23 September, 2007

AUTUMNAL EQUINOX -2007

A Mountain Memorial

On the 22nd day of September, 2007, on or about 1300 hours, deep in the Cabin Creek watershed on the 13,911 ft. Mt. Meeker, the eastern most peak of the Longs Peak Massif, my beloved wife Deborah and I spread the remains of Aaron Boggs Anthony.

"Dad Anthony"....or "Bob"....or "Boggs"....or " A-A-Aaron!!!..or other loving names were attached to him over his 88 years. Mostly we kids called him Dad or Poppo.

His service to this country during World War Two has already been recounted. His work as a civil engineer will remain long after most of us are dust. However, the uncounted hours of sweat, toil and laughter he put in at the Ripley Family Compound of Luring Pines at Meeker Park have not been recalled.


They are akin to the many hours... and days... and long summer nights that many of us spent loving and being loved by that place, by the people who shared it and by the wonderful family who ran it from 1949 to 1972.


The following map, photos and writing chronicle the final deposition of Dad's ashes.
Hopefully, this will recall in those who read it, similar memories for those who share in this little walk on a Saturday afternoon on the eve of the Autumnal Equinox.

Please note:
All of the photos can be clicked and a larger image will come into view.



The yellow highlight is the watercourse of Cabin Creek from its headwaters on Mt. Meeker to where it meets Horse Creek and the South Fork of the St. Vrain River.




Homesteads like this old Boulder Creek Ranch were settled in glacial valleys and open glades of the Front Range from the 1850's through the 1920's.




A view of Mt. Meeker from the southern approach. If you look closely on the far left ridge you will see the profile known as "Chief's Head Peak" (13,579 ft.) These wide open glacial "parks" were formed during the last great ice age.




Cabin Creek...named for the remains of a cabin which Kit Carson built and used as his refuge during his years as a trapper in the employ of the Bent and St. Vrain Company in the late 1840's. It still provides a home to Brookies, Browns and the errant Rainbow Trout.




Sure now, myself it is. My ancient pack stuffed with Dad's ashes, lunch, water, rain gear and first aid kit. You will notice that "Snuffy Senior", my favorite sidearm...a S&W model 27, "N"Frame .357 Mag rides comfortably on my right hip. Deborah says that I an not bad looking for a beat up sixty year old hipster.



The Bridge across Cabin Creek. This is where most of the Ripley kids who were so inclined, sat and caught their first trout. The bridge also led to a path which took us to a wonderful little country store filled with penny candy, canned goods and barrels of pickles and crackers, bait for fishing, beer for the men and dime novels for the ladies. This bridge has been replaced at least four times in my lifetime...and it looks as though it needs to be replaced again.



Picnic Rock, where the original Ripley clan held cookouts after long weekends of work. There are spirits who still reside here....waiting for the return of the King..... It is a place full of wonder and pathos and joy.



I spread the first of Dad's ashes to meld with his compatriots at Picnic Rock. I could write a litany and not be done with names who reside here in a very, very long time. You see, beloved, the list grows almost daily.....





One of the deep holds where the trout reside where a small fall concentrates oxygen, food and a safe place to ride out the summer....growing, thriving. This trip may be about Dad Anthony, yet I cannot help but seek out where the wild trout live.





Deb catches me telling her that I have just seen a good size trout, 10 to 12 inches, moving into a feeding lane. No fishing today....at least not with a rod and line!





One of Dad's favorite places....An engineered waterfall, made to dam the creek to provide water for pumping without curbing its ability to maintain a good flow for both fish and man.



Spreading Dad's ashes into the flow of Cabin Creek. I am certain that some miniscule molecule will make a wayward path down to the Gulf of Mexico. There the ol' man will help feed the progeny of all those shrimp he consumed over the years. Lordy, how he loved seafood!



Look closely, you will see him settle into the sandy sunlit creek bottom.



