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Saturday we paddled June creek again, this time in 24 degree weather with a foot of snow on the riverbanks. T loaned me a new drysuit again, so I was happy on the water. My feet were a cold from the start, but there's a hotsprings halfway down, and we stopped there long enough to get all our cold parts thawed out. I put my paddle in the 150 degree water, and the paddle kept my hands quite warm for a good distance downstream from there. The biggest rapid is just downstream from the hotsprings---it is called Monolith. Last week I ran it first, this time Terry did. The gang is getting used us running stuff instead of waiting in the eddy for someone else to show us how.
more )
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Last weekend I paddled Saturday on the Hood River. Tucker (pie shop) to the Marina--or more like to a spot on the urban trail not far off the interstate--and within a breeze of the Columbia River. The gage read 4.5, the company was good (K, D, T), the run class II+ and continuous with lots of small surfing spots. The dam has been removed (late in 2010) and where it was there is now a rocky class III that hasn't been flushed out by a big flood yet. The right channel at that rapid looks like it could be class IV or V the first time it runs, due to a major shelf of boulders at the end that could form a gnasty hole. It didn't have any water in it at the time of our run. The shuttle for this run is absolutely gorgeous, through the highland orchards between Mt Hood and Mt Adams. Great views in all directions. Here's the bridge at the put-in.

On Sunday I met up with T, D, D, J and 3 others to paddle the June Creek section of the Clackamas, past Austin hotsprings. This is an even smaller river, perhaps largish creek, more class III flavor with one drop (Monolith) that I'd call a class IV. Level was somewhere near 2000 cfs, which was plenty but nowhere near too much. The holes were just beginning to develop. We launched with a group of 8, one took out at the hot springs, and 2 more took out after most of the group got roundly thumped at Monolith. I didn't scout and ran first after I was told it was clear of wood. D took a hit to her cheekbone and was nauseous with a headache, and this after having gotten walloped earlier by a log. Losing half your group seems to be a common occurrence on June creek. I completely respect boaters who have the guts to admit that the river is more than they want on a given day, and go for a riverside walk instead. This run has some continuous sections that require that a boater be on their game. And there is quite a bit of wood to contend with.
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We all know that the hospital is the last place you want to go, unless you really desperately need to be there. That's where the gnarly infections live.

Healthgrades compared mortality data from hospitals across the US and rated them all. I'm pleased to say that Memorial in Chattanooga, TN, made the list, as well as the Mayo clinic hospital in Phoenix, AZ. The Great Lakes region has a top 50 hospital in every state. Ohio and Florida had the most top hospitals (per state). Not a single OR, WV or NY (et. al.) hospital made the list.
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I heard on NPR the other day that the percentage of homes in Oregon that do not have indoor plumbing is increasing. They consider indoor plumbing to be all three of these: flush toilet, tub or shower, and running hot and cold.
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Have you got your vote sorted out for Nov 2?
I'm voting for Kitzhaber but beyond that I have some work to do.
some places you could start, esp for Oregon voters )
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Pictures here.

Got two great new river slang terms for my collection:
Static Clutz = When you really need to be doing something and you do nothing.
Dynamic Clutz = When you really need to be doing something and you do the wrong thing.
Thanks to Alex.
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This squirt spot above is not far from Portland, on the Washougal. There's another good squirt spot on the Clackamas.
I just acquired a squirt boat, and this is what it is designed to do.
I think it was made by Jim Snyder.
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When I drove into Oregon a few days ago I noticed a thick white haze over Pendleton. A day or so later I heard on the NPR news that the widespread haze had blown here from extensive fires burning in Russia. Apparently it's ungodly hot there and the peat bogs are burning. Today I learn that people are getting worried that the burns in Russia are sending radioactive particulates into the air that has been stored in the biomass there since the Chernobyl accident 24 years ago. My goodness.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38648372/ns/world_news-the_new_york_times

Frankly, though, we Americans cannot point too many fingers at other nations who've made contaminating mistakes as long as we are actively engaging in toxic warfare for oil: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/toxic-legacy-of-us-assault-on-fallujah-worse-than-hiroshima-2034065.html
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She's running for congress. I met her today. I was downtown with a friend to go shoe shopping, and stopped by the festival in Heritage Square. It a marijuana legalization event and it was was fairly dead. She was trying to get my vote. )

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