Thursday, December 07, 2017

Pretending it's not December

'Tis the season — that time of year when everyone (meaning a small sampling of friends and acquaintances) is planning 2018 outdoor adventures and races. I see their posts on social media and admit to feeling a small sting of resentment ... "Oh, look at you with your high confidence in a predictable fitness arc built on training and preparation ..." 

Beat has been sending me links to enticing events, but I've resisted the temptation to sign up for anything past next March. The sting of 2017's disappointments and failures is still fresh, and my body hasn't given any consistent indication that it's going to cooperate for me next year, either. I feel like I should continue working on acceptance and nurturing other interests rather than beating my head against the same wall. 

Of course, I'm as bad as the sugar addict who swears off sweets in the morning only to eat a giant cookie for lunch (which, incidentally, is something I would do.) This resolve to not sign up for any more races completely ignores the two huge events I'm supposedly training for right now, which are happening in just over two short months. ("80 days!" someone posted. I prefer this characterization because 80 sounds like a comfortable buffer of days, while two months sounds soon.) What gives me any confidence that I'll have what it takes to survive the Iditarod or White Mountains 100? Nothing, to be honest. Besides, I suppose, the reality that I've done it before. 

My most recent thyroid numbers have fallen into normal range. In theory I should be feeling better. I am, I suppose, but my breathing is still on the rough side, and there hasn't been much pep in my recent efforts. On the positive side, my weight-lifting has rapidly improved in the past few weeks. I almost feel like a real athlete again every time I hit the gym. This leads me to believe my body isn't consuming muscle right now (which is something hyperthyroidism does.) It also sparks a temptation to just go full gym rat and forget all of the running and biking. Of course, I'd probably last three days before missing the outdoors so terribly that I'd come crawling back, in the literal sense. I am a addict. 

The rough breathing is probably tied to multiple issues and won't be easily solved. I've had multiple discussions and tests with my endocrinologist and asthma doctor, and they both agree that I have allergic asthma. Asthma has nothing to do with my thyroid, although these numbers affect my heart rate and therefore breathing, and the autoimmune responses may be connected. This autumn has been particularly bad for allergies, with little moisture and lots of wind. I let myself believe that if winter would just come, everything would be all right. I'd be relieved of this dust-filled air. I'd actually be able to drag my sled, and put my recently boosted strength to better use. And if my sluggishness doesn't improve, it won't matter because winter is guilt-free slog season. So I continue to hope for snow, even as the high-pressure ridge lingers. 

The snowless late autumn even extended to Utah, where I managed a couple of fun outings between the Canyonlands backpacking trip and returning home to dusty Colorado. My dad and I hiked to the ridge above Desolation Lake, with views toward Park City. It was 63 degrees when we left the trailhead, and 37 and snaining when we returned three hours later. Sadly the cold front didn't stick around long enough to bring much precipitation.


On my way home I opted to drive I-80, mostly to take a quick jaunt up the west ridge of Grandeur Peak on my way out of town. This is perhaps my favorite hike from the Salt Lake Valley, because it's short enough to wrap up in a couple of hours, and although it gains 3,500 feet in just over two miles, it somehow feels more gentle than other routes of similar steepness. From the peak I could see the beginnings of a smoggy inversion, and felt grateful that I was leaving town. Salt Lake is my hometown and I still think it's an ideal place to reside; however, I suspect that I no longer possess the lungs to tolerate the awful air quality of a Salt Lake winter. If life brings me back here, I may have no choice but to become a seasonal gym rat.

Looking east at the Wasatch Mountains. No snow, no snow, as far as the eye can see.


The week in Boulder was very warm, with temperatures rising into the low 60s. It was almost enough to make me forget that the calendar had rolled into December, which is also good for my denial that there are only 80 days until the Iditarod. Then a snowless front moved through, and suddenly it was cold. I understood this on an intellectual level, but it was still a shock to the system. Wednesday presented an opportunity for a six-hour solo ride — still one of my favorite ways to spend a half day regardless of how healthy or fit I'm feeling on any given morning. Wednesday morning also brought temperatures in the low teens, and a 15-20mph west wind for exhilarating subzero windchills.

"Better put the pogies on," I thought. Then I proceeded to severely under-dress, because I don't even understand what subzero windchill feels like anymore, given my last ride in 60-degree temps. From the outset I felt awful, with that wind needling into my core until my knees and shoulders ached with cold. My hands and feet were dead slabs of meat. It was stupid, but I was convinced I just need to ride harder to warm up, even as the cold wind drove dust particles into my lungs until I was coughing up gunk and sucking water to spit it out (that is, until my hose froze, and then I didn't have water for four hours.)

