Friday, April 26, 2013

Friday Fun

Some days, ladies and gentlemen, my office looks like this.  I went to Cullowhee to drop supplies and took a moment to enjoy the view. 
 
View from the Jackson County Rec Park. 

Thursday Night Shenanigans

Last night, I made a spontaneous trip to Transylvania County.  I made a second trip to Looking Glass Falls, an 80-foot waterfall in Pisgah National Forest.  Looking Glass is beautiful and I highly recommend it.  If you're heading there from Waynesville, you'll see the Pink Beds picnic area on your left before the falls.  Except when they're closed for the winter, Pink Beds has bathrooms (for future reference).  The picnic area/trails don't close, just the restrooms.  Another place, which I hope to visit, is the Sliding Rock recreation area.  In the summer, it is staffed with lifeguards.  It costs $1 to get in.  It was windy, so the spray was going pretty far.  I stopped along the Blue Ridge Parkway on my way back.  You can see Cold Mountain from there.  Enjoy the pictures and see why they're called the Blue Ridge Mountains.  Be sure to scroll all the way down.  There's a video of the falls.      
 
 


 
 
 






 

Cataloochee Valley Hike

We started at Cataloochee Valley and some of us hiked 10 miles.  It was an easy/moderate hike.  Cataloochee is well-known for elk.  The elk were reintroduced the park and wear radio collars.  This is a national park (Great Smoky Mountains), so the elk are on protected land.  You must remain at least 150 feet away from the elk and can't bother them or enter the fields.  Elk mate in the fall and give birth in the summer.  Winter is a quiet time in that area.  There are other places to see elk, but Cataloochee Valley is the best.  When they mate, the males make a call known as bugling.  Rut is the term for when elk challenge other bulls, attract cows, and make their bugling call.  Their antlers also have a covering known as ''velvet.''  Once their antlers are fully develop, they shed the velvet.  Elk are known as bulls, cows and calves.  Read more about them here: http://www.nps.gov/grsm/naturescience/elk.htm.  There's a great picture on the NPS page, so please check it out.  It shows just how huge the elk can be....a 500-lb female is a BIG girl! :) This page has even more details about the elk, really interesting: http://www.nps.gov/grsm/naturescience/elk-facts.htm.  Now that I've seen elk in the valley, I can officially say my top 10 list is complete.  I think I should write a new one. 













Thursday, April 18, 2013

Twentymile Loop Hike

On Saturday, April 13, we hiked near Fontana Village and were near the Swain/Graham County line.  Here's a little geography help, since NC has so many counties.  My county (Haywood) is next to the one where Asheville is (Buncombe).  Keep going west and end up in the county with WCU (Jackson).  Then, we crossed into Swain, Graham and Swain again.  We were near the TN line.  It took about 1.5 hours to get there.  We only passed one hiker over several hours.  He was headed up to a camp site.  We saw other cars when we arrived and figured those people had also headed to that area.  We saw a deer! It was a buck.  He saw us.  I love knowing that he's nice and safe on federal property.  We were in the Nantahala National Forest.  Although it was called the Twentymile Loop, our actual distance was about 7.6 miles.  It was moderate in difficulty.  It was my first hike in about two months and I enjoyed getting back in the woods. 







There's a deer in the middle. 






Friday, April 12, 2013

Valley of the Lilies 1/2 Marathon

On Saturday, April 6, I ran the Valley of the Lilies 1/2 marathon.  This was at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee.  It had some good points, some bad.  I've been spoiled by some great races, including the OBX.  The price was pretty reasonable.  They allowed participants to use the rec center.  It was great to have a warm place to wait and have access to the restrooms.  The Gatorade was good (not sure if they used powdered, but race folks don't always mix that well).  We got great tech shirts that had an image of the campus.  At least they're a purple and gold school.  The course was as flat as they could make it.  Most of the inclines weren't too bad.  I felt pretty good for most of the race and was thankful for that.  Taking two acetaminophen before helps.  I always do that before a half or a full.  The worst elevation climb was during the catamount climb.  I survived the Catamount Climb! There wasn't any one awful part, but it was gradual incline that kept on going.  I wore a festive outfit, complete with a cape and a flower.  I thought, why not try to go with the theme? I was the only one who was dressed up.  There weren't finisher medals.  I seriously put on the evaluation that I would only run it again if there were medals.  We got pint glasses and stickers.  ;) Afterwards, I enjoyed a peanut butter shake from the DQ.  They were donating part of their sales that day to the race charity.  The charity was professional development opportunities for WCU students (ex- taking a licensing exam or attending a professional conference).  My time was  2:39:21.2.  Not a PR, but not bad for my first half up here.  I do miss the flat terrain of Greenville.    

http://www.christopher-graphics.com/ValleyoftheLillies
This is the photographer's website.  There are a LOT of photos, but I know that I'm on pages 26 and 27 under ''course photos.''  Enjoy!