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	<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast</strong></p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2"> </p>

<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Episode Summary</h2>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into technical thoughts on camera equipment and the creative process. He also touches on issues like light pollution, the evolving nature of digital cameras, and the unique challenges of capturing stunning night sky photography.</p>

<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Chapter Guide</h2>





Timestamp
Chapter Title
Segment Highlights




00:00
Opening &amp; Creative Reflections
Creative challenge in photography, blending business and creative growth, brief show intro with music.


01:30
Website &amp; Book Plugs
Directing listeners to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and his photo books on Amazon; themes — film, desert, surrealism.


02:30
Camping &amp; Comet NEOWISE
Recounts July camping in Eastern Oregon seeking views and photographs of NEOWISE; context of earlier “great comets.”


06:30
Childhood Astronomy Memories
Reminiscing about viewing comets Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake in the 1990s; missing Halley’s comet and thoughts on astronomical cycles.


08:30
NEOWISE Observing Details
Discusses best locations, challenges of light pollution and haze near sea level, and the difference clear mountain skies make.


10:30
Field Photography and Stargazing
Describes equipment and techniques: using binoculars, manual focus, and camera settings, plus tips for night sky shots in the John Day River valley.


15:00
Outdoor Adventure Recap
Details on the travel route, dispersed camping, Oregon terrain, rivers, geology, and solitude near the John Day River.


19:00
More on NEOWISE and Night Shots
Observing NEOWISE in prime conditions, handling photography challenges, recording images till late night, astronomical observation techniques.


22:30
Tech Talk: Cameras &amp; Workflow
Reflections on camera gear — Sony a7R, its quirks, “chimping,” differences with older cameras, and latest high-speed image technology.


27:00
Outro &amp; Calls to Action
Directs to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and Patreon, thanks listeners, previews new content, and encourages support.





 



<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Support the Podcast</h2>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">If you enjoyed this episode, visit billynewmanphoto.com/support or patreon.com/billynewmanphoto to participate in the value-for-value model and find ways to help keep the podcast going. Check out new blog posts, photo books, and more behind-the-scenes content.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>View links at <a href="https://wnp.app/">wnp.app</a></p>
<p>Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.</p>
<p><strong>Quick Links:</strong>Portfolio: <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs">billynewmanphoto.com/photographs</a>Studio: <a href="http://wphoto.co/">wphoto.co</a>Posts: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts/">billynewmanphoto.com/posts</a>Photo Books: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/books/">billynewmanphoto.com/books</a>Amazon Author: <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman">amazon.com/author/billynewman</a></p>
<p><strong>Podcast Episodes:</strong>Billy Newman Photo Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/billynewmanphotopodcast/">Listen here</a>Relax with Rain: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/relaxwithrain/">Listen here</a>Night Sky Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/thenightskypodcast/">Listen here</a></p>
<p><strong>Connect With Billy Newman:</strong>Email: <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">billy@billynewmanphoto.com</a>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">@billynewman</a>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/billymnewmanphoto/">billynewmanphoto</a>X (Twitter): <a href="https://x.com/billynewman">@billynewman</a></p>
<p><strong>Recommended Books:</strong>Landscape Portfolio (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_portfolio-EBOOK-DRAFT-better-2.pdf">Download</a>Black and White Photography (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_Black-and-White-EBOOK-DRAFT-better.pdf">Download</a>Working With Film (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Western-Overland-Excursion-E-book-0812.pdf">Download</a>Western Overland Excursion (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Working_With_Film.pdf">Download</a></p>
<p><strong>Support the Podcast &amp; Photography Projects:</strong>Make a sustaining financial donation: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/">Visit Support Page</a></p>
<p><strong>Podcast Forward:</strong>The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.</p>














<p>[MUSIC] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. I hear different industries kind of talk about what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography. There's a lot of the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of how do you get paid and how do you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of a thing. But still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media and with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out. And that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting. I'm kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff. But it's something that I've been really interested for a long time. [MUSIC] You can see more of my work at BillyNewmanPhoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up Billy Newman under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. And I wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some of the outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I did out toward Eastern Oregon, I think like last, or what was a week before last is when I was out in this area. And I was trying to get some good observations in for Comet NeoWise. I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there. I think that was why we had the new moon before it switched over to being a gibbous moon or a nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think, what was it, around the 15th through the 25th or so of July, there were some pretty good observations to be made of Comet NeoWise. I guess after reading about it a little bit, it's not considered a great comet, like HaleBopp was, or I think it was Hayataki in 1996. We haven't had a great comet in a long time. I've ever seen those when I was a kid though, and that was pretty cool. Watching HaleBopp come through for, it seemed like three months or something. You were just looking at that in the low corners of the Northwestern and Western skies. It was cruising across the skyline there. I remember that still from third, fourth grade when it was coming through. And I also remember the year before that, when straight up in the sky at night, for it was only a week or so. I was a kid, but I remember for that week, you could see a real bright two-tailed comet that was going through. I think, I can't remember how to pronounce it, I think it's Hayataki or, I think it's some Japanese name, I'm pretty sure. But that was a really cool one. That one I still remember really clearly. I was only like, I don't know, seven or something when that, when that comet came through, but I really appreciate getting to make some observations. So that one, when I was a kid, I missed Haley's comet though, back in what, '87, I think was the last one it came through. And I probably will be the few years or that, that decade or two of age range that doesn't get to see Haley's comet in their lifetime. So I think I was born in '88, of course. So if I make it past a hundred, maybe I'll see it. What is it? Maybe like 80 something years. So it's probably not going to come back around until, I think it's like the 2070s or 2080s that I'd have to make it to, for to see Haley's comet again. It'd be fun, but I don't know, maybe we'll see how future, how the, you know, the future is at that time. But it was really cool to get to see comet Neowise. It was just a little below what would be the legs and feet of Ursa Major, the Big Dipper or like the Big Bear as it would kind of be observed. But if you kind of look at the Dipper part that we're all mostly familiar with, if you kind of consider Ursa Major, the larger bear constellation that it's structured on, if you kind of look down below the Dipper is where I was able to make my observations, the comet Neowise. And over here in the elevation area that I'm at in Western Oregon, it's about 200 or 300 feet above sea level. And there's kind of a constant problem with haze and with light pollution in this area. And I think it has to do something with, well, like, I mean, of course, you know, the amount of population that's around, but also there's something about the air quality or about how the air kind of flows out around here that just doesn't ever seem to be as crisp or as dark as you can get up in the mountains. And really, it's just like a stunning difference when you're able to get out further and make some some more clear observations. You know, the level of magnitude of stars that you're able to reveal just in a dark night is so much more crisp and clear. It's just like a it's a total difference. So it was cool to I think I first was able to spot just a little fuzzy bit of a second magnitude version of comet Neowise while I was here in town. But I tried to make a special trip out toward eastern Oregon out into the desert just to do some camping stuff. But what I wanted to do at the same time was make some good observations and also try and get some good photographs of common Neowise as it was coming through during its period where you could you could make some some good sightings. But it was cool. So going out to eastern Oregon, as it got dark a little past 1030 or so, as you look to the northwest, you could really see the comet and its tail spread for a couple inches in the sky. And I was really surprised to notice how little of it you could really make out or see when you're in an area of almost any light pollution once you're back in town or once you're in a lower elevation area with some light pollution and haze around. It was really difficult to make out in the same way that I could out in the desert or out in the mountains. And so I thought that was pretty cool to get to get to see and get to check out over there. But yeah, it was a blast getting to do some stuff out in eastern Oregon. I went over to the John Day River area and I was checking out that area. There's a lot of public land out in that area, but there's also some a lot of private land, too. It's just kind of an interesting area, how it's sort of broken up. And it was cool to get to go out, go out to the I headed out to Madras and then I took off and headed over east of there until I ran into the John Day River. And then I was able to use this map that I have to go through and find some of the open off or just the open roads that are, you know, the smaller gravel roads that are set up to kind of traverse the backcountry out there. So I was able to find a few of those that were open and travel around on those for a while. Now, that was pretty cool. I was able to find some dispersed campsites and set up right along the John Day River, which is really cool. It's a beautiful area out there. It's kind of interesting. The John Day River flows through this sort of, I guess it would be, I don't know, it's kind of like Canyonland and it's also sort of these rolling grass hills that sort of make up the landscape of Northern and Northeastern Oregon. And I think, yeah, as soon as you kind of get a little bit for like a little bit north of Bend is when you get out of the Great Basin area and you start to get into another kind of landscape that seems to stretch up north of the Columbia River up into Washington. I figured that some of it's from like really old deposits from the river systems and the waterways that were up there and how there's old deposits and then an erosion that's happened from those rivers running through the area for such a long time. But really cool to see kind of the rolling hills and then some of the carved out canyons that go through the John Day River area up there. When I found the campsite I was at, I was pretty far away from everybody and I was really far away from any substantial town. I think I was near, I don't know, I don't even know what it is. There wasn't anything there when I drove through it. There was a bridge and a couple little ranch houses, you know, real ranches, right? Like just a little house, like a little two bedroom house and then 100 acres of cattle to deal with. So it seems like another life out there. I wonder how they're dealing with, you know, kind of the way of the world as things are this summer. But it was cool, yeah, getting out there. Went to, oh yeah, I kind of set up my campsite and stuff, had my truck going, and that was all pretty easy going. But then I waited till dark after 1030. Yeah, Comet NeoWiser is really visible up below the Big Dipper. That was pretty cool to get to see out there in eastern Oregon. Really bright, really clear. You could almost make out the second tail. I have my binoculars with me. I think there's some 10 by 42s and those worked really well to view it, to view the comet. Looked really crisp through the binoculars and it got really easy to spot most of the night. Even just to the naked eye, it was really easy to spot it. Just like, oh yeah, it's right there. There's a comet. It's just a big wisp in the sky. So it was really cool to get to view it. What I did is I set up my tripod and I have my camera with me. And so I set it up with a really wide angle and then I was trying to get some photographs of it as the comet was coming down to set on the landscape of the hillside as the hours went on into the night. So I think I stayed out until maybe one or two in the morning when the Big Dipper was sort of scooping down a little low onto the horizon. And then at that point, the place where the comet was dipped below the horizon and then was out of view for the rest of the evening. And I think even into the morning, I think by that time when I was photographing it, it wasn't visible any longer up in the morning sky. I think they said at first in early July, you could kind of view it around Capella if you were able to get out early enough, say three or four in the morning. But as the direction, as it was moving, it was kind of creeping up pretty quickly, day over day over day. It would kind of move a good chunk through the sky. And the direction that it was moving, it was moving to be more visible at the nighttime, which really offered more hours of good observation time. Which I thought was pretty cool to wait until it was really dark enough in the northwest view of the sky, probably about 1030 onward is when you were finally able to make out those kind of finer points of light in the sky in that region. So it was really cool to set up the tripod, set up the camera, set up some manual focus to get it kind of set sharp. You can't use autofocus when you're trying to make photographs of the night sky and the stars because it just kind of seeks back and forth. You have to set it to manual focus and then ring out your focus ring to infinity and then just back a little bit. You'll notice this every time if you do it. It's really frustrating, the dark, because you can't really always make it out in an easy way and edit your mistake quickly. But if you go all the way to infinity and then take pictures there of the night sky, you're going to notice that those points of light that are the stars sort of end up a little fuzzy. And it's because all the way to infinity for whatever reason just isn't quite in focus at infinity. So you have to go all the way out to infinity and then back it off just a little bit. And that'll nearly ensure that most of that part of the image is in focus the whole way. And it's difficult even if you do have an f-stop that's a little bit more tightened out, say like an f4 or f6 or something, you're still going to get a lot of that out of focus softness. If the focus ring isn't really dialed into the right spot. So I try to work on that a little bit. And yeah, dialed in my focus was able to set it up with a reasonable ISO to get some images of the night sky and pick up some of those finer points of light. And then I was able to take a series of photographs in a few different locations out there in the John Day River Valley, which I thought was really cool. It was pretty to be out there and it was a nice night, really warm in the river canyon. And really remote too, like I was mentioning, I think I was the only person out there for a few miles. I saw another group coming in on a, they had like a little mid-size SUV and they were going fishing out at a bend in the river a couple miles up from where I was. And so I took my truck down a little further and camped out just on the side of the river. It was cool, nice green river up to the kind of high desert tan rim rock that runs the area around there. So it was a cool evening, cool campsite area. It was a cool spot to check out Comet NeoWise too. So I tried to check it out up until, I don't know what, you know, 1.30 in the morning when I couldn't see it anymore. And then spent the night out there out in the John Day River area. And then the next morning got up and tried to check out some of the different roads and stuff that went around. You can check out more information at billynumanphoto.com. You can go to billynumanphoto.com/support if you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at billynumanphoto.com/support. You can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it. If you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon, that's patreon.com/billynumanphoto. I've got the Sony a7R going through its paces. It's been really cool using it for the last couple weeks. I've been trying to figure out its idiosyncrasies and there are a lot of them. There's a lot of them with these newer cameras and I can see definitely where from the a7R or from the first series of the a7s to the a7II and so on and so forth with the better and different accentuated camera models, they get better. They really do get better. There are some things with the first renditions of the electronic viewfinder and the system of how that takes photos, how it kind of interrupts when you're taking photos that don't quite seem to the level of professionalism that I'm really trying to hit for. I know that there's a lot of custom settings that I have to go into and sort of tweak how that a7R is going to be grabbing at photos and then how it's chimping. You guys heard of that before? Chimping. I don't know what it really has to do with but it's referring to when you take a photograph or you take a couple of photographs and then you look down at that screen on the bottom of your digital camera, the back plate of your digital camera. You look down and you see the photo and then you come up, you recompose and you shoot again and then come down and look at it. It's, I guess, I don't understand it completely. It just seems sort of like a modern approach to something that the technology allows you to do. I think it's totally acceptable but for whatever reason, it is sort of an interference in the creative or in the photography process sometimes. I know that there are many pros, all of those pros coming from a past world that's no longer here a film where it wasn't really acceptable to do half shutter press autofocus. You have to do autofocus from the back and then shutter is its own system. With that, there's all these kind of silly rules about how you can use focus, how you can use composition stuff, how you can set up your frame, when you can look at the screen or when you can review the images. I guess these film shooters, they thought it was uncouth to be able to review or see the photograph before the film was developed or before it was later on. Interesting and I see kind of psychologically there's this path that does seem to create better work or more intuitive photographs and those are better. They are more needed and I can see where some of these tricks might get you closer to that but the idea of just looking at the back of the screen that doesn't impede you so much and it doesn't really stop you. If you're a pro and you know what you're doing, you look at the screen, you're looking at the screen because you know why you're looking at the screen. It doesn't really seem to make sense that there's these sort of sideways rules about features you can and can't use that are put into your camera. But to speak about efficiency, the problem that I noticed about the a7R is that it will display the image to you for about a second and a half, two seconds and it will display it on the screen but it'll also display it in the electronic viewfinder for your eye. And you can shut this feature off but there's still a little bit of a hiccup around the time that you hit the shutter button. And the problem with this is if I'm framed up to take a photograph, let's say of a situation I remember back at OSU when I was shooting sports a lot, let's say there's a football game, I'm out in front of the action and I see that the beefs set up a play, they throw a pass, the guy gets it, he's right in the pocket on the third of the frame that I have and I have focus tracking on him. I want to take a series of shots with a high frame rate so I can get that whole run of action as he moves towards me. And so the issue that I'm having is in photography you're trying to select moments that look good. That's kind of the point. Aesthetically you want them to be choices that are appealing and that has to do a lot with gesture, a lot with movement, a lot with kind of positioning and framing and composition and sort of thoughtfully considering what does the person look like? How are all these things in the frame relating to each other and is it going to work when you press the shutter? And the difficulty is with these a7Rs or even with the Sony a6000 when I'm looking at it and I take this series of photographs, I'm almost blind that whole time. Whereas before in the past when I would have been working with an SLR, there's the shutter flap where you see black for just a moment but it comes back and it's optically correct immediately. It's optically correct to what you're going to be shooting but with the EVF there's just enough lag that in high action you seem to kind of miss where the gesture is. If stuff's moving around it seems like you almost have to kind of guess or assume that the next moment's going to happen and then try and take it but you can't see it. It's weird. It's like it shuts off the viewfinder right at the time that you need to be looking through it. And so in some ways like that it's a little bit complicated of am I framed up right? Am I looking at the thing right? When I take the picture it just shows me something else all of a sudden. And I know that they've solved a lot of these problems like if you look up the Sony a9 and some of the features that it has if you bring that into high speed shooting it's got this interesting system where instead of having the electronic viewfinder blink black or cut out completely have the processor move all of its attention to processing that image that it just captured and then bring back the electronic viewfinder momentarily later. What we see in the a9 is a system where there's the bracket. There's like a let's say like a red focus bracket that kind of goes around and you're shooting, you're shooting, you're shooting. But what you're seeing is instead of the electronic viewfinder blinking out black and then showing you a frame or just blinking out black and then coming back on what we see is just that bracket, that red bracket blink yellow or blink from black to yellow or black to red or something like that. And all that's indicating is that it is firing frames, but you're just still seeing it completely normally like you would view any action on a screen. And that's a really interesting process. I think it's like, I don't know, it's like 20 frames a second or something like that. It's almost video at that point when you're shooting raw frames. Are you kidding me? Raw frames on a Sony a9 at God knows what almost 50 megapixels that it's shooting at. And you can do 20 frames a second just looking at the thing and then seeing a little black bar blink yellow and that's signaling that you're capturing all that data. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com. A few new things up there, some stuff on the home page, some good links to other, other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts, links to some blog posts. All pretty cool. Yeah. Check it out at Billy Newman, a photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of the podcast. Talk to you next time. Bye. [MUSIC]</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast
 

Episode Summary
Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into ]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast</strong></p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2"> </p>

<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Episode Summary</h2>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into technical thoughts on camera equipment and the creative process. He also touches on issues like light pollution, the evolving nature of digital cameras, and the unique challenges of capturing stunning night sky photography.</p>

<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Chapter Guide</h2>





Timestamp
Chapter Title
Segment Highlights




00:00
Opening &amp; Creative Reflections
Creative challenge in photography, blending business and creative growth, brief show intro with music.


01:30
Website &amp; Book Plugs
Directing listeners to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and his photo books on Amazon; themes — film, desert, surrealism.


02:30
Camping &amp; Comet NEOWISE
Recounts July camping in Eastern Oregon seeking views and photographs of NEOWISE; context of earlier “great comets.”


06:30
Childhood Astronomy Memories
Reminiscing about viewing comets Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake in the 1990s; missing Halley’s comet and thoughts on astronomical cycles.


08:30
NEOWISE Observing Details
Discusses best locations, challenges of light pollution and haze near sea level, and the difference clear mountain skies make.


10:30
Field Photography and Stargazing
Describes equipment and techniques: using binoculars, manual focus, and camera settings, plus tips for night sky shots in the John Day River valley.


15:00
Outdoor Adventure Recap
Details on the travel route, dispersed camping, Oregon terrain, rivers, geology, and solitude near the John Day River.


19:00
More on NEOWISE and Night Shots
Observing NEOWISE in prime conditions, handling photography challenges, recording images till late night, astronomical observation techniques.


22:30
Tech Talk: Cameras &amp; Workflow
Reflections on camera gear — Sony a7R, its quirks, “chimping,” differences with older cameras, and latest high-speed image technology.


27:00
Outro &amp; Calls to Action
Directs to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and Patreon, thanks listeners, previews new content, and encourages support.





 



<h2 class="mb-2 mt-4 font-display font-semimedium text-base first:mt-0">Support the Podcast</h2>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">If you enjoyed this episode, visit billynewmanphoto.com/support or patreon.com/billynewmanphoto to participate in the value-for-value model and find ways to help keep the podcast going. Check out new blog posts, photo books, and more behind-the-scenes content.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>View links at <a href="https://wnp.app/">wnp.app</a></p>
<p>Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.</p>
<p><strong>Quick Links:</strong>Portfolio: <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs">billynewmanphoto.com/photographs</a>Studio: <a href="http://wphoto.co/">wphoto.co</a>Posts: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts/">billynewmanphoto.com/posts</a>Photo Books: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/books/">billynewmanphoto.com/books</a>Amazon Author: <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman">amazon.com/author/billynewman</a></p>
<p><strong>Podcast Episodes:</strong>Billy Newman Photo Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/billynewmanphotopodcast/">Listen here</a>Relax with Rain: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/relaxwithrain/">Listen here</a>Night Sky Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/thenightskypodcast/">Listen here</a></p>
<p><strong>Connect With Billy Newman:</strong>Email: <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">billy@billynewmanphoto.com</a>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">@billynewman</a>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/billymnewmanphoto/">billynewmanphoto</a>X (Twitter): <a href="https://x.com/billynewman">@billynewman</a></p>
<p><strong>Recommended Books:</strong>Landscape Portfolio (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_portfolio-EBOOK-DRAFT-better-2.pdf">Download</a>Black and White Photography (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_Black-and-White-EBOOK-DRAFT-better.pdf">Download</a>Working With Film (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Western-Overland-Excursion-E-book-0812.pdf">Download</a>Western Overland Excursion (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Working_With_Film.pdf">Download</a></p>
<p><strong>Support the Podcast &amp; Photography Projects:</strong>Make a sustaining financial donation: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/">Visit Support Page</a></p>
<p><strong>Podcast Forward:</strong>The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.</p>














<p>[MUSIC] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. I hear different industries kind of talk about what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography. There's a lot of the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of how do you get paid and how do you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of a thing. But still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media and with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out. And that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting. I'm kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff. But it's something that I've been really interested for a long time. [MUSIC] You can see more of my work at BillyNewmanPhoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up Billy Newman under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. And I wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some of the outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I did out toward Eastern Oregon, I think like last, or what was a week before last is when I was out in this area. And I was trying to get some good observations in for Comet NeoWise. I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there. I think that was why we had the new moon before it switched over to being a gibbous moon or a nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think, what was it, around the 15th through the 25th or so of July, there were some pretty good observations to be made of Comet NeoWise. I guess after reading about it a little bit, it's not considered a great comet, like HaleBopp was, or I think it was Hayataki in 1996. We haven't had a great comet in a long time. I've ever seen those when I was a kid though, and that was pretty cool. Watching HaleBopp come through for, it seemed like three months or something. You were just looking at that in the low corners of the Northwestern and Western skies. It was cruising across the skyline there. I remember that still from third, fourth grade when it was coming through. And I also remember the year before that, when straight up in the sky at night, for it was only a week or so. I was a kid, but I remember for that week, you could see a real bright two-tailed comet that was going through. I think, I can't remember how to pronounce it, I think it's Hayataki or, I think it's some Japanese name, I'm pretty sure. But that was a really cool one. That one I still remember really clearly. I was only like, I don't know, seven or something when that, when that comet came through, but I really appreciate getting to make some observations. So that one, when I was a kid, I missed Haley's comet though, back in what, '87, I think was the last one it came through. And I probably will be the few years or that, that decade or two of age range that doesn't get to see Haley's comet in their lifetime. So I think I was born in '88, of course. So if I make it past a hundred, maybe I'll see it. What is it? Maybe like 80 something years. So it's probably not going to come back around until, I think it's like the 2070s or 2080s that I'd have to make it to, for to see Haley's comet again. It'd be fun, but I don't know, maybe we'll see how future, how the, you know, the future is at that time. But it was really cool to get to see comet Neowise. It was just a little below what would be the legs and feet of Ursa Major, the Big Dipper or like the Big Bear as it would kind of be observed. But if you kind of look at the Dipper part that we're all mostly familiar with, if you kind of consider Ursa Major, the larger bear constellation that it's structured on, if you kind of look down below the Dipper is where I was able to make my observations, the comet Neowise. And over here in the elevation area that I'm at in Western Oregon, it's about 200 or 300 feet above sea level. And there's kind of a constant problem with haze and with light pollution in this area. And I think it has to do something with, well, like, I mean, of course, you know, the amount of population that's around, but also there's something about the air quality or about how the air kind of flows out around here that just doesn't ever seem to be as crisp or as dark as you can get up in the mountains. And really, it's just like a stunning difference when you're able to get out further and make some some more clear observations. You know, the level of magnitude of stars that you're able to reveal just in a dark night is so much more crisp and clear. It's just like a it's a total difference. So it was cool to I think I first was able to spot just a little fuzzy bit of a second magnitude version of comet Neowise while I was here in town. But I tried to make a special trip out toward eastern Oregon out into the desert just to do some camping stuff. But what I wanted to do at the same time was make some good observations and also try and get some good photographs of common Neowise as it was coming through during its period where you could you could make some some good sightings. But it was cool. So going out to eastern Oregon, as it got dark a little past 1030 or so, as you look to the northwest, you could really see the comet and its tail spread for a couple inches in the sky. And I was really surprised to notice how little of it you could really make out or see when you're in an area of almost any light pollution once you're back in town or once you're in a lower elevation area with some light pollution and haze around. It was really difficult to make out in the same way that I could out in the desert or out in the mountains. And so I thought that was pretty cool to get to get to see and get to check out over there. But yeah, it was a blast getting to do some stuff out in eastern Oregon. I went over to the John Day River area and I was checking out that area. There's a lot of public land out in that area, but there's also some a lot of private land, too. It's just kind of an interesting area, how it's sort of broken up. And it was cool to get to go out, go out to the I headed out to Madras and then I took off and headed over east of there until I ran into the John Day River. And then I was able to use this map that I have to go through and find some of the open off or just the open roads that are, you know, the smaller gravel roads that are set up to kind of traverse the backcountry out there. So I was able to find a few of those that were open and travel around on those for a while. Now, that was pretty cool. I was able to find some dispersed campsites and set up right along the John Day River, which is really cool. It's a beautiful area out there. It's kind of interesting. The John Day River flows through this sort of, I guess it would be, I don't know, it's kind of like Canyonland and it's also sort of these rolling grass hills that sort of make up the landscape of Northern and Northeastern Oregon. And I think, yeah, as soon as you kind of get a little bit for like a little bit north of Bend is when you get out of the Great Basin area and you start to get into another kind of landscape that seems to stretch up north of the Columbia River up into Washington. I figured that some of it's from like really old deposits from the river systems and the waterways that were up there and how there's old deposits and then an erosion that's happened from those rivers running through the area for such a long time. But really cool to see kind of the rolling hills and then some of the carved out canyons that go through the John Day River area up there. When I found the campsite I was at, I was pretty far away from everybody and I was really far away from any substantial town. I think I was near, I don't know, I don't even know what it is. There wasn't anything there when I drove through it. There was a bridge and a couple little ranch houses, you know, real ranches, right? Like just a little house, like a little two bedroom house and then 100 acres of cattle to deal with. So it seems like another life out there. I wonder how they're dealing with, you know, kind of the way of the world as things are this summer. But it was cool, yeah, getting out there. Went to, oh yeah, I kind of set up my campsite and stuff, had my truck going, and that was all pretty easy going. But then I waited till dark after 1030. Yeah, Comet NeoWiser is really visible up below the Big Dipper. That was pretty cool to get to see out there in eastern Oregon. Really bright, really clear. You could almost make out the second tail. I have my binoculars with me. I think there's some 10 by 42s and those worked really well to view it, to view the comet. Looked really crisp through the binoculars and it got really easy to spot most of the night. Even just to the naked eye, it was really easy to spot it. Just like, oh yeah, it's right there. There's a comet. It's just a big wisp in the sky. So it was really cool to get to view it. What I did is I set up my tripod and I have my camera with me. And so I set it up with a really wide angle and then I was trying to get some photographs of it as the comet was coming down to set on the landscape of the hillside as the hours went on into the night. So I think I stayed out until maybe one or two in the morning when the Big Dipper was sort of scooping down a little low onto the horizon. And then at that point, the place where the comet was dipped below the horizon and then was out of view for the rest of the evening. And I think even into the morning, I think by that time when I was photographing it, it wasn't visible any longer up in the morning sky. I think they said at first in early July, you could kind of view it around Capella if you were able to get out early enough, say three or four in the morning. But as the direction, as it was moving, it was kind of creeping up pretty quickly, day over day over day. It would kind of move a good chunk through the sky. And the direction that it was moving, it was moving to be more visible at the nighttime, which really offered more hours of good observation time. Which I thought was pretty cool to wait until it was really dark enough in the northwest view of the sky, probably about 1030 onward is when you were finally able to make out those kind of finer points of light in the sky in that region. So it was really cool to set up the tripod, set up the camera, set up some manual focus to get it kind of set sharp. You can't use autofocus when you're trying to make photographs of the night sky and the stars because it just kind of seeks back and forth. You have to set it to manual focus and then ring out your focus ring to infinity and then just back a little bit. You'll notice this every time if you do it. It's really frustrating, the dark, because you can't really always make it out in an easy way and edit your mistake quickly. But if you go all the way to infinity and then take pictures there of the night sky, you're going to notice that those points of light that are the stars sort of end up a little fuzzy. And it's because all the way to infinity for whatever reason just isn't quite in focus at infinity. So you have to go all the way out to infinity and then back it off just a little bit. And that'll nearly ensure that most of that part of the image is in focus the whole way. And it's difficult even if you do have an f-stop that's a little bit more tightened out, say like an f4 or f6 or something, you're still going to get a lot of that out of focus softness. If the focus ring isn't really dialed into the right spot. So I try to work on that a little bit. And yeah, dialed in my focus was able to set it up with a reasonable ISO to get some images of the night sky and pick up some of those finer points of light. And then I was able to take a series of photographs in a few different locations out there in the John Day River Valley, which I thought was really cool. It was pretty to be out there and it was a nice night, really warm in the river canyon. And really remote too, like I was mentioning, I think I was the only person out there for a few miles. I saw another group coming in on a, they had like a little mid-size SUV and they were going fishing out at a bend in the river a couple miles up from where I was. And so I took my truck down a little further and camped out just on the side of the river. It was cool, nice green river up to the kind of high desert tan rim rock that runs the area around there. So it was a cool evening, cool campsite area. It was a cool spot to check out Comet NeoWise too. So I tried to check it out up until, I don't know what, you know, 1.30 in the morning when I couldn't see it anymore. And then spent the night out there out in the John Day River area. And then the next morning got up and tried to check out some of the different roads and stuff that went around. You can check out more information at billynumanphoto.com. You can go to billynumanphoto.com/support if you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at billynumanphoto.com/support. You can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it. If you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon, that's patreon.com/billynumanphoto. I've got the Sony a7R going through its paces. It's been really cool using it for the last couple weeks. I've been trying to figure out its idiosyncrasies and there are a lot of them. There's a lot of them with these newer cameras and I can see definitely where from the a7R or from the first series of the a7s to the a7II and so on and so forth with the better and different accentuated camera models, they get better. They really do get better. There are some things with the first renditions of the electronic viewfinder and the system of how that takes photos, how it kind of interrupts when you're taking photos that don't quite seem to the level of professionalism that I'm really trying to hit for. I know that there's a lot of custom settings that I have to go into and sort of tweak how that a7R is going to be grabbing at photos and then how it's chimping. You guys heard of that before? Chimping. I don't know what it really has to do with but it's referring to when you take a photograph or you take a couple of photographs and then you look down at that screen on the bottom of your digital camera, the back plate of your digital camera. You look down and you see the photo and then you come up, you recompose and you shoot again and then come down and look at it. It's, I guess, I don't understand it completely. It just seems sort of like a modern approach to something that the technology allows you to do. I think it's totally acceptable but for whatever reason, it is sort of an interference in the creative or in the photography process sometimes. I know that there are many pros, all of those pros coming from a past world that's no longer here a film where it wasn't really acceptable to do half shutter press autofocus. You have to do autofocus from the back and then shutter is its own system. With that, there's all these kind of silly rules about how you can use focus, how you can use composition stuff, how you can set up your frame, when you can look at the screen or when you can review the images. I guess these film shooters, they thought it was uncouth to be able to review or see the photograph before the film was developed or before it was later on. Interesting and I see kind of psychologically there's this path that does seem to create better work or more intuitive photographs and those are better. They are more needed and I can see where some of these tricks might get you closer to that but the idea of just looking at the back of the screen that doesn't impede you so much and it doesn't really stop you. If you're a pro and you know what you're doing, you look at the screen, you're looking at the screen because you know why you're looking at the screen. It doesn't really seem to make sense that there's these sort of sideways rules about features you can and can't use that are put into your camera. But to speak about efficiency, the problem that I noticed about the a7R is that it will display the image to you for about a second and a half, two seconds and it will display it on the screen but it'll also display it in the electronic viewfinder for your eye. And you can shut this feature off but there's still a little bit of a hiccup around the time that you hit the shutter button. And the problem with this is if I'm framed up to take a photograph, let's say of a situation I remember back at OSU when I was shooting sports a lot, let's say there's a football game, I'm out in front of the action and I see that the beefs set up a play, they throw a pass, the guy gets it, he's right in the pocket on the third of the frame that I have and I have focus tracking on him. I want to take a series of shots with a high frame rate so I can get that whole run of action as he moves towards me. And so the issue that I'm having is in photography you're trying to select moments that look good. That's kind of the point. Aesthetically you want them to be choices that are appealing and that has to do a lot with gesture, a lot with movement, a lot with kind of positioning and framing and composition and sort of thoughtfully considering what does the person look like? How are all these things in the frame relating to each other and is it going to work when you press the shutter? And the difficulty is with these a7Rs or even with the Sony a6000 when I'm looking at it and I take this series of photographs, I'm almost blind that whole time. Whereas before in the past when I would have been working with an SLR, there's the shutter flap where you see black for just a moment but it comes back and it's optically correct immediately. It's optically correct to what you're going to be shooting but with the EVF there's just enough lag that in high action you seem to kind of miss where the gesture is. If stuff's moving around it seems like you almost have to kind of guess or assume that the next moment's going to happen and then try and take it but you can't see it. It's weird. It's like it shuts off the viewfinder right at the time that you need to be looking through it. And so in some ways like that it's a little bit complicated of am I framed up right? Am I looking at the thing right? When I take the picture it just shows me something else all of a sudden. And I know that they've solved a lot of these problems like if you look up the Sony a9 and some of the features that it has if you bring that into high speed shooting it's got this interesting system where instead of having the electronic viewfinder blink black or cut out completely have the processor move all of its attention to processing that image that it just captured and then bring back the electronic viewfinder momentarily later. What we see in the a9 is a system where there's the bracket. There's like a let's say like a red focus bracket that kind of goes around and you're shooting, you're shooting, you're shooting. But what you're seeing is instead of the electronic viewfinder blinking out black and then showing you a frame or just blinking out black and then coming back on what we see is just that bracket, that red bracket blink yellow or blink from black to yellow or black to red or something like that. And all that's indicating is that it is firing frames, but you're just still seeing it completely normally like you would view any action on a screen. And that's a really interesting process. I think it's like, I don't know, it's like 20 frames a second or something like that. It's almost video at that point when you're shooting raw frames. Are you kidding me? Raw frames on a Sony a9 at God knows what almost 50 megapixels that it's shooting at. And you can do 20 frames a second just looking at the thing and then seeing a little black bar blink yellow and that's signaling that you're capturing all that data. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com. A few new things up there, some stuff on the home page, some good links to other, other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts, links to some blog posts. All pretty cool. Yeah. Check it out at Billy Newman, a photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of the podcast. Talk to you next time. Bye. [MUSIC]</p>]]></content:encoded>
	<enclosure url="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast-download/12614/billy-newman-photo-podcast-266.mp3" length="15904810" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast
 

Episode Summary
Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into technical thoughts on camera equipment and the creative process. He also touches on issues like light pollution, the evolving nature of digital cameras, and the unique challenges of capturing stunning night sky photography.

Chapter Guide





Timestamp
Chapter Title
Segment Highlights




00:00
Opening &amp; Creative Reflections
Creative challenge in photography, blending business and creative growth, brief show intro with music.


01:30
Website &amp; Book Plugs
Directing listeners to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and his photo books on Amazon; themes — film, desert, surrealism.


02:30
Camping &amp; Comet NEOWISE
Recounts July camping in Eastern Oregon seeking views and photographs of NEOWISE; context of earlier “great comets.”


06:30
Childhood Astronomy Memories
Reminiscing about viewing comets Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake in the 1990s; missing Halley’s comet and thoughts on astronomical cycles.


08:30
NEOWISE Observing Details
Discusses best locations, challenges of light pollution and haze near sea level, and the difference clear mountain skies make.


10:30
Field Photography and Stargazing
Describes equipment and techniques: using binoculars, manual focus, and camera settings, plus tips for night sky shots in the John Day River valley.


15:00
Outdoor Adventure Recap
Details on the travel route, dispersed camping, Oregon terrain, rivers, geology, and solitude near the John Day River.


19:00
More on NEOWISE and Night Shots
Observing NEOWISE in prime conditions, handling photography challenges, recording images till late night, astronomical observation techniques.


22:30
Tech Talk: Cameras &amp; Workflow
Reflections on camera gear — Sony a7R, its quirks, “chimping,” differences with older cameras, and latest high-speed image technology.


27:00
Outro &amp; Calls to Action
Directs to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and Patreon, thanks listeners, previews new content, and encourages support.





 



Support the Podcast
If you enjoyed this episode, visit billynewmanphoto.com/support or patreon.com/billynewmanphoto to participate in the value-for-value model and find ways to help keep the podcast going. Check out new blog posts, photo books, and more behind-the-scenes content.
 
View links at wnp.app
Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.
Quick Links:Portfolio: billynewmanphoto.com/photographsStudio: wphoto.coPosts: billynewmanphoto.com/postsPhoto Books: billynewmanphoto.com/booksAmazon Author: amazon.com/author/billynewman
Podcast Episodes:Billy Newman Photo Podcast: Listen hereRelax with Rain: Listen hereNight Sky Podcast: Listen here
Connect With Billy Newman:Email: billy@billynewmanphoto.comInstagram: @billynewmanLinkedIn: billynewmanphotoX (Twitter): @billynewman
Recommended Books:Landscape Portfolio (PDF): DownloadBlack and White Photography (PDF): DownloadWorking With Film (PDF): DownloadWestern Overland Excursion (PDF): Download
Support the Podcast &amp; Photography Projects:Make a sustaining financial donation: Visit Support Page
Podcast Forward:The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.














[MUSIC] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. I hear different industries kind of talk about what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography. There's a lot of the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of how do you get paid and how do you operate in a ]]></itunes:summary>
	<itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>22:05</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast
 

Episode Summary
Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into technical thoughts on camera equipment and the creative process. He also touches on issues like light pollution, the evolving nature of digital cameras, and the unique challenges of capturing stunning night sky photography.

Chapter Guide





Timestamp
Chapter Title
Segment Highlights




00:00
Opening &amp; Creative Reflections
Creative challenge in photography, blending business and creative growth, brief show intro with music.


01:30
Website &amp; Book Plugs
Directing listeners to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and his photo books on Amazon; themes — film, desert, surrealism.


02:30
Camping &amp; Comet NEOWISE
Recounts July camping in Eastern Oregon seeking views and photographs of NEOWISE; context of earlier “great comets.”


06:30
Childh]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>265 Blue Hour Coast and Cold Mountain Nights: Oregon Photography Adventures</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-265/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2025 11:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=12613</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast</strong>
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Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.
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<strong>Podcast Episodes:</strong>
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<strong>Recommended Books:</strong>
Landscape Portfolio (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_portfolio-EBOOK-DRAFT-better-2.pdf">Download</a>
Black and White Photography (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_Black-and-White-EBOOK-DRAFT-better.pdf">Download</a>
Working With Film (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Western-Overland-Excursion-E-book-0812.pdf">Download</a>
Western Overland Excursion (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Working_With_Film.pdf">Download</a>
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<strong>Podcast Forward:</strong>
The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.
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[Music] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman Photo Podcast. I&#8217;m talking about a photograph that I made on the Oregon coast today doing Blue Hour probably. I think it was after the sun had set. It was sort of like the golden hour to talk about right as the hour as the sun is setting into sunset. The blue hour they also talk about as after the sun goes down there&#8217;s a lot of those blue kind of purple tones that show up in the atmosphere or you know in the clouds and in the water. There&#8217;s just a lot more of that tone as the sun drops and it&#8217;s a spectrum shift from what we see in the daylight to what we see at night time. But I think this was a photograph taken on the Oregon coast. I think your band-in if I&#8217;m right. And I really liked this photo. It just had it wasn&#8217;t really a big structure in the wave or a big curl or anything like that. That would be that&#8217;d be really striking but I really appreciate this photograph as kind of a close-up look at I just sort of the dreamy feeling of being on the coast. But it was definitely a photograph that I liked a lot and I like that line in the skies as it cuts across as you can kind of see at the top there there&#8217;s a bit of like a cloud break that goes down and that&#8217;s where we get a lot of that light from the sky in the background that kind of cuts underneath that big brim of cloud that goes over the top of the snet that causes a lot of bounce from the ground back up to the sky and then back down and you get a cooler or you get a defused sort of soft light in that effect which I think is really cool. You can see more of my work at billyneuminphoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up billyneumin under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. Finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain creek there in the cascades a couple days ago. That was that like Wednesday. I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was this super moon that was coming up that night if I remember right and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there and they always talk about the super moon which is kind of a I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s a little bit of a misnomer but it&#8217;s cool to see too that I think they talk about happening every six months or so. Really it&#8217;s just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities and the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer that it&#8217;s maximum and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away and it&#8217;s distant maximum but I think it&#8217;s really like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though it&#8217;s a thing I learned way back and I think they they they show it in a scene in Apollo 13 but if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times you&#8217;re able to cover the entire full moon just with your thumbnail. It&#8217;s pretty wild but you got kind of always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky and really a lot of the time it&#8217;s it&#8217;s just as big as your thumbnail at arm&#8217;s reach which is kind of a trip but it&#8217;s kind of a it was cool to see the super moon that night it was really bright it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of look at how it was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me that was kind of nice to see cold that night though man I tell you so I have a 15 degree sleeping bag and that&#8217;s great 15 degrees is fine but and 15 degrees really is is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up in and during the summertime where it&#8217;s I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets but when it says 15 degrees it really means you&#8217;re going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience I think it means you&#8217;re going to stay alive that until it&#8217;s about 15 degrees so if it were me again buying something for maybe I don&#8217;t know a more heavy three season camping experience most of the time probably a lot of the nights out that I do even though I like to go at all times a year it seems like the majority of nights I go out are during the summer months or during like pretty fair weather seasons but if I were going to buy again which I&#8217;m going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going if I was going to buy again I&#8217;d probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree you know I could really use the warms because man what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what would have been probably maybe I don&#8217;t know 29 or something like that it was you know it was a bit below freezing who knows how cold it really was it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon I thought it was a clear night but I thought it would be relatively sheltered and yeah it was a lot of it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up and it was a cold cold night to sit through too so yeah that 15 degree bag was just hold up out there but yeah if I was going to go again I think they have like a zero degree bag and then down below that they have like a negative 15 and like maybe like a negative 30 degree bag negative 30 sounds like a real warm like down back so I think mine&#8217;s a synthetic bag they talk about this sometimes where there&#8217;s like differences in the the thermal insulation qualities of the material that your sleeping bag is made out of and I think that the for it was it was an improvement actually you know above whatever cotton we were using for a while they were using wool stuff which was pretty smart that that works really well to be an insulating material and it doesn&#8217;t all right it works well with moisture and stuff and all the other things we know about marina wool is really cool everybody knows about that kind of stuff but we had like you know those really terrible big cotton sleeping bags way back those erupted and I don&#8217;t know if they were really even that insulating then they switched over to those synthetic materials which is probably all oil based is that sound right like a petroleum based like plastics product that was made out of synthetics I think that&#8217;s how they spin up a lot of those those I don&#8217;t know just those synthetic types of materials that they&#8217;re making these nylons out of so I think that was how all out of this this synthetic stuff had been made but really I think what they they talk about being the superior insulator is down and that&#8217;s what I&#8217;d hope to try and find as another zero degree or negative 15 degree sleeping bag would be a negative 15 degree down bag which is normally a bit more expensive you know when you&#8217;re looking around at the price points for these different sleeping bags if you&#8217;re trying to get into some colder weather camping stuff what you&#8217;re going to find is at those name brand or you know not even name brand this is a just a a bespoke manufacturer for a quality technical outdoors product is going to be very expensive and so that&#8217;s where you&#8217;re going to find I don&#8217;t know well you know three three 99 for a sleeping bag two 99 four 99 six 99 I&#8217;ve seen like a lot of pretty expensive prices out there I think Nimo makes some bags that are looking pretty cool that I&#8217;ve seen recommended a few times I&#8217;ve heard a big agnus they make tens most of the time though right they&#8217;re tank up and here aren&#8217;t they yeah stone glaciers one that I keep hearing kind of pop up here and there now for some sense marm it I think got some bags all right eyes so is you know a retailer of recreational equipment they&#8217;re closed right now though so I don&#8217;t even know if you could get an order from anyone like that but but they have some bags I think that&#8217;s where my synthetic bag was from that I&#8217;ve been using for the last I don&#8217;t know seven years or so so that&#8217;s it&#8217;s been fine but I also tested out the sleeping mat I got I got a new thermo rest sleeping mat and now big news it&#8217;s pretty exciting guys stay tuned it&#8217;s uh yeah it&#8217;s a larger sleeping mat than I have before but it&#8217;s a coded one with the I think it&#8217;s kind of like I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s ballistic now but it&#8217;s that nylon coating over it so it&#8217;s not just the rubber mat at the base of it so you can throw it on the ground or on the semi abrasive materials that it would be outside and it&#8217;s working great I think it&#8217;s about one inch thick or so it&#8217;s about 25 inches wide at the shoulder point and it&#8217;s long enough to fit my old body which is probably a new one for me so yeah I got a solid camp mat I think for the last like three years I&#8217;m sleeping on one that goes flat about four hours after you start sleeping so that&#8217;s kind of nice to swap out I don&#8217;t know why I put up with it for so long really should do that sleep is like one of the best things you can get you know if you can figure out just like a couple easy things to take care of when you&#8217;re out camping or out in the woods and stuff it&#8217;s it&#8217;s probably sleep I mean that&#8217;s like the thing that takes you know and it&#8217;s frustrating too because when like even the last one I&#8217;m talking about didn&#8217;t sleep very well way too cold part of it you know enough shelter enough stuff that was kind of comfortable but really as it is yeah it&#8217;s like oh I need to I need to figure out a couple other extra things to kind of throw in there but yeah there&#8217;s just a couple things you can figure out when you&#8217;re going camping like how to stay warm or how to be comfortable when you do go or like when you are sleeping it&#8217;s like one of the most important and most I don&#8217;t know effective things you can do to kind of improve the way that a trip goes because like yeah I can be like I can be brutal the next day if you don&#8217;t get any sleep the night before which is probably the first half dozen camping trips of the year you know this first half dozen or so overnight to the year I&#8217;m just always kind of groggy and like oh why don&#8217;t I have to get up right now which is sort of how it was Wednesday morning when I woke up yeah I popped up and I think it was probably about five a.m. or so that I that I got up I think it was just about first light the sun had come up yeah but there&#8217;s a little bit of light up in the sky and the stars were kind of washed out by the blue sky so I hopped up and the fire was out I think from the night before like I was mentioning how those the sticks had worn out and the colds had started burning down even I think by the time I was near the end of my last podcast so I hopped out and the the back windows were clear there wasn&#8217;t any frost on it but the front window the windshield was ice over pretty hard really I mean it looked like it was you know like coated in water and then froze over solid so it wasn&#8217;t even just kind of like a fluffy bit of white frost or something that had built up on it through fog it just looked like a hard coating of just a nice sheet over the windshield so that no great I don&#8217;t have an ice scraper or something with me I&#8217;m thinking it&#8217;s me you know who needs an ice scraper I&#8217;m taking a sip of coffee so yeah I don&#8217;t know I grabbed a box I think it was a piece of cardboard out of the back that I could kind of flex around a bit through that over the windshield tried to run the truck for a bit try to warm it up it took a while too but yeah scraped off some ice scraped off a whole big enough to kind of get started on the drive and then prepped to take off but yeah I took some photos and stuff around the campsite for a bit first in the morning nice draw on the valley like I was talking about that goes up to that that ridge point that you can kind of see off in the distance and I think I could see like the the fire from the smoke or the smoke from the fire of the neighboring campers over there I don&#8217;t know if I&#8217;d mentioned it well yeah I definitely didn&#8217;t last one how they were they&#8217;re kind of doing brotes out in the on the road around sunset I think I got a little clip of it on video but yeah it&#8217;s like four or five of them and these kind of beater late 90s four by four trucks doing spins out in the dirt roads so looks fun I don&#8217;t know but they were I think getting the fire going and stuff in the morning too or whatever they had going from the night before if you can see a plume of it coming up from that area they would have been camping in over by the the creek bed downhill and yeah it was cool it took some photos and stuff that morning walked around kind of cleaned up the camp a little bit put the fire stuff out and jumped in the truck had that little hole in the ice to see through and then yeah popped on a podcast and cruised down the road and so what I was trying to do was it was take off down to a couple other spots along the creek while it was still morning and then head down ultimately to the area where the lake started to build up and so kind of how it works is like it kind of flows down the creek and then there&#8217;s a dam at a point ultimately and then back right behind the dam is a reservoir where that creek is kind of built up and I guess now is yeah a body of water out there so drove down a ways and took some photographs of the creek and the morning light and some of the water and stuff coming through I really like that kind of affected the the sort of early spring kind of fresh snow melt mountain creek stuff that just sort of looks really crisp and forested and natural and then I came down a ways further to a bridge that kind of cuts across the span of the creek as it starts to sort of widen out into the reservoir area and it looks like a you know a big stretch of calm water out on the edge of the the bridge where I think two different groups that were doing some fishing in the morning and yeah it seems like people are still out it was a busy area up there is still still definitely pretty fully populated set of people you know even during this lockdown period there&#8217;s a bunch of people out there hanging out in fishing I think it was two different different groups it too maybe they were they were all kind of connected but yeah they were they were out there with a couple lines over the bridge and they were picking up a couple things and things so I saw a lady that was pulling up in a little a little blue kayak to the ramp on the first day and on her what is that thing you know when you you run it through the gilling at you got the fish and stuff anyway just she pulled up with like got it is like four or five trout or something on her on her in her kayak I don&#8217;t know that&#8217;s where I&#8217;ll leave it I guess but she pulled up with four or five trout so I figured these guys these guys were doing a little bit of trout fish out there which sounds fun it&#8217;s a nice clear crisp morning stuff like I was saying so yeah it sounds like it&#8217;d be nice to be out there for a couple hours doing sufficient and yeah it looked like they were they were up to it they were getting a couple things it&#8217;s cool to a son osprey that they took off I think over the lake area just at that time and would kind of like pull up at certain spots over the water kind of back flap to hold in the same spot and look under water and see if there was something and then I don&#8217;t know didn&#8217;t see enough or didn&#8217;t see a prime opportunity and then we&#8217;re gonna swoop off and then take off to a different section of the lake and do it again so watch that about three or four times try to take a couple pictures of the area which you&#8217;re nice too I like the photographs that I got that morning it&#8217;s got to got a nice nice look to it really you know a lot of the time the photographs really look a lot better when you just select the right time of day to be somewhere which you know is obvious but just the types of colors and the types of saturation and dynamics that you get in the the look of a pretty simple you know set of trees and water it just comes off a lot better when it&#8217;s it&#8217;s just the right type of light it&#8217;s really amazing to to kind of see what differences it makes when it&#8217;s a cloud a day or a sunny day or a morning or an evening or midday really it seems like the dynamics of the light change so much that you can get like a totally different look in the photo which is always kind of interesting to pay attention to and sort of see how that how that goes what changes about it and sort of how that affects the photographs that you&#8217;re making I mean you can have you know some cool at any time of day but it&#8217;s kind of cool to figure out how it works for you or how it works or what I&#8217;m trying to do is how how to figure out how how it works for my photographs and what I&#8217;m trying to do which is nice I don&#8217;t know it was cool going out there and climbing around the creeks and stuff in the morning and taking a couple photos and water and osprey and going over to the lake area that&#8217;s trying to work on similar stuff to what I&#8217;ve done before but kind of that mirrored look of the really calm water as it spreads across the lake in the morning and then the reflection of the the bright blue kind of pre-sunlit sky or how is it you know like before the sun is actually up over the horizon there&#8217;s not a lot of intensity so it&#8217;s just kind of a softer blue glow in a lot of ways and then there&#8217;s still enough illumination that you can see the greens and the trees and sort of the soft calm water in the morning before it gets kind of agitated through the rest of the day so nice kind of peaceful looks to the the photos and sort of the natural stuff that I like to go kind of capture you know really ultimately though there&#8217;s some nice stuff up there and I was really like happy to kind of photograph some of the some of what I was looking for but I was also also frustrated in the area too I think there was a there&#8217;s is a little more choked off than what I normally like like there wasn&#8217;t as many opportunities as I had hoped for I had to try and you know utilize the ones that I found but there wasn&#8217;t as many opportunities as I had hoped for for kind of an opened up wide scene that you could set up a landscape photo and there wasn&#8217;t a lot of elements to really work with it was just sort of a you know that&#8217;s like some rolling hills off to a green hill so sometimes I&#8217;m trying to find some stuff that&#8217;s a little bit more dynamic and it&#8217;s look than that but it&#8217;s fun though even as it is anyway though I&#8217;m trying to I think maybe like I was mentioned last one I got stuck and turned around but the snow and I didn&#8217;t want to deal with any of that right now but in the next weeks and stuff I want to get up to Mount Jefferson or Mount Washington or a couple of these other wilderness areas that they have a few kind of visual landmarks that would be worth taking an observation of you can check out more information at billynewmanphoto.com you can go to billynewmanphoto.com afford slash support if you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we&#8217;re running this podcast with if you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about you&#8217;re welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at billynewmanphoto.com for slash support you can also find more information there about patreon and the way that I use it if you&#8217;re interested or are feel more comfortable using patreon that&#8217;s patreon.com for slash billy newmanphoto I wanted to talk today about some stuff that I&#8217;ve been doing this last week for the last few weeks I&#8217;ve been talking about some outdoor stuff and some things kind of related to the lockdown pandemic stuff but I kind of changed what I was talking about a little bit for this podcast but I wanted to get into was some of the training stuff I&#8217;ve been looking into around logic pro 10.5 that has just come out recently and I thought it&#8217;d be kind of kind of cool to go over a little bit of an overview of some of the new features and stuff that are there and some of the stuff that you can do with a digital audio workstation and why why I&#8217;d bother talking about it but I think it was about about a year ago or so I was talking about setting up the studio in the house that I&#8217;m not here and how I was getting a PC computer ready to go is an older one is I think like something from some test up I had around from from 2010 or 11 or so yeah yeah about that time and I remember getting that computer setup with a I think it was yeah I had like windows 10 on it and then I was using I think the same audio interface usb out into the computer and then I downloaded I downloaded sonar the new version of sonar that you can get for free I think it had been owned by what was k-quack sonar and then I think Gibson had bought out k-quack and so it became Gibson sonar and then I think Gibson decided that wasn&#8217;t going to be part of their business anymore so I think they just kind of shut it down essentially but then sold that off to band lab and band lab is a I think a one or it&#8217;s another internet company they have kind of a simplified digital audio workstation app that you can use to kind of create a demo or something like that but what they had done is they they&#8217;d gone through I guess and had purchased probably for a relatively inexpensive price or I don&#8217;t know I assume since they&#8217;re just they&#8217;re just keeping it and kind of hardly maintaining it or you know doing a bit to maintain it but they took the the sonar platinum program the full digital audio workstation multi-tracking tool and they made it free for people to use and for people to get but I think it&#8217;s only a Windows only program so you got to have Windows 10 to run it so I did that yeah and and sonar was a program that I&#8217;d work with before for doing some some studio multi-tracking stuff I think years ago probably around like 2012-2013 when I was when I was working with some friends to set up some studio equipment stuff was cool we had like a big sound craft ghost that was laid out and then we had a bunch of a bunch of channels kind of running into that from from the microphones they were using to track this band and then that all went into a pretty old computer was amazing what it could do you know for just a you know it&#8217;s probably like a 2 gigabyte of RAM you know smaller hard drive 2004 or 5 6 era PC computer no I probably wouldn&#8217;t need that much right there&#8217;s something about that time but that&#8217;s what we used yeah that&#8217;s like all we had all we had with us we had a I think it was like a pre-sowness audio interface and then we got like like an eight-channel audio interface that was really cool you know we had like eight eight digital audio channels coming into the interface which means we could track eight live channels into sonar at a time and it didn&#8217;t even hit up you know even on that old machine and so it was interesting how that architecture worked to do some editing stuff but so sonar is what I had been using before for some stuff really audition Adobe edition is what I&#8217;d use most for some of this kind of the more simple radio broadcast style stuff and that&#8217;s what I had learned to use when I was at when I was at a radio station doing an internship years and years ago back in 2008 right summer 2008 and did that and they used the Adobe edition version 1.5 to do all their radio production edits and yeah I remember going in taking calls with the production guy I don&#8217;t know somebody calling into do like a I think they would do like a water level report it was really interesting radio that station you know you could figure but they would have like this I don&#8217;t know something you know it&#8217;s it&#8217;s 1245 and here&#8217;s your local water level report for July 28th or something and then it would be some lady that would call in from a department that would measure the stuff and she would give her water report and the production guy you&#8217;d record it and then produce that and then it&#8217;d be prepped to go out on air later you know it was like a spot that a DJ would trigger upstairs and so we&#8217;d kind of walk through using audition to do those steps and so learning that as a program is probably the first one that I&#8217;d done which a product probably goes back to high school or before that when I was doing editing stuff but but sonar back to sonar was some of the stuff that I&#8217;d used probably give it more for the for the music you know like trying to like track a band or do like multi-tracking projects but so yeah that&#8217;s what I&#8217;d used a bit that&#8217;s why I thrown on this windows 10 PC to do some audio production stuff for this podcast workflow that I was trying to get into and it&#8217;s cool it works really well but but I stepped using that computer a while ago I think the the windows 10 computer that I&#8217;m talking about had a power supply go bad which could be replaced pretty easily and and is on a to-do list of mine but since then I&#8217;ve really just been relying on kind of like I had mentioned just recording recording onto the device and then using Adobe addition to do the post production work on my MacBook which is I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s just it&#8217;s just a more it&#8217;s just a better workflow and stuff for the most part so I&#8217;m kind of sticking with that but recently to get to the point as you are all excited logic pro 10.5 has come out now logic as yet to be mentioned in this podcast logic pro is the program that was produced by Apple as the professional digital audio work station and so there&#8217;s garage band which probably a lot of people have some experience with and garage band is sort of the trimmed down simplified home user version of a program like like logic pro and they&#8217;ve done that intentionally I think it&#8217;s the same team that generates the two programs and if you if you look at them or you look at their interfaces and you look at the types of access you have to things you really do see a familiar similarity to it which is cool so if you&#8217;ve used something like garage band in the past for home projects you won&#8217;t really have as big of a difficulty moving into a more professional digital audio workstation environment like logic pro 10 so I think it was logic pro 10 just you know 10 zero it came out when I don&#8217;t probably like 2013 or so I think that was that was sold for 200 bucks so it was like a purchase price of 199 and then since then you get the point updates for free or you know as included with your original purchase so just recently I think there had been like 10.4 before this and then now they&#8217;ve moved on to 10.5 and 10.5 I think it&#8217;s probably the biggest as noted by you know playing in new sources as noted as one of the most significant feature updates that logic has had probably in years and years I mean I think this is the first end of the concert removed and updated some of those legacy items that have been in there since 2003 or four or five you know it was just some of these legacy products that were that were originally put in there is including their interfaces too it looks like a 2002 interface for for you know like there&#8217;s these synthesizer interfaces where these these weird knobs that you have to these weird just rotating features of the interface it looks like it looks ridiculous I don&#8217;t know there were any other way to explain it but it&#8217;s it&#8217;s pretty wild for some of the some of the stuff that&#8217;s just remained in computer computer systems for a long time but for 10.5 they try to go through and update a lot of that stuff and it&#8217;s really interesting there&#8217;s a lot of cool new features in logic 10.5 so logic is real similar to sonar which is I guess kind of why I mentioned it and at least from my experience as similar you guys would probably think it&#8217;s similar to I don&#8217;t know what people that are listening probably actually have some well no one&#8217;s listening what do we say if someone were to bother to try and find some information out about logic and they ended up listening to this podcast they probably have had some information about it or they would be coming from from an experience with avid&#8217;s pro tools and pro tools is like the industry standard for multitracking DAW software and I&#8217;ve never used it I&#8217;ve never opened pro tools I&#8217;ve never seen pro tools you know in in its process at all I don&#8217;t know I&#8217;ve got I&#8217;ve looked at a couple videos or something but yeah I have no I have no experience working in pro tools and I don&#8217;t know I&#8217;m not a fan of avid&#8217;s software overall you know for pro tools or for or for the avid system of a video editing stuff either I&#8217;m just I&#8217;m not I&#8217;m not really that interested in the kind of stuff that they put together and it really for price and stuff too it just seems kind of kind of over done a little bit so I&#8217;m pretty happy with with some of the other the other more available tools that are in the consumer computer market I mean I think it&#8217;s like 800 bucks or something still to get to get avid&#8217;s pro tools and I think that in the past it was you know insanely more than that even well you know kind of proprietary back in the past it was more difficult now I think M audio is a partner with pro tools and so in the past if you have pro tools you have a lot of proprietary pro tools audio interfaces that you had to use if you wanted to set up your studio to work seamlessly with the pro tools software now I think they&#8217;ve made a deal with M audio which is sort of like a less expensive audio interface manufacturer they&#8217;ve had like interfaces and microphones and you know they&#8217;ve got like an array of I think they&#8217;ve got like some studio monitors they&#8217;ve got some interfaces they&#8217;ve got like keyboards is a big one that they&#8217;ve got I&#8217;ve got a keyboard over here from M audio and what is it yeah M audio less expensive they make pro tools interfaces which is cool now so that they&#8217;ve got a partnership with pro tools and I think that they&#8217;ve been trying to make that more accessible to musicians probably because it&#8217;s become a more competitive market with well really with like logic logic pro I think I think the industry standard set is I don&#8217;t know it always seems like more secure than it should be you know that doesn&#8217;t it doesn&#8217;t seem like an absolute the pro tools should be the the digital audio workstation of of engineers across the world but for whatever reason it&#8217;s just kind of taken over and and as those people you know are still still in those positions I think that&#8217;s that&#8217;s just with tat and audio recording school it&#8217;s like a standard even though there&#8217;s a lot of other good other good services and choices out there I think I&#8217;ve seen soar and logic taught a lot too so I don&#8217;t know they&#8217;re definitely competitive and and as I&#8217;ve been hearing more there&#8217;s there&#8217;s I don&#8217;t know there&#8217;s produced you know music producers that are coming out saying oh yeah I do a lot of a lot of my work in in logic and then there&#8217;s you know there&#8217;s a whole class of music producers that are logic based producers are stone our based producers are and all right it seems to kind of rotate around every couple years for for who&#8217;s doing water you know who wants to look cool people that use pro tools one of the cool probably a lot of time so back to back to old logic pro 10.5 here&#8217;s the good stuff so thanks a lot for checking out this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast hope you guys check out some stuff on billyneuminfoadow.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage some good links to other other outbound sources some links to books some links to some podcasts links to some blog posts all pretty cool yeah check it out at billyneuminfoadow.com thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the podcast bye see you next time [Music] [BLANK_AUDIO]]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast

View links at wnp.app

Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast ]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast</strong>
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<p>View links at <a href="https://wnp.app/">wnp.app</a></p>
<p>
Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.
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<p>
<strong>Quick Links:</strong>
Portfolio: <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs">billynewmanphoto.com/photographs</a>
Studio: <a href="http://wphoto.co/">wphoto.co</a>
Posts: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts/">billynewmanphoto.com/posts</a>
Photo Books: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/books/">billynewmanphoto.com/books</a>
Amazon Author: <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman">amazon.com/author/billynewman</a>
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<p>
<strong>Podcast Episodes:</strong>
Billy Newman Photo Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/billynewmanphotopodcast/">Listen here</a>
Relax with Rain: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/relaxwithrain/">Listen here</a>
Night Sky Podcast: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/series/thenightskypodcast/">Listen here</a>
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<strong>Connect With Billy Newman:</strong>
Email: <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">billy@billynewmanphoto.com</a>
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<strong>Recommended Books:</strong>
Landscape Portfolio (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_portfolio-EBOOK-DRAFT-better-2.pdf">Download</a>
Black and White Photography (PDF): <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021_Black-and-White-EBOOK-DRAFT-better.pdf">Download</a>
Working With Film (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Western-Overland-Excursion-E-book-0812.pdf">Download</a>
Western Overland Excursion (PDF): <a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Working_With_Film.pdf">Download</a>
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<strong>Support the Podcast &#038; Photography Projects:</strong>
Make a sustaining financial donation: <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/">Visit Support Page</a>
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<strong>Podcast Forward:</strong>
The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.
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[Music] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman Photo Podcast. I&#8217;m talking about a photograph that I made on the Oregon coast today doing Blue Hour probably. I think it was after the sun had set. It was sort of like the golden hour to talk about right as the hour as the sun is setting into sunset. The blue hour they also talk about as after the sun goes down there&#8217;s a lot of those blue kind of purple tones that show up in the atmosphere or you know in the clouds and in the water. There&#8217;s just a lot more of that tone as the sun drops and it&#8217;s a spectrum shift from what we see in the daylight to what we see at night time. But I think this was a photograph taken on the Oregon coast. I think your band-in if I&#8217;m right. And I really liked this photo. It just had it wasn&#8217;t really a big structure in the wave or a big curl or anything like that. That would be that&#8217;d be really striking but I really appreciate this photograph as kind of a close-up look at I just sort of the dreamy feeling of being on the coast. But it was definitely a photograph that I liked a lot and I like that line in the skies as it cuts across as you can kind of see at the top there there&#8217;s a bit of like a cloud break that goes down and that&#8217;s where we get a lot of that light from the sky in the background that kind of cuts underneath that big brim of cloud that goes over the top of the snet that causes a lot of bounce from the ground back up to the sky and then back down and you get a cooler or you get a defused sort of soft light in that effect which I think is really cool. You can see more of my work at billyneuminphoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up billyneumin under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. Finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain creek there in the cascades a couple days ago. That was that like Wednesday. I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was this super moon that was coming up that night if I remember right and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there and they always talk about the super moon which is kind of a I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s a little bit of a misnomer but it&#8217;s cool to see too that I think they talk about happening every six months or so. Really it&#8217;s just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities and the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer that it&#8217;s maximum and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away and it&#8217;s distant maximum but I think it&#8217;s really like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though it&#8217;s a thing I learned way back and I think they they they show it in a scene in Apollo 13 but if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times you&#8217;re able to cover the entire full moon just with your thumbnail. It&#8217;s pretty wild but you got kind of always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky and really a lot of the time it&#8217;s it&#8217;s just as big as your thumbnail at arm&#8217;s reach which is kind of a trip but it&#8217;s kind of a it was cool to see the super moon that night it was really bright it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of look at how it was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me that was kind of nice to see cold that night though man I tell you so I have a 15 degree sleeping bag and that&#8217;s great 15 degrees is fine but and 15 degrees really is is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up in and during the summertime where it&#8217;s I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets but when it says 15 degrees it really means you&#8217;re going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience I think it means you&#8217;re going to stay alive that until it&#8217;s about 15 degrees so if it were me again buying something for maybe I don&#8217;t know a more heavy three season camping experience most of the time probably a lot of the nights out that I do even though I like to go at all times a year it seems like the majority of nights I go out are during the summer months or during like pretty fair weather seasons but if I were going to buy again which I&#8217;m going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going if I was going to buy again I&#8217;d probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree you know I could really use the warms because man what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what would have been probably maybe I don&#8217;t know 29 or something like that it was you know it was a bit below freezing who knows how cold it really was it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon I thought it was a clear night but I thought it would be relatively sheltered and yeah it was a lot of it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up and it was a cold cold night to sit through too so yeah that 15 degree bag was just hold up out there but yeah if I was going to go again I think they have like a zero degree bag and then down below that they have like a negative 15 and like maybe like a negative 30 degree bag negative 30 sounds like a real warm like down back so I think mine&#8217;s a synthetic bag they talk about this sometimes where there&#8217;s like differences in the the thermal insulation qualities of the material that your sleeping bag is made out of and I think that the for it was it was an improvement actually you know above whatever cotton we were using for a while they were using wool stuff which was pretty smart that that works really well to be an insulating material and it doesn&#8217;t all right it works well with moisture and stuff and all the other things we know about marina wool is really cool everybody knows about that kind of stuff but we had like you know those really terrible big cotton sleeping bags way back those erupted and I don&#8217;t know if they were really even that insulating then they switched over to those synthetic materials which is probably all oil based is that sound right like a petroleum based like plastics product that was made out of synthetics I think that&#8217;s how they spin up a lot of those those I don&#8217;t know just those synthetic types of materials that they&#8217;re making these nylons out of so I think that was how all out of this this synthetic stuff had been made but really I think what they they talk about being the superior insulator is down and that&#8217;s what I&#8217;d hope to try and find as another zero degree or negative 15 degree sleeping bag would be a negative 15 degree down bag which is normally a bit more expensive you know when you&#8217;re looking around at the price points for these different sleeping bags if you&#8217;re trying to get into some colder weather camping stuff what you&#8217;re going to find is at those name brand or you know not even name brand this is a just a a bespoke manufacturer for a quality technical outdoors product is going to be very expensive and so that&#8217;s where you&#8217;re going to find I don&#8217;t know well you know three three 99 for a sleeping bag two 99 four 99 six 99 I&#8217;ve seen like a lot of pretty expensive prices out there I think Nimo makes some bags that are looking pretty cool that I&#8217;ve seen recommended a few times I&#8217;ve heard a big agnus they make tens most of the time though right they&#8217;re tank up and here aren&#8217;t they yeah stone glaciers one that I keep hearing kind of pop up here and there now for some sense marm it I think got some bags all right eyes so is you know a retailer of recreational equipment they&#8217;re closed right now though so I don&#8217;t even know if you could get an order from anyone like that but but they have some bags I think that&#8217;s where my synthetic bag was from that I&#8217;ve been using for the last I don&#8217;t know seven years or so so that&#8217;s it&#8217;s been fine but I also tested out the sleeping mat I got I got a new thermo rest sleeping mat and now big news it&#8217;s pretty exciting guys stay tuned it&#8217;s uh yeah it&#8217;s a larger sleeping mat than I have before but it&#8217;s a coded one with the I think it&#8217;s kind of like I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s ballistic now but it&#8217;s that nylon coating over it so it&#8217;s not just the rubber mat at the base of it so you can throw it on the ground or on the semi abrasive materials that it would be outside and it&#8217;s working great I think it&#8217;s about one inch thick or so it&#8217;s about 25 inches wide at the shoulder point and it&#8217;s long enough to fit my old body which is probably a new one for me so yeah I got a solid camp mat I think for the last like three years I&#8217;m sleeping on one that goes flat about four hours after you start sleeping so that&#8217;s kind of nice to swap out I don&#8217;t know why I put up with it for so long really should do that sleep is like one of the best things you can get you know if you can figure out just like a couple easy things to take care of when you&#8217;re out camping or out in the woods and stuff it&#8217;s it&#8217;s probably sleep I mean that&#8217;s like the thing that takes you know and it&#8217;s frustrating too because when like even the last one I&#8217;m talking about didn&#8217;t sleep very well way too cold part of it you know enough shelter enough stuff that was kind of comfortable but really as it is yeah it&#8217;s like oh I need to I need to figure out a couple other extra things to kind of throw in there but yeah there&#8217;s just a couple things you can figure out when you&#8217;re going camping like how to stay warm or how to be comfortable when you do go or like when you are sleeping it&#8217;s like one of the most important and most I don&#8217;t know effective things you can do to kind of improve the way that a trip goes because like yeah I can be like I can be brutal the next day if you don&#8217;t get any sleep the night before which is probably the first half dozen camping trips of the year you know this first half dozen or so overnight to the year I&#8217;m just always kind of groggy and like oh why don&#8217;t I have to get up right now which is sort of how it was Wednesday morning when I woke up yeah I popped up and I think it was probably about five a.m. or so that I that I got up I think it was just about first light the sun had come up yeah but there&#8217;s a little bit of light up in the sky and the stars were kind of washed out by the blue sky so I hopped up and the fire was out I think from the night before like I was mentioning how those the sticks had worn out and the colds had started burning down even I think by the time I was near the end of my last podcast so I hopped out and the the back windows were clear there wasn&#8217;t any frost on it but the front window the windshield was ice over pretty hard really I mean it looked like it was you know like coated in water and then froze over solid so it wasn&#8217;t even just kind of like a fluffy bit of white frost or something that had built up on it through fog it just looked like a hard coating of just a nice sheet over the windshield so that no great I don&#8217;t have an ice scraper or something with me I&#8217;m thinking it&#8217;s me you know who needs an ice scraper I&#8217;m taking a sip of coffee so yeah I don&#8217;t know I grabbed a box I think it was a piece of cardboard out of the back that I could kind of flex around a bit through that over the windshield tried to run the truck for a bit try to warm it up it took a while too but yeah scraped off some ice scraped off a whole big enough to kind of get started on the drive and then prepped to take off but yeah I took some photos and stuff around the campsite for a bit first in the morning nice draw on the valley like I was talking about that goes up to that that ridge point that you can kind of see off in the distance and I think I could see like the the fire from the smoke or the smoke from the fire of the neighboring campers over there I don&#8217;t know if I&#8217;d mentioned it well yeah I definitely didn&#8217;t last one how they were they&#8217;re kind of doing brotes out in the on the road around sunset I think I got a little clip of it on video but yeah it&#8217;s like four or five of them and these kind of beater late 90s four by four trucks doing spins out in the dirt roads so looks fun I don&#8217;t know but they were I think getting the fire going and stuff in the morning too or whatever they had going from the night before if you can see a plume of it coming up from that area they would have been camping in over by the the creek bed downhill and yeah it was cool it took some photos and stuff that morning walked around kind of cleaned up the camp a little bit put the fire stuff out and jumped in the truck had that little hole in the ice to see through and then yeah popped on a podcast and cruised down the road and so what I was trying to do was it was take off down to a couple other spots along the creek while it was still morning and then head down ultimately to the area where the lake started to build up and so kind of how it works is like it kind of flows down the creek and then there&#8217;s a dam at a point ultimately and then back right behind the dam is a reservoir where that creek is kind of built up and I guess now is yeah a body of water out there so drove down a ways and took some photographs of the creek and the morning light and some of the water and stuff coming through I really like that kind of affected the the sort of early spring kind of fresh snow melt mountain creek stuff that just sort of looks really crisp and forested and natural and then I came down a ways further to a bridge that kind of cuts across the span of the creek as it starts to sort of widen out into the reservoir area and it looks like a you know a big stretch of calm water out on the edge of the the bridge where I think two different groups that were doing some fishing in the morning and yeah it seems like people are still out it was a busy area up there is still still definitely pretty fully populated set of people you know even during this lockdown period there&#8217;s a bunch of people out there hanging out in fishing I think it was two different different groups it too maybe they were they were all kind of connected but yeah they were they were out there with a couple lines over the bridge and they were picking up a couple things and things so I saw a lady that was pulling up in a little a little blue kayak to the ramp on the first day and on her what is that thing you know when you you run it through the gilling at you got the fish and stuff anyway just she pulled up with like got it is like four or five trout or something on her on her in her kayak I don&#8217;t know that&#8217;s where I&#8217;ll leave it I guess but she pulled up with four or five trout so I figured these guys these guys were doing a little bit of trout fish out there which sounds fun it&#8217;s a nice clear crisp morning stuff like I was saying so yeah it sounds like it&#8217;d be nice to be out there for a couple hours doing sufficient and yeah it looked like they were they were up to it they were getting a couple things it&#8217;s cool to a son osprey that they took off I think over the lake area just at that time and would kind of like pull up at certain spots over the water kind of back flap to hold in the same spot and look under water and see if there was something and then I don&#8217;t know didn&#8217;t see enough or didn&#8217;t see a prime opportunity and then we&#8217;re gonna swoop off and then take off to a different section of the lake and do it again so watch that about three or four times try to take a couple pictures of the area which you&#8217;re nice too I like the photographs that I got that morning it&#8217;s got to got a nice nice look to it really you know a lot of the time the photographs really look a lot better when you just select the right time of day to be somewhere which you know is obvious but just the types of colors and the types of saturation and dynamics that you get in the the look of a pretty simple you know set of trees and water it just comes off a lot better when it&#8217;s it&#8217;s just the right type of light it&#8217;s really amazing to to kind of see what differences it makes when it&#8217;s a cloud a day or a sunny day or a morning or an evening or midday really it seems like the dynamics of the light change so much that you can get like a totally different look in the photo which is always kind of interesting to pay attention to and sort of see how that how that goes what changes about it and sort of how that affects the photographs that you&#8217;re making I mean you can have you know some cool at any time of day but it&#8217;s kind of cool to figure out how it works for you or how it works or what I&#8217;m trying to do is how how to figure out how how it works for my photographs and what I&#8217;m trying to do which is nice I don&#8217;t know it was cool going out there and climbing around the creeks and stuff in the morning and taking a couple photos and water and osprey and going over to the lake area that&#8217;s trying to work on similar stuff to what I&#8217;ve done before but kind of that mirrored look of the really calm water as it spreads across the lake in the morning and then the reflection of the the bright blue kind of pre-sunlit sky or how is it you know like before the sun is actually up over the horizon there&#8217;s not a lot of intensity so it&#8217;s just kind of a softer blue glow in a lot of ways and then there&#8217;s still enough illumination that you can see the greens and the trees and sort of the soft calm water in the morning before it gets kind of agitated through the rest of the day so nice kind of peaceful looks to the the photos and sort of the natural stuff that I like to go kind of capture you know really ultimately though there&#8217;s some nice stuff up there and I was really like happy to kind of photograph some of the some of what I was looking for but I was also also frustrated in the area too I think there was a there&#8217;s is a little more choked off than what I normally like like there wasn&#8217;t as many opportunities as I had hoped for I had to try and you know utilize the ones that I found but there wasn&#8217;t as many opportunities as I had hoped for for kind of an opened up wide scene that you could set up a landscape photo and there wasn&#8217;t a lot of elements to really work with it was just sort of a you know that&#8217;s like some rolling hills off to a green hill so sometimes I&#8217;m trying to find some stuff that&#8217;s a little bit more dynamic and it&#8217;s look than that but it&#8217;s fun though even as it is anyway though I&#8217;m trying to I think maybe like I was mentioned last one I got stuck and turned around but the snow and I didn&#8217;t want to deal with any of that right now but in the next weeks and stuff I want to get up to Mount Jefferson or Mount Washington or a couple of these other wilderness areas that they have a few kind of visual landmarks that would be worth taking an observation of you can check out more information at billynewmanphoto.com you can go to billynewmanphoto.com afford slash support if you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we&#8217;re running this podcast with if you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about you&#8217;re welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at billynewmanphoto.com for slash support you can also find more information there about patreon and the way that I use it if you&#8217;re interested or are feel more comfortable using patreon that&#8217;s patreon.com for slash billy newmanphoto I wanted to talk today about some stuff that I&#8217;ve been doing this last week for the last few weeks I&#8217;ve been talking about some outdoor stuff and some things kind of related to the lockdown pandemic stuff but I kind of changed what I was talking about a little bit for this podcast but I wanted to get into was some of the training stuff I&#8217;ve been looking into around logic pro 10.5 that has just come out recently and I thought it&#8217;d be kind of kind of cool to go over a little bit of an overview of some of the new features and stuff that are there and some of the stuff that you can do with a digital audio workstation and why why I&#8217;d bother talking about it but I think it was about about a year ago or so I was talking about setting up the studio in the house that I&#8217;m not here and how I was getting a PC computer ready to go is an older one is I think like something from some test up I had around from from 2010 or 11 or so yeah yeah about that time and I remember getting that computer setup with a I think it was yeah I had like windows 10 on it and then I was using I think the same audio interface usb out into the computer and then I downloaded I downloaded sonar the new version of sonar that you can get for free I think it had been owned by what was k-quack sonar and then I think Gibson had bought out k-quack and so it became Gibson sonar and then I think Gibson decided that wasn&#8217;t going to be part of their business anymore so I think they just kind of shut it down essentially but then sold that off to band lab and band lab is a I think a one or it&#8217;s another internet company they have kind of a simplified digital audio workstation app that you can use to kind of create a demo or something like that but what they had done is they they&#8217;d gone through I guess and had purchased probably for a relatively inexpensive price or I don&#8217;t know I assume since they&#8217;re just they&#8217;re just keeping it and kind of hardly maintaining it or you know doing a bit to maintain it but they took the the sonar platinum program the full digital audio workstation multi-tracking tool and they made it free for people to use and for people to get but I think it&#8217;s only a Windows only program so you got to have Windows 10 to run it so I did that yeah and and sonar was a program that I&#8217;d work with before for doing some some studio multi-tracking stuff I think years ago probably around like 2012-2013 when I was when I was working with some friends to set up some studio equipment stuff was cool we had like a big sound craft ghost that was laid out and then we had a bunch of a bunch of channels kind of running into that from from the microphones they were using to track this band and then that all went into a pretty old computer was amazing what it could do you know for just a you know it&#8217;s probably like a 2 gigabyte of RAM you know smaller hard drive 2004 or 5 6 era PC computer no I probably wouldn&#8217;t need that much right there&#8217;s something about that time but that&#8217;s what we used yeah that&#8217;s like all we had all we had with us we had a I think it was like a pre-sowness audio interface and then we got like like an eight-channel audio interface that was really cool you know we had like eight eight digital audio channels coming into the interface which means we could track eight live channels into sonar at a time and it didn&#8217;t even hit up you know even on that old machine and so it was interesting how that architecture worked to do some editing stuff but so sonar is what I had been using before for some stuff really audition Adobe edition is what I&#8217;d use most for some of this kind of the more simple radio broadcast style stuff and that&#8217;s what I had learned to use when I was at when I was at a radio station doing an internship years and years ago back in 2008 right summer 2008 and did that and they used the Adobe edition version 1.5 to do all their radio production edits and yeah I remember going in taking calls with the production guy I don&#8217;t know somebody calling into do like a I think they would do like a water level report it was really interesting radio that station you know you could figure but they would have like this I don&#8217;t know something you know it&#8217;s it&#8217;s 1245 and here&#8217;s your local water level report for July 28th or something and then it would be some lady that would call in from a department that would measure the stuff and she would give her water report and the production guy you&#8217;d record it and then produce that and then it&#8217;d be prepped to go out on air later you know it was like a spot that a DJ would trigger upstairs and so we&#8217;d kind of walk through using audition to do those steps and so learning that as a program is probably the first one that I&#8217;d done which a product probably goes back to high school or before that when I was doing editing stuff but but sonar back to sonar was some of the stuff that I&#8217;d used probably give it more for the for the music you know like trying to like track a band or do like multi-tracking projects but so yeah that&#8217;s what I&#8217;d used a bit that&#8217;s why I thrown on this windows 10 PC to do some audio production stuff for this podcast workflow that I was trying to get into and it&#8217;s cool it works really well but but I stepped using that computer a while ago I think the the windows 10 computer that I&#8217;m talking about had a power supply go bad which could be replaced pretty easily and and is on a to-do list of mine but since then I&#8217;ve really just been relying on kind of like I had mentioned just recording recording onto the device and then using Adobe addition to do the post production work on my MacBook which is I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s just it&#8217;s just a more it&#8217;s just a better workflow and stuff for the most part so I&#8217;m kind of sticking with that but recently to get to the point as you are all excited logic pro 10.5 has come out now logic as yet to be mentioned in this podcast logic pro is the program that was produced by Apple as the professional digital audio work station and so there&#8217;s garage band which probably a lot of people have some experience with and garage band is sort of the trimmed down simplified home user version of a program like like logic pro and they&#8217;ve done that intentionally I think it&#8217;s the same team that generates the two programs and if you if you look at them or you look at their interfaces and you look at the types of access you have to things you really do see a familiar similarity to it which is cool so if you&#8217;ve used something like garage band in the past for home projects you won&#8217;t really have as big of a difficulty moving into a more professional digital audio workstation environment like logic pro 10 so I think it was logic pro 10 just you know 10 zero it came out when I don&#8217;t probably like 2013 or so I think that was that was sold for 200 bucks so it was like a purchase price of 199 and then since then you get the point updates for free or you know as included with your original purchase so just recently I think there had been like 10.4 before this and then now they&#8217;ve moved on to 10.5 and 10.5 I think it&#8217;s probably the biggest as noted by you know playing in new sources as noted as one of the most significant feature updates that logic has had probably in years and years I mean I think this is the first end of the concert removed and updated some of those legacy items that have been in there since 2003 or four or five you know it was just some of these legacy products that were that were originally put in there is including their interfaces too it looks like a 2002 interface for for you know like there&#8217;s these synthesizer interfaces where these these weird knobs that you have to these weird just rotating features of the interface it looks like it looks ridiculous I don&#8217;t know there were any other way to explain it but it&#8217;s it&#8217;s pretty wild for some of the some of the stuff that&#8217;s just remained in computer computer systems for a long time but for 10.5 they try to go through and update a lot of that stuff and it&#8217;s really interesting there&#8217;s a lot of cool new features in logic 10.5 so logic is real similar to sonar which is I guess kind of why I mentioned it and at least from my experience as similar you guys would probably think it&#8217;s similar to I don&#8217;t know what people that are listening probably actually have some well no one&#8217;s listening what do we say if someone were to bother to try and find some information out about logic and they ended up listening to this podcast they probably have had some information about it or they would be coming from from an experience with avid&#8217;s pro tools and pro tools is like the industry standard for multitracking DAW software and I&#8217;ve never used it I&#8217;ve never opened pro tools I&#8217;ve never seen pro tools you know in in its process at all I don&#8217;t know I&#8217;ve got I&#8217;ve looked at a couple videos or something but yeah I have no I have no experience working in pro tools and I don&#8217;t know I&#8217;m not a fan of avid&#8217;s software overall you know for pro tools or for or for the avid system of a video editing stuff either I&#8217;m just I&#8217;m not I&#8217;m not really that interested in the kind of stuff that they put together and it really for price and stuff too it just seems kind of kind of over done a little bit so I&#8217;m pretty happy with with some of the other the other more available tools that are in the consumer computer market I mean I think it&#8217;s like 800 bucks or something still to get to get avid&#8217;s pro tools and I think that in the past it was you know insanely more than that even well you know kind of proprietary back in the past it was more difficult now I think M audio is a partner with pro tools and so in the past if you have pro tools you have a lot of proprietary pro tools audio interfaces that you had to use if you wanted to set up your studio to work seamlessly with the pro tools software now I think they&#8217;ve made a deal with M audio which is sort of like a less expensive audio interface manufacturer they&#8217;ve had like interfaces and microphones and you know they&#8217;ve got like an array of I think they&#8217;ve got like some studio monitors they&#8217;ve got some interfaces they&#8217;ve got like keyboards is a big one that they&#8217;ve got I&#8217;ve got a keyboard over here from M audio and what is it yeah M audio less expensive they make pro tools interfaces which is cool now so that they&#8217;ve got a partnership with pro tools and I think that they&#8217;ve been trying to make that more accessible to musicians probably because it&#8217;s become a more competitive market with well really with like logic logic pro I think I think the industry standard set is I don&#8217;t know it always seems like more secure than it should be you know that doesn&#8217;t it doesn&#8217;t seem like an absolute the pro tools should be the the digital audio workstation of of engineers across the world but for whatever reason it&#8217;s just kind of taken over and and as those people you know are still still in those positions I think that&#8217;s that&#8217;s just with tat and audio recording school it&#8217;s like a standard even though there&#8217;s a lot of other good other good services and choices out there I think I&#8217;ve seen soar and logic taught a lot too so I don&#8217;t know they&#8217;re definitely competitive and and as I&#8217;ve been hearing more there&#8217;s there&#8217;s I don&#8217;t know there&#8217;s produced you know music producers that are coming out saying oh yeah I do a lot of a lot of my work in in logic and then there&#8217;s you know there&#8217;s a whole class of music producers that are logic based producers are stone our based producers are and all right it seems to kind of rotate around every couple years for for who&#8217;s doing water you know who wants to look cool people that use pro tools one of the cool probably a lot of time so back to back to old logic pro 10.5 here&#8217;s the good stuff so thanks a lot for checking out this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast hope you guys check out some stuff on billyneuminfoadow.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage some good links to other other outbound sources some links to books some links to some podcasts links to some blog posts all pretty cool yeah check it out at billyneuminfoadow.com thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the podcast bye see you next time [Music] [BLANK_AUDIO]]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast

View links at wnp.app

Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.


Quick Links:
Portfolio: billynewmanphoto.com/photographs
Studio: wphoto.co
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Amazon Author: amazon.com/author/billynewman


Podcast Episodes:
Billy Newman Photo Podcast: Listen here
Relax with Rain: Listen here
Night Sky Podcast: Listen here


Connect With Billy Newman:
Email: billy@billynewmanphoto.com
Instagram: @billynewman
LinkedIn: billynewmanphoto
X (Twitter): @billynewman


Recommended Books:
Landscape Portfolio (PDF): Download
Black and White Photography (PDF): Download
Working With Film (PDF): Download
Western Overland Excursion (PDF): Download


Support the Podcast &#038; Photography Projects:
Make a sustaining financial donation: Visit Support Page


Podcast Forward:
The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips.