It was all so stupid is because I was carrying multiple layers in my backpack. After two hours of purposeless suffering, I stopped to put them on — every last piece, even though I knew this may mean more suffering when it came time to descend 4,000 feet into town. Encased in a virtual space suit, I almost instantly felt better. Windchill was the sole cause of two hours of misery. I'd say oh well, live and learn ... but apparently I never do.

It was a great ride in the space suit, though. The lower mountains had received a dusting of snow overnight. I churned up Caribou Road until the powder was too deep for my semi-skinny tires, did a little snow dance while unsuccessfully trying to thaw my water hose with my hands, and started the long descent into Boulder. Wearing wind-proof layers, with the piercing gusts at my back, I felt like I was floating through a bubble of silence and warmth. As it turned out, descending was somehow warmer than climbing. Next time I will just start out my rides in the space suit.

Beat and I are now headed to the Bay Area for a weekend, so my pseudo-summer will extend further yet. Although our time there is short, I'm really looking forward to visiting old haunts ... both for nostalgia, and to compare my current fitness on routes I did regularly two years ago. I suspect I will love the first and mourn the second, but knowledge is always better (unless I'm counting days until the Iditarod, in which case I'd really rather not know.)
Friday, December 01, 2017

Walks through time

I couldn't tell you how many times "back in the day" came up this weekend. Probably enough that Danni and Meghan quietly rolled their eyes while I recounted the Upper Black Box trip where Curt threw his pack down the 100-foot cliff that my college friends and I were carefully down-climbing, and all of his Nalgene bottles exploded. I can't help it. A piquant aroma of sagebrush fills the air, heat radiates from sandstone in November, and in my senses I'm 22 years old again, adrift in memory. It almost doesn't matter that this was a different era, when I was a different conglomeration of cells, "back in the day." Although time is linear, our experience of time is not. 

Six or seven years ago, Danni and Meghan started what they hoped would be an annual gathering of friends for wanderings in the wilderness. With the tendency of modern women to be self-deprecating about our passions, they called it "Fat Camp," and started inviting other female friends to join. I tagged along for their Wind Rivers trip in 2015, but time has been seemingly in short supply for everyone since. Finally an opening came up for just the three of us over Thanksgiving weekend so we grabbed it, even though it meant inviting Danni to my family dinner and rushing south immediately after pie was served. We had a short three days but we intended to make the most of it, hiking in the Needles District of Canyonlands National Park.


For planning and acquiring permits at the last minute — she texted me Wednesday afternoon, as I was driving from Colorado to Utah, with the question "do you have a high-clearance vehicle?" — Meghan put together a stunning route: a one-way trip down Salt Creek Canyon. With fields of rare grass and a couple of year-round springs, the canyon is a relative oasis in the Utah desert. Our daily required mileage was short and side-canyon possibilities were many, with an abundance of archaeological sites to explore.

After a lazy car-camp morning, acquiring permits at the visitor center, chatting with the amicable couple who own the Needles Outpost, and driving the shuttle, our hike didn't begin until a few short hours before sunset on Friday. Luckily we only had four miles to walk to our first camp. When I was 22, four miles seemed like a sufficient day of hiking, and you know what — it still does. At mile three, we passed a cabin built by Rensselaer Lee Kirk, a rancher who ran cattle up Salt Creek in the 1890s. Outside were the remnants of a wagon that may be the one he used to haul supplies from Moab, and that had to be broken down and ferried up an eroded pour-over called Big Jump. We circled through the interior of the cabin, admiring its solid construction with hand-planed logs. It was easy to imagine what Kirk's home life might have been like, on a warm summer night with the desert wind rustling cottonwood leaves outside. I pictured an iron pot of beans cooking in the sandstone fireplace. The howling of coyotes might be the only sound to break a silence that stretched for hundreds of miles.

Despite the late start, 90 minutes of hiking put us into camp with daylight to spare, so we ventured up a side canyon in search of ruins. We bashed through the sage and followed erratic deer trails, skipping around fragile patches of cryptobiotic soil as though they were molten lava. We also dodged petrified cow pies, perfectly preserved even though cattle haven't trampled this canyon in more than 40 years.