Rest well and long, Poppo. You served God, your country and your family for many a long year. You deserve this quiet place, this gentle rest, this place you loved. May the good Lord that created you cradle you in his strong and loving arms, just as you did for me so many years ago.



Walking back through the old family compound, Luring Pines. The current owners have kept up the tradition of names on the cabins. And they have maintained the feel, the presence of place...of history. It is a good and blessed place.




Each is still marked with the original signage which my grandmother carved:
Brookside, Columbine, Deer Trail, Echo, Fern Glen, Grey Squirrel, Hoot Owl and Jay.
Each cabin is now privately owned, well maintained....a grand testament to the Ripley tradition.




The Crossroads, looking due north at Cabin Mountain, where Big Owl Road crosses Cabin Creek and the road splits, either returning to Highway 7 or heading downstream to the Big Elk Ranch and the South St. Vrain Canyon. Notice all the mailboxes.







Camp St. Malo, nestled at the base of Mt. Meeker where Cabin Creek crosses beneath Highway 7. Pope John-Paul II requested and held a personal retreat here in the mid-ninteen eighties.

The South Fork of the St. Vrain River facing West into the rugged high country of the southern reaches of Rocky Mountain National Park. This is the Wild Basin Wilderness, some of the most treacherous and inaccessible wild country left in Northern Colorado. To the north is the Never Summer Range, the headwaters of the Big Thompson River, the Poudre River and the North Fork of the South Platte River. To the south is the Indian Peaks Wilderness, a wicked mass of twisting montane and alpine canyons that claims the lives of unprepared humans on a yearly basis....



And this is where we leave this place, this time. The main cabin and lodge...Dad's favorite.

He is finally at rest and I hope y'all have enjoyed the tour of the Northern Front Range of the Rockies in Colorado, on the first day of Autumn, 2007.


God bless y'all, and may He hold you close and warm against His sweet breast, just as he has taken my beloved father and holds him close.


-Stephen

28 August, 2007

THE WHEEL GUN - SNUFFY SR.

Smith &Wesson
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Model 27, N-frame, 4" barrel in .357 Magnum, matching serial number: S-129924,
stamped with ".357 CTG ~ Highway Patrolman" on the right side of the barrel.

A couple of months ago over at http://www.sondrak.com/ The Kisp'ers had a somewhat heated debate over a pic of Tammy Bruce and her lil' wheel gun, "Snuffy"...in which the stunning Ms. Bruce holds onto the pistol in a seemingly cavalier fashion with her index finger neatly wrapped around the trigger.

Not A Good Thing! ...according to most "experts".

However, it did prompt me to put these thoughts together concerning my favorite pistol, the S&W .357 Mag. pictured above. The frame has been refinished, bead blasted and Parkerized and fit with Pachmyr grips. The double action pulls at about seven pounds when uncocked and about two pounds when cocked with absolutely no creep and as crisp as a new two-dollar bill.

This is my favorite sidearm while hiking, fishing and hunting. It also resides next to the bedstead while Deb and I sleep at home. Its big and somewhat heavy. Which is actually a good thing, given that I have it stoked with hand loads which are brutally powerful. I stuff a maximum load of powder into clean and primed Win. cases (ask me, maybe I'll share) that are topped with Hornady's 158gr, HP/XTP bullets.

Just its presence is sufficient to scare most folks. And those who aren't scared would do well not to test its authority in close quarters.

26 July, 2007




- October on the Eastern Plains of Colorado, the hunt for pronghorm antelope begins

The Hunt, The Kill.


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This is not about chasin' Bambi to practice "Catch'an'Release!





PLEASE NOTE:


- This is not safe for those who are offended by the pursuit, slaughter and butcher of game.


- Each photo can be "clicked" and it will give you a larger, better resolution pic.





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A post on my favorite front porch Blog, http://sondrak.com/, has prompted me to revisit this issue.