[Music] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman Photo Podcast. I&#8217;m talking about a photograph that I made on the Oregon coast today doing Blue Hour probably. I think it was after the sun had set. It was sort of like the golden hour to talk about right as the hour as the sun is setting into sunset. The blue hour they also talk about as after the sun goes down there&#8217;s a lot of those blue kind of purple tones that show up in the atmosphere or you know in the clouds and in the water. There&#8217;s just a lot more of that tone as the sun drops and it&#8217;s a spectrum shift from what we see in the daylight to what we see at night time. But I think this was a photograph taken on the Oregon coast. I think your band-in if I&#8217;m right. And I really liked this photo. It just had it wasn&#8217;t really a big structure in the wave or a big curl or anything like that. That would be that&#8217;d be really striking but I really appreciate this photograph as kind of a close-up look at I just sort of the dreamy feeling of being on the coast. But it was definitely a photograph that I liked a lot and I like that line in the skies as it cuts across as you can kind of see at the top there there&#8217;s a bit of like a cloud break that goes down and that&#8217;s where we get a lot of that light from the sky in the background that kind of cuts underneath that big brim of cloud that goes over the top of the snet that causes a lot of bounce from the ground back up to the sky and then back down and you get a cooler or you get a defused sort of soft light in that effect which I think is really cool. You can see more of my work at billyneuminphoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up billyneumin under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. Finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain creek there in the cascades a couple days ago. That was that like Wednesday. I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was this super moon that was coming up that night if I remember right and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there and they always talk about the super moon which is kind of a I don&#8217;t know it&#8217;s a little bit of a misnomer but it&#8217;s cool to see too that I think they talk about happening every six months or so. Really it&#8217;s just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities and the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer that it&#8217;s maximum and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away and it&#8217;s distant maximum but I think it&#8217;s really like a little bit of a]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>32:34</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast

View links at wnp.app

Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along.


Quick Links:
Portfolio: billynewmanphoto.com/photographs
Studio: wphoto.co
Posts: billynewmanphoto.com/posts
Photo Books: billynewmanphoto.com/books
Amazon Author: amazon.com/author/billynewman


Podcast Episodes:
Billy Newman Photo Podcast: Listen here
Relax with Rain: Listen here
Night Sky Podcast: Listen here


Connect With Billy Newman:
Email: billy@billynewmanphoto.com
Instagram: @billynewman
LinkedIn: billynewmanphoto
X (Twitter): @billynewman


Recommended Books:
Landscape Portfolio (PDF): Download
Black and White Photography (PDF): Download
Working With Film (PDF): Download
Western Overland Excursion (PDF): Download


Support the Podcast &#038; Photography Projects:
Make a sustainin]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 200 Hunting Camps &#8211; Creating IPFS Networks</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-200-hunting-camps-creating-ipfs-networks/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2022 13:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
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<p>200 Hunting Camps - Creating IPFS Networks</p>



<p>0:14  

Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.</p>



<p>0:23  

Here different industries kind of talk about, you know what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography, there's a lot of that the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of, you know, how do you got to get paid and how you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of thing, but there's still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity, where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together, and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector, kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out and that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting how kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff, but it's something that I've been really interested for a long time.</p>



<p>1:25  

You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon, I think if you look at that Bitly Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, and cool stuff over there.</p>



<p>1:48  

But I was going to talk about that a little bit, I thought it'd be kind of cool to talk about at least some of the stuff that I know about. Some of the stuff sort of around hunting stuff, I don't I guess I don't really get into a ton of hunting stuff. But But I was trying to think a little bit about some notes that I had about finding and scouting out dispersed hunting campsites or dispersed campsites that are that are away from parks away from state parks and, and sort of those, those bigger areas that are just kind of wide out open that you can camp in. And I've been able to find like a number of them over the years, it's really cool getting to kind of find those locations that you can kind of keep a memory of their spot and then go back to year over year. And these are spots that are cool, because they don't offer any facilities or any services. So there's no no water there, you got to bring all your water in, there's no bathroom services, there's no pavement, probably it's like a pretty dispersed remote location that you can kind of drive up to, but it's also still connected to a road. So it's not as deep into the back country is like a real place that you go. So for like a lot of hunting stuff, I think what I'd seen in the past, and what some of these seem to be set up for is like a hunting party of, say, for for cars, you know, for a couple of groups of people coming together, and then meeting meeting up for their hunting party. And then having a location where they can have like a big enough base camp where they can have all their equipment there for cars. And then they can go out on their couple day expeditions or their morning high and come back to the camp go out on the evening, come back to the camp sort of stuff for what seems like a lot of people in in their different locations that they go go out on hunting trips and stuff. But I was out in the john de river area driving the john de River Canyon, which is like an area, I guess you can probably find it the john de river empties out into the Columbia River. And and then I think kind of is one of the larger river systems larger River drainage is that exist out in Eastern Oregon there. There's a few others that are kind of out there. But I think that's one of the bigger ones that cuts through some of the sections that Eastern Oregon otherwise there's like the Deschutes, that runs down the east side of the Cascades and drains a couple a couple of the rivers into it before it empties out into the Columbia River a little closer to like the Mount Hood area. But the john de river area is cool. It's out there in Eastern Oregon. And that's where I was camping a little bit earlier in July. And as I was driving through I have that that map app that onyx mapping tool. And it's going through and I was marking locations as a driver I really didn't like stay there I stopped there I take pictures or something. But I go through and mark these locations as I was driving around for these dispersed campsite locations that had passed. And so it was kind of a good way for me to make a catalog kind of passively as I was driving around but make a catalogue of the locations that I might be able to go back to, and some of the campsites that seemed a little bit more suitable for a day or an overnight kind of trip or a couple days or something like that. And so that's what I was thinking about for for like dispersed hunting campsite locations have some of the stuff that people kind of use, but by setting up the mapping tools, and using like the photo geotag service or that that option. It's in the honor an off road map app or the Onyx hunt app works really well I was I was finding it worked really well to, to kind of grab the phone, take a picture when you arrived at a location that was like a good hunting camp, but I found like, probably like six or seven on the last two or three trips that I've done just kind of scouting around as I was driving around in the woods and stuff, you know, places that I didn't end up camping that night. But I thought it would be a pretty reasonable spot to head back to some time in the future. So yeah, the john day river area had like a lot of stuff sort of that area, I guess between, like the Painted Hills, around Mitchell, and there's probably a lot of stuff that goes up that highway toward the town of john day. But I think I took like a background that follow the john de river from like the Mitchell area up toward Clair now, which I think is like north of there kind of jumps like to one of the highways that runs north of there, but the I got clear no and up. So I kind of took that section and I was trying to mark like a few of those dispersed camping sites that I would find on the sides. And a lot of these, like I was saying, like, there's no services or anything, but they're set up on BLM land or or national forest land. A lot of them I think, are BLM land. I'm not totally sure about that how that goes. But is this was Yeah, it was like, like,</p>



<p>6:24  

just, well, what am I trying to say about it? What's cool about these dispersed campsites is that you know, you can set up as much stuff as you want, you can be there pretty much undisturbed the whole time. And it's cool. Like I think a lot of these sites are great to combat during the summer stuff. But you can kind of see why they're designed like how they were set up that they're really laid out for hunters coming in in September and October to do like the elk and deer, like hunting trips. But you can kind of tell that I think by like some of the tools and stuff that he's set up for, like some of the ways they have their tables, you see those you see like a branch that's been like nailed in about 10 or 12 feet or 15 feet up in a tree. And I think that's where you can like bring in a deer after it's after you get it while you're out hunting, you can bring it back and then string it up and then start carving up the meat. While it's like while it's hung up on that, but I think that's like one of the signs that I see a lot but also it was like I don't know just whatever they use for their fire pit or whatever else they use, really you're gonna see hunters probably like this week and for the next like month straight if you're out in any of those. This further Eastern Oregon places that people set up to do their hunting trip and stuff. But there's a couple on and offs between the hunting seasons and stuff in the next couple of weeks. But it's kind of it's kind of interesting going out there. And I remember this time of year like out out in Eastern Oregon toward heart mountain, there were like a bunch of hunters that would be set up in different spots. For like a couple sections after Labor Day. I remember when I was a kid I didn't totally reckon how many people would be going to certain places for hunting season stuff, but I was thinking like wow, there's a lot of people camping for some time after Labor Day and you think oh yeah, this is like it's actually like outdoorsman really like to go hunting like to go do stuff into October into November. And I was thinking oh yeah, they're not doing like summer camping trips anymore. They're, you know, they're actually doing doing something else out here in the woods. But it's uh, yeah, it's kind of fun, going around, checking out stuff and trying to do some scouting for that. It's cool, though, you know, one thing I've kind of recognized over the years is, it's really tough to like just go out into an area that you don't really know very well and try and find a good campsite. And that's why I've, I've kind of started. That's really a definitely a big reason why I've tried to start making like a little catalog of locations, a good campsite, I find why I pass them. But also I've been trying to notice that some spots are going to be better than others for different times of the year. So I've been really trying to do a lot of like off season scouting, where at different times of the year when maybe even I'm not on a camping trip, I'm able to kind of scout out a couple different areas and marks and locations or at least like write down remember that there's a location that I want to go back to. But that helps a lot when you're trying to go out to a campsite or to a camping area, or when your circumstances change like a lot of time of camping by myself. But it's kind of cool to remember locations that are a little bigger or something or have a little bit a little bit more of a Ease of Access. If you're going with like a group of people that's a little larger and you want to accommodate a couple different cars or a couple different people. I was kind of noticing like the difference between like, like group sites, and like kind of like more remote sites that you might go to. And that's sort of something that you're going to notice that they're two of these kind of these bigger group sites where it seems like you'd almost have like a horse camp or something. I've seen that as a as an option out there too. It's kind of strange when you go out you know, there's like kind of regular camps it seems like you get set up and then there's like a camp with a with a corral built into the campsite. And it seems like it's made from timber That was cut in process you know they just like cut down a tree right there and then split it and then made a corral out of it to keep their horses for their horse camp that they have for you know some hunting thing that they're up to or some outdoors thing they were up to, but it seems like a lot of these places are like big enough to like bring in an ATV or you know they have like a quad or something like that but it seems like there's kind of like a big circle that area and then otherwise there's like different locations that kind of like more like high clearance trucks or you know like some kind of four four wheel drive location that's a little bit further or you can kind of get back a little ways into the what would kind of be the back entry or into an even closer to a wilderness area and then you can take that and then jump back further and do some hunting in an area that you may be scouting out earlier in the year but for me like I don't really want to do any of that stuff I'm just out kind of hunting for pictures and hunting for good campsite and stuff so that's kind of what's been fun about that going through the john de river area up there there was a lot of stuff that that bordered like some BLM land is stretched up a hill and I guess that areas like one of the one of the drainage is that people go to for a lot of elk hunting</p>



<p>11:13  

and here it's known for that where you know know for some pretty big elk that they're able to to get out of that area which is kind of it's kind of cool, be fun, be fun to see some elk out there I've only seen a couple elk and most of the time I just see the female elk I don't think I've really ever seem like a big ball elk out there in the woods let me kind of fun that I've had a good time yeah getting out to go to some of those dispersed camping sites and stuff there's yes I'm out in deep Eastern Oregon by like heart mountain that I've always really liked. There's a lot it kind of that Eastern Oregon section when you get out there but what I've noticed though is a lot of the stuff in the National Forest section of say like the Cascades it seemed like pretty pretty well populated it's kind of harder to find good spots up there you can you can find like you know, little pull outs and dead end roads and stuff but but as it goes for like just kind of big free dispersed campsite sections it's a little bit harder to find it's a little more organized out in those locations. That's what's cool about some of the BLM stuff and some of the high desert location stuff is it's just it's just kind of wide open you're just you know sort of driving around you take some little dinky road off to the side and then you're at a cool fire pit and the big Juniper tree and it looks like people have been camping there forever You know so it's it's cool you can kind of find some stuff like that and I've had a good time going out to Eastern Oregon to find some stuff like that for myself. So I want to get out there and try and go camping at some of this some of the spots you know like I'm kind of competing with the hunting season like I was saying but but even silly I want to jump out there and try and do some fall camping it's really like one of the best times of year to go out there I really liked the springtime like even the early springtime like late March and April well it's still pretty cold if you can if you can gear up for it, it's really a cool time to be out there because you have so much like texture weather in the sky and then the clouds that it kind of keeps the terrain pretty interesting it can be pretty miserable you know if the weather is totally turned on yet but as it goes for a lot of it it really is kind of like a cool time to be out there in the summertime. It'll even buy like Mayor little in the June for sure. It just gets so hot that it's kind of tough to be out just kind of wandering around hiking around in the in the daytime. So it kind of cuts down on the amount of just kind of trekking around or wandering or poking around so that you can do you probably do some from the track or something but it's a little more fun to get out there and hike around. Check some stuff out so it seems like the fall like when the temperatures are down a little bit. You have a little bit better opportunity to do that and then early in the springtime but I think the Fall is my favorite time to be out there when you're you're watching the aspen trees kind of turning from green to yellow to orange and get a lot of color out there and some of those simoes Aspen groves grow out in Eastern Oregon. So I want to try and go out there and get some photographs of it as the seasons start to change and the colors come on and the trees I get about there's gonna be some nice days and stuff out there It seems like some of the trees are already starting to turn a little bit like I was saying in that last podcast I'm seeing a lot of a lot of trees kind of start to get the late late summer early fall tinge to them what it looks like they're about to about to turn over and get brown and began fall began items so it's gonna come on pretty fast. It's already with the Yeah, like the second week of September.</p>



<p>14:43  

You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to Help me out. And since value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo.</p>



<p>15:23  

So I've been checking out the ipfs network. I've been talking about it a few times before here on the podcast, but it stands for interplanetary file system, it's kind of a cool way of sort of creating a distributed hash table. or in our case, it's something where it's like a distributed network instead of having like a server system. So I've been trying to set that up, it's pretty complicated, but you can go to, say theories and download a program called Orion. And that's like, a browser that you can use to upload and then download, you know, send files back and forth over the ipfs network, which is pretty cool. It's kind of interesting. So I downloaded it on a couple of computers here at home. And I was trying to use this, this key to connect the two of the nodes together so you could kind of create, like a direct connection in the network. And I was trying to do this with a couple other computers I had around the house to to do some stuff, but But yeah, the ipfs node is pretty interesting. And we're trying to put up some media stuff onto that over the last couple days. I've been using this site called D sounds dot audio. And I'm trying to upload a bunch of mp3 files of my podcasts. And it's just kind of interesting to check it out. But yeah, it's it looks like a lot like SoundCloud or something when you use it, but instead of any of those files existing on a website's server, they exist distributed across the world United States I don't know how far it's really distributed yet. But those files are distributed on different computers so it can be reproduced from from different areas of the network. It's interesting, I don't know I'm kind of curious how it works out I'm also using this video program or video website called de dot tube, I think is what it is it's supposed to really just be like a YouTube clone. And it works pretty well it's it's not I think, the full resolution and flow that YouTube is but really as it goes, it's it's quite far along for what you would think to do with it. I've also been checking out bid shoot, which is another sort of YouTube video competitor but they do a lot more with ads and with paid content. And I think that the D tube stuff is it seems like a little more homegrown in some ways when you look at the website but but as I consider it, I think it's you know, it's ad free, it's crypto, decentralized, it's really it's interesting like when you log in, you don't really even use your email address or anything like that it's just it's this cryptographic key that you log in with and that's like your account data and if no one has it so if you lose it that's gone I think forever You know, so it's kind of cool checking it out you can go to the new page you can kind of upload media like you would on YouTube or so that it's a little slower though it seems like that's that's definitely something that I was noticing. I'm trying to make an upload right now. And it's going fine but I think it's a little bit slower than maybe some of the other the other like YouTube or something like that if you're apple in attending dp video it'd be more robust as a service This is definitely like something some some piece of the internet that's being made by people like you and me so it's it's kind of cool that it works at all really, but yeah, I think these these D tube sites and D sound sites are going to be kind of interesting media players and not players like but just interesting kind of media side features that that I think are kind of interesting as people are starting to maybe consider moving away from centralized services like Facebook and Microsoft and Apple and Amazon and all that so yeah, it's gonna think Google you know, YouTube and Google and all that but but it's cool, try to check out the ipfs stuff and get it connected I was trying to upload some videos that I have on my YouTube page right now and trying to download a bunch of YouTube videos. Also, I go to the YouTube videos that I have there's there's a couple different features out there there's like maybe one that you've heard before we put s s before the YouTube domain name and that'll send you over to a website called I think it's like save form or something like that. And then you can you can download sort of a lower resolution version of that. That file which saved me a couple of things I helped me out a couple times it was you know, audio video of it, you can download it, I think it was ad free. That it's as a website that kind of, you know, pushes you to buy stuff a lot though, to think of the way the service works, as opposed to trying to check out this thing called the YouTube dash dl which was like a youtube downloader. So I was trying to go through and download some of the videos that I had on YouTube, but that I don't really have like the same same clips from on my computer. So it's cool to go through and check it out. As to but and was it D sounds distributed sounds,</p>



<p>20:21  

distributed audio, it's kind of cool checking it out. So I'm uploading a video in the background right now on my laptop. It's like a screen capture video working in Lightroom. And going through the editing of a photo. So I'm throwing that up there on the two, which is like, probably going to take forever to upload, it's kind of a larger, I think it's like more than 10 minutes or something like that. It's one gigabyte. So it's like a bigger file for that network to take. So I think it takes like a little bit more time. But it's cool, I'm trying it out. And then I guess we'll kind of see how it goes. It's also cool, too, I guess you can just you can publish websites to the ipfs hash tables. Also, like if you write like a static HTML site or HTML CSS site, I guess you can package that and then upload that. And you will have a web link to go to that HTML site, and it will pull up like it was pulled up on the server, which is pretty interesting. I really learned quite enough about it. Yeah, I'm trying to figure it out a little bit more, I want to try and get like some kind of distributed distributed blog, website app or you know, something where you can kind of update it a couple times, I think there's another one called steep shot dot i O. That was this, this photo sharing website that I was checking out, which is kind of cool. It's still all these are still in alpha. I was having a hard time actually like getting stuff to upload when I was using it. So it was kind of interesting, but I think it's you know, it's stuff that it kind of comes and goes as you're sort of an early adopter some of the services. But I'm gonna try and try and use steep shot.io to continue doing some stuff too. That's another distributed photo sharing site, which is kind of cool uses the, I think I think when you post a photo and post it to the blockchain ledger is still sort of something that's out of my depth, it seems to me, but I think it's kind of cool that you're able to do stuff like that. And yeah, but put stuff up on the web and download it from the web without ever really going through a centralized service. So it's kind of fun stuff. But thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.</p>



<p>22:36  

Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo comm few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, good links to other other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like this. blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks for listening to this episode and the back end.</p>



<p>22:57  
 Thank you.</p>



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<p>200 Hunting Camps - Creating IPFS Networks</p>



<p>0:14  

Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.</p>



<p>0:23  

Here different industries kind of talk about, you know what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography, there's a lot of that the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of, you know, how do you got to get paid and how you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of thing, but there's still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity, where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together, and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector, kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out and that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting how kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff, but it's something that I've been really interested for a long time.</p>



<p>1:25  

You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon, I think if you look at that Bitly Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, and cool stuff over there.</p>



<p>1:48  

But I was going to talk about that a little bit, I thought it'd be kind of cool to talk about at least some of the stuff that I know about. Some of the stuff sort of around hunting stuff, I don't I guess I don't really get into a ton of hunting stuff. But But I was trying to think a little bit about some notes that I had about finding and scouting out dispersed hunting campsites or dispersed campsites that are that are away from parks away from state parks and, and sort of those, those bigger areas that are just kind of wide out open that you can camp in. And I've been able to find like a number of them over the years, it's really cool getting to kind of find those locations that you can kind of keep a memory of their spot and then go back to year over year. And these are spots that are cool, because they don't offer any facilities or any services. So there's no no water there, you got to bring all your water in, there's no bathroom services, there's no pavement, probably it's like a pretty dispersed remote location that you can kind of drive up to, but it's also still connected to a road. So it's not as deep into the back country is like a real place that you go. So for like a lot of hunting stuff, I think what I'd seen in the past, and what some of these seem to be set up for is like a hunting party of, say, for for cars, you know, for a couple of groups of people coming together, and then meeting meeting up for their hunting party. And then having a location where they can have like a big enough base camp where they can have all their equipment there for cars. And then they can go out on their couple day expeditions or their morning high and come back to the camp go out on the evening, come back to the camp sort of stuff for what seems like a lot of people in in their different locations that they go go out on hunting trips and stuff. But I was out in the john de river area driving the john de River Canyon, which is like an area, I guess you can probably find it the john de river empties out into the Columbia River. And and then I think kind of is one of the larger river systems larger River drainage is that exist out in Eastern Oregon there. There's a few others that are kind of out there. But I think that's one of the bigger ones that cuts through some of the sections that Eastern Oregon otherwise there's like the Deschutes, that runs down the east side of the Cascades and drains a couple a couple of the rivers into it before it empties out into the Columbia River a little closer to like the Mount Hood area. But the john de river area is cool. It's out there in Eastern Oregon. And that's where I was camping a little bit earlier in July. And as I was driving through I have that that map app that onyx mapping tool. And it's going through and I was marking locations as a driver I really didn't like stay there I stopped there I take pictures or something. But I go through and mark these locations as I was driving around for these dispersed campsite locations that had passed. And so it was kind of a good way for me to make a catalog kind of passively as I was driving around but make a catalogue of the locations that I might be able to go back to, and some of the campsites that seemed a little bit more suitable for a day or an overnight kind of trip or a couple days or something like that. And so that's what I was thinking about for for like dispersed hunting campsite locations have some of the stuff that people kind of use, but by setting up the mapping tools, and using like the photo geotag service or that that option. It's in the honor an off road map app or the Onyx hunt app works really well I was I was finding it worked really well to, to kind of grab the phone, take a picture when you arrived at a location that was like a good hunting camp, but I found like, probably like six or seven on the last two or three trips that I've done just kind of scouting around as I was driving around in the woods and stuff, you know, places that I didn't end up camping that night. But I thought it would be a pretty reasonable spot to head back to some time in the future. So yeah, the john day river area had like a lot of stuff sort of that area, I guess between, like the Painted Hills, around Mitchell, and there's probably a lot of stuff that goes up that highway toward the town of john day. But I think I took like a background that follow the john de river from like the Mitchell area up toward Clair now, which I think is like north of there kind of jumps like to one of the highways that runs north of there, but the I got clear no and up. So I kind of took that section and I was trying to mark like a few of those dispersed camping sites that I would find on the sides. And a lot of these, like I was saying, like, there's no services or anything, but they're set up on BLM land or or national forest land. A lot of them I think, are BLM land. I'm not totally sure about that how that goes. But is this was Yeah, it was like, like,</p>



<p>6:24  

just, well, what am I trying to say about it? What's cool about these dispersed campsites is that you know, you can set up as much stuff as you want, you can be there pretty much undisturbed the whole time. And it's cool. Like I think a lot of these sites are great to combat during the summer stuff. But you can kind of see why they're designed like how they were set up that they're really laid out for hunters coming in in September and October to do like the elk and deer, like hunting trips. But you can kind of tell that I think by like some of the tools and stuff that he's set up for, like some of the ways they have their tables, you see those you see like a branch that's been like nailed in about 10 or 12 feet or 15 feet up in a tree. And I think that's where you can like bring in a deer after it's after you get it while you're out hunting, you can bring it back and then string it up and then start carving up the meat. While it's like while it's hung up on that, but I think that's like one of the signs that I see a lot but also it was like I don't know just whatever they use for their fire pit or whatever else they use, really you're gonna see hunters probably like this week and for the next like month straight if you're out in any of those. This further Eastern Oregon places that people set up to do their hunting trip and stuff. But there's a couple on and offs between the hunting seasons and stuff in the next couple of weeks. But it's kind of it's kind of interesting going out there. And I remember this time of year like out out in Eastern Oregon toward heart mountain, there were like a bunch of hunters that would be set up in different spots. For like a couple sections after Labor Day. I remember when I was a kid I didn't totally reckon how many people would be going to certain places for hunting season stuff, but I was thinking like wow, there's a lot of people camping for some time after Labor Day and you think oh yeah, this is like it's actually like outdoorsman really like to go hunting like to go do stuff into October into November. And I was thinking oh yeah, they're not doing like summer camping trips anymore. They're, you know, they're actually doing doing something else out here in the woods. But it's uh, yeah, it's kind of fun, going around, checking out stuff and trying to do some scouting for that. It's cool, though, you know, one thing I've kind of recognized over the years is, it's really tough to like just go out into an area that you don't really know very well and try and find a good campsite. And that's why I've, I've kind of started. That's really a definitely a big reason why I've tried to start making like a little catalog of locations, a good campsite, I find why I pass them. But also I've been trying to notice that some spots are going to be better than others for different times of the year. So I've been really trying to do a lot of like off season scouting, where at different times of the year when maybe even I'm not on a camping trip, I'm able to kind of scout out a couple different areas and marks and locations or at least like write down remember that there's a location that I want to go back to. But that helps a lot when you're trying to go out to a campsite or to a camping area, or when your circumstances change like a lot of time of camping by myself. But it's kind of cool to remember locations that are a little bigger or something or have a little bit a little bit more of a Ease of Access. If you're going with like a group of people that's a little larger and you want to accommodate a couple different cars or a couple different people. I was kind of noticing like the difference between like, like group sites, and like kind of like more remote sites that you might go to. And that's sort of something that you're going to notice that they're two of these kind of these bigger group sites where it seems like you'd almost have like a horse camp or something. I've seen that as a as an option out there too. It's kind of strange when you go out you know, there's like kind of regular camps it seems like you get set up and then there's like a camp with a with a corral built into the campsite. And it seems like it's made from timber That was cut in process you know they just like cut down a tree right there and then split it and then made a corral out of it to keep their horses for their horse camp that they have for you know some hunting thing that they're up to or some outdoors thing they were up to, but it seems like a lot of these places are like big enough to like bring in an ATV or you know they have like a quad or something like that but it seems like there's kind of like a big circle that area and then otherwise there's like different locations that kind of like more like high clearance trucks or you know like some kind of four four wheel drive location that's a little bit further or you can kind of get back a little ways into the what would kind of be the back entry or into an even closer to a wilderness area and then you can take that and then jump back further and do some hunting in an area that you may be scouting out earlier in the year but for me like I don't really want to do any of that stuff I'm just out kind of hunting for pictures and hunting for good campsite and stuff so that's kind of what's been fun about that going through the john de river area up there there was a lot of stuff that that bordered like some BLM land is stretched up a hill and I guess that areas like one of the one of the drainage is that people go to for a lot of elk hunting</p>



<p>11:13  

and here it's known for that where you know know for some pretty big elk that they're able to to get out of that area which is kind of it's kind of cool, be fun, be fun to see some elk out there I've only seen a couple elk and most of the time I just see the female elk I don't think I've really ever seem like a big ball elk out there in the woods let me kind of fun that I've had a good time yeah getting out to go to some of those dispersed camping sites and stuff there's yes I'm out in deep Eastern Oregon by like heart mountain that I've always really liked. There's a lot it kind of that Eastern Oregon section when you get out there but what I've noticed though is a lot of the stuff in the National Forest section of say like the Cascades it seemed like pretty pretty well populated it's kind of harder to find good spots up there you can you can find like you know, little pull outs and dead end roads and stuff but but as it goes for like just kind of big free dispersed campsite sections it's a little bit harder to find it's a little more organized out in those locations. That's what's cool about some of the BLM stuff and some of the high desert location stuff is it's just it's just kind of wide open you're just you know sort of driving around you take some little dinky road off to the side and then you're at a cool fire pit and the big Juniper tree and it looks like people have been camping there forever You know so it's it's cool you can kind of find some stuff like that and I've had a good time going out to Eastern Oregon to find some stuff like that for myself. So I want to get out there and try and go camping at some of this some of the spots you know like I'm kind of competing with the hunting season like I was saying but but even silly I want to jump out there and try and do some fall camping it's really like one of the best times of year to go out there I really liked the springtime like even the early springtime like late March and April well it's still pretty cold if you can if you can gear up for it, it's really a cool time to be out there because you have so much like texture weather in the sky and then the clouds that it kind of keeps the terrain pretty interesting it can be pretty miserable you know if the weather is totally turned on yet but as it goes for a lot of it it really is kind of like a cool time to be out there in the summertime. It'll even buy like Mayor little in the June for sure. It just gets so hot that it's kind of tough to be out just kind of wandering around hiking around in the in the daytime. So it kind of cuts down on the amount of just kind of trekking around or wandering or poking around so that you can do you probably do some from the track or something but it's a little more fun to get out there and hike around. Check some stuff out so it seems like the fall like when the temperatures are down a little bit. You have a little bit better opportunity to do that and then early in the springtime but I think the Fall is my favorite time to be out there when you're you're watching the aspen trees kind of turning from green to yellow to orange and get a lot of color out there and some of those simoes Aspen groves grow out in Eastern Oregon. So I want to try and go out there and get some photographs of it as the seasons start to change and the colors come on and the trees I get about there's gonna be some nice days and stuff out there It seems like some of the trees are already starting to turn a little bit like I was saying in that last podcast I'm seeing a lot of a lot of trees kind of start to get the late late summer early fall tinge to them what it looks like they're about to about to turn over and get brown and began fall began items so it's gonna come on pretty fast. It's already with the Yeah, like the second week of September.</p>



<p>14:43  

You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to Help me out. And since value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo.</p>



<p>15:23  

So I've been checking out the ipfs network. I've been talking about it a few times before here on the podcast, but it stands for interplanetary file system, it's kind of a cool way of sort of creating a distributed hash table. or in our case, it's something where it's like a distributed network instead of having like a server system. So I've been trying to set that up, it's pretty complicated, but you can go to, say theories and download a program called Orion. And that's like, a browser that you can use to upload and then download, you know, send files back and forth over the ipfs network, which is pretty cool. It's kind of interesting. So I downloaded it on a couple of computers here at home. And I was trying to use this, this key to connect the two of the nodes together so you could kind of create, like a direct connection in the network. And I was trying to do this with a couple other computers I had around the house to to do some stuff, but But yeah, the ipfs node is pretty interesting. And we're trying to put up some media stuff onto that over the last couple days. I've been using this site called D sounds dot audio. And I'm trying to upload a bunch of mp3 files of my podcasts. And it's just kind of interesting to check it out. But yeah, it's it looks like a lot like SoundCloud or something when you use it, but instead of any of those files existing on a website's server, they exist distributed across the world United States I don't know how far it's really distributed yet. But those files are distributed on different computers so it can be reproduced from from different areas of the network. It's interesting, I don't know I'm kind of curious how it works out I'm also using this video program or video website called de dot tube, I think is what it is it's supposed to really just be like a YouTube clone. And it works pretty well it's it's not I think, the full resolution and flow that YouTube is but really as it goes, it's it's quite far along for what you would think to do with it. I've also been checking out bid shoot, which is another sort of YouTube video competitor but they do a lot more with ads and with paid content. And I think that the D tube stuff is it seems like a little more homegrown in some ways when you look at the website but but as I consider it, I think it's you know, it's ad free, it's crypto, decentralized, it's really it's interesting like when you log in, you don't really even use your email address or anything like that it's just it's this cryptographic key that you log in with and that's like your account data and if no one has it so if you lose it that's gone I think forever You know, so it's kind of cool checking it out you can go to the new page you can kind of upload media like you would on YouTube or so that it's a little slower though it seems like that's that's definitely something that I was noticing. I'm trying to make an upload right now. And it's going fine but I think it's a little bit slower than maybe some of the other the other like YouTube or something like that if you're apple in attending dp video it'd be more robust as a service This is definitely like something some some piece of the internet that's being made by people like you and me so it's it's kind of cool that it works at all really, but yeah, I think these these D tube sites and D sound sites are going to be kind of interesting media players and not players like but just interesting kind of media side features that that I think are kind of interesting as people are starting to maybe consider moving away from centralized services like Facebook and Microsoft and Apple and Amazon and all that so yeah, it's gonna think Google you know, YouTube and Google and all that but but it's cool, try to check out the ipfs stuff and get it connected I was trying to upload some videos that I have on my YouTube page right now and trying to download a bunch of YouTube videos. Also, I go to the YouTube videos that I have there's there's a couple different features out there there's like maybe one that you've heard before we put s s before the YouTube domain name and that'll send you over to a website called I think it's like save form or something like that. And then you can you can download sort of a lower resolution version of that. That file which saved me a couple of things I helped me out a couple times it was you know, audio video of it, you can download it, I think it was ad free. That it's as a website that kind of, you know, pushes you to buy stuff a lot though, to think of the way the service works, as opposed to trying to check out this thing called the YouTube dash dl which was like a youtube downloader. So I was trying to go through and download some of the videos that I had on YouTube, but that I don't really have like the same same clips from on my computer. So it's cool to go through and check it out. As to but and was it D sounds distributed sounds,</p>



<p>20:21  

distributed audio, it's kind of cool checking it out. So I'm uploading a video in the background right now on my laptop. It's like a screen capture video working in Lightroom. And going through the editing of a photo. So I'm throwing that up there on the two, which is like, probably going to take forever to upload, it's kind of a larger, I think it's like more than 10 minutes or something like that. It's one gigabyte. So it's like a bigger file for that network to take. So I think it takes like a little bit more time. But it's cool, I'm trying it out. And then I guess we'll kind of see how it goes. It's also cool, too, I guess you can just you can publish websites to the ipfs hash tables. Also, like if you write like a static HTML site or HTML CSS site, I guess you can package that and then upload that. And you will have a web link to go to that HTML site, and it will pull up like it was pulled up on the server, which is pretty interesting. I really learned quite enough about it. Yeah, I'm trying to figure it out a little bit more, I want to try and get like some kind of distributed distributed blog, website app or you know, something where you can kind of update it a couple times, I think there's another one called steep shot dot i O. That was this, this photo sharing website that I was checking out, which is kind of cool. It's still all these are still in alpha. I was having a hard time actually like getting stuff to upload when I was using it. So it was kind of interesting, but I think it's you know, it's stuff that it kind of comes and goes as you're sort of an early adopter some of the services. But I'm gonna try and try and use steep shot.io to continue doing some stuff too. That's another distributed photo sharing site, which is kind of cool uses the, I think I think when you post a photo and post it to the blockchain ledger is still sort of something that's out of my depth, it seems to me, but I think it's kind of cool that you're able to do stuff like that. And yeah, but put stuff up on the web and download it from the web without ever really going through a centralized service. So it's kind of fun stuff. But thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.</p>



<p>22:36  

Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo comm few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, good links to other other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like this. blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks for listening to this episode and the back end.</p>



<p>22:57  
 Thank you.</p>



<p>200 Hunting Camps - Creating IPFS Networks</p>]]></content:encoded>
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If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



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200 Hunting Camps - Creating IPFS Networks



0:14  

Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.



0:23  

Here different industries kind of talk about, you know what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography, there's a lot of that the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of, you know, how do you got to get paid and how you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of thing, but there's still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity, where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together, and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector, kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out and that's what I really like about ne]]></itunes:summary>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/162-recording-landscape-videos-in-the-rain/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 28 Oct 2020 12:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=9741</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain</p>



<p>Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. </p>



<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a target="_blank" href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain



Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock ]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain</p>



<p>Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. </p>



<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a target="_blank" href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
	<enclosure url="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast-download/9741/162-recording-landscape-videos-in-the-rain.mp3" length="23722757" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain



Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm



Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r



I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.com&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;visit the Support Page here.



You can find&nbsp;my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About&nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/]]></itunes:summary>
	<itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>32:57</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain



Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all the time ]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 158 Early Chanterelle Season</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/158-early-chanterelle-season/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 30 Sep 2020 12:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=9689</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>158 Early Chanterelle Season</p>



<p>Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season.  Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. </p>



<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a target="_blank" href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link 158 Early Chanterelle Season</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About  <a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>158 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Early Chanterelle Season</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking this one out. It's been falling off for this last week. So we got a good bit of rain that had come down for a while here in the northern Oregon area, I was looking on the map on the like radar map the weather map, and it was showing like a pretty good bit of rain that was hitting, I think I call across the wall. Now across the west coast, but all across the Northwest area is, I think it's all like going up into British Columbia pretty far. But I think for this week, it's supposed to be dry, as like, we wait for the next system to kind of push through, and it was kind of weird to kind of change the weather pattern there a little bit, but I think it's been going okay for the fire recovery stuff. So a lot to do and a lot going on. And a man like I'm sure like some of the state highways that cut across the Cascades are going to be shot for probably most of the winter, I wonder if they're going to recover in that way, you know, like just with some of the towns that are just no longer there, they're gonna have to take a long time to rebuild but all the fire damage of, of trees and stuff, they're going to be down the road, and then all the potential damage that's going to come from this winter, as we get heavier rains, heavier snowfall on those broken trees, the ash in the mud and stuff. And I guess there's like a high risk of a mudslide on yours that follows a big fire like this. So that'd be, I guess, a bigger concern too, now that we're talking about some areas that have pretty highly populated highway systems that travel through those passes. So we'll be I'm sure they're gonna try and survey to recover that stuff safely. But I don't know if they've had this large scale of a problem, at least in this in the state of Oregon as I can ever remember ever recall. I don't recall something like this specifically in places like a place like Washington or California. But there must have been other projects that were similar to this in the past that had been pretty significant problems of burn areas and mountainous regions near populated areas. But I think it's really kind of a unique zone to the northwest. So I don't know if we've had that kind of burn before, at least like in this kind of modern time when we're as populated and with such developed road systems that go around, but I think we're gonna see some of those roads close for a while now. But, yeah, as we kind of move into the fall, getting close to the October coming on, it's kind of cool that Yeah, monster kind of moving by seems like fall as you kind of walk around and stuff. You know, I started kind of poking around a little bit for some chanterelle mushrooms. I think it's probably a good time of year. These next couple of weeks for sure will be in a while I guess like the conditions change for it so quickly that they can come on just within, like what you know, a couple of days of of a change in the weather. And now that it's the right time of season, the right temperature, you know, I've seen like a ring of other like an artist garden wonder what it would be like just like toadstools yard, mushrooms popping up in a ring. In a few places. It's kind of weird how they just kind of wait to this the right time of year, or whatever the conditions are that that causes their micro Raizel relationship to interact the right way. And then they fruit out all these mushrooms, and you see these Yeah, rings little populations of mushrooms around. So it's kind of weird. Yeah, like out like into a field. Well, his drive, and you see, like a patch of mushrooms growing in an area that had already been tilled for the year or something, we think we know that he just comes up there, there's a spot under an apple tree that we've got. And that pops up a ring of like white toast or mushrooms every year, and it seems like or like a couple of times a year, I think, like maybe once spring and now like once in the fall that I've kind of noticed the last couple years. So it's kind of interesting how there are these these little patterns like that. But similarly, there are some patterns to the Shawn trail mushroom growth too. So I think that now that we're in this section of October, and I think probably for the next month or so, we'll probably have pretty fair conditions. If it kind of stays wet, I think it might be a little too dry right now. But if it still was a little bit damp from the heavier rains that we got with the last storm, then there are some forested areas that that might start populating up some mushrooms, but that's where I'm trying to just kind of go around and start scouting out a couple of roads and a couple of areas that I want to go back and check out at some other future time. So it's kind of cool. I'm kind of going out to some Forest Service roads and stuff, getting some gear packed up and pack in a backpack and some binoculars so I can kind of scout around and check out some birds and stuff that's gonna kind of fun spot a couple of hawks or I think I've seen I think it was like earlier this year. I've seen turkeys and their turkeys run around the woods and stuff. It's kind of fun when you spot some of that stuff, but it's been cool hadn't had into the coastal range mountains and trying to hunt around for some good chanterelle picking spots, I guess what you're supposed to look for, are, are like Fern, growing beneath evergreen trees and sort of an open forest floor environment, I think that they don't really grow around deciduous trees that have like a good bit of leaf fall during this time of year. But it's kind of interesting to you know; there's sort of some strange things where there are definitely some places where it Wow, they just like really grow, boom, they're just growing there. And even in circumstances where there are hard conditions or where it's not, it's not an optimal condition for mushrooms to be growing. You'll find them in those really good spots and be like, wow, you know, they're here, but they're really not anywhere else. But I swear, it's weird. Coming up here, probably sometime in the next two weeks, there's going to be just the right conditions where they just seem to pop up everywhere, where a lot of the time where they wouldn't have popped up in another location Are you know, at another time and other conditions that popping up right now. And it seems to be when it's warmer and wetter out? before there's like a colder snap or freeze or something. But I remember going out last year, and we were just driving on a forest road that we've been on a number of times before, even during that time of year, and never really seen anything that we were picking up on shows just off the side of the road in the moss, or like up against the mass of the for injuries and stuff. All over, we picked up like, you know, bags, we like had almost stopped because we were just like, well, I guess we kind of had space and like what are we going to do with these so. So it's kind of cool, like when you can, you can really find a bunch of stuff out there. Sometimes though, the conditions are kind of tight, and sometimes, especially like maybe a year like this the the there's a lot of people that go out to try and pick too. So there's kind of some things around that that are a little tricky. But yeah, I think if you're on public land, though you can forage for Shawn trails, or I think Morales without a permit, then you should look that up a little bit. I guess there are some rules around like picking and not picking. And there's sort of some ways that you can do it, and you can't do it. And I guess that there's also like a sale of a permit if you want to use those mushrooms commercially like I think I'd heard before. Like, if you go, you pick a couple of pounds of mushrooms in a box, and then you can if you have a permit, and yeah, like I don't know, some kind of structured relationship already, you can go to like a local restaurant and sell those on trails off at a, you know, a market rate. And I've heard of people doing that before, as part of a job to work. It's kinda interesting. But yeah, we're kind of coming up into the chanterelle picking season. So that'll be kind of fun to go around Scott around some stuff. But thinking about the fire stuff, too, and kind of some of the photography stuff, I haven't really seen any, any direct damage, or like I haven't been to an area yet that was close enough to see where part of the forest burned, or were part of the populated areas that burned. So that'll be strange, I guess kind of finally see, but when I was looking around at, I got a notification for it was this job, this photo job that's out there. And I've been seeing like a few of these pop up, where I think it's maybe people that don't live in the area. I've seen these jobs before. In other other circumstances, you know, like unrelated to fire or unrelated damage, but where people from another area need to get a number of photographs of a property, or a piece of land or a lot that they own or that they intend to buy. And it's like owned by someone else. So they try and like pay someone you know, like hey, like I'm gonna I don't want to drive to say for myself in Oregon, I don't want to drive to Montana to look at a piece of land yet. I will want to get when it gets close or something, but I want someone else that's in the area to take 45 photographs of it for me and then mail those to me, and I'll pay him $300 or something like that. So I've seen like kind of some gigs like that. And it's been it's probably less than 300 bucks a lot of the time. But I've seen a lot of a lot of jobs like that around in the past before. This time though. Now, after all these forest fires, I was looking at this job that was lined up, and it's asking for a photographer to go in a photograph a mobile home lot in an area that I'm certain was hit by the fire. So I guess my suspicion is that they own a couple lots in the area or they own a property that's related to the lots around there, but they don't live there. And so they're trying to have a photographer come in. And I think photograph like as what's there was laughter What had happened. I guess there's probably a lot of people that are trying to get some information or get some some visual on what had happened in that Their area or if they're, their section is no longer in a restricted zone, they're trying to figure out what like, like, did I have any damage? Or you know, what happened over there? What was the smoke damage? What was it like? So I think there's some some property owners that are trying to get some, some reconnaissance information about whatever was going on with their, their property near and around the fire that had burned. So yeah, looking at a couple of those jobs, I don't think I'm gonna take that kind of job. But if you're interested in it, go ahead and apply, check it out. I don't know really how that works, I don't think you can get into an area that was still being in a restricted zone, or you like a burn zone, if you're not like a property owner. Or if you don't have, it seems like some some kind of better, specific, I mean, I guess you're a photographer, but it just seems sort of like a light activity for an emergency zone. So I think it's probably some areas that are like maybe more of the perimeters of that a little bit outside of the area that would have been damaged or something, but it would be affected by it. So I think there's still like another level one, level two, and level three evacuation zones. Level three was like leave now level two is like, get ready to go right now. And over three was get your things together to be prepared to leave, man. No fun. So I think it's probably some of the areas that were outside of those immediate evacuation zones. And there's some people trying to get some information that probably just don't have access to it. But yeah, kind of interesting to see those photography jobs listed. Now, you know, it was just as things come up, as you know, like a need arises. And photography, real estate jobs exist out there, you know, taking photographs of houses or properties have been around for a while I've done a bunch of them. And it's kind of weird to kind of see that shift over to just try a photograph with left of the real estate Not, not if it's like real estate for sale or a condo to rent. It's just Well, you know, is there anything left to that hillside, there's anything left in my apartment, or house or housing complex. So man, that'd be really strange, a lot, a lot, a weird, weird kind of activities to go on this year. So I'm hopeful that those are kind of more under control now. And I hope that California is also getting some relief. I think it's been, it's been a while now. And I don't think they've got the kind of rain relief that we've had through the later September. And then while I guess now we're kind of waiting through a bit of October for it, but but some of the rainfall that we've had this year, I think has been better here in Oregon than it has been in the parts of southern California that are probably still having a difficult time fighting off the fires and stuff. So man, it's really dry conditions and heat. And you know, late summer heat, man, it's rough. So not very fun. But as it goes, Yeah, I think like a lot of stuff has kind of been affected or kind of moved around because of the fires that there's a lot of smoke that's now kind of blown eastward. So I think parts of eastern Oregon are pretty smoky by better, but pretty smoky. If you're kind of in line at one of the fire areas, it's really pretty good over here, like on the west coast, western side of the Cascades. As you go in most of the way up and down the I five corridor, I think when we were doing that, we only ran into a couple patches where you go over like a mountain pass and then you're in an area that has sort of hazy skies or a little bit of smoke and they're really kind of near an area that has a fire going on. So it's kind of weird how there's a couple pockets that that still have a little bit of smoke on the west side of the Cascades, but I think a lot of that is that pushed a little bit more toward the east. And that you know, also I guess kind of bums out people on the eastern side of it too. So I was also thinking about like hunting season or about really just a lot of the outdoors people that are going out and trying to do some stuff during the fall for myself it was a lot of photo trips and a lot of like kind of September and October planned outing or you know kind of camping and traveled trips that I was going to try and go through some public lands over in the upper parts of eastern Oregon that I think are best during this time of year of September and October out there. I think it's really cool watching the aspen trees kind of start to change their color kind of turned into their fiery yellows and oranges and reds as they start to change over under the fall and lose their leaves and get into Washington the animal like the antelope and stuff move over and in southeastern Oregon, it's really cool. Or probably a bunch of the other stuff you get to see right now too. And yeah, it gets to be a bit more of a populated I think time of year. Probably coming up on is it October 1 it's opening day for for deer hunting season here in Oregon. I'm not 100% sure on that, but I do think that it is coming up here right away. So I think I'm gonna try and get a little bit of a trip out before that starts. So that I can do some stuff. Probably before a big wave of people come out for a couple of weeks to do some deer hunting seven this year. It might be a little bit more busy than other years. All right, I just wonder what the pressure will be like and some of those areas. So I'm going to be kind of try or I'm going to try to be mindful of what's going on, I think, during the next couple of weeks, but really, I've never had a problem, or a difficulty trying to, you know, find a spot or find a place for this thing that I'm up to, while while it's been hunting season out there, and a lot of those places are still pretty remote. Like a lot of places I'd go to take photographs are popular, you know, they're just not really in the same spots. Fortunately, I guess that, that you're going to get a lot of pressure for deer hunting for the next couple weeks. So that's kind of cool. But I do want to kind of explore around a little bit. I know some of those areas this time a year are mostly filled up with people that are that are coming through for tourism-related to like a plant hunting trip that they have. So like they're doing like an elk hunting trip up in the central northern central Northeastern section of Oregon, or over here on Western Oregon. But like I hear like up I think it's like fossil Mitchell. And then as you kind of move up further through the Fremont. Now it's that Fremont up there. I don't know what that one is. Now I forget, I don't know what that for the National forces do. I think it's like the strawberry mountains, the Blue Mountains, as you're moving up toward toward like La Grande Pendleton over there. But I've heard like there's some some areas over there. Well, I mean, there's like there's drainage is for hunting districts all across Oregon, you know, and you can put in for Daggett, I guess, and any number of those. But I know like some of the areas that southeastern Oregon. Like there's a string of these like dispersed remote camps that are out there. And this time of year, they, they get filled up a little a little bit faster. For you know, hunting camps coming through a group of guys coming through and setting up a good rigging of stuff stay in there for about 10 days or so again, or you know, it seems like at least five days, five or six days, and then taking off. So it seems like a few of those spots get kind of held up for a little bit longer periods of time this time of year. But I remember Yeah, it's pretty regular that I try and go out on camping trips through September and October. And definitely through like parts of October. I've never even like through school and stuff there would always be like about at least like a weekend, or like a long weekend trip a year that would be out to somewhere deep in Eastern Oregon to kind of check out some stuff. But yeah, really cool area out there. Especially if you get the weather on your side. I think we're getting at like a nice snap of weather this week, if you're able to do it. And if you're able to kind of check your forecasts and stuff then it's it's a cool time to get out there. While though there's a little bit Chris, but it's still dry enough some ways that you can kind of enjoy yourself. And it's really beautiful for photographs with the trees. Like I was saying, if you're able to get to an area where you're at an elevation that that aspen trees are growing, you can photograph the changes and the colors that they have there too. But it's also pretty interesting area as the weather starts to shift a little bit if you're able to stay there. For me, at least before the snow start starts to fall, which I think is gonna be a little bit late this season. I don't think it seems to be like an early snow season over there. But I have been over there and like mid October when it snowed. But if you're over there, and it's just cloudy as it is or just cloudy and like kind of partly rainy, it's a desert. So you don't really get rained out as heavy as I seem to be it rained out over here on the west side of the Cascades. So you can kind of get out and just be dry and a little bit cold and see some interesting cloud cover kind of blow over the desert valleys out there. So it can be kind of an interesting place to check out at some times. But it can't be pretty harsh to when the winds pick up or especially at night, as the temperature drops and the weather changes. And you're definitely going to be dealing with freezing temperatures. If you're going out there much past much past mid October. Seems like maybe they're probably getting close to a frost or, or near the freeze there. I think they're most serious out there around like 4500 feet by 45 to like 5500 feet, and some can be a mile high. Is it a mile high out and blush, I don't know, probably about 40 to 4500 feet maybe. But there are certainly some areas like I talked about on those last trips where you're going out there and you can you can raise an elevation a few 1000 feet and because like I thought i was relatively flat through most of this area, but now you've been gaining an elevation you can get up on top of rise and be at 6500 feet, you'd be like wow, wow. So I have this interesting and kind of move back and forth. A little bit on you out there. But yeah, it's cool. I'm excited to get out and do some travel through some Eastern Oregon areas during October here. Trying to do some video stuff and some photography stuff. I think I was mentioning that before where a lot of the time I'm working on the photography stuff. We're gonna like some film photos or something, and I'm definitely gonna be doing a lot of that this fall. I'm really trying to focus on some like goals to kind of kind of focus what I'm trying to gather while I'm out there. So like, I get Like, an amount of something of, you know, whatever, whatever goal of trying to put together, but kind of try to focus on that a little bit more instead of just kind of haphazard haphazardly going out and then seeing something interesting and maybe taking a photograph of it. So. So let's begin to kind of interesting to do. And I'm trying to do that a little bit with the photographs for a lot of the summer, but I'm also trying to get a collection of better, longer video clips that are recorded in sort of a, you know, a professional way or, you know, I want to try and like set it up on a tripod or set it up in a way where it's, it's kind of an easy and steady shot for a longer period of time. And what I hope to do with that is through like a number of the trips, as I kind of move across Oregon, is to gather enough sets of clips of different like landmark locations that I'm later able to use those videos to put together different pieces and different pieces in association with the photographs. But just to kind of show visually in through video, some of the areas, too, so videos not really like what, what I really like putting together what I especially like editing on and I like kind of some of the more specific controls you have over the outcome and the way that a moment looks in the way that you use photography, instead of sort of a longer format system of video that shows you know, a lot of changes to just a single aspect to something over a period of time. So I think it'd be cool, though to, to go out and try and get a bunch of landscape video clips that are long enough to kind of use in sort of a document documentary fashioned for future projects coming up. So kind of fun. But it's also something I haven't really done as much before. So it kind of also reopens a lot of spots that I've maybe grown tired of going to in the past, you know, where I leave, I've gone to a spot for rock or something like that I've been there a number of ties really cool spot really interesting if you haven't been there if you want to walk around or something. But if you go to take photographs of it, it's really cool. And I could probably take a lot more photographs of the place like that, to be honest, but but as it goes, if you think just just a regular photo framed picture, getting kind of tired of that I have a few of those, and I really have a draw to go back there to photograph it. But if I'm doing like a video project, well, I haven't done that before. So it kind of gives me a little bit of inspiration to go there. And to do that with it. Or I think like what it was a couple years ago, when we were working with a GoPro 360 camera, it was interesting, because it was like, well, all these places that I kind of for me like Crater Lake, which really I have not that much interest in. It was like oh, like I should go to Crater Lake, I should make it to that destination. Because I have this tool with me that I normally don't have, or have this, this thing that I normally don't do, like maybe 360 video in that case are now and in this case of, you know, just going around and trying to make like a steady set of like documentary video clips, it's like, well, I haven't done that before. So kind of opens up like every location in the past that I had gone to. And so you can check that off the list, I don't need to go to that waterfall again, I've kind of been there and I've got some cool photos of it. So I'll just go to the next place and kind of head on. And this kind of opens it up a little bit of Well, I'm familiar with these places, I can kind of go through and produce these clips out in a way that's, you know, going to work for me or something. So it's kind of cool, I'm going through and trying to capture some longer clips and stuff it may have video takes a lot longer to do you know, you have to like do a few things you have to really pull over and really study it and shut everything off. Wait for the sounds to be right. You know, if you're in an area where it doesn't doesn't work, right. Like if you're near a road and there's cars or something going by, or whatever it is you just have to make these mitigations to try and make it work you'd have to like get off the road or go further away or set up a better shot or whatever it is you have to kind of like push a little harder. And then to capture it and sort of similar to like long-exposure photography, you just have to like sit there and wait for why you had to wait for the time to elapse for you to capture a minute of footage or four minutes of footage of these, you know, like cattle moving across the field or something like that. So it's kind of fun. Yeah, the stuff that you see and the stuff that you captured. But it also takes like a lot more work to kind of put together those video pieces. But I'm looking forward to it, I want to try and put together some time-lapse work, some sky video, like some sunset stuff or some clouds kind of moving around. I think that's going to be really interesting or especially like with some of the dynamic kind of dramatic cloud textures that you get over in Eastern Oregon during the September and October times a year. I think it'll be kind of cool to try and photograph some of those quickly kind of moving lower cumulus clouds as they sort of kind of swirl and turn and move past on the sky. So going to try and set up some some longer maybe like an hour video or something like that and then set up a time-lapse from that to kind of speed the video up and then make it something where you can kind of see the changes but I'm trying to put together some of those visual elements pretty much as it's like kind of a fun, activity side project thing but Jenna put some of these like visual video elements together. So I have a collection of those kinds of pieces to like, you know I can I was still photograph of a beautiful sunset, say or I got to have a maybe like an interesting time-lapse that sort of shows it, roll through the colors and roll through the cloud formations that it makes. And I'd like to kind of make a couple of those to go in tandem with some of the other pieces of work that I've been trying to put together. So it kind of kind of goes, carries on stuff, but it's a similar stuff I've been up to, I also got some mini DV tapes back, I think I talked about a couple podcasts back, I'd send them off to be converted. And I had a pair of them, I think, two hours of footage, converted from mini DV tape to mp4. And I got a thumb drive mailed back to me, and plugged it in the computer through on the videos, I've been through about 1.5 gigabytes an hour for an mp4 of standard standard def 2005 video from some mini DV camera. And there's a few good ones I got to work with. But I think a lot of the footage is kind of interesting. It's interesting to see, I think I'd like I'd mentioned maybe I recorded over a number of the tapes that I'd use frequently. So I'd record a project or record a couple clips video, none of it very proficient. And then I capture that over to a computer and edit it. And then I blacked out the tape and then record the next project over it. So there's only like some sections of video that probably still remain. And I bet there's probably a lot of cool pieces that I wish I had been able to keep. I think some of the good stuff I do still have. So that's cool. And from what I found already, it's also pretty cool just to see what was there. But yeah, like some few like I think it was like a men's high school basketball game. I think it was a I think there was a soccer game recorded. I think there was like a girls basketball game recorded. I think there was an assembly recorded like a bunch of like high school footage that I had recorded, or that, like other people recorded with me during probably 2005 2006. Wow. Yeah, that's cool. Yeah, so kind of seeing some of that footage. And some of it we'd use for little projects and stuff we're working on. But it's cool to see the raw footage again. And that's kind of fun about being able to pull up those tapes, take them into a place I haven't converted, and then get get to check out the the types of footage that was on it. But yeah, you get to see some cool stuff. I think it was, like I mentioned maybe before I converted some stuff, and I think it was like some somebodies wedding that I converted, you know, I don't have much attachment to it, but I'm sure those people do, you know, they have the video of whatever it was, but it's cool that this raw video exists, I'll maybe I'll reach out to that I reached out to another friend and said, Hey, check out this, check out this video. You know, it's like an hour of stuff back from high school that we thought was probably just gone, you know. So probably, I think for most people it is, and I think most people don't really have like the archivist mentality or the, the the media mentality that that I always do. But it's really fun to have a photo album or have a clip or a set of clips and videos and stuff from when you were younger. And now especially that we're older, I think some of the some of the benefit of kind of keeping keeping hold of some of those things as they come up. It's kind of cool, you know, you get to like, pull up this thing as Oh, wow. Yeah, that was like 15 years ago. No way. That's what it seems like 15 years past he does he like video yourself or video someplace that you're at. It's cool. So I'm happy to be going through and clipping up some of those pieces of video. Pretty fun. And yeah, kinda kind of carry on as I've tried to get a few more of them converted. I think I have like a little box, I probably have maybe somewhere less than eight of these tapes left. And then I think I have a number of tapes that I'm going to try and collect from my, my family to I think they have a few like, you know, like, I don't know, whatever, probably the earlier stuff of like holidays and family events and whatever that stuff was. And all the tapes that I have are just from what I started, you know, back in like the 2000, probably, for maybe the earliest. For photos of maybe like 2002 2003 those video clips go it's probably 2004 2005 that I was really able to get access to some video stuff, at least that you know that like I was focused on I was using kind of on my own. So yeah, it's cool to have those have those tapes around getting converted, get to check out some old footage on it's a little bit expensive. I think it was 25 bucks for the two hours of footage that I got. So it's fine. And it's cool because it's good footage or it's cool to like have these memories and stuff. But it's also weird too. If you spend 25 bucks and you just get a blacked out tape. You know, imagine it was the blank tape and you're like, Oh, cool. So it's been cool. Yeah, kind of pulling up these old pieces and seeing some stuff especially if like your old like home videos or home movies or your wedding or something like that, man, all of those things. Those are really cool memories to have and then istyles you have kind of been able to keep those as is so important. And now that it's so easy to digitize them. We're in a period of time right now. It's easy to digitize them and easy to duplicate that that He's a data out. So you can archive in different locations like a bigger thumb drive, you can put a bunch of media, or you can kind of diversify that and make four thumb drives and keep them in different places, or with different people, you can share with different people, if there's sets of videos that you want to get out of just being siloed. With you, which is sort of where I'm at to, you know, like I recorded a lot of video, I record a lot of photos, and I don't really have to be the the yearbook creator for everyone I've ever met. But I was also thinking, well, it'd be cool to have to kind of get a hold of a couple of people and say, I have this, this video, it's just been archived in a box of mini DV tapes for the last 15 years, I got a copy of it. There's a footage of you for some projects, here's a set of that, or here's some photos from something that happened back in college or whatever it is, you know, some some project or event that we worked at. So all those kind of things are cool to get a hold of, I know I have them. And I know they might have had them at a time but maybe lost interest or don't have many more than So, yeah, it's kind of cool to come upon that stuff, and then be able to set it out and get to look at that stuff. Again, it's cool looking back into the past a little bit with some old video or some old photographs. So it's been kind of fun. But yeah, we're working on that we're gonna have some video conversions and some photo stuff, trying to do some fun writing, I'm trying to rough draft a bunch of stuff, I use voice to text a lot, I use voice to text to like, get a bunch of paragraphs out. And then I use Grammarly. And another site called Hemingway to kind of help me do some editing of that. But then I also go back through and then I try and like write in a bunch of stuff on top of that. And that really seems to like I don't know kind of helps with speed a lot is really the thing that makes a big difference is the speed that I'm able to put out 300 words or 200 words or something like and then kind of restructure that hold of it. So it's a lot better than I was able to do with the bass, that's for sure. So it's kind of fun. Yeah, voice to text just on an iPhone, or you can do it. Even when I'm out camping and stuff. You can you can use it in airplane mode. And I think you have a database of words within the phone that you're able to do voice to text with it's, it's a pretty comprehensive English library, which is cool. It's really fantastic that you're able to do those kinds of techniques. But But yeah, I think it was a campaign, I was able to put down a lot of work, you know, just by voice to text into my phone, like I always have it into the Notes app. And then I have have, you know, like 10 documents ready to go that have 300 word, little essays, or a little rough draft sections set up so that you can go through throw those into an editor, correct the weird mistakes or like some of them, you probably read it, but correct some weird voice to text mistakes, correct some grammar stuff, and then go back through and try and try and edit a couple ideas and make it you know, it's weird to write, like, like, if you just listen to that last sentence, the structure things that you say, or at least the things that I say, seem to be a lot looser than the structure things that you're right. So when you do like a voice to text thing, you tell a story, you make some comment, but you really, I think have to go back through and sort of rearrange it a little bit to make it clear writing at least ideal. I think that's a benefit of people who write allies; they get a better pair of graphic sense of the things that that the point that they need to make and the communication that they have. So thanks a lot for putting up with me. rambling about fires and photos and cabin and mini DV tape conversions. So it's a good time. But I appreciate you guys tuning in to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can always do more to see some of my work by checking out Billy Newman. photo.com did I say that? I think I said yeah, yeah, go to billion photo.com. That's, that's I figured you guys remember. Thanks for checking out this episode of the podcast it next week.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[158 Early Chanterelle Season



Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season.  Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.koda]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>158 Early Chanterelle Season</p>



<p>Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season.  Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. </p>



<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



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<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link 158 Early Chanterelle Season</p>



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<p>158 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Early Chanterelle Season</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking this one out. It's been falling off for this last week. So we got a good bit of rain that had come down for a while here in the northern Oregon area, I was looking on the map on the like radar map the weather map, and it was showing like a pretty good bit of rain that was hitting, I think I call across the wall. Now across the west coast, but all across the Northwest area is, I think it's all like going up into British Columbia pretty far. But I think for this week, it's supposed to be dry, as like, we wait for the next system to kind of push through, and it was kind of weird to kind of change the weather pattern there a little bit, but I think it's been going okay for the fire recovery stuff. So a lot to do and a lot going on. And a man like I'm sure like some of the state highways that cut across the Cascades are going to be shot for probably most of the winter, I wonder if they're going to recover in that way, you know, like just with some of the towns that are just no longer there, they're gonna have to take a long time to rebuild but all the fire damage of, of trees and stuff, they're going to be down the road, and then all the potential damage that's going to come from this winter, as we get heavier rains, heavier snowfall on those broken trees, the ash in the mud and stuff. And I guess there's like a high risk of a mudslide on yours that follows a big fire like this. So that'd be, I guess, a bigger concern too, now that we're talking about some areas that have pretty highly populated highway systems that travel through those passes. So we'll be I'm sure they're gonna try and survey to recover that stuff safely. But I don't know if they've had this large scale of a problem, at least in this in the state of Oregon as I can ever remember ever recall. I don't recall something like this specifically in places like a place like Washington or California. But there must have been other projects that were similar to this in the past that had been pretty significant problems of burn areas and mountainous regions near populated areas. But I think it's really kind of a unique zone to the northwest. So I don't know if we've had that kind of burn before, at least like in this kind of modern time when we're as populated and with such developed road systems that go around, but I think we're gonna see some of those roads close for a while now. But, yeah, as we kind of move into the fall, getting close to the October coming on, it's kind of cool that Yeah, monster kind of moving by seems like fall as you kind of walk around and stuff. You know, I started kind of poking around a little bit for some chanterelle mushrooms. I think it's probably a good time of year. These next couple of weeks for sure will be in a while I guess like the conditions change for it so quickly that they can come on just within, like what you know, a couple of days of of a change in the weather. And now that it's the right time of season, the right temperature, you know, I've seen like a ring of other like an artist garden wonder what it would be like just like toadstools yard, mushrooms popping up in a ring. In a few places. It's kind of weird how they just kind of wait to this the right time of year, or whatever the conditions are that that causes their micro Raizel relationship to interact the right way. And then they fruit out all these mushrooms, and you see these Yeah, rings little populations of mushrooms around. So it's kind of weird. Yeah, like out like into a field. Well, his drive, and you see, like a patch of mushrooms growing in an area that had already been tilled for the year or something, we think we know that he just comes up there, there's a spot under an apple tree that we've got. And that pops up a ring of like white toast or mushrooms every year, and it seems like or like a couple of times a year, I think, like maybe once spring and now like once in the fall that I've kind of noticed the last couple years. So it's kind of interesting how there are these these little patterns like that. But similarly, there are some patterns to the Shawn trail mushroom growth too. So I think that now that we're in this section of October, and I think probably for the next month or so, we'll probably have pretty fair conditions. If it kind of stays wet, I think it might be a little too dry right now. But if it still was a little bit damp from the heavier rains that we got with the last storm, then there are some forested areas that that might start populating up some mushrooms, but that's where I'm trying to just kind of go around and start scouting out a couple of roads and a couple of areas that I want to go back and check out at some other future time. So it's kind of cool. I'm kind of going out to some Forest Service roads and stuff, getting some gear packed up and pack in a backpack and some binoculars so I can kind of scout around and check out some birds and stuff that's gonna kind of fun spot a couple of hawks or I think I've seen I think it was like earlier this year. I've seen turkeys and their turkeys run around the woods and stuff. It's kind of fun when you spot some of that stuff, but it's been cool hadn't had into the coastal range mountains and trying to hunt around for some good chanterelle picking spots, I guess what you're supposed to look for, are, are like Fern, growing beneath evergreen trees and sort of an open forest floor environment, I think that they don't really grow around deciduous trees that have like a good bit of leaf fall during this time of year. But it's kind of interesting to you know; there's sort of some strange things where there are definitely some places where it Wow, they just like really grow, boom, they're just growing there. And even in circumstances where there are hard conditions or where it's not, it's not an optimal condition for mushrooms to be growing. You'll find them in those really good spots and be like, wow, you know, they're here, but they're really not anywhere else. But I swear, it's weird. Coming up here, probably sometime in the next two weeks, there's going to be just the right conditions where they just seem to pop up everywhere, where a lot of the time where they wouldn't have popped up in another location Are you know, at another time and other conditions that popping up right now. And it seems to be when it's warmer and wetter out? before there's like a colder snap or freeze or something. But I remember going out last year, and we were just driving on a forest road that we've been on a number of times before, even during that time of year, and never really seen anything that we were picking up on shows just off the side of the road in the moss, or like up against the mass of the for injuries and stuff. All over, we picked up like, you know, bags, we like had almost stopped because we were just like, well, I guess we kind of had space and like what are we going to do with these so. So it's kind of cool, like when you can, you can really find a bunch of stuff out there. Sometimes though, the conditions are kind of tight, and sometimes, especially like maybe a year like this the the there's a lot of people that go out to try and pick too. So there's kind of some things around that that are a little tricky. But yeah, I think if you're on public land, though you can forage for Shawn trails, or I think Morales without a permit, then you should look that up a little bit. I guess there are some rules around like picking and not picking. And there's sort of some ways that you can do it, and you can't do it. And I guess that there's also like a sale of a permit if you want to use those mushrooms commercially like I think I'd heard before. Like, if you go, you pick a couple of pounds of mushrooms in a box, and then you can if you have a permit, and yeah, like I don't know, some kind of structured relationship already, you can go to like a local restaurant and sell those on trails off at a, you know, a market rate. And I've heard of people doing that before, as part of a job to work. It's kinda interesting. But yeah, we're kind of coming up into the chanterelle picking season. So that'll be kind of fun to go around Scott around some stuff. But thinking about the fire stuff, too, and kind of some of the photography stuff, I haven't really seen any, any direct damage, or like I haven't been to an area yet that was close enough to see where part of the forest burned, or were part of the populated areas that burned. So that'll be strange, I guess kind of finally see, but when I was looking around at, I got a notification for it was this job, this photo job that's out there. And I've been seeing like a few of these pop up, where I think it's maybe people that don't live in the area. I've seen these jobs before. In other other circumstances, you know, like unrelated to fire or unrelated damage, but where people from another area need to get a number of photographs of a property, or a piece of land or a lot that they own or that they intend to buy. And it's like owned by someone else. So they try and like pay someone you know, like hey, like I'm gonna I don't want to drive to say for myself in Oregon, I don't want to drive to Montana to look at a piece of land yet. I will want to get when it gets close or something, but I want someone else that's in the area to take 45 photographs of it for me and then mail those to me, and I'll pay him $300 or something like that. So I've seen like kind of some gigs like that. And it's been it's probably less than 300 bucks a lot of the time. But I've seen a lot of a lot of jobs like that around in the past before. This time though. Now, after all these forest fires, I was looking at this job that was lined up, and it's asking for a photographer to go in a photograph a mobile home lot in an area that I'm certain was hit by the fire. So I guess my suspicion is that they own a couple lots in the area or they own a property that's related to the lots around there, but they don't live there. And so they're trying to have a photographer come in. And I think photograph like as what's there was laughter What had happened. I guess there's probably a lot of people that are trying to get some information or get some some visual on what had happened in that Their area or if they're, their section is no longer in a restricted zone, they're trying to figure out what like, like, did I have any damage? Or you know, what happened over there? What was the smoke damage? What was it like? So I think there's some some property owners that are trying to get some, some reconnaissance information about whatever was going on with their, their property near and around the fire that had burned. So yeah, looking at a couple of those jobs, I don't think I'm gonna take that kind of job. But if you're interested in it, go ahead and apply, check it out. I don't know really how that works, I don't think you can get into an area that was still being in a restricted zone, or you like a burn zone, if you're not like a property owner. Or if you don't have, it seems like some some kind of better, specific, I mean, I guess you're a photographer, but it just seems sort of like a light activity for an emergency zone. So I think it's probably some areas that are like maybe more of the perimeters of that a little bit outside of the area that would have been damaged or something, but it would be affected by it. So I think there's still like another level one, level two, and level three evacuation zones. Level three was like leave now level two is like, get ready to go right now. And over three was get your things together to be prepared to leave, man. No fun. So I think it's probably some of the areas that were outside of those immediate evacuation zones. And there's some people trying to get some information that probably just don't have access to it. But yeah, kind of interesting to see those photography jobs listed. Now, you know, it was just as things come up, as you know, like a need arises. And photography, real estate jobs exist out there, you know, taking photographs of houses or properties have been around for a while I've done a bunch of them. And it's kind of weird to kind of see that shift over to just try a photograph with left of the real estate Not, not if it's like real estate for sale or a condo to rent. It's just Well, you know, is there anything left to that hillside, there's anything left in my apartment, or house or housing complex. So man, that'd be really strange, a lot, a lot, a weird, weird kind of activities to go on this year. So I'm hopeful that those are kind of more under control now. And I hope that California is also getting some relief. I think it's been, it's been a while now. And I don't think they've got the kind of rain relief that we've had through the later September. And then while I guess now we're kind of waiting through a bit of October for it, but but some of the rainfall that we've had this year, I think has been better here in Oregon than it has been in the parts of southern California that are probably still having a difficult time fighting off the fires and stuff. So man, it's really dry conditions and heat. And you know, late summer heat, man, it's rough. So not very fun. But as it goes, Yeah, I think like a lot of stuff has kind of been affected or kind of moved around because of the fires that there's a lot of smoke that's now kind of blown eastward. So I think parts of eastern Oregon are pretty smoky by better, but pretty smoky. If you're kind of in line at one of the fire areas, it's really pretty good over here, like on the west coast, western side of the Cascades. As you go in most of the way up and down the I five corridor, I think when we were doing that, we only ran into a couple patches where you go over like a mountain pass and then you're in an area that has sort of hazy skies or a little bit of smoke and they're really kind of near an area that has a fire going on. So it's kind of weird how there's a couple pockets that that still have a little bit of smoke on the west side of the Cascades, but I think a lot of that is that pushed a little bit more toward the east. And that you know, also I guess kind of bums out people on the eastern side of it too. So I was also thinking about like hunting season or about really just a lot of the outdoors people that are going out and trying to do some stuff during the fall for myself it was a lot of photo trips and a lot of like kind of September and October planned outing or you know kind of camping and traveled trips that I was going to try and go through some public lands over in the upper parts of eastern Oregon that I think are best during this time of year of September and October out there. I think it's really cool watching the aspen trees kind of start to change their color kind of turned into their fiery yellows and oranges and reds as they start to change over under the fall and lose their leaves and get into Washington the animal like the antelope and stuff move over and in southeastern Oregon, it's really cool. Or probably a bunch of the other stuff you get to see right now too. And yeah, it gets to be a bit more of a populated I think time of year. Probably coming up on is it October 1 it's opening day for for deer hunting season here in Oregon. I'm not 100% sure on that, but I do think that it is coming up here right away. So I think I'm gonna try and get a little bit of a trip out before that starts. So that I can do some stuff. Probably before a big wave of people come out for a couple of weeks to do some deer hunting seven this year. It might be a little bit more busy than other years. All right, I just wonder what the pressure will be like and some of those areas. So I'm going to be kind of try or I'm going to try to be mindful of what's going on, I think, during the next couple of weeks, but really, I've never had a problem, or a difficulty trying to, you know, find a spot or find a place for this thing that I'm up to, while while it's been hunting season out there, and a lot of those places are still pretty remote. Like a lot of places I'd go to take photographs are popular, you know, they're just not really in the same spots. Fortunately, I guess that, that you're going to get a lot of pressure for deer hunting for the next couple weeks. So that's kind of cool. But I do want to kind of explore around a little bit. I know some of those areas this time a year are mostly filled up with people that are that are coming through for tourism-related to like a plant hunting trip that they have. So like they're doing like an elk hunting trip up in the central northern central Northeastern section of Oregon, or over here on Western Oregon. But like I hear like up I think it's like fossil Mitchell. And then as you kind of move up further through the Fremont. Now it's that Fremont up there. I don't know what that one is. Now I forget, I don't know what that for the National forces do. I think it's like the strawberry mountains, the Blue Mountains, as you're moving up toward toward like La Grande Pendleton over there. But I've heard like there's some some areas over there. Well, I mean, there's like there's drainage is for hunting districts all across Oregon, you know, and you can put in for Daggett, I guess, and any number of those. But I know like some of the areas that southeastern Oregon. Like there's a string of these like dispersed remote camps that are out there. And this time of year, they, they get filled up a little a little bit faster. For you know, hunting camps coming through a group of guys coming through and setting up a good rigging of stuff stay in there for about 10 days or so again, or you know, it seems like at least five days, five or six days, and then taking off. So it seems like a few of those spots get kind of held up for a little bit longer periods of time this time of year. But I remember Yeah, it's pretty regular that I try and go out on camping trips through September and October. And definitely through like parts of October. I've never even like through school and stuff there would always be like about at least like a weekend, or like a long weekend trip a year that would be out to somewhere deep in Eastern Oregon to kind of check out some stuff. But yeah, really cool area out there. Especially if you get the weather on your side. I think we're getting at like a nice snap of weather this week, if you're able to do it. And if you're able to kind of check your forecasts and stuff then it's it's a cool time to get out there. While though there's a little bit Chris, but it's still dry enough some ways that you can kind of enjoy yourself. And it's really beautiful for photographs with the trees. Like I was saying, if you're able to get to an area where you're at an elevation that that aspen trees are growing, you can photograph the changes and the colors that they have there too. But it's also pretty interesting area as the weather starts to shift a little bit if you're able to stay there. For me, at least before the snow start starts to fall, which I think is gonna be a little bit late this season. I don't think it seems to be like an early snow season over there. But I have been over there and like mid October when it snowed. But if you're over there, and it's just cloudy as it is or just cloudy and like kind of partly rainy, it's a desert. So you don't really get rained out as heavy as I seem to be it rained out over here on the west side of the Cascades. So you can kind of get out and just be dry and a little bit cold and see some interesting cloud cover kind of blow over the desert valleys out there. So it can be kind of an interesting place to check out at some times. But it can't be pretty harsh to when the winds pick up or especially at night, as the temperature drops and the weather changes. And you're definitely going to be dealing with freezing temperatures. If you're going out there much past much past mid October. Seems like maybe they're probably getting close to a frost or, or near the freeze there. I think they're most serious out there around like 4500 feet by 45 to like 5500 feet, and some can be a mile high. Is it a mile high out and blush, I don't know, probably about 40 to 4500 feet maybe. But there are certainly some areas like I talked about on those last trips where you're going out there and you can you can raise an elevation a few 1000 feet and because like I thought i was relatively flat through most of this area, but now you've been gaining an elevation you can get up on top of rise and be at 6500 feet, you'd be like wow, wow. So I have this interesting and kind of move back and forth. A little bit on you out there. But yeah, it's cool. I'm excited to get out and do some travel through some Eastern Oregon areas during October here. Trying to do some video stuff and some photography stuff. I think I was mentioning that before where a lot of the time I'm working on the photography stuff. We're gonna like some film photos or something, and I'm definitely gonna be doing a lot of that this fall. I'm really trying to focus on some like goals to kind of kind of focus what I'm trying to gather while I'm out there. So like, I get Like, an amount of something of, you know, whatever, whatever goal of trying to put together, but kind of try to focus on that a little bit more instead of just kind of haphazard haphazardly going out and then seeing something interesting and maybe taking a photograph of it. So. So let's begin to kind of interesting to do. And I'm trying to do that a little bit with the photographs for a lot of the summer, but I'm also trying to get a collection of better, longer video clips that are recorded in sort of a, you know, a professional way or, you know, I want to try and like set it up on a tripod or set it up in a way where it's, it's kind of an easy and steady shot for a longer period of time. And what I hope to do with that is through like a number of the trips, as I kind of move across Oregon, is to gather enough sets of clips of different like landmark locations that I'm later able to use those videos to put together different pieces and different pieces in association with the photographs. But just to kind of show visually in through video, some of the areas, too, so videos not really like what, what I really like putting together what I especially like editing on and I like kind of some of the more specific controls you have over the outcome and the way that a moment looks in the way that you use photography, instead of sort of a longer format system of video that shows you know, a lot of changes to just a single aspect to something over a period of time. So I think it'd be cool, though to, to go out and try and get a bunch of landscape video clips that are long enough to kind of use in sort of a document documentary fashioned for future projects coming up. So kind of fun. But it's also something I haven't really done as much before. So it kind of also reopens a lot of spots that I've maybe grown tired of going to in the past, you know, where I leave, I've gone to a spot for rock or something like that I've been there a number of ties really cool spot really interesting if you haven't been there if you want to walk around or something. But if you go to take photographs of it, it's really cool. And I could probably take a lot more photographs of the place like that, to be honest, but but as it goes, if you think just just a regular photo framed picture, getting kind of tired of that I have a few of those, and I really have a draw to go back there to photograph it. But if I'm doing like a video project, well, I haven't done that before. So it kind of gives me a little bit of inspiration to go there. And to do that with it. Or I think like what it was a couple years ago, when we were working with a GoPro 360 camera, it was interesting, because it was like, well, all these places that I kind of for me like Crater Lake, which really I have not that much interest in. It was like oh, like I should go to Crater Lake, I should make it to that destination. Because I have this tool with me that I normally don't have, or have this, this thing that I normally don't do, like maybe 360 video in that case are now and in this case of, you know, just going around and trying to make like a steady set of like documentary video clips, it's like, well, I haven't done that before. So kind of opens up like every location in the past that I had gone to. And so you can check that off the list, I don't need to go to that waterfall again, I've kind of been there and I've got some cool photos of it. So I'll just go to the next place and kind of head on. And this kind of opens it up a little bit of Well, I'm familiar with these places, I can kind of go through and produce these clips out in a way that's, you know, going to work for me or something. So it's kind of cool, I'm going through and trying to capture some longer clips and stuff it may have video takes a lot longer to do you know, you have to like do a few things you have to really pull over and really study it and shut everything off. Wait for the sounds to be right. You know, if you're in an area where it doesn't doesn't work, right. Like if you're near a road and there's cars or something going by, or whatever it is you just have to make these mitigations to try and make it work you'd have to like get off the road or go further away or set up a better shot or whatever it is you have to kind of like push a little harder. And then to capture it and sort of similar to like long-exposure photography, you just have to like sit there and wait for why you had to wait for the time to elapse for you to capture a minute of footage or four minutes of footage of these, you know, like cattle moving across the field or something like that. So it's kind of fun. Yeah, the stuff that you see and the stuff that you captured. But it also takes like a lot more work to kind of put together those video pieces. But I'm looking forward to it, I want to try and put together some time-lapse work, some sky video, like some sunset stuff or some clouds kind of moving around. I think that's going to be really interesting or especially like with some of the dynamic kind of dramatic cloud textures that you get over in Eastern Oregon during the September and October times a year. I think it'll be kind of cool to try and photograph some of those quickly kind of moving lower cumulus clouds as they sort of kind of swirl and turn and move past on the sky. So going to try and set up some some longer maybe like an hour video or something like that and then set up a time-lapse from that to kind of speed the video up and then make it something where you can kind of see the changes but I'm trying to put together some of those visual elements pretty much as it's like kind of a fun, activity side project thing but Jenna put some of these like visual video elements together. So I have a collection of those kinds of pieces to like, you know I can I was still photograph of a beautiful sunset, say or I got to have a maybe like an interesting time-lapse that sort of shows it, roll through the colors and roll through the cloud formations that it makes. And I'd like to kind of make a couple of those to go in tandem with some of the other pieces of work that I've been trying to put together. So it kind of kind of goes, carries on stuff, but it's a similar stuff I've been up to, I also got some mini DV tapes back, I think I talked about a couple podcasts back, I'd send them off to be converted. And I had a pair of them, I think, two hours of footage, converted from mini DV tape to mp4. And I got a thumb drive mailed back to me, and plugged it in the computer through on the videos, I've been through about 1.5 gigabytes an hour for an mp4 of standard standard def 2005 video from some mini DV camera. And there's a few good ones I got to work with. But I think a lot of the footage is kind of interesting. It's interesting to see, I think I'd like I'd mentioned maybe I recorded over a number of the tapes that I'd use frequently. So I'd record a project or record a couple clips video, none of it very proficient. And then I capture that over to a computer and edit it. And then I blacked out the tape and then record the next project over it. So there's only like some sections of video that probably still remain. And I bet there's probably a lot of cool pieces that I wish I had been able to keep. I think some of the good stuff I do still have. So that's cool. And from what I found already, it's also pretty cool just to see what was there. But yeah, like some few like I think it was like a men's high school basketball game. I think it was a I think there was a soccer game recorded. I think there was like a girls basketball game recorded. I think there was an assembly recorded like a bunch of like high school footage that I had recorded, or that, like other people recorded with me during probably 2005 2006. Wow. Yeah, that's cool. Yeah, so kind of seeing some of that footage. And some of it we'd use for little projects and stuff we're working on. But it's cool to see the raw footage again. And that's kind of fun about being able to pull up those tapes, take them into a place I haven't converted, and then get get to check out the the types of footage that was on it. But yeah, you get to see some cool stuff. I think it was, like I mentioned maybe before I converted some stuff, and I think it was like some somebodies wedding that I converted, you know, I don't have much attachment to it, but I'm sure those people do, you know, they have the video of whatever it was, but it's cool that this raw video exists, I'll maybe I'll reach out to that I reached out to another friend and said, Hey, check out this, check out this video. You know, it's like an hour of stuff back from high school that we thought was probably just gone, you know. So probably, I think for most people it is, and I think most people don't really have like the archivist mentality or the, the the media mentality that that I always do. But it's really fun to have a photo album or have a clip or a set of clips and videos and stuff from when you were younger. And now especially that we're older, I think some of the some of the benefit of kind of keeping keeping hold of some of those things as they come up. It's kind of cool, you know, you get to like, pull up this thing as Oh, wow. Yeah, that was like 15 years ago. No way. That's what it seems like 15 years past he does he like video yourself or video someplace that you're at. It's cool. So I'm happy to be going through and clipping up some of those pieces of video. Pretty fun. And yeah, kinda kind of carry on as I've tried to get a few more of them converted. I think I have like a little box, I probably have maybe somewhere less than eight of these tapes left. And then I think I have a number of tapes that I'm going to try and collect from my, my family to I think they have a few like, you know, like, I don't know, whatever, probably the earlier stuff of like holidays and family events and whatever that stuff was. And all the tapes that I have are just from what I started, you know, back in like the 2000, probably, for maybe the earliest. For photos of maybe like 2002 2003 those video clips go it's probably 2004 2005 that I was really able to get access to some video stuff, at least that you know that like I was focused on I was using kind of on my own. So yeah, it's cool to have those have those tapes around getting converted, get to check out some old footage on it's a little bit expensive. I think it was 25 bucks for the two hours of footage that I got. So it's fine. And it's cool because it's good footage or it's cool to like have these memories and stuff. But it's also weird too. If you spend 25 bucks and you just get a blacked out tape. You know, imagine it was the blank tape and you're like, Oh, cool. So it's been cool. Yeah, kind of pulling up these old pieces and seeing some stuff especially if like your old like home videos or home movies or your wedding or something like that, man, all of those things. Those are really cool memories to have and then istyles you have kind of been able to keep those as is so important. And now that it's so easy to digitize them. We're in a period of time right now. It's easy to digitize them and easy to duplicate that that He's a data out. So you can archive in different locations like a bigger thumb drive, you can put a bunch of media, or you can kind of diversify that and make four thumb drives and keep them in different places, or with different people, you can share with different people, if there's sets of videos that you want to get out of just being siloed. With you, which is sort of where I'm at to, you know, like I recorded a lot of video, I record a lot of photos, and I don't really have to be the the yearbook creator for everyone I've ever met. But I was also thinking, well, it'd be cool to have to kind of get a hold of a couple of people and say, I have this, this video, it's just been archived in a box of mini DV tapes for the last 15 years, I got a copy of it. There's a footage of you for some projects, here's a set of that, or here's some photos from something that happened back in college or whatever it is, you know, some some project or event that we worked at. So all those kind of things are cool to get a hold of, I know I have them. And I know they might have had them at a time but maybe lost interest or don't have many more than So, yeah, it's kind of cool to come upon that stuff, and then be able to set it out and get to look at that stuff. Again, it's cool looking back into the past a little bit with some old video or some old photographs. So it's been kind of fun. But yeah, we're working on that we're gonna have some video conversions and some photo stuff, trying to do some fun writing, I'm trying to rough draft a bunch of stuff, I use voice to text a lot, I use voice to text to like, get a bunch of paragraphs out. And then I use Grammarly. And another site called Hemingway to kind of help me do some editing of that. But then I also go back through and then I try and like write in a bunch of stuff on top of that. And that really seems to like I don't know kind of helps with speed a lot is really the thing that makes a big difference is the speed that I'm able to put out 300 words or 200 words or something like and then kind of restructure that hold of it. So it's a lot better than I was able to do with the bass, that's for sure. So it's kind of fun. Yeah, voice to text just on an iPhone, or you can do it. Even when I'm out camping and stuff. You can you can use it in airplane mode. And I think you have a database of words within the phone that you're able to do voice to text with it's, it's a pretty comprehensive English library, which is cool. It's really fantastic that you're able to do those kinds of techniques. But But yeah, I think it was a campaign, I was able to put down a lot of work, you know, just by voice to text into my phone, like I always have it into the Notes app. And then I have have, you know, like 10 documents ready to go that have 300 word, little essays, or a little rough draft sections set up so that you can go through throw those into an editor, correct the weird mistakes or like some of them, you probably read it, but correct some weird voice to text mistakes, correct some grammar stuff, and then go back through and try and try and edit a couple ideas and make it you know, it's weird to write, like, like, if you just listen to that last sentence, the structure things that you say, or at least the things that I say, seem to be a lot looser than the structure things that you're right. So when you do like a voice to text thing, you tell a story, you make some comment, but you really, I think have to go back through and sort of rearrange it a little bit to make it clear writing at least ideal. I think that's a benefit of people who write allies; they get a better pair of graphic sense of the things that that the point that they need to make and the communication that they have. So thanks a lot for putting up with me. rambling about fires and photos and cabin and mini DV tape conversions. So it's a good time. But I appreciate you guys tuning in to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can always do more to see some of my work by checking out Billy Newman. photo.com did I say that? I think I said yeah, yeah, go to billion photo.com. That's, that's I figured you guys remember. Thanks for checking out this episode of the podcast it next week.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[158 Early Chanterelle Season



Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season.  Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm



Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r



I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.com&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;visit the Support Page here.



You can find&nbsp;my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



Link 158 Early Chanterelle Season



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/







158 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Early Chanterelle Season



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking this one out. It's been falling off for this last week. So we got a good bit of rain that had c]]></itunes:summary>
	<itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>34:00</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[158 Early Chanterelle Season



Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season.  Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. 



Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 156 Oregon Wildfires</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-156-oregon-wildfires/</link>
	<pubDate>Mon, 14 Sep 2020 21:00:44 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=9373</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Oregon Wildfires</p>



<p>Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires  1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often? <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp; <a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About   <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>156 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Oregon Wildfires</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast, recorded for the second week of September 2020. Thanks a lot for listening to this podcast. If you're in the northwest or anywhere on the west coast, and if you're probably anywhere in America, I'm sure you've heard about the wildfires that are going on here in Oregon. And if you're on the west coast, as west of the Cascades, I'm sure you've been inundated with smoke for the last week or so, just about like most of this last week, I think since, like Labor Day, it's been pretty intense here. It's been just smoke all through the valley. And I think smoke all the way down to California. Now, I guess I was just reading that there's smoke that's now Kind of pushed out all the way to Michigan. I think a scene and satellite photos are really interesting satellite imagery. I don't know if you guys have been able to see that. There are also some like time-lapse captures of the satellite imagery. And it's really interesting to Kind of see the changes and how the weather was working during the period of time with those wildfires took off. But as a quick rundown, I'm sure there have been better, better news outlets than I am to give you the rundown of the facts of the fires. But yeah, it seems like it's a historic amount of burn. And just a couple of days. I think they've mentioned that it's now more than 1 million acres have burned, and wildfires created. I think just this week, but I think it's for like the Oregon year-to-date amount. I think they mentioned 2 million acres of burned in California this year. pretty significant burns. I think that's at least for Oregon. I think it was double the amount that they had expected for this year was interesting is that it's all occurred so late. I think I was even captured talking on a podcast about a month ago or so that I was surprised not to see more smoke in the year this year as we were Kind of fortunate to not see, you know, some kind of fire complex build-up somewhere in Oregon, there's always been some circumstances that when you get out to Eastern Oregon, you see smoke in the air on the horizon, you figure it's come from somewhere a lot of the time, like when I was growing up, it came from the southern Oregon area, this is used to seem to catch fire every couple of years. Or it was, you know, somewhere, someplace up in the Cascades, you know, Kind of a remote location is somewhere up in like northeast Oregon that was burning. There's been a few fires every year. But they seem to be like more remote locations. And they seem to start, you know, sometime in late June or early July. And they Kind of carry on through the year. But by this time of year, you know, but by September by Labor Day, right? You think it's it's Kind of shifted into the rainy season, and you're Kind of done with the fires. But for those that have already started, you know, at least like significant burns and problems like that. So I was really surprised to Kind of see it shift over like that. But I remember getting the emergency alert on my phone while the skies were still clear. And I think that was on. Was it like Labor Day on Monday, and I have a weird emergency alert for fire. And like easterly wind, I think that's what they were talking about too. And that's really I think what was significant about it, and what might be under looked a little bit and some of them thought it is reasonable to assume that this is an expression of climate change, it's a little bit of a soft answer to just Kind of claim that this is just a part of climate change generally. And it's Kind of interesting how they do those things. But it's interesting to talk about some of the specifics of how we help some of the things have changed over the last couple 100 years, and it has become more of a dry climate in the northwest than I had been, I think before the 1830s I think if you look back to like the historical record or like this weather records that they keep, like hear about like, like Lewis and Clark coming over, stay in it, you know, up along the Columbia nude record the number of rainy days that the season and it was just you know, like a wild amount of rain that they had all the time. And I think that that that had existed and occurred up into like the 1820s and 30s. And they recorded a pretty significant drop off in the amount of rainfall that was occurring in the area. And I think that that was sort of thing that had happened for what about 500 years is that really talk about like that little ice age that Kind of came on In his little ice age, yeah, I think it was, yeah, the Little Ice Age that came on, like at the end of the Renaissance or something like that, before the Renaissance Is that what it was maybe got warmer than I'm probably mixing it up. But whatever Kind of weather change it was, I think it was recorded for a couple of 100 years, and then it sort of started to lay off. And so on the West Coast over here, I think it started to become a bit more of an arid. Well, not arid climate. But I think just the amount of precipitation per year dropped by a pretty strong amount; I think there was like a little bit of a weather change that had happened; I'm not sure how to what degree that that pace has continued. And then to what degree the manmade climate change issue has increased the ramp-up of that issue, as it's changed the weather patterns over the hundreds of years that it's been occurring. But what's interesting about this moment and this event is that the winds, normally in the West Coast area here, come off the Pacific and then blow eastward. A westerly wind that blows toward the east, and Kind of pushes, you know, just Kind of pushes over the United States. And then off to the side, Okay, I see that through the winter, as every week, every three days, there's sort of some, some high and low-pressure system that sort of cycle of the Pacific Ocean and then blow over the West Coast. And then off, off across the country. And I think, like a lot of time, I think in the wintertime, they call like the Pineapple Express you remember like, like the expression that the movie that had come out a long time ago with like where the West Coast, he gets a lot of rainstorms in the winter, like the Kind of come off the Pacific Ocean, they go over Hawaii or out in the Hawaii area, and then swoop back over from a westerly position and then blowback over the West Coast here. What was interesting about this moment, this position, is that we had like a really strong wind from the east really living here for 30 years now. It's really pretty strange to have a strong wind blowing from the east. It's very rare. And so I think I'm not really quite sure what conditions happened to cause that. But I think it was some higher pressure system that was coming down out of Canada. And I think that when mixed with the cold, I think of the colder air like lower pressure system over here. I think there's a lot of when that started to blow through. But I guess Monday it was just like, a record amount of wind. I'm not really sure that because it was hot. It was hot the whole day. It was like, you know, 91 degrees that day. And I remember hearing, like, in Eugene, there's a bunch of trees that got knocked over. I think on the University of Oregon campus; there's a big, big branch of a tree that hung out over the courtyard there. That broke off, and I think it was in the way. I recognize some spots from when I was living in Eugene, have a couple of areas in new, I suppose with trees I'd walked by in the past that it snapped and then fallen off against the buildings. They're just in the downtown area. So I think they got hit pretty hard with a windstorm. I didn't notice where I am. My family in Southern Oregon definitely mentioned that though I said it was uniquely an unusually strong winds are blowing out of the east on a really hard day. And I think that you know, it's strange to think, but I think that that just that simple change or that blonde from the east over across the dry land probably be in a drier amount of air and then now pushing on fires that had already existed now in a different direction. I think just really, and I don't know, made for a pretty strange and Kind of unique set of circumstances that would create this many burns in such a short amount of time. Just thinking about well, there's no cash assembly phase; it's almost hard to keep track of. I probably won't be a comprehensive list of all the information out there about the fires, but I thought it'd be kind of interesting to just Kind of talk about and do a little rundown of stuff. I think there was a fire in the talent Phoenix area. I woke up to hear about that the next day, but that was pretty interesting. You know, being a person that had grown up in Southern Oregon. I know the Medford area and the talent Phoenix Ashland area pretty well. First I'd heard Yeah, it was a fire that was in Asheville, and I guess it started in Ashland and then had immersions do some other areas as it moved. I guess north of the I five corridor, and I think Kind of fall in a creek. Is it the Alameda Creek I'm not sure? But I think following the I five corridor up toward Medford and it really looked significant. And now seeing some of the damage of some of the whole areas that were burned out. It's It's surprising to see the amount of damage that can happen and burn through and then you know, just be gone. I guess it's like all the fuels are gone. But it's like man, those houses were there and they are not there and it was just all Kind of pushed by the amount of oxygen was coming in from those really strong easterly winds. The really dry conditions. It's probably been, you know, 100 days since we have have had rainfall up here. And I'm sure other another number of other issues that have Kind of occurred with it, but it's interesting about this Phoenix talent fires it just sort of shows outside of outside of forestry conditions or you know problems either with the management of old timber or doing doing controlled burns or whatever it might be the talent Phoenix fire is really an area that's just as you see many pretty civilized you know, it's a pretty normal, you know, Park area, all Mariya it's pretty populated area, it's not out in a national forest system that maybe would have been mismanaged or a wilderness area where they weren't able to go in set up roads or you know, fire lines in the same way that they would have in another area. So in this this talent Phoenix fire what you really get to recognize is just the amount of bad conditions that the fire was able to grow in or you will I guess positive conditions for the fire stick but bad bad for our whole population of the town the talent Phoenix fires part of it and then I think there's another fire that's I think even bigger that was spotted I think, you know, like heat rises hot air rises with hot coals and flames and sparks and stuff as you can imagine from the campfires and stuff rise up in that heat and then blow over in a big fire like what we had started to experience national talent Phoenix I think there was some some sparks that had gone over the hillside like a travel like a long way along with the smoke dropped in and started another fire over the shady Cove area and that is now burned a significant amount of land maybe I maybe have this mixed up or something but but i think i think we've also now arrested a person in connection with the talent Phoenix fire as who a person who was starting was starting a set of fires around houses. His weird story, I don't have all the facts on that. It seems like it would have been I think it was a person who probably lived on the street, unsure of how they've got the motivation to perform those actions. I don't know if it was just a chaos move or if they were like an asset of someone else who was trying to organize it more but yeah, it's just seems like such a weird, weird idea. I guess a fire it already started. But those two quickly merged and then continue to burn through talent Phoenix and South Medford I think I know some people that that had to evacuate their houses, I suppose. Like the regions are probably still safer. Okay. But I think that, but yeah, there's a large number of people that had to evacuate from that fire location also a lot of people in the Shady Cove area that had evacuated from their houses that's pretty crazy. And I think they're still still dealing with that I think they were able to get some of it contained. But I think there's still amounts of it that are not contained and it's still just down down so yeah, wild amount of smoke down there really happy that more fires didn't pop off in the hillsides of stuff there you know, like there's a lot of land kind of in the skews as you get south of Ashland on my five as you go up there and surprise some of that stuff didn't get caught on fire too but interesting though Yeah. If there's like an arsonist started the started a couple of these fires here in the Phoenix area that that's pretty wild. And yeah, crazy conditions the wind and the hot weather and the lack of rain that the probably just really allergy I mean, just obviously I guess like self evidently now. It was pretty bad conditions. And definitely fire spread quickly. So I'm not really sure about the rest of the information about the tower Phoenix fire, but there's still Kind of more stuff coming out all the time. I'm not sure but the damage assessor when people are going to get back to the houses to see what's there and what's not there. But for places that were taken out, it's pretty significant. really surprising. I woke up to find out the news. I was by the time Phoenix talent were already gone. So like a tune into a live stream of a newscast down there. kayo bi channel five, and I was watching the NBC stream. I think it's a new stream, NBC. It was a girl who was out there she had a tripod set up for a man on the street, I guess person on the street interview and they were at up a Burger King, Burger King Size in the back. And beside her where the burger king should be his smoldering rubble. And that was the visual that they gave us. She tilted the tripod around and viewed I think this smoke coming off the creek which was pretty heavily burned and then I think I saw like another I think video that was I was going around on Twitter that had been posted of someone kind of panning across the creek and tree line and it was just engulfed in flames as it was Kind of spreading up and traveling pretty quickly down toward toward downtown South Medford. Well, so yeah, that's all pretty crazy now. That's nothing moving on. Well, I mean, that's, that's a pretty significant one. That's Kind of why I led with that one. There's probably no order for me right now. But the Blue River vitta area is now wiped out, I think, pretty totally is what I hear still pretty locked off. That's on highway 126 as you're leaving Eugene going out to Springfield. And I think that's sort of like the North route that you would take over and out there plenty of times past that area. I think that's like a pie around like the cougar reservoir and the hot springs that are out there. I'm not sure if that caught on fire. I know that there's a covered bridge that's up there. I believe there's a few covered bridges. And I believe that it's that maybe that one or two of them may have been lost. This is probably no-no and I don't know I think I was going off of an earlier report that was mentioning that they projected that they would lose all the covered bridges however, I did see a picture where I think that that that one covered bridge you pass on highway 26 as you're driving up past Blue River and vieta I think that one's still is there that one was spared which is great but there was burns heavily on both sides of the river along the Mackenzie River in that valley there and just made a lot of significant burning all through that section. I'm interested to try and find out and see a better and more clear visual of the damage that's occurred out there I think it's it's also Kind of confusing there's still like a lot of haze literally like there's just still so much smoke and concrete all you see is just wreckage and it's almost unrecognizable. It's Kind of weird, you know, your mind gets in there it's like I I don't recognize that, you know, you see a picture of some area reported to be like a boat ramp or a lodge or something or you know, some someone's house or car lot or something out there. And I think I probably driven past it. And I went 26 some time in the past but totally unrecognizable in the haze and the smoke of just a burned-out area you see just Kind of curled wreckage that looks like of cars that got caught on fire. And bikes are those chairs, materials, whatever, whatever was able to still stand But really most everything is just wiped to the ground as it was for a house. So yeah, Blue River. And a lot of a lot of that areas is wiped out pretty heavily. I think maybe Mackenzie bridge, got out of it. Okay, but I think there's a lot of damage out there and pass that area. And it's a real shame that happened right through there. I think I was also here to that for all of these where the trees got really heavily burned out along the sides of the highway. I think they're gonna have to cut a lot of that timber down. And I guess because those trees become unstable as they burned out into the core, and then they'll topple over in the wintertime as snow comes down as also hearing that there's going to be an increased risk of mudslides through the winter season now, as we've had a significant burn a lot of exposed land and ash and stuff is going to get wet and then I guess breakaway and come down here. There's like a risk of mudslides after big forest fires like that, especially on the steep draws and right where there's a bunch of highway traffic. Nice. Yeah, we haven't really had that Kind of experience before. Like I was thinking about the biscuit complex fire on the calamy ops as wilderness that occurred first in 2002. While these firsts for me, I think there's fires in the past are out there, but a real significant portion of that whole forest area burned in 2002. I think I was probably in eighth grade or something like that. And that was a big fire. I think that burned for the whole summer I saw that and the sky and that was out in the wilderness areas are pretty distant out. I think I was saying that in the calamity opsis wilderness, it would be like west of cave junction, that area in South West, Oregon. And I can see that see it really clear in the sky all through the summer for 2002. Down there in Southern Oregon. And then I think later in 2013. There was also another fire hour maybe just a couple years ago now. There was another really significant fire out on the the other section of the calamity offices that had not burned the first time in 2002. And I think that also burned and that was a really significant significant fire to the thing. They fought that for months. I think it burned for a long time. I think it spread for a long time. And that I think finally grew to somewhere around a million acres or something like that. It was a really significant and large area that burned. Now it really interesting just in a day. I think they talked for the last like four days or something like we've reached Are our mounts of like a million acres burned some of those fires had been going I guess since like the middle of August, and they've just been Kind of progressing slowly then with this significant weather change the easterly winds coming coming off the I guess the dry middle of the country land dad just lit those fires change the wind and now we're in the situation that we see ourselves in now. So Blue River fire talked about that one a bit just a little bit man a lot of wild stories out of that one a lot a lot of significant damage a lot of stuff that we're gonna notice for a long time. Now further north as we Kind of go up outside of the Salem area in the I think the cncm River Canyon area the towns of Lions have gates and I think up through Detroit are pretty well burned and wiped out a lot of significant damage up there as well. Bennett through the Detroit area the Detroit Lakes Area heard about some people trying to get out of there and escape that and it sounded pretty harrowing even Lyons which is really quite close to this the Salem area it seems I think there's some pretty pretty harrowing stories of people trying to leave or trying to get their family out and yeah, that sounds sounds pretty crazy up there. I don't really understand the whole reality of of the fires and the situation and the results and the consequences of it. Yeah. Big vibe. I think that one's connecting now with the fire that's on the Clackamas side as it goes down toward esta Qaeda Malala. And as it comes into a section of my I suppose it's not you know, it's like almost like Oregon City and like Lagos where you go in that area put on notice as being you know, in a fire zone, I think I think it's the way that the district works for how they set up their like regional fire map but but I think like areas as far north that are as far up toward Portland is like Oregon City were put on notice, I think level one notice of be ready to evacuate, but areas like Molalla as the Qaeda, few of those other towns that are out in that area out in those fields, and then as it goes up into the hills toward the Clackamas river got really significantly burned. And I think a lot of people have to leave for that. So that's pretty wild. That one was like I think both the ones around like the Santiam River area and the Clackamas river area were both really pretty significant. And that's going to be kind of a weird one to see the recovery from also also out in Lincoln city out in Lincoln City, Oregon, right on the coast on the one on one I think on like the north side of Lincoln city there was a forest fire that it started not sure if these that one was related to arson or not I think they they had mentioned or maybe there's another smaller fire that I think was caught and put out that was that was from an arsonist or I don't know if it's an RS is maybe but but some some irresponsible behavior that was caught and put out like I've noticed, like some deliberate use of fireworks being reported. I've also noticed like a lot of reports that are saying that that's that sound like grand scheme or organized conspiracy of something that's going on which would you would think after your uni like it's, it's something that will cross your mind FTSE the amount of damage that occurred so quickly. It's kinda interesting to see like the number of fires We're sorry, but yeah, this Lincoln City Fire put a good section of the city of Lincoln City on notice to evacuate. Really, I think pretty scary. I think like there's a level three go now notice for a significant amount of the Northern Lincoln City area. And then the South section, I think it was like oh, level two and level one alert to be ready to leave. So pretty spooky weekend. Yeah, man or like is like Labor Day, Labor Day week and the week following it just like a pretty pretty wild thing where Yeah, good conception of the the Cascade Mountains burned. And that's where we're getting the smoke that's like sitting really heavily on us over here on the west coast. As you look at the satellite images, how it's really pushed out, sort of strangely over the West Coast over the Pacific Ocean, you see this big swirl of brown smoke that used to be, you know, a million acres of Oregon timber and houses and everything else that that went up in smoke and then it's now out over the Pacific Ocean swirling around and then I think it's waiting for another pressure system or you know, another other weather system to move through. I think it's gonna start pushing all that smoke back back over us and then back out toward the east as they are mixed in with the rest of the atmosphere over the rest of the time, but I think it should start Kind of blowing out maybe over this next week. kind of depends on how long this this weather pattern stays with. I suppose by the time this podcast comes out, we should already be seeing a bit of improvement and some more. Some more westerly wind blowing, I think it's already Kind of shifted to be a little bit more westerly, but I think we're supposed to be getting a little bit of a change, I think we're supposed to get some clouds and some rain coming Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, a little bit, I think Kind of put in there, but I was looking to change the rain during the day have been at least a couple of those days, like a pretty high percentage chance that we're gonna get some rainfall. So it'd be late probably, but at least we'll be in the right direction of the Kind of stuff that will help the firefighters out there working right now help contain and put away the forest fire stuff that we've got going on. But, man, so I'm sure there's a number of fires that I've missed talking about. I know there's like another whole other set of complexes in California that have been really destructive, and really significant. I'm looking at the smoke and the fire damage of some of the areas that have been down there around like Lake Berryessa, Oroville. They're like any other. There's a lot of areas out there. I think they're talking about 2 million acres. Others may be mentioned earlier, 2 million acres of burn damage this year recorded in 2020. I think that's twice the average. Now here in Oregon, 1 million acres burned, which is a pretty significant amount. Also, if you Kind of think of maybe California being, you know, three, three times Oregon size or something you take, you know, three Oregon's Kind of stacked each other seems like that'd be about what it would take to Kind of fill up the length of California on the Pacific coastline there. But the million acres man pretty quick to get to that number. I know we had some burns already this year, some other fires and stuff. But man that's been like we have had this last week. So that was pretty crazy how quickly moved and really, really significantly, like how destructive it was, again, there's acreages that burn but it seems like some of those have just been out in pretty pretty remote areas for a long time now, this is pretty significant is it being in a number of the highway, like the valley and river draws that are out there and also like the near near like the populated sections, I mean, Medford, the Springfield, Eugene area, the Salem area, and the Portland area, all experienced pretty significant fires right along their their highway that cuts up into the Cascades. And I guess we were pretty fortunate here in the Corvallis, Albany area to be spared. up outside of the you know, there wasn't any fire up on that draw. So, at least in essence, like we're a little bit further away from some of the significant heightened Red Alert circumstances that are going on right now. But yeah, it'd be a weird week for probably most people you know, I was looking at like one of the reports, and 10% of Oregon is forced to evacuate I think those numbers were a little bit off or stretched and then they kind of later came out and said, Oh, yeah, like the calculations probably really only around somewhere around 100,000 or maybe 150,000 people that were required to evacuate. And then I think it was probably around 500,000 people that were about to or were supposed to be on notice to get things ready to leave. I think it was if you if you can predict Clackamas. And Washington County or like is it started like Kind of skewed up toward toward Portland and a little closer to Salem. I think if if either of those districts went from Well, if they either dropped into a level level one alert of you, no gifts, get your stuff get ready to go. I think that would have been well into the 500,000 area. I guess just given as how concentrated the populations here in Oregon are toward the Portland area, the Salem and then the Eugene area and so it's it's all those areas were hit also with with I think all of Medford I think it was like you know, 80,000 people there, put on the list of female figures out and get ready to go somewhere. Every go to the fair. Everybody go to the Jackson County Fairgrounds, all 82,000 people I was reading another thing, classic Jackson County style. Everybody leave Jackson County go to the Jackson County Fairgrounds? Well, okay, it's still pretty close to just about everything going on. But at least it's at the north end of the Medford area, and it's Kind of away from the shady Cove White City stuff that was going on, you can get out there, okay. And then there are 100 beds and some blankets and those will be kept for those people who are elderly or ill. And then your shelter that you receive is to lay on the ground. That was, I think a quote from one of the emergency response people is you can come and have a spot on the ground to lay, but hey, it's shelter. And I thought Wait a second. That's not shelter that's laying on the ground. Hmm, so Kind of classic for Jackson County Emergency Response to, I guess, be overwhelmed, let's say, and I'll guess I grant him that during this time as a bunch of the town is destroyed. So it's gonna be pretty wrecked for a long time and 2020 it's great if one thing doesn't do it to you another thing Well, good times here so yeah, September 2020 the fires in Oregon, just some of the information and experience and stuff that I've been having from here where I've been I've been trying to Kind of stay in so I had plans right like, you know, I can only talk about where I'm camping or where I'm traveling where I want to go and I Kind of wanted to do that on this one. I think I was gonna go out to the coast and then head down to California and I ended up Kind of scrapping all that stuff as it was very smoky and unhealthy to really go anyway, I thought about like Kind of trying to travel out east a little bit further really looking at the satellite map the smoke bath and air quality stuff just about everywhere out to Montana is affected to some degree I think it's better in a lot of places but it's not like a quick drive out and I'll be I'll be out of the blue skies maybe if I found a couple spots but it's pretty far so I was gonna wait for this to Kind of pass or shift up a little bit to get a little bit more of a sense of what's under control and what's not and also there's a lot of highways here that are closed down you know, like I mean there's sections probably all over the state where there's a section a highway that shut down or where it's impossible in some spot so it's all I think pretty strange right now so it's Kind of open for that all to settle down a little bit and for things to get figured out a little bit and then I was gonna try and take off again and maybe do do some more moving around them but yeah for the last couple days have been Kind of holding tight and narrowly trained to dry around much at all really specifically because the air quality you know I went I went down a couple days ago to run some errands and stopped to get a coffee a spot that I go to normally came up to the window It was early in the morning and came to the window it said closed due to air quality and I thought well I don't blame them but yeah it's like wow the fires all the smoke in town that particular I think when you look at the the air particulate it's like Portland Oregon is the the number one worst air quality city in the world right now. I think above Jakarta and Indonesia above where is it is a Beijing? That's better air quality. Somewhere in China has bad air quality, and apparently, I had hoped guys pretty bad, guys. I bet it sucks over there a lot of these days of the year. But yeah, I guess it's supposed to be like the worst air quality in the world. If you look at the way that that scale goes instead of it's been like up above 300 a lot. Yikes. Yeah, like in the extremely unhealthy ranges, the worst, worst smoke and like worst amount of smoke all over the West Coast that I've ever really remembered. or seen. I mean, there's been a few days where the weather changed it was Kind of bad held the smoke low in the valley that normally been off for most of the summer but but held some smoke out really low in the valley in Southern Oregon, you could drive out of Southern Oregon, you know in a northern Oregon here and be fine be up in the sun and there'd be some smoke, but it wouldn't be a big deal. But down there and so in Oregon now you could have visibility of, you know, a few 100 feet or something like a quarter mile or something like that if it was a good part of the day. But it was like that for a few days. And then finally the wind shifted and Kind of pulled up out of the valley and wasn't socked in anymore. But But this Yeah, this is the most socked in and most Kind of long term stretch of heavy smoke that I've ever seen and met all over the West Coast like Canadian border down to California, smoked in weird weather. So I'm really hoping that it Kind of starts to figure itself out really happy that a bunch of people are out there trying to work on it stuff, so we'll see if it starts to get better shift into a more controlled environment in the mid and later September. But appreciate you guys checking out this episode of the building Newman photo podcast I guess all all encompassing the forest fire situation that's occurred last week, but thanks for Kind of listened to it. I know it's Kind of law and facts and stuff. And I'm sure there's a lot of better, better locations for you guys to find some of the specific details. I think I was getting some some good stuff out of the Oregonian. A lot of this specific small-town Kind of local papers have been difficult to get good information from like I was mentioned in like the Southern Oregon like the Medford paper not many good photos or videos or articles about things that are important and doesn't really give you like a good sense of what was going on. Like I was like I think the mail Tribune or like I was mentioning the local NBC ABC and CBS affiliates there. Were doing local reporting on it. A lot of those stories really weren't very good or weren't well structured. And I think I Kind of left out some of the information that would have been good to have it. As part of an overview, some good specifics of information about developments of each case that are going on so you can Kind of get some more information from there. But, man, I'm sure everybody's everyone's attention has been glued to it for the last week. So I hope everybody is holding in there and doing okay, and man, I'm sorry if I may have actually like, actually evacuated and most people my family had to evacuate. It's Kind of crazy. I think they're okay, but man, we're a couple weeks. So go to Billy Newman photo calm. If you want to check out some more information or get in contact with me. I think there's a couple ways you can do it there. If you have any questions or comments about what we've been talking about, or you want to know more about some of the stuff that I'm up to, I put together a 360 video playlist that I think is available on YouTube, you can go straight there to youtube.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. Or you can go to my website. This is what I put together as a playlist link that's there in the grid icons on that front page, you click on 360, it'll take you to a playlist of 360 videos that we're captured around Oregon. Kind of shown some landscape stuff and all that so yeah, collection of those videos put together curated up posted to the front page of the Billy Newman photo.com website. You can check it out there. Anyway, thanks a lot. All this information but the smoke by experience. Fires for the second week of September 2020 fishing everyone listening. I hope you guys have a great day. Bye</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Oregon Wildfires



Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires  1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a p]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Oregon Wildfires</p>



<p>Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires  1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City</p>



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<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.</p>



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<p>156 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Oregon Wildfires</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast, recorded for the second week of September 2020. Thanks a lot for listening to this podcast. If you're in the northwest or anywhere on the west coast, and if you're probably anywhere in America, I'm sure you've heard about the wildfires that are going on here in Oregon. And if you're on the west coast, as west of the Cascades, I'm sure you've been inundated with smoke for the last week or so, just about like most of this last week, I think since, like Labor Day, it's been pretty intense here. It's been just smoke all through the valley. And I think smoke all the way down to California. Now, I guess I was just reading that there's smoke that's now Kind of pushed out all the way to Michigan. I think a scene and satellite photos are really interesting satellite imagery. I don't know if you guys have been able to see that. There are also some like time-lapse captures of the satellite imagery. And it's really interesting to Kind of see the changes and how the weather was working during the period of time with those wildfires took off. But as a quick rundown, I'm sure there have been better, better news outlets than I am to give you the rundown of the facts of the fires. But yeah, it seems like it's a historic amount of burn. And just a couple of days. I think they've mentioned that it's now more than 1 million acres have burned, and wildfires created. I think just this week, but I think it's for like the Oregon year-to-date amount. I think they mentioned 2 million acres of burned in California this year. pretty significant burns. I think that's at least for Oregon. I think it was double the amount that they had expected for this year was interesting is that it's all occurred so late. I think I was even captured talking on a podcast about a month ago or so that I was surprised not to see more smoke in the year this year as we were Kind of fortunate to not see, you know, some kind of fire complex build-up somewhere in Oregon, there's always been some circumstances that when you get out to Eastern Oregon, you see smoke in the air on the horizon, you figure it's come from somewhere a lot of the time, like when I was growing up, it came from the southern Oregon area, this is used to seem to catch fire every couple of years. Or it was, you know, somewhere, someplace up in the Cascades, you know, Kind of a remote location is somewhere up in like northeast Oregon that was burning. There's been a few fires every year. But they seem to be like more remote locations. And they seem to start, you know, sometime in late June or early July. And they Kind of carry on through the year. But by this time of year, you know, but by September by Labor Day, right? You think it's it's Kind of shifted into the rainy season, and you're Kind of done with the fires. But for those that have already started, you know, at least like significant burns and problems like that. So I was really surprised to Kind of see it shift over like that. But I remember getting the emergency alert on my phone while the skies were still clear. And I think that was on. Was it like Labor Day on Monday, and I have a weird emergency alert for fire. And like easterly wind, I think that's what they were talking about too. And that's really I think what was significant about it, and what might be under looked a little bit and some of them thought it is reasonable to assume that this is an expression of climate change, it's a little bit of a soft answer to just Kind of claim that this is just a part of climate change generally. And it's Kind of interesting how they do those things. But it's interesting to talk about some of the specifics of how we help some of the things have changed over the last couple 100 years, and it has become more of a dry climate in the northwest than I had been, I think before the 1830s I think if you look back to like the historical record or like this weather records that they keep, like hear about like, like Lewis and Clark coming over, stay in it, you know, up along the Columbia nude record the number of rainy days that the season and it was just you know, like a wild amount of rain that they had all the time. And I think that that that had existed and occurred up into like the 1820s and 30s. And they recorded a pretty significant drop off in the amount of rainfall that was occurring in the area. And I think that that was sort of thing that had happened for what about 500 years is that really talk about like that little ice age that Kind of came on In his little ice age, yeah, I think it was, yeah, the Little Ice Age that came on, like at the end of the Renaissance or something like that, before the Renaissance Is that what it was maybe got warmer than I'm probably mixing it up. But whatever Kind of weather change it was, I think it was recorded for a couple of 100 years, and then it sort of started to lay off. And so on the West Coast over here, I think it started to become a bit more of an arid. Well, not arid climate. But I think just the amount of precipitation per year dropped by a pretty strong amount; I think there was like a little bit of a weather change that had happened; I'm not sure how to what degree that that pace has continued. And then to what degree the manmade climate change issue has increased the ramp-up of that issue, as it's changed the weather patterns over the hundreds of years that it's been occurring. But what's interesting about this moment and this event is that the winds, normally in the West Coast area here, come off the Pacific and then blow eastward. A westerly wind that blows toward the east, and Kind of pushes, you know, just Kind of pushes over the United States. And then off to the side, Okay, I see that through the winter, as every week, every three days, there's sort of some, some high and low-pressure system that sort of cycle of the Pacific Ocean and then blow over the West Coast. And then off, off across the country. And I think, like a lot of time, I think in the wintertime, they call like the Pineapple Express you remember like, like the expression that the movie that had come out a long time ago with like where the West Coast, he gets a lot of rainstorms in the winter, like the Kind of come off the Pacific Ocean, they go over Hawaii or out in the Hawaii area, and then swoop back over from a westerly position and then blowback over the West Coast here. What was interesting about this moment, this position, is that we had like a really strong wind from the east really living here for 30 years now. It's really pretty strange to have a strong wind blowing from the east. It's very rare. And so I think I'm not really quite sure what conditions happened to cause that. But I think it was some higher pressure system that was coming down out of Canada. And I think that when mixed with the cold, I think of the colder air like lower pressure system over here. I think there's a lot of when that started to blow through. But I guess Monday it was just like, a record amount of wind. I'm not really sure that because it was hot. It was hot the whole day. It was like, you know, 91 degrees that day. And I remember hearing, like, in Eugene, there's a bunch of trees that got knocked over. I think on the University of Oregon campus; there's a big, big branch of a tree that hung out over the courtyard there. That broke off, and I think it was in the way. I recognize some spots from when I was living in Eugene, have a couple of areas in new, I suppose with trees I'd walked by in the past that it snapped and then fallen off against the buildings. They're just in the downtown area. So I think they got hit pretty hard with a windstorm. I didn't notice where I am. My family in Southern Oregon definitely mentioned that though I said it was uniquely an unusually strong winds are blowing out of the east on a really hard day. And I think that you know, it's strange to think, but I think that that just that simple change or that blonde from the east over across the dry land probably be in a drier amount of air and then now pushing on fires that had already existed now in a different direction. I think just really, and I don't know, made for a pretty strange and Kind of unique set of circumstances that would create this many burns in such a short amount of time. Just thinking about well, there's no cash assembly phase; it's almost hard to keep track of. I probably won't be a comprehensive list of all the information out there about the fires, but I thought it'd be kind of interesting to just Kind of talk about and do a little rundown of stuff. I think there was a fire in the talent Phoenix area. I woke up to hear about that the next day, but that was pretty interesting. You know, being a person that had grown up in Southern Oregon. I know the Medford area and the talent Phoenix Ashland area pretty well. First I'd heard Yeah, it was a fire that was in Asheville, and I guess it started in Ashland and then had immersions do some other areas as it moved. I guess north of the I five corridor, and I think Kind of fall in a creek. Is it the Alameda Creek I'm not sure? But I think following the I five corridor up toward Medford and it really looked significant. And now seeing some of the damage of some of the whole areas that were burned out. It's It's surprising to see the amount of damage that can happen and burn through and then you know, just be gone. I guess it's like all the fuels are gone. But it's like man, those houses were there and they are not there and it was just all Kind of pushed by the amount of oxygen was coming in from those really strong easterly winds. The really dry conditions. It's probably been, you know, 100 days since we have have had rainfall up here. And I'm sure other another number of other issues that have Kind of occurred with it, but it's interesting about this Phoenix talent fires it just sort of shows outside of outside of forestry conditions or you know problems either with the management of old timber or doing doing controlled burns or whatever it might be the talent Phoenix fire is really an area that's just as you see many pretty civilized you know, it's a pretty normal, you know, Park area, all Mariya it's pretty populated area, it's not out in a national forest system that maybe would have been mismanaged or a wilderness area where they weren't able to go in set up roads or you know, fire lines in the same way that they would have in another area. So in this this talent Phoenix fire what you really get to recognize is just the amount of bad conditions that the fire was able to grow in or you will I guess positive conditions for the fire stick but bad bad for our whole population of the town the talent Phoenix fires part of it and then I think there's another fire that's I think even bigger that was spotted I think, you know, like heat rises hot air rises with hot coals and flames and sparks and stuff as you can imagine from the campfires and stuff rise up in that heat and then blow over in a big fire like what we had started to experience national talent Phoenix I think there was some some sparks that had gone over the hillside like a travel like a long way along with the smoke dropped in and started another fire over the shady Cove area and that is now burned a significant amount of land maybe I maybe have this mixed up or something but but i think i think we've also now arrested a person in connection with the talent Phoenix fire as who a person who was starting was starting a set of fires around houses. His weird story, I don't have all the facts on that. It seems like it would have been I think it was a person who probably lived on the street, unsure of how they've got the motivation to perform those actions. I don't know if it was just a chaos move or if they were like an asset of someone else who was trying to organize it more but yeah, it's just seems like such a weird, weird idea. I guess a fire it already started. But those two quickly merged and then continue to burn through talent Phoenix and South Medford I think I know some people that that had to evacuate their houses, I suppose. Like the regions are probably still safer. Okay. But I think that, but yeah, there's a large number of people that had to evacuate from that fire location also a lot of people in the Shady Cove area that had evacuated from their houses that's pretty crazy. And I think they're still still dealing with that I think they were able to get some of it contained. But I think there's still amounts of it that are not contained and it's still just down down so yeah, wild amount of smoke down there really happy that more fires didn't pop off in the hillsides of stuff there you know, like there's a lot of land kind of in the skews as you get south of Ashland on my five as you go up there and surprise some of that stuff didn't get caught on fire too but interesting though Yeah. If there's like an arsonist started the started a couple of these fires here in the Phoenix area that that's pretty wild. And yeah, crazy conditions the wind and the hot weather and the lack of rain that the probably just really allergy I mean, just obviously I guess like self evidently now. It was pretty bad conditions. And definitely fire spread quickly. So I'm not really sure about the rest of the information about the tower Phoenix fire, but there's still Kind of more stuff coming out all the time. I'm not sure but the damage assessor when people are going to get back to the houses to see what's there and what's not there. But for places that were taken out, it's pretty significant. really surprising. I woke up to find out the news. I was by the time Phoenix talent were already gone. So like a tune into a live stream of a newscast down there. kayo bi channel five, and I was watching the NBC stream. I think it's a new stream, NBC. It was a girl who was out there she had a tripod set up for a man on the street, I guess person on the street interview and they were at up a Burger King, Burger King Size in the back. And beside her where the burger king should be his smoldering rubble. And that was the visual that they gave us. She tilted the tripod around and viewed I think this smoke coming off the creek which was pretty heavily burned and then I think I saw like another I think video that was I was going around on Twitter that had been posted of someone kind of panning across the creek and tree line and it was just engulfed in flames as it was Kind of spreading up and traveling pretty quickly down toward toward downtown South Medford. Well, so yeah, that's all pretty crazy now. That's nothing moving on. Well, I mean, that's, that's a pretty significant one. That's Kind of why I led with that one. There's probably no order for me right now. But the Blue River vitta area is now wiped out, I think, pretty totally is what I hear still pretty locked off. That's on highway 126 as you're leaving Eugene going out to Springfield. And I think that's sort of like the North route that you would take over and out there plenty of times past that area. I think that's like a pie around like the cougar reservoir and the hot springs that are out there. I'm not sure if that caught on fire. I know that there's a covered bridge that's up there. I believe there's a few covered bridges. And I believe that it's that maybe that one or two of them may have been lost. This is probably no-no and I don't know I think I was going off of an earlier report that was mentioning that they projected that they would lose all the covered bridges however, I did see a picture where I think that that that one covered bridge you pass on highway 26 as you're driving up past Blue River and vieta I think that one's still is there that one was spared which is great but there was burns heavily on both sides of the river along the Mackenzie River in that valley there and just made a lot of significant burning all through that section. I'm interested to try and find out and see a better and more clear visual of the damage that's occurred out there I think it's it's also Kind of confusing there's still like a lot of haze literally like there's just still so much smoke and concrete all you see is just wreckage and it's almost unrecognizable. It's Kind of weird, you know, your mind gets in there it's like I I don't recognize that, you know, you see a picture of some area reported to be like a boat ramp or a lodge or something or you know, some someone's house or car lot or something out there. And I think I probably driven past it. And I went 26 some time in the past but totally unrecognizable in the haze and the smoke of just a burned-out area you see just Kind of curled wreckage that looks like of cars that got caught on fire. And bikes are those chairs, materials, whatever, whatever was able to still stand But really most everything is just wiped to the ground as it was for a house. So yeah, Blue River. And a lot of a lot of that areas is wiped out pretty heavily. I think maybe Mackenzie bridge, got out of it. Okay, but I think there's a lot of damage out there and pass that area. And it's a real shame that happened right through there. I think I was also here to that for all of these where the trees got really heavily burned out along the sides of the highway. I think they're gonna have to cut a lot of that timber down. And I guess because those trees become unstable as they burned out into the core, and then they'll topple over in the wintertime as snow comes down as also hearing that there's going to be an increased risk of mudslides through the winter season now, as we've had a significant burn a lot of exposed land and ash and stuff is going to get wet and then I guess breakaway and come down here. There's like a risk of mudslides after big forest fires like that, especially on the steep draws and right where there's a bunch of highway traffic. Nice. Yeah, we haven't really had that Kind of experience before. Like I was thinking about the biscuit complex fire on the calamy ops as wilderness that occurred first in 2002. While these firsts for me, I think there's fires in the past are out there, but a real significant portion of that whole forest area burned in 2002. I think I was probably in eighth grade or something like that. And that was a big fire. I think that burned for the whole summer I saw that and the sky and that was out in the wilderness areas are pretty distant out. I think I was saying that in the calamity opsis wilderness, it would be like west of cave junction, that area in South West, Oregon. And I can see that see it really clear in the sky all through the summer for 2002. Down there in Southern Oregon. And then I think later in 2013. There was also another fire hour maybe just a couple years ago now. There was another really significant fire out on the the other section of the calamity offices that had not burned the first time in 2002. And I think that also burned and that was a really significant significant fire to the thing. They fought that for months. I think it burned for a long time. I think it spread for a long time. And that I think finally grew to somewhere around a million acres or something like that. It was a really significant and large area that burned. Now it really interesting just in a day. I think they talked for the last like four days or something like we've reached Are our mounts of like a million acres burned some of those fires had been going I guess since like the middle of August, and they've just been Kind of progressing slowly then with this significant weather change the easterly winds coming coming off the I guess the dry middle of the country land dad just lit those fires change the wind and now we're in the situation that we see ourselves in now. So Blue River fire talked about that one a bit just a little bit man a lot of wild stories out of that one a lot a lot of significant damage a lot of stuff that we're gonna notice for a long time. Now further north as we Kind of go up outside of the Salem area in the I think the cncm River Canyon area the towns of Lions have gates and I think up through Detroit are pretty well burned and wiped out a lot of significant damage up there as well. Bennett through the Detroit area the Detroit Lakes Area heard about some people trying to get out of there and escape that and it sounded pretty harrowing even Lyons which is really quite close to this the Salem area it seems I think there's some pretty pretty harrowing stories of people trying to leave or trying to get their family out and yeah, that sounds sounds pretty crazy up there. I don't really understand the whole reality of of the fires and the situation and the results and the consequences of it. Yeah. Big vibe. I think that one's connecting now with the fire that's on the Clackamas side as it goes down toward esta Qaeda Malala. And as it comes into a section of my I suppose it's not you know, it's like almost like Oregon City and like Lagos where you go in that area put on notice as being you know, in a fire zone, I think I think it's the way that the district works for how they set up their like regional fire map but but I think like areas as far north that are as far up toward Portland is like Oregon City were put on notice, I think level one notice of be ready to evacuate, but areas like Molalla as the Qaeda, few of those other towns that are out in that area out in those fields, and then as it goes up into the hills toward the Clackamas river got really significantly burned. And I think a lot of people have to leave for that. So that's pretty wild. That one was like I think both the ones around like the Santiam River area and the Clackamas river area were both really pretty significant. And that's going to be kind of a weird one to see the recovery from also also out in Lincoln city out in Lincoln City, Oregon, right on the coast on the one on one I think on like the north side of Lincoln city there was a forest fire that it started not sure if these that one was related to arson or not I think they they had mentioned or maybe there's another smaller fire that I think was caught and put out that was that was from an arsonist or I don't know if it's an RS is maybe but but some some irresponsible behavior that was caught and put out like I've noticed, like some deliberate use of fireworks being reported. I've also noticed like a lot of reports that are saying that that's that sound like grand scheme or organized conspiracy of something that's going on which would you would think after your uni like it's, it's something that will cross your mind FTSE the amount of damage that occurred so quickly. It's kinda interesting to see like the number of fires We're sorry, but yeah, this Lincoln City Fire put a good section of the city of Lincoln City on notice to evacuate. Really, I think pretty scary. I think like there's a level three go now notice for a significant amount of the Northern Lincoln City area. And then the South section, I think it was like oh, level two and level one alert to be ready to leave. So pretty spooky weekend. Yeah, man or like is like Labor Day, Labor Day week and the week following it just like a pretty pretty wild thing where Yeah, good conception of the the Cascade Mountains burned. And that's where we're getting the smoke that's like sitting really heavily on us over here on the west coast. As you look at the satellite images, how it's really pushed out, sort of strangely over the West Coast over the Pacific Ocean, you see this big swirl of brown smoke that used to be, you know, a million acres of Oregon timber and houses and everything else that that went up in smoke and then it's now out over the Pacific Ocean swirling around and then I think it's waiting for another pressure system or you know, another other weather system to move through. I think it's gonna start pushing all that smoke back back over us and then back out toward the east as they are mixed in with the rest of the atmosphere over the rest of the time, but I think it should start Kind of blowing out maybe over this next week. kind of depends on how long this this weather pattern stays with. I suppose by the time this podcast comes out, we should already be seeing a bit of improvement and some more. Some more westerly wind blowing, I think it's already Kind of shifted to be a little bit more westerly, but I think we're supposed to be getting a little bit of a change, I think we're supposed to get some clouds and some rain coming Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, a little bit, I think Kind of put in there, but I was looking to change the rain during the day have been at least a couple of those days, like a pretty high percentage chance that we're gonna get some rainfall. So it'd be late probably, but at least we'll be in the right direction of the Kind of stuff that will help the firefighters out there working right now help contain and put away the forest fire stuff that we've got going on. But, man, so I'm sure there's a number of fires that I've missed talking about. I know there's like another whole other set of complexes in California that have been really destructive, and really significant. I'm looking at the smoke and the fire damage of some of the areas that have been down there around like Lake Berryessa, Oroville. They're like any other. There's a lot of areas out there. I think they're talking about 2 million acres. Others may be mentioned earlier, 2 million acres of burn damage this year recorded in 2020. I think that's twice the average. Now here in Oregon, 1 million acres burned, which is a pretty significant amount. Also, if you Kind of think of maybe California being, you know, three, three times Oregon size or something you take, you know, three Oregon's Kind of stacked each other seems like that'd be about what it would take to Kind of fill up the length of California on the Pacific coastline there. But the million acres man pretty quick to get to that number. I know we had some burns already this year, some other fires and stuff. But man that's been like we have had this last week. So that was pretty crazy how quickly moved and really, really significantly, like how destructive it was, again, there's acreages that burn but it seems like some of those have just been out in pretty pretty remote areas for a long time now, this is pretty significant is it being in a number of the highway, like the valley and river draws that are out there and also like the near near like the populated sections, I mean, Medford, the Springfield, Eugene area, the Salem area, and the Portland area, all experienced pretty significant fires right along their their highway that cuts up into the Cascades. And I guess we were pretty fortunate here in the Corvallis, Albany area to be spared. up outside of the you know, there wasn't any fire up on that draw. So, at least in essence, like we're a little bit further away from some of the significant heightened Red Alert circumstances that are going on right now. But yeah, it'd be a weird week for probably most people you know, I was looking at like one of the reports, and 10% of Oregon is forced to evacuate I think those numbers were a little bit off or stretched and then they kind of later came out and said, Oh, yeah, like the calculations probably really only around somewhere around 100,000 or maybe 150,000 people that were required to evacuate. And then I think it was probably around 500,000 people that were about to or were supposed to be on notice to get things ready to leave. I think it was if you if you can predict Clackamas. And Washington County or like is it started like Kind of skewed up toward toward Portland and a little closer to Salem. I think if if either of those districts went from Well, if they either dropped into a level level one alert of you, no gifts, get your stuff get ready to go. I think that would have been well into the 500,000 area. I guess just given as how concentrated the populations here in Oregon are toward the Portland area, the Salem and then the Eugene area and so it's it's all those areas were hit also with with I think all of Medford I think it was like you know, 80,000 people there, put on the list of female figures out and get ready to go somewhere. Every go to the fair. Everybody go to the Jackson County Fairgrounds, all 82,000 people I was reading another thing, classic Jackson County style. Everybody leave Jackson County go to the Jackson County Fairgrounds? Well, okay, it's still pretty close to just about everything going on. But at least it's at the north end of the Medford area, and it's Kind of away from the shady Cove White City stuff that was going on, you can get out there, okay. And then there are 100 beds and some blankets and those will be kept for those people who are elderly or ill. And then your shelter that you receive is to lay on the ground. That was, I think a quote from one of the emergency response people is you can come and have a spot on the ground to lay, but hey, it's shelter. And I thought Wait a second. That's not shelter that's laying on the ground. Hmm, so Kind of classic for Jackson County Emergency Response to, I guess, be overwhelmed, let's say, and I'll guess I grant him that during this time as a bunch of the town is destroyed. So it's gonna be pretty wrecked for a long time and 2020 it's great if one thing doesn't do it to you another thing Well, good times here so yeah, September 2020 the fires in Oregon, just some of the information and experience and stuff that I've been having from here where I've been I've been trying to Kind of stay in so I had plans right like, you know, I can only talk about where I'm camping or where I'm traveling where I want to go and I Kind of wanted to do that on this one. I think I was gonna go out to the coast and then head down to California and I ended up Kind of scrapping all that stuff as it was very smoky and unhealthy to really go anyway, I thought about like Kind of trying to travel out east a little bit further really looking at the satellite map the smoke bath and air quality stuff just about everywhere out to Montana is affected to some degree I think it's better in a lot of places but it's not like a quick drive out and I'll be I'll be out of the blue skies maybe if I found a couple spots but it's pretty far so I was gonna wait for this to Kind of pass or shift up a little bit to get a little bit more of a sense of what's under control and what's not and also there's a lot of highways here that are closed down you know, like I mean there's sections probably all over the state where there's a section a highway that shut down or where it's impossible in some spot so it's all I think pretty strange right now so it's Kind of open for that all to settle down a little bit and for things to get figured out a little bit and then I was gonna try and take off again and maybe do do some more moving around them but yeah for the last couple days have been Kind of holding tight and narrowly trained to dry around much at all really specifically because the air quality you know I went I went down a couple days ago to run some errands and stopped to get a coffee a spot that I go to normally came up to the window It was early in the morning and came to the window it said closed due to air quality and I thought well I don't blame them but yeah it's like wow the fires all the smoke in town that particular I think when you look at the the air particulate it's like Portland Oregon is the the number one worst air quality city in the world right now. I think above Jakarta and Indonesia above where is it is a Beijing? That's better air quality. Somewhere in China has bad air quality, and apparently, I had hoped guys pretty bad, guys. I bet it sucks over there a lot of these days of the year. But yeah, I guess it's supposed to be like the worst air quality in the world. If you look at the way that that scale goes instead of it's been like up above 300 a lot. Yikes. Yeah, like in the extremely unhealthy ranges, the worst, worst smoke and like worst amount of smoke all over the West Coast that I've ever really remembered. or seen. I mean, there's been a few days where the weather changed it was Kind of bad held the smoke low in the valley that normally been off for most of the summer but but held some smoke out really low in the valley in Southern Oregon, you could drive out of Southern Oregon, you know in a northern Oregon here and be fine be up in the sun and there'd be some smoke, but it wouldn't be a big deal. But down there and so in Oregon now you could have visibility of, you know, a few 100 feet or something like a quarter mile or something like that if it was a good part of the day. But it was like that for a few days. And then finally the wind shifted and Kind of pulled up out of the valley and wasn't socked in anymore. But But this Yeah, this is the most socked in and most Kind of long term stretch of heavy smoke that I've ever seen and met all over the West Coast like Canadian border down to California, smoked in weird weather. So I'm really hoping that it Kind of starts to figure itself out really happy that a bunch of people are out there trying to work on it stuff, so we'll see if it starts to get better shift into a more controlled environment in the mid and later September. But appreciate you guys checking out this episode of the building Newman photo podcast I guess all all encompassing the forest fire situation that's occurred last week, but thanks for Kind of listened to it. I know it's Kind of law and facts and stuff. And I'm sure there's a lot of better, better locations for you guys to find some of the specific details. I think I was getting some some good stuff out of the Oregonian. A lot of this specific small-town Kind of local papers have been difficult to get good information from like I was mentioned in like the Southern Oregon like the Medford paper not many good photos or videos or articles about things that are important and doesn't really give you like a good sense of what was going on. Like I was like I think the mail Tribune or like I was mentioning the local NBC ABC and CBS affiliates there. Were doing local reporting on it. A lot of those stories really weren't very good or weren't well structured. And I think I Kind of left out some of the information that would have been good to have it. As part of an overview, some good specifics of information about developments of each case that are going on so you can Kind of get some more information from there. But, man, I'm sure everybody's everyone's attention has been glued to it for the last week. So I hope everybody is holding in there and doing okay, and man, I'm sorry if I may have actually like, actually evacuated and most people my family had to evacuate. It's Kind of crazy. I think they're okay, but man, we're a couple weeks. So go to Billy Newman photo calm. If you want to check out some more information or get in contact with me. I think there's a couple ways you can do it there. If you have any questions or comments about what we've been talking about, or you want to know more about some of the stuff that I'm up to, I put together a 360 video playlist that I think is available on YouTube, you can go straight there to youtube.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. Or you can go to my website. This is what I put together as a playlist link that's there in the grid icons on that front page, you click on 360, it'll take you to a playlist of 360 videos that we're captured around Oregon. Kind of shown some landscape stuff and all that so yeah, collection of those videos put together curated up posted to the front page of the Billy Newman photo.com website. You can check it out there. Anyway, thanks a lot. All this information but the smoke by experience. Fires for the second week of September 2020 fishing everyone listening. I hope you guys have a great day. Bye</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Oregon Wildfires



Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires  1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City



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I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



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156 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Oregon Wildfires



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast, recorded for the second week of September 2020. Thanks a lot for listening to this podcast. If you're in the northwest or anywhere on the west coast, and if you're probably anywhere in America, I'm sure you've heard about the wildfires that are going on here in Oregon. And if you're on the west coast, as west of the Cascades, I'm sure you've been inundated with smoke for the last week or so, just about like most of this last week, I think since, like Labor Day, it's been pretty intense here. It's been just smoke all through the valley. And I think smoke all the way down to California. Now, I guess I was just reading that there's smoke that's now Kind of pushed out all the way to Michigan. I think a scene and satellite photos are really interesting satellite imagery. I don't know if you guys have been able to see that. There are also some like time-lapse captures of the satellite imagery. And it's really interesting to Kind of see the changes and how the weather was working during the period of time with those wildfires took off. But as a quick rundown, I'm sure there have been better, better news outlets than I am to give you the rundown of the facts of the fires. But yeah, it seems like it's a historic amount of burn. And just a couple of days. I think they've mentioned that it's now more than 1 million acres have bu]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Oregon Wildfires



Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires  1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to ]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 155 Scouting Remote Hunting Camps</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-155-scouting-remote-hunting-camps/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 09 Sep 2020 12:12:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8534</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a  GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA. </p>



<p>Hunting Camps</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



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<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp; <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a  GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a  GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA. </p>



<p>Hunting Camps</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



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<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp; <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a  GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA. 



Hunting Camps



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp; https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a  GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA. 



Hunting Camps



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp; https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Weddi]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-154-developing-film-and-converting-minidv-tapes/</link>
	<pubDate>Tue, 01 Sep 2020 21:18:24 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8524</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Developing Film And Converting MiniDV </p>



<p>Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006.  Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower.  </p>



<p>154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp; <a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp; <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>Developing Film Converting MiniDV</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>Billy Newman Photo Podcast Feed</p>



<p><a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast">https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast</a></p>







<p>154 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Developing film and Converting old tapes</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. I hope everybody's doing well. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode. I wanted to talk a little about the start of September, some of the stuff I've been up to. It's cool, and I just finished a roll of film here pretty recently. Like I think during this last week when I was out traveling around, and I haven't finished a roll of film in a while, I've been shooting mostly on the digital camera that I've got kind of moved over to canon equipment back in 2018. And I've been shooting with that for, and I guess now almost two years is what it's coming up too. And so, during that time, I picked up a Canon film camera.And I've been using the Canon lenses that I have for my digital camera. On the Eos system over on an older canon film camera from I think the late 90s is what I was able to pick up. So I went over on like kth comm. I think this was this is probably like nine months ago or so at the beginning of the year. And I picked up a really inexpensive Canon camera body was like $35, something like that, to, to pick up this camera, mostly plastic in the body, but it has a bunch of the manual controls that you would expect from the sort of mid-range SLR sort of like the five D Mark, or you know, the five D Mark, the five D line, you know, whatever when you want to pick, but it's not the full professional build model. But it's definitely not the lower-end one. So yeah, it has like kind of the same layout of buttons and stuff on it as you can get with the more modern layout of cannon buttons and stuff. So most of it's really the same as it kind of translates back from one to the other. But it's a cool, pretty simple camera, and it's got, I think, like three focus points, three autofocus points on the inside. And that works fine for the kind of simple stuff that I was trying to do. But it's cool I was a cargo by I'm out here at a wildlife refuge spot. And I was checking out sort of has changed now that it's September 1, they've cut all the grass that they grow in these fields out here, that's all been cut, bailed, driven off. And then now it's like been tilled up, and there's like dirt and rocks and like all of these big multi-acre fields that kind of a stretch on out here. So we're working with this canon film camera, this, I can't remember what the name of it is. But it's got pretty simple controls, and it's been easy to use. It has a weird battery. Maybe I have talked about that before. The kind of tricky thing about some of these late 90s SLR cameras is that they take this sort of proprietary about these almost proprietary disposable batteries. I think this one is something sort of like to sort of fat double A's that are bonded together. And then kind of wrapped in this, you know, this little casing unit and that's supposed to like fit in your camera, and then the power of the camera for a couple of rolls or something like that it works fine. But I always kind of prefer the double-A or something that's a little more standard. They understood that they needed certain batteries to deliver more power for certain mechanisms. But I think now they've got that pretty well figured out with different series or different sets of series of double A and triple A batteries that they can use. Like that, the lithium-ion double-A batteries seem to work fine. And a lot of the stuff that I've used before, even just you know, the basic Duracell stuff has always worked fine. These are, these are weird batteries. So there, you know, like really thick, kind of, like if you took a double-A battery, and it was made playdough you took a double-A just kind of squished it a centimeter smaller than it was and kind of got it fatter on the sides. That's sort of what it looks like. And like I was saying, Yeah, bound together as I set it to and then put into the camera, and I haven't had to replace it in a year, but really, I've only shot through one roll. So I think like when I shoot with the Nikon f4, I think that takes a proprietary battery, but if you have the double-A battery pack system that attaches to it, and that's what I had so that one took like, took like six double-A batteries that went into the base and into the handle of the camera. And you could get about ten rolls of film shot with just that one set of batteries. And for me that would last a really long time. But if you'd imagine, you know, 10 rolls of film is you know, Max 36 frames. So if you multiply that out, it's you know, it's not more than a day's worth of shooting if you're if you're kind of shooting an event or like a wedding Or a sporting event, or something like that, where you're going to be expected to come back with a lot of frames that you, you know, develop and produce and then pick from. But for most of this kind of like, landscape work that I'm up to, or you like, this sort of stuff, it's a lot slower, it's a lot easier in a lot of ways to put together and a little more steady way. And so yeah, 10 roles, or, you know, like, I'm not going to shoot through 10 roles in the next two years, probably. Because it's, you know, sort of novelty thing for me to shoot now, but it's cool. I got that film role finished, I think, yeah, like I was saying it was probably from January till near the end of August now. So it's really not like a fast pace, it's probably like two or three frames a month that I've been shooting, but it's at a number of the different camps and stuff that I've gone to over the last year are different like trips and stuff that I've gone through different little spots that I was at. So I hope that there's some cool stuff on there. It's kind of fun when you go back and check. And you see, like what you got. And if you haven't, like, duplicate it over, or at least if I noticed, I haven't really duplicated over the the photo sets with, you know, a bunch of digital images of the same location, and then a bunch of film photos that same location have I really like crossed over too much. It's really almost a surprise to me what I when I developed the role, and I see some frames over there, I think, oh, man, I've heard you know, I've never seen this photo before, I never got to look at the back of the screen, just have to see how this photo would come out. I didn't I didn't get to pull it up on my computer yet. So you kind of look back to this thing that happened, you know, six or seven months ago, and you go, oh, man, I remember taking a picture of it, but I had never seen it. And so it's kind of fun getting to capture some of that stuff. And get to go through and check it out. And yeah, sometimes there's a there's a cool quality to the film photos that come out. But this is the first role that I put through this camera. So we'll see if it if it comes out at all, I don't really know how to develop it now that we're in sort of the, the COVID staff that we've been going through during 2020. I know like a lot of businesses and now opened up again or you know, like back into operations. But there's also sort of some strange protocols of how different things work. So I was trying to kind of figure that out and see if there was delays or something to it. But I think that, that I'm able to take it down to a spot. And they can probably develop it in house over a couple days. But well, no, I think it's still send out. Yeah. So I think it kind of depends on like, what what the, you know, what the location in Portland is doing or something right? I'm not really sure. It's kind of interesting, I think they can do a lot of C 41 processing in house. So maybe it's easier for him than what I'm thinking. But I was looking at a couple different services. So there's always kind of the idea where, if you're in a bigger market, you probably got a couple more options than I do. But out here in a more rural smaller market getting filmed about this become quite a bit more difficult. I probably talked about this before. Well, you know, like we've everybody's seen, the film departments in the photo departments of a lot of stores, just kind of go out of business, or flip to be in just a few digital kiosks that you get prints made up. And that's definitely going to serve 99% of the business. But in department store negatives were never the best things by any means. But but a lot of a lot of the access that you would have had to send your photos somewhere that you would see at least you know, like through your commercial markets you go to have kind of disappeared. And so so now like, yeah, you really just have to send an envelope out yourself to some developing house to have them, process the photos, send you back your negatives and send you back like a digital CD or thumb drive with your photos on I think now you can select for thumb drives for most everything. But it's kind of a little strange. It's and it's a reason I was looking at this one service called I think the darkroom. I think they're out of like an area in Northern California, like Santa Cruz or Monterey or something like that. And it's, I think, probably south, probably Bay Area. Maybe I could say that more like the South Bay sort of what it seemed like they're, they're saying from some of their information, but with them, I kind of like fill out a contact form on that website. And then it sent off that information. And they email me back like a prepaid mailer that I can put my, my film role in, and then they'll take it, put it through a scanning process during my negatives back and then give me the scans through some digital means. And the prices were pretty reasonable, but it seemed like it was somewhere around 20 bucks a roll to get the sort of good stuff, you can go up from there and spend more you can go down a little bit and spend a little less, but I wouldn't really recommend that that'd be that'd be like a lower quality scan of the materials. I haven't really that's sort of what I'm faced with the local stuff too. Like I was saying I can go to this local camera shop that's still a town away. And I could drop my film out there, then there's sort of the old-timey, they haven't really renovated anything since the late 90s, sort of camera store model that you would have seen before. But you go in there, you can drop your film off, they'll have it ready in a day, which is great. Otherwise, with this meal and service, we'll probably have to wait a week or two weeks to get my film back. But you can wait like a day, two days, three days or something, go down and pick up the film. But the problem is the CD that they provide you is bad. Or it's just got like, I haven't done that in years to I used to have like a CD reader, I haven't had like a CD drive in a long tiling a couple of years now at least that I've like done the CD stuff, shoot. But the seat Yeah, the CD-quality or like, whatever, whatever system they're using to scan those images is pretty bad. So you get like a, it's like a two megapixel scan, it's really highly usable for anything. But you know, like, something fun to see on a computer screen. But it's not really good enough to print anything more than like a four by five or so in photo. And even still, that's kind of, it's not as rich as it could be, if it was scanned properly. So that's one of the benefits that you get with doing the send out is that you get to kind of work with whatever, whatever scan shop is actually looking at and dealing with and caring for your photos and a lot of these local shops, they probably do a good job also. And if you're in again, like a larger market or more developed market, there's going to be well, I don't know, probably like, I don't know, there's probably going to be one or two places. And most of the West Coast market cities like say, you know, like Seattle, now the car going by. But like Seattle, Vancouver, San Francisco, I mean, Portland's got two or one, maybe they've got like a little art-house style one. But I think a lot of these also, I think they kind of cheat a little and send their stuff out to a bigger print house when it gets a little more complicated. So I'm not really sure how that goes, you kind of have to look at it. And like sort of read what that little spot is up to and how they kind of work with us that's filled with photos and stuff. But But yeah, I think getting the scans is a pretty good way of going about getting your film stuff created. And it's not too bad sending your scan in getting it developed put on CD getting sent back to you, that's all pretty easy to see 41 processing for a lot of the color film stuff that you can just get is pretty easy to use, like any other more complicated stuff, like medium format, or large format, if you get to shoot it, what's the other one to 40 even like some black and white stuff, it's like it's just not standard enough, it's not the C 41 processing system they've got. So it has to be sent out to like a different place. And it has to be, I guess, more beautifully processed to get handled. But I think that's because kind of like what what we recognize is that the those those formats of pretty much all of it disappeared now. So you just really can't get ahold of a lot of medium format film to shoot through. I mean, you can, of course, but it's just not going to be something that's done enough. So just about all that stuff is sent out to a few hubs that are large enough, so they can get enough of that so that it's profitable enough for them to keep developing it. So it's kind of cool. It's interesting, but But yeah, I want to try and shoot that film off. Get my my film sent back to me. Hopefully that'll work out pretty good. The other thing I've been trying to do, I've been going through like an old box that I have, and it's got these mini DV tapes in from probably started in I don't know 2005 2006 2007 and then probably no more by around 2008 or 2009 those interesting facets things kind of come and go when you look back at him . I think when I was getting into video editing and video processing stuff back in like high school and into college when I started a lot of the video footage that I'd record would be put onto these mini DV tapes that were little kind of like small palm-sized VHS tapes that were kind of a split between a few different video mediums that are out there like hiei or VHS See I think was like the other camera types that they had out there for a couple of years sort of were sort of floating around there in the market at the same time. They have these mini DV tapes, and it's got footage on them still, and I think I have clips of the footage that is that have been captured off of it like way back in 2005. Whenever I use a capture card to capture mini DV footage over from the camcorder that took it and then bring it into Final Cut Studio three or whatever it was that might have been around back then probably studio two Adobe version one premiere one, you know way back. But when you'd capture the this AVI file that was huge as a humongous file was like two gigabytes every minute or something. It was terrible. It kind of a uncompressed and this is just like a standard definition grainy video it sucks to deal with, but you just barely kind of process it with the computers of the day running it FireWire over from the computer, or over like across the camcorder through like a little capture card FireWire mechanism that I had in it, I think it was I got to use like a Canon XL one back in the day. And that was pretty cool. That was like a pretty fancy camera for the 2004 2005 2006 range. And so yeah, it was fun to get to shoot on a nice big lens. And I got to do a bunch of sports stuff and a bunch of normal video stuff. But But yeah, sure, with that captured onto a mini DV tape, sent over FireWire to like Mac, g five computer I think is what it was for a long time. And then I got one of those later myself to use to do some editing stuff. And I had that until I don't know, 2012 or so 2013 when I finally sold it. But yeah, using those computers and stuff to capture these mini DV tapes a way back, I'd captured the footage, done some edits to it or worked on whatever project that was associated with it. And then I'd rented that out. And I probably still have some of those captured files that are edited rendered out that are somewhere on my computer video archive that I've got around, I've seen a few of them float around, but it's not really like the raw footage. So it's cool. I've got these mini DV tapes still, to whatever still on, and I think they've been recorded over a few times. So I didn't do the the archivist job of putting everything together as I probably should have project by project, mini DV tape, but mini DV tape to pull out all the raw stuff now and be able to have it in full. I think I've recorded over a few of those like short class project files that I would have recorded for a bunch of the stuff that I would have worked on through late High School in college. So for whatever, I got a box of tapes, so whatever I do have I have, but I definitely think that I've lost some stuff in there too. So taking these sets of tapes, and I'm trying to take them in and send it to like a conversion shop, sort of like I was saying, you know, with the film stuff, trying to get my film developed, I'm trying to send these these mini DV tapes out to a spot where they'll take it, put it in the scanning system, and then capture that video off of it again and give me a digital file with that captured video. And it's kind of cool getting to see some of the stuff again, I've done it with two tapes already as like a test, and then I need to drop in probably another eight or 10 tapes to see if I can get some video off of them. But it's kind of cool. Yeah, some stuff that goes back to I think like 2006. And then another thing from probably summer of 2007. Maybe somewhere in there. Yeah, probably like the 2007 year I think it's like this wedding that I recorded. And so yeah, I just, I just got this guy, this tape bag, it was blank. It didn't have a label on it. And it's just, yeah, somebody's wedding from 2007 that I recorded. So it's like, yeah, there you go. Yeah, another event that I accorded recorded some some stage event that I recorded, and got got tape of it, there you go camera set up on a tripod looking at video from I think that was 2000, early 2007 as well, you know, so it's kind of kind of interesting to csfb, I just dropped off another two tapes, I'm going to I think drop off. Maybe you know that four or so. And I think they process it, they put it on a thumb drive for you. And then they send you the tape back and they give you a thumb drive. And it has a sort of process mark on it. But yeah, he through the through the same drive in your computer to transfer those files over. And they're like a more reasonably compressed mp4 or something, I think this time, or QuickTime file, something like that. And yeah, drag it over your computer, you got to an hour of videotape. now converted over to a digital file. So I'm going to try and go through that box that I have and see if I can pull out some cool videos from some stuff from 2005 to 2008. Whatever range of stuff I was recording at that time, that'd be kind of fun to see. Really what I'm noticing though is that it's just a lot of junk. I really am frustrated that you kind of think like early on, you're like recording some stuff, you're recording something cool. And then it kind of turns out later to be not not super useful. It's just not like a really like a full contained thing. And you think man, there's a lot of waste in here. If I could have eight hours of the good stuff. That would have been great. You know, if you really think about life and like, oh, what, eight hours what I'd want to still see now. Right? You know, like, what kind of stuff What do I wish I had recorded a little bit more of moment to moment. And I'm looking at that a little bit through the videos that I recorded that are like, what is this project and also into the photos I record to have like, you know, like that. There's an there's the process of photos that is cool, but there's some nostalgic stuff about photography that that really is what grows Over the years, you know, like, if you just take in personal photos, it's like the moments that the things in the the way that you sort of interacted with the thing that ends up being a lot more fun to see and look back on then just sort of the, the most plain, sort of flatly composed VISTA that you can kind of put together on a on a viewpoint, which is sort of what I ended having a lot of just like, Oh, yeah, it's like, it's like a horizon and then a sky. And I don't really know where it is, and it's sort of flat. And okay, but, but then there's a lot of stuff. That's, that's pretty cool. And sort of personal to get to see. And that's what the, I think the fun stuff is year over year, over years, you get kind of further down the road. But I wanted to talk a little bit about the proceed meteor shower that had come up a while back now, in early August, it was cool again, to see that hopefully, you guys got to get out and make some observations of some meteors that were going by I got to do a couple of camping trips. During that time. I think like at the end of July, when comet nowise was cruising over, some of you guys probably got to see that that was cool. But during like the end of July is when the Perseus start kind of ramping up. And then it's pretty late. It's like it's a chance that you'll see a meteorite, or you know, a meteor streak across the sky during the evening sky during those weeks, but it really starts to kick up and peak. I think it's August 10 11th, and 12th sort of in that range ninth 10th 11th 12th. But really, I think like the 10th 11th is when it's it's the night to see it. And it's cool, and knives are on yours that the that the meteor shower is really peaking. I think it can be like up to 50 or almost 60 an hour, but you'd be projected to see. But I've seen a lot of really cool ones before that. It's been pretty fun, or you just go like, well man. I'm just seeing a lot of shooting stars throughout the sky. So it was cool. This year, I went out for a couple different sightings of it. I think like that during that last podcast that I was talking about was probably one of the better observation nights that I had when I was up on top of that mountain peak out in Eastern Oregon. It was really beautiful. It was the really dark night you can you can see really crisply into the Milky Way and into kind of the little filament light structures that sort of make up the edges and boundaries of the Milky Way. And then how dark it gets as it kind of falls off that into the deep space part of the night sky. It's really cool to kind of check out and look at that and and that was a lot of fun. Getting to go out there. Look at the sky, look at the Milky Way watch the Perseids as it kind of started to kick in a little bit more after midnight. So I said it took about about 2am that night and they're probably saw it's probably 15 or nearly 20 pretty good ones. there's a there's a bunch of spinners that were kind of coming through there but there was really like a lot of good ones that I was able to see kind of later or over that night and the night before. And it's cool when you get to see a few of them they really kind of stretch off across like a lot of different parts of the sky. I think they're the idea of the Percy is is that they're sort of originating out of the constellation of Perseus up in the north east part of the sky. But really, you can see him shoot now down into like Sagittarius and Scorpio in the south are way out past like Arcturus as you get like a little bit further over into the western sky. But yeah, it was cool getting to check out the meteor shower getting to see some of those bright tubes that are left band is like plasma tubes that are left behind is one of the bigger meteorites kind of cruises through burns up and leaves this kind of tube of I guess hot air hot ionized there. And it kind of glows for about a second or so. And the sky You can kind of see it as then sort of zips and whisps away as it sort of evaporates and cools back down. But it's fine. Yeah, being out there watching a few media or media shoot by that was fun. And then yeah, really a great part of August and some of the observations that you get to do is get a check out the meteor shower, I guess there are meteor showers through other parts of the year to like, think there's supposed to be? Well, it's probably a couple more weeks, and usually another really good one that comes up in October that we normally Miss. There's another good one, I think it's like the Leonid. Maybe it's a Leonid shower, that's in November. But for a lot of us in the Northern Hemisphere, by that time, it's just like clouded over enough. Or the the way that the weather is working just makes it so that you're not really able to make the kind of observations of the meteor showers you'd like to I suppose even when, like I was in Hawaii A while back and I was trying to make observations and some of those things I hadn't been able to do during the winter months here in Oregon. And a lot of that stuff I really wasn't able to see in the way that I would have hoped to. or Yeah, I just like the observations of it like we're just I don't know kind of kind of difficult to make. So really like get the proceed meteor shower was always one of the coolest ones because it's it's kind of it's, it's right there kind of writing a good season where you get to check it out. And in a good location for a lot of us here in the Northern Hemisphere and stuff. So it was cool, had a good time. Getting to do some of that earlier this year, it's ready to I'm out here. I like this section of the of this wildlife refuge, I was noticing the leaves and stuff like I was talking about the the acres of the of the grass fields have been tilled now. And that's dirt and rocks that are sort of turned up all over these multi acre fields and stuff. But out here past that there's groves of oak trees that kind of stretch out along the creeks as the ground and then up onto the hillsides is it kind of extends up into the forest over here more. But I've noticed in the oak trees, now that it's September 1, there's like this browning that's starting to occur. And so it's just sort of the the last two weeks of August is when you really start to first see it, but it's the first twinge that the the leaves are starting to change their color and that the seasons are starting to flip. And it's starting to move into into more of the fall. autumn season, which is kind of cool. It's interesting to see like how it sort of takes place when I was driving on the freeway last week. And as sort of moving around a little bit more, I could see a few rows of trees that had been put in I think they were ash or maybe their poplar trees that had already started to turn really quite yellow, and on some of the branches. And it's interesting to see how they sort of start to pop and turn a different time. But it'll be interesting to see how this year sort of plays out. I'm not sure if we're going to get the Indian summer the extended summer into like late September or October, like we've maybe gotten a few of the last last few years, but it'd be kind of need to check out, I'm excited for it to be September. So to be maybe a little bit of change of the vibe of what's been going on for the last few months, I'm kind of tired of the pandemic and the lockdown stuff and some of the changes that have sort of come with that. So I'm hopeful to kind of maybe see the Far be a shift in some of the way that some of that's working or kind of see like how it's going to evolve, we're going to maybe see now if like colleges are going back into place, or if schools are going back into place, or I think that'll be kind of maybe it'll set the temperature, the vibe of the type of change we're going to see through the rest of the year and how it's gonna go. I'm already seeing news articles saying you know, expect expected a distance Thanksgiving over zoom. So it doesn't look like they're putting it on the agenda to be back out of it or celebrating anything soon, which I understand, I guess makes some sense. And it sounds like a lot of states are going to be bringing their schools back into place, which I think is really going to affect a lot of parents and their ability to have a work schedule as a managing their kid in a home environment stuff. So that's all going to be kind of strange. Now that kind of cascades a problem. But yeah, it looks like it's gonna take a little longer to pull out of all the consequences from the pandemic. And it's too bad I wasn't a little faster. I was hoping that it would be kind of in July or August that would be able to kick most of it and get back to pretty regular business. But yeah, with a lot of states just not selected to have their their K through 12 classrooms reopened. But for reopening through a distance learning mechanism where you're, you're required to be occupied at home. I think that's gonna put a lot of parents in positions, that it's just gonna make it it's gonna make it an auditioning, or it's well, it's just gonna be a weird couple months, and I think everybody's got a pretty good handle on that. Shoot. I wanted to talk about this trip I did out to the lake Billy Chinook area. That's a cool area. I like that I think like Billy Chinook is, well maybe it's the lake I've seen a couple different names for that lake. It's sort of on the border. one edge of it toward the north is the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. To the south. I think it's when is that area. Now I don't know what it is. I was trying to think of the the National Forest system as part of that. Now I can't remember. But there's some national forest out there. And I think it's where like the crooked river and maybe the White River Salmon River, same river. I can remember it's where like a couple rivers sort of have their convergence point before they think they enter up and head down toward the Deschutes river and They put a dam in there and then backed it up. And it's an amazing location. It's really wild to think of what the landscape must have been like they're way, way back, but they put a dam in. But these canyon walls, he's like really, really steep walls go down, you know, like hundreds of feet or something more than like where it's even dammed up to today. So it's a really kind of strange spot but but yeah, I was camping out over there. Really interesting area, it was cool. I didn't camp down by the lake that was really actually very full kind of, like I talked about a few times in this podcast. The the outdoor kind of camping here is sort of the more developed pull your pull your truck and trailer in and set up a campsite. 15 feet from another camper next to a lake so you can fish kind of spots. Those are all really full this summer. I think, you know, maybe like Tuesday, Wednesday, you can find some more open spots, but they're still campers through the week. But then by Thursday, Friday, Saturday, most of those spots are real full in the small town junctions to get to those spots are even more full, like going out to lupine before you get out toward the Newberry crater Paulina Lake area or out toward like Crescent lake or some of those cascade lakes you can cut up to that the LA pine area some of those little travels and a gas stations out there that I've intersected with a couple times on this trip southeast Oregon are slammed by Friday with out of state license plates and within state license plates from people from Portland or bend or from wherever you're going out to do their summer recreation stuff and it's been way more busy this year than I've seen it for a number of the past years but but yeah, when I was at toward the Lake Village Nick area that the State Park area where there's like tent camping and RV camping that was sold out it said no vacancy, and it was loaded like no no distancing and seemed really you know, but it's just tense on 10 on 10 on 10 on truck camper, and so on. And it's a cool spot that I would say it's great if you get a boat or if you're renting like a houseboat or family boat or something like that to go out on a school you can drive your trailer down, drop it in the lake and take off for you know, a whole day and just kind of cruise around acres and acres of of Lake out there. So really beautiful spot really cool. It seems like it'd be a good spot to go fishing or I think people do some kind of light watersports, sort of, not jet ski, but, you know, like wakeboard, innertube, ski sort of stuff. I think it's like some parts of it. And then I think some other parts are still set up to be a little more slow for the fishing stuff. Now the car driving by what's up cars. But it was cool that there's a nice spot to go camping I, what I ended up doing though, is a was looking on that map. That off road on x map that I've talked about a few times shows a lot of the roads, the Forest Service roads to kind of stretch out and but Forest Service roads that are open too. So a lot of them have like gates on them. So if you're going down a road and you see it on the map, you're not really sure if it's open open to the public or if it if it drives through or not. It's cool because you can look on this map and see what is there where you can go and you can see what roads are open. But I was able to take this forest service or the cuts on the south side of the lake area, and then I think goes up into the mountains. And then it would if you took it all the way you would go over the mountain and then head down to sisters Oregon, which is a ways south of there, but you could take that just with with backroads the Forest Service backroads. But it was cool. But as you kind of climbed the ridge out of the Lake area out of the draw that was created by the river and the creek that flow into the bigger lake. You climb away it's like 500 feet or something that seems and you get up kind of toward the top of it. And it's interesting, the landscape is out there. It's really it seems like a flat landscape. And then the elevation changes created by the erosion from the water that that kind of creates these big Canyon draws that then drop down into the lake. So you can drop in elevation a lot, but really as you climb in elevation and get to the top of that, it really looks like a plateau that flattens out and goes flat across the high desert area out up into like Mount Hood or Mount Jefferson that you can kind of see from that area as you kind of climb up out of the I guess out of that Canyon grassland area. So it was cool. Yeah, the camping spot I got to was a dispersed campsite. That was up on top of that ridge outside of all the commotion at the State Park area by Billy Chinook. And it was cool Yeah, pulled up out of there. Found I think like these four campsites had like firing setup and they were all about probably like spread out by like a quarter mile or so. It wasn't too long of a space be I was this old rocky road that kind of curled out onto the precipice of this, this little point. And then the main road sort of stretched up the spine to the ridge, and went up a little further, until it crested over, and then came back down the other side, but went out toward this point, you had a cool view of Mount Jefferson, that wasn't really too far where mount Jefferson looked pretty prominent in the view. And then, as you looked at kind of toward the north, North West, you could see the point of Mount Hood, kind of sticking up over the flat plateau, the land that I talked about, you can see all the Mount Hood, but you can see kind of the top third of it or so just kind of sticking up over this flat plateau landscape. And then below that below Mount Hood, it dropped into this big Canyon, and then dropped into the lake Billy Chinook that you can kind of see down to the north and northwest or north and northeast, below me. And so it was cool is nice. Getting up to that spot. I tried to take some pictures up there, try to get some sunset photos of Mount Jefferson and try to do a couple of sunrise photos too. That was cool. It was better to lighten the sunrise sort of given the the side of the mountain that I was on. But yeah, it was nice getting out there and checking out mount Jefferson at night it was cool. was pretty smart. Like I'm kind of against like starting fires and stuff right now. So I've been using I think I talked about a couple of times that propane heater that saved me a lot through the through the season. But this is a good spot to use it it says everywhere up there. I think after a couple, a couple fires that had gotten out into the grassland and then gotten out of control. Early this decade, I think it was about 10 years ago or so they had that Warm Springs fire that burned. A lot of it, if you pull up a satellite image of the area, you'll see acres and acres and acres, this this whole big region that's been blackened by, by this flat fire that have gone through the big section of the Warm Springs Reservation. And some of the land that kind of stretches out from there. real shame as that goes, but there's a lot of stuff that says you know, hey, like we are locking down a lot of the fire you stuff that you have. So any any kind of just anything that seems hot, you just you don't get to use is pretty much what it seems to say I think in use gas stoves. And then you can use some propane systems, but really it's like, it's it's pretty against it in most ways. So like, I think you can't use charcoal, you can't use a fire pan, which is you know, sort of you get around these restrictions a lot of the time. You can't use any of that stuff. And I think it really kind of noticing what i what i saw out there is the wind is just really kicking up fast. And if anything leaves the fire and as a hot Ember, it'll just blow across and catch into a bunch of grass really way faster than you can get to it and way faster you can deal with it. So I understand like a lot of that, and I'm pretty happy to not have to deal with making a big fire or anything out there right now, especially through the summertime. So now that now that it is dropping into September and the fall, and moving into like some of the like hunting camp stuff that people are going to be doing. fires are gonna be great. That's always a fun part of the October camping stuff. When you get to light up a big fire burn through some Woods there plate. still stay warm. That stuff's really fun, but but man for like mid summer, really dry grassland camping. I'm happy to skip the fire this time. It was cool, though. That night when I was out there, I was camping out at the truck. And as you looked north, you could see up in Washington somewhere, you know, must have been way north of the Columbia River. You can see this Thunderhead system that had moved over. And you can see these these really bright and very distant strikes of lightning, they would shoot down somewhere east of Mount Adams so you can kind of make out up there you can see I can see Mount Hood from where I was and then a little over from that. Really more of like a due north location. You can see the hump of Mount Adams out there. And then so somewhere out east of Mount Adams from that landmark, you could see these big purple bolts of lightning that would strike down somewhere up in Washington, but that was really cool to see. Glad I got to be up there, and you can hear it, though. No Thunder anything you just see these distant flashes and stuff every 1015 minutes. You see these strikes from the storm and nowhere near me But yeah, as a trip, you can still see it from those mountaintops up there. So that was cool. Got a good time hanging out there out by mount Jefferson seeing some stuff. Check it out like Billy Shinnok that was really fun. Got to drop down to a couple fishing spots that are in that area. That was cool. nice spot, good summer spot spot to go really nice to get away from the State Park campsite area that they had that was super packed out and go to summaries that were a little bit more dispersed on the sides. How to get time doing that. So if It's cool that I probably wrap up the podcast here for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. You guys should check out my website Billy Newman photo calm; I'm gonna try and put up some more written and photo content up there on the blog posts section of the site through September and October. So that'll be kind of cool. Have some new photos and stuff that I haven't put up before. I'm gonna try and try and put out, and I got a few other things kind of planned for the fall, but I'm excited to get into but yeah, so a few few more podcasts or September. Couple more things like this talking about some camping, I have a few plans to go out and do some traveling and stuff. So I hope I get to do some posts and makes new photos about that. It's pretty excited about what I got coming out for at least the next 30 days, and it probably slows down a lot into late October, November. Man the winning time. How fun. It's gonna be exciting. But yeah, go to Billy Newman photo calm for slash support. You check out some more stuff about this podcast helped me out on there. It's always appreciated. Yeah. Until next time, thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcasts.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Developing Film And Converting MiniDV 



Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006.  Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower.  