Besides a myriad of deer tracks, we began to see distinct kitty tracks. We guessed a larger mountain lion followed closely by a juvenile, climbing out of the wash and circling back. They were well-defined compared to most of the deer tracks we saw, which meant they were fresh. Collectively we acknowledged that instinctual chill running down our spines. A setting sun but also nervousness prompted us to turn around. Not ten minutes later, Meghan called out, "Mountain lion! Over there!" We stopped and looked toward the hillside, where a large animal was sprinting parallel to our path. The animal had a long tail and broad head, with golden fur that glistened in the afternoon light. Its body turned light gray as it entered the shadows, where it stopped and turned to face us. It was less than a hundred meters away, and large enough that its head peeked over waist-tall sagebrush that dotted the canyon.

"Maybe it's a fox," Meghan suggested, in that uncertain tone people use when they're trying to explain away certain fear.

"That is not a fox," I replied, and squinted at the lion until I was certain I could see its gaze piercing mine, communicating our undisputed places in the food chain. It turned again and ran along a row of juniper trees, stopping twice more to look toward us before disappearing over the hillside. We had to cross its prior path to return to our campsite, so we had no choice but to continue forward.

"Let's stick close together," Danni suggested.

Despite primal nervousness, we couldn't help our human curiosity to explore a cliff dwelling on the way. The structure was built by the Ancestral Puebloans more than 700 years ago. As early farmers, they lived year-round in the canyon while cultivating maize, beans, and squash. Their stone houses and granaries are still largely in tact, scattered with pottery shards and centuries-old corn cobs. It wasn't so easy to imagine their home lives, huddled in these oven-like alcoves under a searing summer sun, carrying spring water in clay pots as they scaled sheer standstone walls with baffling agility.

Seven hundred years later, the alcove that held these ruins was by far the warmest place in the canyon. Even with a mountain lion lurking close by, we wished we could relocate as we descended into a sink of freezing air that surrounded our tents. The sun disappeared as we sought out the nearby spring to collect water. We passed a sandstone window that was listed only as "natural arch" on our map. "We'll call it Cougar Mouth Arch," I suggested.

The sun was gone at 5 p.m. By 7, the temperature was freezing and frost was already forming on my neglected cup of tea. Danni announced she was ready to crawl into her sleeping bag, and I knew we had a least 12 idle hours ahead. I don't often sleep through a night, and feared it was going to be a long one, but I was grateful as well. Beyond unpolluted desert air, the sky was filled with stars upon stars. Silence was absolute. I remembered many quiet nights in the desert before cell phone reception. I could happily go weeks without, now.

In the short minutes between dinner and lights out — perhaps in an attempt to keep conversation flowing beyond an unconscionably early bedtime — Meghan asked the question, "What's the worst thing about aging?" All that came to my mind was, "I wish I still felt the way I did in 2014." I wasn't even that much younger then. Those are just my most recent memories of a time when I consistently felt healthy and strong, and still clung to a belief that limits were negotiable tricks of the mind. Now my imagination is often my best escape from physical limits, which are definitely real, and possibly permanent. My body's chemical balance has shifted and I'm certainly not the same conglomeration of cells. Yet life remains amazing. If I'm lucky enough to continue experiencing wonder at age 50, 60, 70, I will rejoice. I'm not 22 years old anymore, and it doesn't really matter.

The following morning, we 'shwacked through a horror maze of rabbit brush to view rock art that Meghan's eagle eye spotted from a fair distance. I've prided myself on retaining 20/20 vision into my late 30s, but Meghan's undoubtedly exceeds mine. Like many, I find ancient rock art utterly fascinating — for the unlikely environment in which it was created, the even more unlikely way it lasted, and the unanswerable questions about its meaning. This panel might portray a simple illustration of one's family and directions to the spring, or it might convey the existential ruminations of an ancient restless soul. Across centuries these communications have been obscured, and yet they leave a powerful impression.

A bit off trail and out of the way, this site was filled with interesting pottery shards. Survival in this canyon was undoubtedly hard — cultivating crops in the arid soil, constantly exposed to extreme heat, wind, and cold, scaling treacherous walls just to access shelter — yet the Ancestral Puebloans clearly spent a lot of time making art. The value of art feels somewhat lost in modern society, where most of the billions of us prefer effortless entertainment and arbitrary achievement to "frivolous" acts of creation. If I needed to scratch seeds from the sand just to live another day, would I still feel compelled to scrawl hand-ground pigments onto rock and express my inner longings? I suspect I would.