I grew up in the Western United States. Both my parents families were farmers, ranchers or knew the cycle of birth and death and re-birth in domesitcated and/or game animals.

Growing up, I ate deer, elk, beef, buffalo, antelope, wild and domestic goat, sheep and pig, peccary, horse, mountain lion, and birds of every description. We ate what was provided us.

We all know that meat is a very dense, powerful protein. Our not-so-distant ancestors relied upon meat to sustain them and their families. They knew it so well that they began to domesticate animals for their consumption.

They knew it so well that, even after the domestication of certain animals, they chose to hunt. They trapped fowl and beasts. They shot birds, wild beasts and they fished for all manner of marine and fresh water animals.

We do the same today. It is deeply rooted in our genetic makeup. We have vestigal canine teeth which help us rip flesh. Our guts are well suited to the digestion of meat, along with fruits and vegetables and grains.

Those who think otherwise are welcome to believe as they wish.

However, they are not welcome to define my way of life and how I choose to provide food for myself and my family.

I do not agree with them and will fight till the end of my life to preserve my heritage, those ancestors who have hunted game and those who have raised, slaughtered and butchered domesticated animals.




- An abandoned farmhouse on the Plains of Eastern Colorado

I choose to hunt because of my love of the outdoors, the quiet rhythm of land and sky and weather. I enjoy the chase and all of it's nuance. It is work. It is joy. It is frustrating mayhem. It is sorrow.


I enjoy all of the fine and subtle ambiance that changes each day I walk in the field. I appreciate the patina of seasons laid upon seasons and the hand of man, as husband and lover of the land.

The use of a well tuned weapon to bring down a game animal has always fascinated me. The use of the same weapon to make a quick, clean and humane kill has always been my desire. That is what I was taught.

I enjoy the wide, wide open spaces of the plains. It is an environment that is at once overwhelming and intimidating in the powerful expanse, both of sky and land. It is also very intimate, requiring a gentle, humble acceptance of its wild nature, its gentle and fragile life.

This land will kill you. It has no conscience, nor does it care a whit as to man's frailties.

This land will sustain you. It is a land that loves those who know it and know how to respond to it with humility and caution.



- Sandhill country, the truck is a speck in the upper center.

On an early October day, Mark, my hunting/fishing partner and I began glassing the endless, rolling prairie of Southeast Colorado for signs of Pronghorm antelope..."white butts" as we like to call them.

Pronghorn are a perfect example of Darwin's theory of Evolution. They fit this country, just as it fits them. They have 270 degree vision that has been equated to a man with 8X power binoculars. Their hearts are massive pumps, nearly twice the size of a human of the same mass. They have incredible lung capacity and enjoy loping at sustained speeds near 20/30 MPH. They can, with little effort, run at the blistering pace of 60 MPH and disappear in a heartbeat...which is why many call them "Prairie Ghosts."

On this particular day, Mark and I scoped a small herd about four miles out. We made our decision to follow a shallow wash from the north which would bring us within shooting distance, maybe 200 to 300 yards.

I came up on a slight rise to find myself looking at what I thought was a 400 yard shot...that is a full four football field's distance. I dropped to a sitting stance, took one more look in the binoculars, clicked my bi-pod open and drew a bead on a satellite animal. Heat waves danced in the scope. A frisky breeze blew crossways.

I took a long breath, released about halfway and the world stood still. I could feel and see the blood thumping, moving my scope. I squeezed the trigger on my .270 Win. It roared and a millisecond later I heard a wet "Twump." Mark yelled...."YOU GOT'IM"


- Myself and an average antelope of maybe 90 pounds.

I paced off steps from where I shot to the dead goat. Three hundred fifty and some odd long steps and I found that my shot had hit dead on, blowing the top off of the animal's heart. It dropped in its tracks, dead.

I made that shot after two days of hunting. Mark and I drove and glassed and hiked and fought wind and heat waves and more wind.