154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Developing Film And Converting MiniDV </p>



<p>Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006.  Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower.  </p>



<p>154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



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<p>Developing Film Converting MiniDV</p>



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<p>154 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Developing film and Converting old tapes</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. I hope everybody's doing well. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode. I wanted to talk a little about the start of September, some of the stuff I've been up to. It's cool, and I just finished a roll of film here pretty recently. Like I think during this last week when I was out traveling around, and I haven't finished a roll of film in a while, I've been shooting mostly on the digital camera that I've got kind of moved over to canon equipment back in 2018. And I've been shooting with that for, and I guess now almost two years is what it's coming up too. And so, during that time, I picked up a Canon film camera.And I've been using the Canon lenses that I have for my digital camera. On the Eos system over on an older canon film camera from I think the late 90s is what I was able to pick up. So I went over on like kth comm. I think this was this is probably like nine months ago or so at the beginning of the year. And I picked up a really inexpensive Canon camera body was like $35, something like that, to, to pick up this camera, mostly plastic in the body, but it has a bunch of the manual controls that you would expect from the sort of mid-range SLR sort of like the five D Mark, or you know, the five D Mark, the five D line, you know, whatever when you want to pick, but it's not the full professional build model. But it's definitely not the lower-end one. So yeah, it has like kind of the same layout of buttons and stuff on it as you can get with the more modern layout of cannon buttons and stuff. So most of it's really the same as it kind of translates back from one to the other. But it's a cool, pretty simple camera, and it's got, I think, like three focus points, three autofocus points on the inside. And that works fine for the kind of simple stuff that I was trying to do. But it's cool I was a cargo by I'm out here at a wildlife refuge spot. And I was checking out sort of has changed now that it's September 1, they've cut all the grass that they grow in these fields out here, that's all been cut, bailed, driven off. And then now it's like been tilled up, and there's like dirt and rocks and like all of these big multi-acre fields that kind of a stretch on out here. So we're working with this canon film camera, this, I can't remember what the name of it is. But it's got pretty simple controls, and it's been easy to use. It has a weird battery. Maybe I have talked about that before. The kind of tricky thing about some of these late 90s SLR cameras is that they take this sort of proprietary about these almost proprietary disposable batteries. I think this one is something sort of like to sort of fat double A's that are bonded together. And then kind of wrapped in this, you know, this little casing unit and that's supposed to like fit in your camera, and then the power of the camera for a couple of rolls or something like that it works fine. But I always kind of prefer the double-A or something that's a little more standard. They understood that they needed certain batteries to deliver more power for certain mechanisms. But I think now they've got that pretty well figured out with different series or different sets of series of double A and triple A batteries that they can use. Like that, the lithium-ion double-A batteries seem to work fine. And a lot of the stuff that I've used before, even just you know, the basic Duracell stuff has always worked fine. These are, these are weird batteries. So there, you know, like really thick, kind of, like if you took a double-A battery, and it was made playdough you took a double-A just kind of squished it a centimeter smaller than it was and kind of got it fatter on the sides. That's sort of what it looks like. And like I was saying, Yeah, bound together as I set it to and then put into the camera, and I haven't had to replace it in a year, but really, I've only shot through one roll. So I think like when I shoot with the Nikon f4, I think that takes a proprietary battery, but if you have the double-A battery pack system that attaches to it, and that's what I had so that one took like, took like six double-A batteries that went into the base and into the handle of the camera. And you could get about ten rolls of film shot with just that one set of batteries. And for me that would last a really long time. But if you'd imagine, you know, 10 rolls of film is you know, Max 36 frames. So if you multiply that out, it's you know, it's not more than a day's worth of shooting if you're if you're kind of shooting an event or like a wedding Or a sporting event, or something like that, where you're going to be expected to come back with a lot of frames that you, you know, develop and produce and then pick from. But for most of this kind of like, landscape work that I'm up to, or you like, this sort of stuff, it's a lot slower, it's a lot easier in a lot of ways to put together and a little more steady way. And so yeah, 10 roles, or, you know, like, I'm not going to shoot through 10 roles in the next two years, probably. Because it's, you know, sort of novelty thing for me to shoot now, but it's cool. I got that film role finished, I think, yeah, like I was saying it was probably from January till near the end of August now. So it's really not like a fast pace, it's probably like two or three frames a month that I've been shooting, but it's at a number of the different camps and stuff that I've gone to over the last year are different like trips and stuff that I've gone through different little spots that I was at. So I hope that there's some cool stuff on there. It's kind of fun when you go back and check. And you see, like what you got. And if you haven't, like, duplicate it over, or at least if I noticed, I haven't really duplicated over the the photo sets with, you know, a bunch of digital images of the same location, and then a bunch of film photos that same location have I really like crossed over too much. It's really almost a surprise to me what I when I developed the role, and I see some frames over there, I think, oh, man, I've heard you know, I've never seen this photo before, I never got to look at the back of the screen, just have to see how this photo would come out. I didn't I didn't get to pull it up on my computer yet. So you kind of look back to this thing that happened, you know, six or seven months ago, and you go, oh, man, I remember taking a picture of it, but I had never seen it. And so it's kind of fun getting to capture some of that stuff. And get to go through and check it out. And yeah, sometimes there's a there's a cool quality to the film photos that come out. But this is the first role that I put through this camera. So we'll see if it if it comes out at all, I don't really know how to develop it now that we're in sort of the, the COVID staff that we've been going through during 2020. I know like a lot of businesses and now opened up again or you know, like back into operations. But there's also sort of some strange protocols of how different things work. So I was trying to kind of figure that out and see if there was delays or something to it. But I think that, that I'm able to take it down to a spot. And they can probably develop it in house over a couple days. But well, no, I think it's still send out. Yeah. So I think it kind of depends on like, what what the, you know, what the location in Portland is doing or something right? I'm not really sure. It's kind of interesting, I think they can do a lot of C 41 processing in house. So maybe it's easier for him than what I'm thinking. But I was looking at a couple different services. So there's always kind of the idea where, if you're in a bigger market, you probably got a couple more options than I do. But out here in a more rural smaller market getting filmed about this become quite a bit more difficult. I probably talked about this before. Well, you know, like we've everybody's seen, the film departments in the photo departments of a lot of stores, just kind of go out of business, or flip to be in just a few digital kiosks that you get prints made up. And that's definitely going to serve 99% of the business. But in department store negatives were never the best things by any means. But but a lot of a lot of the access that you would have had to send your photos somewhere that you would see at least you know, like through your commercial markets you go to have kind of disappeared. And so so now like, yeah, you really just have to send an envelope out yourself to some developing house to have them, process the photos, send you back your negatives and send you back like a digital CD or thumb drive with your photos on I think now you can select for thumb drives for most everything. But it's kind of a little strange. It's and it's a reason I was looking at this one service called I think the darkroom. I think they're out of like an area in Northern California, like Santa Cruz or Monterey or something like that. And it's, I think, probably south, probably Bay Area. Maybe I could say that more like the South Bay sort of what it seemed like they're, they're saying from some of their information, but with them, I kind of like fill out a contact form on that website. And then it sent off that information. And they email me back like a prepaid mailer that I can put my, my film role in, and then they'll take it, put it through a scanning process during my negatives back and then give me the scans through some digital means. And the prices were pretty reasonable, but it seemed like it was somewhere around 20 bucks a roll to get the sort of good stuff, you can go up from there and spend more you can go down a little bit and spend a little less, but I wouldn't really recommend that that'd be that'd be like a lower quality scan of the materials. I haven't really that's sort of what I'm faced with the local stuff too. Like I was saying I can go to this local camera shop that's still a town away. And I could drop my film out there, then there's sort of the old-timey, they haven't really renovated anything since the late 90s, sort of camera store model that you would have seen before. But you go in there, you can drop your film off, they'll have it ready in a day, which is great. Otherwise, with this meal and service, we'll probably have to wait a week or two weeks to get my film back. But you can wait like a day, two days, three days or something, go down and pick up the film. But the problem is the CD that they provide you is bad. Or it's just got like, I haven't done that in years to I used to have like a CD reader, I haven't had like a CD drive in a long tiling a couple of years now at least that I've like done the CD stuff, shoot. But the seat Yeah, the CD-quality or like, whatever, whatever system they're using to scan those images is pretty bad. So you get like a, it's like a two megapixel scan, it's really highly usable for anything. But you know, like, something fun to see on a computer screen. But it's not really good enough to print anything more than like a four by five or so in photo. And even still, that's kind of, it's not as rich as it could be, if it was scanned properly. So that's one of the benefits that you get with doing the send out is that you get to kind of work with whatever, whatever scan shop is actually looking at and dealing with and caring for your photos and a lot of these local shops, they probably do a good job also. And if you're in again, like a larger market or more developed market, there's going to be well, I don't know, probably like, I don't know, there's probably going to be one or two places. And most of the West Coast market cities like say, you know, like Seattle, now the car going by. But like Seattle, Vancouver, San Francisco, I mean, Portland's got two or one, maybe they've got like a little art-house style one. But I think a lot of these also, I think they kind of cheat a little and send their stuff out to a bigger print house when it gets a little more complicated. So I'm not really sure how that goes, you kind of have to look at it. And like sort of read what that little spot is up to and how they kind of work with us that's filled with photos and stuff. But But yeah, I think getting the scans is a pretty good way of going about getting your film stuff created. And it's not too bad sending your scan in getting it developed put on CD getting sent back to you, that's all pretty easy to see 41 processing for a lot of the color film stuff that you can just get is pretty easy to use, like any other more complicated stuff, like medium format, or large format, if you get to shoot it, what's the other one to 40 even like some black and white stuff, it's like it's just not standard enough, it's not the C 41 processing system they've got. So it has to be sent out to like a different place. And it has to be, I guess, more beautifully processed to get handled. But I think that's because kind of like what what we recognize is that the those those formats of pretty much all of it disappeared now. So you just really can't get ahold of a lot of medium format film to shoot through. I mean, you can, of course, but it's just not going to be something that's done enough. So just about all that stuff is sent out to a few hubs that are large enough, so they can get enough of that so that it's profitable enough for them to keep developing it. So it's kind of cool. It's interesting, but But yeah, I want to try and shoot that film off. Get my my film sent back to me. Hopefully that'll work out pretty good. The other thing I've been trying to do, I've been going through like an old box that I have, and it's got these mini DV tapes in from probably started in I don't know 2005 2006 2007 and then probably no more by around 2008 or 2009 those interesting facets things kind of come and go when you look back at him . I think when I was getting into video editing and video processing stuff back in like high school and into college when I started a lot of the video footage that I'd record would be put onto these mini DV tapes that were little kind of like small palm-sized VHS tapes that were kind of a split between a few different video mediums that are out there like hiei or VHS See I think was like the other camera types that they had out there for a couple of years sort of were sort of floating around there in the market at the same time. They have these mini DV tapes, and it's got footage on them still, and I think I have clips of the footage that is that have been captured off of it like way back in 2005. Whenever I use a capture card to capture mini DV footage over from the camcorder that took it and then bring it into Final Cut Studio three or whatever it was that might have been around back then probably studio two Adobe version one premiere one, you know way back. But when you'd capture the this AVI file that was huge as a humongous file was like two gigabytes every minute or something. It was terrible. It kind of a uncompressed and this is just like a standard definition grainy video it sucks to deal with, but you just barely kind of process it with the computers of the day running it FireWire over from the computer, or over like across the camcorder through like a little capture card FireWire mechanism that I had in it, I think it was I got to use like a Canon XL one back in the day. And that was pretty cool. That was like a pretty fancy camera for the 2004 2005 2006 range. And so yeah, it was fun to get to shoot on a nice big lens. And I got to do a bunch of sports stuff and a bunch of normal video stuff. But But yeah, sure, with that captured onto a mini DV tape, sent over FireWire to like Mac, g five computer I think is what it was for a long time. And then I got one of those later myself to use to do some editing stuff. And I had that until I don't know, 2012 or so 2013 when I finally sold it. But yeah, using those computers and stuff to capture these mini DV tapes a way back, I'd captured the footage, done some edits to it or worked on whatever project that was associated with it. And then I'd rented that out. And I probably still have some of those captured files that are edited rendered out that are somewhere on my computer video archive that I've got around, I've seen a few of them float around, but it's not really like the raw footage. So it's cool. I've got these mini DV tapes still, to whatever still on, and I think they've been recorded over a few times. So I didn't do the the archivist job of putting everything together as I probably should have project by project, mini DV tape, but mini DV tape to pull out all the raw stuff now and be able to have it in full. I think I've recorded over a few of those like short class project files that I would have recorded for a bunch of the stuff that I would have worked on through late High School in college. So for whatever, I got a box of tapes, so whatever I do have I have, but I definitely think that I've lost some stuff in there too. So taking these sets of tapes, and I'm trying to take them in and send it to like a conversion shop, sort of like I was saying, you know, with the film stuff, trying to get my film developed, I'm trying to send these these mini DV tapes out to a spot where they'll take it, put it in the scanning system, and then capture that video off of it again and give me a digital file with that captured video. And it's kind of cool getting to see some of the stuff again, I've done it with two tapes already as like a test, and then I need to drop in probably another eight or 10 tapes to see if I can get some video off of them. But it's kind of cool. Yeah, some stuff that goes back to I think like 2006. And then another thing from probably summer of 2007. Maybe somewhere in there. Yeah, probably like the 2007 year I think it's like this wedding that I recorded. And so yeah, I just, I just got this guy, this tape bag, it was blank. It didn't have a label on it. And it's just, yeah, somebody's wedding from 2007 that I recorded. So it's like, yeah, there you go. Yeah, another event that I accorded recorded some some stage event that I recorded, and got got tape of it, there you go camera set up on a tripod looking at video from I think that was 2000, early 2007 as well, you know, so it's kind of kind of interesting to csfb, I just dropped off another two tapes, I'm going to I think drop off. Maybe you know that four or so. And I think they process it, they put it on a thumb drive for you. And then they send you the tape back and they give you a thumb drive. And it has a sort of process mark on it. But yeah, he through the through the same drive in your computer to transfer those files over. And they're like a more reasonably compressed mp4 or something, I think this time, or QuickTime file, something like that. And yeah, drag it over your computer, you got to an hour of videotape. now converted over to a digital file. So I'm going to try and go through that box that I have and see if I can pull out some cool videos from some stuff from 2005 to 2008. Whatever range of stuff I was recording at that time, that'd be kind of fun to see. Really what I'm noticing though is that it's just a lot of junk. I really am frustrated that you kind of think like early on, you're like recording some stuff, you're recording something cool. And then it kind of turns out later to be not not super useful. It's just not like a really like a full contained thing. And you think man, there's a lot of waste in here. If I could have eight hours of the good stuff. That would have been great. You know, if you really think about life and like, oh, what, eight hours what I'd want to still see now. Right? You know, like, what kind of stuff What do I wish I had recorded a little bit more of moment to moment. And I'm looking at that a little bit through the videos that I recorded that are like, what is this project and also into the photos I record to have like, you know, like that. There's an there's the process of photos that is cool, but there's some nostalgic stuff about photography that that really is what grows Over the years, you know, like, if you just take in personal photos, it's like the moments that the things in the the way that you sort of interacted with the thing that ends up being a lot more fun to see and look back on then just sort of the, the most plain, sort of flatly composed VISTA that you can kind of put together on a on a viewpoint, which is sort of what I ended having a lot of just like, Oh, yeah, it's like, it's like a horizon and then a sky. And I don't really know where it is, and it's sort of flat. And okay, but, but then there's a lot of stuff. That's, that's pretty cool. And sort of personal to get to see. And that's what the, I think the fun stuff is year over year, over years, you get kind of further down the road. But I wanted to talk a little bit about the proceed meteor shower that had come up a while back now, in early August, it was cool again, to see that hopefully, you guys got to get out and make some observations of some meteors that were going by I got to do a couple of camping trips. During that time. I think like at the end of July, when comet nowise was cruising over, some of you guys probably got to see that that was cool. But during like the end of July is when the Perseus start kind of ramping up. And then it's pretty late. It's like it's a chance that you'll see a meteorite, or you know, a meteor streak across the sky during the evening sky during those weeks, but it really starts to kick up and peak. I think it's August 10 11th, and 12th sort of in that range ninth 10th 11th 12th. But really, I think like the 10th 11th is when it's it's the night to see it. And it's cool, and knives are on yours that the that the meteor shower is really peaking. I think it can be like up to 50 or almost 60 an hour, but you'd be projected to see. But I've seen a lot of really cool ones before that. It's been pretty fun, or you just go like, well man. I'm just seeing a lot of shooting stars throughout the sky. So it was cool. This year, I went out for a couple different sightings of it. I think like that during that last podcast that I was talking about was probably one of the better observation nights that I had when I was up on top of that mountain peak out in Eastern Oregon. It was really beautiful. It was the really dark night you can you can see really crisply into the Milky Way and into kind of the little filament light structures that sort of make up the edges and boundaries of the Milky Way. And then how dark it gets as it kind of falls off that into the deep space part of the night sky. It's really cool to kind of check out and look at that and and that was a lot of fun. Getting to go out there. Look at the sky, look at the Milky Way watch the Perseids as it kind of started to kick in a little bit more after midnight. So I said it took about about 2am that night and they're probably saw it's probably 15 or nearly 20 pretty good ones. there's a there's a bunch of spinners that were kind of coming through there but there was really like a lot of good ones that I was able to see kind of later or over that night and the night before. And it's cool when you get to see a few of them they really kind of stretch off across like a lot of different parts of the sky. I think they're the idea of the Percy is is that they're sort of originating out of the constellation of Perseus up in the north east part of the sky. But really, you can see him shoot now down into like Sagittarius and Scorpio in the south are way out past like Arcturus as you get like a little bit further over into the western sky. But yeah, it was cool getting to check out the meteor shower getting to see some of those bright tubes that are left band is like plasma tubes that are left behind is one of the bigger meteorites kind of cruises through burns up and leaves this kind of tube of I guess hot air hot ionized there. And it kind of glows for about a second or so. And the sky You can kind of see it as then sort of zips and whisps away as it sort of evaporates and cools back down. But it's fine. Yeah, being out there watching a few media or media shoot by that was fun. And then yeah, really a great part of August and some of the observations that you get to do is get a check out the meteor shower, I guess there are meteor showers through other parts of the year to like, think there's supposed to be? Well, it's probably a couple more weeks, and usually another really good one that comes up in October that we normally Miss. There's another good one, I think it's like the Leonid. Maybe it's a Leonid shower, that's in November. But for a lot of us in the Northern Hemisphere, by that time, it's just like clouded over enough. Or the the way that the weather is working just makes it so that you're not really able to make the kind of observations of the meteor showers you'd like to I suppose even when, like I was in Hawaii A while back and I was trying to make observations and some of those things I hadn't been able to do during the winter months here in Oregon. And a lot of that stuff I really wasn't able to see in the way that I would have hoped to. or Yeah, I just like the observations of it like we're just I don't know kind of kind of difficult to make. So really like get the proceed meteor shower was always one of the coolest ones because it's it's kind of it's, it's right there kind of writing a good season where you get to check it out. And in a good location for a lot of us here in the Northern Hemisphere and stuff. So it was cool, had a good time. Getting to do some of that earlier this year, it's ready to I'm out here. I like this section of the of this wildlife refuge, I was noticing the leaves and stuff like I was talking about the the acres of the of the grass fields have been tilled now. And that's dirt and rocks that are sort of turned up all over these multi acre fields and stuff. But out here past that there's groves of oak trees that kind of stretch out along the creeks as the ground and then up onto the hillsides is it kind of extends up into the forest over here more. But I've noticed in the oak trees, now that it's September 1, there's like this browning that's starting to occur. And so it's just sort of the the last two weeks of August is when you really start to first see it, but it's the first twinge that the the leaves are starting to change their color and that the seasons are starting to flip. And it's starting to move into into more of the fall. autumn season, which is kind of cool. It's interesting to see like how it sort of takes place when I was driving on the freeway last week. And as sort of moving around a little bit more, I could see a few rows of trees that had been put in I think they were ash or maybe their poplar trees that had already started to turn really quite yellow, and on some of the branches. And it's interesting to see how they sort of start to pop and turn a different time. But it'll be interesting to see how this year sort of plays out. I'm not sure if we're going to get the Indian summer the extended summer into like late September or October, like we've maybe gotten a few of the last last few years, but it'd be kind of need to check out, I'm excited for it to be September. So to be maybe a little bit of change of the vibe of what's been going on for the last few months, I'm kind of tired of the pandemic and the lockdown stuff and some of the changes that have sort of come with that. So I'm hopeful to kind of maybe see the Far be a shift in some of the way that some of that's working or kind of see like how it's going to evolve, we're going to maybe see now if like colleges are going back into place, or if schools are going back into place, or I think that'll be kind of maybe it'll set the temperature, the vibe of the type of change we're going to see through the rest of the year and how it's gonna go. I'm already seeing news articles saying you know, expect expected a distance Thanksgiving over zoom. So it doesn't look like they're putting it on the agenda to be back out of it or celebrating anything soon, which I understand, I guess makes some sense. And it sounds like a lot of states are going to be bringing their schools back into place, which I think is really going to affect a lot of parents and their ability to have a work schedule as a managing their kid in a home environment stuff. So that's all going to be kind of strange. Now that kind of cascades a problem. But yeah, it looks like it's gonna take a little longer to pull out of all the consequences from the pandemic. And it's too bad I wasn't a little faster. I was hoping that it would be kind of in July or August that would be able to kick most of it and get back to pretty regular business. But yeah, with a lot of states just not selected to have their their K through 12 classrooms reopened. But for reopening through a distance learning mechanism where you're, you're required to be occupied at home. I think that's gonna put a lot of parents in positions, that it's just gonna make it it's gonna make it an auditioning, or it's well, it's just gonna be a weird couple months, and I think everybody's got a pretty good handle on that. Shoot. I wanted to talk about this trip I did out to the lake Billy Chinook area. That's a cool area. I like that I think like Billy Chinook is, well maybe it's the lake I've seen a couple different names for that lake. It's sort of on the border. one edge of it toward the north is the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. To the south. I think it's when is that area. Now I don't know what it is. I was trying to think of the the National Forest system as part of that. Now I can't remember. But there's some national forest out there. And I think it's where like the crooked river and maybe the White River Salmon River, same river. I can remember it's where like a couple rivers sort of have their convergence point before they think they enter up and head down toward the Deschutes river and They put a dam in there and then backed it up. And it's an amazing location. It's really wild to think of what the landscape must have been like they're way, way back, but they put a dam in. But these canyon walls, he's like really, really steep walls go down, you know, like hundreds of feet or something more than like where it's even dammed up to today. So it's a really kind of strange spot but but yeah, I was camping out over there. Really interesting area, it was cool. I didn't camp down by the lake that was really actually very full kind of, like I talked about a few times in this podcast. The the outdoor kind of camping here is sort of the more developed pull your pull your truck and trailer in and set up a campsite. 15 feet from another camper next to a lake so you can fish kind of spots. Those are all really full this summer. I think, you know, maybe like Tuesday, Wednesday, you can find some more open spots, but they're still campers through the week. But then by Thursday, Friday, Saturday, most of those spots are real full in the small town junctions to get to those spots are even more full, like going out to lupine before you get out toward the Newberry crater Paulina Lake area or out toward like Crescent lake or some of those cascade lakes you can cut up to that the LA pine area some of those little travels and a gas stations out there that I've intersected with a couple times on this trip southeast Oregon are slammed by Friday with out of state license plates and within state license plates from people from Portland or bend or from wherever you're going out to do their summer recreation stuff and it's been way more busy this year than I've seen it for a number of the past years but but yeah, when I was at toward the Lake Village Nick area that the State Park area where there's like tent camping and RV camping that was sold out it said no vacancy, and it was loaded like no no distancing and seemed really you know, but it's just tense on 10 on 10 on 10 on truck camper, and so on. And it's a cool spot that I would say it's great if you get a boat or if you're renting like a houseboat or family boat or something like that to go out on a school you can drive your trailer down, drop it in the lake and take off for you know, a whole day and just kind of cruise around acres and acres of of Lake out there. So really beautiful spot really cool. It seems like it'd be a good spot to go fishing or I think people do some kind of light watersports, sort of, not jet ski, but, you know, like wakeboard, innertube, ski sort of stuff. I think it's like some parts of it. And then I think some other parts are still set up to be a little more slow for the fishing stuff. Now the car driving by what's up cars. But it was cool that there's a nice spot to go camping I, what I ended up doing though, is a was looking on that map. That off road on x map that I've talked about a few times shows a lot of the roads, the Forest Service roads to kind of stretch out and but Forest Service roads that are open too. So a lot of them have like gates on them. So if you're going down a road and you see it on the map, you're not really sure if it's open open to the public or if it if it drives through or not. It's cool because you can look on this map and see what is there where you can go and you can see what roads are open. But I was able to take this forest service or the cuts on the south side of the lake area, and then I think goes up into the mountains. And then it would if you took it all the way you would go over the mountain and then head down to sisters Oregon, which is a ways south of there, but you could take that just with with backroads the Forest Service backroads. But it was cool. But as you kind of climbed the ridge out of the Lake area out of the draw that was created by the river and the creek that flow into the bigger lake. You climb away it's like 500 feet or something that seems and you get up kind of toward the top of it. And it's interesting, the landscape is out there. It's really it seems like a flat landscape. And then the elevation changes created by the erosion from the water that that kind of creates these big Canyon draws that then drop down into the lake. So you can drop in elevation a lot, but really as you climb in elevation and get to the top of that, it really looks like a plateau that flattens out and goes flat across the high desert area out up into like Mount Hood or Mount Jefferson that you can kind of see from that area as you kind of climb up out of the I guess out of that Canyon grassland area. So it was cool. Yeah, the camping spot I got to was a dispersed campsite. That was up on top of that ridge outside of all the commotion at the State Park area by Billy Chinook. And it was cool Yeah, pulled up out of there. Found I think like these four campsites had like firing setup and they were all about probably like spread out by like a quarter mile or so. It wasn't too long of a space be I was this old rocky road that kind of curled out onto the precipice of this, this little point. And then the main road sort of stretched up the spine to the ridge, and went up a little further, until it crested over, and then came back down the other side, but went out toward this point, you had a cool view of Mount Jefferson, that wasn't really too far where mount Jefferson looked pretty prominent in the view. And then, as you looked at kind of toward the north, North West, you could see the point of Mount Hood, kind of sticking up over the flat plateau, the land that I talked about, you can see all the Mount Hood, but you can see kind of the top third of it or so just kind of sticking up over this flat plateau landscape. And then below that below Mount Hood, it dropped into this big Canyon, and then dropped into the lake Billy Chinook that you can kind of see down to the north and northwest or north and northeast, below me. And so it was cool is nice. Getting up to that spot. I tried to take some pictures up there, try to get some sunset photos of Mount Jefferson and try to do a couple of sunrise photos too. That was cool. It was better to lighten the sunrise sort of given the the side of the mountain that I was on. But yeah, it was nice getting out there and checking out mount Jefferson at night it was cool. was pretty smart. Like I'm kind of against like starting fires and stuff right now. So I've been using I think I talked about a couple of times that propane heater that saved me a lot through the through the season. But this is a good spot to use it it says everywhere up there. I think after a couple, a couple fires that had gotten out into the grassland and then gotten out of control. Early this decade, I think it was about 10 years ago or so they had that Warm Springs fire that burned. A lot of it, if you pull up a satellite image of the area, you'll see acres and acres and acres, this this whole big region that's been blackened by, by this flat fire that have gone through the big section of the Warm Springs Reservation. And some of the land that kind of stretches out from there. real shame as that goes, but there's a lot of stuff that says you know, hey, like we are locking down a lot of the fire you stuff that you have. So any any kind of just anything that seems hot, you just you don't get to use is pretty much what it seems to say I think in use gas stoves. And then you can use some propane systems, but really it's like, it's it's pretty against it in most ways. So like, I think you can't use charcoal, you can't use a fire pan, which is you know, sort of you get around these restrictions a lot of the time. You can't use any of that stuff. And I think it really kind of noticing what i what i saw out there is the wind is just really kicking up fast. And if anything leaves the fire and as a hot Ember, it'll just blow across and catch into a bunch of grass really way faster than you can get to it and way faster you can deal with it. So I understand like a lot of that, and I'm pretty happy to not have to deal with making a big fire or anything out there right now, especially through the summertime. So now that now that it is dropping into September and the fall, and moving into like some of the like hunting camp stuff that people are going to be doing. fires are gonna be great. That's always a fun part of the October camping stuff. When you get to light up a big fire burn through some Woods there plate. still stay warm. That stuff's really fun, but but man for like mid summer, really dry grassland camping. I'm happy to skip the fire this time. It was cool, though. That night when I was out there, I was camping out at the truck. And as you looked north, you could see up in Washington somewhere, you know, must have been way north of the Columbia River. You can see this Thunderhead system that had moved over. And you can see these these really bright and very distant strikes of lightning, they would shoot down somewhere east of Mount Adams so you can kind of make out up there you can see I can see Mount Hood from where I was and then a little over from that. Really more of like a due north location. You can see the hump of Mount Adams out there. And then so somewhere out east of Mount Adams from that landmark, you could see these big purple bolts of lightning that would strike down somewhere up in Washington, but that was really cool to see. Glad I got to be up there, and you can hear it, though. No Thunder anything you just see these distant flashes and stuff every 1015 minutes. You see these strikes from the storm and nowhere near me But yeah, as a trip, you can still see it from those mountaintops up there. So that was cool. Got a good time hanging out there out by mount Jefferson seeing some stuff. Check it out like Billy Shinnok that was really fun. Got to drop down to a couple fishing spots that are in that area. That was cool. nice spot, good summer spot spot to go really nice to get away from the State Park campsite area that they had that was super packed out and go to summaries that were a little bit more dispersed on the sides. How to get time doing that. So if It's cool that I probably wrap up the podcast here for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. You guys should check out my website Billy Newman photo calm; I'm gonna try and put up some more written and photo content up there on the blog posts section of the site through September and October. So that'll be kind of cool. Have some new photos and stuff that I haven't put up before. I'm gonna try and try and put out, and I got a few other things kind of planned for the fall, but I'm excited to get into but yeah, so a few few more podcasts or September. Couple more things like this talking about some camping, I have a few plans to go out and do some traveling and stuff. So I hope I get to do some posts and makes new photos about that. It's pretty excited about what I got coming out for at least the next 30 days, and it probably slows down a lot into late October, November. Man the winning time. How fun. It's gonna be exciting. But yeah, go to Billy Newman photo calm for slash support. You check out some more stuff about this podcast helped me out on there. It's always appreciated. Yeah. Until next time, thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcasts.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Developing Film And Converting MiniDV 



Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006.  Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower.  



154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



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Developing Film Converting MiniDV



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



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154 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Developing film and Converting old tapes



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. I hope everybody's doing well. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode. I wanted to talk a little about the start of September, some of the stuff I've been up to. It's cool, and I just finished a roll of film here pretty recently. Like I think during this last week when I was out traveling around, and I haven't finished a roll of film in a while, I've been shooting mostly on the digital camera that I've got kind of moved over to canon equipment back in 2018. And I've been shooting with that for, and I guess now almost two years is what it's coming up too. And so, during that time, I picked up a Canon film camera.And I've been using the Canon lenses that I have for my digital camera. On the Eos system over on an older canon film camera from I think the late 90s is what I was able to pick up. So I went over on like kth comm. I think this was this is probably like nine months ago or so at the beginning of the year. And I picked up a really inexpensive Canon camera body was like $35, something like that, to, to pick up this camera, mostly plastic in the body, but it has a bunch of the manual controls that you would expect from the sort of mid-range SLR sort of like the five D Mark, or you know, the five D Mark, the five D line, you know, whatever when you want to pick, but it's not the full professional build model. But it's definitely not the lower-end one. So yeah, it has like kind of the same layout of buttons and stuff on it as you can get with the more modern layout of cannon buttons and stuff. So most of it's really the same as it kind of translates back from one to the other. But it's a cool, pretty simple camera, and it's got, I think, like three focus points, three autofocus points on the inside. And that works fine for t]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>41:46</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Developing Film And Converting MiniDV 



Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006.  Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower.  



154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp; https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



Developing Film Converting MiniDV



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.]]></googleplay:description>
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</item>

<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 153 Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-camping-at-an-8500-ft-mountain-peak/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2020 16:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8519</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak</p>



<p>Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. </p>



<p>Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



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<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



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<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>or&nbsp;<a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



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<p>https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast</p>



<p>153 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Camping at an 8500 ft mountain peak</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second or almost coming up to the third week of August 2020. Made a cup of coffee this morning, and I'm out at that peak of the mountain out in Eastern Oregon.</p>



<p>Pretty cool spot up here that I was able to get to. I was looking around on the map. And I was able to find some spots that were old lookout towers like I guess they were like old like fire lookout towers for when there would be lightning strikes or other starts of fires for forest fires in the area. I have driven to a couple of them before, seven in Northern California. I'll talk about those in a few. But yeah, it's cool that you can find where these cabins are here if you look around. And I guess many of them now I use this as lookout towers for the fire department or federal forest department or whatever it would be.</p>



<p>But now, many of them have been kind of retrofitted to be overnight cabins that you can or other people in public can rent out and get for like a night or two nights or, or a part of a week or something is pretty cool. I guess they book pretty far out in advance. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, I was looking around at some of those. And I've been on a trip for a couple of days now, driving around in some BLM and national forest land. It's out here in Eastern Oregon. And there's a lot of it, it's cool, a lot of space, a lot of open space in this part of the country.</p>



<p>It's a bit of a difference between them between west of the Cascades and east of the Cascades. A lot of the national forest land is on the west coast. Well, yeah, I'm trying to think of it a little. But as good as I can tell, a lot of the national forest land on the west coast is mountainous with many ridges, and a lot of thick timber too, a lot of thick evergreen forests wonderful area. But it's hard to traverse that kind of terrain; many of them have had roads that are pretty well maintained, they go through some of those areas.</p>



<p>But still, even with that, there's not a lot of open expanses and the kind of tight quarters sometimes. So it's kind of cool getting out over here in Eastern Oregon, where it sort of flattens out a bit opens up a bit. And even though there are still quite a few trees in the area that I'm looking out at, like I'm looking at, South of me here, miles and miles and miles of forest land, and mountains that go out 20 miles, 30 miles or so. But it's cool. It goes out for a while. But there are changes in the land to the lookout. Like I was saying, I made it at the top of the peak of a mountain here. So I can see out to the east over here, I look over, and I see like a few ridges, a few bluffs, and it seems like it goes on forever. But it's pretty cool.</p>



<p>And this area here, looking out west to me here, I can see the lights of one of the cities last night that's out here, or you know, one of the small towns it's in the area, he can kind of see the little dots of those. Those farms and ranches and some concentration in downtown are out over in the valley to the west of me. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, you can kind of see the changes and ripples in the landscape up here. But yeah, there's a lookout tower up here in this area. And you can rat them out. There are a few others in a couple of other spots I was at yesterday, too. So I was traveling down these Forest Service roads, and then you can pull off and then go up. It's pretty high.</p>



<p>It's like you're driving up on the rim. You kind of like already made most of your way up the elevation. But then you can take these little side roads off that the main road, and then it'll cut up to a cabin that's put up with, you know, a forest service money, and it's been there for a long time. And yeah, hang out at their picnic tables in a bathroom and stuff. It's one of the more well serviced high altitude areas that you know, you can kind of pop into, but it's cool. They maintain the roads pretty well.</p>



<p>So you can drive right up to the summit of it. And then check it out and then drive right back down, which is a nice feature of it. But I'm not at the lookout tower right now. I'm actually a half-mile away over on another peak that's just a bit higher in elevation. There's no Lookout Tower. Over here, but there's like a couple Geological Survey markers up here that they've got pinned down to the top of the summit, which is cool.</p>



<p>I should check them a little they read a bit more accurately what my altitude is. I think that it's around 8500 feet right now, which is cool. It's pretty high up here. It seems like it's one of the highest things Around can lookout. I can see one of the mountains in the Cascades. I can see Mount Shasta from here yesterday. I was in a spot where I could see Mount Thiessen and Mount McLoughlin, which was cool. Kind of getting to spot that in the evening time. You can see the cracked kind of crackled rock of the Horn of mouthfeel sent over, and what is it like South?</p>



<p>The southern section of the Cascades in Oregon. I can look out into California waves, and I can see Mount Shasta from here. I can't see anything like a blast. And that's probably way too far. I can't really see anything that goes North either. But, yeah, probably they got something if it was a little clear. There seems like some smoke in the air. Probably smoke. Not really quite sure which fire it's coming from. But yeah, there's like some good bands of smoke in the air. And it's a little hazy.</p>



<p>You can kind of Yeah, pretty good visibility for miles, but right on the brim of the horizon is sort of a murky, kind of smoke toned cloud that sort of stretches all the surrounding way. It's cool. That was about a quarter-mile away from this Lookout Tower up at the top of this little rise. And it's cool, there's this little two-track road that just kind of meanders right up the side of this hill, and then you just sort of pop up onto the summit. And then you've got something that's about now would that be maybe 10 yards 15 yards across by, say 50 yards long, the sort of the flat enough spot of the summit that you can kind of walk around on before it starts to dip off. So really, only an area of about probably 100 by 100 feet is really flat enough to park a vehicle.</p>



<p>But yeah, the area kind of stretches on a bit out from there. And there are many kinds of outcrops of rock, I think like I'm looking down over to my two o'clock. There's an outcrop of rock that sticks up as I look out over to my was it probably 10 o'clock over to the other side and drops off pretty quickly as it kind of pulls into a ravine before it pops up to the peak of another hill over to the east of me. But, there's like a little another little two-track row that kind of carries on quite steeply. I might add that it just kind of drops down that hill. Lord knows where it goes. I don't think I'm going to take that one.</p>



<p>I think I was looking at a camper that I passed yesterday at a spot in like a more setup campground. They have their fifth wheel set up, but they have like that for ATVs out there, and I see it. Man having a quad out here would be pretty cool. They're just, you know, the kind of train and stuff you can travel over. And just kind of the ability to take some of these roads take some of these steep little tracks and stuff would be kind of fun.</p>



<p>But yeah, I think it probably isn't good for my mid-sized highway-ready truck to be jumping on. But beautiful spot up here. Really cool. I was spending the night up here last night. It's just right at the peak of the summit; I was thinking I was going to get a ton of wind, like that's what I ran into yesterday when I went up to the edge of a bluff where I was at, at the high elevation point where they had their lookout towers down from it a bit at a set of picnic tables in an area that set up really beautiful.</p>



<p>You can see that the land kind of slopes off to the west gradually in the forest land. But to the east, there's just a real steep, probably 800-foot drop off that goes down to a lake bed valley floor out to the east of me. So it was really cool kind of getting up there and seeing it, but when I got up to that spot where it had been in the trees in the more moderate elevations of it to the west side, there hadn't really been any wind or any inclement weather or anything like that. But when I got up near the peak, there are two fronts of weather as the sun was going down.</p>



<p>We're just kind of mixing weirdly, and you got a ton of wind blowing each and every different way. So I was just getting blown around a lot up in that area, and there were some people up there that seemed like they wanted me to go, so I took off and found another campsite, but beautiful spot up in that area is really kind of just to be out when you get up to this. This peaks you kind of figure you'd be running into a lot of wind or as It was just going to be blowing me out for a while. So is that really the best place to camp, and can I go seen as sort of small area and claustrophobic enough that it sort of feels weird just being up here by yourself barking on the tippy top of a mountain hanging out all night?</p>



<p>It was kind of weird when it got dark. You know, like after, after the sun went down, and it's nighttime, and you can just sort of see darkness really all around you but for the city lights out to the distance from where I'm at. And yeah, it's just kind of a small area. It's kind of freaky walking around and sort of uneven ground and stuff. You're like, man, where am I right now? But it's cool. It's a beautiful spot; get kind of used to it after a bit. It seems like other people are kind of used to it too.</p>



<p>I see other trucks kind of driving around in different areas, or yesterday I did. I saw a couple trucks moving around and stuff. Yeah, I was up here last night, trying to make some photographs of a guy here a couple of hours before sunset. And I try to start to take some photos of the sunset and photos of the surrounding landscape, which is pretty cool. Stunning spots up here. So yeah, like when I was looking south, I think I'm looking at over into the over into Nevada from how far south I am right now. So I think I'm in the Fremont, and I was shot filing this out the Fremont Winema National Forest.</p>



<p>And I think last time I said a Winona, kind of American Oregonian pronunciation of something that was probably I have a sense Well, I don't know. I should look up who when emo was. I'm not really sure. But yeah, over in this Fremont NEMA national forest area. It's pretty cool. And I think it stretches out into a section of the border. Well, I'm not sure really where the border is. But I think we're right about at the border of Northern California, Southern Oregon.</p>



<p>And a bat-like over deeper east to me is a lot of Nevada too, which is cool. So yeah, I was looking out south to me, and I could see a lightning strike. Oh, yeah, I can see lightning, probably six or seven. Good flashes of it seem like hundreds of miles to the South. And he never heard anything, you know, but you could just see like a little or a big bright pop of light, way deep into the South, where they're having some kind of lightning storm. You know, it's probably by Reno or something. But, but it's a school up here. Yeah, it's a nice kind of clear night, hot too. Everybody in the southwest is talking about this heatwave coming through, like Arizona will hit 115. And probably everywhere around everywhere in Nevada and Vegas, and Los Angeles will be or east of Los Angeles into the Palm Desert over by Joshua Tree is just going to be begun during this period of August right now.</p>



<p>Probably fortunate that they're not running Burning Man. I mean, I guess everybody's used to 115 120 degree days with if you had not into Burning Man, Black Rock desert area every summer. But yeah, I feel like the COVID-19 pandemic stuff, all live events in Nevada, are shut down. I think everybody in California is kind of spooked about some of those mass gatherings of people as well. So doesn't look like there's going to be a burn this year. Fine with me, I suppose. But I'm sure there's a bunch of people missing out, which is too bad.</p>



<p>But as you're taking photos, in the evening time of sunset, and trying to photograph some contours and changes in the land, you can kind of see some landmarks. And just sort of the way that these bluffs rise up from, or you have a rise up over the land. And then I have the steep drop-offs. So it's kind of trying to get some images of that. And the perspective that I have from up here on top of this mountain. Pretty cool. It's kind of interesting looking out, and you're like looking down at a ridge that I've only really seen from the valley floor of it before.</p>



<p>The valley floor of it looks huge. Like when you're down there, you lookout, and then you look up at this massive table, you know, Mesa of Iraq, it's just kind of built-up in front of Yeah, but then outside that all around it is, you know, just kind of flat and low in those areas. But yeah, appears just seems like the tippy top of it. So you can kind of look down into the forest. And then you can look at where the forest ends and where the ridge begins. And it just kind of has a steep drop off into a lower Valley. But pretty cool up here. So I was taking photos of that.</p>



<p>Taking photos of some kind of Well, I guess it's where, like creeks and water have run off the mountains over the millennia and have created these deep ours, that cut through this desert landscape out here, and how they kind of pull through this sort of tidy Canyon area and then open up into a wider area that was, I don't know, eroded by some Lakes or something like that back in the Pleistocene era, and probably, probably a few ice ages, a few Ice Age cycles before that, too. So I'm not really sure how old this landscape is. I mean, looking at some other stuff, I kind of have, like, some perspective on 15,000 years. But man, if you talk about 100,000 years, I don't really know, I can't really tell you, or I'm not really very good at that. I know a lot of people do, where they have like a pretty good kind of mental picture in their head of what the changes in the landscape over the last 15 million years were, but it's kind of cool like to see like the geological research that they have out there for some different stuff.</p>



<p>I was up in northern Oregon a few weeks ago, I think when I was talking about being near the john de area, and I was reading some information about the geology in that region and how it was formed. Like way back, I guess they find a lot of fossils up in that area. I think there's a town called a fossil. I remember being a kid up there, go into the high school in the back, pass the football field, and you can just dig away at some shale. And if you kind of crack that shale open, you're going to see these Fern leaves or these, you know, just this full pattern leaf in the rock. And I guess they've also found, like, a lot of like animal fossils out there. Part of the laws that you can't pick up vertebrate fossils is, I think, what I understand thinking to get seashells. I'm not totally sure I think you can get a fossilized seashell.</p>



<p>But maybe they even ask you not to that I'm not really sure. But I guess the vertebrate for fossilized vertebrates there are requested to be remaining in place. But the researchers have gone through and found a lot of that stuff and tried to collect evidence of the geological formations and changes over the years. And I think with that, they're able to kind of make a pretty clear map of the way that the Oregon landscape was constituted back then. I was reading some information before the Quaternary period, where we're in right now.</p>



<p>This is the last couple of 100,000 years that we've had these cycles of ice ages that come on and off. But before that, there was a period where the Earth's climate was, I guess, a lot wetter and a lot warmer. So even in an area like northern Oregon, which is now sort of a dry, kind of high plains' grassland area as you get up into the Columbia River area over in Eastern Oregon, like as you go from, I don't know, somewhere, somewhere around Pendleton that Kennewick, you know, something like that landscape. There's just a bunch of kind of dry flat grassland now, but apparently, 15 million years ago, it was something like palm trees and a more like a way wetter. Rainfall or not rain forest but the way more wet, forested area that was more tropical in its nature. And I guess that kind of reflected with a lot of the animals that were there. Like they talk about camels being there.</p>



<p>They talk about a predecessor to the modern horse, like a kind of small horse. It was probably more like a deer-sized animal sort of this kind of fat nose like predecessors to what would be something more like a bear have been found out there. A lot of different animals were found out there. Which is really cool. I think rhinoceroses john big beaver Sloths few things like that that might have been later collections of animals. But yeah, at some of those early collections, it's interesting to hear about the kind of landscape that it must have been. Still, apparently through some kind of geologic activity, a bit like a really quick or fast-acting mudslide came through and just buried everything in that region all at once. So I think hard in there and then fossilized many of those animals trapped in that mud slider. I don't know, that mud event that came through pretty swiftly. And yeah, I just kind of encapsulated all those things, including the trees to I guess there are some areas where you can see some spires that they kind of are now part of what's been eroded away from the creeks and the rivers that are flowing through that area Ever since then, you know, over the last few, many million years.</p>



<p>They've washed away, and now we have some river canyons and Creek canyons that we see through the area now, and that's where we see some exposed rim rock and stuff that kind of falls along with that with the canyon as it flows out toward the bigger Columbia River Lake river area over there in Eastern Oregon. So it's really cool to get a bit of a perspective on the kinds of things that have changed out here over the years. But yeah, I guess you can. They've made out that those spires are old, old tree trunks that had been encapsulated in mud and then had fossilized over the years. And then now as they're being exposed, again, through erosion, there's really just sort of spiral shape on the edge of a cliff face, but I guess they've been identified as fossilized tree trunks. It's pretty cool. So out here in this area, as I'm thinking about the types of changes that have happened over the past, I don't know 100,000 years or so, which is what I have just a tiny bit better handle on, at least in this region, you can kind of see some different erosion patterns that have happened to the landscape out here. Like when I look out to the west, northwest to me, I see, I see like another huge bluff that runs across from miles. And then below that, there's a big depression in the land that runs really flat and smoothly for miles and miles and miles, it goes up to the North.</p>



<p>And apparently, as you find out more information about it, what now is really just dry desert sagebrush used to be back in the Pleistocene era, a pretty significant lake that stretched on that was probably I think, they marked it on the rimrock of the bluff to be like, 500 feet deep. You know, now that lake will dry out in the summer, if it's, if it's a dry year, there won't be any water in, in, in two of the five lakes that are sort of just little puddles that seem to be left of what once was a huge, massive body of water that was out here probably changed the way this landscape felt 30,000 years ago, 40,000 years ago, this sort of things would oscillate on and off between the ice ages, I think, what is it a 30,000-year period? Mix or to some sense? Well, so what it was about 15,000 years ago from now that we were coming into a period where the Ice Age was starting to end. And as we were kind of coming into what we are, we now have as the Holocene. But before that? Well, I think they kind of marked that out like 11 or 12,000 years or something like that. But some of the earliest human artifacts are, I think they're coprolites. They've been found in Mesa Vera de Chile, way down in South US, recorded proven out to be human remains. But yeah, 15,000 years ago is what they are carbon data too. So really interested to kind of think about human exploration in some of these areas. If you follow the land bridge hypothesis, they came over Beringia, from Asia to Alaska, and then it traveled down into the Americas. That must have been something like 15,000 years ago that that had, I guess, started well. I don't know how that goes. It would have been there or maybe before that to some ideas or that it might have been before them. But it seems like some of the earliest things that we've ever found are from about that 15,000-year mark.</p>



<p>They had some ideas, like, kind of rudimentary can new technology, where they could sort of skirt along what would have been the much lower coastline of the Pacific. I think they say it was somewhere around 400 feet lower in elevation to where it is now. But they were able to kind of skirt around the coast and traveled a little more quickly. To get down towards South US. We do expeditions as you can to do some little jumps out in the ocean travel on the coast pullover. Have a camp. It probably took a long time to figure all that stuff out. Or, you know, for them to maneuver through all the landscape and survive and build and gain resources and stuff. I don't think it was just one guy. Or maybe it was just sort of an interesting thing, how there are outliers, where I think when they track different animals to that, that normally have kind of a home range of 50 miles or something like that. I think they've been tracking. I think it was wolves. I think coupe sometimes too, but yeah, I think the wolf was one that I had heard or reported that like traveled like 1500 miles, you know, it was just like on the run, or you know, just took off but, but really like a lot of them have sort of a more localized home range. And then, for whatever reason, one of them has the Explorer gene as a dog would, whatever that would be. But, still, for whatever kind of urge your drive it has or whatever type of pressures are put on it by its environment, it ends up making a really significant amount of distance all in one go.</p>



<p>So there's sort of a gradualism perspective where things happen pretty gradually and families, we got families, we got families that would kind of slowly traverse a bit of distance South at a time to make its way down to South US. And then there's the other idea of what it would be like punctuated equilibrium, where just about everything is almost the same all the time. But one person does a lot more, or a small group of people does a lot more all at once, which is another idea out there for some ways things spread. I think it's sort of a universal idea of what is it? I think it was the idea of uniformitarianism. And, and punctuated equilibrium where I think there's still kind of a concept and evolution that is talked about, I think for a while, it was considered that like uniformitarianism was what was taking place where everything was about the same and just sort of gradually evolving over time with slow incremental changes that had happened since the beginning of time. Well, uniformitarianism, I think, is more of like a religious perspective that came from the Catholic Church where everything has to be the same because God made it that way a bit. But if you kind of relax that a bit into some of the things that we're trying to tie it to later in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. And then I guess on to the 19th century, where there are you know, the 18 hundreds from when scientific method naturalist researchers, geological surveys were going on in the last year, they're able to kind of put some of those ideas together. But I guess there's always been a debate between those sides of things, you know, even trained scientists sort of disagree about which side of the line to come down on. So assuming the idea is also called the well, this is a different idea, but it's attached.</p>



<p>But there's the idea of lumpers and splitters where, as you're categorizing things, certain people train people to sort of select to lump very similar things together and identify in the same category while others split those small differences. And when identify something that might be similar into two different categories. Which is kind of an interesting idea. I think that happens in biology a lot when they're trying to classify an animal. You know, you have many catfish or something, but you have a catfish with these features. And that's like maybe a different species. Is it a different species or a different subspecies? But it's kind of interesting how they come into those delineations between those decisions. Yes, it's got to be a person that decides what it is. And so those who would want it to be the same, those are lumpers, those who'd want it to be identified selectively different. Those are splitters. And I guess that's sort of a conversation that's ongoing in the scientific community even still. It makes sense, you know, because it's about human categorization, categorization, which I think goes medicine, right. But I think that's sort of the intent of it, you know, it's like, it's a human endeavor that we're involved in, by trying to survey and categorize these different things that we're experiencing in the world. And it's to better have a context of what those are to ourselves. So we can explain them to ourselves. But we don't have to, you know, it's not actually definitive, if it's, if it's lumped, or if it's split, it's just sort of a natural occurrence. And it is different. Each individual, you know, unit of that species is probably a little different. You know if you can imagine, if anyone specific individual the species, or any two, I suppose, were Noah's Ark style, were the only remaining members of that species to procreate and then have offspring. You'd have kind of a genetic bottleneck of those inheritable traits of that animal, and it might not be representative of every trait that was expressed in that animal for a long time.</p>



<p>So I guess that's kind of to say that it's just, there are some things we see and some things we don't and there's a lot of genetic expressions that we could have if there's different pressures, environmental pressures, or different I guess, different circumstances that those creatures were involved in during the evolution of their lifespan, or you know, the species span but yeah, it's got cool thinking about some of that stuff and thinking about some of the past environments that must have been out here. You know, I think about what it was like when the great bass in your area here. It was more full of water. I guess like I was saying, sort of during the ice age or during the Pleistocene era where you were kind of coming in and out of ice ages over 200,000 years, 2 million years. 5 million years. I don't know, they say something like that. But so yeah, like the ice age that we just got out of, I think is part of a cyclical period that the Earth has been in for, for a long time now, where you kind of have an ice age and then rolls off, and there's not as much ice, but there's still ice caps, and then it rolls on, again, where there's ice, and then rolls off where there's not as much ice. And then I guess, for a significant time, but you know, way back in the dinosaurs, and for a significant time for the millions of years that followed that was it like that 68 million years ago, Mark, where we, we lost we had that big extinction event, there was a significant period after that to where there were no ice caps, you know, there's no ice on the South Pole, no ice on the North Pole.</p>



<p>It was like low Earth or something. And I have heard the well. I've heard some reasons for it. I probably won't speculate too much on it now. But you guys should look it up. It's kind of interesting. There are some interesting ideas about how the environment used to be. But, still, yeah, it's kind of a trip to think that there had only been really a couple periods in Earth's history and development over the last 4 billion years when there's been a snowball Earth, I think, is what they call it. The period where there's like a significant amount of ice and snow across the land and held up in glaciers over high elevation areas, either at the poles or even on the mountaintop areas of the North, like the high Northern and low southern regions of the Earth.</p>



<p>But yeah, and I guess when there is ice on the Earth, that's what an ice age is, is a bit of what I've been learning. So kind of a trip to learn some of that stuff. But thinking about some Pleistocene stuff here in the Great Basin, where these giant lakes like a kind of like almost inland seas, had existed for a while, it really must have been quite different. What was it like, Lake Lahontan out in? Nevada? I guess there's like the Great Salt Lake that we see now. It's just a big giant salt flat, and apparently, that used to be, you know, an inland body of water developed. And then yeah, out here, I think they talked about I think they talk about areas of like, what would it be? I guess it's the northern great bass and region of probably like Silver Lake summer-like. And then as you travel south to Abraham Lake, and then whatever, whatever is out there, I'm not really sure what this area would have been called before that. But apparently, all those were just connected as one enormous lake that sort of stretched on for a long time, or there are some breakups in mountains and stuff. But there were just really massive bodies of water that carried on out here, and then it just started to dry up over the years.</p>



<p>I guessed even like 500 years ago, there were are more significant lakes out here like that would probably like more or less resemble something closer to Klamath Lake like we have in Oregon now than what we see out like in the Alvord, like I've talked about the Alvord Desert before earlier in the podcast, I was talking about the Black Rock desert, Black Rock desert, that playa is made, you know from the silt that settled flatly across a lake bed that had been out in that region. And it's now dried and no longer there. And so it's just interesting to kind of perceive some of this Nevada landscape deep southeastern Oregon landscape is something that had really been occupied by a lot of water at once and now is a significant desert region that really doesn't receive any water. So it's just kind of perplexing to sort of pondering like, Oh, I wonder why to like that those kinds of changes have happened in the landscape. But yeah, kind of cool stuff. So over this trip, I've been checking out some of these, these Forest Service towers, which has been pretty cool. I've been having a good time kind of figuring it out a bit. I was driving around some Forest Service roads up in the Fremont minima National Forest. I was trying to find some campsites that I've never been to before and try to find some spots to check out, but yeah, along with a couple lookout towers and cabins that are sort of nestled away up in the mountains there. So yeah, pretty. Pretty cool. Being up here.

I've seen a few animals. That's been kind of fun. I think I saw my first badger. I need to look this up, but I don't think I've seen a badger out in person, yet I should probably hold my tongue before speaking too much about it. But yeah, I was able to pull it up in my binoculars it was out on the road, hundreds of feet in front of me. And it kind of hurt my car, and then it was just sort of take-off and run further down the road. And then I was, you know, kind of putting along and making my way, and they would stop and then turn its body so that it was kind of facing me, and then I could kind of see its face and body. And it was pretty low to the ground, and sort of like a little wobbly look to it didn't look like a fox, or you know, the way a fox would move or the way that a little coyote would move or something.</p>



<p>But yeah, I just look like a little wobbly critter that kind of scooted down the road a bit with stop, turn post up, look back at me. That's why I was able to pull up binoculars and try and get it on it. And it looks really quite a bit like a little badger that was wobbling around out there. So we're just kind of fine. And then, as I made it a little way out further closer to it. And I finally got the good sense to Duke to the left and cut off into the forest. So didn't see it after that. But this coyote cut across the land over there. I think I've seen a couple coyotes, one of them was quite a bit further away. I heard a bunch of them suddenly kind of winning and call them, you know, making those little coyote hoots that they do. But yeah, I was camped out, I think, two nights ago. And there was a little pack of coyotes that were all calling out to each other.</p>



<p>Somewhere to the North of me seemed like, like a half-mile or a mile away or so. But it seemed like they were still, you know, pretty close. They're probably checking me out. But a lot of cows out there. So a lot of cows like cattle that's been, I think you put up on some of that public land through a permanent to sort of range round and graze and see a bunch of little cows out there kind of run around with their mom cow. And they're blocking the road. I mean pretty good a couple of times, like 3030, big old black cows and a bunch of little baby calves, or you know, little guys. We're all sort of posted up in the middle of a road and have to get close to them. They just look at, yet they start to moo, moo, moo. And then they sort of start to scatter, and then they get scared, and then they all run, and then they definitely scatter, and then I kind of put my truck through and then take up take off on that Forest Service road just a little further. A few deer really only, as I think, dos most of the time-out here. So a couple cottontails that's kind of fun. I don't know. Gobble of critters. But not anything too crazy or too big out here. I haven't seen any antelope. I haven't. I don't think I've really gone East enough to get into the antelope country. I think if I cut just a bit more to the east, I would get closer to some areas where I've seen antelope before.</p>



<p>Like, I've been over to like heart mountain before and over to the Steens. And in those areas, that scene impacts antelope or the little herd's antelope running around and gathering out there. And they're exciting watching this, this pronghorn antelope kind of cruising across the landscape over there. I was learning that those are one of like what is it? Are they like? They're actually a separate animal from the African antelope. And they're like one of the oldest evolved species in North US. Yeah, the antelope. I guess the pronghorn is sort of more accurate with what it's called by some folks now. Well, yeah, when you see a pronghorn antelope out here in Eastern Oregon, you apparently like their speed and their ability to kind of book it across this. This landscape was sort of evolved at a time when they had to. They had outrun what they consider to be like a North American Cheetah Lake animal. I think it was slightly different from the mountain lions we have now or the Jaguars that you find in, like, what was it like northern? Well, I guess I think New Mexico is maybe the furthest North that you'll find or that they've spotted or seen something like that as part of like, their natural range now. And then like south into Mexico, and then and then Central US. And then up here, we have mountain lions, but yeah, apparently, there used to be some now-extinct form of a cat. That was really fast like they talked about cheetahs being fast. Still, I guess the eyesight and the speed of the antelope sort of signals that for some period of its evolutionary history, it had had a spot thing really far away and then move really fast when I found him.</p>



<p>I think that kind of leads to the idea that there was some predator competition for that the for you know, for those antelope that would have put that kind of pressure on him to evolve that kind of binocular eyesight and that kind of speed when they're moving around. So it's kind of interesting kind of coloring about and seeing some of these different animals and stuff out here. But that's pretty cool. Camped out here up in my truck, had the little Mr. heater going yesterday keeping me warm in the evening, and got my sleeping mat and a sleeping bag laid out here in the back of my truck, as I was doing a couple nights out away from home. But it's cool. Yeah, I got my little podcast rig. And the rest of my stuff up here got my layers, you know, really, like I was saying, it's just like super hot like with that heat wave coming through like they were talking about so even here. And I think that's about 8500 feet above sea level.</p>



<p>It was still warm almost all night. I think I had to take a layer off yesterday up in the forest mountains are in the forested area mountains I was at to the west of me, I got real cold at night, I think I've got like a 15-degree sleeping bag. And I think it's like 15 degrees is where you'll survive, but I don't think it's where you're going to be comfortable. You know. So I think a lot of people have talked about that before. So a lot of times, when I'm going to bed with that 15-degree bag, I have to wear a couple extra layers. Like just like clothes you know, like I'll wear like I got this, I've got like a wall layer that I keep on, and I've got like some like a wool pair of leggings I'll keep on that. They kind of keep me a bit warmer at night, and then sometimes, you know what's colder, I've had to throw on a couple sweaters to try and stay warm. The nice trick, though, is that I've learned it is I'm so cold that I wake up from being cold I can kick on that propane heater even here in the back of the cab of my truck. There's enough ventilation of it, but even in the back of the cab of my truck, I can kick that propane heater on for 10 minutes and heat the cab of the truck up to some reasonably comfortable 70 degrees, and then shut it off. So have enough time to be warm to fall back asleep in somewhat of a position to comfort, so they worked out pretty good but yeah.</p>



<p>This morning at about 630, I saw the sun popping up over what is it this Mesa Ridge over to the west to me and then really only after just a couple of minutes it kind of turned from that soft, warm orange light to what would be sort of that more rugged flat daylight look like the shadows there's you know there's really not like a lot of forest or mountains or anything else. You know I'm at the top of the mountain, so right as soon as it came over the horizon, it was just up. And then I was watching the shadows from this mountain cast to the west fade away and turn into what would be regular old daylight pretty quickly; it seemed like 15 minutes or something like that interesting works out here. And in areas where you got a lot of horizon line around, yeah, but yeah, beautiful morning, really cool to be up here in this area. I was kind of freaked out by this area like As mentioned earlier, but it worked out pretty good. I was thinking about maybe I should take some pictures up there and then flip the truck around I back down before it gets dark, but it worked out pretty well hanging out a pier because I wouldn't put a tent up here, that's for sure. But yeah, being in a little spot spending the night out, setting up the tripod taking some star photos. That was cool. You got Jupiter and Saturn out to the do south through a good bit of the night right now. Up in the constellation of Sagittarius. And then somewhere around 11 o'clock. 1130 probably midnight most areas where you don't have a great view of the eastern horizon. I was able to see Mars coming up this morning. It was beautiful. I saw the Moon and Mars or spice pardon me, the moon and like a crescent moon and Venus rising.</p>



<p>Probably around 3:30am 3am 4am somewhere in there. And yeah, looks just awesome. It's incredible to see. See, Venus looks really bright in the morning sky. Looks like it's pretty far away from the horizon line right now. And yeah, nice crescent moon or kind of near crescent shape of a moon right up next to it along the ecliptic line there, so that was pretty cool to see this morning. And then yeah, somewhere around 630, the sun popped up, and now we're back into daylight. So beautiful to see some stuff up here. Oh, and also the purse. He is probably talked about the proceeds a few other times on this podcast in the past, but yeah, the purse he had meteor showers. That thing comes around once a year during this time in late July and August, and I guess he has a peak right around the 10th, 11th 12th of August. So every year, I figure, and I think some years that kind of predicted to be stronger and some Time's like, a bit less strong. But it was cool during this last couple of days when the moon has been sort of more at that crescent shape, rise and really late into the night, you get these really dark skies. I'm sure you can. You can still see quite a bit of the sky. But then, for the last couple of days, it's just been a really dark and intense sky, especially up here in these higher elevations.</p>



<p>Like once, you get to 4040 500 feet now I'm at 8500 feet, it's like, it's just a really crisp air and really dark sky where you can see a lot of stuff as I mean, I could easily make out the Andromeda Galaxy with the naked eye last night as I was looking up toward the cast come to Perseus and yeah, just really cool to Well, I guess, man, the constellation of Andromeda. But that's always been, I guess, generally as a constellation, this one I've never really seen the shape of. But yeah, looking at you can just see like, Wow, look at that. That's the Andromeda Galaxy right there, naked-eye observation of it, and it looks good. You can see it a lot of times in a dark sky. But the man is apparent to see, like looking south into the constellation of Sagittarius, you see that some of those points in the Milky Way that are part of the Galactic Center really clearly just some of those, like clusters of stars that are out there. Real distant, real faint, or you know, in magnitude, but as they're so close to together as you kind of looked down to the center of the galaxy. As we get those really thick and bright plumes of the kind of dirty look at the Milky Way, it cuts across the sky. But yeah, really beautiful to see from an area like this up here, on one of these summer nights, that has that kind of crisp summer, warm air up here. Nice night to see some of those summer constellations and a nice night to observe some meteor showers even still, I think what is like a couple of days after the peak of to proceed meteor shower, I was able to count probably like 10 or 15, that were really pretty good ones, you know, there are some spitters that I probably didn't count, but there's a number of them that had like that bright, kind of lasting plasma trail that sort of runs behind it.</p>



<p>I guess that as the rock enters the atmosphere, it'll kind of, wow, I don't know if I can really explain to it that well, but it'll leave like a tube behind it. That is illuminated as it's kind of burned its way through that area and then dissipated, you know, to whatever fine point that it ended. But that tube that existed as a tail behind it will stay visible for a couple of seconds after that. After that, big shooting stars already passed. So really cool to kind of get to see some of that stuff from out here. Seeing a couple good ones like that before, but yeah, pretty fun stuff being out here, man. It was a good time.

I'm probably gonna head back toward the five corridors today and then make my way back home. But yeah, it's been a nice time being camped out here over in Eastern Oregon, but trying to get some more time of it in the summer. Well, while I've had the time, also, man, some of these little lake towns out here in Eastern Oregon. I don't even think they've heard of COVID-19 Yeah, you know, I'm fine with it, I suppose. But yeah, I walked into Safeway yesterday. Only a few people that are, you know, some have masks on, but not everybody likes a couple of guys I saw their look like just younger. I wouldn't even really rant, you know, I want to kind of put some cool name to them. But I think they were just goofy dude that lives out here in the country. They didn't even bring a mask into the store. You know, they didn't have it around their neck, or they weren't even trying to play it off. Like oh, well, I mean, I'm more than six feet away. So I'm not going to wear my mask right now. I'd probably try and pull that move. But yeah, these guys just walked around like it was 2019.</p>



<p>What's the deal? I don't know. Nice way to live, I suppose. But it has got funny. I guess there's no Coronavirus out here. So I guess other stuff worried about, probably Me too, I suppose. But I hope to strike that repeat. I hope everybody's doing well out there. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I'm going to try and wrap it up here. And if you guys want, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com to see more information about the photos I've taken and check out some of the other work I've been up to. Oh, you can also check out Billy Newman's photo comm forward-slash support if you want to throw some support toward the podcast. It's always appreciated toward the photo chips towards aping and stuff. And yeah, the goal is to kind of try and continue some travel stuff over here in Eastern Oregon, California, Nevada, Idaho, if they don't lock all the states down, but at least as it is through these sections of public land in Oregon that I'm able to travel around and still through the end August into September and October while the weather is still in season for it. So looking forward to the next few weeks of it, getting to travel around, take some photos and stuff. It's been a nice time getting out and traveling and stuff. So hope everybody's doing good. Thanks for listening to this episode of the building human photo podcast. Always check out more stuff if you want to online, but until next time, I'll talk to you later. </p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. 



Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



L]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak</p>



<p>Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. </p>



<p>Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



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<p>153 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Camping at an 8500 ft mountain peak</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second or almost coming up to the third week of August 2020. Made a cup of coffee this morning, and I'm out at that peak of the mountain out in Eastern Oregon.</p>



<p>Pretty cool spot up here that I was able to get to. I was looking around on the map. And I was able to find some spots that were old lookout towers like I guess they were like old like fire lookout towers for when there would be lightning strikes or other starts of fires for forest fires in the area. I have driven to a couple of them before, seven in Northern California. I'll talk about those in a few. But yeah, it's cool that you can find where these cabins are here if you look around. And I guess many of them now I use this as lookout towers for the fire department or federal forest department or whatever it would be.</p>



<p>But now, many of them have been kind of retrofitted to be overnight cabins that you can or other people in public can rent out and get for like a night or two nights or, or a part of a week or something is pretty cool. I guess they book pretty far out in advance. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, I was looking around at some of those. And I've been on a trip for a couple of days now, driving around in some BLM and national forest land. It's out here in Eastern Oregon. And there's a lot of it, it's cool, a lot of space, a lot of open space in this part of the country.</p>



<p>It's a bit of a difference between them between west of the Cascades and east of the Cascades. A lot of the national forest land is on the west coast. Well, yeah, I'm trying to think of it a little. But as good as I can tell, a lot of the national forest land on the west coast is mountainous with many ridges, and a lot of thick timber too, a lot of thick evergreen forests wonderful area. But it's hard to traverse that kind of terrain; many of them have had roads that are pretty well maintained, they go through some of those areas.</p>



<p>But still, even with that, there's not a lot of open expanses and the kind of tight quarters sometimes. So it's kind of cool getting out over here in Eastern Oregon, where it sort of flattens out a bit opens up a bit. And even though there are still quite a few trees in the area that I'm looking out at, like I'm looking at, South of me here, miles and miles and miles of forest land, and mountains that go out 20 miles, 30 miles or so. But it's cool. It goes out for a while. But there are changes in the land to the lookout. Like I was saying, I made it at the top of the peak of a mountain here. So I can see out to the east over here, I look over, and I see like a few ridges, a few bluffs, and it seems like it goes on forever. But it's pretty cool.</p>



<p>And this area here, looking out west to me here, I can see the lights of one of the cities last night that's out here, or you know, one of the small towns it's in the area, he can kind of see the little dots of those. Those farms and ranches and some concentration in downtown are out over in the valley to the west of me. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, you can kind of see the changes and ripples in the landscape up here. But yeah, there's a lookout tower up here in this area. And you can rat them out. There are a few others in a couple of other spots I was at yesterday, too. So I was traveling down these Forest Service roads, and then you can pull off and then go up. It's pretty high.</p>



<p>It's like you're driving up on the rim. You kind of like already made most of your way up the elevation. But then you can take these little side roads off that the main road, and then it'll cut up to a cabin that's put up with, you know, a forest service money, and it's been there for a long time. And yeah, hang out at their picnic tables in a bathroom and stuff. It's one of the more well serviced high altitude areas that you know, you can kind of pop into, but it's cool. They maintain the roads pretty well.</p>



<p>So you can drive right up to the summit of it. And then check it out and then drive right back down, which is a nice feature of it. But I'm not at the lookout tower right now. I'm actually a half-mile away over on another peak that's just a bit higher in elevation. There's no Lookout Tower. Over here, but there's like a couple Geological Survey markers up here that they've got pinned down to the top of the summit, which is cool.</p>



<p>I should check them a little they read a bit more accurately what my altitude is. I think that it's around 8500 feet right now, which is cool. It's pretty high up here. It seems like it's one of the highest things Around can lookout. I can see one of the mountains in the Cascades. I can see Mount Shasta from here yesterday. I was in a spot where I could see Mount Thiessen and Mount McLoughlin, which was cool. Kind of getting to spot that in the evening time. You can see the cracked kind of crackled rock of the Horn of mouthfeel sent over, and what is it like South?</p>



<p>The southern section of the Cascades in Oregon. I can look out into California waves, and I can see Mount Shasta from here. I can't see anything like a blast. And that's probably way too far. I can't really see anything that goes North either. But, yeah, probably they got something if it was a little clear. There seems like some smoke in the air. Probably smoke. Not really quite sure which fire it's coming from. But yeah, there's like some good bands of smoke in the air. And it's a little hazy.</p>



<p>You can kind of Yeah, pretty good visibility for miles, but right on the brim of the horizon is sort of a murky, kind of smoke toned cloud that sort of stretches all the surrounding way. It's cool. That was about a quarter-mile away from this Lookout Tower up at the top of this little rise. And it's cool, there's this little two-track road that just kind of meanders right up the side of this hill, and then you just sort of pop up onto the summit. And then you've got something that's about now would that be maybe 10 yards 15 yards across by, say 50 yards long, the sort of the flat enough spot of the summit that you can kind of walk around on before it starts to dip off. So really, only an area of about probably 100 by 100 feet is really flat enough to park a vehicle.</p>



<p>But yeah, the area kind of stretches on a bit out from there. And there are many kinds of outcrops of rock, I think like I'm looking down over to my two o'clock. There's an outcrop of rock that sticks up as I look out over to my was it probably 10 o'clock over to the other side and drops off pretty quickly as it kind of pulls into a ravine before it pops up to the peak of another hill over to the east of me. But, there's like a little another little two-track row that kind of carries on quite steeply. I might add that it just kind of drops down that hill. Lord knows where it goes. I don't think I'm going to take that one.</p>



<p>I think I was looking at a camper that I passed yesterday at a spot in like a more setup campground. They have their fifth wheel set up, but they have like that for ATVs out there, and I see it. Man having a quad out here would be pretty cool. They're just, you know, the kind of train and stuff you can travel over. And just kind of the ability to take some of these roads take some of these steep little tracks and stuff would be kind of fun.</p>



<p>But yeah, I think it probably isn't good for my mid-sized highway-ready truck to be jumping on. But beautiful spot up here. Really cool. I was spending the night up here last night. It's just right at the peak of the summit; I was thinking I was going to get a ton of wind, like that's what I ran into yesterday when I went up to the edge of a bluff where I was at, at the high elevation point where they had their lookout towers down from it a bit at a set of picnic tables in an area that set up really beautiful.</p>



<p>You can see that the land kind of slopes off to the west gradually in the forest land. But to the east, there's just a real steep, probably 800-foot drop off that goes down to a lake bed valley floor out to the east of me. So it was really cool kind of getting up there and seeing it, but when I got up to that spot where it had been in the trees in the more moderate elevations of it to the west side, there hadn't really been any wind or any inclement weather or anything like that. But when I got up near the peak, there are two fronts of weather as the sun was going down.</p>



<p>We're just kind of mixing weirdly, and you got a ton of wind blowing each and every different way. So I was just getting blown around a lot up in that area, and there were some people up there that seemed like they wanted me to go, so I took off and found another campsite, but beautiful spot up in that area is really kind of just to be out when you get up to this. This peaks you kind of figure you'd be running into a lot of wind or as It was just going to be blowing me out for a while. So is that really the best place to camp, and can I go seen as sort of small area and claustrophobic enough that it sort of feels weird just being up here by yourself barking on the tippy top of a mountain hanging out all night?</p>



<p>It was kind of weird when it got dark. You know, like after, after the sun went down, and it's nighttime, and you can just sort of see darkness really all around you but for the city lights out to the distance from where I'm at. And yeah, it's just kind of a small area. It's kind of freaky walking around and sort of uneven ground and stuff. You're like, man, where am I right now? But it's cool. It's a beautiful spot; get kind of used to it after a bit. It seems like other people are kind of used to it too.</p>



<p>I see other trucks kind of driving around in different areas, or yesterday I did. I saw a couple trucks moving around and stuff. Yeah, I was up here last night, trying to make some photographs of a guy here a couple of hours before sunset. And I try to start to take some photos of the sunset and photos of the surrounding landscape, which is pretty cool. Stunning spots up here. So yeah, like when I was looking south, I think I'm looking at over into the over into Nevada from how far south I am right now. So I think I'm in the Fremont, and I was shot filing this out the Fremont Winema National Forest.</p>



<p>And I think last time I said a Winona, kind of American Oregonian pronunciation of something that was probably I have a sense Well, I don't know. I should look up who when emo was. I'm not really sure. But yeah, over in this Fremont NEMA national forest area. It's pretty cool. And I think it stretches out into a section of the border. Well, I'm not sure really where the border is. But I think we're right about at the border of Northern California, Southern Oregon.</p>



<p>And a bat-like over deeper east to me is a lot of Nevada too, which is cool. So yeah, I was looking out south to me, and I could see a lightning strike. Oh, yeah, I can see lightning, probably six or seven. Good flashes of it seem like hundreds of miles to the South. And he never heard anything, you know, but you could just see like a little or a big bright pop of light, way deep into the South, where they're having some kind of lightning storm. You know, it's probably by Reno or something. But, but it's a school up here. Yeah, it's a nice kind of clear night, hot too. Everybody in the southwest is talking about this heatwave coming through, like Arizona will hit 115. And probably everywhere around everywhere in Nevada and Vegas, and Los Angeles will be or east of Los Angeles into the Palm Desert over by Joshua Tree is just going to be begun during this period of August right now.</p>



<p>Probably fortunate that they're not running Burning Man. I mean, I guess everybody's used to 115 120 degree days with if you had not into Burning Man, Black Rock desert area every summer. But yeah, I feel like the COVID-19 pandemic stuff, all live events in Nevada, are shut down. I think everybody in California is kind of spooked about some of those mass gatherings of people as well. So doesn't look like there's going to be a burn this year. Fine with me, I suppose. But I'm sure there's a bunch of people missing out, which is too bad.</p>



<p>But as you're taking photos, in the evening time of sunset, and trying to photograph some contours and changes in the land, you can kind of see some landmarks. And just sort of the way that these bluffs rise up from, or you have a rise up over the land. And then I have the steep drop-offs. So it's kind of trying to get some images of that. And the perspective that I have from up here on top of this mountain. Pretty cool. It's kind of interesting looking out, and you're like looking down at a ridge that I've only really seen from the valley floor of it before.</p>



<p>The valley floor of it looks huge. Like when you're down there, you lookout, and then you look up at this massive table, you know, Mesa of Iraq, it's just kind of built-up in front of Yeah, but then outside that all around it is, you know, just kind of flat and low in those areas. But yeah, appears just seems like the tippy top of it. So you can kind of look down into the forest. And then you can look at where the forest ends and where the ridge begins. And it just kind of has a steep drop off into a lower Valley. But pretty cool up here. So I was taking photos of that.</p>



<p>Taking photos of some kind of Well, I guess it's where, like creeks and water have run off the mountains over the millennia and have created these deep ours, that cut through this desert landscape out here, and how they kind of pull through this sort of tidy Canyon area and then open up into a wider area that was, I don't know, eroded by some Lakes or something like that back in the Pleistocene era, and probably, probably a few ice ages, a few Ice Age cycles before that, too. So I'm not really sure how old this landscape is. I mean, looking at some other stuff, I kind of have, like, some perspective on 15,000 years. But man, if you talk about 100,000 years, I don't really know, I can't really tell you, or I'm not really very good at that. I know a lot of people do, where they have like a pretty good kind of mental picture in their head of what the changes in the landscape over the last 15 million years were, but it's kind of cool like to see like the geological research that they have out there for some different stuff.</p>



<p>I was up in northern Oregon a few weeks ago, I think when I was talking about being near the john de area, and I was reading some information about the geology in that region and how it was formed. Like way back, I guess they find a lot of fossils up in that area. I think there's a town called a fossil. I remember being a kid up there, go into the high school in the back, pass the football field, and you can just dig away at some shale. And if you kind of crack that shale open, you're going to see these Fern leaves or these, you know, just this full pattern leaf in the rock. And I guess they've also found, like, a lot of like animal fossils out there. Part of the laws that you can't pick up vertebrate fossils is, I think, what I understand thinking to get seashells. I'm not totally sure I think you can get a fossilized seashell.</p>



<p>But maybe they even ask you not to that I'm not really sure. But I guess the vertebrate for fossilized vertebrates there are requested to be remaining in place. But the researchers have gone through and found a lot of that stuff and tried to collect evidence of the geological formations and changes over the years. And I think with that, they're able to kind of make a pretty clear map of the way that the Oregon landscape was constituted back then. I was reading some information before the Quaternary period, where we're in right now.</p>



<p>This is the last couple of 100,000 years that we've had these cycles of ice ages that come on and off. But before that, there was a period where the Earth's climate was, I guess, a lot wetter and a lot warmer. So even in an area like northern Oregon, which is now sort of a dry, kind of high plains' grassland area as you get up into the Columbia River area over in Eastern Oregon, like as you go from, I don't know, somewhere, somewhere around Pendleton that Kennewick, you know, something like that landscape. There's just a bunch of kind of dry flat grassland now, but apparently, 15 million years ago, it was something like palm trees and a more like a way wetter. Rainfall or not rain forest but the way more wet, forested area that was more tropical in its nature. And I guess that kind of reflected with a lot of the animals that were there. Like they talk about camels being there.</p>



<p>They talk about a predecessor to the modern horse, like a kind of small horse. It was probably more like a deer-sized animal sort of this kind of fat nose like predecessors to what would be something more like a bear have been found out there. A lot of different animals were found out there. Which is really cool. I think rhinoceroses john big beaver Sloths few things like that that might have been later collections of animals. But yeah, at some of those early collections, it's interesting to hear about the kind of landscape that it must have been. Still, apparently through some kind of geologic activity, a bit like a really quick or fast-acting mudslide came through and just buried everything in that region all at once. So I think hard in there and then fossilized many of those animals trapped in that mud slider. I don't know, that mud event that came through pretty swiftly. And yeah, I just kind of encapsulated all those things, including the trees to I guess there are some areas where you can see some spires that they kind of are now part of what's been eroded away from the creeks and the rivers that are flowing through that area Ever since then, you know, over the last few, many million years.</p>



<p>They've washed away, and now we have some river canyons and Creek canyons that we see through the area now, and that's where we see some exposed rim rock and stuff that kind of falls along with that with the canyon as it flows out toward the bigger Columbia River Lake river area over there in Eastern Oregon. So it's really cool to get a bit of a perspective on the kinds of things that have changed out here over the years. But yeah, I guess you can. They've made out that those spires are old, old tree trunks that had been encapsulated in mud and then had fossilized over the years. And then now as they're being exposed, again, through erosion, there's really just sort of spiral shape on the edge of a cliff face, but I guess they've been identified as fossilized tree trunks. It's pretty cool. So out here in this area, as I'm thinking about the types of changes that have happened over the past, I don't know 100,000 years or so, which is what I have just a tiny bit better handle on, at least in this region, you can kind of see some different erosion patterns that have happened to the landscape out here. Like when I look out to the west, northwest to me, I see, I see like another huge bluff that runs across from miles. And then below that, there's a big depression in the land that runs really flat and smoothly for miles and miles and miles, it goes up to the North.</p>



<p>And apparently, as you find out more information about it, what now is really just dry desert sagebrush used to be back in the Pleistocene era, a pretty significant lake that stretched on that was probably I think, they marked it on the rimrock of the bluff to be like, 500 feet deep. You know, now that lake will dry out in the summer, if it's, if it's a dry year, there won't be any water in, in, in two of the five lakes that are sort of just little puddles that seem to be left of what once was a huge, massive body of water that was out here probably changed the way this landscape felt 30,000 years ago, 40,000 years ago, this sort of things would oscillate on and off between the ice ages, I think, what is it a 30,000-year period? Mix or to some sense? Well, so what it was about 15,000 years ago from now that we were coming into a period where the Ice Age was starting to end. And as we were kind of coming into what we are, we now have as the Holocene. But before that? Well, I think they kind of marked that out like 11 or 12,000 years or something like that. But some of the earliest human artifacts are, I think they're coprolites. They've been found in Mesa Vera de Chile, way down in South US, recorded proven out to be human remains. But yeah, 15,000 years ago is what they are carbon data too. So really interested to kind of think about human exploration in some of these areas. If you follow the land bridge hypothesis, they came over Beringia, from Asia to Alaska, and then it traveled down into the Americas. That must have been something like 15,000 years ago that that had, I guess, started well. I don't know how that goes. It would have been there or maybe before that to some ideas or that it might have been before them. But it seems like some of the earliest things that we've ever found are from about that 15,000-year mark.</p>



<p>They had some ideas, like, kind of rudimentary can new technology, where they could sort of skirt along what would have been the much lower coastline of the Pacific. I think they say it was somewhere around 400 feet lower in elevation to where it is now. But they were able to kind of skirt around the coast and traveled a little more quickly. To get down towards South US. We do expeditions as you can to do some little jumps out in the ocean travel on the coast pullover. Have a camp. It probably took a long time to figure all that stuff out. Or, you know, for them to maneuver through all the landscape and survive and build and gain resources and stuff. I don't think it was just one guy. Or maybe it was just sort of an interesting thing, how there are outliers, where I think when they track different animals to that, that normally have kind of a home range of 50 miles or something like that. I think they've been tracking. I think it was wolves. I think coupe sometimes too, but yeah, I think the wolf was one that I had heard or reported that like traveled like 1500 miles, you know, it was just like on the run, or you know, just took off but, but really like a lot of them have sort of a more localized home range. And then, for whatever reason, one of them has the Explorer gene as a dog would, whatever that would be. But, still, for whatever kind of urge your drive it has or whatever type of pressures are put on it by its environment, it ends up making a really significant amount of distance all in one go.</p>



<p>So there's sort of a gradualism perspective where things happen pretty gradually and families, we got families, we got families that would kind of slowly traverse a bit of distance South at a time to make its way down to South US. And then there's the other idea of what it would be like punctuated equilibrium, where just about everything is almost the same all the time. But one person does a lot more, or a small group of people does a lot more all at once, which is another idea out there for some ways things spread. I think it's sort of a universal idea of what is it? I think it was the idea of uniformitarianism. And, and punctuated equilibrium where I think there's still kind of a concept and evolution that is talked about, I think for a while, it was considered that like uniformitarianism was what was taking place where everything was about the same and just sort of gradually evolving over time with slow incremental changes that had happened since the beginning of time. Well, uniformitarianism, I think, is more of like a religious perspective that came from the Catholic Church where everything has to be the same because God made it that way a bit. But if you kind of relax that a bit into some of the things that we're trying to tie it to later in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. And then I guess on to the 19th century, where there are you know, the 18 hundreds from when scientific method naturalist researchers, geological surveys were going on in the last year, they're able to kind of put some of those ideas together. But I guess there's always been a debate between those sides of things, you know, even trained scientists sort of disagree about which side of the line to come down on. So assuming the idea is also called the well, this is a different idea, but it's attached.</p>



<p>But there's the idea of lumpers and splitters where, as you're categorizing things, certain people train people to sort of select to lump very similar things together and identify in the same category while others split those small differences. And when identify something that might be similar into two different categories. Which is kind of an interesting idea. I think that happens in biology a lot when they're trying to classify an animal. You know, you have many catfish or something, but you have a catfish with these features. And that's like maybe a different species. Is it a different species or a different subspecies? But it's kind of interesting how they come into those delineations between those decisions. Yes, it's got to be a person that decides what it is. And so those who would want it to be the same, those are lumpers, those who'd want it to be identified selectively different. Those are splitters. And I guess that's sort of a conversation that's ongoing in the scientific community even still. It makes sense, you know, because it's about human categorization, categorization, which I think goes medicine, right. But I think that's sort of the intent of it, you know, it's like, it's a human endeavor that we're involved in, by trying to survey and categorize these different things that we're experiencing in the world. And it's to better have a context of what those are to ourselves. So we can explain them to ourselves. But we don't have to, you know, it's not actually definitive, if it's, if it's lumped, or if it's split, it's just sort of a natural occurrence. And it is different. Each individual, you know, unit of that species is probably a little different. You know if you can imagine, if anyone specific individual the species, or any two, I suppose, were Noah's Ark style, were the only remaining members of that species to procreate and then have offspring. You'd have kind of a genetic bottleneck of those inheritable traits of that animal, and it might not be representative of every trait that was expressed in that animal for a long time.</p>



<p>So I guess that's kind of to say that it's just, there are some things we see and some things we don't and there's a lot of genetic expressions that we could have if there's different pressures, environmental pressures, or different I guess, different circumstances that those creatures were involved in during the evolution of their lifespan, or you know, the species span but yeah, it's got cool thinking about some of that stuff and thinking about some of the past environments that must have been out here. You know, I think about what it was like when the great bass in your area here. It was more full of water. I guess like I was saying, sort of during the ice age or during the Pleistocene era where you were kind of coming in and out of ice ages over 200,000 years, 2 million years. 5 million years. I don't know, they say something like that. But so yeah, like the ice age that we just got out of, I think is part of a cyclical period that the Earth has been in for, for a long time now, where you kind of have an ice age and then rolls off, and there's not as much ice, but there's still ice caps, and then it rolls on, again, where there's ice, and then rolls off where there's not as much ice. And then I guess, for a significant time, but you know, way back in the dinosaurs, and for a significant time for the millions of years that followed that was it like that 68 million years ago, Mark, where we, we lost we had that big extinction event, there was a significant period after that to where there were no ice caps, you know, there's no ice on the South Pole, no ice on the North Pole.</p>



<p>It was like low Earth or something. And I have heard the well. I've heard some reasons for it. I probably won't speculate too much on it now. But you guys should look it up. It's kind of interesting. There are some interesting ideas about how the environment used to be. But, still, yeah, it's kind of a trip to think that there had only been really a couple periods in Earth's history and development over the last 4 billion years when there's been a snowball Earth, I think, is what they call it. The period where there's like a significant amount of ice and snow across the land and held up in glaciers over high elevation areas, either at the poles or even on the mountaintop areas of the North, like the high Northern and low southern regions of the Earth.</p>



<p>But yeah, and I guess when there is ice on the Earth, that's what an ice age is, is a bit of what I've been learning. So kind of a trip to learn some of that stuff. But thinking about some Pleistocene stuff here in the Great Basin, where these giant lakes like a kind of like almost inland seas, had existed for a while, it really must have been quite different. What was it like, Lake Lahontan out in? Nevada? I guess there's like the Great Salt Lake that we see now. It's just a big giant salt flat, and apparently, that used to be, you know, an inland body of water developed. And then yeah, out here, I think they talked about I think they talk about areas of like, what would it be? I guess it's the northern great bass and region of probably like Silver Lake summer-like. And then as you travel south to Abraham Lake, and then whatever, whatever is out there, I'm not really sure what this area would have been called before that. But apparently, all those were just connected as one enormous lake that sort of stretched on for a long time, or there are some breakups in mountains and stuff. But there were just really massive bodies of water that carried on out here, and then it just started to dry up over the years.</p>



<p>I guessed even like 500 years ago, there were are more significant lakes out here like that would probably like more or less resemble something closer to Klamath Lake like we have in Oregon now than what we see out like in the Alvord, like I've talked about the Alvord Desert before earlier in the podcast, I was talking about the Black Rock desert, Black Rock desert, that playa is made, you know from the silt that settled flatly across a lake bed that had been out in that region. And it's now dried and no longer there. And so it's just interesting to kind of perceive some of this Nevada landscape deep southeastern Oregon landscape is something that had really been occupied by a lot of water at once and now is a significant desert region that really doesn't receive any water. So it's just kind of perplexing to sort of pondering like, Oh, I wonder why to like that those kinds of changes have happened in the landscape. But yeah, kind of cool stuff. So over this trip, I've been checking out some of these, these Forest Service towers, which has been pretty cool. I've been having a good time kind of figuring it out a bit. I was driving around some Forest Service roads up in the Fremont minima National Forest. I was trying to find some campsites that I've never been to before and try to find some spots to check out, but yeah, along with a couple lookout towers and cabins that are sort of nestled away up in the mountains there. So yeah, pretty. Pretty cool. Being up here.