It's interesting how one can look at something as simple as the outline of a hand print and think, "I see you," and perhaps imagine an entire narrative of moments surrounding their creation.

Meanwhile we continued walking, heavy packs pressing down on our shoulders, with the warm November sun radiating off rock and jaw-dropping formations appearing around every corner. In these moments, I could imagine that ancient life would not be so bad.

We were constantly in awe of the Puebloans' apparent climbing abilities. This granary was some 35 feet above the canyon floor. It may have had a ladder, but it also might just have been accessible via this sandstone chimney, which Meghan demonstrated was likely an easy shimmy if one was fit and not necessary frightened about slipping and falling on the way down. She and Danni spent about a half hour playing with possibilities while I sat by idly, perfectly content to not do any scrambling. At 22 I was braver, more willing to rappel down a wall on a rope harness or friction climb near-vertical slickrock. Eventually anxiety, not to mention a few close calls, caught up with me. I've since accepted that some of us have a more volatile relationship with gravity, and we live on by not trying to be heroes to ourselves.

We walked around the corner from the chimney granary, and collectively gasped. The next feature was the famous "All-American Man," a stunningly bright shield motif painted in blue, red, and white stripes. There has been controversy surrounding this painting. Some insisted it was a hoax created by 19th-century cowboys. But after comparing hundreds of paint pigments and patterns, most of the region's archaeologists are convinced of All-American Man's authenticity from a pre-U.S.A. era.

Just beyond All-American Man, we spent more time wandering through the willows to find this panel, which was surprisingly whimsical. I imagined this artist laughing as he caricatured his friends.

We spent so much of Saturday's short daylight exploring ruins that by the time the sun began to sink below canyon walls, we were only halfway to camp. For a couple of hours we put our heads down and marched through the sand. The canyon narrowed and cottonwoods and willows choked an almost a claustrophobic corridor. I thought back to stories my dad told me about riding his motorcycle up this canyon in the 1980s, when motorized vehicles were legal and erosion was more severe. Back then the creek bed was open enough to ride directly up the middle, spraying his brothers and friends with a rooster-tail of silty water. Slowly the evidence is fading, even as happy memories live on.

We arrived at camp just as the last hints of dusk faded to night sky, and set up tents under charred cottonwood trunks that seemed solid, but I suppose you never know. About a mile down the trail we spotted one chunk of petrified bear scat, so at least the required bear canisters we were hoisting seemed justified. Meghan was still nervous about lions. I considered an evening jaunt up to Angel Arch after 7:30 bedtime, but decided against this, as it would worry my friends, and I'd admittedly feel spooked. Moonlight was also too faint for arch viewing on this night. Instead I walked a short distance up the creek bed and stared in awe at the full-color Milky Way, framed by black canyon walls.

The next morning we found more evidence of nearby kitties, helpfully outlined by Meghan. I suppose it's best I didn't do any solo night hiking, and I did manage to read one and a quarter books over three nights ("Cycling to the South Pole" by Maria Leijerstram ... interesting, but not as introspective as I'd hoped. And a re-reading of "Refuge" by Terry Tempest Williams.)

Side canyon possibilities continued to entice, but we had too much real life to get back to — the long shuttle and then driving back to Salt Lake so Danni could catch an evening flight. Sunday was mostly a heads-down-and-march day. Lively conversations continued. I love spending time with these friends because the interesting and hilarious stories never dry up. We talked about planning a much longer trip, or a bikepacking route. Anything to extend the tradition.

We looped around the Peekaboo pictograph panel and discovered that an anticipated spring was dry. Even though there were only five miles left to hike, I'm exceedingly paranoid about possessing no water, so I jogged back a half mile to collect a liter. Although my friends insisted there was time for this diversion, none of us did the math. As it worked out we were already behind schedule. The final segment of trail ascended a sandstone crack via a ladder and continued along slickrock benches, in and out of drainages. We had no choice but to push hard along the constant up and downs. I felt good, executing bursts of power with no difficulty breathing. Perhaps I'm back on an upswing! One can always hope.


We passed a trail sign indicating an alternative long way around. I hinted at my desire to follow this route, but of course there was no time. Is there ever enough time?