He shot his animal at a little after 08:00 hours on our first morning out, a nice, older buck. He was lucky.

It took me a bit longer to do what I had come to do. Put clean, wild meat on my table.


- Skinning and dressing the goats at our friends ranch



- Myself, my backside as I skin the front legs.

A good butcher (like myself) will be able to package up between 30 to 50 pounds of meat from an antelope. This is meat with minimal fat, no growth hormones, no antibiotics. It is meat that tastes like the wild wind. It is good. And I would rather eat of it than any fancy-schmancy hundred dollar steak.

Period.

I can ususally draw one tag for antelope in Colorado every year or so. Wyoming normally has leftover tags and, if I am feeling rich, can harvest two or more animals in the Cowboy state.

That weighs in at only 150 to 200 lbs of meat...if I am successful.

It is a sobering thought, how much it requires to provide such a bounty. And, I would not change it for the world, nor any fool who does not understand.

It is my life and my heritage.

08 July, 2007

Fishing the Middle Fork of the South Platte
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- Setting up the "Cabin", a 20ft. hunting/fishing trailer.


On Thursday, 5 July, 2007 Mark and I headed out of the 90 plus degree Denver heat. Mark is one of my oldest friends, a stout man and an ethical hunter and fisherman. Just before sunrise, we loaded his truck with flyfishing gear, food for a week, adult beverages and my .357 S&W "Black Bear Repellent"pistol. We left Mark's house at 06:00. Two hours later, we arrived at his land in South Park.

Mark purchased his two parcels of land, a total of 5 acres, about eight years ago. The land sits on a wide ridge top which, more or less, runs east to west. His parcels set on the North facing slope. The year after the purchase, he bought an older, twenty foot travel trailer and placed it on a leveled flat facing almost due West.


It is simple, almost rustic. There is no inside toilet and the water system no longer functions. The convenant controlled land association provides a "public" outhouse for the use of the recreational landowners, like Mark. There is a year round spring at the base of the ridge which provides clean, cold water at some five gallons a minute. Mark carries four, two and a half gallon water jugs which are filled at the spring used as a water source at the "Cabin." The only truly modern convenience to which Mark has aquiesed, is the installation of a small electrical generator. It provides light and allows the heater to be run on cold autumn nights.


- View from the "Cabin" facing West by Northwest, across Buffalo Valley.


Mark's land is located near the center of South Park, just North of the legendary fishing reservoirs of Antero, Spinney and Eleven-Mile, impoundments which breech the main channel of the South Platte River.

South Park is a huge glacial valley encircled by great mountain ranges on three sides; East, West and North. All of these ranges dump their valley facing snow-melt into the South Platte, making it a grand and powerful river before it exits the valley through Eleven-Mile Canyon, turning Northeast towards Denver.

The South Fork, Middle Fork, Tarryall, Jefferson, Michgan are main tributaries which feed into the central river at various points in the valley.

In most years, it is a lush and fertile valley. Still, there are the years when snowpack is low and the summer rains are driven North or South, or are simply non-existant. Those years are reminders to us all that Colorado is mostly a semi-arid desert.

The following pics were taken on the Middle Fork within the Tomahawk State Wildlife lease. Mark and I fished this beautiful, glacial valley for three days.




- Gear at the ready, streamside.

I fished my favorite set up:

An old, eight foot, five weight Orvis rod; Battenkill reel with weight-forward line and a seven foot tapered leader with two feet (more or less) of 4X tippet.

The first day we threw every fly in our arsenal at the water. Dries, Wets, Nymphs...specific imitations and attractors of every size and color were tied on and cast in every possible style. I had only three strikes and one hook up in three hours.

Mark did about the same. Neither of us brought a fish to hand, much less to the frying pan. It was a frustrating, yet gorgeous and restful day.



- The Middle Fork, facing north to its headwaters.

