It has become a ritual. I have no family in the area to get together with (they’re spread out from Florida to Texas to California), so I always go for a substantial hike (a snowshoe if there is enough snow) every year on Christmas or the day after. And this year is no different.It’s a miserable day out there – temps in the mid-30s with a cold rain pouring down, but that won’t stop me. I lace up my hiking boots, throw on a rain slicker and head out, Sprague Brook Park my destination. There is a most wonderful trail in this park; it follows the ridge high above the creek and its myriad tributaries and has great views but what I really like about it is that it weaves in and out of old growth forest.
I set out at a little after 2pm giving me about 2 ½ hours to complete the 6+ mile hike before darkness sets in. Normally that is plenty of time but today it’s a trudge because there is 3 or 4 inches of mushy snow on the ground making every step a challenge - especially slippery going up or downhill – which is much of the hike.
This is truly a bleak day, the kind they invented the word 'bleak' to describe. The winter sun, which is already low in the sky this time of year, is completely blocked out by thick, gray overcast; the light is so muted it feels like twilight in the middle of the afternoon. To add to the atmosphere, curtains of icy rain blow sideways in the gusty winds; it’s a challenge to keep the hood on my head, the winds try again and again to tear it off. There is no keeping dry, the wet quickly makes its way down inside my boots, jacket and hood; before I know it, I’m wet through and through.Nevertheless, I’m lovin’ every step! I say a bad day hiking is still better than a week of good days inside. I’m just getting to know this trail as I only discovered it earlier this year so I stop often to marvel in the impressive views and at the plentiful huge old trees. I find a black cherry that I estimate to be at least five feet across (I must remember to bring a tape measure with me next time.) It’s the widest forest-grown (as opposed to field grown where there is no competition for sunlight) black cherry I think I’ve ever seen. This is one massive, impressive tree.
I also find a couple of sugar maples that I guess to be seven feet wide! Then, wandering off trail, I discover a special grove of at least twenty towering old growth sugar maples in one small area - it must be really dark here in the summer when these monsters are fully leafed out, the canopy has to be nearly impenetrable. There are also plenty of other old trees along the trail besides cherrys and maples, other impressive specimans include hemlocks, beeches and birches.
With the rain pattering on my hood and the howling winds I can’t hear much else, so it really startles me when a blue jay suddenly screams from the murk. The first animal encounter of the day. Next, I watch a gang of chickadees flitting from tree to tree, foraging for food. I recall reading somewhere that birds require upwards of 10,000 calories a day – the equivalent of a human eating 150,000 calories! The search for food must be all-consuming task every day for those brave birds that overwinter here in the north.
Now I spy a little bandit digging in the snow. I stop walking. He stops digging. We stare at each other, neither moving a muscle. Then he (she?) slowly ambles over to a tree and begins climbing up. At about ten feet off the ground, he stops and looks at me with curious eyes – what a cute picture! Only I haven’t brought my camera because it’s so wet and windy (I guess I’ll never learn the lesson to always bring it.)
My final wildlife sighting of the day is of a deer down in the gorge that has caught sight of my movement up here on the ridge. We watch each other for several minutes until I raise my hand to salute this beautiful animal and wish it a Merry Christmas. With that, she takes off at a gallop. I love watching those fluffy white tails bob through the forest with the greatest of ease!
I make it back to my vehicle just before dark, soaked to the bone, but content if not cold and a little tired. This has been a wonderful hike, the very best one yet until… the next one of course!


Sometimes it’s obvious, like being hidden deep down in the bottom of a ravine or gorge or on a steep slope. Other times there doesn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason to its survival and I just scratch my head and wonder. The truth is that the loggers didn’t miss much unless it was inaccessible, part of protected public land, on a private estate or purposely set aside as a refuge.


♦ and so on...

As I make my way back, the snow rains down from the trees even harder than before and, by the time I pop out of the woods, I am thoroughly soaked and shivering. Only one solution to this problem, I jump into the truck and blast the heater - ahhhhh, that feels so good. By now, the snow has turned to all rain and the magic has melted. I head home, wet, warm and happy, for I have once again been fortunate enough to have seen the kind of beauty that most people only experience a few lucky times in their lives. Even if it did involve some danger, it was definitely worth it!
The forecast called for a wet snowfall overnight and I woke up well before dawn excited about the prospects. With many of the autumn leaves still hanging like ornaments in the trees, this could offer some unique scenery – despite our reputation for snow here in Western New York, it is not common in mid-October when the leaves are at their most colorful.
There it is and it’s a nice one, spilling and splashing down a fifty foot wall. I’ve read that there is a way up and around the waterfall, with more waterfalls upstream but this is the end of the hike for me, I’ve done enough today and I’m not about to attack a fifty foot wall.