The day after returning from Canyonlands, my parents and I traveled to Ogden to visit my grandmother, who was recently diagnosed with terminal cancer. She seems okay with this, as a religious woman who longs to reunite with her husband. For now she must endure an extremely difficult transition that few talk about. "Why is it so hard to get out of here?" she exclaimed early in our visit. She'd felt particularly down that morning, and found comfort by reading letters my late grandfather had written. We listened to her recount some of her memories. I clasped her cold hands and expressed my gratitude that I'd inherited her passion for record-keeping. For my 8th birthday she gave me my first journal, and a photo album that prompted me to start taking disposable-camera snapshots when I was 17. She has kept meticulous scrapbooks for all of her grandkids called her "Grandma Angel Books," which she continued to add to, well into our adulthoods, when we wrote her an e-mail or achieved something noteworthy. Hearing loss prevented her from processing my statement, but she did lament the records she'd been combing through — an award she received from the governor, newspaper articles recounting her volunteer work, a half-century of advocating for the hearing-impaired. "What's it worth?" she said with a sour look on her face. "Nothing."


I was stung by this declaration from my grandmother, as though she was dismissing our collective histories. Perhaps she was simply expressing a practical view that pieces of paper don't mean anything compared to the experiences, but I still disagree. The records are what we leave behind. Shadows are all that remain, whispers echoing into the future. I would like an opportunity look through her records, and nearly said so, but that seemed like a selfish statement. She's my last living grandparent, and I can't imagine a world without her. I could feel my own hands trembling as we leaned in for a hug, perhaps our last. As we embraced, she proclaimed that "Grandma is speaking her mind," and tearfully told me that what she wanted most for me, was that I get married. I unintentionally laughed, because I was expecting something worse. I love my grandmother. We are so alike, even though we are so vastly different. As I closed her garage door tight, I thought, "This is the worst part of aging. Facing the loss of the people we love."

Time marches with its head down, but we don't. I suppose this is why we create traditions, to connect the experiences of our past with anticipation for the future. Salt Creek Canyon holds the memory of the Archaic Peoples thousands of years ago, the Ancestral Puebloans, the Navajo, cowboys, archaeologists, motorcyclists, backpackers, trail runners, and now us, the dedicated denizens of Fat Camp. Thank you, Meghan and Danni, for inviting me into your tradition. I hope it continues for years to come.
Monday, November 20, 2017

People find some reason to believe

Photo by Beat Jegerlehner
About once a week, I carve out an opportunity for a moderate-length ride with no set direction and no real training purpose. Beat teases me for refusing to call six hours "long," but it's still a far cry from the way I used to ride my bike — seven days a week, several hours in the morning before work, and up to twelve hours on weekends. Still, I relish these "semi-long" rides, alone on seemingly abandoned county roads, grinding up a steep hill or into the wind or both for large majority of my time in the saddle, utterly zoned out — or, rather, "in the zone."

Riding my bike over the relentless terrain of the Front Range foothills is never easy, but it becomes significantly more difficult for me during physical downswings. Conversely, this is when I come to love riding the most. Engaging my muscles for steep climbs demands so much oxygen that there's little left for my brain. I fall into a meditative trance. Long minutes pass with no emotional engagement, observation, or recollection of what went by. I believe I'm aware on the sensory level where it counts, but nothing records to memory. I "come to" at points and feel refreshed, even though I'm still grinding up a hill. As a journalist and archivist at heart, I usually become annoyed at myself when I realize I haven't been paying attention. But for six hours, once a week, this vacation from my brain is a welcome respite. 

Photo by Beat Jegerlehner. 
Colorado is currently experiencing a typical November weather pattern, where "unseasonably" warm temperatures pull air over the Continental Divide like a power vacuum, causing frequently strong and occasionally hurricane-force downslope winds. If it's 70 degrees in Denver, there's a good chance of 70mph winds in the mountains. I know this, but there's still that lingering summer mentality/optimism that says "it's a beautiful day! Let's go for a hike!"

 I said this after I cut a run short on Saturday because my breathing was rough and I became dizzy enough to stumble over too many steps. Why would I pit this poor fitness against the insurmountable west wind? Well, earlier in the week, I had a brief burst of confidence when my name turned up on the roster for the 2018 White Mountains 100. This means I have two amazing races to look forward to in March. If I can somehow start in good physical condition, I believe I have the endurance, experience, and fortitude to do well. Plus, I am just itching to take on a tough challenge and break out of my slump. Because how long has it been since I had a good race? And then I realize ... how long has it been? What makes me believe I'll be strong enough to finish a race, ever again? Certainly not when I can't even stumble my way through a nine-mile run, that's for sure.