Where we fish, the Middle Fork runs cold (never over forty degrees,) even in the middle of Summer. The Tomahawk State Wildlife lease is only forty-some odd miles downstream from its headwaters at the base of Mount Democrat (14,148 ft.). It becomes quite a formidable river in those forty miles, carrying snow melt down from five of Colorado's fifty-one (or fifty-two, depending on who you believe) peaks reaching over forteen thousand feet in altitude.

The Middle Fork, like the main river and all of its tributaries in South Park, is rich with native species of aquatic insects. There are multiple, overlapping hatches of major insect groups during the seasons when the waters are open. The Caddis (Trichoptera) was the hatch that Mark and I hoped to be lucky enough to catch. Six years ago we experienced the full Caddis hatch. The two of us spent two days catching and releasing at least twenty-five fish of nine inches or better during each day. We were sore, sunburned and smiling from ear to ear for weeks after.




- The Middle Fork athe mouth of the the glacial valley, facing South.

The drainages of all Colorado streams and rivers are formed by one of two geological phenomenon; glacial activity or water errosion. The Middle Fork, as is moves through the Tomahawk State Wildlife lease, twists and turns, creating oxbows in a gentle "U" shaped glacial valley. Over thousands of years, the river has carried silt, rock and rubble down during the wild Spring run-off and depositing it in this valley. The ox-bows which twist and turn, sometimes turning into woven side channels, allow the run-off to slow, and the deposits fill the channels creating pools and estuaries which eventually fill with the silt creating peatbogs, and rich soil and finally, this rich subalpine hay and grazing land we call South Park.


- Willow breaks surrounding the main channel.

The willow and the beaver helped create the riparian envrionment of the Middle Fork, just as they have done for all the rivers in the Central Rocky Mountains. Since the arrival of European man in the early 19th Century, the beaver are no longer a major influence. However, the willows remain. And since there are few beaver to harvest them, they can become thick, entangled forests, prohibiting access to the rivers. European man has introduced their cattle, which can, under their watchful eye of the rancher, create breaks opening flats and access to the rivers.

Cattle do not, however, build dams. It is up to man to either reintroduce the beaver or replicate his work if the historic nature of these amazing watersheds.




- Dark storm clouds build over the Middle Fork Valley.

Mark and I fished that first day until about 13:00 hours when the storm clouds, thunderheads and winds drove us from the river. Cold rain pelted us as we reached the truck. The Mourning and Eurasian doves poured into the Ponderosa as we stripped off waders and boots and vests and jumped into the cab. Cloud to cloud and ground to cloud lightning struck all about us as we drove over the alluvial ridge down into the main channel valley south of Hartsel. Mark asked me if I wanted to check out the legendary "Dream Stream" that stretch of water between Spinney and Eleven-Mile. It is mostly public water and being the tailwater of a dam, open to fishing year'round.

The "Dream Stream" http://www.coloradotrouthunters.com/dreamstream.html , (the only hotlink in this little essay), is an amazing yet exasperating.... beautiful, glorious and very technical; or ugly, nasty, wind driven and completely unfishable five mile stretch of the main channel of the South Platte River.

The storm proceeded us. Driving wind blew the rain, rattled the truck and created an amusement park ride for us as we hauled our way across South Park. It was clear, or not so, that the "Dream Stream" was in one of her nasty and unfishable moods.

We headed back to the "Cabin" to dry out, share libations and lies, food and a short poker game. We each turned in to sleep a night of sleep in the rain-washed, Aspen spiced air of South Park.

At some late point, I woke to answer Nature's call, stepped outside to find a sky filled with dripping bright stars. The storm clouds were gone. I relieved my bladder, and bearing a grand smile, returned to dream of rivers filled with monster trout and endless plains filled with elk and antelope.



- A transitional ox-bow on the Middle Fork. (Mark is a tiny figure on the upper left
hand stretch.)