I've seen a few animals. That's been kind of fun. I think I saw my first badger. I need to look this up, but I don't think I've seen a badger out in person, yet I should probably hold my tongue before speaking too much about it. But yeah, I was able to pull it up in my binoculars it was out on the road, hundreds of feet in front of me. And it kind of hurt my car, and then it was just sort of take-off and run further down the road. And then I was, you know, kind of putting along and making my way, and they would stop and then turn its body so that it was kind of facing me, and then I could kind of see its face and body. And it was pretty low to the ground, and sort of like a little wobbly look to it didn't look like a fox, or you know, the way a fox would move or the way that a little coyote would move or something.</p>



<p>But yeah, I just look like a little wobbly critter that kind of scooted down the road a bit with stop, turn post up, look back at me. That's why I was able to pull up binoculars and try and get it on it. And it looks really quite a bit like a little badger that was wobbling around out there. So we're just kind of fine. And then, as I made it a little way out further closer to it. And I finally got the good sense to Duke to the left and cut off into the forest. So didn't see it after that. But this coyote cut across the land over there. I think I've seen a couple coyotes, one of them was quite a bit further away. I heard a bunch of them suddenly kind of winning and call them, you know, making those little coyote hoots that they do. But yeah, I was camped out, I think, two nights ago. And there was a little pack of coyotes that were all calling out to each other.</p>



<p>Somewhere to the North of me seemed like, like a half-mile or a mile away or so. But it seemed like they were still, you know, pretty close. They're probably checking me out. But a lot of cows out there. So a lot of cows like cattle that's been, I think you put up on some of that public land through a permanent to sort of range round and graze and see a bunch of little cows out there kind of run around with their mom cow. And they're blocking the road. I mean pretty good a couple of times, like 3030, big old black cows and a bunch of little baby calves, or you know, little guys. We're all sort of posted up in the middle of a road and have to get close to them. They just look at, yet they start to moo, moo, moo. And then they sort of start to scatter, and then they get scared, and then they all run, and then they definitely scatter, and then I kind of put my truck through and then take up take off on that Forest Service road just a little further. A few deer really only, as I think, dos most of the time-out here. So a couple cottontails that's kind of fun. I don't know. Gobble of critters. But not anything too crazy or too big out here. I haven't seen any antelope. I haven't. I don't think I've really gone East enough to get into the antelope country. I think if I cut just a bit more to the east, I would get closer to some areas where I've seen antelope before.</p>



<p>Like, I've been over to like heart mountain before and over to the Steens. And in those areas, that scene impacts antelope or the little herd's antelope running around and gathering out there. And they're exciting watching this, this pronghorn antelope kind of cruising across the landscape over there. I was learning that those are one of like what is it? Are they like? They're actually a separate animal from the African antelope. And they're like one of the oldest evolved species in North US. Yeah, the antelope. I guess the pronghorn is sort of more accurate with what it's called by some folks now. Well, yeah, when you see a pronghorn antelope out here in Eastern Oregon, you apparently like their speed and their ability to kind of book it across this. This landscape was sort of evolved at a time when they had to. They had outrun what they consider to be like a North American Cheetah Lake animal. I think it was slightly different from the mountain lions we have now or the Jaguars that you find in, like, what was it like northern? Well, I guess I think New Mexico is maybe the furthest North that you'll find or that they've spotted or seen something like that as part of like, their natural range now. And then like south into Mexico, and then and then Central US. And then up here, we have mountain lions, but yeah, apparently, there used to be some now-extinct form of a cat. That was really fast like they talked about cheetahs being fast. Still, I guess the eyesight and the speed of the antelope sort of signals that for some period of its evolutionary history, it had had a spot thing really far away and then move really fast when I found him.</p>



<p>I think that kind of leads to the idea that there was some predator competition for that the for you know, for those antelope that would have put that kind of pressure on him to evolve that kind of binocular eyesight and that kind of speed when they're moving around. So it's kind of interesting kind of coloring about and seeing some of these different animals and stuff out here. But that's pretty cool. Camped out here up in my truck, had the little Mr. heater going yesterday keeping me warm in the evening, and got my sleeping mat and a sleeping bag laid out here in the back of my truck, as I was doing a couple nights out away from home. But it's cool. Yeah, I got my little podcast rig. And the rest of my stuff up here got my layers, you know, really, like I was saying, it's just like super hot like with that heat wave coming through like they were talking about so even here. And I think that's about 8500 feet above sea level.</p>



<p>It was still warm almost all night. I think I had to take a layer off yesterday up in the forest mountains are in the forested area mountains I was at to the west of me, I got real cold at night, I think I've got like a 15-degree sleeping bag. And I think it's like 15 degrees is where you'll survive, but I don't think it's where you're going to be comfortable. You know. So I think a lot of people have talked about that before. So a lot of times, when I'm going to bed with that 15-degree bag, I have to wear a couple extra layers. Like just like clothes you know, like I'll wear like I got this, I've got like a wall layer that I keep on, and I've got like some like a wool pair of leggings I'll keep on that. They kind of keep me a bit warmer at night, and then sometimes, you know what's colder, I've had to throw on a couple sweaters to try and stay warm. The nice trick, though, is that I've learned it is I'm so cold that I wake up from being cold I can kick on that propane heater even here in the back of the cab of my truck. There's enough ventilation of it, but even in the back of the cab of my truck, I can kick that propane heater on for 10 minutes and heat the cab of the truck up to some reasonably comfortable 70 degrees, and then shut it off. So have enough time to be warm to fall back asleep in somewhat of a position to comfort, so they worked out pretty good but yeah.</p>



<p>This morning at about 630, I saw the sun popping up over what is it this Mesa Ridge over to the west to me and then really only after just a couple of minutes it kind of turned from that soft, warm orange light to what would be sort of that more rugged flat daylight look like the shadows there's you know there's really not like a lot of forest or mountains or anything else. You know I'm at the top of the mountain, so right as soon as it came over the horizon, it was just up. And then I was watching the shadows from this mountain cast to the west fade away and turn into what would be regular old daylight pretty quickly; it seemed like 15 minutes or something like that interesting works out here. And in areas where you got a lot of horizon line around, yeah, but yeah, beautiful morning, really cool to be up here in this area. I was kind of freaked out by this area like As mentioned earlier, but it worked out pretty good. I was thinking about maybe I should take some pictures up there and then flip the truck around I back down before it gets dark, but it worked out pretty well hanging out a pier because I wouldn't put a tent up here, that's for sure. But yeah, being in a little spot spending the night out, setting up the tripod taking some star photos. That was cool. You got Jupiter and Saturn out to the do south through a good bit of the night right now. Up in the constellation of Sagittarius. And then somewhere around 11 o'clock. 1130 probably midnight most areas where you don't have a great view of the eastern horizon. I was able to see Mars coming up this morning. It was beautiful. I saw the Moon and Mars or spice pardon me, the moon and like a crescent moon and Venus rising.</p>



<p>Probably around 3:30am 3am 4am somewhere in there. And yeah, looks just awesome. It's incredible to see. See, Venus looks really bright in the morning sky. Looks like it's pretty far away from the horizon line right now. And yeah, nice crescent moon or kind of near crescent shape of a moon right up next to it along the ecliptic line there, so that was pretty cool to see this morning. And then yeah, somewhere around 630, the sun popped up, and now we're back into daylight. So beautiful to see some stuff up here. Oh, and also the purse. He is probably talked about the proceeds a few other times on this podcast in the past, but yeah, the purse he had meteor showers. That thing comes around once a year during this time in late July and August, and I guess he has a peak right around the 10th, 11th 12th of August. So every year, I figure, and I think some years that kind of predicted to be stronger and some Time's like, a bit less strong. But it was cool during this last couple of days when the moon has been sort of more at that crescent shape, rise and really late into the night, you get these really dark skies. I'm sure you can. You can still see quite a bit of the sky. But then, for the last couple of days, it's just been a really dark and intense sky, especially up here in these higher elevations.</p>



<p>Like once, you get to 4040 500 feet now I'm at 8500 feet, it's like, it's just a really crisp air and really dark sky where you can see a lot of stuff as I mean, I could easily make out the Andromeda Galaxy with the naked eye last night as I was looking up toward the cast come to Perseus and yeah, just really cool to Well, I guess, man, the constellation of Andromeda. But that's always been, I guess, generally as a constellation, this one I've never really seen the shape of. But yeah, looking at you can just see like, Wow, look at that. That's the Andromeda Galaxy right there, naked-eye observation of it, and it looks good. You can see it a lot of times in a dark sky. But the man is apparent to see, like looking south into the constellation of Sagittarius, you see that some of those points in the Milky Way that are part of the Galactic Center really clearly just some of those, like clusters of stars that are out there. Real distant, real faint, or you know, in magnitude, but as they're so close to together as you kind of looked down to the center of the galaxy. As we get those really thick and bright plumes of the kind of dirty look at the Milky Way, it cuts across the sky. But yeah, really beautiful to see from an area like this up here, on one of these summer nights, that has that kind of crisp summer, warm air up here. Nice night to see some of those summer constellations and a nice night to observe some meteor showers even still, I think what is like a couple of days after the peak of to proceed meteor shower, I was able to count probably like 10 or 15, that were really pretty good ones, you know, there are some spitters that I probably didn't count, but there's a number of them that had like that bright, kind of lasting plasma trail that sort of runs behind it.</p>



<p>I guess that as the rock enters the atmosphere, it'll kind of, wow, I don't know if I can really explain to it that well, but it'll leave like a tube behind it. That is illuminated as it's kind of burned its way through that area and then dissipated, you know, to whatever fine point that it ended. But that tube that existed as a tail behind it will stay visible for a couple of seconds after that. After that, big shooting stars already passed. So really cool to kind of get to see some of that stuff from out here. Seeing a couple good ones like that before, but yeah, pretty fun stuff being out here, man. It was a good time.

I'm probably gonna head back toward the five corridors today and then make my way back home. But yeah, it's been a nice time being camped out here over in Eastern Oregon, but trying to get some more time of it in the summer. Well, while I've had the time, also, man, some of these little lake towns out here in Eastern Oregon. I don't even think they've heard of COVID-19 Yeah, you know, I'm fine with it, I suppose. But yeah, I walked into Safeway yesterday. Only a few people that are, you know, some have masks on, but not everybody likes a couple of guys I saw their look like just younger. I wouldn't even really rant, you know, I want to kind of put some cool name to them. But I think they were just goofy dude that lives out here in the country. They didn't even bring a mask into the store. You know, they didn't have it around their neck, or they weren't even trying to play it off. Like oh, well, I mean, I'm more than six feet away. So I'm not going to wear my mask right now. I'd probably try and pull that move. But yeah, these guys just walked around like it was 2019.</p>



<p>What's the deal? I don't know. Nice way to live, I suppose. But it has got funny. I guess there's no Coronavirus out here. So I guess other stuff worried about, probably Me too, I suppose. But I hope to strike that repeat. I hope everybody's doing well out there. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I'm going to try and wrap it up here. And if you guys want, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com to see more information about the photos I've taken and check out some of the other work I've been up to. Oh, you can also check out Billy Newman's photo comm forward-slash support if you want to throw some support toward the podcast. It's always appreciated toward the photo chips towards aping and stuff. And yeah, the goal is to kind of try and continue some travel stuff over here in Eastern Oregon, California, Nevada, Idaho, if they don't lock all the states down, but at least as it is through these sections of public land in Oregon that I'm able to travel around and still through the end August into September and October while the weather is still in season for it. So looking forward to the next few weeks of it, getting to travel around, take some photos and stuff. It's been a nice time getting out and traveling and stuff. So hope everybody's doing good. Thanks for listening to this episode of the building human photo podcast. Always check out more stuff if you want to online, but until next time, I'll talk to you later. </p>]]></content:encoded>
	<enclosure url="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast-download/8519/billy-newman-photo-podcast-camping-at-an-8500-ft-mountain-peak.mp3" length="36868723" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. 



Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



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153 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Camping at an 8500 ft mountain peak



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second or almost coming up to the third week of August 2020. Made a cup of coffee this morning, and I'm out at that peak of the mountain out in Eastern Oregon.



Pretty cool spot up here that I was able to get to. I was looking around on the map. And I was able to find some spots that were old lookout towers like I guess they were like old like fire lookout towers for when there would be lightning strikes or other starts of fires for forest fires in the area. I have driven to a couple of them before, seven in Northern California. I'll talk about those in a few. But yeah, it's cool that you can find where these cabins are here if you look around. And I guess many of them now I use this as lookout towers for the fire department or federal forest department or whatever it would be.



But now, many of them have been kind of retrofitted to be overnight cabins that you can or other people in public can rent out and get for like a night or two nights or, or a part of a week or something is pretty cool. I guess they book pretty far out in advance. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, I was looking around at some of those. And I've been on a trip for a couple of days now, driving around in some BLM and national forest land. It's out here in Eastern Oregon. And there's a lot of it, it's cool, a lot of space, a lot of open space in this part of the country.



It's a bit of a difference between them between west of the Cascades and east of the Cascades. A lot of the national forest land is on the west coast. Well, yeah, I'm trying to think of it a little. But as good as I can tell, a lot of the national forest land on the west coast is mountainous with many ridges, and a lot of thick timber too, a lot of thick evergreen forests wonderful area. But it's hard to traverse that kin]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>51:12</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. 



Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



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About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



I]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 152 Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-152-sandhill-cranes-in-a-high-desert-meadow/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 12 Aug 2020 17:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8516</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow</p>



<p>Audio Fixed </p>



<p>Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow</p>



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<p>152 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Sandhill Crane _2</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now, and I'm in the back of my truck on the tailgate at a campsite in the Fremont winnaman National Forest in South Central Oregon. Pretty sure that's about where it would be. Maybe it's still Central Oregon. I think it's, it's still in the mountain area before you drop into the Great Basin, near the location that I was for the last podcast when I was talking about hanging out near that cabin, near a meadow. And since then, I've been driving kind of around through these Forest Service roads, checking out different campsites that are laid out in some areas. A lot of areas up here, I think. I think what I was looking at my watch, and it says we're about 4900 feet. I think it was about 5200 feet near maybe the higher parts that I was at. But yeah, this is pretty high up here. I think it's a little snow on the ground in a spot a while back when I was driving a little shady spot that and get it been warmed up, which is weird to see in August. Not much snow out here, though, you know, by any means. So I think I was up here in the springtime in a different area kind of further down and lower and elevation. And I think it was early April. And I could get away ways up the mountain, but I think I got snowed out really quickly before it before you really even break into, you know, the Forest Service roads that are up here. Even the more well-traveled ones just weren't maintained through the winter. These are gravel roads out here. It's like a cinder cone that's cashed up and then spread across the roads, or I think further to the west. They're still using gravel. I think I crossed over from Klamath County, now into Lake County. As I've been making my way, I think on the map app that I've got that onyx off-road app that I've been using a lot out here, it's really been a good benefit to have a road map of all these Forest Service roads and all the trails and the terrain and stuff that I'm looking around. But yeah, it really helps to kind of scan around and sees what's around you and how to get through some places. But I mean, you'll have just real tiny ATV trails. troublingly though, I think I mentioned, they're not really totally differentiated with notes on how bad each different road is. It's just a solid green line. It says you can drive on it. And it might be a well-graded gravel road. That's why like a highway, or it might be a really small and brushy like overgrown powerline road that kind of cuts along a property line. That's what I was on yesterday for about a half-hour, and I was thinking, man, I probably would have taken that main way around. If I had realized it would do this. That's the thing that gets you to because it'll be a good road for about three miles, you know, or long enough that you're like, I don't really want to turn around. And then it'll kind of gradually creep in and creeping more slowly is I suppose less and fewer people have gone out as far as that to keep the road well-traveled and maintained. But yeah, you get that, that the ruts of the tires. And then you get the center strip where you're getting like a bunch of seedlings of trees, these evergreen trees that are growing up about two feet, three feet or so and they haven't really been topped off or knocked over by other trucks go through maybe there's I don't know, higher clearance vehicles that go through most of the time. But even in this truck, it's still just kind of scraped across the bottom of these tiny little seedlings that are all over the place. So I don't know It's okay, it's okay kind of floating around. But I think I made it around like 70 miles or so from the last place that I was camping and I'm now up in the hills at an area out by a big lake. Well, I think it's a reservoir. And I think this area, there's like kind of a natural depression, it's only been 2025 feet lower. But I think what they've done is they've dammed up an area down from here and then I've created a reservoir up here, I think to supply water to the town and farmland that's down lower in elevation from here, which is kind of cool. It's interesting how it's sort of laid out like this up here but I've been walking around up here for a little and I think I'm the only person up here in this area. I think there's a like a forest service campground that's a little ways over it's pretty undeveloped too. There's a I think there's like I don't think there's running water there. But didn't there's a boat ramp or something that's about it. And there's signs that give me information really out here though. It's just it's just undeveloped camping. But there's a picnic table at the spot. I'm at pretty big Rockpile fireplace with the fire grate over it looks like it was a hunting camp up here. I see, I see a couple log poles that are stretched across a tree at probably 12 feet and eight feet or so. I think that's what they use when, like in the fall when they start doing their when hunting season comes into effect and I think this area gets a little more flooded out with people that are drawn tags to go mule deer hunting. And I think if they if they fill their tag, then they'll use these poles to I guess like prep the meat as it's as you get it back in a camp but it's a cool little camp it's a big area to it's it was a swaying to. There's like a rope swing with a wood board at the bottom that you sit on. You can swing around a pine tree up here a lot of pine trees wood as lodgepole pine. So that was called. I think that's what I saw on a sign that said this is an experimental for us and they're gonna test scenarios, you know, regrowth of lodgepole pine, I think I see what they're talking about. They're just real straight, real thin. Not a lot of curvatures and stuff. So I figure like what they do is alright, like a lot of the the White House or you know, polls that we see here are from trees like this. Pretty exciting. Wow. I've been walking around out here. It's still a good bit of trees in this area. But a bit further out for me like I was saying is that lake bed but it's it's really dry right now there's kind of like a creek flowing through part of the center of it. I'm sure. They probably fill it up in the winter time. I gotta remember it's August two. And if I remember, right, it wasn't a heavy rain year. Is that true? It seemed really rainy this winter. But if I remember them talking about the watershed, they're still talking about how it's sort of a drought year again. Take a sip of my cold coffee that I made up earlier. I got my aeropress hat with me and then I picked up another jet boy Have you had one years ago. Jet bows are like one of the best camping inventions that have been around for a while if you don't have a good portable stove and you're going out a lot. It really makes things a lot easier and a lot more comfortable. But yeah, I've gone without making a fire anytime this year than in the summer out here. I keep seeing signs. As I've kind of learned in the past to that during fire season there's there's really like no, no good way. Or at least no legal way to have an open fire pit. You know, like a rock pit with some logs in it, I think is frowned upon up here. I think we've had a lot of forest fires and stuff up here. From stuff like that, but yeah, I've really kind of tried to avoid making campfires but for circumstances where I feel like I'd really need it in the wintertime I have more fun with that sort of stuff. But what I've noticed the most with camping for multiple days and setting up campfires is that is that you really get city and you get dirty a lot faster. Your clothes are kind of impregnated with the smell of like a wet smoke and stuff and I'm not really appreciated the way I feel with that. So yeah, I've kind of found that by doing just a couple lighter things. And also by following the fire regulation rules, I can kind of stay a bit more comfortable while I'm out camping and stuff. So I'm not really in the backcountry and I don't like a big, big expedition hike backpack and deep into the wilderness and anything I've got my truck here, I've got a cooler, I've got a stove and all that stuff. But then even when I'm out camping or backpack and stuff, the Jetboil is just like it's a pound or last or so I don't it's great. It's just an easy thing to carry and, and, and travel around with. So yeah, lit it up this word made my coffee, I got my aeropress with me, which I think is probably my preferred camping coffee making method if you haven't had an aeropress it's probably one of the the easier. And I don't know it's been it's been fine to make a single cup of coffee. Now if you got like four people and you want a lot of coffee the same time, when that'd be a great solution. It's pretty tough. You can kind of do one cup of coffee at a time for me out here. It works great. You can throw in a scoop it's kind of like plastic. I think it's made by aerobie you know that you know when you were in elementary school and you play Frisbee. It was like an arrow B frisbee they make like frisbees, I think they're like a plastics company and they try and find different uses for these plastics that they're creating. So I guess at some high temperature plastic, and it's a coffeemaker Wow. So you get these little filters you throw them in you can probably look it up online to figure out what an aeropress is but I filled up my coffee and stuff and made my cup and my camping cup and threw some half-and-half in there that I had in the cooler and it's already it's already cold. So it's okay. But other camping tools that I found super useful was like I was saying I don't really have a heater or I don't have a fireplace that I'm using our you know like a fire ring or I'm not bringing wood with me through this time here but what I did pick up is an is just like a portable propane heater. I've seen these used by a couple Other people before, but it's sort of the size of a briefcase or so. And it's it takes one of those, this portable green propane pans, you can pick up for three or four bucks at a store. And you throw that in there. Yeah, light the pilot light. And then it's got this, like ceramic pad that throws off heat. So it's great to have and that's really like my fireplace replacement as exciting as that sounds, but it's pretty safe working really well been really stable and easy to use. But yeah, I got my tailgate down and I've got that like heater going in. At night. It's an it's about as good as a fire you know, you don't have any of the the exhaust or the smoke and stuff coming off of it. So it's a nice clean heat source and stuff. And it's fun to if you want to move you're like oh, you know, I like my cat. But let's walk out over here like what I did last night is a shut the heater off. While I was after I made dinner and I sit in my truck. And then I walked out probably about 100 yards into that open area as you get near the edge of the lake bed. And then I sat down over there and then kick the heater on again. Boom. I'm set up and hanging out and warm. And yeah, it gets cold up here at night. Really, I think the last couple of days have been kind of chilly. Well, least like yesterday was pretty cold for I don't know what day in August. You think it'd be? You think it'd be a hot one. But yeah, it was pretty, pretty cool. Yesterday, I think it was probably like 73 degrees as a high. It was really comfortable. Or I appreciated that as opposed to the heat like I was I was knocked out by the heat. I think it was like around 100 when I was out in the john de area a few weeks back. And man Yeah, it was just wiped out by that. But it was 100 degrees. I'm driving around my truck with the windows down and I have AC in this thing. And I just like I have this mask, right? It's a gator. Yeah, everybody's got a mask nowadays. So I've got one of these Gators. And I would just constantly be like dunking that and ice water. And then like using that to cool off. But man, yeah, throwing that around your neck when it's covered in ice water is a great way to cool off. I think that was like some, I don't know some like gimmicky product back in the early 2000s was something like that where you'd you'd fill up like some something wrapped around your neck and it had ice cubes and water in it. You go on a walk and stay cool in the summer. Now that's super cool coffee. But yeah, having this heater out here has been great going out to anywhere you want setting up a chair, set up a heater, it's a pretty comfortable way to do some stuff. And it works well for doing some photo stuff too, because you can just kind of take off from where you're at, take your camera bag, take this little heater, and then set up your tripod. Sit down said it became a staff get your shots ready for like that evening time. Because you can sit there pretty comfortably and just you know, stay warm and stay pretty comfortable. And I wouldn't really take it too far out, you know if I was if I was traveling pretty far. But if it's if it's just kind of like a short, short little jaunt down to a spot where I'm fishing are where I'm going to be taking some photos. It seems like it's been working pretty good for that sort of stuff. But yeah, kind of fun having a couple of things around, I brought to bear a few other things, but I don't know, I'll probably get into the other camp stuff later. It's been pretty smooth though, keep it out here and traveling around. I've been trying to do some more rock counting stuff. I was learning about some of the privileges that you have on public lands to do rock counting. It's cool you can look this up yourselves too but I think there's like rock counting. It's like the hobby of going around and collecting interesting rocks that you find you know out while you're traveling around and so legally you still get to pick those things up from public land areas, unless there's some specific restriction in that area. But yeah, you can go around and do rock counting all you want so I think it's its most common stones that you can you can just pick up with no, or you know, just you're right on public land to pick up the rocks he come past so it's been kind of cool going around and picking up appearances in a bunch of city and in raw form stuff, which is pretty cool. coming across some Jasper's some agate supports some petrified wood. That's been cool. I think last week I found a chunk of petrified wood when I was walking around and I thought hey, nice cool like this. And there's some areas in Oregon where there's more of that than others. I think it was part of part of the land development of how I guess how much wood would have been trapped quickly under mud. Is that what it is? I don't know. There's some there's some like specific process of how petrified wood gets created from really old trees and you know how that that mineral change happens. So I was learning about agate to agates from wood also I didn't really understand this, I think agates from when a piece of wood is buried in lava from a volcanic flow, someone that knows about rocks really would probably be able to tell me more quickly. But I think from something I was understanding recently, if you don't listen to it, check out the meat eater podcast, there's a bunch of really good stuff on there. I think it's hosted by Steve rinella. And they normally have like some really good guests on to talk about. Most of the time, it's through the focus, or through the lens of like hunting trips and stuff. But really, I've learned so much about like outdoors outdoor management. And then you know, including stuff like this, like rock counting, and geology and all sorts of like intersectional ideas that are about the outdoors and outdoorsmen ship. So really appreciate it kind of some of the things I've learned from that. But one of the things I learned from that from an episode, I think maybe back in early May was about some rock counting stuff that they were doing, where they were going out looking for agate. And I think they were out in the Yellowstone valley where they were looking for agate, one of the things that they explained is from one of the the old Yellowstone eruptions, there was a flow of magma that covered a forest or you know, a lot of trees. And then what would happen is that once that wood was encased in magma, the wood the carbon would burn away, and then it would leave a pocket where that wood had been. And then over a long amount of time, water groundwater would seep into that pocket, and then evaporate out. But as it would seep in, it would bring a certain set of minerals in it. And then as that mineral deposit would build, it would build an agate. And that's how you get these agate stones, I have this one at home. That's that's it looks like, it looks like an onion almost or like if you've ever seen the cross section of a really big piece of hail is sort of like that, where it's got all these different layers to it that have been created at different times at different stages as it developed. But it was pretty cool. Yeah, going around and try and find some agate. And really cool stuff are really, really cool colors really cool. Like, just the clarity of some of them is awesome. It's really cool. I think a little further out from here, you can start finding opal, which is cool, I don't think I've really found a lot of opal. I've heard a lot about that. In the i think i think it's more common and more popular like out in Nevada, I think like north-western Nevada is pretty common for finding opal, or deposits of opal rocks in that area. And that's sort of similar to an agate, at least in look of that kind of clear, Crystal Levy, look of Iraq, which is always fun to find that I've been traveling around up here, and it's kind of High Country up here. But I've been traveling around and yeah, trying to do some rock counting stuff, trying to pick up some different things. And you really can find a lot if you're keeping your eyes to the ground and picking up pieces and chips and chunks of different rocks. And Stephanie you kind of collect through them and see what you got and what you want to keep and stuff. But as I was understanding the rules are rock counting, you can get into I think it's 25 pounds of rock a day from BLM land across Oregon. And I believe it's 10 pounds of rock per day from national forest land, really, it's a lot of rock. Also, in addition to that you can pick up 125 pound or more specific specimen from I think each location. So like if you find like one big rock that's out 50 pounds or 30 pounds or something like that you can you can take that rock as well and not be in violation of your rockhounding picking limits. Pretty, pretty fun. But it's cool. Yeah, you can go around and pick up a lot of stuff. And I think it's with a maximum of 250 pounds collected from each property management location through a year. So you can pick up 250 pounds of rocks over the course of a year. And I think you can't do that in a day, I suppose. Some information sort of sort of states both things, so I'm not really sure which one it is but from what I understood from looking at the National Forest Service website, I think there's some information about rockhounding in Oregon, and some of the areas that I was going to be I was 25 pounds a day on BLM 10 pounds a day on national forest land and that and yeah, that's cool. That's a lot. You can also go around and pick up firewood which I didn't really know about. You need like a permit in some circumstances if you're trying to collect it commercially. But if you're collecting it for private personal use, even just like home use, there's a lot of wood that you can pick up from managed public lands. Some I think there's like some specific areas where they want you to be doing that and some specific areas where they don't want you to be doing that. I think if it's Well, I'm not sure not all downed would but I think if if, if it's down and it's collectible, I think you can collect that in a lot of areas. So yeah, I went through like in the springtime I went through an area of BLM land and I filled up my truck with with a bunch of logs that had been taken down and I think stacked up in an area and yeah, I just loaded up my truck and I have firewood for a while you can get like a I think you can get it's it's a limit similar to the Rock County so you can get like a couple cords of wood a year and collect that for personal home use I think if you're trying to sell firewood then you have to go through the BLM or the Forest Service to get a permit for the area where you're going to be doing wood cutting I've only just picked up down wood that you pick up kind of like for campfire so it's like you know if you're going around trying to pick up firewood for camp it's kind of a similar process to that I'm not really like cutting down on fresh trees and aging them but but there's there's a qualification for that too. You can go around and if it's a specifically designated area for that kind of thing. You can go around and actually you know, use a tool and cut down a tree and process it and take it home and cover up your stump or something like that. And you know naturalize the stump that you cut but but yeah, there's there's a lot of stuff you can do out on public land I wasn't really quite quite aware of in every way. But yeah, it's been cool being out here. Doing some rock counting stuff, trying to find some, some cool pieces. Really a lot of obsidian is what I've been finding, which has been fun. A lot of a lot of like volcanic rock stuff out here. And some of them are cool, you know, but they're not that. Like they're not like a gem or anything. It's just like, you know, a basalt stone from a volcano. But it's cool. Yeah, these rock counting stuff has been pretty good. Oh, what was the other stuff I wanted to talk about. So I think I saw what we've been seeing. I saw a helicopter. There's a thunderstorm. That was like when I was last doing a podcast right so there was like a big time thunderstorm that was rolling through that last camp that I was at when I was podcasting and then rained a bunch after that vows nice. Stayed nice and dry and pretty warm and tracking the truck canopy and stuff waited out the rain then it cleared off just like a couple hours later is that that thunderstorm system moved past us and then got cleared off got cold got pretty cold. I layered up and I walked out into that field now with a ton of wet grass and stuff. walked out there brought the heater like I was talking about and posted it up out in that Meadow to check out the stars and stuff from that you can see Scorpio almost all a Scorpio it's really cool when you got a strong Southern view of the sky. And for Miss area in Oregon you can't quite see the dip in the tail of Scorpio is a kind of scoops down and it comes back up with the stinger at the end. You just barely or I get out you can you can definitely imagine how it kind of scoops around but yeah, at where it is now. This time in August. I think it's it's kind of tipping over and gone. not visible. And that spot but I think I see. Was it Jupiter? You see just past Sagittarius as you're looking to the south. Then near that just a little bit further over to the east on that same ecliptic line you see Saturn. I think they both near the position where they'd be at opposition. They're not as bright as they were a few years ago, you notice, but they're still really bright. Really cool to see. And then if you stay up late enough, maybe around midnight or so. You'll see Mars rise over on the eastern horizon. And it looks real real coppery red and really noticeable really cool. But I think it came up right about the same or about an hour or so after the moon rose last night. So tonight or probably rise along the same location as Mars. That's interesting. Yeah. Yeah. Would those cool, check it out that stuff. And I was checking it out the other night after that thunderstorm out in that field. So it's kind of fun, kind of staying up and check it out some stuff. But then I went to bed. And then I got up the next morning and this was what was really cool. As I looked out the field. I hadn't really seen any animals out there. I heard a few a few birds like a raven, and a couple other things. I think I heard a turkey gobble. Not sure though but I looked out looked across the field and I saw that two of the biggest birds I have ever seen. There. They are the biggest birds I've ever seen. I'm really not sure what it is it looks like similar to Blue herring, so I figured some kind of herring, maybe it's a crane. But I would, I would guess if it was standing up, it would be almost four feet tall. It really looked like a small deer or a dog, like in mass and size, as you know, kind of like the feathery body if it wasn't popped up in a big way, but there are two of them. And yeah, it looked like dinosaurs out there. In this middle of this field. I've never seen a bird like that it looked like like a blue herring. That was about twice a day I see a buck. It's at my two o'clock walk into my three o'clock. 1.2 point 3.4 point. It's a two or three point buck. It doesn't see me. That's cool. Little buck cruising through. I think it's a mule deer out here. I sound like a group of mule deer down in the lake bed this morning. And when I started wrestling around, they they all kind of started run or one of them kind of got excited and then ran off there. They're probably like two or 300 yards from me. And I pulled up the binoculars as scouten Yeah, they're just booking it across this open lake bed. And then they got tired and stopped and started eating grass like almost right away. So it's kind of funny how they they kind of move around but yet this guy's like no. What? 200 feet walking around can't cool, dude. Thanks for camping with me. What is this in two giant birds. I saw these two giant birds Thunderbirds. They're awesome. They're Brown, kind of Sandy tan colored. And they had like a beaked face like a real pointy beaked face really similar to a blue herring. It looked like it looked like an emu or an ostrich or something out in this field. It was diet. But it looked I'd say like I've seen a lot of blue herrings, they're way more slender than this. This really had that kind of big kind of round full body thing and then had that crane neck that kind of the s curved crane neck and it was just kind of on the ground walking with its buddy. And they were cruising around poking at the ground trying to get grubs or whatever. But But yeah, really cool to see him and then so I was watching them for a bit I had him in the binoculars I think I got a couple pictures. But like I was explaining that last podcast smartly. I have a wide angle lens with me, which is you 17 to 40 millimeter so as way out super wide. So you just so you know, no telephoto my back. So didn't get the wildlife shot. That would have been cool, which is fine. And I accept but I did get a couple pictures of it that probably poorly show two big things out in the distance. And I mean, it looks like it could be dogs could be deer. Or it could be birds. So it was pretty awesome to see. But as I walked out a little bit, I exposed myself into the sunlight. They got they got side of me and then they they both let out these for like maybe 30 seconds to a minute or so. They both just kind of stood around and made these sort of warning or territorial croaks. These like these like three beat croaks that would just echo across this whole this whole valley that are this whole Meadow area that I was in it just carried on four acres. They're probably like an acre or two away from me at that time. And yeah, they just let out these loud croaks kind of morning that these up, standing dude predator out in the distance. But yeah, then they kind of sorted it into flight, but they just kind of started back off up into the hill, up into the tree line. And then I tucked back myself back up into the tree line by my truck, made another cup of coffee that morning, and then I saw him kind of pop out again and poking around that. That Meadow again, but it was really cool giant birds, I really would say they're like four feet tall. Body Mass section, it seemed like about two feet or so. And you know, like kind of on their leg, maybe 24 inches off the ground. Yeah, it just seemed like a really big bird. If I was standing right next to it. I'd be like, Whoa, man, this is this is a real critter. So it was fun. I've never seen a bird like that out there before I've heard about. Some of those are some birds like that before I remember hearing like, it's like a ground colloquial family story that I think like a great uncle of mine had had probably similar to this area too, which is interesting. I like that. But he said that he had woken up one morning and looked out and saw these prehistoric looking Thunderbirds he called him and I think I had an experience like a two. I think it was fun. I'm sure it's totally a normal animal. It's probably used to be around a lake or something. You know, that's sort of what it seemed like is just like a giant Pelican or crane or something that you would see out by the ocean, but to see how You're just walking around sagebrush in a field in a meadow at 730 in the morning, it's just like, Wow, look at that. I thought I'd see a deer out there, but no giant birds. So that was really cool. Never seen any, any birds like that before that was fun later in the day saw a few Hawks. Those are cool to see they were watching me. I came out here to this reservoir area, and there is an area where there's water that's backed up, but I saw an osprey fly out over real high, probably 100 feet up above the water, then it kind of kind of did these tight circles. And then it did this big kind of quick drop with its wings still out back but kind of kind of braced drops down about 30 feet did another circle and that tuck those wings in and Dove straight boom down in the water spash grab the fish look like a three inch or four inch Sunfish. And that aspect grabbed it, crushed it and bolted off to its its tree branch perch to have lunch. It was really cool. I love watching this Ospreys fish, it's really interesting to see their their behaviors and stuff. You've got an osprey and are like, you know, like a bird of prey like that. And now it operates in juxtaposition to other birds that we see their behaviors that more commonly. And it's just really interesting to see, like how they operate, how they work and sort of their I don't know, their attitude of their behavior is just kind of interesting. Or just seemed like really present. You know, like, I think they say that, like eagles are carrying eaters. Is that what it is? So there's sort of like a vulture where they'll eat dead things. I think hawks do that a bit too. But hawks, hawks will pass. I think hawks like to pounce on mice stuff, but you never see a hawk fish, like I see ospreay fishing all the time, it's just really cool to see that kind of connection, or that kind of that kind of development between their ecosystem of an osprey knowing instinctually knowing from its parents that, you know, it's because they nest the nest really like for a long time. So you need to have those big nasty return to those nests instead of the giant, wide nest and the snags. And they're just like really impressive lifecycles they've gotten but it was cool. Check it out. smartspace always something I like that additional to that. I saw a helicopter cruise by like I've seen there's a lightning storm just the other day. So I guess it must have started fire somewhere out here. But I saw this helicopter cruise over right near the reservoir that I'm at. I was a couple miles away from at the time, but I saw a reservoir come or I saw a helicopter fly over the reservoir with a big bucket hanging from it. And I watched it to a cycle of like two drops or it wouldn't drop here but it would scoop up water from this reservoir and then fly out to wherever beyond my distance wherever it needed to go to dump on this fire. putting out fires with the helicopter. It was cool to see but yeah, it was really wow. No way the helicopters cruising right here, picking up a scoop of water and then bolting it over to wherever that fire needs to go out. But it was a trip to see that it was cool. I wonder what that be like to be you know that, Hey, you got your firefighter but with the helicopter, it'd be a trip to be like, well, let's ramp up the helicopter. And it'd be a weird to be a pilot to do that. You know, like I hear about being a helicopter pilot, but I just think it'd be really strange to be hovering. Drop a big sack into the water. And then boom, scoop up hundreds of pounds gallons and gallons and gallons of water. I mean water is heavy, right? You know, so you have to like think about that. But then scoop up all that change how you're flying to adjust to all the new weight that you've added to the to the vehicle that you're flying in while you're flying it. That's what I think it'd be strange if you load a vehicle or something and then you've got that weight in it and then you fly that around. But as you're riding a light vehicle like a light helicopter, cruising down picking up big, like 1000 pounds of water actually can't pick that up but picking up all the water that it can and then lifting off and taken off again that just be so strange to fly around the mountains picking up picking up big buckets of water and then dropping it on fires. It just seems like a weird way to spend your days out here in the high desert. But I'm sure it'll be probably some cool stories. I don't know. Yeah, cool stuff to see that helicopter. cool to see. This Thunderbirds cool. Do some rockhounding cool. See some mule deer cruising around out here saw that bug Oh, endless chipmunks. I see chipmunk perched up getting some sign right now. Nice. But yeah, endless. Endless chipmunks. Many squirrels no mosquitoes at all. That's been great man. I got beat up by mosquitoes up in the Cascades. I think last week I'm still kind of nursing my way back to health from that. That really hurt. It's x those mountain mosquitoes, when they're held by those bogs and marshes and lakes leftover from the snow melt. And it seems like now in July and August is when they're really just getting going. But man, they're brutal, hungry mosquitoes. And I hit myself a deep a couple times. it slowed him down. But man, I could have used 50 or so last mosquito bites that day, that's for sure. So, yeah, good times, but have fun, get beat up by mosquitoes, but but not on this trip. So I'm having a good time. I think it's a little colder this time too. So that's probably part of what's dampened down the number of mosquitoes and really out here in this higher desert area, I think you get a little lucky with mosquitoes if you're not around like a pretty heavy body of water. So in a lot of areas I've been it's been pretty dry. So are you it's like pretty far away from a lake and pretty far away from like, a bigger river or Creek source, that'd be a mosquito swamp. So thank goodness, I've stayed away from that for a little bit. But having a good time out here, I'm going to be driving around for a good part of the day, checking out some more Forest Service routes. And looking at this map, there's just so many areas you can go from you can spend, you could probably go I could probably go down into Nevada, I you know, I'd cross a couple highways or something. But you could probably drive all the way down in Nevada, mostly just taking these Forest Service roads. I think Dan is like the Fremont than the winner. And then you can drop down into the I think Humboldt I think it would be the Humboldt National Forest. Yeah, you can stay out on these back country roads and stay off the I mean, you know, there's no towns or houses or anything on here. So I think just about everything is a bad country road. But you can stay on those and get down into I don't know Nevada, or Northeastern California and spend a bunch of time just kind of tooling around out in this high desert country. So it's pretty cool. I've enjoyed checking it out out here. And I want to try and get back out here and do some more stuff. I think it's a it's a good good kind of location before it gets too deep into the fall. And I think this is probably one of the the faster places to get snowed out in in October or October, November, depending on the snow levels that year. I remember being out with my dad, October 17 I think we were camping at an area in Eastern Oregon, really still just kind of the lowland area of Eastern Oregon, where you know you're not you're not climbing up real high to a mountaintop or anything like that kind of like where I am now. But it started snowing snowed through the valley snowed all across the highway when for years, we were trying to trying to drive back the blei and a couple inches or something like that. But still, you know for like early October there's still hunters out there and campers and stuff. And yeah, I just get hit with the the first couple couple inches of snow. It's good times, but I'm not sure it makes it cool for people that are more used to this now and stuff I'm sure it's kind of an easy transition when you're doing some hunting stuff to get out and deal with but man I do not like early season wet snow if it stick in and kind of deal with that. But man that you know, just like after it half hour, it's just standing water is what it feels like. It's just that slushy stuff, you can't even walk in through it all splash now. It's rough. So I'm glad to kind of avoid that most of the time. But up here in the mountains is cool. Hey, the helicopters back I think you might be able to hear that. I'll probably noise gate that sound out. But yeah, I hear that chopper flying over and it looks like it's probably gonna head over to that reservoir again. So again, I've had those fires, shoot. But I'm gonna wrap it up here, I suppose. And probably come back with another podcast in the next couple days to talk about more of the summer camping trips I've been out on and I think I'm going to try and get home process and photos, process some stuff together and then do a little retrospective about some of the last couple camping trips that that had not yet talked about on the podcast. So thanks for tuning in and listen to me. jabber from my tailgate, high atop the Fremont winnaman National Forest in the mountains by Lakeside camping out. Thanks for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can find more information about me at Billy Newman photo comm shoot me a message or feel free to support the podcast to go to Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, or I think patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo if you'd like to help out and send me some bucks to support the travel and photo stuff that I'm up to and what I'm able to put together so it always helps. always appreciate it. But thank you guys very much for bothering to listen. And to check out this episode of The Billy Newman a photo podcast Talk to you next time.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow



Audio Fixed 



Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Sa]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow</p>



<p>Audio Fixed </p>



<p>Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow</p>



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<p>152 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Sandhill Crane _2</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now, and I'm in the back of my truck on the tailgate at a campsite in the Fremont winnaman National Forest in South Central Oregon. Pretty sure that's about where it would be. Maybe it's still Central Oregon. I think it's, it's still in the mountain area before you drop into the Great Basin, near the location that I was for the last podcast when I was talking about hanging out near that cabin, near a meadow. And since then, I've been driving kind of around through these Forest Service roads, checking out different campsites that are laid out in some areas. A lot of areas up here, I think. I think what I was looking at my watch, and it says we're about 4900 feet. I think it was about 5200 feet near maybe the higher parts that I was at. But yeah, this is pretty high up here. I think it's a little snow on the ground in a spot a while back when I was driving a little shady spot that and get it been warmed up, which is weird to see in August. Not much snow out here, though, you know, by any means. So I think I was up here in the springtime in a different area kind of further down and lower and elevation. And I think it was early April. And I could get away ways up the mountain, but I think I got snowed out really quickly before it before you really even break into, you know, the Forest Service roads that are up here. Even the more well-traveled ones just weren't maintained through the winter. These are gravel roads out here. It's like a cinder cone that's cashed up and then spread across the roads, or I think further to the west. They're still using gravel. I think I crossed over from Klamath County, now into Lake County. As I've been making my way, I think on the map app that I've got that onyx off-road app that I've been using a lot out here, it's really been a good benefit to have a road map of all these Forest Service roads and all the trails and the terrain and stuff that I'm looking around. But yeah, it really helps to kind of scan around and sees what's around you and how to get through some places. But I mean, you'll have just real tiny ATV trails. troublingly though, I think I mentioned, they're not really totally differentiated with notes on how bad each different road is. It's just a solid green line. It says you can drive on it. And it might be a well-graded gravel road. That's why like a highway, or it might be a really small and brushy like overgrown powerline road that kind of cuts along a property line. That's what I was on yesterday for about a half-hour, and I was thinking, man, I probably would have taken that main way around. If I had realized it would do this. That's the thing that gets you to because it'll be a good road for about three miles, you know, or long enough that you're like, I don't really want to turn around. And then it'll kind of gradually creep in and creeping more slowly is I suppose less and fewer people have gone out as far as that to keep the road well-traveled and maintained. But yeah, you get that, that the ruts of the tires. And then you get the center strip where you're getting like a bunch of seedlings of trees, these evergreen trees that are growing up about two feet, three feet or so and they haven't really been topped off or knocked over by other trucks go through maybe there's I don't know, higher clearance vehicles that go through most of the time. But even in this truck, it's still just kind of scraped across the bottom of these tiny little seedlings that are all over the place. So I don't know It's okay, it's okay kind of floating around. But I think I made it around like 70 miles or so from the last place that I was camping and I'm now up in the hills at an area out by a big lake. Well, I think it's a reservoir. And I think this area, there's like kind of a natural depression, it's only been 2025 feet lower. But I think what they've done is they've dammed up an area down from here and then I've created a reservoir up here, I think to supply water to the town and farmland that's down lower in elevation from here, which is kind of cool. It's interesting how it's sort of laid out like this up here but I've been walking around up here for a little and I think I'm the only person up here in this area. I think there's a like a forest service campground that's a little ways over it's pretty undeveloped too. There's a I think there's like I don't think there's running water there. But didn't there's a boat ramp or something that's about it. And there's signs that give me information really out here though. It's just it's just undeveloped camping. But there's a picnic table at the spot. I'm at pretty big Rockpile fireplace with the fire grate over it looks like it was a hunting camp up here. I see, I see a couple log poles that are stretched across a tree at probably 12 feet and eight feet or so. I think that's what they use when, like in the fall when they start doing their when hunting season comes into effect and I think this area gets a little more flooded out with people that are drawn tags to go mule deer hunting. And I think if they if they fill their tag, then they'll use these poles to I guess like prep the meat as it's as you get it back in a camp but it's a cool little camp it's a big area to it's it was a swaying to. There's like a rope swing with a wood board at the bottom that you sit on. You can swing around a pine tree up here a lot of pine trees wood as lodgepole pine. So that was called. I think that's what I saw on a sign that said this is an experimental for us and they're gonna test scenarios, you know, regrowth of lodgepole pine, I think I see what they're talking about. They're just real straight, real thin. Not a lot of curvatures and stuff. So I figure like what they do is alright, like a lot of the the White House or you know, polls that we see here are from trees like this. Pretty exciting. Wow. I've been walking around out here. It's still a good bit of trees in this area. But a bit further out for me like I was saying is that lake bed but it's it's really dry right now there's kind of like a creek flowing through part of the center of it. I'm sure. They probably fill it up in the winter time. I gotta remember it's August two. And if I remember, right, it wasn't a heavy rain year. Is that true? It seemed really rainy this winter. But if I remember them talking about the watershed, they're still talking about how it's sort of a drought year again. Take a sip of my cold coffee that I made up earlier. I got my aeropress hat with me and then I picked up another jet boy Have you had one years ago. Jet bows are like one of the best camping inventions that have been around for a while if you don't have a good portable stove and you're going out a lot. It really makes things a lot easier and a lot more comfortable. But yeah, I've gone without making a fire anytime this year than in the summer out here. I keep seeing signs. As I've kind of learned in the past to that during fire season there's there's really like no, no good way. Or at least no legal way to have an open fire pit. You know, like a rock pit with some logs in it, I think is frowned upon up here. I think we've had a lot of forest fires and stuff up here. From stuff like that, but yeah, I've really kind of tried to avoid making campfires but for circumstances where I feel like I'd really need it in the wintertime I have more fun with that sort of stuff. But what I've noticed the most with camping for multiple days and setting up campfires is that is that you really get city and you get dirty a lot faster. Your clothes are kind of impregnated with the smell of like a wet smoke and stuff and I'm not really appreciated the way I feel with that. So yeah, I've kind of found that by doing just a couple lighter things. And also by following the fire regulation rules, I can kind of stay a bit more comfortable while I'm out camping and stuff. So I'm not really in the backcountry and I don't like a big, big expedition hike backpack and deep into the wilderness and anything I've got my truck here, I've got a cooler, I've got a stove and all that stuff. But then even when I'm out camping or backpack and stuff, the Jetboil is just like it's a pound or last or so I don't it's great. It's just an easy thing to carry and, and, and travel around with. So yeah, lit it up this word made my coffee, I got my aeropress with me, which I think is probably my preferred camping coffee making method if you haven't had an aeropress it's probably one of the the easier. And I don't know it's been it's been fine to make a single cup of coffee. Now if you got like four people and you want a lot of coffee the same time, when that'd be a great solution. It's pretty tough. You can kind of do one cup of coffee at a time for me out here. It works great. You can throw in a scoop it's kind of like plastic. I think it's made by aerobie you know that you know when you were in elementary school and you play Frisbee. It was like an arrow B frisbee they make like frisbees, I think they're like a plastics company and they try and find different uses for these plastics that they're creating. So I guess at some high temperature plastic, and it's a coffeemaker Wow. So you get these little filters you throw them in you can probably look it up online to figure out what an aeropress is but I filled up my coffee and stuff and made my cup and my camping cup and threw some half-and-half in there that I had in the cooler and it's already it's already cold. So it's okay. But other camping tools that I found super useful was like I was saying I don't really have a heater or I don't have a fireplace that I'm using our you know like a fire ring or I'm not bringing wood with me through this time here but what I did pick up is an is just like a portable propane heater. I've seen these used by a couple Other people before, but it's sort of the size of a briefcase or so. And it's it takes one of those, this portable green propane pans, you can pick up for three or four bucks at a store. And you throw that in there. Yeah, light the pilot light. And then it's got this, like ceramic pad that throws off heat. So it's great to have and that's really like my fireplace replacement as exciting as that sounds, but it's pretty safe working really well been really stable and easy to use. But yeah, I got my tailgate down and I've got that like heater going in. At night. It's an it's about as good as a fire you know, you don't have any of the the exhaust or the smoke and stuff coming off of it. So it's a nice clean heat source and stuff. And it's fun to if you want to move you're like oh, you know, I like my cat. But let's walk out over here like what I did last night is a shut the heater off. While I was after I made dinner and I sit in my truck. And then I walked out probably about 100 yards into that open area as you get near the edge of the lake bed. And then I sat down over there and then kick the heater on again. Boom. I'm set up and hanging out and warm. And yeah, it gets cold up here at night. Really, I think the last couple of days have been kind of chilly. Well, least like yesterday was pretty cold for I don't know what day in August. You think it'd be? You think it'd be a hot one. But yeah, it was pretty, pretty cool. Yesterday, I think it was probably like 73 degrees as a high. It was really comfortable. Or I appreciated that as opposed to the heat like I was I was knocked out by the heat. I think it was like around 100 when I was out in the john de area a few weeks back. And man Yeah, it was just wiped out by that. But it was 100 degrees. I'm driving around my truck with the windows down and I have AC in this thing. And I just like I have this mask, right? It's a gator. Yeah, everybody's got a mask nowadays. So I've got one of these Gators. And I would just constantly be like dunking that and ice water. And then like using that to cool off. But man, yeah, throwing that around your neck when it's covered in ice water is a great way to cool off. I think that was like some, I don't know some like gimmicky product back in the early 2000s was something like that where you'd you'd fill up like some something wrapped around your neck and it had ice cubes and water in it. You go on a walk and stay cool in the summer. Now that's super cool coffee. But yeah, having this heater out here has been great going out to anywhere you want setting up a chair, set up a heater, it's a pretty comfortable way to do some stuff. And it works well for doing some photo stuff too, because you can just kind of take off from where you're at, take your camera bag, take this little heater, and then set up your tripod. Sit down said it became a staff get your shots ready for like that evening time. Because you can sit there pretty comfortably and just you know, stay warm and stay pretty comfortable. And I wouldn't really take it too far out, you know if I was if I was traveling pretty far. But if it's if it's just kind of like a short, short little jaunt down to a spot where I'm fishing are where I'm going to be taking some photos. It seems like it's been working pretty good for that sort of stuff. But yeah, kind of fun having a couple of things around, I brought to bear a few other things, but I don't know, I'll probably get into the other camp stuff later. It's been pretty smooth though, keep it out here and traveling around. I've been trying to do some more rock counting stuff. I was learning about some of the privileges that you have on public lands to do rock counting. It's cool you can look this up yourselves too but I think there's like rock counting. It's like the hobby of going around and collecting interesting rocks that you find you know out while you're traveling around and so legally you still get to pick those things up from public land areas, unless there's some specific restriction in that area. But yeah, you can go around and do rock counting all you want so I think it's its most common stones that you can you can just pick up with no, or you know, just you're right on public land to pick up the rocks he come past so it's been kind of cool going around and picking up appearances in a bunch of city and in raw form stuff, which is pretty cool. coming across some Jasper's some agate supports some petrified wood. That's been cool. I think last week I found a chunk of petrified wood when I was walking around and I thought hey, nice cool like this. And there's some areas in Oregon where there's more of that than others. I think it was part of part of the land development of how I guess how much wood would have been trapped quickly under mud. Is that what it is? I don't know. There's some there's some like specific process of how petrified wood gets created from really old trees and you know how that that mineral change happens. So I was learning about agate to agates from wood also I didn't really understand this, I think agates from when a piece of wood is buried in lava from a volcanic flow, someone that knows about rocks really would probably be able to tell me more quickly. But I think from something I was understanding recently, if you don't listen to it, check out the meat eater podcast, there's a bunch of really good stuff on there. I think it's hosted by Steve rinella. And they normally have like some really good guests on to talk about. Most of the time, it's through the focus, or through the lens of like hunting trips and stuff. But really, I've learned so much about like outdoors outdoor management. And then you know, including stuff like this, like rock counting, and geology and all sorts of like intersectional ideas that are about the outdoors and outdoorsmen ship. So really appreciate it kind of some of the things I've learned from that. But one of the things I learned from that from an episode, I think maybe back in early May was about some rock counting stuff that they were doing, where they were going out looking for agate. And I think they were out in the Yellowstone valley where they were looking for agate, one of the things that they explained is from one of the the old Yellowstone eruptions, there was a flow of magma that covered a forest or you know, a lot of trees. And then what would happen is that once that wood was encased in magma, the wood the carbon would burn away, and then it would leave a pocket where that wood had been. And then over a long amount of time, water groundwater would seep into that pocket, and then evaporate out. But as it would seep in, it would bring a certain set of minerals in it. And then as that mineral deposit would build, it would build an agate. And that's how you get these agate stones, I have this one at home. That's that's it looks like, it looks like an onion almost or like if you've ever seen the cross section of a really big piece of hail is sort of like that, where it's got all these different layers to it that have been created at different times at different stages as it developed. But it was pretty cool. Yeah, going around and try and find some agate. And really cool stuff are really, really cool colors really cool. Like, just the clarity of some of them is awesome. It's really cool. I think a little further out from here, you can start finding opal, which is cool, I don't think I've really found a lot of opal. I've heard a lot about that. In the i think i think it's more common and more popular like out in Nevada, I think like north-western Nevada is pretty common for finding opal, or deposits of opal rocks in that area. And that's sort of similar to an agate, at least in look of that kind of clear, Crystal Levy, look of Iraq, which is always fun to find that I've been traveling around up here, and it's kind of High Country up here. But I've been traveling around and yeah, trying to do some rock counting stuff, trying to pick up some different things. And you really can find a lot if you're keeping your eyes to the ground and picking up pieces and chips and chunks of different rocks. And Stephanie you kind of collect through them and see what you got and what you want to keep and stuff. But as I was understanding the rules are rock counting, you can get into I think it's 25 pounds of rock a day from BLM land across Oregon. And I believe it's 10 pounds of rock per day from national forest land, really, it's a lot of rock. Also, in addition to that you can pick up 125 pound or more specific specimen from I think each location. So like if you find like one big rock that's out 50 pounds or 30 pounds or something like that you can you can take that rock as well and not be in violation of your rockhounding picking limits. Pretty, pretty fun. But it's cool. Yeah, you can go around and pick up a lot of stuff. And I think it's with a maximum of 250 pounds collected from each property management location through a year. So you can pick up 250 pounds of rocks over the course of a year. And I think you can't do that in a day, I suppose. Some information sort of sort of states both things, so I'm not really sure which one it is but from what I understood from looking at the National Forest Service website, I think there's some information about rockhounding in Oregon, and some of the areas that I was going to be I was 25 pounds a day on BLM 10 pounds a day on national forest land and that and yeah, that's cool. That's a lot. You can also go around and pick up firewood which I didn't really know about. You need like a permit in some circumstances if you're trying to collect it commercially. But if you're collecting it for private personal use, even just like home use, there's a lot of wood that you can pick up from managed public lands. Some I think there's like some specific areas where they want you to be doing that and some specific areas where they don't want you to be doing that. I think if it's Well, I'm not sure not all downed would but I think if if, if it's down and it's collectible, I think you can collect that in a lot of areas. So yeah, I went through like in the springtime I went through an area of BLM land and I filled up my truck with with a bunch of logs that had been taken down and I think stacked up in an area and yeah, I just loaded up my truck and I have firewood for a while you can get like a I think you can get it's it's a limit similar to the Rock County so you can get like a couple cords of wood a year and collect that for personal home use I think if you're trying to sell firewood then you have to go through the BLM or the Forest Service to get a permit for the area where you're going to be doing wood cutting I've only just picked up down wood that you pick up kind of like for campfire so it's like you know if you're going around trying to pick up firewood for camp it's kind of a similar process to that I'm not really like cutting down on fresh trees and aging them but but there's there's a qualification for that too. You can go around and if it's a specifically designated area for that kind of thing. You can go around and actually you know, use a tool and cut down a tree and process it and take it home and cover up your stump or something like that. And you know naturalize the stump that you cut but but yeah, there's there's a lot of stuff you can do out on public land I wasn't really quite quite aware of in every way. But yeah, it's been cool being out here. Doing some rock counting stuff, trying to find some, some cool pieces. Really a lot of obsidian is what I've been finding, which has been fun. A lot of a lot of like volcanic rock stuff out here. And some of them are cool, you know, but they're not that. Like they're not like a gem or anything. It's just like, you know, a basalt stone from a volcano. But it's cool. Yeah, these rock counting stuff has been pretty good. Oh, what was the other stuff I wanted to talk about. So I think I saw what we've been seeing. I saw a helicopter. There's a thunderstorm. That was like when I was last doing a podcast right so there was like a big time thunderstorm that was rolling through that last camp that I was at when I was podcasting and then rained a bunch after that vows nice. Stayed nice and dry and pretty warm and tracking the truck canopy and stuff waited out the rain then it cleared off just like a couple hours later is that that thunderstorm system moved past us and then got cleared off got cold got pretty cold. I layered up and I walked out into that field now with a ton of wet grass and stuff. walked out there brought the heater like I was talking about and posted it up out in that Meadow to check out the stars and stuff from that you can see Scorpio almost all a Scorpio it's really cool when you got a strong Southern view of the sky. And for Miss area in Oregon you can't quite see the dip in the tail of Scorpio is a kind of scoops down and it comes back up with the stinger at the end. You just barely or I get out you can you can definitely imagine how it kind of scoops around but yeah, at where it is now. This time in August. I think it's it's kind of tipping over and gone. not visible. And that spot but I think I see. Was it Jupiter? You see just past Sagittarius as you're looking to the south. Then near that just a little bit further over to the east on that same ecliptic line you see Saturn. I think they both near the position where they'd be at opposition. They're not as bright as they were a few years ago, you notice, but they're still really bright. Really cool to see. And then if you stay up late enough, maybe around midnight or so. You'll see Mars rise over on the eastern horizon. And it looks real real coppery red and really noticeable really cool. But I think it came up right about the same or about an hour or so after the moon rose last night. So tonight or probably rise along the same location as Mars. That's interesting. Yeah. Yeah. Would those cool, check it out that stuff. And I was checking it out the other night after that thunderstorm out in that field. So it's kind of fun, kind of staying up and check it out some stuff. But then I went to bed. And then I got up the next morning and this was what was really cool. As I looked out the field. I hadn't really seen any animals out there. I heard a few a few birds like a raven, and a couple other things. I think I heard a turkey gobble. Not sure though but I looked out looked across the field and I saw that two of the biggest birds I have ever seen. There. They are the biggest birds I've ever seen. I'm really not sure what it is it looks like similar to Blue herring, so I figured some kind of herring, maybe it's a crane. But I would, I would guess if it was standing up, it would be almost four feet tall. It really looked like a small deer or a dog, like in mass and size, as you know, kind of like the feathery body if it wasn't popped up in a big way, but there are two of them. And yeah, it looked like dinosaurs out there. In this middle of this field. I've never seen a bird like that it looked like like a blue herring. That was about twice a day I see a buck. It's at my two o'clock walk into my three o'clock. 1.2 point 3.4 point. It's a two or three point buck. It doesn't see me. That's cool. Little buck cruising through. I think it's a mule deer out here. I sound like a group of mule deer down in the lake bed this morning. And when I started wrestling around, they they all kind of started run or one of them kind of got excited and then ran off there. They're probably like two or 300 yards from me. And I pulled up the binoculars as scouten Yeah, they're just booking it across this open lake bed. And then they got tired and stopped and started eating grass like almost right away. So it's kind of funny how they they kind of move around but yet this guy's like no. What? 200 feet walking around can't cool, dude. Thanks for camping with me. What is this in two giant birds. I saw these two giant birds Thunderbirds. They're awesome. They're Brown, kind of Sandy tan colored. And they had like a beaked face like a real pointy beaked face really similar to a blue herring. It looked like it looked like an emu or an ostrich or something out in this field. It was diet. But it looked I'd say like I've seen a lot of blue herrings, they're way more slender than this. This really had that kind of big kind of round full body thing and then had that crane neck that kind of the s curved crane neck and it was just kind of on the ground walking with its buddy. And they were cruising around poking at the ground trying to get grubs or whatever. But But yeah, really cool to see him and then so I was watching them for a bit I had him in the binoculars I think I got a couple pictures. But like I was explaining that last podcast smartly. I have a wide angle lens with me, which is you 17 to 40 millimeter so as way out super wide. So you just so you know, no telephoto my back. So didn't get the wildlife shot. That would have been cool, which is fine. And I accept but I did get a couple pictures of it that probably poorly show two big things out in the distance. And I mean, it looks like it could be dogs could be deer. Or it could be birds. So it was pretty awesome to see. But as I walked out a little bit, I exposed myself into the sunlight. They got they got side of me and then they they both let out these for like maybe 30 seconds to a minute or so. They both just kind of stood around and made these sort of warning or territorial croaks. These like these like three beat croaks that would just echo across this whole this whole valley that are this whole Meadow area that I was in it just carried on four acres. They're probably like an acre or two away from me at that time. And yeah, they just let out these loud croaks kind of morning that these up, standing dude predator out in the distance. But yeah, then they kind of sorted it into flight, but they just kind of started back off up into the hill, up into the tree line. And then I tucked back myself back up into the tree line by my truck, made another cup of coffee that morning, and then I saw him kind of pop out again and poking around that. That Meadow again, but it was really cool giant birds, I really would say they're like four feet tall. Body Mass section, it seemed like about two feet or so. And you know, like kind of on their leg, maybe 24 inches off the ground. Yeah, it just seemed like a really big bird. If I was standing right next to it. I'd be like, Whoa, man, this is this is a real critter. So it was fun. I've never seen a bird like that out there before I've heard about. Some of those are some birds like that before I remember hearing like, it's like a ground colloquial family story that I think like a great uncle of mine had had probably similar to this area too, which is interesting. I like that. But he said that he had woken up one morning and looked out and saw these prehistoric looking Thunderbirds he called him and I think I had an experience like a two. I think it was fun. I'm sure it's totally a normal animal. It's probably used to be around a lake or something. You know, that's sort of what it seemed like is just like a giant Pelican or crane or something that you would see out by the ocean, but to see how You're just walking around sagebrush in a field in a meadow at 730 in the morning, it's just like, Wow, look at that. I thought I'd see a deer out there, but no giant birds. So that was really cool. Never seen any, any birds like that before that was fun later in the day saw a few Hawks. Those are cool to see they were watching me. I came out here to this reservoir area, and there is an area where there's water that's backed up, but I saw an osprey fly out over real high, probably 100 feet up above the water, then it kind of kind of did these tight circles. And then it did this big kind of quick drop with its wings still out back but kind of kind of braced drops down about 30 feet did another circle and that tuck those wings in and Dove straight boom down in the water spash grab the fish look like a three inch or four inch Sunfish. And that aspect grabbed it, crushed it and bolted off to its its tree branch perch to have lunch. It was really cool. I love watching this Ospreys fish, it's really interesting to see their their behaviors and stuff. You've got an osprey and are like, you know, like a bird of prey like that. And now it operates in juxtaposition to other birds that we see their behaviors that more commonly. And it's just really interesting to see, like how they operate, how they work and sort of their I don't know, their attitude of their behavior is just kind of interesting. Or just seemed like really present. You know, like, I think they say that, like eagles are carrying eaters. Is that what it is? So there's sort of like a vulture where they'll eat dead things. I think hawks do that a bit too. But hawks, hawks will pass. I think hawks like to pounce on mice stuff, but you never see a hawk fish, like I see ospreay fishing all the time, it's just really cool to see that kind of connection, or that kind of that kind of development between their ecosystem of an osprey knowing instinctually knowing from its parents that, you know, it's because they nest the nest really like for a long time. So you need to have those big nasty return to those nests instead of the giant, wide nest and the snags. And they're just like really impressive lifecycles they've gotten but it was cool. Check it out. smartspace always something I like that additional to that. I saw a helicopter cruise by like I've seen there's a lightning storm just the other day. So I guess it must have started fire somewhere out here. But I saw this helicopter cruise over right near the reservoir that I'm at. I was a couple miles away from at the time, but I saw a reservoir come or I saw a helicopter fly over the reservoir with a big bucket hanging from it. And I watched it to a cycle of like two drops or it wouldn't drop here but it would scoop up water from this reservoir and then fly out to wherever beyond my distance wherever it needed to go to dump on this fire. putting out fires with the helicopter. It was cool to see but yeah, it was really wow. No way the helicopters cruising right here, picking up a scoop of water and then bolting it over to wherever that fire needs to go out. But it was a trip to see that it was cool. I wonder what that be like to be you know that, Hey, you got your firefighter but with the helicopter, it'd be a trip to be like, well, let's ramp up the helicopter. And it'd be a weird to be a pilot to do that. You know, like I hear about being a helicopter pilot, but I just think it'd be really strange to be hovering. Drop a big sack into the water. And then boom, scoop up hundreds of pounds gallons and gallons and gallons of water. I mean water is heavy, right? You know, so you have to like think about that. But then scoop up all that change how you're flying to adjust to all the new weight that you've added to the to the vehicle that you're flying in while you're flying it. That's what I think it'd be strange if you load a vehicle or something and then you've got that weight in it and then you fly that around. But as you're riding a light vehicle like a light helicopter, cruising down picking up big, like 1000 pounds of water actually can't pick that up but picking up all the water that it can and then lifting off and taken off again that just be so strange to fly around the mountains picking up picking up big buckets of water and then dropping it on fires. It just seems like a weird way to spend your days out here in the high desert. But I'm sure it'll be probably some cool stories. I don't know. Yeah, cool stuff to see that helicopter. cool to see. This Thunderbirds cool. Do some rockhounding cool. See some mule deer cruising around out here saw that bug Oh, endless chipmunks. I see chipmunk perched up getting some sign right now. Nice. But yeah, endless. Endless chipmunks. Many squirrels no mosquitoes at all. That's been great man. I got beat up by mosquitoes up in the Cascades. I think last week I'm still kind of nursing my way back to health from that. That really hurt. It's x those mountain mosquitoes, when they're held by those bogs and marshes and lakes leftover from the snow melt. And it seems like now in July and August is when they're really just getting going. But man, they're brutal, hungry mosquitoes. And I hit myself a deep a couple times. it slowed him down. But man, I could have used 50 or so last mosquito bites that day, that's for sure. So, yeah, good times, but have fun, get beat up by mosquitoes, but but not on this trip. So I'm having a good time. I think it's a little colder this time too. So that's probably part of what's dampened down the number of mosquitoes and really out here in this higher desert area, I think you get a little lucky with mosquitoes if you're not around like a pretty heavy body of water. So in a lot of areas I've been it's been pretty dry. So are you it's like pretty far away from a lake and pretty far away from like, a bigger river or Creek source, that'd be a mosquito swamp. So thank goodness, I've stayed away from that for a little bit. But having a good time out here, I'm going to be driving around for a good part of the day, checking out some more Forest Service routes. And looking at this map, there's just so many areas you can go from you can spend, you could probably go I could probably go down into Nevada, I you know, I'd cross a couple highways or something. But you could probably drive all the way down in Nevada, mostly just taking these Forest Service roads. I think Dan is like the Fremont than the winner. And then you can drop down into the I think Humboldt I think it would be the Humboldt National Forest. Yeah, you can stay out on these back country roads and stay off the I mean, you know, there's no towns or houses or anything on here. So I think just about everything is a bad country road. But you can stay on those and get down into I don't know Nevada, or Northeastern California and spend a bunch of time just kind of tooling around out in this high desert country. So it's pretty cool. I've enjoyed checking it out out here. And I want to try and get back out here and do some more stuff. I think it's a it's a good good kind of location before it gets too deep into the fall. And I think this is probably one of the the faster places to get snowed out in in October or October, November, depending on the snow levels that year. I remember being out with my dad, October 17 I think we were camping at an area in Eastern Oregon, really still just kind of the lowland area of Eastern Oregon, where you know you're not you're not climbing up real high to a mountaintop or anything like that kind of like where I am now. But it started snowing snowed through the valley snowed all across the highway when for years, we were trying to trying to drive back the blei and a couple inches or something like that. But still, you know for like early October there's still hunters out there and campers and stuff. And yeah, I just get hit with the the first couple couple inches of snow. It's good times, but I'm not sure it makes it cool for people that are more used to this now and stuff I'm sure it's kind of an easy transition when you're doing some hunting stuff to get out and deal with but man I do not like early season wet snow if it stick in and kind of deal with that. But man that you know, just like after it half hour, it's just standing water is what it feels like. It's just that slushy stuff, you can't even walk in through it all splash now. It's rough. So I'm glad to kind of avoid that most of the time. But up here in the mountains is cool. Hey, the helicopters back I think you might be able to hear that. I'll probably noise gate that sound out. But yeah, I hear that chopper flying over and it looks like it's probably gonna head over to that reservoir again. So again, I've had those fires, shoot. But I'm gonna wrap it up here, I suppose. And probably come back with another podcast in the next couple days to talk about more of the summer camping trips I've been out on and I think I'm going to try and get home process and photos, process some stuff together and then do a little retrospective about some of the last couple camping trips that that had not yet talked about on the podcast. So thanks for tuning in and listen to me. jabber from my tailgate, high atop the Fremont winnaman National Forest in the mountains by Lakeside camping out. Thanks for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can find more information about me at Billy Newman photo comm shoot me a message or feel free to support the podcast to go to Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, or I think patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo if you'd like to help out and send me some bucks to support the travel and photo stuff that I'm up to and what I'm able to put together so it always helps. always appreciate it. But thank you guys very much for bothering to listen. And to check out this episode of The Billy Newman a photo podcast Talk to you next time.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow



Audio Fixed 



Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;Visit the Support Page here.



You can find&nbsp;my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast







152 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Sandhill Crane _2



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now, and I'm in the back of my truck on the tailgate at a campsite in the Fremont winnaman National Forest in South Central Oregon. Pretty sure that's about where it would be. Maybe it's still Central Oregon. I think it's, it's still in the mountain area before you drop into the Great Basin, near the location that I was for the last podcast when I was talking about hanging out near that cabin, near a meadow. And since then, I've been driving kind of around through these Forest Service roads, checking out different campsites that are laid out in some areas. A lot of areas up here, I think. I think what I was looking at my watch, and it says we're about 4900 feet. I think it was about 5200 feet near maybe the higher parts that I was at. But yeah, this is pretty high up here. I think it's a little snow on the ground in a spot a while back when I was driving a little shady spot that and get it been warmed up, which is weird to see in August. Not much snow out here, though, you know, by any means. So I think I was up here in the springtime in a different area kind of further down and lower and elevation. And I think it was early April. And I could get away ways up the mountain, but I think I got snowed out really quickly before it before you really even break into, you know, the Forest Service roads that are up here. Even the more well-traveled ones just weren't maintained through the winter. These are gravel roads out here. It's like a cinder cone that's cashed up and then spread across the roads, or I think further to the west. They're still using gravel. I think I crossed over from Klamath County, now into Lake County. As I've been making my way, I think on the map app that I've got that]]></itunes:summary>
	<itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>30:37</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow



Audio Fixed 



Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour ]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 151 Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-151-summer-thunderstorm-over-fremont-winema-national-forest/</link>
	<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2020 17:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8514</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest</p>



<p>Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



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<p>About &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>or&nbsp;<a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



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<p>151 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown summer thunderstorm_1</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Be sure you guys are tuning in for the first week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now; I'm deep in the middle of the Fremont National Forest, where I've been driving around for a good part of the day. And it's not; it's not really high desert out here. I think it's still mostly like smaller pine trees. And then I think just a little further east if I were to drive where you would start to drop into the area, that would be like the Great Basin, I think that area that was the Inland Sea back during the Pleistocene period before the end of the last ice age. And that's where you get like on eastern Oregon and then out into Nevada to I think it's like just a little east of Bend Oregon. And, and then south from there, into Nevada, and parts of Utah. I think it's like a really big, like high desert area that I think was mostly created from like an inland sea or, you know, that's, I think what they talked about the Great Basin area when you look on those, those maps, and it kinda has this, this far northern region that are up into the Chico mountains and pretty sure somewhere around there. But I think it's a pretty cool being out here. I was able to find a, like an old or at least it's on the map is like a forest service cabin, I don't think it was really in use by the Forest Service's it's not like a base, or it's not like a place where they have resources or tracks. It's just like, an old, an old built homestead almost is what it looks like out here. And it's got to, but I think it's kind of semi-managed and sort of protected by the National Forest Service out here. The roads are pretty good to get into it. And then it opens up into a big meadow. It's probably. I don't know, six or seven acres or so. And then there's like big fencing around it made out of the small, like log pines that they dropped. And then they'd put together these like a-frames and then stack together logs on that to make these big fences that kind of stretch around the property of the house, I guess to not have it, I don't know, trampled or whatever by but whatever out here. I think when I was walking around, I saw that there's there seems to be like some open range cattle that share the land out here. As I was walking around, I can see some signs of it. And then I could also see, and this is where I'm not really too good at. Following what I'm seeing, I'm not sure if it's like, like mule deer that are out there. Or if it's elk that are out there. I know the mule deer out here, but I'm not sure if what I was seeing was from an elk or knives seemed like it would be elk. But I'm not really sure. It's kind of cool, though. It's cool being out here in this area. I spent a good part of the day getting down here. I've been trying to make a camping trip of some sort each week here through the summer. And that's really kind of been really only one of the few things that have been. I don't know, stress-relieving anybody else stressed this year 2020. Man, what a good time. It's an It's been a long couple months, it seems like, and it seems like a lot of changes and a lot of shifts and stuff for a lot of people, myself included, and just kind of the way that things go and the way that you're able to kind of plan for the future and the way you're able to sort of deal and figure stuff out. And yeah, it's been kind of depressing to just sort of change up, and really I think psychologically, the more draining thing is the the lack of assurance that it's sorting out or that any of these milestones that are out there for what we're dealing with are our stable milestones, you know, it seems like the kind of keep moving out further and further away from us. I remember back in early, what was it like mid-March, March 15, when we had the guidelines for America come out said we were going to be locked down for two weeks a 15 day period, we're going to get a stimulus check. And then it could last it could last with an effect as long into July or August. I remember hearing in that port now we're here in August. It seems like it's still honestly seems like it's like one of the longest periods. I mean, of course, it's obvious what I'm saying now, but it's just the longest period in history that I think anything like this has ever occurred in this kind of pattern. I mean, we've had other pandemics and stuff, but I think more What I'm talking about is like the social pressure that's sort of coming along with them with this set of circumstances that we've seen over the last few months maybe it's part of an election year. A lot of countries go through periods of turmoil before their election cycle process, but as it is, I think it's just like a lot of lot of real factors that are uncomfortable. So part of what I've been trying to do since I have a pretty, a pretty small Well, how do I say yeah, it's like a pretty easy set of things that I'm up to right now. And I'd really like to expand it; I've been kind of frustrated that there's not really an opportunity to do a lot more stuff, you know, like any of the weddings I would have done this summer, they're pretty much out. any of the other work stuff I would have done to make some money is sort of up in the air. And so a lot of the stuff that I'm doing is, is sort of alternative to that, which has been really interesting, it's been fine. It's not been that interesting, I guess, given just the amount of pressure that's on everything, if it was just an open period, you know, everybody got to kind of relearn some things, and we knew what it was gonna end or we knew that it was a good thing that was happening, you know, I bet everybody would have been more creative. That's sort of what I'd heard from a lot of folks are, you know, like, I listen to a lot of radio, a lot of podcasts and stuff. I listen to a lot of podcasts from the different comics that are out there, along with a few others but, but at the beginning of all this, we were talking about, oh, yeah, we're gonna we're gonna write a ton we're gonna be we're gonna come out of this with a whole new our material of jokes to write and then a couple months into a couple of weeks into it, they're all saying I haven't, I haven't even flipped open a notebook, I haven't written anything down, I haven't done anything creative. And I think that's sort of a sign of and hearing from a lot of people that are out to try and do something semi creative, or even just creatively wake up and make coffee and eggs, it's like, it's just a drag a lot of the time and there's been a, you know, there's a lot of stuff that's kind of dragging people down, and in a number of ways. So I hope everybody that does end up listening to this is, is getting through it and understands that they're not alone in the in all the stuff that's going on. And it's it's just a It's a unique year and a lot of ways. So hello, man, I hope it's unique. It's unique so far into my life. So I guess I can count my blessings on that. So I'm out here and what I've been trying to do to kind of sort out that stress and stuff is to try and get out and get to do some more outdoor travel and some camping stuff while I have the wide opportunity to especially through the summer. I mean, that's one of the activities that's not restricted. Is traveling around and camping. I think I talked about that on one of those podcasts in May when we were still in the lockdown coming up to our phase one reopening. And we rock kind of trying to figure out what can we do what can we not do? What do we do with this time now that we have you know what, we can't go to work? You know, we kind of do some stuff in town, but it's like you can only like take walks around your block so many times or take hikes at the park so many times. So I guess it's I have the background in it. And since I've been doing it for a while, I've been trying to take advantage of getting out once a week for an overnight trip or a two night trip to go to new places in Oregon and really trying to do a lot of scouting stuff, which I've enjoyed to doing some scouting stuff through the summer has been pretty cool. Where I'm really trying to go through some of these backroads I'm trying to like Mark spots in the map where there's good campsites, which I hadn't really done before, you know, it was a lot of places I've driven a lot, a lot of roads I've been on. Especially, you know, I backcountry roads to Forest Service roads, BLM roads, and I know a lot of good dispersed camping areas. And really, I understand the context of how to find those areas so much better now that I'm older than when I was young. I mean, when I was young, and I go camping with my dad, you know, we'd go out to Eastern Oregon, we'd find some spots. And they had known about this spot, since you know, he was a kid and he was going over there and hunting camps and stuff with his grandpa. So it's cool for me to get to go over to those same spots and get to check out that area and stuff. But I think there's been or at least when I was a kid, I didn't really understand that the land, like the public land rights that you have, and really how those are organized, like how public lands are organized and what you can do on him and then sort of how it operates. I didn't really understand the difference between national forest land and BLM land or national Parkland and state Parkland or wilderness areas, National Wildlife Refuge areas, man, there's just so many distinctions of different things and then also just private property. So I didn't really have a clear recollection of those things. And really, a lot of time when it's public land, you can go on it, but there's some things you can't do on it like I they maybe hunt in some circumstances, like a, like a national park, or I think you can't discharge a firearm inside a national park. But for specifically permitted events, maybe probably national wildlife refuges. I think those hunting opportunities are limited. Also though, you can still do some things in those areas. I think you have to get permitted and you have to drop tag for that location, I think is what it is. But yeah, it's kind of interesting, sort of learning about that learning how these things go, and also finally getting some maps that you can use that you can kind of trust better. While you're in the backcountry. I think that's something that's really helped me kind of understand where I can go and what I can do and I don't know I mean, we've had those map books you know, like that, that 50 page or 100 page book of Oregon and you know, every page is a 25 mile map of that area is always super useful as a kind of grid out everything and show you that you know the mile by mile marking and the topography of the area. The different Little roads and stuff that even those roads, those mapmakers still got things wrong. I remember to you know, back in like, was it 2004, I think we were out in an area in Southern Oregon near the Nevada border was a Druze reservoir somewhere South a Gearhart mountain. And I remember we were on some, some little, some little road, I don't even know if it was if it was a national forest area, I think it was just in between private and public lands, as it kind of jumped back and forth. And those pretty remote areas, all of it is just remote, desert and forest and sagebrush and Juniper. But some of it goes into like ranch land, it's more managed, and some of it cuts back into BLM land. So as little roads sort of meander through it. But I remember being out there and noticing that the map on the page was just totally different than the map or than the other real world ground truth of where the road went. And I saw Oh, wow, yeah, you can't really trust the maps to show you the information that you want to see. When you need it. Other times to you know, you'll see like, Oh, hey, like it shows there's a road right here. Good deal, we'll take that road. Well, you know, it shows it's on the map. So you cut down there, you get on the road, and then it's washed out like crazy. Or it's super bumpy and like, and just terrible, right? And but it's the same green roads, the same label, the same marking is the road next to it that was graded and, and aren't was that paved, right? It's grated gravel, they put more gravel down, I think is what I'm trying to say they've, they've made it an easier going road to drive on. But then you get those washboard sections out there. I don't know if you guys have done that, where you're driving around in the Forest Service roads and those gravel roads. And I think it's a natural process of erosion that occurs that creates these waves in the material. You know, as I think as a rainwater comes down, it sort of naturally over time generates these, these little ripples. And that's the washboard effect that you get when you're driving. That's also the thing that kind of keeps your car sideways when you're, you're going a little too fast on a gravel road. So I started doing today, I think I kicked it pretty hard side or not, you know, like, it's pretty loose on the traction, and it was starting to tip sideways in my truck. And so I slowed down and threw it into four wheel drive after that, and was able to cruise around out here pretty freely. But yeah, I wanted to talk on this podcast about hanging out in the Fremont National Forest and I just got finished with a huge thunderstorm that came through. It just really finished raining a little ago. We kind of thing when I arrived to today at this Meadows still a few hours before sunset, so I walked around and kind of went along the perimeter of the meadow and then and then I noticed that you know, I mean it's cloudy. It's been kind of cloudy today. And there's been thunderheads that have been building up over the location that I've been ever since I kind of came over the past the Cascades had been in like a pretty solid string of a thunderheads that have sort of coalesced into big mass over the Cascades. Some of it here over the Fremont National Forest river mountains these are that I'm in, and yeah, it seems like this section in Eastern Oregon was getting hit with a good Thunder a good summer August thunderstorm today, which was kind of fun to sit through and go through. It was cool. If I got rained on pretty hard early when I was driving over. I thought I'd get out here and be a little more free of it. But it seemed like that storm kind of drifted over this way. And it was sort of drifting north from here. And yeah, there's a new system, but man, there's just a bunch of lightning that was coming through and huge cracks of thunder. Just big, deep rumbles. I haven't heard Thunder like that. And in years and years, probably, you know, where it just kind of stays and like, hangs and rolls for 10 seconds. 15 seconds, it seems like you know, you just really kind of like whoa, is Can it really still be just cracking and rumbling and rolling. And, and there was enough activity and if lightning activity that was going on where you'd hear thunder. I mean, it was almost like 45 minutes there where there was just a crack and a roll of thunder almost continuously like it was an it was pretty intense. It's It's It's really, I think one of the more strong lightning storms I've been in a while. But that's sort of how it goes out here. When you have these higher elevations. I think I'm floating around up in the 5100 feet or so above sea level. And so it just means I'm up in the mountains where these, these thunderstorms get started, you know, they get there. They get there. I think that's where they'll kind of coalesce over these big mountain tops and then float over in the hot weather. I don't really understand the weather enough to say I know how a thunderstorm starts. It doesn't start now. I've just gotten cold enough. I'm trying to throw a jacket on. And now you got to live through it. I'm really camping. It's been good but I'm gonna be out here for two nights, I think is what I'm going to do. And then tomorrow, I'll cruise out. And I'll try and hit some of these Forest Service roads for a bit. drive around, do some exploring mark a couple spots on the map as a, as I'm cruising around. I think that'll be, that'll be a good time. But then I haven't been out here before. I think I've heard of a couple of friends that have been out in this area that have done some. I think they did a couple scouting trips for a hunting trip that they're going on in the fall. I think this is an area where we're one of my friends goes, I think they try and draw a tag for not this area. I think it's a drainage over from here. But I think I've heard about this area a couple times from people talking about it. So yeah, it's cool, it's cool spot it was out taking pictures earlier, taking some photographs, I've been working mostly, probably for almost a year and a half now. I've been working a lot with this 17 to 40 millimeter wide angle Canon lens. And it's a pretty inexpensive lens, and you can get it for like 400 bucks, maybe a little less, if you're lucky. And you get it on a sale time sometimes in the fall as we're kind of ramping down toward for Thanksgiving, I think you can get some good deals on it. But that's it's sort of in the the $400 range. I think sometimes maybe it's more around five or something, but I picked it up a couple years ago when I was starting to do some real estate photography or was working for Airbnb for a while where they had hired me as a photographer to go into these Airbnb plus listings, and get a new set of photographs, I was interested in kind of learning about how specific they wanted all this, this photographs and this this really specific art style and, and you know, format of it. And that was fine. It was interesting to do for a while. But, but what was cool is that I picked up that lens to get in and do that work. But really, after that, I've been appreciating how much I can do with that wide-angle lens. And then you know, 40 millimeters isn't way different than 50 millimeters. It's certainly different for the effects of portraits and stuff but when I'm out here doing landscape stuff, and I'm trying to take pictures of a lot of this stuff is kind of sketch photos to where I'm sort of going around and midday I'm taking some photos of some different things I want some cat photos and my track and my little cooler set up in the back here. And so all that's been good. In addition to that the the Astrophotography stuff that I can do with it, it's pretty cool because it drops to 17 millimeters. It's an autofocus lens, it's a sealed lens, it's, it's pretty, it's it's pretty good and most ways and I've really noticed over time that I'm not as absolute of a mandate for me to be shooting at a really wide open f stop you know, if I'm shooting at a wide-open aperture, almost all my photos early on were 1.8 or, or 2.0 or two eight or something. And I would do that really because I was trying to I was really trying to get because I didn't have very many lenses I was really trying to get as much effect out of that bouquet out of that soft background as I could. So I was really trying to lean into that and get some photos with it, and I noticed with my camera and equipment at the time that it just it just looked better. They just did look better when it was at, you know f1 eight; I think I just had that nifty 50 Nikon 50 millimeter for the longest time that's what I did. I did my early trips on and did a lot of my portfolio building stuff on that but I've got a different 50 millimeter lens with me now I've got it on my film camera in my bag right now which I need to take out too and I'm trying to finish a roll of acti film it's been on there for a while and I've enjoyed shooting it it's cool it's and it's a new Canon camera to me at least I got it used on kth and spent 35 bucks on it 10 bucks to ship it and it takes a weird battery to it's one of those 90s film cameras it has this weird it almost looks like a battery pack. This it's like two so I was almost like to double A's if they were a little fatter but are bonded together in this little plastic pack and then you pop that in there and shoot for a little while I guess and it runs a meter okay so I'm I'm getting by with it but I've noticed the film cameras stuff it's it's fun to have an awesome film camera it'd be cool to have a Leica and all the lenses I wanted but a lot of the time with that you know the good lenses I have this this new or like canon l glass that I get to shoot through and for film photos and for the variety of images or the variety of lenses i have i can i can do telephoto I can do prime I can do really wide-angle all with the modern digital Canon lenses that have you know chips in them that read well that meter well that make contact with or send information back and forth or at least from the lens to the camera I think that works. That works in the autofocus stuff for the digital camera. This is this is autofocus. Yeah, it's an autofocus digital camera. It's sending information back. It's working. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. So it's it's cool. Like That's something I didn't really have available to me for a long time. You know, I think when I've probably on this podcast, if you go way back in the archives, I'm talking a lot about film with a Nikon f4. You know, I mean, that just had autofocus, I was the first camera like 88 to get autofocus period. So it's cool to have that in a more flexible way now. But what I remember talking about the past that was that I had, like, limited options with glass all the time, I didn't really always have the lenses that I would have preferred. And so I've kind of made a collection of that now with this canon stuff, I got a Canon camera. And so I can throw all those lenses on and have that same flexibility that I have with my digital set. But just with this, this film body that I get to shoot a roll through, so I kind of say the film stuff for when it's a thing that I want. But what I've noticed, though, for a little while, is that I miss a lot of those moments, and I ended up just having the the norm, you know, the regular digital camera with me with a bunch of my other gear. When I've been going out, I've been trying to kind of just take the camera with me, and then I'll leave the bigger bag back at the truck. So that I'm not really carrying as much stuff with me, I've also started carrying, like when I'm out here in the woods and stuff I'm carrying that binocular harness with me, which is kind of cool, you can get them in different sizes, but it's sort of like if you imagine like a backpack, but what they do is they strap on to the front, so it's right on your chest. And what you can do is fill is put like a pair of binoculars in there. So you can pull them out and then scatter around with your binoculars, do some glasses, and then pop them back into your into your harness and then kind of carry on with whatever you want to do. But if you leave that empty without the without the binoculars, if you have a smaller camera rig, probably like a mirrorless or a Sony camera, you know, like one of those Sony, a 6000s. Man, if you were a backpacker, and you had a Sony A 6000. And this, this front carry, like binocular pack, you'd be really sad that would be like all the camera bag that you'd need. In fact, really, if I'm thinking about ever doing some, like, over, you know, some longer backpacking travel, where I just have to pack everything in a way it's gonna be something I'm more conscious of, than I think that's really like the way to go is I've kind of been thinking about it a little bit, it's like get to get a lighter camera, or I mean, it'd be great to like carry like a 360 camera, you know, if you're going up somewhere, those are almost nothing as it is anyway but but if you carry like an SLR or something that you want to try and do some some more controlled photography was you had something like a, an A 6000 from Sony or an a seven, seven or three or whatever it is something that size with a lens attached to it, you know, that could fit in one of these binocular hearts is harnesses and carry kind of route on your front and then you see something you would take it, pop that open right on your chest, pull it right up to your eyes, got straps on it in the harness, pull it right up to your eyes ready to shoot, and you can take photos, or take photos, you know as quick as you want to. So it's kind of a cool process. If you're out hiking a lot for what I'm doing. I have my binocular harness, but it's got binoculars in it. And I've been kind of going around trying to do some bird watching stuff while I'm out here in so cool Hawk was posted up who's looking at me, that's about all I've seen so far. So I coyote the other day. That was cool. I'll talk about that later that but because I had those binoculars in there, and I've been kind of going out on these, these shorter hikes and stuff that I've been trying to go around and like, just kind of watch some stuff or watch land and kind of keep an eye out. But I just had the camera on my longer strap on my side with that 17 to 40 millimeter lens. And that's where it's really good. And it's been a pretty flexible kit for me to go around and take a bunch of photographs with so it's pretty easy, pretty lightweight to work with. And I can kind of move back and forth between those things strapped around my neck, you know, it's not everything just hanging around my neck with a lanyard. It's all kind of put somewhere or packed in somewhere. So that's been kind of cool. But it was good going out and taking some photos tonight, I was trying to get some of the i didn't i didn't get anything lightning in the camera, the lightning stone kind of past as soon as it was getting really dark enough to do like a long exposure kind of thing where I could, I could sort of catch something, something spark and otherwise, you know, you got to you got to beat the lightning bolt with your shutter finger. And that's a pretty tricky task to do. I think that's how they do it. You know, when you get those, you get those like magazine photos back in the day of powerful lightning bolt striking. I don't know the center of a road or something like that. It's what they'd show, you know, some kind of power lightning bolt, but the way that they would do that stuff is I think, I think it was like it was dark out, you know, are pretty dark out. And so they'd set the camera up for just a cycle of long exposures. And then they would just kind of let it ride, you know, so they'd have a couple seconds to expose the image to whatever you know would work. And then they would just kind of have that rolling so that when when a bolt of lightning did strike, and it would be captured and you could go through that collection of captured or you know how I say that. When a lightning bolt would strike the ground, the cam I would have already been exposing for a photograph. Because it's just cycling the shutter on a four second exposure, let's say something like that. And so you know, it takes a four second exposure, stops, processes for a second, takes a four second exposure stops processes for a second. So I think that's how they did some of that stuff where they, they kind of anticipate. Alright, it's been a couple minutes, let's take a frame now and then it's just going to be an event in the future. So we don't know if it's going to happen or not, we're going to wait for this event in the future when we boom, see a lightning bolt. And then that light then exposes the sensor or the film and the camera. And then you're left with an image that has that lightning bolt represented in the frame when you're shooting on a tripod or something like that with with like a short cycle, long exposure. And I thought that was pretty cool. But I didn't really get a chance to get all that stuff set up before the storm kind of passed me by I did get a lot of cool handheld stuff that was that's great if the thunderheads and stuff. And really unfortunately, just in the location that I'm at a lot of that and I guess maybe for the better. But that lightning storm didn't pass right over my head, it was still a little ways away. So I could see the lightning bolts cracking through the trees can out in the distance more, a few they stretched across the sky pretty good too. It's just a big old, you know, from from east to west. It was like a big old chunk of boulders crack all the way across the sky. It was cool. So I got photos of the thunderheads, the sunset, the the big field out here, it's cool. It's a nice area. But I was also thinking about some of the other stuff that I want to be doing tomorrow. So I'm out in the Fremont National Forest, I'm going to be heading, I think, maybe south from here, and I'm going to try and explore a couple of areas that are still open. Or I guess it's all open publicly, this is like a pretty large contiguous section of national forest land here. And really, like that's a big part of Oregon overall, right? It's like 53%, public lands. It's cool. Yeah, if you look at a map, you'll see the cities and you'll seem like the highways and stuff. But if you have the right map, it'll show you where the BLM land is and where the different national forests are. And it's cool, this whole area, the Northwest is just, there's a lot of public land that you get to use. And there's a lot of open area that you get to go to and, and yeah, now that I've got a good map of the outdoor off-road, roads and some of the terrain and stuff with some good notes, and I'm able to kind of move around and get out to a lot more places than I had before. So it's been cool. The app that I'm using is the on x off road app; it's, I think 2999 a year. And so pitch that out, picked up this app, and then you can download offline, these, these really detailed off road maps that are supposed to show you all the trails, you know, even just walking trails, all the roads, all of the like the pieces of information you'd need for kind of moving around in the backcountry and really as surprising as it is as remote as a lot of these places are people go here, you know, it's it's also public land is managed by the the forest department forest Forest Service. Yeah, I think a lot of this does managed by the Forest Service, the BLM stuffs managed by the BLM. And that's why these roads are as good as they are or maintained. And that's why I like when trees are down on these mountain roads, you know, someone has to go through at the beginning of the year and cut all those out, rip them out filling the potholes, all that sort of stuff. So all these areas are, are known about and you know, kind of managed in a pretty significant way. In fact, I think, more so to come in the future. I think they just announced yesterday or the day before that they've passed the great American outdoors Act, which I really don't know the first thing about or, or what it does or doesn't do or what it puts in or leaves out. But I think part of my understanding is that it's supposed to change some of the funding mechanisms that go into supporting the the maintenance of these public lands that are out here across the country, but really significantly out here in the western states. So it's, it's pretty cool. I think, before that it was like, well, we should spend, you know, X amount of money, but there's a more important place for that money to go. So it wasn't like a guaranteed amount. Sort of what I understand, so if I understand it correctly, there's like I think they've said $3 billion a year of mandated funding for projects. I think here in the backcountry, BLM land, Forest Service land and like national wildlife refuges and stuff so pretty cool, but yeah, I think that's gonna, well, maybe we'll see a change in that. I think it's supposed to better fund the operations of BLM and forest service people as they're going through. And trying to get these areas ready for, for the public to be using more regularly. So it's cool. I think it'll mean a lot over the next few years, or what maybe we'll see how it, how it kind of transforms some of the way that these these areas are managed. I think maybe it's more for mining, I probably shouldn't even speculate. I'm not sure at all. But it's pretty cool. I'm excited about being out here and doing some camping and stuff dealing with this thunderstorm. I think it's one of those things whereby the morning, you know, it's going to be or at least I was looking at the weather, it should be mostly cloudy, partly cloudy, mostly sunny tomorrow for a while. So I think that's pretty cool. I'm excited to be hanging out, do some cabin stuff, do some podcasting. I'm in the back of my truck right now. Like I was saying it was rain in early after this thunderstorm. So I got that canopy on my truck. And I'm nice and dry, nice warm, kind of feels like I'm just inside somewhere. So it's, it's a cool cool rig, having the four wheel drive, having the canopy on the back, having your staff and your sleeping area. Just kind of set it back there. And I'm ready to go. So I've been having a good time being out here, and it's been pretty good. Pretty good trip so far. I so appreciate you guys checking out this podcast from me. I'm gonna do a couple more podcasts while I'm out here on this camping trip. And I'll I'll try and try and set up a little backlog of them on my website. I think it'll be a good idea. Now I kind of take the breaks and stuff. I'm sure no one no one keeps listening when it when it is there. But hey, if you listen to this and the podcast, shoot me an email time for the plugs. It's Billy Newman photo.com. If you want to check out my website, see some of my photographs, check out more podcasts that I've done, or books that I've tried to put together which is maybe what I'm going to try and do out here to try and get some photographs for another good book. That Yeah, Billy Newman photo comm you can check me out there. That's where all my focus is going these days write me an email, there's a forum they actually want to get in touch with me. And always good to hear from people, I suppose. So thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you listening back</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest



Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema Na]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest</p>



<p>Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest</p>



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<p>151 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown summer thunderstorm_1</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Be sure you guys are tuning in for the first week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now; I'm deep in the middle of the Fremont National Forest, where I've been driving around for a good part of the day. And it's not; it's not really high desert out here. I think it's still mostly like smaller pine trees. And then I think just a little further east if I were to drive where you would start to drop into the area, that would be like the Great Basin, I think that area that was the Inland Sea back during the Pleistocene period before the end of the last ice age. And that's where you get like on eastern Oregon and then out into Nevada to I think it's like just a little east of Bend Oregon. And, and then south from there, into Nevada, and parts of Utah. I think it's like a really big, like high desert area that I think was mostly created from like an inland sea or, you know, that's, I think what they talked about the Great Basin area when you look on those, those maps, and it kinda has this, this far northern region that are up into the Chico mountains and pretty sure somewhere around there. But I think it's a pretty cool being out here. I was able to find a, like an old or at least it's on the map is like a forest service cabin, I don't think it was really in use by the Forest Service's it's not like a base, or it's not like a place where they have resources or tracks. It's just like, an old, an old built homestead almost is what it looks like out here. And it's got to, but I think it's kind of semi-managed and sort of protected by the National Forest Service out here. The roads are pretty good to get into it. And then it opens up into a big meadow. It's probably. I don't know, six or seven acres or so. And then there's like big fencing around it made out of the small, like log pines that they dropped. And then they'd put together these like a-frames and then stack together logs on that to make these big fences that kind of stretch around the property of the house, I guess to not have it, I don't know, trampled or whatever by but whatever out here. I think when I was walking around, I saw that there's there seems to be like some open range cattle that share the land out here. As I was walking around, I can see some signs of it. And then I could also see, and this is where I'm not really too good at. Following what I'm seeing, I'm not sure if it's like, like mule deer that are out there. Or if it's elk that are out there. I know the mule deer out here, but I'm not sure if what I was seeing was from an elk or knives seemed like it would be elk. But I'm not really sure. It's kind of cool, though. It's cool being out here in this area. I spent a good part of the day getting down here. I've been trying to make a camping trip of some sort each week here through the summer. And that's really kind of been really only one of the few things that have been. I don't know, stress-relieving anybody else stressed this year 2020. Man, what a good time. It's an It's been a long couple months, it seems like, and it seems like a lot of changes and a lot of shifts and stuff for a lot of people, myself included, and just kind of the way that things go and the way that you're able to kind of plan for the future and the way you're able to sort of deal and figure stuff out. And yeah, it's been kind of depressing to just sort of change up, and really I think psychologically, the more draining thing is the the lack of assurance that it's sorting out or that any of these milestones that are out there for what we're dealing with are our stable milestones, you know, it seems like the kind of keep moving out further and further away from us. I remember back in early, what was it like mid-March, March 15, when we had the guidelines for America come out said we were going to be locked down for two weeks a 15 day period, we're going to get a stimulus check. And then it could last it could last with an effect as long into July or August. I remember hearing in that port now we're here in August. It seems like it's still honestly seems like it's like one of the longest periods. I mean, of course, it's obvious what I'm saying now, but it's just the longest period in history that I think anything like this has ever occurred in this kind of pattern. I mean, we've had other pandemics and stuff, but I think more What I'm talking about is like the social pressure that's sort of coming along with them with this set of circumstances that we've seen over the last few months maybe it's part of an election year. A lot of countries go through periods of turmoil before their election cycle process, but as it is, I think it's just like a lot of lot of real factors that are uncomfortable. So part of what I've been trying to do since I have a pretty, a pretty small Well, how do I say yeah, it's like a pretty easy set of things that I'm up to right now. And I'd really like to expand it; I've been kind of frustrated that there's not really an opportunity to do a lot more stuff, you know, like any of the weddings I would have done this summer, they're pretty much out. any of the other work stuff I would have done to make some money is sort of up in the air. And so a lot of the stuff that I'm doing is, is sort of alternative to that, which has been really interesting, it's been fine. It's not been that interesting, I guess, given just the amount of pressure that's on everything, if it was just an open period, you know, everybody got to kind of relearn some things, and we knew what it was gonna end or we knew that it was a good thing that was happening, you know, I bet everybody would have been more creative. That's sort of what I'd heard from a lot of folks are, you know, like, I listen to a lot of radio, a lot of podcasts and stuff. I listen to a lot of podcasts from the different comics that are out there, along with a few others but, but at the beginning of all this, we were talking about, oh, yeah, we're gonna we're gonna write a ton we're gonna be we're gonna come out of this with a whole new our material of jokes to write and then a couple months into a couple of weeks into it, they're all saying I haven't, I haven't even flipped open a notebook, I haven't written anything down, I haven't done anything creative. And I think that's sort of a sign of and hearing from a lot of people that are out to try and do something semi creative, or even just creatively wake up and make coffee and eggs, it's like, it's just a drag a lot of the time and there's been a, you know, there's a lot of stuff that's kind of dragging people down, and in a number of ways. So I hope everybody that does end up listening to this is, is getting through it and understands that they're not alone in the in all the stuff that's going on. And it's it's just a It's a unique year and a lot of ways. So hello, man, I hope it's unique. It's unique so far into my life. So I guess I can count my blessings on that. So I'm out here and what I've been trying to do to kind of sort out that stress and stuff is to try and get out and get to do some more outdoor travel and some camping stuff while I have the wide opportunity to especially through the summer. I mean, that's one of the activities that's not restricted. Is traveling around and camping. I think I talked about that on one of those podcasts in May when we were still in the lockdown coming up to our phase one reopening. And we rock kind of trying to figure out what can we do what can we not do? What do we do with this time now that we have you know what, we can't go to work? You know, we kind of do some stuff in town, but it's like you can only like take walks around your block so many times or take hikes at the park so many times. So I guess it's I have the background in it. And since I've been doing it for a while, I've been trying to take advantage of getting out once a week for an overnight trip or a two night trip to go to new places in Oregon and really trying to do a lot of scouting stuff, which I've enjoyed to doing some scouting stuff through the summer has been pretty cool. Where I'm really trying to go through some of these backroads I'm trying to like Mark spots in the map where there's good campsites, which I hadn't really done before, you know, it was a lot of places I've driven a lot, a lot of roads I've been on. Especially, you know, I backcountry roads to Forest Service roads, BLM roads, and I know a lot of good dispersed camping areas. And really, I understand the context of how to find those areas so much better now that I'm older than when I was young. I mean, when I was young, and I go camping with my dad, you know, we'd go out to Eastern Oregon, we'd find some spots. And they had known about this spot, since you know, he was a kid and he was going over there and hunting camps and stuff with his grandpa. So it's cool for me to get to go over to those same spots and get to check out that area and stuff. But I think there's been or at least when I was a kid, I didn't really understand that the land, like the public land rights that you have, and really how those are organized, like how public lands are organized and what you can do on him and then sort of how it operates. I didn't really understand the difference between national forest land and BLM land or national Parkland and state Parkland or wilderness areas, National Wildlife Refuge areas, man, there's just so many distinctions of different things and then also just private property. So I didn't really have a clear recollection of those things. And really, a lot of time when it's public land, you can go on it, but there's some things you can't do on it like I they maybe hunt in some circumstances, like a, like a national park, or I think you can't discharge a firearm inside a national park. But for specifically permitted events, maybe probably national wildlife refuges. I think those hunting opportunities are limited. Also though, you can still do some things in those areas. I think you have to get permitted and you have to drop tag for that location, I think is what it is. But yeah, it's kind of interesting, sort of learning about that learning how these things go, and also finally getting some maps that you can use that you can kind of trust better. While you're in the backcountry. I think that's something that's really helped me kind of understand where I can go and what I can do and I don't know I mean, we've had those map books you know, like that, that 50 page or 100 page book of Oregon and you know, every page is a 25 mile map of that area is always super useful as a kind of grid out everything and show you that you know the mile by mile marking and the topography of the area. The different Little roads and stuff that even those roads, those mapmakers still got things wrong. I remember to you know, back in like, was it 2004, I think we were out in an area in Southern Oregon near the Nevada border was a Druze reservoir somewhere South a Gearhart mountain. And I remember we were on some, some little, some little road, I don't even know if it was if it was a national forest area, I think it was just in between private and public lands, as it kind of jumped back and forth. And those pretty remote areas, all of it is just remote, desert and forest and sagebrush and Juniper. But some of it goes into like ranch land, it's more managed, and some of it cuts back into BLM land. So as little roads sort of meander through it. But I remember being out there and noticing that the map on the page was just totally different than the map or than the other real world ground truth of where the road went. And I saw Oh, wow, yeah, you can't really trust the maps to show you the information that you want to see. When you need it. Other times to you know, you'll see like, Oh, hey, like it shows there's a road right here. Good deal, we'll take that road. Well, you know, it shows it's on the map. So you cut down there, you get on the road, and then it's washed out like crazy. Or it's super bumpy and like, and just terrible, right? And but it's the same green roads, the same label, the same marking is the road next to it that was graded and, and aren't was that paved, right? It's grated gravel, they put more gravel down, I think is what I'm trying to say they've, they've made it an easier going road to drive on. But then you get those washboard sections out there. I don't know if you guys have done that, where you're driving around in the Forest Service roads and those gravel roads. And I think it's a natural process of erosion that occurs that creates these waves in the material. You know, as I think as a rainwater comes down, it sort of naturally over time generates these, these little ripples. And that's the washboard effect that you get when you're driving. That's also the thing that kind of keeps your car sideways when you're, you're going a little too fast on a gravel road. So I started doing today, I think I kicked it pretty hard side or not, you know, like, it's pretty loose on the traction, and it was starting to tip sideways in my truck. And so I slowed down and threw it into four wheel drive after that, and was able to cruise around out here pretty freely. But yeah, I wanted to talk on this podcast about hanging out in the Fremont National Forest and I just got finished with a huge thunderstorm that came through. It just really finished raining a little ago. We kind of thing when I arrived to today at this Meadows still a few hours before sunset, so I walked around and kind of went along the perimeter of the meadow and then and then I noticed that you know, I mean it's cloudy. It's been kind of cloudy today. And there's been thunderheads that have been building up over the location that I've been ever since I kind of came over the past the Cascades had been in like a pretty solid string of a thunderheads that have sort of coalesced into big mass over the Cascades. Some of it here over the Fremont National Forest river mountains these are that I'm in, and yeah, it seems like this section in Eastern Oregon was getting hit with a good Thunder a good summer August thunderstorm today, which was kind of fun to sit through and go through. It was cool. If I got rained on pretty hard early when I was driving over. I thought I'd get out here and be a little more free of it. But it seemed like that storm kind of drifted over this way. And it was sort of drifting north from here. And yeah, there's a new system, but man, there's just a bunch of lightning that was coming through and huge cracks of thunder. Just big, deep rumbles. I haven't heard Thunder like that. And in years and years, probably, you know, where it just kind of stays and like, hangs and rolls for 10 seconds. 15 seconds, it seems like you know, you just really kind of like whoa, is Can it really still be just cracking and rumbling and rolling. And, and there was enough activity and if lightning activity that was going on where you'd hear thunder. I mean, it was almost like 45 minutes there where there was just a crack and a roll of thunder almost continuously like it was an it was pretty intense. It's It's It's really, I think one of the more strong lightning storms I've been in a while. But that's sort of how it goes out here. When you have these higher elevations. I think I'm floating around up in the 5100 feet or so above sea level. And so it just means I'm up in the mountains where these, these thunderstorms get started, you know, they get there. They get there. I think that's where they'll kind of coalesce over these big mountain tops and then float over in the hot weather. I don't really understand the weather enough to say I know how a thunderstorm starts. It doesn't start now. I've just gotten cold enough. I'm trying to throw a jacket on. And now you got to live through it. I'm really camping. It's been good but I'm gonna be out here for two nights, I think is what I'm going to do. And then tomorrow, I'll cruise out. And I'll try and hit some of these Forest Service roads for a bit. drive around, do some exploring mark a couple spots on the map as a, as I'm cruising around. I think that'll be, that'll be a good time. But then I haven't been out here before. I think I've heard of a couple of friends that have been out in this area that have done some. I think they did a couple scouting trips for a hunting trip that they're going on in the fall. I think this is an area where we're one of my friends goes, I think they try and draw a tag for not this area. I think it's a drainage over from here. But I think I've heard about this area a couple times from people talking about it. So yeah, it's cool, it's cool spot it was out taking pictures earlier, taking some photographs, I've been working mostly, probably for almost a year and a half now. I've been working a lot with this 17 to 40 millimeter wide angle Canon lens. And it's a pretty inexpensive lens, and you can get it for like 400 bucks, maybe a little less, if you're lucky. And you get it on a sale time sometimes in the fall as we're kind of ramping down toward for Thanksgiving, I think you can get some good deals on it. But that's it's sort of in the the $400 range. I think sometimes maybe it's more around five or something, but I picked it up a couple years ago when I was starting to do some real estate photography or was working for Airbnb for a while where they had hired me as a photographer to go into these Airbnb plus listings, and get a new set of photographs, I was interested in kind of learning about how specific they wanted all this, this photographs and this this really specific art style and, and you know, format of it. And that was fine. It was interesting to do for a while. But, but what was cool is that I picked up that lens to get in and do that work. But really, after that, I've been appreciating how much I can do with that wide-angle lens. And then you know, 40 millimeters isn't way different than 50 millimeters. It's certainly different for the effects of portraits and stuff but when I'm out here doing landscape stuff, and I'm trying to take pictures of a lot of this stuff is kind of sketch photos to where I'm sort of going around and midday I'm taking some photos of some different things I want some cat photos and my track and my little cooler set up in the back here. And so all that's been good. In addition to that the the Astrophotography stuff that I can do with it, it's pretty cool because it drops to 17 millimeters. It's an autofocus lens, it's a sealed lens, it's, it's pretty, it's it's pretty good and most ways and I've really noticed over time that I'm not as absolute of a mandate for me to be shooting at a really wide open f stop you know, if I'm shooting at a wide-open aperture, almost all my photos early on were 1.8 or, or 2.0 or two eight or something. And I would do that really because I was trying to I was really trying to get because I didn't have very many lenses I was really trying to get as much effect out of that bouquet out of that soft background as I could. So I was really trying to lean into that and get some photos with it, and I noticed with my camera and equipment at the time that it just it just looked better. They just did look better when it was at, you know f1 eight; I think I just had that nifty 50 Nikon 50 millimeter for the longest time that's what I did. I did my early trips on and did a lot of my portfolio building stuff on that but I've got a different 50 millimeter lens with me now I've got it on my film camera in my bag right now which I need to take out too and I'm trying to finish a roll of acti film it's been on there for a while and I've enjoyed shooting it it's cool it's and it's a new Canon camera to me at least I got it used on kth and spent 35 bucks on it 10 bucks to ship it and it takes a weird battery to it's one of those 90s film cameras it has this weird it almost looks like a battery pack. This it's like two so I was almost like to double A's if they were a little fatter but are bonded together in this little plastic pack and then you pop that in there and shoot for a little while I guess and it runs a meter okay so I'm I'm getting by with it but I've noticed the film cameras stuff it's it's fun to have an awesome film camera it'd be cool to have a Leica and all the lenses I wanted but a lot of the time with that you know the good lenses I have this this new or like canon l glass that I get to shoot through and for film photos and for the variety of images or the variety of lenses i have i can i can do telephoto I can do prime I can do really wide-angle all with the modern digital Canon lenses that have you know chips in them that read well that meter well that make contact with or send information back and forth or at least from the lens to the camera I think that works. That works in the autofocus stuff for the digital camera. This is this is autofocus. Yeah, it's an autofocus digital camera. It's sending information back. It's working. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. So it's it's cool. Like That's something I didn't really have available to me for a long time. You know, I think when I've probably on this podcast, if you go way back in the archives, I'm talking a lot about film with a Nikon f4. You know, I mean, that just had autofocus, I was the first camera like 88 to get autofocus period. So it's cool to have that in a more flexible way now. But what I remember talking about the past that was that I had, like, limited options with glass all the time, I didn't really always have the lenses that I would have preferred. And so I've kind of made a collection of that now with this canon stuff, I got a Canon camera. And so I can throw all those lenses on and have that same flexibility that I have with my digital set. But just with this, this film body that I get to shoot a roll through, so I kind of say the film stuff for when it's a thing that I want. But what I've noticed, though, for a little while, is that I miss a lot of those moments, and I ended up just having the the norm, you know, the regular digital camera with me with a bunch of my other gear. When I've been going out, I've been trying to kind of just take the camera with me, and then I'll leave the bigger bag back at the truck. So that I'm not really carrying as much stuff with me, I've also started carrying, like when I'm out here in the woods and stuff I'm carrying that binocular harness with me, which is kind of cool, you can get them in different sizes, but it's sort of like if you imagine like a backpack, but what they do is they strap on to the front, so it's right on your chest. And what you can do is fill is put like a pair of binoculars in there. So you can pull them out and then scatter around with your binoculars, do some glasses, and then pop them back into your into your harness and then kind of carry on with whatever you want to do. But if you leave that empty without the without the binoculars, if you have a smaller camera rig, probably like a mirrorless or a Sony camera, you know, like one of those Sony, a 6000s. Man, if you were a backpacker, and you had a Sony A 6000. And this, this front carry, like binocular pack, you'd be really sad that would be like all the camera bag that you'd need. In fact, really, if I'm thinking about ever doing some, like, over, you know, some longer backpacking travel, where I just have to pack everything in a way it's gonna be something I'm more conscious of, than I think that's really like the way to go is I've kind of been thinking about it a little bit, it's like get to get a lighter camera, or I mean, it'd be great to like carry like a 360 camera, you know, if you're going up somewhere, those are almost nothing as it is anyway but but if you carry like an SLR or something that you want to try and do some some more controlled photography was you had something like a, an A 6000 from Sony or an a seven, seven or three or whatever it is something that size with a lens attached to it, you know, that could fit in one of these binocular hearts is harnesses and carry kind of route on your front and then you see something you would take it, pop that open right on your chest, pull it right up to your eyes, got straps on it in the harness, pull it right up to your eyes ready to shoot, and you can take photos, or take photos, you know as quick as you want to. So it's kind of a cool process. If you're out hiking a lot for what I'm doing. I have my binocular harness, but it's got binoculars in it. And I've been kind of going around trying to do some bird watching stuff while I'm out here in so cool Hawk was posted up who's looking at me, that's about all I've seen so far. So I coyote the other day. That was cool. I'll talk about that later that but because I had those binoculars in there, and I've been kind of going out on these, these shorter hikes and stuff that I've been trying to go around and like, just kind of watch some stuff or watch land and kind of keep an eye out. But I just had the camera on my longer strap on my side with that 17 to 40 millimeter lens. And that's where it's really good. And it's been a pretty flexible kit for me to go around and take a bunch of photographs with so it's pretty easy, pretty lightweight to work with. And I can kind of move back and forth between those things strapped around my neck, you know, it's not everything just hanging around my neck with a lanyard. It's all kind of put somewhere or packed in somewhere. So that's been kind of cool. But it was good going out and taking some photos tonight, I was trying to get some of the i didn't i didn't get anything lightning in the camera, the lightning stone kind of past as soon as it was getting really dark enough to do like a long exposure kind of thing where I could, I could sort of catch something, something spark and otherwise, you know, you got to you got to beat the lightning bolt with your shutter finger. And that's a pretty tricky task to do. I think that's how they do it. You know, when you get those, you get those like magazine photos back in the day of powerful lightning bolt striking. I don't know the center of a road or something like that. It's what they'd show, you know, some kind of power lightning bolt, but the way that they would do that stuff is I think, I think it was like it was dark out, you know, are pretty dark out. And so they'd set the camera up for just a cycle of long exposures. And then they would just kind of let it ride, you know, so they'd have a couple seconds to expose the image to whatever you know would work. And then they would just kind of have that rolling so that when when a bolt of lightning did strike, and it would be captured and you could go through that collection of captured or you know how I say that. When a lightning bolt would strike the ground, the cam I would have already been exposing for a photograph. Because it's just cycling the shutter on a four second exposure, let's say something like that. And so you know, it takes a four second exposure, stops, processes for a second, takes a four second exposure stops processes for a second. So I think that's how they did some of that stuff where they, they kind of anticipate. Alright, it's been a couple minutes, let's take a frame now and then it's just going to be an event in the future. So we don't know if it's going to happen or not, we're going to wait for this event in the future when we boom, see a lightning bolt. And then that light then exposes the sensor or the film and the camera. And then you're left with an image that has that lightning bolt represented in the frame when you're shooting on a tripod or something like that with with like a short cycle, long exposure. And I thought that was pretty cool. But I didn't really get a chance to get all that stuff set up before the storm kind of passed me by I did get a lot of cool handheld stuff that was that's great if the thunderheads and stuff. And really unfortunately, just in the location that I'm at a lot of that and I guess maybe for the better. But that lightning storm didn't pass right over my head, it was still a little ways away. So I could see the lightning bolts cracking through the trees can out in the distance more, a few they stretched across the sky pretty good too. It's just a big old, you know, from from east to west. It was like a big old chunk of boulders crack all the way across the sky. It was cool. So I got photos of the thunderheads, the sunset, the the big field out here, it's cool. It's a nice area. But I was also thinking about some of the other stuff that I want to be doing tomorrow. So I'm out in the Fremont National Forest, I'm going to be heading, I think, maybe south from here, and I'm going to try and explore a couple of areas that are still open. Or I guess it's all open publicly, this is like a pretty large contiguous section of national forest land here. And really, like that's a big part of Oregon overall, right? It's like 53%, public lands. It's cool. Yeah, if you look at a map, you'll see the cities and you'll seem like the highways and stuff. But if you have the right map, it'll show you where the BLM land is and where the different national forests are. And it's cool, this whole area, the Northwest is just, there's a lot of public land that you get to use. And there's a lot of open area that you get to go to and, and yeah, now that I've got a good map of the outdoor off-road, roads and some of the terrain and stuff with some good notes, and I'm able to kind of move around and get out to a lot more places than I had before. So it's been cool. The app that I'm using is the on x off road app; it's, I think 2999 a year. And so pitch that out, picked up this app, and then you can download offline, these, these really detailed off road maps that are supposed to show you all the trails, you know, even just walking trails, all the roads, all of the like the pieces of information you'd need for kind of moving around in the backcountry and really as surprising as it is as remote as a lot of these places are people go here, you know, it's it's also public land is managed by the the forest department forest Forest Service. Yeah, I think a lot of this does managed by the Forest Service, the BLM stuffs managed by the BLM. And that's why these roads are as good as they are or maintained. And that's why I like when trees are down on these mountain roads, you know, someone has to go through at the beginning of the year and cut all those out, rip them out filling the potholes, all that sort of stuff. So all these areas are, are known about and you know, kind of managed in a pretty significant way. In fact, I think, more so to come in the future. I think they just announced yesterday or the day before that they've passed the great American outdoors Act, which I really don't know the first thing about or, or what it does or doesn't do or what it puts in or leaves out. But I think part of my understanding is that it's supposed to change some of the funding mechanisms that go into supporting the the maintenance of these public lands that are out here across the country, but really significantly out here in the western states. So it's, it's pretty cool. I think, before that it was like, well, we should spend, you know, X amount of money, but there's a more important place for that money to go. So it wasn't like a guaranteed amount. Sort of what I understand, so if I understand it correctly, there's like I think they've said $3 billion a year of mandated funding for projects. I think here in the backcountry, BLM land, Forest Service land and like national wildlife refuges and stuff so pretty cool, but yeah, I think that's gonna, well, maybe we'll see a change in that. I think it's supposed to better fund the operations of BLM and forest service people as they're going through. And trying to get these areas ready for, for the public to be using more regularly. So it's cool. I think it'll mean a lot over the next few years, or what maybe we'll see how it, how it kind of transforms some of the way that these these areas are managed. I think maybe it's more for mining, I probably shouldn't even speculate. I'm not sure at all. But it's pretty cool. I'm excited about being out here and doing some camping and stuff dealing with this thunderstorm. I think it's one of those things whereby the morning, you know, it's going to be or at least I was looking at the weather, it should be mostly cloudy, partly cloudy, mostly sunny tomorrow for a while. So I think that's pretty cool. I'm excited to be hanging out, do some cabin stuff, do some podcasting. I'm in the back of my truck right now. Like I was saying it was rain in early after this thunderstorm. So I got that canopy on my truck. And I'm nice and dry, nice warm, kind of feels like I'm just inside somewhere. So it's, it's a cool cool rig, having the four wheel drive, having the canopy on the back, having your staff and your sleeping area. Just kind of set it back there. And I'm ready to go. So I've been having a good time being out here, and it's been pretty good. Pretty good trip so far. I so appreciate you guys checking out this podcast from me. I'm gonna do a couple more podcasts while I'm out here on this camping trip. And I'll I'll try and try and set up a little backlog of them on my website. I think it'll be a good idea. Now I kind of take the breaks and stuff. I'm sure no one no one keeps listening when it when it is there. But hey, if you listen to this and the podcast, shoot me an email time for the plugs. It's Billy Newman photo.com. If you want to check out my website, see some of my photographs, check out more podcasts that I've done, or books that I've tried to put together which is maybe what I'm going to try and do out here to try and get some photographs for another good book. That Yeah, Billy Newman photo comm you can check me out there. That's where all my focus is going these days write me an email, there's a forum they actually want to get in touch with me. And always good to hear from people, I suppose. So thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you listening back</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest



Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;Visit the Support Page here.



You can find&nbsp;my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast







151 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown summer thunderstorm_1



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Be sure you guys are tuning in for the first week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now; I'm deep in the middle of the Fremont National Forest, where I've been driving around for a good part of the day. And it's not; it's not really high desert out here. I think it's still mostly like smaller pine trees. And then I think just a little further east if I were to drive where you would start to drop into the area, that would be like the Great Basin, I think that area that was the Inland Sea back during the Pleistocene period before the end of the last ice age. And that's where you get like on eastern Oregon and then out into Nevada to I think it's like just a little east of Bend Oregon. And, and then south from there, into Nevada, and parts of Utah. I think it's like a really big, like high desert area that I think was mostly created from like an inland sea or, you know, that's, I think what they talked about the Great Basin area when you look on those, those maps, and it kinda has this, this far northern region that are up into the Chico mountains and pretty sure somewhere around there. But I think it's a pretty cool being out here. I was able to find a, like an old or at least it's on the map is like a forest service cabin, I don't think it was really in use by the Forest Service's it's not like a base, or it's not like a place where they have resources or tracks. It's just like, an old, an old built homestead almost is what it looks like out here. And it's got to, but I think it's kind of semi-managed and sort of protected by the National Forest Service out here. The roads are pretty good to get into it. And then it opens up into a big meadow. It's probably. I don't know, six or seven acres or so. And then there's like big fencing around it made out of the small, lik]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>32:43</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest



Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. 



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager ]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 150 Comet Neowise</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-150-comet-neowise/</link>
	<pubDate>Mon, 03 Aug 2020 17:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8512</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River,  </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>or&nbsp;<a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast</p>







<p>150 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys for tuning in to this episode recorded for the first week of August in 2020. And wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I made to Eastern Oregon. I think like last week before last is when I was out in this area, and I was trying to get some good observations in for comet nowise I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there I think that was why we had kind of like the new moon before it switched over to being gibbous moon or nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think it was around the 15th through the 25th or so of July. There are some pretty good observations to be made of comet Neo wise, and I guess after kind of reading about it a bit, it's not considered a great comet, like Hale Bopp was, or I think it was I talkie 9996 we hadn't had a great comment in a long time I've ever seen those when I was a kid though that was pretty cool. Like watching the Hale Bopp come through for it seemed like three months or something you know that you're just kind of looking at that in the low corners of the northwestern and Western skies was kind of cruising across the skyline I remember that still from like, third-fourth grade when it was coming through, and I also remember the year before that, when like straight up in the air you know like straight up in the sky at night for it was only like a week or so I was a kid you know, but I remember for that week you can see a real bright two-tailed comet those guns I think I can't remember how to pronounce I think is how you talk here. I think it's it's some Japanese name. Pretty sure. But that was a really cool one. That one I still remember really clearly I was only like, I don't know, seven or something when that like when that comic came through. But I really appreciated getting to make some observations with that one as a kid. I missed Halley's Comet, though, back in what 87, I think, was the last one if it came through. And I probably will be the few years that you know that decade or two of the age range that doesn't get to see Halley's Comet in their lifetime. So I think I was born in 88, of course. So if I make it past 100, maybe you'll see it; what is it maybe like 80 something years, so it's probably not going to come back around until I think it's like the 2017 or 2000 80s that I'd have to make it to for to see Halley's Comet again, that'd be fun, but I don't know, maybe we'll see our future. The future is at that time. But it was really cool to get to see Comet Neo wise; It was just a little below what would be the legs and feet of Ursa Major, the Big Dipper, or like the big bear as it observed. But if you kind of look at the deeper part that we're all most familiar with, if you kind of consider Ursa Major, the larger bear constellation that it's structured on, if you kind of look down below the dipper is where I was able to make my observations of comet nowise. And over here in the elevation area that I'm at, in Western Oregon, it's about 200 or 300 feet above sea level. And there's kind of a constant problem with haze and with light pollution in this area. And I think it has to do something with the well, I mean, of course, you know, the amount of population that's around and also something about the air quality or about how the air kind of flows out around here that just doesn't ever seem to be as crisp or as dark as you can get up in the mountains. And, and really it's just like a stunning difference when you're able to get out further and make some more clear observations. You know, the level of magnitude of stars that you're able to reveal, just in a dark night, is so much more crisp and clear. It's just like a total difference. So it was cool too. I think I was first able to spot just a little fuzzy bit of a second magnitude version of Comet Neowise while I was here in town, but I tried to make a special trip out toward Eastern Oregon out into the desert just to do some camping stuff. But what I wanted to do at the same time was make some good observations and also try and get some good photographs of Comet Neowise as it was coming through during its period, where you could, you could make some, some good sightings of it, but it was cool. So going out to Eastern Oregon, as it got dark, a little past 1030 or so as you look to the northwest, you can really see the comet and its tail spread for a couple of inches in the sky. And I was really surprised to notice how little of it you could really make out to see when you're in an area of almost any light pollution, once you're back in town, or once you're in a lower elevation area. With some light pollution and haze around, it was really difficult to make out in the same way that I could out in the desert or out in the mountains. And so I thought it was pretty cool to get to see and get to check out over there. But yeah, it was a blast getting to do some stuff out in Eastern Oregon. I went over to the John de River area. And I checked out that area. There's a lot of public land out in that area. But there's also some, a lot of private lands too. It's just kind of an interesting area, how it has sort of broken up, and it was cool to get to go out to the head out to Madras, and then I took off and headed over East there until I ran into the john de River. And then I was able to use this map that I have to go through and find some open off or just the open roads that are, you know, smaller gravel roads that are set up to kind of traverse the backcountry out there. So I was able to find a few of those that were open and travel around on those for a while. That was pretty cool. I was able to find some dispersed campsites and set them upright along the john de River, which is really cool. It's a beautiful area out there. It's kind of interesting, and the john de river flows through this sort of. I guess it would be, and I don't know. It's kind of like Canyonland. And it's also sort of these rolling grass hills that sort of make up the landscape of Northern, northern, and northeastern Oregon. And I think Yeah, as soon as you kind of get a little for like a little north of bend is when you get out of the Great Basin area. And you start to get into another kind of landscape that seems to stretch up north of the Columbia River up into Washington. I've heard that some of it are from ancient deposits from the river systems in the waterways that were up there and how it was like there are old deposits and then an erosion that's happened from those rivers running through the area for such a long time. But, but really cool to see kind of the rolling hills and then some carved out canyons that go through the john de river area up there. When I found the campsite, I was at, and I was pretty far away from everybody. And I was really far away from any substantial town. I think it was near. I don't know, and I don't even know what it is. There wasn't anything there. When I drove through, there's a bridge and a couple of little ranch houses, you know, real ranches, right? Like just a little, a little, a little house like a little two-bedroom house and then 100 acres of cattle to deal with. So it seems, uh, seems like another life out there. I wonder how they're dealing with, you know, kind of the way the world is things are this summer, but it was cool. Yeah, getting out there. I went to already kind of set up my campsite, and stuff had my truck going. And that was all pretty easygoing. But then I waited till dark after 1030. Yeah, comet neowise is really visible up below the Big Dipper; it was pretty cool to get to see out there in Eastern Oregon really bright, really clear, you can almost make out the second tail. I have my binoculars with me. I think there are some ten by 40 twos. And those read really well to view it to view the comment. Like really crisp through there through the binoculars, and yeah, really easy to spot most of the night. Even just to the naked eye, it was really easy to spot. It was like, Oh, yeah, it's right there, there's a comment. It's just a big whisper in the sky. So it was really cool to get to view it; what I did is I set up my tripod, and I have my camera with me. So I set it up with a really wide angle. And then I was trying to get some photographs of it as it was, as the comet was sort of coming down to set on the landscape of the hillside, you know, as the hours went on into the night. So I think I stayed out until maybe one or two in the morning when the Big Dipper was sort of scooping down a little low onto the horizon. And then, at that point, the place where the comment was dipped below the horizon and then was out of view for the rest of the evening. And I think even into the morning. I think by that time, when I was photographing it, and it wasn't visible any longer. Up in the morning sky. I think they said you know, at first in early July, you could kind of view it around Capella, if you were able to get out early enough, say three or four in the morning, but as the direction, as it was moving, it was kind of creeping up pretty quickly, you know, day over day. Every day, it would kind of move a good chunk through the sky. And in the direction that it was moving, it was moving to be more visible at the nighttime, which really offered more hours of good observation time, which I thought was pretty cool to wait until it was really dark enough in the northwest view of the sky, probably about 1030 onward, is when you're finally able to make out this kind of finer points of light in the sky in that region. So it was really cool, set up the tripod, set up the camera, set up some manual focus to get it kind of set sharp at night, you can't, you can't use autofocus when you're trying to take photographs of the night sky and the stars because it just kind of seeps back and forth, you have to set it to manual focus and then ring out your focus ring to infinity. And then just back a bit. You'll notice this every time if you do it. It's really frustrating the dark because you can't really always make it out easily and edit your mistake quickly. But if you go all the way to infinity, and then they fix pictures there, the night sky, you're going to notice that these points of light that are the stars sort of end up a little fuzzy, and it's because all the way to infinity, for whatever reason, just isn't quite in focus at infinity. So you have to go all the way up to infinity and then back it off just a bit. And that'll nearly ensure that most of that part of the image is in focus the whole way. And it's difficult even if you do have an F stop that's a little more tightened out, say like an f4 six or something; you're still going to get a lot of that out-of-focus softness if the focus ring isn't really dialed into the right spot. So I tried to work on that a little. And yeah, dialed in my focus was able to set it up with reasonable ISO to get some images of the night sky and pick up some of those finer points of light, and then it was able to take a series of photographs in a few different locations out there in the john de River Valley, which I thought was really cool is pretty to be out there, and it was a nice night really warm in the River Canyon. And really remote to like I was mentioned I think I was the only person out there for a few miles I saw another group coming in on a like a little midsize SUV, and they were going fishing out of the bend in the river a couple of miles up from where I was the size of my truck down a little further and camped out. Just on the side of the river. It was a cool, nice Green River up to the kind of high desert tan rim rock that runs the area around there. So it was a cool evening, a cool campsite area. It's a cool spot to check out comet noise too. So I tried to check it out. Up until I don't know what 130 in the morning when I couldn't see it anymore and then spent the night out there out in the john de river area and then the next morning got up and try to check out some different roads and stuff that went around in that area. So it was pretty cool. I was glad I was able to get out there and do some comment watching over the last couple</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Comet Neowise



Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River,  



Produce]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River,  </p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>or&nbsp;<a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast</p>







<p>150 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Comet Neowise</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys for tuning in to this episode recorded for the first week of August in 2020. And wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I made to Eastern Oregon. I think like last week before last is when I was out in this area, and I was trying to get some good observations in for comet nowise I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there I think that was why we had kind of like the new moon before it switched over to being gibbous moon or nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think it was around the 15th through the 25th or so of July. There are some pretty good observations to be made of comet Neo wise, and I guess after kind of reading about it a bit, it's not considered a great comet, like Hale Bopp was, or I think it was I talkie 9996 we hadn't had a great comment in a long time I've ever seen those when I was a kid though that was pretty cool. Like watching the Hale Bopp come through for it seemed like three months or something you know that you're just kind of looking at that in the low corners of the northwestern and Western skies was kind of cruising across the skyline I remember that still from like, third-fourth grade when it was coming through, and I also remember the year before that, when like straight up in the air you know like straight up in the sky at night for it was only like a week or so I was a kid you know, but I remember for that week you can see a real bright two-tailed comet those guns I think I can't remember how to pronounce I think is how you talk here. I think it's it's some Japanese name. Pretty sure. But that was a really cool one. That one I still remember really clearly I was only like, I don't know, seven or something when that like when that comic came through. But I really appreciated getting to make some observations with that one as a kid. I missed Halley's Comet, though, back in what 87, I think, was the last one if it came through. And I probably will be the few years that you know that decade or two of the age range that doesn't get to see Halley's Comet in their lifetime. So I think I was born in 88, of course. So if I make it past 100, maybe you'll see it; what is it maybe like 80 something years, so it's probably not going to come back around until I think it's like the 2017 or 2000 80s that I'd have to make it to for to see Halley's Comet again, that'd be fun, but I don't know, maybe we'll see our future. The future is at that time. But it was really cool to get to see Comet Neo wise; It was just a little below what would be the legs and feet of Ursa Major, the Big Dipper, or like the big bear as it observed. But if you kind of look at the deeper part that we're all most familiar with, if you kind of consider Ursa Major, the larger bear constellation that it's structured on, if you kind of look down below the dipper is where I was able to make my observations of comet nowise. And over here in the elevation area that I'm at, in Western Oregon, it's about 200 or 300 feet above sea level. And there's kind of a constant problem with haze and with light pollution in this area. And I think it has to do something with the well, I mean, of course, you know, the amount of population that's around and also something about the air quality or about how the air kind of flows out around here that just doesn't ever seem to be as crisp or as dark as you can get up in the mountains. And, and really it's just like a stunning difference when you're able to get out further and make some more clear observations. You know, the level of magnitude of stars that you're able to reveal, just in a dark night, is so much more crisp and clear. It's just like a total difference. So it was cool too. I think I was first able to spot just a little fuzzy bit of a second magnitude version of Comet Neowise while I was here in town, but I tried to make a special trip out toward Eastern Oregon out into the desert just to do some camping stuff. But what I wanted to do at the same time was make some good observations and also try and get some good photographs of Comet Neowise as it was coming through during its period, where you could, you could make some, some good sightings of it, but it was cool. So going out to Eastern Oregon, as it got dark, a little past 1030 or so as you look to the northwest, you can really see the comet and its tail spread for a couple of inches in the sky. And I was really surprised to notice how little of it you could really make out to see when you're in an area of almost any light pollution, once you're back in town, or once you're in a lower elevation area. With some light pollution and haze around, it was really difficult to make out in the same way that I could out in the desert or out in the mountains. And so I thought it was pretty cool to get to see and get to check out over there. But yeah, it was a blast getting to do some stuff out in Eastern Oregon. I went over to the John de River area. And I checked out that area. There's a lot of public land out in that area. But there's also some, a lot of private lands too. It's just kind of an interesting area, how it has sort of broken up, and it was cool to get to go out to the head out to Madras, and then I took off and headed over East there until I ran into the john de River. And then I was able to use this map that I have to go through and find some open off or just the open roads that are, you know, smaller gravel roads that are set up to kind of traverse the backcountry out there. So I was able to find a few of those that were open and travel around on those for a while. That was pretty cool. I was able to find some dispersed campsites and set them upright along the john de River, which is really cool. It's a beautiful area out there. It's kind of interesting, and the john de river flows through this sort of. I guess it would be, and I don't know. It's kind of like Canyonland. And it's also sort of these rolling grass hills that sort of make up the landscape of Northern, northern, and northeastern Oregon. And I think Yeah, as soon as you kind of get a little for like a little north of bend is when you get out of the Great Basin area. And you start to get into another kind of landscape that seems to stretch up north of the Columbia River up into Washington. I've heard that some of it are from ancient deposits from the river systems in the waterways that were up there and how it was like there are old deposits and then an erosion that's happened from those rivers running through the area for such a long time. But, but really cool to see kind of the rolling hills and then some carved out canyons that go through the john de river area up there. When I found the campsite, I was at, and I was pretty far away from everybody. And I was really far away from any substantial town. I think it was near. I don't know, and I don't even know what it is. There wasn't anything there. When I drove through, there's a bridge and a couple of little ranch houses, you know, real ranches, right? Like just a little, a little, a little house like a little two-bedroom house and then 100 acres of cattle to deal with. So it seems, uh, seems like another life out there. I wonder how they're dealing with, you know, kind of the way the world is things are this summer, but it was cool. Yeah, getting out there. I went to already kind of set up my campsite, and stuff had my truck going. And that was all pretty easygoing. But then I waited till dark after 1030. Yeah, comet neowise is really visible up below the Big Dipper; it was pretty cool to get to see out there in Eastern Oregon really bright, really clear, you can almost make out the second tail. I have my binoculars with me. I think there are some ten by 40 twos. And those read really well to view it to view the comment. Like really crisp through there through the binoculars, and yeah, really easy to spot most of the night. Even just to the naked eye, it was really easy to spot. It was like, Oh, yeah, it's right there, there's a comment. It's just a big whisper in the sky. So it was really cool to get to view it; what I did is I set up my tripod, and I have my camera with me. So I set it up with a really wide angle. And then I was trying to get some photographs of it as it was, as the comet was sort of coming down to set on the landscape of the hillside, you know, as the hours went on into the night. So I think I stayed out until maybe one or two in the morning when the Big Dipper was sort of scooping down a little low onto the horizon. And then, at that point, the place where the comment was dipped below the horizon and then was out of view for the rest of the evening. And I think even into the morning. I think by that time, when I was photographing it, and it wasn't visible any longer. Up in the morning sky. I think they said you know, at first in early July, you could kind of view it around Capella, if you were able to get out early enough, say three or four in the morning, but as the direction, as it was moving, it was kind of creeping up pretty quickly, you know, day over day. Every day, it would kind of move a good chunk through the sky. And in the direction that it was moving, it was moving to be more visible at the nighttime, which really offered more hours of good observation time, which I thought was pretty cool to wait until it was really dark enough in the northwest view of the sky, probably about 1030 onward, is when you're finally able to make out this kind of finer points of light in the sky in that region. So it was really cool, set up the tripod, set up the camera, set up some manual focus to get it kind of set sharp at night, you can't, you can't use autofocus when you're trying to take photographs of the night sky and the stars because it just kind of seeps back and forth, you have to set it to manual focus and then ring out your focus ring to infinity. And then just back a bit. You'll notice this every time if you do it. It's really frustrating the dark because you can't really always make it out easily and edit your mistake quickly. But if you go all the way to infinity, and then they fix pictures there, the night sky, you're going to notice that these points of light that are the stars sort of end up a little fuzzy, and it's because all the way to infinity, for whatever reason, just isn't quite in focus at infinity. So you have to go all the way up to infinity and then back it off just a bit. And that'll nearly ensure that most of that part of the image is in focus the whole way. And it's difficult even if you do have an F stop that's a little more tightened out, say like an f4 six or something; you're still going to get a lot of that out-of-focus softness if the focus ring isn't really dialed into the right spot. So I tried to work on that a little. And yeah, dialed in my focus was able to set it up with reasonable ISO to get some images of the night sky and pick up some of those finer points of light, and then it was able to take a series of photographs in a few different locations out there in the john de River Valley, which I thought was really cool is pretty to be out there, and it was a nice night really warm in the River Canyon. And really remote to like I was mentioned I think I was the only person out there for a few miles I saw another group coming in on a like a little midsize SUV, and they were going fishing out of the bend in the river a couple of miles up from where I was the size of my truck down a little further and camped out. Just on the side of the river. It was a cool, nice Green River up to the kind of high desert tan rim rock that runs the area around there. So it was a cool evening, a cool campsite area. It's a cool spot to check out comet noise too. So I tried to check it out. Up until I don't know what 130 in the morning when I couldn't see it anymore and then spent the night out there out in the john de river area and then the next morning got up and try to check out some different roads and stuff that went around in that area. So it was pretty cool. I was glad I was able to get out there and do some comment watching over the last couple</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Comet Neowise



Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River,  



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Comet Neowise



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast







150 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Comet Neowise



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys for tuning in to this episode recorded for the first week of August in 2020. And wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I made to Eastern Oregon. I think like last week before last is when I was out in this area, and I was trying to get some good observations in for comet nowise I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there I think that was why we had kind of like the new moon before it switched over to being gibbous moon or nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think it was around the 15th through the 25th or so of July. There are some pretty good observations to be made of comet Neo wise, and I guess after kind of reading about it a bit, it's not considered a great comet, like Hale Bopp was, or I think it was I talkie 9996 we hadn't had a great comment in a long time I've ever seen those when I was a kid though that was pretty cool. Like watching the Hale Bopp come through for it seemed like three months or something you know that you're just kind of looking at that in the low corners of the northwestern and Western skies was kind of cruising across the skyline I remember that still from like, third-fourth grade when it was coming through, and I also remember the year before that, when like straight up in the air you know like straight up in the sky at night for it was only like a week or so I was a kid you know, but I remember for that week you can see a real bright two-tailed comet those guns I think I can't remember how to pronounce I think is how you talk here.]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>13:52</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Comet Neowise



Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River,  



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Comet Neowise



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp;&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.comor&nbsp;you can em]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 149 Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-wildflowers-foxglove-and-oregon-grape/</link>
	<pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2020 15:30:56 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8506</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape</p>







<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp; <a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About &nbsp; <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p><a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast">https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast</a></p>







<p>149 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown wildflowers foxglove and oregon grape</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you checking this one out. I wanted to talk to you guys today, I think for what is today, the 12th of June 2020. A lot a lot of stuff going on right now in the world. But, in fact a bit about the ideas around media that I had around that no last podcast that I recorded. This one, I was going to get into a little bit of the outdoor stuff that I've been up to, and some of the photo editing bits that I was on and also I wanted to talk a little more about editing with a controller board. What is it called? I don't know. They, yeah, like a MIDI controller. So yeah, the first part I guess I wanted to talk about, we're heading out to the wildlife refuge area. That's out south of Corvallis. Here. The Finley Wildlife Refuge went out there for a couple days in a row to try and check outs and some of the area out there I think it's now opened up a little bit more officially I think during the first weeks of the lockdown here in Oregon, the road that was gated up, I think almost for like two months, the road that cut through to the main section of the wildlife refuge had been boarded up or not boarded up. But I think there's like a gate that cuts across the front entrance of it. Even though it's really sort of a public road that cuts through to the highway on the other side, I think it goes from Bell fountain road over to highway 99 on the other side, so you can cut all the way through but they Yeah, they closed off both ends, I think because there's a visitor center in the in the middle there. And they didn't want people coming in and congregating or I guess traveling on the trails for a period of time. So yeah, I noticed that on a couple other spots a couple of the entrances, they said that maybe I think that you couldn't enter for a while then they sort of shifted those regulations around like we I think kind of talked about on a couple of the previous podcasts and then you could walk but then you had to remain socially distanced and the rest of it. So I think yeah, it's opened. It's opened back up mostly now and has been for the last few weeks. Normally, I think the the wildlife refuges in this area open up on April 1 and then close down again on November 1. And I think that's for the migratory bird I guess seasonal patterns that they that they are in so I think it's for I think it's an area for Canadian geese to come in. And winter in. If that sounds right. I guess that's fine. Oh, so it's loaded up there in the wintertime it's loaded with birds and grains and eat grits and stuff. It's really cool to go down there and, and take some binoculars and look around a lot of Eagles late in the winter. I think that was pretty cool during like February. And in March of this year, there were a lot of bald eagles out in that area, that Willamette Valley, just sort of roaming around. But it was pretty fun to see a lot of hawks too. That was really cool. So yeah, a lot of birds in that area. But I cruise down there this last week for a couple trips to kind of hike out to a few spots now that it's a little more opened up and you can kind of travel through it. It's nice, it's really close to the the area around here and it's a little more open that that's one thing I was noticing as I was looking for a few areas that were a little more opened up as a meadow. And that is as tightly constricted of a forest area. I'll talk about a few of those places next to but this area is really cool though the Willamette Valley area, just really probably a lot of Western Oregon in total. This time of year for the last couple of weeks of May, in the first couple of weeks of June, there's still so much water and rain and sun in the area as it as it's coming down that we really get a lot of flowering plants this time of year. And then later into July. Well, even even by the end of June. And then as you go into July for sure at August it just gets so dry that there's there's really no more wild flowering plants out on the hillsides and in the meadows. So that's what's really cool about right now is you can go out into a meadow and you're going into pretty tall grass because the grass is growing really tall as well right now, and going to seed and then there's a lot of different types of ways like milkweed as the white flowers that grow on it. There's another type of kind of Cecily weed that grows yellow flowers and then there's just additionally like a bunch of cool stretches of fields of wild flowers that are out there that kind of grow interspersed across these fields that have been specifically I think I photographed before talked about probably every year the the fox Glover and bloom this time of year, which is really cool. So you can go around to just about any hillside in Oregon. And you're going to see these really cool stocks of the stock with this, you know, kind of clumped pattern of bright, purple, magenta flowers that are sort of butted off of it. And you'll see him everywhere in this part Oregon for sure. I mean, gosh, like anywhere from I think it would be like Roseburg to Seattle, probably. I don't know if it goes that far. But I don't know if I really saw a lot in Southern Oregon. Just wild on the hillsides during the summertime. There's there's probably a bit out there right now. But really, this area of the Willamette Valley and up into parts of the Cascades before it gets too high in elevation. You see a lot of that out there anyway, that there seem to be like logging activity, you know, where there's, there's some down trees, there's an open field of grass. You know, it can interspersed and then, and then some sunlight that's able to get through to the bottom of the forest floor. That seems like there's these, these rows of foxglove that kind of come in, maybe they were invasive, but not sure how they really came through. I mean, they must have been like tracked in somewhere I see him I see him spilled out by roadsides all over. So it makes me wonder sometimes, but yeah, beautiful flowers really cool. And the way that they bloom for probably the next three weeks is really one of the the natural highlights of, of taking photographs in Oregon, or going out and looking at stuff in Oregon, it's really just one of the nicer bits of the year where you can go out and you can find cool, bright flowers just about anywhere that you can head out to. So yeah, I've always appreciate how you go out and try to get some photographs of that this time of year. I noticed that a little bit in Oregon specifically, probably anywhere that you photograph stuff, is that there's sort of a seasonality to some things where there's a two week period of the year, where a certain idea is just going to work better than other periods of the year. And you can travel around and do different things you can be dynamic, but but but really kind of thinking of it like okay, what am I offered during this period of time that the year provides me so you know, the wintertime, just kind of obtusely think, well, you get snow in the wintertime, and in the summer you get sun, I guess or in the fall you get colored leaves, which is I guess that's a, that's a pretty easy one to understand. But even that you kind of get in the, into the dynamics of taking photographs in the fall. And if you were to think about the, the crisp kind of bright look of early October, before everything gets real wet, or before the leaves really drop, that's when you're able to get a lot of the the crisp, like, kind of vibrant color and mix of colors where you get like the greens, the Orange is the yellows and the Reds sort of spread through the different trees in the air, you get that kind of late September, early October, but by November is still the fall, you get a lot of stuff that that just looks like it's, you know, it's it's a lot of trees that have lost their leaves. And it looks a lot more gray. And there's just kind of a difference of the way that the look of it is similarly in a place like this, with its four season base. And it wasn't like this in Hawaii, right? You know, it was almost the same every day to a fault almost. But similarly in an area like this, where there's changes throughout the year, this time of year, in late May and early June, like I'm talking about, you get these cool blooms of flowers. And that's just a different dynamic than we were going to see later in the year. You know, I mean, late July, August, we have a bunch of blackberries and bloom or something. And, and all through the rest of the year. There's different things but right now we get a bunch of Oregon grape, those bright, cool yellow flowers that are spread across the hillsides as you're driving out to the coast. Or like I was mentioning the the fox glove and the wildflowers that are growing as well. Pretty cool. So that's what I was up to trying to find out the wildlife refuge this time of year. There's really not much wildlife out there as maybe you'd figure but I think during this area this season of the summer, a lot of the animals that would naturally be there have had it off for a while. I don't know if it's up to the mountains. I think there's a good-sized herd of elk that go in and out of the wildlife refuge there. I've seen him a few times I think maybe I talked about before in this podcast, but like last winter, I'd seen him a couple times. But I think it was thinking specifically maybe sometime in November. I think that's near there. Right. But I'm not really sure the dynamics of how elk work. But yeah, I definitely saw a few bowls. You can see Yeah, they're big racks kind of walking through this open field of a have a wildlife refuge and then and then yeah, bunch of the dozer around. Oh, I think I mentioned a few weeks ago, maybe on one of these podcasts that we were out at the wildlife refuge. Well, yeah. So strike one I said almost I mean in kitten, but we were added a further south section of the same wildlife refuge, looking across the open field at dusk and we saw Well, I'm not sure what it was it could it was an elk. It was now cruciate, but we saw a lone elk maybe 200 yards out across an open field. And it just kind of cruised a little zigzag as it kind of like went through this field sort of scoping and bending down to chew. And we watched it for a while. And then we ended up taking off after 45 minutes or something. But yeah, we just have to hanging out and having like a picnic or something. Yeah. Hanging out. And yeah, this Oh, popped up and cruise around out there. So I guess that was, what was that? mid May or so when we last saw that. So that was kind of cool. But yeah, just that that lone elk. Also, he's probably headed up to the hills. I guess by the time that it's gonna get pretty hot out here. I bet the people around there sort of know their, their natural migrations a little bit better. But it's cool. Yeah, you can go out there in the wintertime, see elk. You can see a bunch of birds. I saw coyote out there. It was fun. But yeah, there's a bunch of bunch of animals, but natural stuff, which places you can hike around. It's just it's cool that we have a couple areas like that, that are designated as, as wills, or what it's a wilderness area to a wildlife refuge. I think there's another one north of here. Well, there's a bunch in Oregon, really, if you if you if you pull up a map and you look for wildlife refuges, you'll probably find one that near and about the area that you live, there's really a lot outside the Portland area. There's a lot, I think along but I 84 Columbia River Corridor. There's a lot I think, down this way into the Willamette Valley and along the coast, but there's really almost nothing, I was surprised. There's almost none in Southern Oregon. And there's a few but it's it's it's pretty dispersed out in Eastern Oregon. It's really I think, just considered everything in Eastern Oregon Public Lands or, you know, like, was BLM or, or a national forest or something. So why designated wildlife? I think they're supposed to be specifically, specifically set aside as viewsheds. Or like specific wildlife habitats that they want to keep intact. And I think a lot of that program was maybe put in place in the 70s and 80s. But I'm not really sure about it, is there's a whole there's a whole breakdown of the history, I mean, a breakdown I don't have but there's a whole breakdown of the history of how different segments of public lands were kind of attached and then set up. And so they're really not all as old as I might have thought they were, I think I think this one might be back from the maybe 70s or 80s, like I was saying when they finally had it established. And so even still, there's, there's like a few farms and a few, like, there's a bunch of buildings and stuff out there already, because they built things before there's ever any public land protections. And so now there's those structures there. And you drive through and it's cool, it's fine, I think, I think a lot of it's managed land. So they have like a number of fields, like I was mentioning that the elk kind of cruise across, but in the summertime, like right now. They have, they have a bunch of tractors down there, and they have gone through and plowed or not plowed but they've gone through, is it a combine, they went through and cut the hay, they cut the grass that was grown. And then they made these giant rolls not bales that those square bales of hay that you would see you know, kind of as a commercial product, but these really huge bales of hay that seemed like about as big as my truck around and as tall as my truck. And then they stack eight of those up onto a flatbed pick or not pickup truck but a flatbed semi truck. And then they have like a double trailer. So they have when I was 16 of these big bales and then they're they're doing runs that all day to take out this grass product that they've produced on the land there. And I think that's sort of one of the the multiple use cases for the land management that they do. You know, they do this kind of like I was talking about earlier, you know, you do this time of year, you do this next time a year. Because it's just it's just what the land and the environment offer you at that time. So I was out there the other day, yeah, watching these, these tractors kind of cruise around and pick up, pick up their bales of hay that they'd set it up. And then I think after that once that's done as it gets into the drier season, in the rest of the year, I think it goes it just kind of hangs out until the fall and then and then that's when the elk come back in and that's when the birds come back in. So it's cool going out there and check it out a few spots have been enjoying it in the afternoons. That's a good spot to kind of head out to and it's an easy spot to get to and you can kind of find like a bunch of open areas where you can kind of focus They're not just some real specific singular points, like, I have this 50 millimeter macro lens on my camera right now. So instead of just going out and taking a wide angle broad landscape photos, which is a nice area for you can go in and with that macro lens focus in kind of real specifically and tightly on to a cluster of flowers or grouping of flowers, I think kind of pick your angle of view. Or well, and kind of pick your, I guess, pick your depth of field and sort of select how just how you're going to make that image kind of pop, or how you're gonna get that flower to separate from the rest of it. But yeah, it's fun working with the macros because you can get kind of right in there next to it and still keep that object and focus like, like a flower or a bug or something. Any, I guess kind of small, small, detailed item, you can move that lens right up next to anything is that because if it's what is its minimum focal distance, I'm not sure what that was called. What is that when it's, you know, however many centimeters away from the front of the glass, the lens it is until you can first get something in focus. With a lot of lenses, like if you try this with a telephoto lens, some telephoto lenses I've had, like, I think I had a f4 telephoto lens and you couldn't you could not focus that lens. And something less than eight feet of distance, you got to be like nine feet away before you could get something in focus with that lens. With something like a macro lens, you can get, you know, six centimeters away from the lens, and you'll still be able to keep that in focus. And I think that's with some of the dynamics of how the glass optics are arranged inside the lens. I guess I'll leave it there cuz I'm sure certainly the rest of it is beyond me. But it's kind of cool. Thinking about some of the macro stuff. So it's cool having it on there. And it's cool getting to go around this time of year because there's, like I was mentioning there's just there's, there's all these different opportunities to go and kind of arranged these different little bits of flowers and take some photos of them. Also, I guess Miss Jane Yeah, big, big, wide open fields and landscapes and stuff. I mean, it's quite a full hearty landscape. I want to get out and see some real mountains are seen as get up in the Cascades or something and try and fix up them a little bit more. A little bit more extreme in the landscape side. But as it goes for a nice mellow field in the evening light of June. Let's go on pretty good. Taking some photos of fast foxgloves fields, a wild flowers. So pretty easygoing bit of time there. So by doing that, I also went up to Coburg ridge and I had like a pellet gun. This scene that I was like when we were kids and stuff Yeah, he had like a BB gun. I got like, like a daisy red Ryder. But there's also like the pellet guns where you put the the copper Bibi's but those little sort of little LED kind of parachute tipped pellets, right. Yeah. So you pop one of those in and I had a few of those. I guess when I was a kid, over at my grandparents place, we go shoot cans and stuff. But this one that I've got is like a single shot one like a pump action one. So I went up to Coburg ridge. So went over to Brownsville, and then headed out the back way went up to Coburg ridge. And there's a bunch of big different roads sort of cut off there out into the forest up in the hills and stuff where you can you can go up to a dead end and people go shooting up there all the time. And you know, it's interesting during this lockdown and stuff to where there's a bunch of people that aren't able to go back to work, but are still trying to occupy their time. There's, there's a bunch of people, though, it seems like you know, when you go out to a wilderness area, I talked about this a bit before in another podcast. But if you go to a wilderness or a more remote location, there's should be no one there, right? Because everybody's at work. But as soon as everybody's not at work. There's another 10 people that decided to go out to the middle of nowhere. And once 10 people show up, even though there's a lot of people in Oregon man, once 10 people show up in the middle of nowhere, it starts to seem crowded. And so even on a Tuesday afternoon, if you go up on Coburg Ridge, there's gonna be a lot of pull-outs and roads and different areas that you think maybe would be providing more solitude at some point in the past now you're going to come around a corner and there's going to be there's going to be a couple tracks pulled over already into a spot and they're already firing away. You just see that as you kind of do s turns around the different around that little forest gravel road as you kind of cruise around in the hills there. So I went out I found a spot that was cool. It wasn't you know, heavily crowded and stuff but yeah, I set up a little target and stuff and then was practicing with this. This little pump action pellet rifle that I was Trying to check out that was kind of fun. Bella rifles cruiser and doing some, some target practice really I was trying to get to be, I guess like a little bit more of a consistent shot at a specific distance. I've heard that before, we're like what you want to try and do if you're getting provided hear me, I'm Tina pelegrin. But if you try to get into some shooting stuff, and you want to kind of, I guess kind of refine your consistency, so you can get, you can get a good shot, I think the idea was like a 50 yards and then 100 yards, what you want her to try and do was get a pattern or you know, get like a probably something in about the size of a dinner plate. So what I had heard, where you want to try and get a cluster of shots fired into the space of about a dinner plate. And I guess that's sort of showing that as I take a shot and have the consistency to get it into a specific point of a target. That's, that's actually selected, even at a range of somewhere around 100 yards. And I think that's part like hear hunters talking about that, like, you're a good shot, but are you a good shot at x range, you know, which I think is the preliminary element of, of if you're doing any, any kind of gun activity, but or if you're actually doing some real shooting, but I don't know, I gotta try it more, I haven't been very much of a good shot through the years. I mean, I think like the most of the stuff I've done was like a BB gun at, say 50 feet or something. So that's not a lot of yardage to be firing across, what I want to try and do is I have a 22 around those my grandparents, my grandfather's and so I want to take that out to Eastern Oregon, or out to even some of the spots that I was at, and do some, but really, I want the range. So I want to go to like Eastern Oregon and set something a bit like 50 and 100, like I'm saying and then and then kind of practice on trying to get the, I guess the distribution of my shot placement into a space that would be about as wide a part is at dinner play. And then when I can kind of do that, then I guess I'd have the confidence to sort of consider that if I am taking a shot at a target or whatever. I'm not really gonna be a hunter, I suppose. But yeah, if I'm firing at a target at a range, then I know that the my shot placement is consistent. And after that, you know, my use of is consistent enough. That seems like I should be doing it. I hear about that with like archery too, you know, like when people are getting into I guess bow hunting more specifically, you know, where they want to try and make their shots at 30 yards, and then 40 yards more consistent so that if they do take a shot when they're hunting, they have the shot placement, and confidence in the shot placement at that range. So they can take a shot take an animal down, I suppose. Because that's kind of one of the worst things is if if you're outside of that, if you're hunting and you're outside of that that dinner, dinner plate size target patch, then you get a bad hit, they say, and then it won't, it won't be as direct. And then it'll really I think generally just cause more suffering as we maybe leave it there the conversation. But I don't think that's really anyone's goal, as far as you know, like when you're out about and so yeah, let's go do some target practice stuff, trying to get into that with some of the time that I've had. But I wanted to talk a little bit on this podcast, even though I've been going on for a while now about wedding photography. And I thought that the the wedding photography industry was maybe one of those interesting problems that we're going to see kind of continued to spill out over the next months, it seems like with this with COVID, and then with the lockdown. And then with the multiphase reopening plan that we have, there's going to be a lot of businesses and industries that come back online. And a lot of people seem to get back to work with a significant hiccup in the system. But it seems like maybe those industries will come back online and get back to work sort of smoothly. I'm curious about the wedding industry. Well, the wedding industry, the events industry overall. And then as the sort of trickle down, trickles down the the economic pyramid there, how does that arrive at wedding photographers? And that's sort of one of the questions that I've had I've been mulling over over the last weeks. I mean, it seems like everybody went through the experience of having any, any booked gigs during the month of April or May just sort of cancelled and evaporated. Right before everyone's eyes. So I was curious how that was for any wedding photographers out there. I mean, I remember. There's like a wedding back on like March 6. And now I think that just by snuck under the wire there. And then for the last many months, there's been no public gatherings of that type and no, no events for that kind of thing. So it's curious. Yeah, like, man, like, what's that gonna do to industries where it really you just have to have some level of confidence, you know, like market confidence to try and participate in, I was thinking about, yeah, like vacationing, or even a lot of leisure based stuff, it seems like a lot of families are going to be in a position where they've not been working for a period of time, and to some capacity, they're going to be in the hole, you know, I mean, with everybody's mortgage crisis, or rent crisis, or job crisis, or, I mean, please fill in the list of what we're going to be experiencing in the next six, six months, or whether it's going to be identified as experienced in the next six months, it'll be interesting to kind of go through, as I understand it, like even in places like California, where they're getting into their phase two, and then phase three parts of the reopening. I think they're gonna have bars, and then nightclubs return. And then I think maybe later into that, even is when you're going to get event centers to open back up again, that's more for like, like concert venues or sporting event venues, that sort of thing. But I was interested, just kind of more specifically, yeah, like, how is a wedding venue going to reopen? And I figure kind of given the news of some things, it seems like, there's just gonna be a lot of things that reopen. They're just about what we're open again, you know, at least in a numbers day, this seems like taxes is sort of moving that way, Oklahoma's moving that way. Seems like a lot of those kind of Midwestern and southern states are sort of moving in that direct direction pretty quickly. And really, as even I can say, a lot of places in Oregon, especially this rural area of Oregon, there's, there's not many masks, there's not many private business guidelines that you interact with. So it, there's just not and I mean, gosh, like looking at the the flow of traffic and the number of people out and just how things are, it's really quite a different environment than it was months ago at the beginning of this. In March, it seems like a lot of the concern people had about not going out or not interacting or not continuing on with their, their more regularly scheduled lives is is just not going to be interrupted anymore. I think we've, it seems like mentally A lot of people have just selected that. It that problem has passed. I might be one of those people, for better or worse. So as it goes, Yeah, it seems like a lot of stuff is reopening. It seems like events of some type are going to come back into place, but family of like voluntary family events like weddings, it just seems like Well, I don't know, I don't know how those events are going to be rescheduled. Definitely, like a wedding ceremony is a super important part of person's life. And it just seems like it's gonna be a hard year for that to happen and go smoothly, you know, and it kind of specifically for those folks who are in the industry that's supported by the wedding, the wedding events industry, it's like, we'll go out and DJs a lot of catering businesses, I'm sure have to wait for those live events to come back before they get a booking to go to a catering event. And then even still, you know, how are people going to be interacting with that sort of stuff? So So this was wonder about Yeah, photography, like for family photography, like any family photo gigs, I had, like, probably evaporated for the next couple months, I'm sure you know, like, when are we going to get? I mean, a lot of families that are together, I'm sure are fine. But do they want photos right now? Do they want to spend a significant amount of money after all this stuff has happened? Or you know, just like the number of people that would have been interested in a sort of a luxury purchase have larger photo package created for them, it just seems like wow, let's not have someone over at our house or let's not go out to somewhere as a family or let's not drop all this money on something that we don't need anymore. And I bet there's a lot of industries that are going to be kind of suffering from that as we sort of come out of a readjustment from what what is it that we need in the 2020s now and what was just sort of superfluous, like luxury item that we had in the past that's, that's no longer really necessary. I don't know maybe I think a lot of stuff in human nature will just kind of pop back to the way that maybe had been before like I was just mentioned, it seems like the season of considering this stuff for a lot of folks has passed. And then for a lot of folks in addition to that there's a lot of a lot of face masks and face shields and distancing behavior going on. So it'll be interesting to see how that divergence either comes back together or continues to divide. And it seems like right now we're in we're in a time where things like that just sort of continue to divide. So maybe that's what it'll look like for the next few years. But I'm not sure I think, as it goes, if well, as a consumer goes, I think that a lot of consumers will be able to get what they want, if they want to go out to eat, if they want to get married, if they want a photo package, they'll be able to get one, as it goes for the businesses, I think that that's going to be a little bit more concerning where all of those small businesses are going to have to compete for a much smaller whole pie. And that means their slice, I think it's gonna be a lot slimmer, as well. So maybe it'll be interesting, I think, I think it'll be it'll be it'll be a big dip. But then I think it'll probably return. I don't know, maybe a year or so. Depends on depends, I guess. And like, what the second wave stuff goes, like I don't I don't really expect to see any multi generation weddings, or family photo events coming around soon. I mean, gosh, like I was doing the family, family portrait stuff in Hawaii, or last year. And that's not going on at all anymore. What are they doing? I mean, I've thought about this a few times. And the first time I thought about it, but Gosh, like Yeah, what are these? What are these people doing now? The photographers or the hotels or any of that? But additionally, the families? When are they coming back? I mean, why hasn't opened up anything yet? They're still completely locked out. I think they're arresting residents to go outside in the wrong way still. So what is the confidence to go on a seven day trip to Hawaii gonna pop back in? And then when is that also going to include getting a Hokie photo package with your family? Man, or Yeah, like inviting your your elderly, grandmother or grandfather to a wedding or something? It just seems like, oh, man, I wonder, are these people just gonna be on Skype? Maybe they'll need photos and videos more than ever now. There'll be a multimedia wedding where you're just in an empty room with the bride and groom and pastor, and then it's streamed over zoom. That's gonna be a great future. I don't really suspect that I think a lot of people are pretty fatigued by the idea of working with zoom or working with these video chat services. And really, whatever happened to a phone call? I mean, this is audio, isn't it? Are you? Are you sad that I cannot be seen right now? I don't know. Maybe. So it seems a little too Max Headroom for me to just keep looking at someone on a half second delay. It's obviously a silly. So I really I think audio I think voice I think sound is a really powerful medium just on its own. And I've always been curious why, you know, like a conference call seemed to work quite well, in the 90s. It doesn't seem like everything has to be a zoom meeting, which is not an equivalent to face to face. Not yet. I think that's a part of latency. I've been trying to learn about this with audio stuff, too. And that's what some of the 5g infrastructure is supposed to work on to is the latency of how long it takes a packet to get made, and then sent across the network and delivered, and then how long it takes for return of that two round trip back to me, essentially, saying, you know, like, What's that? What's that little chunk of delay? That happens? on a phone like on a Skype call, where, you know, it's it's not real, it's maybe 900 milliseconds behind where it's, you know, it's just like a 10th of a second or something off. And there's an effect to that you're just the video motion to you know, like, if you make a reaction, there's just the moment of delay. Remember, you remember this, like on the news feeds when a correspondent was at a satellite location, maybe across the earth? And so the the news anchor would say, like, Hey, what are you learning in India? And then it would be, you'd be staring at the image of the reporter, waiting to start his report, and you count this like, silent bead of like, 123456. Like, what is why why is this guy that started talking? Yeah. And then you say, Oh, well, yeah, we're here. And we're covering this and then you think, oh, that that giant gap that big delay in the responses is when that person heard it in real time, and then started responding. And that big gap that we hear is the round trip delay that it takes for the signal to leave the studio and America wherever it was traveled to a satellite bounce around. Across a few satellites is supposed to The other side of the earth and then bounce down to the ground in India where it makes contact with a producer. They're at, you know, wherever this camera guy is on a remote, and then the anchor hears it speaks. And then it goes through the same process again, where it goes up to a satellite bounces around halfway around the Earth comes back down to the ground over another satellite, and then is broadcast out over the air. So that whole thing is latency. The whole the time that it takes that process to occur is latency. And to the degree that we can shrink that or shorten that, or use different information tools to make that happen faster, like packet sizing, or I don't know, network forming or what is it packet forming, so that they're able to make these these kinds of things a little bit faster. And so I think that's one of the hopes of 5g, and then I've also heard of one now it's that low latency, I think that's one of the problems is Satellite Internet, like one of the hopes was that you could get satellite in and then get bandwidth anywhere around the Earth. But the problem that people would have is high latency. And that's I think, because the satellite is so much further away than even a cell phone tower, like we were talking about. And that just kind of the way and the technology that was developed for the satellites wasn't wasn't low latency. So I think that's what one of the attempts of the starlink program is, I think you've heard about that, I hate to say Elon Musk's starlink. But that might be like, the easiest way to recognize it, maybe you've seen the satellites cruising overhead to, I've only seen him a couple times, or once a one night, I saw a number of them, which is probably what you would see to most the time, they're not there. And then there's a cluster of them. And apparently, they're going to be launching somewhere around 1000. They were supposed to cover a grid around the sphere of the earth. And then what we were talking about is that we create kind of a lower latency satellite network that would allow telecommunications of data packets to any location on the earth. And the hope is that that would have that would I guess, provide access to people all around the world to do some type of compute or some type of networked data exchange wirelessly anywhere on the earth? Yes, you'd have, you know, anywhere you don't have cell signal, you'd have signal because it goes to the satellite, everything's a satellite phone now is what the idea that that project is. So it's getting off the ground, it's getting into space, they've launched maybe 200 satellites. Now it seems like they go up with about 50 or 60. Every time I heard they had a launch, maybe every month since early March or so. I think there was maybe there was I think maybe one in January. There's definitely one in March. I think there was one again in May. Yeah, so they got a bunch of satellites up. I think it's pretty cool. I think that's what they're doing with some of those, those Falcon nine rockets when they're, they're sending them up to do you know, the SpaceX missions, not the, the Dragon capsule that went to the space station, but some of the other ones that they have for, for satellite deployment. I think that's what they're doing is deploying some of these starlink satellites. They got a panic, not panic, but a unexcited phone call from a friend. He said, Billy, look outside. What's this? The UFO we're being invaded. And I like to happen. And yeah, it's a stream of pretty bright. satellites are pretty bright objects that are lit moving quick across the sky from the southwest to the northeast. And they're kind of spaced out. Just a little gap between each other. It just seemed like maybe like one or two inches of the of the distance of the sky. like you'd be grabbed it in your fingers at your arms like, and there's just the stream and I'm kind of cruising at satellite speed across the sky look like a satellite. But most of the time, they don't move in that direction. They don't move that fast. They don't look that color. So it's like yeah, what is that? That's cool. And trippy and scared. It's like, Whoa, like, Are we being invaded? I mean, war, the world's was just the radio program. And it caused more panic than that. Maybe we're, I don't know. I guess we're where it's more settled into it now. But But yeah, I got this phone call from my friend. And I was thinking about I was like, Oh, yeah, this. This is the starlink program. This is that that satellite deployment, where they're all clustered together, and they're going to be visible for a period of time. And then I think they're going to be, they're kind of spiraling out as they go around the Earth. They're sort of getting further and further out in orbit from the earth each time they go until they get to a distance, that they're going to sort of remain as my understanding. And so I think they're pretty bright. Now once they're launched, and then over time, they're going to get a little like dimmer and dimmer and dimmer until they're really not as no noticeable I think that was a concern for a while for Astro photographers is that this deployment of 1000 satellites into the sky is going to disrupt long exposure night photography significantly, because we're going to have all these different extra points of light, that we're going to ruin all this this data gathering that we do for astronomy or for personal Astro photography, I hope. And my understanding is there supposed to be painted in this black matte paint? like they did with the Iridium satellites, more recently. And that's supposed to, I guess, affect the the flares that we get those Iridium burns that we would see where a satellite is, you know, is visible, but then all of a sudden, catches the glare of the sun. And then shimmers for five or 10 seconds really bright, brighter than almost anything in the sky and then fades again. It's called an Iridium burn for the Iridium satellites that were put up as like satellite communication. I think it's like how we get NBC or something. Yeah. We get some of those. Some of those satellite communications that we have now almost everything, you know, goes through this satellite communications network that was launched, I think back in the 60s, the Iridium network, and then a lot of that was replaced in the last 10 years, maybe with the new items. And then I think now they're watching, you know, watching all these SpaceX items. But yeah, it's cool. If you get a chance to see him You can I think you can look up online, like how to spot the the SpaceX starlink satellites that have been launched. And they're on a pretty specific timing, and they're only in like, a certain part of the world at any given time. And I think it takes a while for them to get to your part of the world if they're not there right now. So yeah, I think you can check it out. And you can find like, one of the sightings or one of the times that you're gonna have a sighting in your area, but it's pretty cool. Yeah, you can find it and see some satellites cruising by, hopefully, as the summer kind of rolls out a little bit more near Corvallis. Maybe I'd mentioned before. It has been around. June. Oh, yeah. So I think I'm gonna wrap it up there for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Thank you very much for checking it out. Today, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com, for more information about me or my photographs, or some of the photo ebooks I put together, or I don't know, whatever other stuff. So hopefully, yeah, we get to talk again soon. I think there's a couple a couple topics I didn't get to on this one, I'll get back to some of those logic control things I want to talk about. And I want to kind of get into a deeper dive on that stuff. Next time. I'm just getting into working with this, this controller with the software that runs controls in Lightroom with it and I'm just really getting used to it where you can kind of use this mixing board to mix and match different colors and light ramps. So I'm looking to try and get into that more and then maybe make some some stuff around it. But I'll definitely get into that in a deeper dive next time. The podcast but thanks for checking this out. Talk to you guys later. Bye</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape







Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto


]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape</p>







<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



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<p>149 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown wildflowers foxglove and oregon grape</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you checking this one out. I wanted to talk to you guys today, I think for what is today, the 12th of June 2020. A lot a lot of stuff going on right now in the world. But, in fact a bit about the ideas around media that I had around that no last podcast that I recorded. This one, I was going to get into a little bit of the outdoor stuff that I've been up to, and some of the photo editing bits that I was on and also I wanted to talk a little more about editing with a controller board. What is it called? I don't know. They, yeah, like a MIDI controller. So yeah, the first part I guess I wanted to talk about, we're heading out to the wildlife refuge area. That's out south of Corvallis. Here. The Finley Wildlife Refuge went out there for a couple days in a row to try and check outs and some of the area out there I think it's now opened up a little bit more officially I think during the first weeks of the lockdown here in Oregon, the road that was gated up, I think almost for like two months, the road that cut through to the main section of the wildlife refuge had been boarded up or not boarded up. But I think there's like a gate that cuts across the front entrance of it. Even though it's really sort of a public road that cuts through to the highway on the other side, I think it goes from Bell fountain road over to highway 99 on the other side, so you can cut all the way through but they Yeah, they closed off both ends, I think because there's a visitor center in the in the middle there. And they didn't want people coming in and congregating or I guess traveling on the trails for a period of time. So yeah, I noticed that on a couple other spots a couple of the entrances, they said that maybe I think that you couldn't enter for a while then they sort of shifted those regulations around like we I think kind of talked about on a couple of the previous podcasts and then you could walk but then you had to remain socially distanced and the rest of it. So I think yeah, it's opened. It's opened back up mostly now and has been for the last few weeks. Normally, I think the the wildlife refuges in this area open up on April 1 and then close down again on November 1. And I think that's for the migratory bird I guess seasonal patterns that they that they are in so I think it's for I think it's an area for Canadian geese to come in. And winter in. If that sounds right. I guess that's fine. Oh, so it's loaded up there in the wintertime it's loaded with birds and grains and eat grits and stuff. It's really cool to go down there and, and take some binoculars and look around a lot of Eagles late in the winter. I think that was pretty cool during like February. And in March of this year, there were a lot of bald eagles out in that area, that Willamette Valley, just sort of roaming around. But it was pretty fun to see a lot of hawks too. That was really cool. So yeah, a lot of birds in that area. But I cruise down there this last week for a couple trips to kind of hike out to a few spots now that it's a little more opened up and you can kind of travel through it. It's nice, it's really close to the the area around here and it's a little more open that that's one thing I was noticing as I was looking for a few areas that were a little more opened up as a meadow. And that is as tightly constricted of a forest area. I'll talk about a few of those places next to but this area is really cool though the Willamette Valley area, just really probably a lot of Western Oregon in total. This time of year for the last couple of weeks of May, in the first couple of weeks of June, there's still so much water and rain and sun in the area as it as it's coming down that we really get a lot of flowering plants this time of year. And then later into July. Well, even even by the end of June. And then as you go into July for sure at August it just gets so dry that there's there's really no more wild flowering plants out on the hillsides and in the meadows. So that's what's really cool about right now is you can go out into a meadow and you're going into pretty tall grass because the grass is growing really tall as well right now, and going to seed and then there's a lot of different types of ways like milkweed as the white flowers that grow on it. There's another type of kind of Cecily weed that grows yellow flowers and then there's just additionally like a bunch of cool stretches of fields of wild flowers that are out there that kind of grow interspersed across these fields that have been specifically I think I photographed before talked about probably every year the the fox Glover and bloom this time of year, which is really cool. So you can go around to just about any hillside in Oregon. And you're going to see these really cool stocks of the stock with this, you know, kind of clumped pattern of bright, purple, magenta flowers that are sort of butted off of it. And you'll see him everywhere in this part Oregon for sure. I mean, gosh, like anywhere from I think it would be like Roseburg to Seattle, probably. I don't know if it goes that far. But I don't know if I really saw a lot in Southern Oregon. Just wild on the hillsides during the summertime. There's there's probably a bit out there right now. But really, this area of the Willamette Valley and up into parts of the Cascades before it gets too high in elevation. You see a lot of that out there anyway, that there seem to be like logging activity, you know, where there's, there's some down trees, there's an open field of grass. You know, it can interspersed and then, and then some sunlight that's able to get through to the bottom of the forest floor. That seems like there's these, these rows of foxglove that kind of come in, maybe they were invasive, but not sure how they really came through. I mean, they must have been like tracked in somewhere I see him I see him spilled out by roadsides all over. So it makes me wonder sometimes, but yeah, beautiful flowers really cool. And the way that they bloom for probably the next three weeks is really one of the the natural highlights of, of taking photographs in Oregon, or going out and looking at stuff in Oregon, it's really just one of the nicer bits of the year where you can go out and you can find cool, bright flowers just about anywhere that you can head out to. So yeah, I've always appreciate how you go out and try to get some photographs of that this time of year. I noticed that a little bit in Oregon specifically, probably anywhere that you photograph stuff, is that there's sort of a seasonality to some things where there's a two week period of the year, where a certain idea is just going to work better than other periods of the year. And you can travel around and do different things you can be dynamic, but but but really kind of thinking of it like okay, what am I offered during this period of time that the year provides me so you know, the wintertime, just kind of obtusely think, well, you get snow in the wintertime, and in the summer you get sun, I guess or in the fall you get colored leaves, which is I guess that's a, that's a pretty easy one to understand. But even that you kind of get in the, into the dynamics of taking photographs in the fall. And if you were to think about the, the crisp kind of bright look of early October, before everything gets real wet, or before the leaves really drop, that's when you're able to get a lot of the the crisp, like, kind of vibrant color and mix of colors where you get like the greens, the Orange is the yellows and the Reds sort of spread through the different trees in the air, you get that kind of late September, early October, but by November is still the fall, you get a lot of stuff that that just looks like it's, you know, it's it's a lot of trees that have lost their leaves. And it looks a lot more gray. And there's just kind of a difference of the way that the look of it is similarly in a place like this, with its four season base. And it wasn't like this in Hawaii, right? You know, it was almost the same every day to a fault almost. But similarly in an area like this, where there's changes throughout the year, this time of year, in late May and early June, like I'm talking about, you get these cool blooms of flowers. And that's just a different dynamic than we were going to see later in the year. You know, I mean, late July, August, we have a bunch of blackberries and bloom or something. And, and all through the rest of the year. There's different things but right now we get a bunch of Oregon grape, those bright, cool yellow flowers that are spread across the hillsides as you're driving out to the coast. Or like I was mentioning the the fox glove and the wildflowers that are growing as well. Pretty cool. So that's what I was up to trying to find out the wildlife refuge this time of year. There's really not much wildlife out there as maybe you'd figure but I think during this area this season of the summer, a lot of the animals that would naturally be there have had it off for a while. I don't know if it's up to the mountains. I think there's a good-sized herd of elk that go in and out of the wildlife refuge there. I've seen him a few times I think maybe I talked about before in this podcast, but like last winter, I'd seen him a couple times. But I think it was thinking specifically maybe sometime in November. I think that's near there. Right. But I'm not really sure the dynamics of how elk work. But yeah, I definitely saw a few bowls. You can see Yeah, they're big racks kind of walking through this open field of a have a wildlife refuge and then and then yeah, bunch of the dozer around. Oh, I think I mentioned a few weeks ago, maybe on one of these podcasts that we were out at the wildlife refuge. Well, yeah. So strike one I said almost I mean in kitten, but we were added a further south section of the same wildlife refuge, looking across the open field at dusk and we saw Well, I'm not sure what it was it could it was an elk. It was now cruciate, but we saw a lone elk maybe 200 yards out across an open field. And it just kind of cruised a little zigzag as it kind of like went through this field sort of scoping and bending down to chew. And we watched it for a while. And then we ended up taking off after 45 minutes or something. But yeah, we just have to hanging out and having like a picnic or something. Yeah. Hanging out. And yeah, this Oh, popped up and cruise around out there. So I guess that was, what was that? mid May or so when we last saw that. So that was kind of cool. But yeah, just that that lone elk. Also, he's probably headed up to the hills. I guess by the time that it's gonna get pretty hot out here. I bet the people around there sort of know their, their natural migrations a little bit better. But it's cool. Yeah, you can go out there in the wintertime, see elk. You can see a bunch of birds. I saw coyote out there. It was fun. But yeah, there's a bunch of bunch of animals, but natural stuff, which places you can hike around. It's just it's cool that we have a couple areas like that, that are designated as, as wills, or what it's a wilderness area to a wildlife refuge. I think there's another one north of here. Well, there's a bunch in Oregon, really, if you if you if you pull up a map and you look for wildlife refuges, you'll probably find one that near and about the area that you live, there's really a lot outside the Portland area. There's a lot, I think along but I 84 Columbia River Corridor. There's a lot I think, down this way into the Willamette Valley and along the coast, but there's really almost nothing, I was surprised. There's almost none in Southern Oregon. And there's a few but it's it's it's pretty dispersed out in Eastern Oregon. It's really I think, just considered everything in Eastern Oregon Public Lands or, you know, like, was BLM or, or a national forest or something. So why designated wildlife? I think they're supposed to be specifically, specifically set aside as viewsheds. Or like specific wildlife habitats that they want to keep intact. And I think a lot of that program was maybe put in place in the 70s and 80s. But I'm not really sure about it, is there's a whole there's a whole breakdown of the history, I mean, a breakdown I don't have but there's a whole breakdown of the history of how different segments of public lands were kind of attached and then set up. And so they're really not all as old as I might have thought they were, I think I think this one might be back from the maybe 70s or 80s, like I was saying when they finally had it established. And so even still, there's, there's like a few farms and a few, like, there's a bunch of buildings and stuff out there already, because they built things before there's ever any public land protections. And so now there's those structures there. And you drive through and it's cool, it's fine, I think, I think a lot of it's managed land. So they have like a number of fields, like I was mentioning that the elk kind of cruise across, but in the summertime, like right now. They have, they have a bunch of tractors down there, and they have gone through and plowed or not plowed but they've gone through, is it a combine, they went through and cut the hay, they cut the grass that was grown. And then they made these giant rolls not bales that those square bales of hay that you would see you know, kind of as a commercial product, but these really huge bales of hay that seemed like about as big as my truck around and as tall as my truck. And then they stack eight of those up onto a flatbed pick or not pickup truck but a flatbed semi truck. And then they have like a double trailer. So they have when I was 16 of these big bales and then they're they're doing runs that all day to take out this grass product that they've produced on the land there. And I think that's sort of one of the the multiple use cases for the land management that they do. You know, they do this kind of like I was talking about earlier, you know, you do this time of year, you do this next time a year. Because it's just it's just what the land and the environment offer you at that time. So I was out there the other day, yeah, watching these, these tractors kind of cruise around and pick up, pick up their bales of hay that they'd set it up. And then I think after that once that's done as it gets into the drier season, in the rest of the year, I think it goes it just kind of hangs out until the fall and then and then that's when the elk come back in and that's when the birds come back in. So it's cool going out there and check it out a few spots have been enjoying it in the afternoons. That's a good spot to kind of head out to and it's an easy spot to get to and you can kind of find like a bunch of open areas where you can kind of focus They're not just some real specific singular points, like, I have this 50 millimeter macro lens on my camera right now. So instead of just going out and taking a wide angle broad landscape photos, which is a nice area for you can go in and with that macro lens focus in kind of real specifically and tightly on to a cluster of flowers or grouping of flowers, I think kind of pick your angle of view. Or well, and kind of pick your, I guess, pick your depth of field and sort of select how just how you're going to make that image kind of pop, or how you're gonna get that flower to separate from the rest of it. But yeah, it's fun working with the macros because you can get kind of right in there next to it and still keep that object and focus like, like a flower or a bug or something. Any, I guess kind of small, small, detailed item, you can move that lens right up next to anything is that because if it's what is its minimum focal distance, I'm not sure what that was called. What is that when it's, you know, however many centimeters away from the front of the glass, the lens it is until you can first get something in focus. With a lot of lenses, like if you try this with a telephoto lens, some telephoto lenses I've had, like, I think I had a f4 telephoto lens and you couldn't you could not focus that lens. And something less than eight feet of distance, you got to be like nine feet away before you could get something in focus with that lens. With something like a macro lens, you can get, you know, six centimeters away from the lens, and you'll still be able to keep that in focus. And I think that's with some of the dynamics of how the glass optics are arranged inside the lens. I guess I'll leave it there cuz I'm sure certainly the rest of it is beyond me. But it's kind of cool. Thinking about some of the macro stuff. So it's cool having it on there. And it's cool getting to go around this time of year because there's, like I was mentioning there's just there's, there's all these different opportunities to go and kind of arranged these different little bits of flowers and take some photos of them. Also, I guess Miss Jane Yeah, big, big, wide open fields and landscapes and stuff. I mean, it's quite a full hearty landscape. I want to get out and see some real mountains are seen as get up in the Cascades or something and try and fix up them a little bit more. A little bit more extreme in the landscape side. But as it goes for a nice mellow field in the evening light of June. Let's go on pretty good. Taking some photos of fast foxgloves fields, a wild flowers. So pretty easygoing bit of time there. So by doing that, I also went up to Coburg ridge and I had like a pellet gun. This scene that I was like when we were kids and stuff Yeah, he had like a BB gun. I got like, like a daisy red Ryder. But there's also like the pellet guns where you put the the copper Bibi's but those little sort of little LED kind of parachute tipped pellets, right. Yeah. So you pop one of those in and I had a few of those. I guess when I was a kid, over at my grandparents place, we go shoot cans and stuff. But this one that I've got is like a single shot one like a pump action one. So I went up to Coburg ridge. So went over to Brownsville, and then headed out the back way went up to Coburg ridge. And there's a bunch of big different roads sort of cut off there out into the forest up in the hills and stuff where you can you can go up to a dead end and people go shooting up there all the time. And you know, it's interesting during this lockdown and stuff to where there's a bunch of people that aren't able to go back to work, but are still trying to occupy their time. There's, there's a bunch of people, though, it seems like you know, when you go out to a wilderness area, I talked about this a bit before in another podcast. But if you go to a wilderness or a more remote location, there's should be no one there, right? Because everybody's at work. But as soon as everybody's not at work. There's another 10 people that decided to go out to the middle of nowhere. And once 10 people show up, even though there's a lot of people in Oregon man, once 10 people show up in the middle of nowhere, it starts to seem crowded. And so even on a Tuesday afternoon, if you go up on Coburg Ridge, there's gonna be a lot of pull-outs and roads and different areas that you think maybe would be providing more solitude at some point in the past now you're going to come around a corner and there's going to be there's going to be a couple tracks pulled over already into a spot and they're already firing away. You just see that as you kind of do s turns around the different around that little forest gravel road as you kind of cruise around in the hills there. So I went out I found a spot that was cool. It wasn't you know, heavily crowded and stuff but yeah, I set up a little target and stuff and then was practicing with this. This little pump action pellet rifle that I was Trying to check out that was kind of fun. Bella rifles cruiser and doing some, some target practice really I was trying to get to be, I guess like a little bit more of a consistent shot at a specific distance. I've heard that before, we're like what you want to try and do if you're getting provided hear me, I'm Tina pelegrin. But if you try to get into some shooting stuff, and you want to kind of, I guess kind of refine your consistency, so you can get, you can get a good shot, I think the idea was like a 50 yards and then 100 yards, what you want her to try and do was get a pattern or you know, get like a probably something in about the size of a dinner plate. So what I had heard, where you want to try and get a cluster of shots fired into the space of about a dinner plate. And I guess that's sort of showing that as I take a shot and have the consistency to get it into a specific point of a target. That's, that's actually selected, even at a range of somewhere around 100 yards. And I think that's part like hear hunters talking about that, like, you're a good shot, but are you a good shot at x range, you know, which I think is the preliminary element of, of if you're doing any, any kind of gun activity, but or if you're actually doing some real shooting, but I don't know, I gotta try it more, I haven't been very much of a good shot through the years. I mean, I think like the most of the stuff I've done was like a BB gun at, say 50 feet or something. So that's not a lot of yardage to be firing across, what I want to try and do is I have a 22 around those my grandparents, my grandfather's and so I want to take that out to Eastern Oregon, or out to even some of the spots that I was at, and do some, but really, I want the range. So I want to go to like Eastern Oregon and set something a bit like 50 and 100, like I'm saying and then and then kind of practice on trying to get the, I guess the distribution of my shot placement into a space that would be about as wide a part is at dinner play. And then when I can kind of do that, then I guess I'd have the confidence to sort of consider that if I am taking a shot at a target or whatever. I'm not really gonna be a hunter, I suppose. But yeah, if I'm firing at a target at a range, then I know that the my shot placement is consistent. And after that, you know, my use of is consistent enough. That seems like I should be doing it. I hear about that with like archery too, you know, like when people are getting into I guess bow hunting more specifically, you know, where they want to try and make their shots at 30 yards, and then 40 yards more consistent so that if they do take a shot when they're hunting, they have the shot placement, and confidence in the shot placement at that range. So they can take a shot take an animal down, I suppose. Because that's kind of one of the worst things is if if you're outside of that, if you're hunting and you're outside of that that dinner, dinner plate size target patch, then you get a bad hit, they say, and then it won't, it won't be as direct. And then it'll really I think generally just cause more suffering as we maybe leave it there the conversation. But I don't think that's really anyone's goal, as far as you know, like when you're out about and so yeah, let's go do some target practice stuff, trying to get into that with some of the time that I've had. But I wanted to talk a little bit on this podcast, even though I've been going on for a while now about wedding photography. And I thought that the the wedding photography industry was maybe one of those interesting problems that we're going to see kind of continued to spill out over the next months, it seems like with this with COVID, and then with the lockdown. And then with the multiphase reopening plan that we have, there's going to be a lot of businesses and industries that come back online. And a lot of people seem to get back to work with a significant hiccup in the system. But it seems like maybe those industries will come back online and get back to work sort of smoothly. I'm curious about the wedding industry. Well, the wedding industry, the events industry overall. And then as the sort of trickle down, trickles down the the economic pyramid there, how does that arrive at wedding photographers? And that's sort of one of the questions that I've had I've been mulling over over the last weeks. I mean, it seems like everybody went through the experience of having any, any booked gigs during the month of April or May just sort of cancelled and evaporated. Right before everyone's eyes. So I was curious how that was for any wedding photographers out there. I mean, I remember. There's like a wedding back on like March 6. And now I think that just by snuck under the wire there. And then for the last many months, there's been no public gatherings of that type and no, no events for that kind of thing. So it's curious. Yeah, like, man, like, what's that gonna do to industries where it really you just have to have some level of confidence, you know, like market confidence to try and participate in, I was thinking about, yeah, like vacationing, or even a lot of leisure based stuff, it seems like a lot of families are going to be in a position where they've not been working for a period of time, and to some capacity, they're going to be in the hole, you know, I mean, with everybody's mortgage crisis, or rent crisis, or job crisis, or, I mean, please fill in the list of what we're going to be experiencing in the next six, six months, or whether it's going to be identified as experienced in the next six months, it'll be interesting to kind of go through, as I understand it, like even in places like California, where they're getting into their phase two, and then phase three parts of the reopening. I think they're gonna have bars, and then nightclubs return. And then I think maybe later into that, even is when you're going to get event centers to open back up again, that's more for like, like concert venues or sporting event venues, that sort of thing. But I was interested, just kind of more specifically, yeah, like, how is a wedding venue going to reopen? And I figure kind of given the news of some things, it seems like, there's just gonna be a lot of things that reopen. They're just about what we're open again, you know, at least in a numbers day, this seems like taxes is sort of moving that way, Oklahoma's moving that way. Seems like a lot of those kind of Midwestern and southern states are sort of moving in that direct direction pretty quickly. And really, as even I can say, a lot of places in Oregon, especially this rural area of Oregon, there's, there's not many masks, there's not many private business guidelines that you interact with. So it, there's just not and I mean, gosh, like looking at the the flow of traffic and the number of people out and just how things are, it's really quite a different environment than it was months ago at the beginning of this. In March, it seems like a lot of the concern people had about not going out or not interacting or not continuing on with their, their more regularly scheduled lives is is just not going to be interrupted anymore. I think we've, it seems like mentally A lot of people have just selected that. It that problem has passed. I might be one of those people, for better or worse. So as it goes, Yeah, it seems like a lot of stuff is reopening. It seems like events of some type are going to come back into place, but family of like voluntary family events like weddings, it just seems like Well, I don't know, I don't know how those events are going to be rescheduled. Definitely, like a wedding ceremony is a super important part of person's life. And it just seems like it's gonna be a hard year for that to happen and go smoothly, you know, and it kind of specifically for those folks who are in the industry that's supported by the wedding, the wedding events industry, it's like, we'll go out and DJs a lot of catering businesses, I'm sure have to wait for those live events to come back before they get a booking to go to a catering event. And then even still, you know, how are people going to be interacting with that sort of stuff? So So this was wonder about Yeah, photography, like for family photography, like any family photo gigs, I had, like, probably evaporated for the next couple months, I'm sure you know, like, when are we going to get? I mean, a lot of families that are together, I'm sure are fine. But do they want photos right now? Do they want to spend a significant amount of money after all this stuff has happened? Or you know, just like the number of people that would have been interested in a sort of a luxury purchase have larger photo package created for them, it just seems like wow, let's not have someone over at our house or let's not go out to somewhere as a family or let's not drop all this money on something that we don't need anymore. And I bet there's a lot of industries that are going to be kind of suffering from that as we sort of come out of a readjustment from what what is it that we need in the 2020s now and what was just sort of superfluous, like luxury item that we had in the past that's, that's no longer really necessary. I don't know maybe I think a lot of stuff in human nature will just kind of pop back to the way that maybe had been before like I was just mentioned, it seems like the season of considering this stuff for a lot of folks has passed. And then for a lot of folks in addition to that there's a lot of a lot of face masks and face shields and distancing behavior going on. So it'll be interesting to see how that divergence either comes back together or continues to divide. And it seems like right now we're in we're in a time where things like that just sort of continue to divide. So maybe that's what it'll look like for the next few years. But I'm not sure I think, as it goes, if well, as a consumer goes, I think that a lot of consumers will be able to get what they want, if they want to go out to eat, if they want to get married, if they want a photo package, they'll be able to get one, as it goes for the businesses, I think that that's going to be a little bit more concerning where all of those small businesses are going to have to compete for a much smaller whole pie. And that means their slice, I think it's gonna be a lot slimmer, as well. So maybe it'll be interesting, I think, I think it'll be it'll be it'll be a big dip. But then I think it'll probably return. I don't know, maybe a year or so. Depends on depends, I guess. And like, what the second wave stuff goes, like I don't I don't really expect to see any multi generation weddings, or family photo events coming around soon. I mean, gosh, like I was doing the family, family portrait stuff in Hawaii, or last year. And that's not going on at all anymore. What are they doing? I mean, I've thought about this a few times. And the first time I thought about it, but Gosh, like Yeah, what are these? What are these people doing now? The photographers or the hotels or any of that? But additionally, the families? When are they coming back? I mean, why hasn't opened up anything yet? They're still completely locked out. I think they're arresting residents to go outside in the wrong way still. So what is the confidence to go on a seven day trip to Hawaii gonna pop back in? And then when is that also going to include getting a Hokie photo package with your family? Man, or Yeah, like inviting your your elderly, grandmother or grandfather to a wedding or something? It just seems like, oh, man, I wonder, are these people just gonna be on Skype? Maybe they'll need photos and videos more than ever now. There'll be a multimedia wedding where you're just in an empty room with the bride and groom and pastor, and then it's streamed over zoom. That's gonna be a great future. I don't really suspect that I think a lot of people are pretty fatigued by the idea of working with zoom or working with these video chat services. And really, whatever happened to a phone call? I mean, this is audio, isn't it? Are you? Are you sad that I cannot be seen right now? I don't know. Maybe. So it seems a little too Max Headroom for me to just keep looking at someone on a half second delay. It's obviously a silly. So I really I think audio I think voice I think sound is a really powerful medium just on its own. And I've always been curious why, you know, like a conference call seemed to work quite well, in the 90s. It doesn't seem like everything has to be a zoom meeting, which is not an equivalent to face to face. Not yet. I think that's a part of latency. I've been trying to learn about this with audio stuff, too. And that's what some of the 5g infrastructure is supposed to work on to is the latency of how long it takes a packet to get made, and then sent across the network and delivered, and then how long it takes for return of that two round trip back to me, essentially, saying, you know, like, What's that? What's that little chunk of delay? That happens? on a phone like on a Skype call, where, you know, it's it's not real, it's maybe 900 milliseconds behind where it's, you know, it's just like a 10th of a second or something off. And there's an effect to that you're just the video motion to you know, like, if you make a reaction, there's just the moment of delay. Remember, you remember this, like on the news feeds when a correspondent was at a satellite location, maybe across the earth? And so the the news anchor would say, like, Hey, what are you learning in India? And then it would be, you'd be staring at the image of the reporter, waiting to start his report, and you count this like, silent bead of like, 123456. Like, what is why why is this guy that started talking? Yeah. And then you say, Oh, well, yeah, we're here. And we're covering this and then you think, oh, that that giant gap that big delay in the responses is when that person heard it in real time, and then started responding. And that big gap that we hear is the round trip delay that it takes for the signal to leave the studio and America wherever it was traveled to a satellite bounce around. Across a few satellites is supposed to The other side of the earth and then bounce down to the ground in India where it makes contact with a producer. They're at, you know, wherever this camera guy is on a remote, and then the anchor hears it speaks. And then it goes through the same process again, where it goes up to a satellite bounces around halfway around the Earth comes back down to the ground over another satellite, and then is broadcast out over the air. So that whole thing is latency. The whole the time that it takes that process to occur is latency. And to the degree that we can shrink that or shorten that, or use different information tools to make that happen faster, like packet sizing, or I don't know, network forming or what is it packet forming, so that they're able to make these these kinds of things a little bit faster. And so I think that's one of the hopes of 5g, and then I've also heard of one now it's that low latency, I think that's one of the problems is Satellite Internet, like one of the hopes was that you could get satellite in and then get bandwidth anywhere around the Earth. But the problem that people would have is high latency. And that's I think, because the satellite is so much further away than even a cell phone tower, like we were talking about. And that just kind of the way and the technology that was developed for the satellites wasn't wasn't low latency. So I think that's what one of the attempts of the starlink program is, I think you've heard about that, I hate to say Elon Musk's starlink. But that might be like, the easiest way to recognize it, maybe you've seen the satellites cruising overhead to, I've only seen him a couple times, or once a one night, I saw a number of them, which is probably what you would see to most the time, they're not there. And then there's a cluster of them. And apparently, they're going to be launching somewhere around 1000. They were supposed to cover a grid around the sphere of the earth. And then what we were talking about is that we create kind of a lower latency satellite network that would allow telecommunications of data packets to any location on the earth. And the hope is that that would have that would I guess, provide access to people all around the world to do some type of compute or some type of networked data exchange wirelessly anywhere on the earth? Yes, you'd have, you know, anywhere you don't have cell signal, you'd have signal because it goes to the satellite, everything's a satellite phone now is what the idea that that project is. So it's getting off the ground, it's getting into space, they've launched maybe 200 satellites. Now it seems like they go up with about 50 or 60. Every time I heard they had a launch, maybe every month since early March or so. I think there was maybe there was I think maybe one in January. There's definitely one in March. I think there was one again in May. Yeah, so they got a bunch of satellites up. I think it's pretty cool. I think that's what they're doing with some of those, those Falcon nine rockets when they're, they're sending them up to do you know, the SpaceX missions, not the, the Dragon capsule that went to the space station, but some of the other ones that they have for, for satellite deployment. I think that's what they're doing is deploying some of these starlink satellites. They got a panic, not panic, but a unexcited phone call from a friend. He said, Billy, look outside. What's this? The UFO we're being invaded. And I like to happen. And yeah, it's a stream of pretty bright. satellites are pretty bright objects that are lit moving quick across the sky from the southwest to the northeast. And they're kind of spaced out. Just a little gap between each other. It just seemed like maybe like one or two inches of the of the distance of the sky. like you'd be grabbed it in your fingers at your arms like, and there's just the stream and I'm kind of cruising at satellite speed across the sky look like a satellite. But most of the time, they don't move in that direction. They don't move that fast. They don't look that color. So it's like yeah, what is that? That's cool. And trippy and scared. It's like, Whoa, like, Are we being invaded? I mean, war, the world's was just the radio program. And it caused more panic than that. Maybe we're, I don't know. I guess we're where it's more settled into it now. But But yeah, I got this phone call from my friend. And I was thinking about I was like, Oh, yeah, this. This is the starlink program. This is that that satellite deployment, where they're all clustered together, and they're going to be visible for a period of time. And then I think they're going to be, they're kind of spiraling out as they go around the Earth. They're sort of getting further and further out in orbit from the earth each time they go until they get to a distance, that they're going to sort of remain as my understanding. And so I think they're pretty bright. Now once they're launched, and then over time, they're going to get a little like dimmer and dimmer and dimmer until they're really not as no noticeable I think that was a concern for a while for Astro photographers is that this deployment of 1000 satellites into the sky is going to disrupt long exposure night photography significantly, because we're going to have all these different extra points of light, that we're going to ruin all this this data gathering that we do for astronomy or for personal Astro photography, I hope. And my understanding is there supposed to be painted in this black matte paint? like they did with the Iridium satellites, more recently. And that's supposed to, I guess, affect the the flares that we get those Iridium burns that we would see where a satellite is, you know, is visible, but then all of a sudden, catches the glare of the sun. And then shimmers for five or 10 seconds really bright, brighter than almost anything in the sky and then fades again. It's called an Iridium burn for the Iridium satellites that were put up as like satellite communication. I think it's like how we get NBC or something. Yeah. We get some of those. Some of those satellite communications that we have now almost everything, you know, goes through this satellite communications network that was launched, I think back in the 60s, the Iridium network, and then a lot of that was replaced in the last 10 years, maybe with the new items. And then I think now they're watching, you know, watching all these SpaceX items. But yeah, it's cool. If you get a chance to see him You can I think you can look up online, like how to spot the the SpaceX starlink satellites that have been launched. And they're on a pretty specific timing, and they're only in like, a certain part of the world at any given time. And I think it takes a while for them to get to your part of the world if they're not there right now. So yeah, I think you can check it out. And you can find like, one of the sightings or one of the times that you're gonna have a sighting in your area, but it's pretty cool. Yeah, you can find it and see some satellites cruising by, hopefully, as the summer kind of rolls out a little bit more near Corvallis. Maybe I'd mentioned before. It has been around. June. Oh, yeah. So I think I'm gonna wrap it up there for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Thank you very much for checking it out. Today, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com, for more information about me or my photographs, or some of the photo ebooks I put together, or I don't know, whatever other stuff. So hopefully, yeah, we get to talk again soon. I think there's a couple a couple topics I didn't get to on this one, I'll get back to some of those logic control things I want to talk about. And I want to kind of get into a deeper dive on that stuff. Next time. I'm just getting into working with this, this controller with the software that runs controls in Lightroom with it and I'm just really getting used to it where you can kind of use this mixing board to mix and match different colors and light ramps. So I'm looking to try and get into that more and then maybe make some some stuff around it. But I'll definitely get into that in a deeper dive next time. The podcast but thanks for checking this out. Talk to you guys later. Bye</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape







Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp; https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/







If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast







149 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown wildflowers foxglove and oregon grape



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you checking this one out. I wanted to talk to you guys today, I think for what is today, the 12th of June 2020. A lot a lot of stuff going on right now in the world. But, in fact a bit about the ideas around media that I had around that no last podcast that I recorded. This one, I was going to get into a little bit of the outdoor stuff that I've been up to, and some of the photo editing bits that I was on and also I wanted to talk a little more about editing with a controller board. What is it called? I don't know. They, yeah, like a MIDI controller. So yeah, the first part I guess I wanted to talk about, we're heading out to the wildlife refuge area. That's out south of Corvallis. Here. The Finley Wildlife Refuge went out there for a couple days in a row to try and check outs and some of the area out there I think it's now opened up a little bit more officially I think during the first weeks of the lockdown here in Oregon, the road that was gated up, I think almost for like two months, the road that cut through to the main section of the wildlife refuge had been boarded up or not boarded up. But I think there's like a gate that cuts across the front entrance of it. Even though it's really sort of a public road that cuts through to the highway on the other side, I think it goes from Bell fountain road over to highway 99 on the other side, so you can cut all the way through but they Yeah, they closed off both ends, I think because there's a visitor center in the in the middle there. And they didn't want people coming in and congregating or I guess traveling on the trails for a period of time. So yeah, I noticed that on a couple other spots a couple of the entrances, they said that maybe I think that you couldn't enter for a while then they sort of shifted those regulations around like we I think kind of talked about on a couple of the previous podcasts and then you could walk but then you had to remain socially distanced and the rest of it. So I think yeah]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>43:54</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape







Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About &nbsp; https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/







If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 146 Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-146-smith-rock-urges-portland-not-to-visit/</link>
	<pubDate>Sat, 16 May 2020 16:22:58 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8496</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit</p>



<p>DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. </p>



<p>Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>







<p>146-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you guys tuning in. I think it's May 16. Today 2020 of everybody's doing well, and I think this accounts for like the first, the first full day after the 15th, which marks the beginning of phase one reopening here in the Oregon area. I guess a lot of other states are sort of entering into the same kind of thing with the beginning of their reopenings. And starting up. I think the start of the I think it's like a lot of retail stores. I don't know what's still restricted. I think there's still like a number of private businesses that can't really can't really get started, it seems like a lot of restaurant stuff is still kind of held back, was it gyms or something? Maybe that's the kind of held back? It seems like, it seems like a lot of places are really kind of getting going. But maybe it's like California, I keep hearing news out of there probably because, you know, there's so many people in that area that that are, you know, producing media and stuff. But I keep hearing kind of strange rules out of the lockdown that sort of continues to go on and the LA County area and along like the California coast and that area. So it's kind of interesting to see how there's such a varied approach and the way that they're they're sort of bringing stuff back. What is it like Arkansas you can have? I'm gonna have a concert, or something. I think there's a place trying to drive in concert idea sounds kind of fun, really, you know, everybody pull up in a car. It always just sounds like a good idea, I guess when there's not a pandemic going on. So there's maybe less fear than that. But But yeah, that sounds fun. Driving concert, I don't know. Or I think there's a limited seating in places for for some venues now that I think is Max, like maybe 150 people swept some places to try and some of those Midwest areas, I think maybe like Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, I think some areas over there kind of try and some, some live events stuff out. I'm not sure what it is for restaurants, and a lot of places still seems like social distancing standards are what's required. And a lot of those places I hear about restaurants operating in, like 25% capacity, and maybe 50% capacity. But even still, that just doesn't seem economically, like it's kind of work, I didn't really spend a lot of time working in restaurants. But even still, I have enough tangential experience with the restaurant industry to know that those margins aren't really wide enough, when you're making food, to if you were, if you were just supporting yourself on 100% capacity before all this, there's really not a good reason that that you're going to support your business on 25% capacity for the next foreseeable future. I mean, gosh, like, it just seems like you're gonna operate at a loss for six months, or more, I don't know if anybody can really handle that, especially after a big dip like this, you know, it's not going to be a better economic time after this for for a lot of those kinds of industries, or you know, just so there's like a rate limit on the amount of customers that you can have at any given time. So that seems to be a problem. I don't know how they're really going to handle that. They don't know, there's venues and stuff to try to come back, it seems like there's a lot of people just trying to do it to, to try and jump back in and be the first people competing again. So I guess in that standard, I understand I understand it, but it's sort of strange, I have to see what like department stores and stuff are doing I think, you know, obviously grocery stores that remained open and so a lot of places that I would kind of hop into, in and out of regularly on a weekly basis had been open, you know, kind of throughout this whole time and have almost forgot about you know, like, do I need to go to a clothing store? Or was there something at a shoe store or mall there's something you need to go through, you know, the thing that came up is on my truck, I gotta get my new tags for like the passenger registration stuff until What is it 2022 that you know that two year registration that comes up so I think I bought my truck now four years ago. Wow. That was like what may may 6, I think, I think it was the day after Cinco de Maya and it looked like the guy at the bank that was handling like the payment when I was making the the transfer of funds between my ownership or you know, like the other guys ownership to my ownership of the vehicle. The guy that was doing it behind the counter looked pretty pretty hungover. I was thinking, oh yeah, it was Cinco de mayo yesterday. I guess I got to take it easy on this guy. But that was four years ago yeah that I bought the bought the Colorado, and I've been driving around since, and so yeah, now I got to now I gotta buy new tags for it. So I had the letter in the mail a couple weeks back it was sort of before most of the pandemic lockdown stuff it started I think it was in early March that I first got my paperwork probably should have mailed it in at the time but but it was looking to be the day that during this period of the state of emergency things like car registrations and driver's license expirations are</p>



<p>I guess being handled on a case by case basis but genuinely being treated with an amount of leniency. So have that to look forward to, I guess that, yeah, if if you had a registration lapse during the time, the pandemic, you really asked to not participate in going to the DMV, I think they're closed in all cases. And I think there's maybe like one or two spots that are having, by appointment only type of events going on, there's some information on the page for the Oregon DMV, and there's probably information generally, state by state and stuff, like in Georgia, they're saying, like, if you were, if you were 16 year old or coming on to be a 16 year old, and you had an appointment to get your driver's license scheduled, I think you just you just get to drive now, you don't need to be licensed or something like that can't come in and get a license. And I guess there was a need to, to whatever decision making they they had come to there was a need for those people to have access to drive, I guess, during this emergency, you know, probably in a lot of those places. Like I don't know if this is the case, I don't know if we're talking about Atlanta, Georgia here, but, but it seems like out in the sticks. Even out here, you know, in the farm country in Oregon and stuff, you know, you're 13 or 14, and you're kind of learning how to how to move a cart, you know, how to move, you know, some kind of utility vehicle around a property when you're you're trying to do maintenance and stuff. I was driving a golf cart around all the time at the time I was 910 or something like that. And then that kind of escalated into like a farm truck or work truck by like a later age, I was learning to drive when I was I guess like a real vehicle. It was still like when I was 15. But yeah, it seems like you would need to kind of have access to that. So yeah, if you weren't able to get into a DMV to get any kind of licensing, I guess it'd be nice to roll your permit over to a license, or maybe it's something like roll your I don't know, roll into just have it a permanent without having to worry about it. Who knows. But it seems like yeah, that was something they were trying over, you know, in different states have different rules, as we're finding out pretty clearly, I guess, in the last couple months. But over here, I found out the passenger registration is is not required to be updated, I guess, when I was looking at that to the governor Kate Brown had extended the state of emergency. It's kind of a few different things going on, you know, there's the stay at home orders. And then there's also the governor's emergency powers that are established when they issue a state of emergency analysis. And that gives them access to federal funding for the emergency so that it doesn't have to come out of the state budget. Is that what it is? It's something like that. I don't know, I don't understand governance. But the state of emergency order, I think was extended into, like July 6, I think is what it was at latest kind of perhaps could be extended further than that originally, you know, when all this stuff started, it was you know, 15 days to flatten the curve March 15 to April 1. And that pretty quickly expanded into what we've been experiencing now, which you know, it could go in no other way. Right? When Has it ever been that? Oh, yeah, just 15 days of this. And it'll be we'll wrap it all up all the loose ends. We'll handle it in 15 days. So I guess that never happens. It didn't happen this time either. And what do you know, there's like, complications and communication, limited amounts of supplies for things that seem necessary now. This seems like that's, that's like how it goes. Every time there's a big national emergency. What was that movie like? where it was, it was covering the Russian soldiers and the world war two front. And it was like kind of the front lines. The scene was, and you know, one person it's in factual history, right. But one person got a gun than the person next to him got a box of ammo and no gun. Right. So it just seems like yeah, that will be they only had they only had enough for one of each, you know. So Yikes. It seems like that's kind of just how it goes sometimes. So unfortunately, we're not in that kind of like, we're not in that kind of hot water. It seems a lot better than that. Unfortunately, it hasn't been as problematic as maybe we maybe first anticipated Hawaii. So I don't have to worry about my check registration. You guys are excited about that. I was thinking I had to go to the DMV.</p>



<p>I don't have to.</p>



<p>It's cool. This last week, I've been doing a bunch of gardening stuff. The weather kind of turned a little bit to the Rainier side of saying so I don't know, I was kind of discouraged from doing some camping stuff that I might have wanted to do or really I'm trying to figure out some time to get on the eastern Oregon and make it to a few of the more distant spots that I haven't been to in a while. And it's a tricky time of year because it's like I don't know what it is. So what am I saying? When it's real cold in the winter, some of the pasturelands stuff isn't really out, but it's real cold. So like the ticks aren't out as much the mosquitoes, I desert mosquitoes, yikes, they're not out as much. Some of those things go a little easier when it's colder earlier in the year. And then later, when it's more towards summer, it's a little bit easier with the environment that you're dealing with, it's not as harsh or extreme or cold, you know, you're not freezing all the time. But there's like a few other harsh conditions of heat that you have to deal with. So there's kind of like a few different pockets that you can hit. And right now it's difficult to because you know, it's like, it's, it's, it's the more wet season over there, you know, it's not raining, now, the snow is probably melted off. But we will Yeah, there's like a bit of rain, that's, that's still falling this time of year. Some of the areas out there, they dry up real fast in the summary. So what you would normally find the beach is trial and out there, this time of year, it's a flat like low lying area, it'll kind of turn to this, this Marsh or like sometimes a lot of these areas, it almost looks like a lake or something, you know, it's like a one foot, it's like one foot deep or one or two or three inches deep for most of it. And maybe it maxes out at six inches deep at the center. And, or just these areas that turn real marshy and then after a week or so you know that water sinks to the ground and just grass rises up from that. But this time of year, it can be real, real tricky out there and some spots don't and then they, you know the texts get really bad. And it seems like April and May be part of may two. Not a big fan of those. or other weird little stuff out there guys remember find like a scorpion out there in Eastern Oregon. Like a real like a tiny one. I was probably like three inches, three inches or so sad at night with a flashlight as like guys. That's another scorpion. I don't need to see any of that stuff. But yeah, we're trying to find some time to go out to Eastern Oregon. But the weather instead of is kind of turned a little bit. So that might be a week or two before I do that. And it's Yeah, it's just kind of been a weird time with a bunch of that stuff. I was looking at a thing where I think it was on Oregon live there. They're getting to the point like we were talking about a bit ago where we're even on the last podcast. So there's some public lands that are reopening across Oregon. And there, they're open. They're opening up the state parks, I guess pretty soon or like the state public lands. But there's still like asking sort of strange rules about that. I think there was something about how they're going to, they're going to open up Smith Rock State Park, north of bend that rock climbing area. But they're saying that they're opening it for locals only is sort of what they're listing. And there was an article in the Oregonian that said that Portlanders are not welcome. Oh, okay. I don't know how enforceable that is, or how that's really structured. Part of what was advised in the language was that you're you're not supposed to travel more than 50 miles from your home for outdoor recreation. I don't, I don't know if that's the rule or regulation, or what's really understood is Oregon has really just reopened hunting and fishing to out of state residents.</p>



<p>So I mean, this app does that line up, you can come in from Utah and hunt. But you can't go from Portland to somewhere out in Eastern Oregon, and hike or walk around or go to an open State Park seems like if you're within your own state, you're you're in your state, you know, they should have made it smaller states that they wanted you to not travel that much. So I don't know, I understand if they want to lock down the state or try and keep you more confined to that area. But it seems a little strange if you are reopening if you're closing. Close. You know, but if you're reopening, and it's open. I don't know. It sounds like it's open. I think there's a there's a number of places that are kind of concerned about it with kind of some good reason. And really, I've been kind of concerned about this as a growing problem. For me, really, I think, you know, it's just gonna be escalating as everybody's kind of been cooped up for a long time. Anybody that wants to get out has been stuck kind of thing and maybe they can't get out and I think real soon like this weekend, a really next weekend and the weekend after for Memorial Day weekend. I think it's really going to flood a lot of a lot of places a lot of public land places that I'd want to go to just because the lessons like that somewhere real remote. These areas are all being stated as being reopened. People have been stuck inside for a long time. It's Memorial Day weekend. So it's kind of it's socially known as the weekend to go out and begin camping. It's probably going to be the first time that in Oregon, we're really getting some nicer weather system. into the summer. And as many people that will still exist that don't want to go outside related to the pandemic stuff, there's going to be so many people that do want to go out that I think it's really going to flat out a lot of a lot of areas in the next couple of weeks. And we're probably going to see some weird regulatory reactions from that. You know, like, I don't know, Kate brown kind of around Spring Break said, you know, go out, go, go to the beach, walk around, it's important to get exercise and everybody did that. And he said, How dare you get out and go to the beach and walk around as much as he did. So then they closed it all down. So I think we're going to kind of see something, something like that here soon to where they say, Yep, Oregon State Parks are reopening. But don't go. Oh, and it's Memorial Day weekend. And you all went. So now we're we're closing them again. So you don't go? I don't know. That's speculation, I suppose. But yeah, it's funny to see an article saying Yeah, Portlanders don't come. So Oh, okay. Sure. I don't know. It doesn't sound fair to me. Yeah, state state parks and stuff, I'd probably stay away from a lot of state parks for a while. And just given their Well, they're just they seem to be in sort of a regulatory flux. So it seems like things that you might understand as being acceptable. Public Land Use stuff at any other time. I might be a little different on the state lands right now. So yeah, if it's a state park, like a, you know, a place with facilities and, and little trails and stuff that you have to pay a fee for? I don't know; I might stay out of there for a little while. Like, what was it like silver Falls State Park? Smith Rock State Park some of those spots? I bet we're gonna be we're gonna be really overcrowded for a couple periods of time. They're kind of recommended. If you don't find parking in the parking lot, then you should go home because it's too full. Okay, yeah. Well, I mean, that's, that's probably how it is most most of the time. So yeah, who knows? But I was saying earlier, yeah, I've been kind of doing a bunch of gardening stuff this week. That's pretty exciting. So yeah, I went down and I got, I got a bunch of railroad ties to put together like a garden box, and then some soil amendment stuff. So I'm trying to fill that, and we got some starter plants to, you know, a couple different vegetables and, and, and things like that, that we're going to try and grow through the summer. So we're, yeah, we're trying to carve out a garden box spot now. And we've been having like deer that come through pretty frequently. And we're gated off too, but they still kind of come in from this lower section over there. That's, that's more opened up that we don't really have control over. So well. I don't know. We'll see how those deer do but, but I also picked up I think of I think it chicken wire that I'm going to try and put across as like a fence for it. So kind of see how that goes. But that's gonna try and protect him protect some vegetables from from the deer that we got. Yeah. So I don't know that some of the gardening stuff that I'm up to you and been trying to do like different yard stuff, trying to clean things up. That's very exciting. That's kind of the same stuff that I've been up to for most of the week was just kind of chores like that. Well, isn't driving here and there. I wanted to read this story. This was one in the Oregonian, and that will probably wrap up with but this one was</p>



<p>one that says more state parks reopened on the Oregon coast from Lincoln City to Florence. This is one of the things that a lot of the smallest, like kind of like we were talking about with Smith rock two and different state parks. Right. But a lot of the the smaller towns on the coast had been talking about how they have low just not enough facilities, a lot of those smaller towns, you know, Port Orford, and they don't have a hospital, do they? So there's that I guess problems with the amount of publicly available medical facilities for people that might end up getting sick or or exposing the community to Coronavirus. So even though they are reopening. They are saying they're not reopening. Right, or are they? So this one from the Oregonian. I think just published yesterday on the 15th says more state parks reopened on the Oregon coast Lincoln city to Florence. The gradual reopening of the Oregon State Park System has now reached the Central Oregon coast. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department reopened 25 State Park sites on the Central Oregon coast Friday, including popular beachfront sites like a seat ahead seal rock, South Beach, Jessie M. Honeyman and Drivers state parks, some parks have fully reopened, but many are open with limited facilities and services. Another 10 state parks along the Central Coast remain closed including Beverly beach, boiler Bay and roads and state parks. I don't really know those places or roads and I know Beverly beach that's a pretty popular one. The entire Oregon State Park System close to the public on March 23, to help stop the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Now as counties getting approved for the state's phase one reopening plan, park officials are slowly reopening those parks to the public. Now it says a full list of Oregon State Park reopenings is posted online at Oregon State parks.org. So that's probably a good spot to go if you're looking for some information about the public land reopenings here in Oregon and go to the Oregon State Park site. I also like I was saying in the last couple ones I'd gone to the to the Oregon was it Oh, DFW the Fish and Wildlife site to see what those people were saying and what their closures were related to the COVID pandemic stuff and like I talked about, I mean, there was like individual individual choices for a lot of those National Park systems or BLM lands, but a lot of them would remain open to the some capacity. So yeah, it's worth it to kind of go and find out some stuff, but yeah, now that it's it's reopening. There's some stuff that is definitely reopening. So continuing with that article, many of Oregon's most popular state parks remain close to the public, including all sites in the Columbia River Gorge and others close to Portland, like silver falls. Was this one Milo, MacGyver and subs stub Stewart. State officials continue to urge Oregonians to avoid non essential travel, including day trips, and for those in urban areas to not travel more than 50 miles from home to recreate. That's an interesting sentence. And I don't think this is a law, by the way. So thanks state officials, state officials continue to urge without making a law regulation. Oregonians to avoid all nonessential travel, including day trips. And for those in urban areas to not travel more than 50 miles from home to recreate. Is that like the one urban area of Portland? Is that what they're talking about? Um, I don't know if I'd trust that as a rule probably could get shut down. I think if you want to get out and you know, you could get out, you probably can this is what I was also thinking to is it might be a good time to get a fishing license or get a hunting license. I think they're like, you know, 35 bucks, you can get the super pass or something for like 75 and get both of them. But</p>



<p>that gives you It seems like some rights to to be traveling around. I mean, even still, if you just kind of claim that as what your occupation is, while you're out you probably get more leniency to but it seems like yeah, that those who are initiated seem to have more access now than than those who then just read this article. So yeah, it seems like if you had like a fishing license, and you're traveling around and you went to a place to go fishing, because it's an allowed activity, you could do that. It seems like an error. You know, like, like I was mentioning a minute ago, it's like he can't travel more than 50 miles from your home to recreate. But Oregon is reopened public lands to out of state, like hunting and fishing licence holders to come into state to use the lands for recreation purposes. So it seems like if outside people can do it, then certainly people who are in the state can go to travel to participate in those kind of activities, too. But I also understand that Yeah, maybe just traveling to a state park to go hike with 100,000 other people is probably a bad idea. Or, I don't know, an undesirable idea at the time. And so people who visit state parks are encouraged to take precautions to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 official said visitors should wear face masks and bring their own hand sanitizer soap and water. Probably because the bathrooms are still going to be closed or strangely closed. Not a bad idea to bring hand sanitizers and soaps and water to outdoor places normally, but I don't know if it's going to be a big deal on this one. People are also asked to keep six feet apart of social distancing while out at Park sites and to leave one space between their car and the car next to them. Hmm, I don't know about that one. Visitors are asked to recreate only with those in their household. Well, thanks for the information. Okay, so that's the idea, I guess from the word of State Park reopening so it was the Oregon State parks.org was one of the sites you can go to to find out some of the information about the May 15 phase one reopenings of Oregon State Park public lands. Yeah, sounds fun. At least there's a couple spots, open it up back like that. It seems like still a few places around Like the city parks and stuff, those are still all shut down. So I'm not in too much of a draw to go to any of these state parks really, you know, this is one of those things where you see this article. And this is one of the things where if you're a little confused about the delineations of different public lands, it can be it can seem like, and this is what I had thought, and sort of the the layman's view of it before, is that when I saw something like that, if, you know, state parks reopening, I would have thought, Oh, well, like they were closed before. And I guess the parks were, but I would have just sort of assumed that to be almost all public areas that you could go out to, or go outside to, or I wouldn't have really known of places outside of just those limited areas of state parks. But I think like we talked about, on the last podcast, a lot of those national wildlife refuges were open, a lot of the wildlife viewing areas are still open wilderness areas are of course, still open. You know, there's still a lot of things that were that were publicly accessible to go out on and go hiking on. And a lot of those places are going to be way less populated than their their state park counterparts. I think just because of the the notoriety that they have, I mean, you know, there's, there's good reason, really, I'd suppose why the Columbia River Gorge hikes are closed down right now, those get very busy during a lot of the year. And I just don't know, if they could, they could handle that kind of use capacity right now. It just seems it seems like a lot of stuff. Same with silver falls or, or even Smith rock and some busy days like that, you know, I'm sure in the spring, it can be super busy out there. So if the reopening and there fell in the parking lot, it's probably going to be busy enough. And it's probably going to be busy with a lot of folks from Ben that haven't been there in a while I understand the idea of people locally wanting to get out and go to those things. But it seems like an odd and just sort of beyond what is legally regulated for them to ask that people not go just for just for no reason. So I'm probably not going to go, but I guess it's for my own reasons and stuff. So we'll see how it goes. I'm going to try and get out a little bit before the Memorial Day weekend, which is when I'm kind of suppose it's going to get a hit another maximum. And they're going to probably try to and more sternly asked that people not go, which I'm not looking forward to. I don't wanna follow this rule. I want to go. So I'm gonna wrap up the podcast around here and continue my day with cool gardening stuff outside like I was talking about earlier.</p>



<p>Do you have that to look forward to on the next podcast? Did I plant the miracles or not? Find out next time on The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can go to Billy Newman photo comm to see some of the other stuff. I've been working on some of the posts that put up some of the other podcasts that I've put together in past years as well.</p>



<p>And, yeah,</p>



<p>I suppose that's it. I'm gonna try and go out and do some stuff for the weekend. Do some gardening like I was talking about, maybe I can get out and do some fun photo stuff. And that has something cool to talk about. That's a little more photo news related. But thanks for tuning in to this episode of The doing photo podcast. This is Episode 146</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. 



Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



If you’re looking t]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit</p>



<p>DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. </p>



<p>Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit</p>



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<p>146-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you guys tuning in. I think it's May 16. Today 2020 of everybody's doing well, and I think this accounts for like the first, the first full day after the 15th, which marks the beginning of phase one reopening here in the Oregon area. I guess a lot of other states are sort of entering into the same kind of thing with the beginning of their reopenings. And starting up. I think the start of the I think it's like a lot of retail stores. I don't know what's still restricted. I think there's still like a number of private businesses that can't really can't really get started, it seems like a lot of restaurant stuff is still kind of held back, was it gyms or something? Maybe that's the kind of held back? It seems like, it seems like a lot of places are really kind of getting going. But maybe it's like California, I keep hearing news out of there probably because, you know, there's so many people in that area that that are, you know, producing media and stuff. But I keep hearing kind of strange rules out of the lockdown that sort of continues to go on and the LA County area and along like the California coast and that area. So it's kind of interesting to see how there's such a varied approach and the way that they're they're sort of bringing stuff back. What is it like Arkansas you can have? I'm gonna have a concert, or something. I think there's a place trying to drive in concert idea sounds kind of fun, really, you know, everybody pull up in a car. It always just sounds like a good idea, I guess when there's not a pandemic going on. So there's maybe less fear than that. But But yeah, that sounds fun. Driving concert, I don't know. Or I think there's a limited seating in places for for some venues now that I think is Max, like maybe 150 people swept some places to try and some of those Midwest areas, I think maybe like Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, I think some areas over there kind of try and some, some live events stuff out. I'm not sure what it is for restaurants, and a lot of places still seems like social distancing standards are what's required. And a lot of those places I hear about restaurants operating in, like 25% capacity, and maybe 50% capacity. But even still, that just doesn't seem economically, like it's kind of work, I didn't really spend a lot of time working in restaurants. But even still, I have enough tangential experience with the restaurant industry to know that those margins aren't really wide enough, when you're making food, to if you were, if you were just supporting yourself on 100% capacity before all this, there's really not a good reason that that you're going to support your business on 25% capacity for the next foreseeable future. I mean, gosh, like, it just seems like you're gonna operate at a loss for six months, or more, I don't know if anybody can really handle that, especially after a big dip like this, you know, it's not going to be a better economic time after this for for a lot of those kinds of industries, or you know, just so there's like a rate limit on the amount of customers that you can have at any given time. So that seems to be a problem. I don't know how they're really going to handle that. They don't know, there's venues and stuff to try to come back, it seems like there's a lot of people just trying to do it to, to try and jump back in and be the first people competing again. So I guess in that standard, I understand I understand it, but it's sort of strange, I have to see what like department stores and stuff are doing I think, you know, obviously grocery stores that remained open and so a lot of places that I would kind of hop into, in and out of regularly on a weekly basis had been open, you know, kind of throughout this whole time and have almost forgot about you know, like, do I need to go to a clothing store? Or was there something at a shoe store or mall there's something you need to go through, you know, the thing that came up is on my truck, I gotta get my new tags for like the passenger registration stuff until What is it 2022 that you know that two year registration that comes up so I think I bought my truck now four years ago. Wow. That was like what may may 6, I think, I think it was the day after Cinco de Maya and it looked like the guy at the bank that was handling like the payment when I was making the the transfer of funds between my ownership or you know, like the other guys ownership to my ownership of the vehicle. The guy that was doing it behind the counter looked pretty pretty hungover. I was thinking, oh yeah, it was Cinco de mayo yesterday. I guess I got to take it easy on this guy. But that was four years ago yeah that I bought the bought the Colorado, and I've been driving around since, and so yeah, now I got to now I gotta buy new tags for it. So I had the letter in the mail a couple weeks back it was sort of before most of the pandemic lockdown stuff it started I think it was in early March that I first got my paperwork probably should have mailed it in at the time but but it was looking to be the day that during this period of the state of emergency things like car registrations and driver's license expirations are</p>



<p>I guess being handled on a case by case basis but genuinely being treated with an amount of leniency. So have that to look forward to, I guess that, yeah, if if you had a registration lapse during the time, the pandemic, you really asked to not participate in going to the DMV, I think they're closed in all cases. And I think there's maybe like one or two spots that are having, by appointment only type of events going on, there's some information on the page for the Oregon DMV, and there's probably information generally, state by state and stuff, like in Georgia, they're saying, like, if you were, if you were 16 year old or coming on to be a 16 year old, and you had an appointment to get your driver's license scheduled, I think you just you just get to drive now, you don't need to be licensed or something like that can't come in and get a license. And I guess there was a need to, to whatever decision making they they had come to there was a need for those people to have access to drive, I guess, during this emergency, you know, probably in a lot of those places. Like I don't know if this is the case, I don't know if we're talking about Atlanta, Georgia here, but, but it seems like out in the sticks. Even out here, you know, in the farm country in Oregon and stuff, you know, you're 13 or 14, and you're kind of learning how to how to move a cart, you know, how to move, you know, some kind of utility vehicle around a property when you're you're trying to do maintenance and stuff. I was driving a golf cart around all the time at the time I was 910 or something like that. And then that kind of escalated into like a farm truck or work truck by like a later age, I was learning to drive when I was I guess like a real vehicle. It was still like when I was 15. But yeah, it seems like you would need to kind of have access to that. So yeah, if you weren't able to get into a DMV to get any kind of licensing, I guess it'd be nice to roll your permit over to a license, or maybe it's something like roll your I don't know, roll into just have it a permanent without having to worry about it. Who knows. But it seems like yeah, that was something they were trying over, you know, in different states have different rules, as we're finding out pretty clearly, I guess, in the last couple months. But over here, I found out the passenger registration is is not required to be updated, I guess, when I was looking at that to the governor Kate Brown had extended the state of emergency. It's kind of a few different things going on, you know, there's the stay at home orders. And then there's also the governor's emergency powers that are established when they issue a state of emergency analysis. And that gives them access to federal funding for the emergency so that it doesn't have to come out of the state budget. Is that what it is? It's something like that. I don't know, I don't understand governance. But the state of emergency order, I think was extended into, like July 6, I think is what it was at latest kind of perhaps could be extended further than that originally, you know, when all this stuff started, it was you know, 15 days to flatten the curve March 15 to April 1. And that pretty quickly expanded into what we've been experiencing now, which you know, it could go in no other way. Right? When Has it ever been that? Oh, yeah, just 15 days of this. And it'll be we'll wrap it all up all the loose ends. We'll handle it in 15 days. So I guess that never happens. It didn't happen this time either. And what do you know, there's like, complications and communication, limited amounts of supplies for things that seem necessary now. This seems like that's, that's like how it goes. Every time there's a big national emergency. What was that movie like? where it was, it was covering the Russian soldiers and the world war two front. And it was like kind of the front lines. The scene was, and you know, one person it's in factual history, right. But one person got a gun than the person next to him got a box of ammo and no gun. Right. So it just seems like yeah, that will be they only had they only had enough for one of each, you know. So Yikes. It seems like that's kind of just how it goes sometimes. So unfortunately, we're not in that kind of like, we're not in that kind of hot water. It seems a lot better than that. Unfortunately, it hasn't been as problematic as maybe we maybe first anticipated Hawaii. So I don't have to worry about my check registration. You guys are excited about that. I was thinking I had to go to the DMV.</p>



<p>I don't have to.</p>



<p>It's cool. This last week, I've been doing a bunch of gardening stuff. The weather kind of turned a little bit to the Rainier side of saying so I don't know, I was kind of discouraged from doing some camping stuff that I might have wanted to do or really I'm trying to figure out some time to get on the eastern Oregon and make it to a few of the more distant spots that I haven't been to in a while. And it's a tricky time of year because it's like I don't know what it is. So what am I saying? When it's real cold in the winter, some of the pasturelands stuff isn't really out, but it's real cold. So like the ticks aren't out as much the mosquitoes, I desert mosquitoes, yikes, they're not out as much. Some of those things go a little easier when it's colder earlier in the year. And then later, when it's more towards summer, it's a little bit easier with the environment that you're dealing with, it's not as harsh or extreme or cold, you know, you're not freezing all the time. But there's like a few other harsh conditions of heat that you have to deal with. So there's kind of like a few different pockets that you can hit. And right now it's difficult to because you know, it's like, it's, it's, it's the more wet season over there, you know, it's not raining, now, the snow is probably melted off. But we will Yeah, there's like a bit of rain, that's, that's still falling this time of year. Some of the areas out there, they dry up real fast in the summary. So what you would normally find the beach is trial and out there, this time of year, it's a flat like low lying area, it'll kind of turn to this, this Marsh or like sometimes a lot of these areas, it almost looks like a lake or something, you know, it's like a one foot, it's like one foot deep or one or two or three inches deep for most of it. And maybe it maxes out at six inches deep at the center. And, or just these areas that turn real marshy and then after a week or so you know that water sinks to the ground and just grass rises up from that. But this time of year, it can be real, real tricky out there and some spots don't and then they, you know the texts get really bad. And it seems like April and May be part of may two. Not a big fan of those. or other weird little stuff out there guys remember find like a scorpion out there in Eastern Oregon. Like a real like a tiny one. I was probably like three inches, three inches or so sad at night with a flashlight as like guys. That's another scorpion. I don't need to see any of that stuff. But yeah, we're trying to find some time to go out to Eastern Oregon. But the weather instead of is kind of turned a little bit. So that might be a week or two before I do that. And it's Yeah, it's just kind of been a weird time with a bunch of that stuff. I was looking at a thing where I think it was on Oregon live there. They're getting to the point like we were talking about a bit ago where we're even on the last podcast. So there's some public lands that are reopening across Oregon. And there, they're open. They're opening up the state parks, I guess pretty soon or like the state public lands. But there's still like asking sort of strange rules about that. I think there was something about how they're going to, they're going to open up Smith Rock State Park, north of bend that rock climbing area. But they're saying that they're opening it for locals only is sort of what they're listing. And there was an article in the Oregonian that said that Portlanders are not welcome. Oh, okay. I don't know how enforceable that is, or how that's really structured. Part of what was advised in the language was that you're you're not supposed to travel more than 50 miles from your home for outdoor recreation. I don't, I don't know if that's the rule or regulation, or what's really understood is Oregon has really just reopened hunting and fishing to out of state residents.</p>



<p>So I mean, this app does that line up, you can come in from Utah and hunt. But you can't go from Portland to somewhere out in Eastern Oregon, and hike or walk around or go to an open State Park seems like if you're within your own state, you're you're in your state, you know, they should have made it smaller states that they wanted you to not travel that much. So I don't know, I understand if they want to lock down the state or try and keep you more confined to that area. But it seems a little strange if you are reopening if you're closing. Close. You know, but if you're reopening, and it's open. I don't know. It sounds like it's open. I think there's a there's a number of places that are kind of concerned about it with kind of some good reason. And really, I've been kind of concerned about this as a growing problem. For me, really, I think, you know, it's just gonna be escalating as everybody's kind of been cooped up for a long time. Anybody that wants to get out has been stuck kind of thing and maybe they can't get out and I think real soon like this weekend, a really next weekend and the weekend after for Memorial Day weekend. I think it's really going to flood a lot of a lot of places a lot of public land places that I'd want to go to just because the lessons like that somewhere real remote. These areas are all being stated as being reopened. People have been stuck inside for a long time. It's Memorial Day weekend. So it's kind of it's socially known as the weekend to go out and begin camping. It's probably going to be the first time that in Oregon, we're really getting some nicer weather system. into the summer. And as many people that will still exist that don't want to go outside related to the pandemic stuff, there's going to be so many people that do want to go out that I think it's really going to flat out a lot of a lot of areas in the next couple of weeks. And we're probably going to see some weird regulatory reactions from that. You know, like, I don't know, Kate brown kind of around Spring Break said, you know, go out, go, go to the beach, walk around, it's important to get exercise and everybody did that. And he said, How dare you get out and go to the beach and walk around as much as he did. So then they closed it all down. So I think we're going to kind of see something, something like that here soon to where they say, Yep, Oregon State Parks are reopening. But don't go. Oh, and it's Memorial Day weekend. And you all went. So now we're we're closing them again. So you don't go? I don't know. That's speculation, I suppose. But yeah, it's funny to see an article saying Yeah, Portlanders don't come. So Oh, okay. Sure. I don't know. It doesn't sound fair to me. Yeah, state state parks and stuff, I'd probably stay away from a lot of state parks for a while. And just given their Well, they're just they seem to be in sort of a regulatory flux. So it seems like things that you might understand as being acceptable. Public Land Use stuff at any other time. I might be a little different on the state lands right now. So yeah, if it's a state park, like a, you know, a place with facilities and, and little trails and stuff that you have to pay a fee for? I don't know; I might stay out of there for a little while. Like, what was it like silver Falls State Park? Smith Rock State Park some of those spots? I bet we're gonna be we're gonna be really overcrowded for a couple periods of time. They're kind of recommended. If you don't find parking in the parking lot, then you should go home because it's too full. Okay, yeah. Well, I mean, that's, that's probably how it is most most of the time. So yeah, who knows? But I was saying earlier, yeah, I've been kind of doing a bunch of gardening stuff this week. That's pretty exciting. So yeah, I went down and I got, I got a bunch of railroad ties to put together like a garden box, and then some soil amendment stuff. So I'm trying to fill that, and we got some starter plants to, you know, a couple different vegetables and, and, and things like that, that we're going to try and grow through the summer. So we're, yeah, we're trying to carve out a garden box spot now. And we've been having like deer that come through pretty frequently. And we're gated off too, but they still kind of come in from this lower section over there. That's, that's more opened up that we don't really have control over. So well. I don't know. We'll see how those deer do but, but I also picked up I think of I think it chicken wire that I'm going to try and put across as like a fence for it. So kind of see how that goes. But that's gonna try and protect him protect some vegetables from from the deer that we got. Yeah. So I don't know that some of the gardening stuff that I'm up to you and been trying to do like different yard stuff, trying to clean things up. That's very exciting. That's kind of the same stuff that I've been up to for most of the week was just kind of chores like that. Well, isn't driving here and there. I wanted to read this story. This was one in the Oregonian, and that will probably wrap up with but this one was</p>



<p>one that says more state parks reopened on the Oregon coast from Lincoln City to Florence. This is one of the things that a lot of the smallest, like kind of like we were talking about with Smith rock two and different state parks. Right. But a lot of the the smaller towns on the coast had been talking about how they have low just not enough facilities, a lot of those smaller towns, you know, Port Orford, and they don't have a hospital, do they? So there's that I guess problems with the amount of publicly available medical facilities for people that might end up getting sick or or exposing the community to Coronavirus. So even though they are reopening. They are saying they're not reopening. Right, or are they? So this one from the Oregonian. I think just published yesterday on the 15th says more state parks reopened on the Oregon coast Lincoln city to Florence. The gradual reopening of the Oregon State Park System has now reached the Central Oregon coast. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department reopened 25 State Park sites on the Central Oregon coast Friday, including popular beachfront sites like a seat ahead seal rock, South Beach, Jessie M. Honeyman and Drivers state parks, some parks have fully reopened, but many are open with limited facilities and services. Another 10 state parks along the Central Coast remain closed including Beverly beach, boiler Bay and roads and state parks. I don't really know those places or roads and I know Beverly beach that's a pretty popular one. The entire Oregon State Park System close to the public on March 23, to help stop the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Now as counties getting approved for the state's phase one reopening plan, park officials are slowly reopening those parks to the public. Now it says a full list of Oregon State Park reopenings is posted online at Oregon State parks.org. So that's probably a good spot to go if you're looking for some information about the public land reopenings here in Oregon and go to the Oregon State Park site. I also like I was saying in the last couple ones I'd gone to the to the Oregon was it Oh, DFW the Fish and Wildlife site to see what those people were saying and what their closures were related to the COVID pandemic stuff and like I talked about, I mean, there was like individual individual choices for a lot of those National Park systems or BLM lands, but a lot of them would remain open to the some capacity. So yeah, it's worth it to kind of go and find out some stuff, but yeah, now that it's it's reopening. There's some stuff that is definitely reopening. So continuing with that article, many of Oregon's most popular state parks remain close to the public, including all sites in the Columbia River Gorge and others close to Portland, like silver falls. Was this one Milo, MacGyver and subs stub Stewart. State officials continue to urge Oregonians to avoid non essential travel, including day trips, and for those in urban areas to not travel more than 50 miles from home to recreate. That's an interesting sentence. And I don't think this is a law, by the way. So thanks state officials, state officials continue to urge without making a law regulation. Oregonians to avoid all nonessential travel, including day trips. And for those in urban areas to not travel more than 50 miles from home to recreate. Is that like the one urban area of Portland? Is that what they're talking about? Um, I don't know if I'd trust that as a rule probably could get shut down. I think if you want to get out and you know, you could get out, you probably can this is what I was also thinking to is it might be a good time to get a fishing license or get a hunting license. I think they're like, you know, 35 bucks, you can get the super pass or something for like 75 and get both of them. But</p>



<p>that gives you It seems like some rights to to be traveling around. I mean, even still, if you just kind of claim that as what your occupation is, while you're out you probably get more leniency to but it seems like yeah, that those who are initiated seem to have more access now than than those who then just read this article. So yeah, it seems like if you had like a fishing license, and you're traveling around and you went to a place to go fishing, because it's an allowed activity, you could do that. It seems like an error. You know, like, like I was mentioning a minute ago, it's like he can't travel more than 50 miles from your home to recreate. But Oregon is reopened public lands to out of state, like hunting and fishing licence holders to come into state to use the lands for recreation purposes. So it seems like if outside people can do it, then certainly people who are in the state can go to travel to participate in those kind of activities, too. But I also understand that Yeah, maybe just traveling to a state park to go hike with 100,000 other people is probably a bad idea. Or, I don't know, an undesirable idea at the time. And so people who visit state parks are encouraged to take precautions to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 official said visitors should wear face masks and bring their own hand sanitizer soap and water. Probably because the bathrooms are still going to be closed or strangely closed. Not a bad idea to bring hand sanitizers and soaps and water to outdoor places normally, but I don't know if it's going to be a big deal on this one. People are also asked to keep six feet apart of social distancing while out at Park sites and to leave one space between their car and the car next to them. Hmm, I don't know about that one. Visitors are asked to recreate only with those in their household. Well, thanks for the information. Okay, so that's the idea, I guess from the word of State Park reopening so it was the Oregon State parks.org was one of the sites you can go to to find out some of the information about the May 15 phase one reopenings of Oregon State Park public lands. Yeah, sounds fun. At least there's a couple spots, open it up back like that. It seems like still a few places around Like the city parks and stuff, those are still all shut down. So I'm not in too much of a draw to go to any of these state parks really, you know, this is one of those things where you see this article. And this is one of the things where if you're a little confused about the delineations of different public lands, it can be it can seem like, and this is what I had thought, and sort of the the layman's view of it before, is that when I saw something like that, if, you know, state parks reopening, I would have thought, Oh, well, like they were closed before. And I guess the parks were, but I would have just sort of assumed that to be almost all public areas that you could go out to, or go outside to, or I wouldn't have really known of places outside of just those limited areas of state parks. But I think like we talked about, on the last podcast, a lot of those national wildlife refuges were open, a lot of the wildlife viewing areas are still open wilderness areas are of course, still open. You know, there's still a lot of things that were that were publicly accessible to go out on and go hiking on. And a lot of those places are going to be way less populated than their their state park counterparts. I think just because of the the notoriety that they have, I mean, you know, there's, there's good reason, really, I'd suppose why the Columbia River Gorge hikes are closed down right now, those get very busy during a lot of the year. And I just don't know, if they could, they could handle that kind of use capacity right now. It just seems it seems like a lot of stuff. Same with silver falls or, or even Smith rock and some busy days like that, you know, I'm sure in the spring, it can be super busy out there. So if the reopening and there fell in the parking lot, it's probably going to be busy enough. And it's probably going to be busy with a lot of folks from Ben that haven't been there in a while I understand the idea of people locally wanting to get out and go to those things. But it seems like an odd and just sort of beyond what is legally regulated for them to ask that people not go just for just for no reason. So I'm probably not going to go, but I guess it's for my own reasons and stuff. So we'll see how it goes. I'm going to try and get out a little bit before the Memorial Day weekend, which is when I'm kind of suppose it's going to get a hit another maximum. And they're going to probably try to and more sternly asked that people not go, which I'm not looking forward to. I don't wanna follow this rule. I want to go. So I'm gonna wrap up the podcast around here and continue my day with cool gardening stuff outside like I was talking about earlier.</p>



<p>Do you have that to look forward to on the next podcast? Did I plant the miracles or not? Find out next time on The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can go to Billy Newman photo comm to see some of the other stuff. I've been working on some of the posts that put up some of the other podcasts that I've put together in past years as well.</p>



<p>And, yeah,</p>



<p>I suppose that's it. I'm gonna try and go out and do some stuff for the weekend. Do some gardening like I was talking about, maybe I can get out and do some fun photo stuff. And that has something cool to talk about. That's a little more photo news related. But thanks for tuning in to this episode of The doing photo podcast. This is Episode 146</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. 



Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.







146-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you guys tuning in. I think it's May 16. Today 2020 of everybody's doing well, and I think this accounts for like the first, the first full day after the 15th, which marks the beginning of phase one reopening here in the Oregon area. I guess a lot of other states are sort of entering into the same kind of thing with the beginning of their reopenings. And starting up. I think the start of the I think it's like a lot of retail stores. I don't know what's still restricted. I think there's still like a number of private businesses that can't really can't really get started, it seems like a lot of restaurant stuff is still kind of held back, was it gyms or something? Maybe that's the kind of held back? It seems like, it seems like a lot of places are really kind of getting going. But maybe it's like California, I keep hearing news out of there probably because, you know, there's so many people in that area that that are, you know, producing media and stuff. But I keep hearing kind of strange rules out of the lockdown that sort of continues to go on and the LA County area and along like the California coast and that area. So it's kind of interesting to see how there's such a varied approach and the way that they're they're sort of bringing stuff back. What is it like Arkansas you can have? I'm gonna have a concert, or something. I think there's a place trying to drive in concert idea sounds kind of fun, really, you know, everybody pull up in a car. It always just sounds like a good idea, I guess when there's not a pandemic going on. So there's maybe less fear than that. But But yeah, that sounds fun. Driving concert, I don't know. Or I think there's a limited seating in places for for some venues now that I think is Max, like maybe 150 people swept some places to try and some of those Midwest areas, I think maybe like Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, I think some areas over there kind of try and some, some live events stuff out. I'm not sure what it is for restaurants, and a lot of places still seems like social distancing standards are what's required. And a lot of those places I hear about restaurants operating in, like 25% capacity, and maybe 50% capacity. But even still, that just doesn't seem economically, like it's kind of work, I didn't really spend a lot of time working in restaurants. But even still, I have eno]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. 



Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can liste]]></googleplay:description>
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	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
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	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-145-oregon-public-land-reopenings/</link>
	<pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2020 15:05:09 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8494</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Oregon Public Land Reopenings</p>



<p>Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings</p>



<p>15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailheads begin to reopen. </p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>







<p>145-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown.txt</p>



<p>Hello, thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 11, 2020. How's it going? Thanks for checking this one. I finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain Creek there in the Cascades a couple days ago. What was that like Wednesday, I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was the super moon that was coming up that night. If I remember right, and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there. And they always talk about the Super Moon, which is kind of a, I don't know, it's a little bit of a misnomer. But it's, it's cool to see to that thing to talk about happening every six months or so. Really, it's just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities in the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer than its maximum, and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away. And it's distant maximum. But I think it's really only like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though, it's a thing I learned way back. And I think that they show it at a scene in Apollo 13. But if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times, you're able to cover the entire Full Moon, just with your thumbnail. It's pretty wild, man, you can always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky. And really a lot of the time it's, it's just as big as your thumbnail it at arm's reach, which is kind of a trip. But it was kind of it was cool to see the supermoon that night was really bright, it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of LIGO was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me. That was kind of nice to see. Cold that night, though. Man, I tell you so have a 15 degree sleeping bag. And that's great. 15 degrees is fine. But envision degrees really is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up being in during the summertime. Where it's done, I was just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets. But when is this 15 degrees really means you're going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees, but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience, I think it means you're going to stay alive. That until it's about 15 degrees. So if it were me again, buying something for maybe I don't know, a more heavy three season camping experience most of the time, probably a lot of the nights out that I do. Even though I like to go at all times a year, it seems like the majority of nights I go out or during the summer months or you know during like pretty fair weather seasons. But if I were going to buy again, which I'm going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going, if I was going to buy again, I probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree. And I could really use the warm because man, what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what would have been probably, maybe, I don't know, 29 or something like that it was you know, as a bit below freezing. Who knows how cold it really was, it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon. I thought it was a clear night, but I thought it would be relatively sheltered. And yeah, it was a lot of it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up. And it was a cold, cold night to sit through too. So. So yeah, that 15 degree bag was was just holding up out there. But yeah, if I was gonna go again, I think they have like a zero degree bag. And then down below that they had like a negative 15 and then maybe like a negative 30 degree bag. Negative 30 sounds like a real warm, like down bag. So I think mine's a synthetic bag. They talk about this sometimes where there's like differences in the thermal insulation qualities of the material that your sleeping bag is made out of. And I think that the for it was it was an improvement actually, you know, above whatever whatever cotton we were using for a while they were using wool stuff, which was pretty smart I that that works really well to to be an insulating material. And it doesn't. Alright, that works well with moisture and stuff and all the other things we know about. merino wool is really cool. Everybody knows about that kind of stuff but but we had like, you know, those really terrible big cotton sleeping bags way back. Those arrived. I don't know if they were really even that insulating. Then they switched over to those synthetic materials, which is probably all oil based. Does that sound right? Like a petroleum based plastics product that was made out of synthetics. I think that's how they spin up a lot of those. Those Biologists those synthetic types of materials that they're making these nylons out of.</p>



<p>So I think that was how a lot of this, this synthetic stuff had been made. But really, I think what they they talk about being the superior insulator is down. And that's what I'd hoped to try and find as another zero degree or negative 15 degree sleeping bag would be a negative 15 degree down bag, which is normally a bit more expensive. You know, when you're looking around at the price points for these different sleeping bags, if you're trying to get into some colder weather camping stuff, where you're gonna find is it those name brand or land even name brand, necessarily, but just a bespoke manufacturer for quality, technical outdoors product is going to be very expensive. And so that's where you're gonna find. I don't know whether you know, 399 for a sleeping bag. 299-490-9699 I've seen like a lot of pretty expensive prices out there. I think NEEMO makes some bags that are looking pretty cool that I've seen recommended a few times. I've heard a big Agnus. They make 10s most of the time though, right? They're 10 company, aren't they? Yeah, stone glaciers one that I keep hearing kind of pop up here and there. Now, for some sense. Marmon, I think has bags. Alright guys, is you know, a retailer of recreational equipment. They're closed right now though. So I don't even know if you get an order from anyone like that, but, but they have some bags, I think that's where my synthetic bag was from, that I've been using for the last, I don't know, seven years or so. So that's, it's been fine. But I also tested out the sleeping mat I got I got a new Thermarest sleeping mat. And now big news. It's pretty exciting. Guys, stay tuned. It's a Yeah, it's a larger sleeping mat than I had before. But it's a it's a coated one with I think it's kind of like it's ballistic now. But it's that nylon coating over it. So it's not just the rubber mat at the base of it. So you can throw it on the ground or on the barrel, semi abrasive materials that it would be outside and is working great. I think it's about one inch thick or so it's about 25 inches wide at the shoulder point is long enough to fit my whole body, which is probably the one for me. So yeah, I got a solid camp man. I think for the last three years, I've been sleeping on one that goes flat about four hours after you start sleeping. So that's kind of nice to swap out. I don't know why I put up with so long really shouldn't do that. Sleep is like one of the best things you can get, you know, if you can figure out just like a couple easy things to take care of when you're out camping or out in the woods and stuff. It's probably sleep. I mean, that's like the thing that takes and it's frustrating, because like even this last one I'm talking about, didn't sleep very well, way too cold part of it, you know, no shelter and enough stuff that was kind of comfortable. But really as it is, yeah, it's like I need to, I need to figure out a couple other extra things to kind of throw in there. But yeah, there's just a couple things you can figure out when you're going camping, like how to stay warm, or how to be comfortable when you do go. Or like when you are sleeping is like one of the most important and most, I don't know, effective things you can do to kind of improve the way that a trip goes. Because like, I can be like I can be brutal the next day if you don't get any sleep the night before. We just have probably the first half a dozen camping trips of the year. You know those first half dozen or so overnights of the year. I'm just always kind of groggy and like what I have to get up right now. We just sort out was Wednesday morning when I woke up. I popped up. And I think it was probably about 5am so that I that I got up I think it was just about first light. The sun had come up Yeah, but there's a little bit of light up in the sky, and the stars were kind of washed out by the blue sky. So I have to up and the fire was out. I think from the night before like I was mentioning how those the sticks had worn out and the coals that started burning down even I think by the time I was near the end of my last podcast. I hopped out, and the back windows were clear. There wasn't any frost on it. But the front window the windshield was ice over pretty hard really. I mean it looked like it was, you know, like coated or water and then froze over solid. So it wasn't even just kind of like a fluffy bit of white frost or something that had built up on it through fog. It just look like a hard coating of just an ice sheet over the windshield. Great. I don't have a nice grape or something with me. I'm thinking that it's me now. Who needs an ice-scraper. I'm taking a sip of coffee.</p>



<p>So yeah, I don't know. I grabbed a box. I think it was a Visa card. are bored out of the bag, but I could kind of flex around a bit through that over the windshield, try to run the truck for a bit try to warm it up and took a while to but yeah scraped off some ice scraped out of the hole big enough to kind of get started on the drive and then prepped to take off but yeah, take some photos and stuff around the campsite for a bit first in the morning. Nice draw in the valley like I was talking about that goes up to that that ridge point that you can kind of see off in the distance and I think I could see like the the fire from the smoke or the smoke from the fire of the neighboring campers over there. I don't know if I'd mentioned it well Yeah, I definitely didn't the last one. They were they're kind of doing Brody's out in the on the road. Around sunset. I think I got a little clip of it on video. But yeah, it's like four or five of them. And he's kind of beater late 90s for about four trucks doing spins out in the dirt roads. So it looks fun, I don't know. But they were getting getting the fire going and stuff in the morning to or whatever they had gone from the night before. You can see a plume of it coming up from the area they would have been camping over by the creek bed down hill. And yeah, it was cool. took some photos and stuff that morning, walked around kind of cleaned up the camp a little bit. But the fire stuff out and jumped in the truck, had that little hole in the ice to see through. And then yeah, popped on a podcast and cruised down the road. And so what I was trying to do was was take off down to a couple other spots along the creek while it was still morning and then head down ultimately to the area where the lake it started to build up. And so kind of how it works is like it kind of flows down the creek. And then there's a dam at a point ultimately, and then back right behind the dam is a reservoir where that Greek is kind of built up. And I guess now is Yeah, body of water out there. So drove down a ways and took some photographs of the creek and the morning light and some of the water and stuff coming through. I really like that kind of affected the sort of early spring, kind of fresh snowmelt mountain Creek stuff that just sort of looks really crisp and forested and natural. And then it came down a ways further to a bridge that kind of cuts across the span of the creek as it starts to sort of widen out into the reservoir area. And it looks like, you know, a big stretch of calm water out on the edge of the bridge where I think two different groups that were doing some fishing in the morning. And yeah, it seems like people are still out. It was a busy area up there is still still definitely pretty fully populated set of people. You know, even during this lockdown period, there was a bunch of people out there hanging out and fishing. I think it was too different. The different groups to maybe they were they were all kind of connected. But yeah, they were they're out there with a couple lines over the bridge. And they were picking up a couple things, I think so I saw a lady that was pulling up and a little a little blue kayak to the ramp on the first day. And on her What is that thing you know, when you you ran it through the gilling you got the fish and stuff anyway, she pulled up with like guns like four or five trout or something on her</p>



<p>on her</p>



<p>inner guy, that's where it Leave it, I guess, but she pulled up before if I tried. So I figured you guys, these guys were doing a little bit of trout fishing out there. Which sounds fun. It's a nice, clear, crisp morning and stuff like I was saying. So yeah, it sounds like it'd be nice to be out there for a couple hours doing sufficient. And yeah, it looked like they were they were up to what they were getting a couple things. Let's go to a sound ospreay that the took off, I think over the lake area just at that time. And we kind of like pull up at certain spots over the water, kind of back flap to hold in the same spot, look underwater and see if there's something I didn't see enough, or I didn't see a prime opportunity. And then we're going to swoop off and then take off to a different section of the lake, then do it again. So watch that about three or four times, try to take a couple pictures of the area. What's your nice do I like the photographs that I got that morning, it's good to get a nice a nice look to it really, you know, a lot of the time that the photographs really look a lot better when you just select the right time of day to be somewhere which you know, is obvious, but just the types of colors and the types of saturation and dynamics that you get in the look of a pretty simple, you know, set of trees and water, it just comes off a lot better when it's just the right type of light. It's really amazing to to kind of see what differences it makes when it's a cloudy day or a sunny day or a morning or an evening or midday. Really, it seems like the dynamics of the light change so much that you can get like a totally different look in the photo, which is always kind of interesting to pay attention to and sort of see how that how that goes, What changes about it and sort of how that affects the photographs that you're making. I mean you can edit you know some cool at any time of day but you It's kind of cool to figure out how it works for you or how it works, or what I'm trying to do is how to figure out how, how it works for my photographs and what I'm trying to do. Which is nice. It was cool going out there and climbing around the creeks and stuff in the morning and taking a cup of photos and water nice, Brian, going over to the Lake area that's trying to work on similar stuff to what I've done before, but kind of that mirror look of that really calm water as it spreads across the lake in the morning. And then the reflection of the bright blue, kind of pre sunlit sky, or how's it you know, like before the sun is actually up over the horizon, there's not a lot of intensity. So it's just kind of a softer blue glow and a lot of ways. And then there's still enough illumination that you can see the greens and the trees and sort of the soft calm water in the morning before it gets kind of agitated through the rest of the day. So nice kind of peaceful looks to the photos and sort of the the natural stuff that I like to go kind of capture. You know, really, ultimately, though, there's some nice stuff up there. And I was really like, happy to kind of photograph some of the some of what I was looking for. But I was also also frustrated in the area too. I think there was a there's a little more choked off than what I normally like. Like, there wasn't as many opportunities as I had hoped for I did try to, you know, utilize the ones that I found. But there wasn't as many opportunities as I had hoped for for kind of an opened up wide scene that you could set up a landscape photo and there wasn't a lot of elements to really work with, it was just sort of like some rolling hills off to a Green Hill. So. So sometimes I'm trying to find some stuff that's a little bit more dynamic, and it look than that. But it was fun, though, even is anyway. Though, I'm trying to think maybe, like I was mentioned on last when I got stuck and turned around, but the snow and I didn't want to deal with any of that right now. But in the next weeks and stuff, I want to get up to Mount Jefferson or Mount Washington or a couple of these other wilderness areas that that have a few kind of visual landmarks that would be worth taking an observation of. And you know, this other thing I want to bring up? Maybe I could talk about it here. Where is it? I think that it was on Oregon live. So there's the Oregonian, the Oregon newspaper here at a Portland I suppose, right? Or is it the state newspaper?</p>



<p>I think it's the Portland none. But Oregon live comm there was a news article that I was gonna check out says, What outdoor spaces have reopened in Oregon, which are still closed, published on May 8. And I was gonna check out a couple little pieces in here. But it does a good job. If you if you look this one up. It does a good enough job though it also has a little bit of sly language. And well, I'll tell you kind of like I'd been mentioned in the last couple of times, there is a bit of language that is meant for the initiated in this sort of thing. So it'll say you can't do things. Sometimes you can do those things. So you might have to check with them each kind of local area to see what your access to the lands are in that area. But But this article is the first one that I've seen in a while that actually goes through and seems to make a comment a little bit more specifically about different sections of land that are going to be open and what types of facilities are going to reopen in that area. And what are what is not going to, you know, like a visitor center is going to stay close, but maybe like the restrooms will be open or, or all of that sort of stuff is closed, but the trails are open. So let's see what we got. I think in this is Oregon State Parks are going to gradually reopen. And I bet that's gonna take a while it says all campgrounds are going to remain close. I was looking at Wildlife Refuge areas like the one that's south of where we are. I think there's one there's another one north of us too. Those are I think they visited centers are listed as being closed. But the lands themselves are open. So if there's like a parking lot area where people will congregate, they might have gated that off. But the land itself is open to do hiking, I suppose. So you can do the Hanceville. And in Oregon, there's no there's no mask requirement as issued by the governor. I think there is a mask consideration request that has been made, then private businesses can add that as a requirement to do business with them. But outside you can choose to walk around without one. I think there was a mention that, you know, there's a measure of Dr. Fauci saying that if you were in and out area, it might not be necessary to wear a mask any longer, which I don't know. We'll see it. Pick it up. It's fortunate that in this area, at least there's a lower caseload than probably a lot of the parts of the world. I think it says over in the Oregon coast, which has been kind of a hotspot when it was talking about land access. A lot of those beach towns didn't really want to have to deal with people from Portland shooting over and taking a beach vacation and getting them sick I think was sort of the idea or overrunning their facilities and in their ability to handle it. So I think a lot of those things that still been shut down, but I think there is some of the same that like beaches are technically open in Oregon. But all public access points are managed by the Oregon Parks and recreation department are closed until further notice. Well, Cannon Beach has banned visitors through at least June 2. seaside has entirely closed its beaches to the public. Tillamook County has closed all beach access points and parking lots. Lincoln County from Lincoln city to yachts, has temporarily banned short term vacation rentals. county parks have reopened enqueues and Douglas counties this summer only open for residents and some public health restrictions still apply. Columbia River Gorge virtually all recreation areas in the Columbia River Gorge remain closed, including state parks in both Oregon and Washington. All US Forest Service lands in the Columbia Gorge is closed, including wilderness areas really wow. That's one of the most strict closures that there are. It must be to really just control like the population of Portland going out and do an ageing which is strange man if you want to do a two hour drive you got everything open to you but less than that it's closed. Some recreation sites are still open at the Bonneville, the Dow's and the john de dams. Some recreation sites are open at the Bonneville the downs and the john de dams. Well, at least those are open. Everybody go recreate at the dams? Why are those open? Everybody was gonna the john de damp the recreation centers open mountain hood all developed recreation areas on Mount Hood are currently close to the public including all trailheads boat ramps, day-use sites, snow parks and campgrounds, Forest Service roads and dispersed areas are open to the public as well as trails not accessed by developed trailheads Yeah, so that was one of those those tickets where the governor has close to trailheads. Oh, trailheads, okay, well, so any any strange technical way It means that the trails are open. If you are able to park</p>



<p>off the trailhead, and then access the trail by going back and tree right, you know, cutting over to the side, and then getting onto the trailhead by going around or getting onto the trail by going around the trailhead. You are following the law. ski resorts are now allowed to reopen. Hey, great may 15, or get getting some scheme, though so far only Timberline Lodge has announced it will do so for now Timberline Lodge remains closed. Okay, well, yeah, there you go. national forests. Here's the ticket. All developed recreation areas in most of Oregon and Washington National Forest are closed to the public recreation areas. Okay, so that means like a developed kind of structured site. Or does it What does it say here, including all trailheads, boat ramps de use sites, snow parks, and campgrounds, the US Forest Service has announced it will begin a phased reopening of those sides. The no timeline has been made public Forest Service roads and dispersed areas are open to the public, as well as trails not accessed by developed trailheads. Hunting and fishing is allowed in undeveloped areas. Well, there you go. So really, yeah, so this is one of those things that is how would you say like a dog whistle to the initiated, as that says to you, or maybe not you you're probably the initiated, right? You're listening to this podcast. That's the secrets. So yeah, when it's talking about that stuff, it's kind of a little bit of a, I don't know, a layman's trick or something. I think it's saying like, Oh, yeah, it's close, like recreation sites are closed or trailheads are closed or visitor centers are closed, like, that's what anybody cares about when they're going out to a wilderness area. So it might mean that a bathroom is closed or that it's not been cleaned, but If you're going for a remote or dispersed forest experience, those are all still as open as they ever would have been. Because I think they're your public lands, you know, you have access to those kind of places. That's where it seemed like dispersed camping, hunting and fishing is still available. Forest Service roads are still open to be traveled on. But really, when it's saying like a recreation site is closed, I think it's talking about a developed Forest Service campground, a developed Forest Service like bathroom where they use site like it was saying a snow Park site where you'd have a parking lot and a congregation of people or a trailhead site where there's a parking lot, and a congregation of people. Normally those places that have like, some kind of day-use parking pass for you know, give $2 to an envelope and put it in a box or something. That kind of places I think still remain close, but those lands are still open. And it is a little bit more complicated, kind of on the coastal side of the cascade side besides you get out in the Eastern Oregon a lot of those Forest Service lands you know, the the national forest land, or BLM land is just so wide open, as in there's just like, it's just, it's just wide-open landscape that it's, it's pretty accessible. You can go to a lot of places out there, like the john de dam, go hang out there. Let's see back to this. It says the Umpqua National Forest will reopen most of its boat ramps and trailheads. On May 9, the trailhead to Umpqua hot springs remains closed as we talk about unquote hot springs the last time remaining closed I guess this hot springs would probably mean that'd be gross like hey, I wonder I wonder the person in this hot spring before me I COVID Oh, that's gonna be a great thought for the next year I'm quite National Forest on May 9 that means it's already open for like two days now. People can trailhead and and boat ramp all they want to wow I wonder how that's gonna do for like river recreation stuff that's just kind of interesting how it's working. Let's see what do we have? There's like some other stuff national parks. Crater Lake National Park is currently close to the public as well as john day fossil bets Lewis and Clark National Historic Park tours at the Oregon caves National Monument not tours at the Oregon caves National Monument are closed, but hiking trails remain open. Well, that makes sense. Yeah, the Oregon caves down outside of the cave junction in Southern Oregon. I've been there a few times for field trips and like the seventh grade and whatnot. Really should go again as an adult. I don't really have a clear memory of how cool it might be. I think it was a I mean, it's a national monument. Right? It's got to be something cool. So yeah, the tours are closed. I remember that was kind of the thing I was always bummed about is like the lava the lava caves, you can go to an Eastern Oregon. Those are open you just be just drive up and walk in yourself and</p>



<p>you should bring a flashlight, you know, it's up to you. The the caves that the caves in outside of cave junction. at the Oregon caves, I don't know. It's just too on rails. It was just too much of like a 45 minute tour, and then you'll leave, which I've never really preferred even as a kid. But as you go, not be any cake because I bet they treat you with kid gloves when you're 10. Hiking trails remain open out there. Well, that's good. Metro parks Oregon State Forest day-use areas campgrounds and restrooms are closed. In Oregon State forests, though dispersed camping trails and target shooting remain open. State Forest officials have asked that people delay travel as much as possible. Let me check that again. State Forest officials have asked that people delay travel as much as possible. Have they asked that maybe they have out there? I don't know if they have the right to do that. Again, I think that's kind of speaking to the uninitiated in that setting. So I think if you have a hunting license or a fishing license, or you're actively participating in a planned event, I think like there's bear season still turkey season, maybe that's and ended. But I think there was like a spring bear hunt that it opened up. And there's open open season and whatever else. And I think that those were dispersed experiences like that were still acceptable. So I don't know if they have the right to ask you to not attend your public lands. It's sort of one of those things I'm talking about, again, where it's like, well, but they're not in charge of it. They're in charge of managing it for you, but they're not in charge of it. Wildlife Refuges. Wildlife Refuges managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service remain open to the public. It says the parking lots access points and visitor centers may be closed. I was kind of what I experienced when I went out to the Finley Wildlife Refuge south of Corvallis here, and it's a big area where like Canadian geese, and elk and birds of other types rest up. I guess during the winter, it's just sort of I guess technically it would have reopened or more open access to the public on April 1, but due to the Coronavirus stuff, it had been kind of closed. And I think at first they were putting up some signs that said, like, hey, the governor said that this is closed, but I don't think they said that. So I think really, it was just at the visitor center. That was a section of that, though, no one really cared. I mean, I want to see the wildlife I want to see the visitor center that that Visitor Center was closed, it also closed a gate that goes to Well, it's really just a road the drive-thru, but I guess that would go to a more congregated parking lot area. So that had been closed, but people have been parking on the outside of that and then walking in because they have right to their public land. Which is cool. Yeah, you can go in there. And it's a beautiful spot. You can kind of hike around through there. There's a bunch of trails, and it's a pretty remote area, or, you know, just as it is, it's not a lot of people that are trying to occupy it. And given that it's a wildlife refuge. There's just a density of wildlife that's collected there. That's pretty cool to check out. You know, there's a lot of I think that's where we saw an elk a couple weeks ago. Before that, we'd seen a coyote walking around out there we kind of I bought a bunch of bald eagles and a bunch of hawks and what else has been out there? A lot. So what was out there a couple weeks ago that biplane was out there a couple of weeks ago. That's where I was checking that out. So yeah, wildlife refuges, I guess, remain open to the public. For a lot of access points. I was looking at that there's like no wildlife refuge, land allocated in Southern Oregon as I was kind of looking through there. I think there's one just south of here and one just north of here near Salem. And then there's like a bunch of along the coast. There's a bunch over in Eastern Oregon a lot up along the Columbia River, but there's nothing at all in Southern Oregon. To know I live down there, I guess. BLM land, I think we're wrapping it up here. This is near the end. Thanks for reading an article. BLM land most day you sites and many restrooms on Bureau of Land Management land are closed to the public, as well as all campgrounds, visitors are instructed to contact local BLM offices for specific closure details. The acquaint ahead outstanding natural area and Oregon Trail interpretive center remain closed. Mount sounds like they're saying that it's closed. Many restrooms on Bureau of Land Management land are close to the public as well as campgrounds.</p>