and with birds high up in the trees singing praises of the place, I feel like I have found the mythical Garden of Eden. I sit down in the shade to eat my lunch serenaded by the always alluring melodies of falling water and beautiful birdsong – in the middle of the desert - magical!
and ‘The Bottle House’ (sorry, I didn't get a good shot):
A house built from thousands of beer and liquor bottles by Tom Kelly in 1906. Most of the other buildings, including the bank, schools, and jail, have long since decayed and partially or completely caved in.
It’s snowing and sleeting at this elevation (3,800 ft.) as I poke around the ruins, a raw day.
And it’s early so I have the place completely to myself. All the better to feel the spirit of the place - it’s kind of creepy actually. No one would choose to live here without gold for incentive, it’s bleak, dry, extremely hot in the summer and remote. How quickly they fall when the gold (money) runs out.
But Death valley has its own kind of unique beauty – the earth laid bare revealing bands of pastel colors running through the rock walls of the surrounding mountains – in places it resembles different flavors of ice cream layered on top of each other if one uses a little imagination.
At sunset and sunrise, when the low sun accents the colors, the effect can be quite stunning. Sand dunes also stand out during the magic hours of dawn and dusk, taking on a warm glow with long shadows accenting their textures.
So why do I find myself in a motel again tonight, outside of the park? Because, believe it or not, it is pouring relentlessly and all the roads in the park are closed due to flooding (and snow and ice at higher elevations.) What? In Death Valley? The place where the 1.9 inch annual rainfall is greatly exceeded by an evaporation potential of 150 inches per year? Yes, I have timed my arrival perfectly (not.)
It’s chilly here at 7,500 feet and scattered snow patches contrast nicely with the vivid reds. I start hiking to the top of a ridge to gain sweeping views into the canyon; it’s slow going in the shifting red sands at this elevation. When I finally reach the top, I am breathing heavily. I stop, catch my breath and marvel at the splendor spread out before me.
The sand resulting from the erosion of the rock settles smooth creating an unreal-looking soft landscape of rich color and sexy silkiness (if rocks and sand can ever be sexy and silky, they are here, or maybe I’ve just been out here alone for too long.

This is excellent exercise, not just for the heart and muscles, but for coordination and mental alertness as well. It occurs to me that hiking like this is a great activity for overall fitness, one that just about anyone can do at their own pace. And this is not to mention being given the privilege of beholding some of Mother Nature’s finest while doing it - lush foliage, gorgeous wildflowers, magical encounters with our forest friends, heartbreakingly beautiful birdsongs and the incomparable sweet and oxygenated fragrance of the forest to mention a few.
If it’s been a while since I last visited one of these sylvan cathedrals, I start to feel disconnected from the world around me. But as soon as I enter the woods, I’m renewed, at once both in touch with the cosmos again but freed of its challenges and problems, at least for now. Surrounded by forest, I am somehow incapable of worry.
Sadly, every last scrap of woods that I grew up exploring in as a child is long gone. With suburban sprawl pushing out further and further, forestland is disappearing at an alarming rate - so I hike that which remains whenever I get the chance. Developers don’t seem to have learned what I have in this life: money in itself cannot bring happiness – I’ve been both well-off and poor – but a simple jaunt in the woods can. I’ve never not felt better, physically, mentally and spiritually, after a hike than before. I hike for my health!


and almost miss the road heading off west to Boulder.
Up here, the weather is different; there are patches of snow scattered about and the wind is bitingly cold. I am on the Burr Trail, named after John Atlantic Burr, who was born in 1846 aboard the SS Brooklyn somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. He and his family lived in Salt Lake City, then later moved south and established the town of
Turns out this wall of rock I am driving next to is the ‘
By now, you’d think I’d have had enough of hoodoos but I can’t resist. The hike is tough going; it’s through disturbed desert (cattle grazing – I’ll say it again, what in the heck are cattle doing grazing in the desert?), a painfully slow slog through loose sand. I realize that my legs are still very tired from all the ambitious hiking I’

It’s warmer here than any of the other places I have camped so far and not just because of the fire; I’m at lower elevation, 2,500 feet lower than last night for instance, which makes for about a ten degree difference. With the fire, that’s really significant, and, for the first time on this trip, I’m actually comfortable being outside after the sun goes down without needing to bundle up like the Michelin man. Real bathrooms, running water, good wine, a nice fire and relative warmth - I guess you could say I am on ‘vacation’ tonight!
It’s cool, but not frigid and I am actually enjoying the morning placidity without shivering for once. There’s hardly a sound except for my breathing and the occasional vehicle passing by out on the highway. I consider staying here for another day – it’s all so very comfortable - but decide against it; there’s so much yet to explore and only a little more than a week of ‘vacation’ left to do it!
I glance down uncomfortably at the gas gauge edging down inexorably towards ‘E’, my last fill was way back in Page, Arizona (in hindsight, I
Sucking on fumes, I come to the intersection with Route 276, which angles off to southwest towards Lake Powell. It dead ends at the lake (in the summer there is ferry service to the other side where the road continues) but my map shows another tiny town called