 It was in this state of mind that I joined Beat and Jorge on the Arapahoe Glacier Trail on Sunday — nervous, actually a bit terrified, but determined to figure out how well I deal with difficult and potentially dangerous weather conditions when I'm not at my best. Oxygen-sucking gusts greeted us at the trailhead, but the hike through the forest went well enough. Friday's storm left about six inches of powder — less snow depth than when I snowshoed the trail in early October, but honestly more than I expected to see. Beat took photos of dramatic lenticular clouds and we nearly strapped on our snowshoes, but I requested waiting until we rose above tree line, "to see how scoured it is."

Emerging from the last scraggly strands of spruce, we stepped into the gut of a wind funnel more intense than any I've felt in years. I say this often, but I believe when the Niwot Saddle data is finally updated, the numbers will bear this out. Although the ambient temperature was just barely below 32 degrees, the flash-freezing of skin happened in seconds. We huddled next to rocks and pulled on all of our gear, except for the snowshoes and ice axes and spikes that were completely useless on a slope stripped of even a base crust of snow. Upward we trudged. I was forced to use all of my hard-won weightlifting strength to brace my upper body against a roaring freight train of air. Beat seemed giddy. Jorge had his usual quiet stoicism. I was frightened. Even though it froze my lips, I had to pull down my face mask to prevent the feeling of being smothered.

For what seemed to be hours, I fought gnawing anxiety and desperate breathing as ever-increasing wind gusts forced me onto my knees. I wondered what it would feel like to tumble over the rocks. I imagined digging my ice ax into the tundra to stop the momentum amid 70mph winds. Eventually a gust pushed me down and I couldn't catch my breath. I was gasping, fading. Was I going to black out? This was the exact scenario I feared most during my trip across Alaska in 2016 — being in a position where I desperately needed to rest, in a place where I couldn't rest.

Beat saw me on my hands and knees, and possibly witnessed the few seconds where I laid my head on a clump of tundra and curled into the fetal position. He came toward me. Between long pauses for breath, I said that it was time for me to turn around. The wind was so loud that neither of us could hear the other even as we pressed our heads together, but he and Jorge followed me downhill. I thought they were retreating on my account, but later Beat told me that they'd reached an altitude where neither of them could stand upright. About 100 feet higher than my limit, they were forced to their knees as well.

We beat a quick retreat. Within the mile back to tree line, we were laughing about the adventure. But I felt ashamed. I'd certainly failed my own test.

 On the drive home, I asked Beat if he wanted to do a "bike swap" on Monday, where I ride to his office and take the car so he can run home. This is often how I justify my long rides, and emotionally I was in need. Of course I woke up on Monday to ongoing winds. Our weather station at home was recording sustained 35mph with 45mph gusts. I knew if I rode west toward the Divide, it was going to be just awful.

It would have been easy to talk myself out of it. But I set out just the same — mashing pedals to grind my way downhill, and pressed against an invisible wall at every climb. It was so hard that my thoughts shut down early. Occasionally a gust nearly blew me off the road, and I startled as I threw a foot down to brace myself. The grind continued. Even though temperatures were in the high 40s, I pulled on full face-covering layers. As I neared 9,000 feet, the wind was almost unworkable. I was at my limit, grinding so slowly that I could barely balance the bike, and then a gust caught my side and slammed me into the dirt. The sudden crash brought a surge of adrenaline and all of the ensuing emotions. Suddenly I was very frightened, again. I am too weak for this wind. I can't make it. I should turn around ... but descending all that altitude with the same wind at my side and back would probably blow me over repeatedly. I thought about calling Beat, maybe calling an Uber. Someone to rescue me. But then again ... no ... I don't really need that.

Instead, I continued west, upward, straight into the wind. Later I looked at weather stations along Gap Road, and one recorded a gust of 88mph. Even if that's not credible, other weather stations at possibly more protected houses along the road had 66, 71, 74mph gusts. I was still frightened, but resolved to control my balance and my breathing. This required thought, and I noticed all of the things I'd been missing — the dynamic sky, the swirling dust, the dramatic contrast of snow and rock on the mountain skyline.

When I finally started my long descent into Boulder, the wind was dying. Amid the coasting calm, I recaptured my confidence. "Everything's going to be great this winter," I thought. "I'm feeling better already."