Day Two:
Mark and I returned to the Middle Fork on the Tomahawk State Wildlife lease. We spent the early morning drive discussing what had worked for us, at least to a minor extent, on the previous day. Mark tied on a #14 pheasant tail nymph with a strike indicator. I began with a #14, Blonde St. Vrain Caddis dry fly. We hiked down, heading North into the interwoven channels.

Mark headed upstream, I headed down. It was, after all, a "fishing" trip...not a "catching" trip.


- Mark fishing a short leader, nymph set-up.


An hour or so later, I walked upstream to find Mark.

Neither of us had caught anything.

Narry a strike.

Nothing.

I told him I was going to try a dry fly which had drawn one good strike early yesterday. I tied on what I could only describe as a strange and abberant mutation of an Olive Stimuator. It had a bright, lime green thorax and the rest of the body looked like a traditional Stimulator. (NO....not that kind of stimulator!!!) I walked back to a promising hole, tied the #12 monster on the line and flipped it over a ragged snag into the flow above the deep hole.

Faster than thought, a black shape flashed up from the deep, hit the fly and I raised my rod tip.

The fight was on. The fish dove, bending the light tip of my rod to the water...It had to be a Brown trout, heavy and thrashing... Less than two minutes later, a tired and gasping eleven inch Brown lay in the grass bank and I stood, smiling ear to ear.





- The dark line of the Middle Fork as it flows out to meet the main channel in South Park.

I told Mark what had happened as I handed him a clone of the mutant Stimulator.

As he re-rigged his line, I returned downstream. For the rest of the day, we worked the deep holes, riffles and snags all along the Middle Fork in the Tomahawk State Wildlife lease. Between the two of us, we caught and released twelve or so fish of notable size and a number of fingerlings.

Those fingerlings defined the future of this watershed. The Colorado Division of Wildlife no longer stocks what are called "put'n'take" clones in rivers. They stock the major lakes, ponds and reservoirs with what they call "catchable" size trout, seven to ten inches. They also monitor and maintain sub-alpine and alpine lakes with remnant spawn of native cutthroats.

Mark took two fish home for his daughter. I took none.

It is my way.

We fished a bit more, then returned to the "Cabin" for celebratory drinks and dinner. We woke more later than early the next morning, ate breakfast, closed up the trailer and headed down to the valley floor.

07 July 2007.....07-07-07, the Birthday of Robert Anson Heinlein and TUA.

We stopped here and there, visited old friends, talked of the passing of parents and friends taken too young, too soon. At some point near mid-day, we turned our heavy hearts homeward, eastward, back to the heat of the high plains and this new Los Angeles, the megalopolis of Denver.

Thanks be to God.

26 May, 2007

Memorial Day ~ 28 May 2007























Aaron Boggs Anthony - Captain, U.S. Army Air Corp, 13th Air Force – 5th Heavy Bomber Group in the Pacific Theatre during WWII. Bob and his crew, members of the 31st Bomber Squadron, flew their Consolidated B-24 Liberators on 51 missions in and around the Philipine Islands.




Dad was born 23 May 1917 and died 21 Sept. 2005.





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Clayton Charles Kemp, Jr - Aviation Antisubmarine Warfare Technician 3rd ClassHS-8, CVSG-59, USS BENNINGTON United States Navy.

09 October 1947 - 12 January 1967 Wheatridge, Colorado

Panel 14E Line 017, Viet Nam Veteran's Memorial, Washington, DC




Chuck died in North Vietnamese waters when the helicopter on which he crewed went down. His body was never recovered.
It was three months and three days after his nineteenth birthday.
He was more than just a friend, he was like a brother.
As long as I draw breath, his memory will not be forgotten.

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Pearl Harbor survivor, Houston James of Dallas, embraced Marine Staff Sargent Mark Graunke Jr. during a Veteran's Day commemoration yesterday. Graunke lost a hand, an eye and a leg while difusing an IED in Iraq last year. - 11 November 2005, Associate Press