<p>Okay. Yeah, so</p>



<p>I think that when they're talking about campgrounds, and restrooms, I think, again, they're talking about the develop locations that would be at, like congregation points, that would be kind of more similar to where you'd be like, you know, just like a campground kind of thing. But any of these dispersed locations are still available to the public. And when I was up on the, like I was saying, when I was out into the national forest land, as soon as you get to the area where you're in national forest and camping is allowed off the road. There's these fairings and campsites built up just off the side of the road. And those were all loaded up. All of them had an RV or a fifth wheel or trailer or a truck content and stuff set up with a bunch of wood and people hanging out there for what seemed like a setup for three or four or five days or something. So it seemed like there's a lot of locations that are like that across Oregon. earlier in the month, early in April, when I went out to Eastern Oregon, I was checking out an area to camp out there that is normally way remote, you know, you'd only see people kind of backed up in there during a hunting season or something. And it was loaded up, you know, just early April, it was loaded out. And I think it's because out of all the millions of people out there, and all these people that have been set aside as non essential workers with a lot of time I mean, you know, for millions and millions of them, they're staying home and for maybe, I don't know, 80,000 people or something, they're all taking their trucks and going out and that 80,000 people is enough to fill up the 5000 good spots that seem to be spread across some of that remote land out there. So it's kind of funny to see sort of where people are lining up and how things are going. And then I'm one of them too, right. You know, I got the time, and I'm trying to go out and try to check out some of these still open areas. So it's cool that we're getting to phase one of the reopening process. Hopefully, people are in a good place for that as we're coming into the middle of May and then Memorial Day weekend and some of the kind of onset of the summer season stuff. I think that it'll be good to have a more reopened kind of vibe of it going on then, man could you imagine staying close through Memorial Day. You can go out you can do some river stuff or something. stuff or some land stuff, any of that kind of outdoor stuff that I'd want to do. It'd be terrible if it was, if it was shut down to me. So I'm glad it's open and available to us. And yeah, thanks for going through. And looking at some land access that we have across Oregon as we start to reopen into phase one. They sort of, I guess, listening through some sleeping through a cold night and taking photos in the morning stories from the cabin trip the other day talking about the supermoon a little bit covered a bit of stuff. So I think we'll probably start wrapping it up there. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can see more of my stuff at Billy Newman photo comm where I put up a couple blog posts here and there some ideas about some photography stuff, a bunch of these podcasts are up there. And other ways you can get in contact with me to do some business with me or, or I guess talk about some photo stuff with me if you're interested. So yeah, thanks a lot. I'm going to keep enjoying my cup of coffee on this Monday morning and seconds about the stuff done. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of doing a new photo podcast I will talk to you again.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Oregon Public Land Reopenings



Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings



15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailh]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Oregon Public Land Reopenings</p>



<p>Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings</p>



<p>15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailheads begin to reopen. </p>



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<p>145-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown.txt</p>



<p>Hello, thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 11, 2020. How's it going? Thanks for checking this one. I finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain Creek there in the Cascades a couple days ago. What was that like Wednesday, I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was the super moon that was coming up that night. If I remember right, and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there. And they always talk about the Super Moon, which is kind of a, I don't know, it's a little bit of a misnomer. But it's, it's cool to see to that thing to talk about happening every six months or so. Really, it's just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities in the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer than its maximum, and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away. And it's distant maximum. But I think it's really only like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though, it's a thing I learned way back. And I think that they show it at a scene in Apollo 13. But if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times, you're able to cover the entire Full Moon, just with your thumbnail. It's pretty wild, man, you can always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky. And really a lot of the time it's, it's just as big as your thumbnail it at arm's reach, which is kind of a trip. But it was kind of it was cool to see the supermoon that night was really bright, it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of LIGO was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me. That was kind of nice to see. Cold that night, though. Man, I tell you so have a 15 degree sleeping bag. And that's great. 15 degrees is fine. But envision degrees really is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up being in during the summertime. Where it's done, I was just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets. But when is this 15 degrees really means you're going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees, but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience, I think it means you're going to stay alive. That until it's about 15 degrees. So if it were me again, buying something for maybe I don't know, a more heavy three season camping experience most of the time, probably a lot of the nights out that I do. Even though I like to go at all times a year, it seems like the majority of nights I go out or during the summer months or you know during like pretty fair weather seasons. But if I were going to buy again, which I'm going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going, if I was going to buy again, I probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree. And I could really use the warm because man, what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what would have been probably, maybe, I don't know, 29 or something like that it was you know, as a bit below freezing. Who knows how cold it really was, it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon. I thought it was a clear night, but I thought it would be relatively sheltered. And yeah, it was a lot of it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up. And it was a cold, cold night to sit through too. So. So yeah, that 15 degree bag was was just holding up out there. But yeah, if I was gonna go again, I think they have like a zero degree bag. And then down below that they had like a negative 15 and then maybe like a negative 30 degree bag. Negative 30 sounds like a real warm, like down bag. So I think mine's a synthetic bag. They talk about this sometimes where there's like differences in the thermal insulation qualities of the material that your sleeping bag is made out of. And I think that the for it was it was an improvement actually, you know, above whatever whatever cotton we were using for a while they were using wool stuff, which was pretty smart I that that works really well to to be an insulating material. And it doesn't. Alright, that works well with moisture and stuff and all the other things we know about. merino wool is really cool. Everybody knows about that kind of stuff but but we had like, you know, those really terrible big cotton sleeping bags way back. Those arrived. I don't know if they were really even that insulating. Then they switched over to those synthetic materials, which is probably all oil based. Does that sound right? Like a petroleum based plastics product that was made out of synthetics. I think that's how they spin up a lot of those. Those Biologists those synthetic types of materials that they're making these nylons out of.</p>



<p>So I think that was how a lot of this, this synthetic stuff had been made. But really, I think what they they talk about being the superior insulator is down. And that's what I'd hoped to try and find as another zero degree or negative 15 degree sleeping bag would be a negative 15 degree down bag, which is normally a bit more expensive. You know, when you're looking around at the price points for these different sleeping bags, if you're trying to get into some colder weather camping stuff, where you're gonna find is it those name brand or land even name brand, necessarily, but just a bespoke manufacturer for quality, technical outdoors product is going to be very expensive. And so that's where you're gonna find. I don't know whether you know, 399 for a sleeping bag. 299-490-9699 I've seen like a lot of pretty expensive prices out there. I think NEEMO makes some bags that are looking pretty cool that I've seen recommended a few times. I've heard a big Agnus. They make 10s most of the time though, right? They're 10 company, aren't they? Yeah, stone glaciers one that I keep hearing kind of pop up here and there. Now, for some sense. Marmon, I think has bags. Alright guys, is you know, a retailer of recreational equipment. They're closed right now though. So I don't even know if you get an order from anyone like that, but, but they have some bags, I think that's where my synthetic bag was from, that I've been using for the last, I don't know, seven years or so. So that's, it's been fine. But I also tested out the sleeping mat I got I got a new Thermarest sleeping mat. And now big news. It's pretty exciting. Guys, stay tuned. It's a Yeah, it's a larger sleeping mat than I had before. But it's a it's a coated one with I think it's kind of like it's ballistic now. But it's that nylon coating over it. So it's not just the rubber mat at the base of it. So you can throw it on the ground or on the barrel, semi abrasive materials that it would be outside and is working great. I think it's about one inch thick or so it's about 25 inches wide at the shoulder point is long enough to fit my whole body, which is probably the one for me. So yeah, I got a solid camp man. I think for the last three years, I've been sleeping on one that goes flat about four hours after you start sleeping. So that's kind of nice to swap out. I don't know why I put up with so long really shouldn't do that. Sleep is like one of the best things you can get, you know, if you can figure out just like a couple easy things to take care of when you're out camping or out in the woods and stuff. It's probably sleep. I mean, that's like the thing that takes and it's frustrating, because like even this last one I'm talking about, didn't sleep very well, way too cold part of it, you know, no shelter and enough stuff that was kind of comfortable. But really as it is, yeah, it's like I need to, I need to figure out a couple other extra things to kind of throw in there. But yeah, there's just a couple things you can figure out when you're going camping, like how to stay warm, or how to be comfortable when you do go. Or like when you are sleeping is like one of the most important and most, I don't know, effective things you can do to kind of improve the way that a trip goes. Because like, I can be like I can be brutal the next day if you don't get any sleep the night before. We just have probably the first half a dozen camping trips of the year. You know those first half dozen or so overnights of the year. I'm just always kind of groggy and like what I have to get up right now. We just sort out was Wednesday morning when I woke up. I popped up. And I think it was probably about 5am so that I that I got up I think it was just about first light. The sun had come up Yeah, but there's a little bit of light up in the sky, and the stars were kind of washed out by the blue sky. So I have to up and the fire was out. I think from the night before like I was mentioning how those the sticks had worn out and the coals that started burning down even I think by the time I was near the end of my last podcast. I hopped out, and the back windows were clear. There wasn't any frost on it. But the front window the windshield was ice over pretty hard really. I mean it looked like it was, you know, like coated or water and then froze over solid. So it wasn't even just kind of like a fluffy bit of white frost or something that had built up on it through fog. It just look like a hard coating of just an ice sheet over the windshield. Great. I don't have a nice grape or something with me. I'm thinking that it's me now. Who needs an ice-scraper. I'm taking a sip of coffee.</p>



<p>So yeah, I don't know. I grabbed a box. I think it was a Visa card. are bored out of the bag, but I could kind of flex around a bit through that over the windshield, try to run the truck for a bit try to warm it up and took a while to but yeah scraped off some ice scraped out of the hole big enough to kind of get started on the drive and then prepped to take off but yeah, take some photos and stuff around the campsite for a bit first in the morning. Nice draw in the valley like I was talking about that goes up to that that ridge point that you can kind of see off in the distance and I think I could see like the the fire from the smoke or the smoke from the fire of the neighboring campers over there. I don't know if I'd mentioned it well Yeah, I definitely didn't the last one. They were they're kind of doing Brody's out in the on the road. Around sunset. I think I got a little clip of it on video. But yeah, it's like four or five of them. And he's kind of beater late 90s for about four trucks doing spins out in the dirt roads. So it looks fun, I don't know. But they were getting getting the fire going and stuff in the morning to or whatever they had gone from the night before. You can see a plume of it coming up from the area they would have been camping over by the creek bed down hill. And yeah, it was cool. took some photos and stuff that morning, walked around kind of cleaned up the camp a little bit. But the fire stuff out and jumped in the truck, had that little hole in the ice to see through. And then yeah, popped on a podcast and cruised down the road. And so what I was trying to do was was take off down to a couple other spots along the creek while it was still morning and then head down ultimately to the area where the lake it started to build up. And so kind of how it works is like it kind of flows down the creek. And then there's a dam at a point ultimately, and then back right behind the dam is a reservoir where that Greek is kind of built up. And I guess now is Yeah, body of water out there. So drove down a ways and took some photographs of the creek and the morning light and some of the water and stuff coming through. I really like that kind of affected the sort of early spring, kind of fresh snowmelt mountain Creek stuff that just sort of looks really crisp and forested and natural. And then it came down a ways further to a bridge that kind of cuts across the span of the creek as it starts to sort of widen out into the reservoir area. And it looks like, you know, a big stretch of calm water out on the edge of the bridge where I think two different groups that were doing some fishing in the morning. And yeah, it seems like people are still out. It was a busy area up there is still still definitely pretty fully populated set of people. You know, even during this lockdown period, there was a bunch of people out there hanging out and fishing. I think it was too different. The different groups to maybe they were they were all kind of connected. But yeah, they were they're out there with a couple lines over the bridge. And they were picking up a couple things, I think so I saw a lady that was pulling up and a little a little blue kayak to the ramp on the first day. And on her What is that thing you know, when you you ran it through the gilling you got the fish and stuff anyway, she pulled up with like guns like four or five trout or something on her</p>



<p>on her</p>



<p>inner guy, that's where it Leave it, I guess, but she pulled up before if I tried. So I figured you guys, these guys were doing a little bit of trout fishing out there. Which sounds fun. It's a nice, clear, crisp morning and stuff like I was saying. So yeah, it sounds like it'd be nice to be out there for a couple hours doing sufficient. And yeah, it looked like they were they were up to what they were getting a couple things. Let's go to a sound ospreay that the took off, I think over the lake area just at that time. And we kind of like pull up at certain spots over the water, kind of back flap to hold in the same spot, look underwater and see if there's something I didn't see enough, or I didn't see a prime opportunity. And then we're going to swoop off and then take off to a different section of the lake, then do it again. So watch that about three or four times, try to take a couple pictures of the area. What's your nice do I like the photographs that I got that morning, it's good to get a nice a nice look to it really, you know, a lot of the time that the photographs really look a lot better when you just select the right time of day to be somewhere which you know, is obvious, but just the types of colors and the types of saturation and dynamics that you get in the look of a pretty simple, you know, set of trees and water, it just comes off a lot better when it's just the right type of light. It's really amazing to to kind of see what differences it makes when it's a cloudy day or a sunny day or a morning or an evening or midday. Really, it seems like the dynamics of the light change so much that you can get like a totally different look in the photo, which is always kind of interesting to pay attention to and sort of see how that how that goes, What changes about it and sort of how that affects the photographs that you're making. I mean you can edit you know some cool at any time of day but you It's kind of cool to figure out how it works for you or how it works, or what I'm trying to do is how to figure out how, how it works for my photographs and what I'm trying to do. Which is nice. It was cool going out there and climbing around the creeks and stuff in the morning and taking a cup of photos and water nice, Brian, going over to the Lake area that's trying to work on similar stuff to what I've done before, but kind of that mirror look of that really calm water as it spreads across the lake in the morning. And then the reflection of the bright blue, kind of pre sunlit sky, or how's it you know, like before the sun is actually up over the horizon, there's not a lot of intensity. So it's just kind of a softer blue glow and a lot of ways. And then there's still enough illumination that you can see the greens and the trees and sort of the soft calm water in the morning before it gets kind of agitated through the rest of the day. So nice kind of peaceful looks to the photos and sort of the the natural stuff that I like to go kind of capture. You know, really, ultimately, though, there's some nice stuff up there. And I was really like, happy to kind of photograph some of the some of what I was looking for. But I was also also frustrated in the area too. I think there was a there's a little more choked off than what I normally like. Like, there wasn't as many opportunities as I had hoped for I did try to, you know, utilize the ones that I found. But there wasn't as many opportunities as I had hoped for for kind of an opened up wide scene that you could set up a landscape photo and there wasn't a lot of elements to really work with, it was just sort of like some rolling hills off to a Green Hill. So. So sometimes I'm trying to find some stuff that's a little bit more dynamic, and it look than that. But it was fun, though, even is anyway. Though, I'm trying to think maybe, like I was mentioned on last when I got stuck and turned around, but the snow and I didn't want to deal with any of that right now. But in the next weeks and stuff, I want to get up to Mount Jefferson or Mount Washington or a couple of these other wilderness areas that that have a few kind of visual landmarks that would be worth taking an observation of. And you know, this other thing I want to bring up? Maybe I could talk about it here. Where is it? I think that it was on Oregon live. So there's the Oregonian, the Oregon newspaper here at a Portland I suppose, right? Or is it the state newspaper?</p>



<p>I think it's the Portland none. But Oregon live comm there was a news article that I was gonna check out says, What outdoor spaces have reopened in Oregon, which are still closed, published on May 8. And I was gonna check out a couple little pieces in here. But it does a good job. If you if you look this one up. It does a good enough job though it also has a little bit of sly language. And well, I'll tell you kind of like I'd been mentioned in the last couple of times, there is a bit of language that is meant for the initiated in this sort of thing. So it'll say you can't do things. Sometimes you can do those things. So you might have to check with them each kind of local area to see what your access to the lands are in that area. But But this article is the first one that I've seen in a while that actually goes through and seems to make a comment a little bit more specifically about different sections of land that are going to be open and what types of facilities are going to reopen in that area. And what are what is not going to, you know, like a visitor center is going to stay close, but maybe like the restrooms will be open or, or all of that sort of stuff is closed, but the trails are open. So let's see what we got. I think in this is Oregon State Parks are going to gradually reopen. And I bet that's gonna take a while it says all campgrounds are going to remain close. I was looking at Wildlife Refuge areas like the one that's south of where we are. I think there's one there's another one north of us too. Those are I think they visited centers are listed as being closed. But the lands themselves are open. So if there's like a parking lot area where people will congregate, they might have gated that off. But the land itself is open to do hiking, I suppose. So you can do the Hanceville. And in Oregon, there's no there's no mask requirement as issued by the governor. I think there is a mask consideration request that has been made, then private businesses can add that as a requirement to do business with them. But outside you can choose to walk around without one. I think there was a mention that, you know, there's a measure of Dr. Fauci saying that if you were in and out area, it might not be necessary to wear a mask any longer, which I don't know. We'll see it. Pick it up. It's fortunate that in this area, at least there's a lower caseload than probably a lot of the parts of the world. I think it says over in the Oregon coast, which has been kind of a hotspot when it was talking about land access. A lot of those beach towns didn't really want to have to deal with people from Portland shooting over and taking a beach vacation and getting them sick I think was sort of the idea or overrunning their facilities and in their ability to handle it. So I think a lot of those things that still been shut down, but I think there is some of the same that like beaches are technically open in Oregon. But all public access points are managed by the Oregon Parks and recreation department are closed until further notice. Well, Cannon Beach has banned visitors through at least June 2. seaside has entirely closed its beaches to the public. Tillamook County has closed all beach access points and parking lots. Lincoln County from Lincoln city to yachts, has temporarily banned short term vacation rentals. county parks have reopened enqueues and Douglas counties this summer only open for residents and some public health restrictions still apply. Columbia River Gorge virtually all recreation areas in the Columbia River Gorge remain closed, including state parks in both Oregon and Washington. All US Forest Service lands in the Columbia Gorge is closed, including wilderness areas really wow. That's one of the most strict closures that there are. It must be to really just control like the population of Portland going out and do an ageing which is strange man if you want to do a two hour drive you got everything open to you but less than that it's closed. Some recreation sites are still open at the Bonneville, the Dow's and the john de dams. Some recreation sites are open at the Bonneville the downs and the john de dams. Well, at least those are open. Everybody go recreate at the dams? Why are those open? Everybody was gonna the john de damp the recreation centers open mountain hood all developed recreation areas on Mount Hood are currently close to the public including all trailheads boat ramps, day-use sites, snow parks and campgrounds, Forest Service roads and dispersed areas are open to the public as well as trails not accessed by developed trailheads Yeah, so that was one of those those tickets where the governor has close to trailheads. Oh, trailheads, okay, well, so any any strange technical way It means that the trails are open. If you are able to park</p>



<p>off the trailhead, and then access the trail by going back and tree right, you know, cutting over to the side, and then getting onto the trailhead by going around or getting onto the trail by going around the trailhead. You are following the law. ski resorts are now allowed to reopen. Hey, great may 15, or get getting some scheme, though so far only Timberline Lodge has announced it will do so for now Timberline Lodge remains closed. Okay, well, yeah, there you go. national forests. Here's the ticket. All developed recreation areas in most of Oregon and Washington National Forest are closed to the public recreation areas. Okay, so that means like a developed kind of structured site. Or does it What does it say here, including all trailheads, boat ramps de use sites, snow parks, and campgrounds, the US Forest Service has announced it will begin a phased reopening of those sides. The no timeline has been made public Forest Service roads and dispersed areas are open to the public, as well as trails not accessed by developed trailheads. Hunting and fishing is allowed in undeveloped areas. Well, there you go. So really, yeah, so this is one of those things that is how would you say like a dog whistle to the initiated, as that says to you, or maybe not you you're probably the initiated, right? You're listening to this podcast. That's the secrets. So yeah, when it's talking about that stuff, it's kind of a little bit of a, I don't know, a layman's trick or something. I think it's saying like, Oh, yeah, it's close, like recreation sites are closed or trailheads are closed or visitor centers are closed, like, that's what anybody cares about when they're going out to a wilderness area. So it might mean that a bathroom is closed or that it's not been cleaned, but If you're going for a remote or dispersed forest experience, those are all still as open as they ever would have been. Because I think they're your public lands, you know, you have access to those kind of places. That's where it seemed like dispersed camping, hunting and fishing is still available. Forest Service roads are still open to be traveled on. But really, when it's saying like a recreation site is closed, I think it's talking about a developed Forest Service campground, a developed Forest Service like bathroom where they use site like it was saying a snow Park site where you'd have a parking lot and a congregation of people or a trailhead site where there's a parking lot, and a congregation of people. Normally those places that have like, some kind of day-use parking pass for you know, give $2 to an envelope and put it in a box or something. That kind of places I think still remain close, but those lands are still open. And it is a little bit more complicated, kind of on the coastal side of the cascade side besides you get out in the Eastern Oregon a lot of those Forest Service lands you know, the the national forest land, or BLM land is just so wide open, as in there's just like, it's just, it's just wide-open landscape that it's, it's pretty accessible. You can go to a lot of places out there, like the john de dam, go hang out there. Let's see back to this. It says the Umpqua National Forest will reopen most of its boat ramps and trailheads. On May 9, the trailhead to Umpqua hot springs remains closed as we talk about unquote hot springs the last time remaining closed I guess this hot springs would probably mean that'd be gross like hey, I wonder I wonder the person in this hot spring before me I COVID Oh, that's gonna be a great thought for the next year I'm quite National Forest on May 9 that means it's already open for like two days now. People can trailhead and and boat ramp all they want to wow I wonder how that's gonna do for like river recreation stuff that's just kind of interesting how it's working. Let's see what do we have? There's like some other stuff national parks. Crater Lake National Park is currently close to the public as well as john day fossil bets Lewis and Clark National Historic Park tours at the Oregon caves National Monument not tours at the Oregon caves National Monument are closed, but hiking trails remain open. Well, that makes sense. Yeah, the Oregon caves down outside of the cave junction in Southern Oregon. I've been there a few times for field trips and like the seventh grade and whatnot. Really should go again as an adult. I don't really have a clear memory of how cool it might be. I think it was a I mean, it's a national monument. Right? It's got to be something cool. So yeah, the tours are closed. I remember that was kind of the thing I was always bummed about is like the lava the lava caves, you can go to an Eastern Oregon. Those are open you just be just drive up and walk in yourself and</p>



<p>you should bring a flashlight, you know, it's up to you. The the caves that the caves in outside of cave junction. at the Oregon caves, I don't know. It's just too on rails. It was just too much of like a 45 minute tour, and then you'll leave, which I've never really preferred even as a kid. But as you go, not be any cake because I bet they treat you with kid gloves when you're 10. Hiking trails remain open out there. Well, that's good. Metro parks Oregon State Forest day-use areas campgrounds and restrooms are closed. In Oregon State forests, though dispersed camping trails and target shooting remain open. State Forest officials have asked that people delay travel as much as possible. Let me check that again. State Forest officials have asked that people delay travel as much as possible. Have they asked that maybe they have out there? I don't know if they have the right to do that. Again, I think that's kind of speaking to the uninitiated in that setting. So I think if you have a hunting license or a fishing license, or you're actively participating in a planned event, I think like there's bear season still turkey season, maybe that's and ended. But I think there was like a spring bear hunt that it opened up. And there's open open season and whatever else. And I think that those were dispersed experiences like that were still acceptable. So I don't know if they have the right to ask you to not attend your public lands. It's sort of one of those things I'm talking about, again, where it's like, well, but they're not in charge of it. They're in charge of managing it for you, but they're not in charge of it. Wildlife Refuges. Wildlife Refuges managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service remain open to the public. It says the parking lots access points and visitor centers may be closed. I was kind of what I experienced when I went out to the Finley Wildlife Refuge south of Corvallis here, and it's a big area where like Canadian geese, and elk and birds of other types rest up. I guess during the winter, it's just sort of I guess technically it would have reopened or more open access to the public on April 1, but due to the Coronavirus stuff, it had been kind of closed. And I think at first they were putting up some signs that said, like, hey, the governor said that this is closed, but I don't think they said that. So I think really, it was just at the visitor center. That was a section of that, though, no one really cared. I mean, I want to see the wildlife I want to see the visitor center that that Visitor Center was closed, it also closed a gate that goes to Well, it's really just a road the drive-thru, but I guess that would go to a more congregated parking lot area. So that had been closed, but people have been parking on the outside of that and then walking in because they have right to their public land. Which is cool. Yeah, you can go in there. And it's a beautiful spot. You can kind of hike around through there. There's a bunch of trails, and it's a pretty remote area, or, you know, just as it is, it's not a lot of people that are trying to occupy it. And given that it's a wildlife refuge. There's just a density of wildlife that's collected there. That's pretty cool to check out. You know, there's a lot of I think that's where we saw an elk a couple weeks ago. Before that, we'd seen a coyote walking around out there we kind of I bought a bunch of bald eagles and a bunch of hawks and what else has been out there? A lot. So what was out there a couple weeks ago that biplane was out there a couple of weeks ago. That's where I was checking that out. So yeah, wildlife refuges, I guess, remain open to the public. For a lot of access points. I was looking at that there's like no wildlife refuge, land allocated in Southern Oregon as I was kind of looking through there. I think there's one just south of here and one just north of here near Salem. And then there's like a bunch of along the coast. There's a bunch over in Eastern Oregon a lot up along the Columbia River, but there's nothing at all in Southern Oregon. To know I live down there, I guess. BLM land, I think we're wrapping it up here. This is near the end. Thanks for reading an article. BLM land most day you sites and many restrooms on Bureau of Land Management land are closed to the public, as well as all campgrounds, visitors are instructed to contact local BLM offices for specific closure details. The acquaint ahead outstanding natural area and Oregon Trail interpretive center remain closed. Mount sounds like they're saying that it's closed. Many restrooms on Bureau of Land Management land are close to the public as well as campgrounds.</p>



<p>Okay. Yeah, so</p>



<p>I think that when they're talking about campgrounds, and restrooms, I think, again, they're talking about the develop locations that would be at, like congregation points, that would be kind of more similar to where you'd be like, you know, just like a campground kind of thing. But any of these dispersed locations are still available to the public. And when I was up on the, like I was saying, when I was out into the national forest land, as soon as you get to the area where you're in national forest and camping is allowed off the road. There's these fairings and campsites built up just off the side of the road. And those were all loaded up. All of them had an RV or a fifth wheel or trailer or a truck content and stuff set up with a bunch of wood and people hanging out there for what seemed like a setup for three or four or five days or something. So it seemed like there's a lot of locations that are like that across Oregon. earlier in the month, early in April, when I went out to Eastern Oregon, I was checking out an area to camp out there that is normally way remote, you know, you'd only see people kind of backed up in there during a hunting season or something. And it was loaded up, you know, just early April, it was loaded out. And I think it's because out of all the millions of people out there, and all these people that have been set aside as non essential workers with a lot of time I mean, you know, for millions and millions of them, they're staying home and for maybe, I don't know, 80,000 people or something, they're all taking their trucks and going out and that 80,000 people is enough to fill up the 5000 good spots that seem to be spread across some of that remote land out there. So it's kind of funny to see sort of where people are lining up and how things are going. And then I'm one of them too, right. You know, I got the time, and I'm trying to go out and try to check out some of these still open areas. So it's cool that we're getting to phase one of the reopening process. Hopefully, people are in a good place for that as we're coming into the middle of May and then Memorial Day weekend and some of the kind of onset of the summer season stuff. I think that it'll be good to have a more reopened kind of vibe of it going on then, man could you imagine staying close through Memorial Day. You can go out you can do some river stuff or something. stuff or some land stuff, any of that kind of outdoor stuff that I'd want to do. It'd be terrible if it was, if it was shut down to me. So I'm glad it's open and available to us. And yeah, thanks for going through. And looking at some land access that we have across Oregon as we start to reopen into phase one. They sort of, I guess, listening through some sleeping through a cold night and taking photos in the morning stories from the cabin trip the other day talking about the supermoon a little bit covered a bit of stuff. So I think we'll probably start wrapping it up there. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can see more of my stuff at Billy Newman photo comm where I put up a couple blog posts here and there some ideas about some photography stuff, a bunch of these podcasts are up there. And other ways you can get in contact with me to do some business with me or, or I guess talk about some photo stuff with me if you're interested. So yeah, thanks a lot. I'm going to keep enjoying my cup of coffee on this Monday morning and seconds about the stuff done. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of doing a new photo podcast I will talk to you again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Oregon Public Land Reopenings



Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings



15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailheads begin to reopen. 



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



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145-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown.txt



Hello, thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 11, 2020. How's it going? Thanks for checking this one. I finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain Creek there in the Cascades a couple days ago. What was that like Wednesday, I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was the super moon that was coming up that night. If I remember right, and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there. And they always talk about the Super Moon, which is kind of a, I don't know, it's a little bit of a misnomer. But it's, it's cool to see to that thing to talk about happening every six months or so. Really, it's just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities in the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer than its maximum, and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away. And it's distant maximum. But I think it's really only like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though, it's a thing I learned way back. And I think that they show it at a scene in Apollo 13. But if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times, you're able to cover the entire Full Moon, just with your thumbnail. It's pretty wild, man, you can always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky. And really a lot of the time it's, it's just as big as your thumbnail it at arm's reach, which is kind of a trip. But it was kind of it was cool to see the supermoon that night was really bright, it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of LIGO was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me. That was kind of nice to see. Cold that night, though. Man, I tell you so have a 15 degree sleeping bag. And that's great. 15 degrees is fine. But envision degrees really is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up being in during the summertime. Where it's done, I was just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets. But when is this 15 degrees really means you're going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees, but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience, I think it means you're going to stay alive. That until it's about 15 degrees. So if it were me again, buying something for maybe I don']]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Oregon Public Land Reopenings



Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings



15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailheads begin to reopen. 



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research p]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 144 Creek Camp</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-144-creek-camp/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2020 20:13:24 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8490</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Creek Camp</p>



<p>Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge!</p>



<p>Creek Camp</p>











<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



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<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



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<p>144-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 6, 2020. How's it going? Thanks a lot for tuning into this episode, I'm catching up on sun, national forest land right now about cold Creek in an area, kind of outside of where I'm living in Oregon. And it's gone pretty well, we're having a good day, I'm just here by myself. So I'm doing a solo camping trip. It's the first solo night out I've done this year, and I'm excited to be doing it. I think it's gonna be kind of cool. It's been fun. So far too. It's been,</p>



<p>it's been pretty mellow. I'm out here at my campsite, I got my recording gear, rigged up and I'm at the tailgate of my truck, and made a fire earlier in the fire rank. And it's a pretty clear night, pretty mellow weather seems kind of cold up here. It's sort of a mountain. And I think it's close-ish to the snow level. But still a few. It's still a bit above me, I drove up to it earlier. So earlier, when I was coming in, I left at about noon today. And I took off and drove to town up into the forest and then up kind of on this meandering Forest Service road. And you think right now that you know, maybe a lot of stuff would be empty or or you're not in a lot of use. But really, when I got out here, I noticed a good bit of traffic, it's a nice day, it's May, it's may 6. So I bet people are kind of getting out and and just kind of given the environment that we're in right now where people don't get to, or you know, that are just kind of stuck at home or they didn't they're not at work or something, they're probably the for the first time, you know, a lot of free time for a lot of these people do. So it seems like this area here. As soon as I got to the region that you could camp, it was full of campers, I was noticing that when I was coming up. So there's an area where I think you have to go at 17 miles up the road before you hit the area where you can begin just camping on the side of the road. And I think that's that's probably the spot where the national forest land begins. And before that, I think you're in a region of BLM land that structured out below there as you get kind of closer down toward the highway. And so this further out, made it through the BLM land, that's I guess there's no camping, I think you can do like a lot of day-use area stuff out there a couple campgrounds a past just sort of like Forest Service campgrounds, or BLM campgrounds but sort of a more organized, pull out with the bathroom, those were closed, or you know, there's like I think one of them at least I saw the picnic area had remained open for day you stuff that you know, you just kind of walked down to the river or something. There was a number of people out by the lake earlier down in the area, I was lower down on the mountain side. And then as I kind of had come up here into the hills, most of this road had been paved. So it's a pretty commonly used road. And I think I think it goes pretty well, I think it goes all the way through. So if it were clear, you could get from here, or from the side that I was on, I guess it would be kind of the South, the southwest side to the northeast side of the corner of the forest and kind of pop out on the other side of the highway. And when I was driving through earlier, I'd gone just a bit further than where I am now. And I traveled up uphill a bit more and it kind of started getting windy. And then I started noticing a little bit of snow in the shade your spots the the north facing slopes and stuff. And then after a little bit further, it was pretty crazy. It was it was probably a couple It must have been a couple 100 downed trees that had come come down through the road. And so the truck had come through so far. And just cut out a small route, you know, just cut out maybe eight feet of the tree there. So you could get a vehicle through investment more than that. But it was just enough to kind of squeeze a truck through, but really the the posts of the logs are still just kind of sticking out strewn across, like toothpicks. What was that like pick up sticks game that you could play? It was kind of like that when they were just kind of like all stacked upon each other. We were just kind of laid out over each other all the way up this road. And I go over or go under a couple low bridges to you know, we have to like skirt around to the side that you know the tree was still just hung all the way across the road or hadn't been cut down. I think it was too high. I'm not even sure if it was a forest service truck that did some of this seems like it must have been given the effort. But it just seems like they just started or they haven't really got around to finishing the work. I don't know maybe maybe the snow had just melted up at that high of an elevation but as I gotten just a little bit further up the way I saw, I saw like the road was just packed out in snow and there was a couple tire tracks that had gone in about four feet and then backed out and twisted around. And then I guess come back the other way so it seemed like I'd seen a couple cars come from that way and I guess they just turned around before I did you know but it was good. I travel all the way up there and checked out a couple spots out man it was there was a spot where there's there's this man I I would hate to have to be the person or the engineering crew that was putting in bridges out in these really rural areas. I look at some of these engineering projects, you know, just like steep, steep cliff sides, really. And then they have to reinforce this wall.</p>



<p>And then build like a bridge out over it too. But there's this area that I was passing, and I must have been a couple of years ago, or whatever it was, but they built a new bridge sense. But the old bridge, the bridge that used to be there for years, I guess had been washed out in a snowstorm or a flood out. And it's only, you know, 100 yards, down the creek way there. And you just see this, this giant button, not a very large, probably 75 footbridge structure, they're supposed to cut cut across this creek is just kind of laying out over the rocks downriver. They didn't go well, hey, there's a bridge is washed out over there. So it's a trip. But I've seen a few of those things out here in some of the spots of the big rural areas where things get washed out. And it takes a couple couple years for them to kind of reestablish whatever was over there. So I don't know. But it was cool, I took a took a couple photos of it. I've been trying to take some photos of this Creek area here. And it's cool, there's a lot of a lot of nice river rock and stuff at the base of it and a lot of fresh snowmelt too. So the water looks really really green, or you know, just kind of that pure kind of Emerald and</p>



<p>aqua blue look that you can get to some of this mountain water that's up here in the Cascades really pretty really fresh,</p>



<p>really crisp kind of kind of area. I noticed though this region as opposed to others, is maybe a little drier in its it's kind of forested climate, how is that see I'm in the area that should be pretty mossy and stuff. So maybe I'm not sure what I'm talking about is interesting. There's just different regions of the environment as you kind of go through areas Oregon, but even though this is a pretty forested area, some of these areas real near here are real lush and wet and or they just have you know, kind of a lot, a lot going on in that manner. This is really a little bit more arid of an area, but it's a nice forest area, it's it's a big area to I think just a ways up, there's a wilderness area and a couple trailheads that'd be cool, but I bet they're kind of snowed in now given the elevations. So we'll see if all my plans come together, but as it was, for the most part, it was to travel out and to try and get some some photo stuff done some photo work, I'm trying to do more on the side of, you know, just kind of like creating stuff that I'm really interested in, you know, like the photos that I really want to get to, I'm going to try and put those together and and kind of put those out is you know, a little publishing pieces and stuff in there. But that's really my main focus is trying to work on the the images and the art stuff that it really wants you right now and not Man, what a great time to so I just you know, with a lot of things kind of shut down. It's really unfortunate for a lot of people that have a lot of their primary activities kind of shut down. But as it is, you know, a lot of the stuff I want to do is just related to self publishing, there's really no one telling me what I can't do, or you know what I have to stop doing. And so I really appreciate the the kind of flexibility and man if there's just there's just a lot of opportunity right now, which is kind of what I'm excited about, you know, it's it's sort of a reset for a lot of people to kind of come back in and figure out what they were doing before and what kind of stuff they want to be doing. And I still want to be doing the same things, just a lot of a lot of media creation stuff. And a lot of, you know, photography, publishing, but what's cool about now is you just it kind of shakes things out a little bit, you get to you get to kind of focus on it if you think that's what you need to focus on with your time because man, things can change real fast. Things that you think we're really stable, maybe won't be the way the earth is, you know, the way the world is the way society is. might seem real strong, but maybe things can kind of change up on you real fast too. So it's it's been maybe a little bit of a lesson for a lot of people. Oh, people aren't, aren't too worried or too, too afraid. individually. There's a lot of a lot of circumstances where maybe that's more appropriate, but here in the Oregon area, it's nice that I apparently the the stats for the virus stuff are going down I think there's no new cases reported was I think a recent headline, I was looking at the county stats that I'm in so it's been holding steady at 39 cases reported and two deaths in the in the county I'm and that was from early in April that had been kind of kind of set so looks good for our rural area. And I'm hoping that it's going that way for many of the other county areas that exist out there in the United States too. But as it is, yeah, getting out and trying to work around what I'm what I'm learning from the US Fish and Wildlife Department. So I went to the Oregon website for the Oregon fish and wildlife. And that's trying to understand a little bit about what was going on with the regulations right now. And what was clear was open. I think in the last podcast that I mentioned that things are more open. And really, in a lot of ways, they are it's really cool. In Oregon, there's a lot of flexibility. And probably in most states there's there's still a lot of flexibility. Even in lockdown an essential activity is you know, is outdoor activity or is still qualified as it so you can't go to trailhead, you can't go to campgrounds, again, go to parks, or national parks, or state parks, right, but you can go or state land, right? I don't know. But you can go to BLM land, you can go to national forest land, you can go to a number of these trail areas. And what's fortunate about a lot of the area in the western states is most of these western states, it's like 50% public lands. So there's still a lot of regions that are that are publicly accessible, a lot of opportunity to be by yourself, or you know, there's, there's not gonna be a lot of crowds around as it is. So not a lot of risk out there, which is cool. And given Yeah, that's a lot of the stuff that I want to be be trying to get out. It's a great time of year to be doing it, we're coming into the pocket of the springtime here in May. I think we're still coming through like a few more of the last rainstorms that are well, I don't know, it's this area, this is region of the world kind of gets a lot of that through June, it seems.</p>



<p>I'm hoping we can avoid that. But we got a pretty nice spring so far. Oh, but I hope it turns around a little bit, or kind of kicks in kicks in a little bit more, but we've had a few rainstorms just last couple weeks, and it's kind of a dampening the interest I've had and running out and trying to camp and stuff some, as I'm sure as it starts getting nicer, probably everybody's going to be itching to get outside more and more, especially the folks that are that have been kind of cooped up in apartment areas or more densely populated regions of of urban centers, but it's great being out here, in a big campsite area, I got a nice view, I got to drive around forever out here to to find a good spot to camp. So there's, there's plenty of spots, there's also like I was saying a good crowd too, you know, so just about every every one of these areas. And as a firing, it has someone camping out it, you know, all the way up the creek, there's a lot of spots like that. So that's really not my favorite kind of environment for this circumstance, you know, I'm not really doing like, I don't know, ultimate camping experience kind of trips right now, but, but I am trying to get to some locations that are good to take some photographs of. And so if I need to, like you know, just camp out for, you know, in whatever location for a couple hours and then wake up real early and take off and go to the spot that I need to go. That's pretty functional. But even still, I really like to have some more space and get to kind of set up the camp the way I want to. And that's really the great benefit of trying to go to an area like BLM land or national forest land where you can really kind of do that and you have a few more your own rules that you can make and follow like you know, I set up a fire here and a fire ring. And I gathered my wood out here and I've got no one around me really there's there's some folks down the road here. There's a junction, and then you can kind of take another another road off and head down the hills uphill right now, you can head down the hillside toward the creek. And there's I think a pole out over there where there's a there's a group of probably five or six it seems like five or six-four by four trucks. Some young guys probably my age are a little younger probably out travel around with the time off that they have to, but it looks fun. Yeah, taking off for about four and around.</p>



<p>I heard him rallying around out here before sunset. It was funny. Doing some donuts. The yeah but I just just before I started this podcast, there was a there's a guy and like a white</p>



<p>like a white Sierra that had cruised up now as a ram. I'm pretty sure yeah, yeah, cruised up the main road here and then yeah, just like pulled off onto the road that I'm camping on. I came back here a couple 100 couple 100 meters and swung into the big area I'm camping out in and and then it rode that kind of cruises by and so took off. It's a remote one though there's not enough destroyed dead ends. And dead ends just two minutes up this road or something I went up there first when I was checking it out seeing what was around here, seeing if it opened up anymore, further up the way but really just kind of pulls up to like a ravine, that's the straw that's been pulled out by a creek and then it kind of follows a sort of steep contour up into some sort of thick remote on prepared logging road sort of stuff up there. And I'm still I'm still kind of taking it easy. So you know, I don't need to get into that right now. I think I'm fine. So I cruise back down here to this, this nice open spot with the view and got I got a wide-open view to my South Sea seems pretty south. Yeah, it's pretty south and it goes off a bit, and then you can see like a ridge that's up on top of the mountain. Out in the distance. It's kind of cool, you know, just kind of this this kind of these rolling cascade hills that are out there and a lot of forested land and be up at the top of it. You can kind of See this outcrop a rock. And as that kind of draws down this, this kind of Creek collects and then comes down to the main Creek over here. Cool area. It's nice and it's really pretty. I think right now. I think I see the moonlight coming up. It's cast and light onto the trees up in front of me I see this more headlights. Nada, it's the moon. Well, I think I see Venus out here. I think I see my fire going low. So that's good news, I waited till just about dark, and then using up all my firewood that I gathered. That's cool. It's not a big deal. It's Yeah, there's this area, I think the spot that I'm in specifically was like, I think I've been logged out. In fact, as I'm looking up the hill, I see like that was locked out at some time. And this area that I'm at was was is flat, it was logged and then flattened out back out when they're putting this road in. However it is. So there's a big, there's a big pile just just down here of whether it comes through some years ago and cleared out a bunch of brush and stacked it up in a pile over there. And so I just got walked over there and pulled out some some dry sticks they've been they've just been dried out over there for years. So they're seasoned and ready to go. And they they pretty small. Probably probably like about I don't know, a little bit thicker around than your thumb and no bigger than, you know, the thickness of a wrist or something around as a stick. So I just gathered up a bunch of those. And I'm throwing them onto the fire here.</p>



<p>I used some old dried up Fern earlier that's trying to get the fire started. I just had like crappy sticks, and some of them are still kind of dewy and stuff. Just kind of from from sitting around. And you know, it rained a bunch yesterday, I think it rained on me earlier when I was driving around to so that wood wasn't wet and it's dried out pretty well. But it just isn't small enough. And I got a gun through I was learning this, this tactic called feather sticks. Do you guys heard of that it's like a bushcrafting term, I hate that word; I prefer like camping or hunting or something like that. But in the world of bushcrafting, which I'm sure you can YouTube, there's, this is actually a really brilliant idea. And a lot of that stuff is great to have generating the skills that you'd need to run to manage yourself in the outdoors. And think kind of the thinking behind it is the more that you know about how to work with your environment, the less gear you need to carry with you and and really the more apt you are to make proper choices in a short period of time that will help you out. So that's that's really helpful. So you know, just kinda like having fire building skills or knowing what to do and how to set up camp or how to run a tarp or how to get water, all that sort of stuff. Anyway, in this case, you take some of these sticks that I'm talking about some of these drier ones, you take your knife, your sturdy bushcraft knife, that people still like to talk about anything, you take around 24 inches of that stick, and kind of break them down at 24 inches or so. And then we're supposed to do is take that knife and sort of what would it be like kind of like peeling a potato or something or like you know, if you got to like kind of peel a carrot, what do you want to do is kind of start at the top. And then you want to peel into it, you kind of cut in with the knife just a little bit and then run a slice that down all the way down to the the end of the bar. But you don't you don't slice off that flake of wood that you've been pulling up, you can make it pretty thin, too. It's called feather sticks for a reason, right. So you try and kind of make it like a thin strip of wood that's kind of pulled up from it. And the wood will just kind of naturally curl upon itself. As you chop on it, it takes a lot of getting used to you kind of have to get to get to get the hang of trying to get those feather pieces down, you have to hold it onto the stick itself. So you cut down all the way to the last like two inches or so of the wood and then you leave it. And so what happens is I used to cut, you kind of rotate the wood and you cut down, rotate the wood and cut down. And so you get after doing that for a while. It's just a bunch of these real thin flakes of wood that are all gathered up at the top end of this stick, and then you have a nice dry piece of kindling, that sort of work down next to it. And so what you do is people that a lot of bushcrafting and camping stuff is just doing a lot of preparation and a lot of work that sort of seems like man should roll lighter. Or you know, jetabroad some newspapers or something that would have done more. But if you're in a bushcraft and yeah, it's one of those things you can do if you have nothing, nothing around. But yeah, you make these feathers sticks, and they're good fire starting material if you get the right wood that's that's drying, if you can kind of run down and you get these plumes of these this kind of saw or Masada is but these little like plumes of wood flakes and they'll they'll burn up real quick when you get when you get a fire going on them. But what I did for this one, oh the other fire tip. What was the one I heard? Cotton balls and Vaseline. here that's that's like the fire starter ticket because it's pretty, pretty neutral. You can use the Vaseline for a couple different things and the cotton balls too but that petroleum jelly. That petroleum jelly that makes up the Vaseline will rock a fire and the cotton too. So yeah, you just take a cotton swab from the bathroom, Vaseline you put that in like a Ziploc bag, and then you pack That into one of the pockets of your backpack. And you can get a fire going with a lot of stuff, or you can get the base of a fire gun with a lot of stuff like that would work great even with the gun was like a flint Flint rod. I can't remember what the other word is for it. But those Flint rods that you strike and then you run a spray sparks onto instead you can do that I always bring a lighter a couple lighters with a gun in my pocket right now. But those are really easy fire starter tools where you can light that you got a good flame going for a sustained amount of time running out the petroleum jelly and the cotton and then you can stack smaller twigs and sticks and stuff on it, and then run bigger branches on that really quickly. And that that helps out a lot. In my case, I didn't know that I had a couple couple napkins from lunch. And I had some Fern that I spotted over here, and it had died out. And so there's these these dried out fronds of Fern leaves over I don't know about 50 feet over here under the side of the road.</p>



<p>So I went over there with my knife, and I cut down a couple handfuls of those, I came back over to the fire I laid out a better the smaller sticks at the base. And then I stacked in a bunch of the dried Fern is a bad there. And then I put some of the strips of paper towel that I had balled up in a section there and then I stacked up kind of a little fork like a little lean-to four of some of the smaller sticks and then had some of the bigger sticks are ready to go but lit up the the what was it the paper towel and a couple in like two spots is what I tried to lift paper towel in two spots with the lighter. And then real quickly, I just kind of held over the ferns was dried ferns and they lit up real fast here. So that was a great fire started piece. And that cuts you know cuts a big flame really quickly. And then I put that over it. And then that kind of got the lower ferns sort of burn and and some of the sticks go in and then I threw on those smaller twigs over. And then that cut through the bigger sticks on there. So dropped a couple logs on there. I was kind of scavenging them from some of the other firings that I was passing along the way, even though I'd gone out. What was it a couple, I don't know, it's probably a month or so ago now, and I collected a good bit of firewood up in some of the areas outside of where I was working at. And yeah, I'd kind of drive around and if I see like some some downed, dried out wood on the road, I'd throw it in the back of the truck and I brought it home and I cut it up and then I stacked it up. And so some of its guys seasoning out now we've got a little fire pit at home that we're kind of we're kind of using it with but I was gonna bring some of that some of the twigs and some of the kindling that I had and then I forgot about it and didn't bring any firewood with me which is fine to know. You know, it's cool. Really almost anytime I've gone out camping in the past I've never brought firewood with me even probably at times I should have or you know places that you're not supposed to scavenge firewood or that it's been so used that there's just no firewood in any capacity left to scavenge. batch Where was that? is in Wyoming? Yeah, I was in Wyoming, we were traveling, we were camped out at a spot. And cabbages go through there. We were in September. So I'm sure that he has been in constant use from, you know, April until the end, right. You know, it's just been constant use. And it's been like that for the last 100 years. Or how long, you know, we're not the first but in that in that area out there, there just been nothing available to burn. So all the all those flammable resources has been collected by other other kindling hunters in the past. And it's kind of interesting to see how that goes. So we kind of had to be resourceful, and we had to kind of figure out how to gather enough stuff. But we did pretty well you know, like, we kind of go to like pine needles and pine cones, sometimes those those were pretty well are often pretty dry, and will burn well enough, they're not going to be a sustaining fire, they're not going to really like get up embers go into the degree that you can really cook on an effective way but, but you can't cook on it, I mean, you can get some stuff going and in some other ways you can get you know enough of a fire gun that you can you can get a log on. So that's that's normally what I would have is you know, you have like one or two good logs that can kind of keep things kicking for the evening. But to get that going, you need to you need to have some smaller stuff. And normally that day, you just don't find where you show up because you can't be here there's gonna be sticks around, so you try and gather that stuff up. But man, if it's a busy area, that stuff will have been scavenged shoot, but that's not my problem now. So I'm, I'm loaded up on some firewood and I got to get better coals go and that I can get this stuff set rockin with. But it's cool being out here in the canopy, sitting out of this campsite, run into fire for a little bit. That's kind of nice. I was trying to do some writing stuff. I got my journal open over here, and I'm trying to kind of sketch out some of the ideas that I want to do for some publishing stuff. I'll get into that some some future podcasts are always always talking about it too soon. And I'm like, maybe that ideal change. But But yeah, I'm trying to sketch out some new stuff for what I want to do through the through the rest of the spring and the summer and stuff but probably a good bit more of this kind of thing. It'd be kind of fun. I'm looking forward to doing a bit more of this stuff. What was the other thing I had, I gotta turn my headlamp on?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, my phone is definitely out now. You Stoke it,</p>



<p>I think I'm gonna have to run down to that area, or that, you know, that's this, this was at that setup, bunch of dried out sticks that are kind of down the way for me, when I have to walk down there, read my headlamp, try to figure out if I can, if I can pull some firewood up and get this thing going again. But also, I might not have to it's, it's late enough, I could probably kick just kick out whatever embers I have here to keep me warm for a bit and then stack myself up in the truck, try and sleep it off for a couple hours. And I'm hoping to get up early in the morning. And get back out of here and try and do a couple couple morning based photography things if I'm able to on the drive, and I tried to scout out a couple locations, sort of by our lakes side down here to try to check out so there's sort of this, this Creek area and then that ultimately ends up running into I think it's a reservoir really, but this, this, this reservoir area down the way and that had some some stuff that I wanted to try and work out. And along with this creek to this creek is pretty cool. So there's a few pull outs here that I want to try and do some some under the water. Rock stuff are you know, kind of I guess just sort of like working with flowing water. And then also working with some still water. So yeah, I was hoping to do a couple, a couple photography endeavors down there before it got too late in the morning. And if I'm just kind of hanging out camp, and maybe that'll be the case, but also not in a super hurry. Or at least a Subaru to get completely back what what's beautiful about this camp setup is I don't I don't have anything pulled out now. It's awesome. I just have it all in this canopy. It's all in the truck, which is kind of great. It's sort of returning to what I was doing originally in the Camry way back, you know, when we kind of figured out that that is great to have, you know, your tat and your other camp stuff when you're running backpacks or run into a real campsite. But in certain in some and search and in many situations, having a car that you can have set up to crash out in is a great thing and just saves a ton of time and ton of kind of confusion or frustration about how to set stuff up or what's going to make a good campsite or what's going to be effective or not. So in this case, yeah, I just feel I got got my sleeping bag got my my cooler and stuff set up here in the back of the truck bed canopy. And then yeah, it's it's pretty similar to maybe probably the best ad set up. And the four runner back in the day when I was camping out living out of that thing for a while. So yeah, it's cool, kind of kind of returning to some of the stuff that I liked a lot. I think some of the last times I was camping out by myself. Well, I camp out by myself, you're in there and we do photo stuff. But really a lot of it's just with Marina and I when we're traveling around together, do photo photo trips. But I remember I was kind of going back to it while longer one that I did back in I think it was 2012 when I took off, or I don't know, it was probably three weeks or something like that. And I was just kind of slowly kind of turn through some regions of Oregon,</p>



<p>like Crater Lake and through some of those, I guess like the robe, and Klamath national forest areas and stuff. Yeah, it's kind of cruising through there and go into a number of different spots. I think I spent like, four days ever by the Umpqua hot springs. And I think that's when they were still open. And maybe maybe now it's changed. But I think that they've been closed for a few years now to overnight camp. And because of the amount of abuse that occurred out there, just abuse to the land, and abuse to whatever kind of social contract had been unstructured. But I think people have kind of turned that to a pretty freaky party spot after a bit there. So they had like that a dumpster for you know, public, public use of refuse, but it was always and often overflowed. And just just, I think they only picked it up like once a week or once every two weeks. But man, that thing would just be overflowed with trash, and trash stacked around and trash stacked at the campsite and broken glass of the campsite and broken glass at the hot springs. And they just said, Hey, no more, no more overnight stuff out here. So super, that kind of management has to go into, but that's the tough thing about some of these spots, these individual places that are really cool. Just kind of, I guess kind of getting too much attention by a certain segment of the general public that just doesn't have a respect for the the use of the public land out here. So it's frustration sometimes when when you lose some of the access to some of these these cool spots, you know, some of these draws like oh, yeah, I do want to go to that hot spring that's a you know, just an old-timey open place. It's cool areas just been rides, it's hot water coming into the ground. It hasn't just happened. So it's really cool that you can kind of go to a place like that, but the Cuz it's a draw, because it's a piece of attention that that would be sort of a site to go to, then it ends up ultimately just getting shut down. That's kind of a frustration sometimes. But it was cool. Yeah, back in the day in 2012. I camped out there for like, four, four days or something like that. And then I travel around to the day, go to a couple different spots, go to some different waterfall waterfall areas around there, do some photograph. Once you do photography, a token he falls Watson falls, I think was over there. Those are beautiful waterfalls in that area. And then I go back to the hot springs campgrounds area where I had a camp set up. And I think it was Yeah, sleeping in the Camry in the back of the camera. And then I had some stuff set up outside of it, I take a hike out at night, and I got to the hot springs and stuff and hang out there for a while and then cruise back to my car. Yeah, it's a good time, kind of just being out there by yourself thinking about stuff happen, people, sometimes they you know, but really, you're just kind of there by yourself, or there's not a lot of other, you know, public around and stuff. That's a weird thing dealing with the public or what is internet dealing with some other people when you're out in the woods, it's always kind of freaky, even here, you know, like, what back right before I started this thing, I was gonna start it. And then I heard a truck. And then like, I was saying that truck guy came up, pulled up, went up this road here and then swung around and came back a couple minutes later. But even that, you know, it's an innocent trip or just someone looking around. But it's still weird. It's like, who's this guy at nine o'clock at night that's driving by me and a truck happened earlier to I think some of those guys that are down low are they one of them came up and was I think just kind of check out this area up here didn't know I was up here, but came up this road. And then like kind of swung or like, hooked up in the parking lot. Or the the area that I'm in here, where I'm camped where the road is wide and he flipped around and then took off and stuff cuz I'm up here, I guess. But it's just like, Hey, dude, I know you don't mean anything. And I guess this is the only thing that can't happen. But what's going on one other guy out here where I have no cell service. Man, yeah, there's some characters out here to some time. So. So yeah, it's, it's interesting. It's not a park, it's not really well managed. When you're out here in the woods. And man, sometimes people aren't really well managed. So</p>



<p>you just kind of it's, it's cool to have to be sharp on what, what, what's going around what people are around what's going on stuff. So but it's find out here. I've never really had a bad interaction. But it's always just sometimes maybe tense is sort of what you'd say you never communicate really. And maybe sometimes it's just paranoia. I'm sure people are fine and nice and stuff. But there is sort of a code out there. out in Eastern Oregon, I remember when I was a kid, you got to do some camping trips out there. And, and you think a small town of 30,000 people really isn't, isn't a populace. But even in that, you're kind of enculturated to a regular set of systems that are sort of similar to what what a city is or what a suburban area is. And so that's sort of what I grew up in. But once you get out pretty fine to you know, some of that rangeland stuff, or in some some of that area where it's just public land. And there's not many people around, there's sort of an old high desert wave that you get, it's like old Ranger way, but is that when two trucks are driving by each other and opposite directions, you kind of give a little hand up, you don't really move it, you just kind of lifted up off the steering wheel, like a salute. And then you put it back down. And it's just sort of saying like, Hey, I'm a good guy out there. So yeah, I may I guess, I suppose to instill trust that even though that's the only other person that you've seen in a day, they're not after you, you know, you're safe. You're you're on the same team or something. So I don't know what it was really about. But maybe just old high desert politeness, I suppose. So yeah, my plans are I'm going to I'm going to cooped up here and camp out and then cruise out to find some stuff to photograph in the morning. I'm hoping to do hoping to cite some wildlife out here. I brought the binoculars and maybe I'll get get a chance to see some stuff or maybe see some sign if something's out here, but but not too sure. I think I'm not gonna get off the road very far in this circumstance. So best I might see some birds or I don't know, two people. That's my life. But yeah, I'm gonna head down to the lake in the morning early and try and maybe get some photographs down there. I'm trying to do some stuff around water on this trip water and some color and stuff, but really, it's just kind of materializing. However, I wanted to I'm not really trying to hold myself to seriously structured any one specific thing because really ultimately, like any of those limiting or what would be like kind of those confining limitations that you'd set on yourself to do photography. They're just not really in line with any The projects that I'm interested in really working on, you know, so really interested in just trying to make photographs that sort of represent myself the best. And I'm trying to kind of figure that out in a good way to, you know, a lot of people kind of make pictures to what would it be, I don't know, fit, fit the need of work or fit the need of a style that they've seen sort of a thing, you know, trying to like, oh, okay, I need to match the style and kind of work with it. But really what I'm trying to do now, I think, pasts are coming through onto the other side of that the 10 year mark of taking some of the work that I do on photography pretty seriously. And so with that, I'm kind of trying to move into Well, what what is Billy want to do with this, you know, what is the thing that, that my interest is drawn toward, instead of trying to make some kind of</p>



<p>some kind of what I think should work sort of thing, I really want to try and go to just what I am interested in, I think that that position of interest is really going to be where I'm going to make the best work that I can, instead of trying to figure out, you know, what other people think I should do, or, or trying to follow the directions of people that really haven't thought about these things as hard as I have, which is certainly the circumstance that probably any creative person has found themselves in for years now, you know, trying to follow the direction of someone who's, who's your boss, or your director, or your project manager, who really hasn't ever spent any time actually participating in the, the actual process of the art that you do, you know, and I bet that that's the circumstance probably as old as time. But people kind of move through it. And it's sort of a signup process, what would you call it, it's a phase, it's a phase. It's a phase, it's kind of just, you know, how it is for a while, and then and then someday, you're the old guy telling people what to do, and things you don't understand. So I bet it's just kind of the what the lifecycle, you know, part of the lifecycle. So good times, but my fire is now pretty completely out, see the embers burn in there. But I think that's gonna be where I call it for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you guys for listening, SAS, and people tune in to the last one. So that's cool. I want to try and build out a few more of these and having fun recording mobily and recording up in the studio in the loft at home. That's been a lot of fun, too. So hoping to try and get some more of these podcasts out on my website. That's Billy Newman photo calm. And I've done a rebuild on that one looking a bit cleaner. Links are going to actual websites now you know, any of that stuff that was kinda like, Oh, that's a dead link, or Oh, that's not</p>



<p>filled out or</p>



<p>this isn't. This isn't where it should be. Those kinds of things have been sort of rearranged and, you know, kind of edited down and changed some of the text out and stuff. So I'm trying to make it fresh. Got a lot of time for it. You know, man, this COVID stuff. It's like Alright, well, I'll rewrite my website code. How about how about that? So I did that. And then yeah, now I got a jam. I got to go out, taketake some photos and stuff. So I'm happy to be out here. taking some pictures. These are just regular ones. I got to go through a bunch of 360 ones too. That'll be cool. But yeah, good times. I do a photo stuff camping out by myself. Thanks for keeping me company. Have a good one.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Creek Camp



Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge!



Creek Camp











If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop ]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Creek Camp</p>



<p>Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge!</p>



<p>Creek Camp</p>











<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



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<p>144-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 6, 2020. How's it going? Thanks a lot for tuning into this episode, I'm catching up on sun, national forest land right now about cold Creek in an area, kind of outside of where I'm living in Oregon. And it's gone pretty well, we're having a good day, I'm just here by myself. So I'm doing a solo camping trip. It's the first solo night out I've done this year, and I'm excited to be doing it. I think it's gonna be kind of cool. It's been fun. So far too. It's been,</p>



<p>it's been pretty mellow. I'm out here at my campsite, I got my recording gear, rigged up and I'm at the tailgate of my truck, and made a fire earlier in the fire rank. And it's a pretty clear night, pretty mellow weather seems kind of cold up here. It's sort of a mountain. And I think it's close-ish to the snow level. But still a few. It's still a bit above me, I drove up to it earlier. So earlier, when I was coming in, I left at about noon today. And I took off and drove to town up into the forest and then up kind of on this meandering Forest Service road. And you think right now that you know, maybe a lot of stuff would be empty or or you're not in a lot of use. But really, when I got out here, I noticed a good bit of traffic, it's a nice day, it's May, it's may 6. So I bet people are kind of getting out and and just kind of given the environment that we're in right now where people don't get to, or you know, that are just kind of stuck at home or they didn't they're not at work or something, they're probably the for the first time, you know, a lot of free time for a lot of these people do. So it seems like this area here. As soon as I got to the region that you could camp, it was full of campers, I was noticing that when I was coming up. So there's an area where I think you have to go at 17 miles up the road before you hit the area where you can begin just camping on the side of the road. And I think that's that's probably the spot where the national forest land begins. And before that, I think you're in a region of BLM land that structured out below there as you get kind of closer down toward the highway. And so this further out, made it through the BLM land, that's I guess there's no camping, I think you can do like a lot of day-use area stuff out there a couple campgrounds a past just sort of like Forest Service campgrounds, or BLM campgrounds but sort of a more organized, pull out with the bathroom, those were closed, or you know, there's like I think one of them at least I saw the picnic area had remained open for day you stuff that you know, you just kind of walked down to the river or something. There was a number of people out by the lake earlier down in the area, I was lower down on the mountain side. And then as I kind of had come up here into the hills, most of this road had been paved. So it's a pretty commonly used road. And I think I think it goes pretty well, I think it goes all the way through. So if it were clear, you could get from here, or from the side that I was on, I guess it would be kind of the South, the southwest side to the northeast side of the corner of the forest and kind of pop out on the other side of the highway. And when I was driving through earlier, I'd gone just a bit further than where I am now. And I traveled up uphill a bit more and it kind of started getting windy. And then I started noticing a little bit of snow in the shade your spots the the north facing slopes and stuff. And then after a little bit further, it was pretty crazy. It was it was probably a couple It must have been a couple 100 downed trees that had come come down through the road. And so the truck had come through so far. And just cut out a small route, you know, just cut out maybe eight feet of the tree there. So you could get a vehicle through investment more than that. But it was just enough to kind of squeeze a truck through, but really the the posts of the logs are still just kind of sticking out strewn across, like toothpicks. What was that like pick up sticks game that you could play? It was kind of like that when they were just kind of like all stacked upon each other. We were just kind of laid out over each other all the way up this road. And I go over or go under a couple low bridges to you know, we have to like skirt around to the side that you know the tree was still just hung all the way across the road or hadn't been cut down. I think it was too high. I'm not even sure if it was a forest service truck that did some of this seems like it must have been given the effort. But it just seems like they just started or they haven't really got around to finishing the work. I don't know maybe maybe the snow had just melted up at that high of an elevation but as I gotten just a little bit further up the way I saw, I saw like the road was just packed out in snow and there was a couple tire tracks that had gone in about four feet and then backed out and twisted around. And then I guess come back the other way so it seemed like I'd seen a couple cars come from that way and I guess they just turned around before I did you know but it was good. I travel all the way up there and checked out a couple spots out man it was there was a spot where there's there's this man I I would hate to have to be the person or the engineering crew that was putting in bridges out in these really rural areas. I look at some of these engineering projects, you know, just like steep, steep cliff sides, really. And then they have to reinforce this wall.</p>



<p>And then build like a bridge out over it too. But there's this area that I was passing, and I must have been a couple of years ago, or whatever it was, but they built a new bridge sense. But the old bridge, the bridge that used to be there for years, I guess had been washed out in a snowstorm or a flood out. And it's only, you know, 100 yards, down the creek way there. And you just see this, this giant button, not a very large, probably 75 footbridge structure, they're supposed to cut cut across this creek is just kind of laying out over the rocks downriver. They didn't go well, hey, there's a bridge is washed out over there. So it's a trip. But I've seen a few of those things out here in some of the spots of the big rural areas where things get washed out. And it takes a couple couple years for them to kind of reestablish whatever was over there. So I don't know. But it was cool, I took a took a couple photos of it. I've been trying to take some photos of this Creek area here. And it's cool, there's a lot of a lot of nice river rock and stuff at the base of it and a lot of fresh snowmelt too. So the water looks really really green, or you know, just kind of that pure kind of Emerald and</p>



<p>aqua blue look that you can get to some of this mountain water that's up here in the Cascades really pretty really fresh,</p>



<p>really crisp kind of kind of area. I noticed though this region as opposed to others, is maybe a little drier in its it's kind of forested climate, how is that see I'm in the area that should be pretty mossy and stuff. So maybe I'm not sure what I'm talking about is interesting. There's just different regions of the environment as you kind of go through areas Oregon, but even though this is a pretty forested area, some of these areas real near here are real lush and wet and or they just have you know, kind of a lot, a lot going on in that manner. This is really a little bit more arid of an area, but it's a nice forest area, it's it's a big area to I think just a ways up, there's a wilderness area and a couple trailheads that'd be cool, but I bet they're kind of snowed in now given the elevations. So we'll see if all my plans come together, but as it was, for the most part, it was to travel out and to try and get some some photo stuff done some photo work, I'm trying to do more on the side of, you know, just kind of like creating stuff that I'm really interested in, you know, like the photos that I really want to get to, I'm going to try and put those together and and kind of put those out is you know, a little publishing pieces and stuff in there. But that's really my main focus is trying to work on the the images and the art stuff that it really wants you right now and not Man, what a great time to so I just you know, with a lot of things kind of shut down. It's really unfortunate for a lot of people that have a lot of their primary activities kind of shut down. But as it is, you know, a lot of the stuff I want to do is just related to self publishing, there's really no one telling me what I can't do, or you know what I have to stop doing. And so I really appreciate the the kind of flexibility and man if there's just there's just a lot of opportunity right now, which is kind of what I'm excited about, you know, it's it's sort of a reset for a lot of people to kind of come back in and figure out what they were doing before and what kind of stuff they want to be doing. And I still want to be doing the same things, just a lot of a lot of media creation stuff. And a lot of, you know, photography, publishing, but what's cool about now is you just it kind of shakes things out a little bit, you get to you get to kind of focus on it if you think that's what you need to focus on with your time because man, things can change real fast. Things that you think we're really stable, maybe won't be the way the earth is, you know, the way the world is the way society is. might seem real strong, but maybe things can kind of change up on you real fast too. So it's it's been maybe a little bit of a lesson for a lot of people. Oh, people aren't, aren't too worried or too, too afraid. individually. There's a lot of a lot of circumstances where maybe that's more appropriate, but here in the Oregon area, it's nice that I apparently the the stats for the virus stuff are going down I think there's no new cases reported was I think a recent headline, I was looking at the county stats that I'm in so it's been holding steady at 39 cases reported and two deaths in the in the county I'm and that was from early in April that had been kind of kind of set so looks good for our rural area. And I'm hoping that it's going that way for many of the other county areas that exist out there in the United States too. But as it is, yeah, getting out and trying to work around what I'm what I'm learning from the US Fish and Wildlife Department. So I went to the Oregon website for the Oregon fish and wildlife. And that's trying to understand a little bit about what was going on with the regulations right now. And what was clear was open. I think in the last podcast that I mentioned that things are more open. And really, in a lot of ways, they are it's really cool. In Oregon, there's a lot of flexibility. And probably in most states there's there's still a lot of flexibility. Even in lockdown an essential activity is you know, is outdoor activity or is still qualified as it so you can't go to trailhead, you can't go to campgrounds, again, go to parks, or national parks, or state parks, right, but you can go or state land, right? I don't know. But you can go to BLM land, you can go to national forest land, you can go to a number of these trail areas. And what's fortunate about a lot of the area in the western states is most of these western states, it's like 50% public lands. So there's still a lot of regions that are that are publicly accessible, a lot of opportunity to be by yourself, or you know, there's, there's not gonna be a lot of crowds around as it is. So not a lot of risk out there, which is cool. And given Yeah, that's a lot of the stuff that I want to be be trying to get out. It's a great time of year to be doing it, we're coming into the pocket of the springtime here in May. I think we're still coming through like a few more of the last rainstorms that are well, I don't know, it's this area, this is region of the world kind of gets a lot of that through June, it seems.</p>



<p>I'm hoping we can avoid that. But we got a pretty nice spring so far. Oh, but I hope it turns around a little bit, or kind of kicks in kicks in a little bit more, but we've had a few rainstorms just last couple weeks, and it's kind of a dampening the interest I've had and running out and trying to camp and stuff some, as I'm sure as it starts getting nicer, probably everybody's going to be itching to get outside more and more, especially the folks that are that have been kind of cooped up in apartment areas or more densely populated regions of of urban centers, but it's great being out here, in a big campsite area, I got a nice view, I got to drive around forever out here to to find a good spot to camp. So there's, there's plenty of spots, there's also like I was saying a good crowd too, you know, so just about every every one of these areas. And as a firing, it has someone camping out it, you know, all the way up the creek, there's a lot of spots like that. So that's really not my favorite kind of environment for this circumstance, you know, I'm not really doing like, I don't know, ultimate camping experience kind of trips right now, but, but I am trying to get to some locations that are good to take some photographs of. And so if I need to, like you know, just camp out for, you know, in whatever location for a couple hours and then wake up real early and take off and go to the spot that I need to go. That's pretty functional. But even still, I really like to have some more space and get to kind of set up the camp the way I want to. And that's really the great benefit of trying to go to an area like BLM land or national forest land where you can really kind of do that and you have a few more your own rules that you can make and follow like you know, I set up a fire here and a fire ring. And I gathered my wood out here and I've got no one around me really there's there's some folks down the road here. There's a junction, and then you can kind of take another another road off and head down the hills uphill right now, you can head down the hillside toward the creek. And there's I think a pole out over there where there's a there's a group of probably five or six it seems like five or six-four by four trucks. Some young guys probably my age are a little younger probably out travel around with the time off that they have to, but it looks fun. Yeah, taking off for about four and around.</p>



<p>I heard him rallying around out here before sunset. It was funny. Doing some donuts. The yeah but I just just before I started this podcast, there was a there's a guy and like a white</p>



<p>like a white Sierra that had cruised up now as a ram. I'm pretty sure yeah, yeah, cruised up the main road here and then yeah, just like pulled off onto the road that I'm camping on. I came back here a couple 100 couple 100 meters and swung into the big area I'm camping out in and and then it rode that kind of cruises by and so took off. It's a remote one though there's not enough destroyed dead ends. And dead ends just two minutes up this road or something I went up there first when I was checking it out seeing what was around here, seeing if it opened up anymore, further up the way but really just kind of pulls up to like a ravine, that's the straw that's been pulled out by a creek and then it kind of follows a sort of steep contour up into some sort of thick remote on prepared logging road sort of stuff up there. And I'm still I'm still kind of taking it easy. So you know, I don't need to get into that right now. I think I'm fine. So I cruise back down here to this, this nice open spot with the view and got I got a wide-open view to my South Sea seems pretty south. Yeah, it's pretty south and it goes off a bit, and then you can see like a ridge that's up on top of the mountain. Out in the distance. It's kind of cool, you know, just kind of this this kind of these rolling cascade hills that are out there and a lot of forested land and be up at the top of it. You can kind of See this outcrop a rock. And as that kind of draws down this, this kind of Creek collects and then comes down to the main Creek over here. Cool area. It's nice and it's really pretty. I think right now. I think I see the moonlight coming up. It's cast and light onto the trees up in front of me I see this more headlights. Nada, it's the moon. Well, I think I see Venus out here. I think I see my fire going low. So that's good news, I waited till just about dark, and then using up all my firewood that I gathered. That's cool. It's not a big deal. It's Yeah, there's this area, I think the spot that I'm in specifically was like, I think I've been logged out. In fact, as I'm looking up the hill, I see like that was locked out at some time. And this area that I'm at was was is flat, it was logged and then flattened out back out when they're putting this road in. However it is. So there's a big, there's a big pile just just down here of whether it comes through some years ago and cleared out a bunch of brush and stacked it up in a pile over there. And so I just got walked over there and pulled out some some dry sticks they've been they've just been dried out over there for years. So they're seasoned and ready to go. And they they pretty small. Probably probably like about I don't know, a little bit thicker around than your thumb and no bigger than, you know, the thickness of a wrist or something around as a stick. So I just gathered up a bunch of those. And I'm throwing them onto the fire here.</p>



<p>I used some old dried up Fern earlier that's trying to get the fire started. I just had like crappy sticks, and some of them are still kind of dewy and stuff. Just kind of from from sitting around. And you know, it rained a bunch yesterday, I think it rained on me earlier when I was driving around to so that wood wasn't wet and it's dried out pretty well. But it just isn't small enough. And I got a gun through I was learning this, this tactic called feather sticks. Do you guys heard of that it's like a bushcrafting term, I hate that word; I prefer like camping or hunting or something like that. But in the world of bushcrafting, which I'm sure you can YouTube, there's, this is actually a really brilliant idea. And a lot of that stuff is great to have generating the skills that you'd need to run to manage yourself in the outdoors. And think kind of the thinking behind it is the more that you know about how to work with your environment, the less gear you need to carry with you and and really the more apt you are to make proper choices in a short period of time that will help you out. So that's that's really helpful. So you know, just kinda like having fire building skills or knowing what to do and how to set up camp or how to run a tarp or how to get water, all that sort of stuff. Anyway, in this case, you take some of these sticks that I'm talking about some of these drier ones, you take your knife, your sturdy bushcraft knife, that people still like to talk about anything, you take around 24 inches of that stick, and kind of break them down at 24 inches or so. And then we're supposed to do is take that knife and sort of what would it be like kind of like peeling a potato or something or like you know, if you got to like kind of peel a carrot, what do you want to do is kind of start at the top. And then you want to peel into it, you kind of cut in with the knife just a little bit and then run a slice that down all the way down to the the end of the bar. But you don't you don't slice off that flake of wood that you've been pulling up, you can make it pretty thin, too. It's called feather sticks for a reason, right. So you try and kind of make it like a thin strip of wood that's kind of pulled up from it. And the wood will just kind of naturally curl upon itself. As you chop on it, it takes a lot of getting used to you kind of have to get to get to get the hang of trying to get those feather pieces down, you have to hold it onto the stick itself. So you cut down all the way to the last like two inches or so of the wood and then you leave it. And so what happens is I used to cut, you kind of rotate the wood and you cut down, rotate the wood and cut down. And so you get after doing that for a while. It's just a bunch of these real thin flakes of wood that are all gathered up at the top end of this stick, and then you have a nice dry piece of kindling, that sort of work down next to it. And so what you do is people that a lot of bushcrafting and camping stuff is just doing a lot of preparation and a lot of work that sort of seems like man should roll lighter. Or you know, jetabroad some newspapers or something that would have done more. But if you're in a bushcraft and yeah, it's one of those things you can do if you have nothing, nothing around. But yeah, you make these feathers sticks, and they're good fire starting material if you get the right wood that's that's drying, if you can kind of run down and you get these plumes of these this kind of saw or Masada is but these little like plumes of wood flakes and they'll they'll burn up real quick when you get when you get a fire going on them. But what I did for this one, oh the other fire tip. What was the one I heard? Cotton balls and Vaseline. here that's that's like the fire starter ticket because it's pretty, pretty neutral. You can use the Vaseline for a couple different things and the cotton balls too but that petroleum jelly. That petroleum jelly that makes up the Vaseline will rock a fire and the cotton too. So yeah, you just take a cotton swab from the bathroom, Vaseline you put that in like a Ziploc bag, and then you pack That into one of the pockets of your backpack. And you can get a fire going with a lot of stuff, or you can get the base of a fire gun with a lot of stuff like that would work great even with the gun was like a flint Flint rod. I can't remember what the other word is for it. But those Flint rods that you strike and then you run a spray sparks onto instead you can do that I always bring a lighter a couple lighters with a gun in my pocket right now. But those are really easy fire starter tools where you can light that you got a good flame going for a sustained amount of time running out the petroleum jelly and the cotton and then you can stack smaller twigs and sticks and stuff on it, and then run bigger branches on that really quickly. And that that helps out a lot. In my case, I didn't know that I had a couple couple napkins from lunch. And I had some Fern that I spotted over here, and it had died out. And so there's these these dried out fronds of Fern leaves over I don't know about 50 feet over here under the side of the road.</p>



<p>So I went over there with my knife, and I cut down a couple handfuls of those, I came back over to the fire I laid out a better the smaller sticks at the base. And then I stacked in a bunch of the dried Fern is a bad there. And then I put some of the strips of paper towel that I had balled up in a section there and then I stacked up kind of a little fork like a little lean-to four of some of the smaller sticks and then had some of the bigger sticks are ready to go but lit up the the what was it the paper towel and a couple in like two spots is what I tried to lift paper towel in two spots with the lighter. And then real quickly, I just kind of held over the ferns was dried ferns and they lit up real fast here. So that was a great fire started piece. And that cuts you know cuts a big flame really quickly. And then I put that over it. And then that kind of got the lower ferns sort of burn and and some of the sticks go in and then I threw on those smaller twigs over. And then that cut through the bigger sticks on there. So dropped a couple logs on there. I was kind of scavenging them from some of the other firings that I was passing along the way, even though I'd gone out. What was it a couple, I don't know, it's probably a month or so ago now, and I collected a good bit of firewood up in some of the areas outside of where I was working at. And yeah, I'd kind of drive around and if I see like some some downed, dried out wood on the road, I'd throw it in the back of the truck and I brought it home and I cut it up and then I stacked it up. And so some of its guys seasoning out now we've got a little fire pit at home that we're kind of we're kind of using it with but I was gonna bring some of that some of the twigs and some of the kindling that I had and then I forgot about it and didn't bring any firewood with me which is fine to know. You know, it's cool. Really almost anytime I've gone out camping in the past I've never brought firewood with me even probably at times I should have or you know places that you're not supposed to scavenge firewood or that it's been so used that there's just no firewood in any capacity left to scavenge. batch Where was that? is in Wyoming? Yeah, I was in Wyoming, we were traveling, we were camped out at a spot. And cabbages go through there. We were in September. So I'm sure that he has been in constant use from, you know, April until the end, right. You know, it's just been constant use. And it's been like that for the last 100 years. Or how long, you know, we're not the first but in that in that area out there, there just been nothing available to burn. So all the all those flammable resources has been collected by other other kindling hunters in the past. And it's kind of interesting to see how that goes. So we kind of had to be resourceful, and we had to kind of figure out how to gather enough stuff. But we did pretty well you know, like, we kind of go to like pine needles and pine cones, sometimes those those were pretty well are often pretty dry, and will burn well enough, they're not going to be a sustaining fire, they're not going to really like get up embers go into the degree that you can really cook on an effective way but, but you can't cook on it, I mean, you can get some stuff going and in some other ways you can get you know enough of a fire gun that you can you can get a log on. So that's that's normally what I would have is you know, you have like one or two good logs that can kind of keep things kicking for the evening. But to get that going, you need to you need to have some smaller stuff. And normally that day, you just don't find where you show up because you can't be here there's gonna be sticks around, so you try and gather that stuff up. But man, if it's a busy area, that stuff will have been scavenged shoot, but that's not my problem now. So I'm, I'm loaded up on some firewood and I got to get better coals go and that I can get this stuff set rockin with. But it's cool being out here in the canopy, sitting out of this campsite, run into fire for a little bit. That's kind of nice. I was trying to do some writing stuff. I got my journal open over here, and I'm trying to kind of sketch out some of the ideas that I want to do for some publishing stuff. I'll get into that some some future podcasts are always always talking about it too soon. And I'm like, maybe that ideal change. But But yeah, I'm trying to sketch out some new stuff for what I want to do through the through the rest of the spring and the summer and stuff but probably a good bit more of this kind of thing. It'd be kind of fun. I'm looking forward to doing a bit more of this stuff. What was the other thing I had, I gotta turn my headlamp on?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, my phone is definitely out now. You Stoke it,</p>



<p>I think I'm gonna have to run down to that area, or that, you know, that's this, this was at that setup, bunch of dried out sticks that are kind of down the way for me, when I have to walk down there, read my headlamp, try to figure out if I can, if I can pull some firewood up and get this thing going again. But also, I might not have to it's, it's late enough, I could probably kick just kick out whatever embers I have here to keep me warm for a bit and then stack myself up in the truck, try and sleep it off for a couple hours. And I'm hoping to get up early in the morning. And get back out of here and try and do a couple couple morning based photography things if I'm able to on the drive, and I tried to scout out a couple locations, sort of by our lakes side down here to try to check out so there's sort of this, this Creek area and then that ultimately ends up running into I think it's a reservoir really, but this, this, this reservoir area down the way and that had some some stuff that I wanted to try and work out. And along with this creek to this creek is pretty cool. So there's a few pull outs here that I want to try and do some some under the water. Rock stuff are you know, kind of I guess just sort of like working with flowing water. And then also working with some still water. So yeah, I was hoping to do a couple, a couple photography endeavors down there before it got too late in the morning. And if I'm just kind of hanging out camp, and maybe that'll be the case, but also not in a super hurry. Or at least a Subaru to get completely back what what's beautiful about this camp setup is I don't I don't have anything pulled out now. It's awesome. I just have it all in this canopy. It's all in the truck, which is kind of great. It's sort of returning to what I was doing originally in the Camry way back, you know, when we kind of figured out that that is great to have, you know, your tat and your other camp stuff when you're running backpacks or run into a real campsite. But in certain in some and search and in many situations, having a car that you can have set up to crash out in is a great thing and just saves a ton of time and ton of kind of confusion or frustration about how to set stuff up or what's going to make a good campsite or what's going to be effective or not. So in this case, yeah, I just feel I got got my sleeping bag got my my cooler and stuff set up here in the back of the truck bed canopy. And then yeah, it's it's pretty similar to maybe probably the best ad set up. And the four runner back in the day when I was camping out living out of that thing for a while. So yeah, it's cool, kind of kind of returning to some of the stuff that I liked a lot. I think some of the last times I was camping out by myself. Well, I camp out by myself, you're in there and we do photo stuff. But really a lot of it's just with Marina and I when we're traveling around together, do photo photo trips. But I remember I was kind of going back to it while longer one that I did back in I think it was 2012 when I took off, or I don't know, it was probably three weeks or something like that. And I was just kind of slowly kind of turn through some regions of Oregon,</p>



<p>like Crater Lake and through some of those, I guess like the robe, and Klamath national forest areas and stuff. Yeah, it's kind of cruising through there and go into a number of different spots. I think I spent like, four days ever by the Umpqua hot springs. And I think that's when they were still open. And maybe maybe now it's changed. But I think that they've been closed for a few years now to overnight camp. And because of the amount of abuse that occurred out there, just abuse to the land, and abuse to whatever kind of social contract had been unstructured. But I think people have kind of turned that to a pretty freaky party spot after a bit there. So they had like that a dumpster for you know, public, public use of refuse, but it was always and often overflowed. And just just, I think they only picked it up like once a week or once every two weeks. But man, that thing would just be overflowed with trash, and trash stacked around and trash stacked at the campsite and broken glass of the campsite and broken glass at the hot springs. And they just said, Hey, no more, no more overnight stuff out here. So super, that kind of management has to go into, but that's the tough thing about some of these spots, these individual places that are really cool. Just kind of, I guess kind of getting too much attention by a certain segment of the general public that just doesn't have a respect for the the use of the public land out here. So it's frustration sometimes when when you lose some of the access to some of these these cool spots, you know, some of these draws like oh, yeah, I do want to go to that hot spring that's a you know, just an old-timey open place. It's cool areas just been rides, it's hot water coming into the ground. It hasn't just happened. So it's really cool that you can kind of go to a place like that, but the Cuz it's a draw, because it's a piece of attention that that would be sort of a site to go to, then it ends up ultimately just getting shut down. That's kind of a frustration sometimes. But it was cool. Yeah, back in the day in 2012. I camped out there for like, four, four days or something like that. And then I travel around to the day, go to a couple different spots, go to some different waterfall waterfall areas around there, do some photograph. Once you do photography, a token he falls Watson falls, I think was over there. Those are beautiful waterfalls in that area. And then I go back to the hot springs campgrounds area where I had a camp set up. And I think it was Yeah, sleeping in the Camry in the back of the camera. And then I had some stuff set up outside of it, I take a hike out at night, and I got to the hot springs and stuff and hang out there for a while and then cruise back to my car. Yeah, it's a good time, kind of just being out there by yourself thinking about stuff happen, people, sometimes they you know, but really, you're just kind of there by yourself, or there's not a lot of other, you know, public around and stuff. That's a weird thing dealing with the public or what is internet dealing with some other people when you're out in the woods, it's always kind of freaky, even here, you know, like, what back right before I started this thing, I was gonna start it. And then I heard a truck. And then like, I was saying that truck guy came up, pulled up, went up this road here and then swung around and came back a couple minutes later. But even that, you know, it's an innocent trip or just someone looking around. But it's still weird. It's like, who's this guy at nine o'clock at night that's driving by me and a truck happened earlier to I think some of those guys that are down low are they one of them came up and was I think just kind of check out this area up here didn't know I was up here, but came up this road. And then like kind of swung or like, hooked up in the parking lot. Or the the area that I'm in here, where I'm camped where the road is wide and he flipped around and then took off and stuff cuz I'm up here, I guess. But it's just like, Hey, dude, I know you don't mean anything. And I guess this is the only thing that can't happen. But what's going on one other guy out here where I have no cell service. Man, yeah, there's some characters out here to some time. So. So yeah, it's, it's interesting. It's not a park, it's not really well managed. When you're out here in the woods. And man, sometimes people aren't really well managed. So</p>



<p>you just kind of it's, it's cool to have to be sharp on what, what, what's going around what people are around what's going on stuff. So but it's find out here. I've never really had a bad interaction. But it's always just sometimes maybe tense is sort of what you'd say you never communicate really. And maybe sometimes it's just paranoia. I'm sure people are fine and nice and stuff. But there is sort of a code out there. out in Eastern Oregon, I remember when I was a kid, you got to do some camping trips out there. And, and you think a small town of 30,000 people really isn't, isn't a populace. But even in that, you're kind of enculturated to a regular set of systems that are sort of similar to what what a city is or what a suburban area is. And so that's sort of what I grew up in. But once you get out pretty fine to you know, some of that rangeland stuff, or in some some of that area where it's just public land. And there's not many people around, there's sort of an old high desert wave that you get, it's like old Ranger way, but is that when two trucks are driving by each other and opposite directions, you kind of give a little hand up, you don't really move it, you just kind of lifted up off the steering wheel, like a salute. And then you put it back down. And it's just sort of saying like, Hey, I'm a good guy out there. So yeah, I may I guess, I suppose to instill trust that even though that's the only other person that you've seen in a day, they're not after you, you know, you're safe. You're you're on the same team or something. So I don't know what it was really about. But maybe just old high desert politeness, I suppose. So yeah, my plans are I'm going to I'm going to cooped up here and camp out and then cruise out to find some stuff to photograph in the morning. I'm hoping to do hoping to cite some wildlife out here. I brought the binoculars and maybe I'll get get a chance to see some stuff or maybe see some sign if something's out here, but but not too sure. I think I'm not gonna get off the road very far in this circumstance. So best I might see some birds or I don't know, two people. That's my life. But yeah, I'm gonna head down to the lake in the morning early and try and maybe get some photographs down there. I'm trying to do some stuff around water on this trip water and some color and stuff, but really, it's just kind of materializing. However, I wanted to I'm not really trying to hold myself to seriously structured any one specific thing because really ultimately, like any of those limiting or what would be like kind of those confining limitations that you'd set on yourself to do photography. They're just not really in line with any The projects that I'm interested in really working on, you know, so really interested in just trying to make photographs that sort of represent myself the best. And I'm trying to kind of figure that out in a good way to, you know, a lot of people kind of make pictures to what would it be, I don't know, fit, fit the need of work or fit the need of a style that they've seen sort of a thing, you know, trying to like, oh, okay, I need to match the style and kind of work with it. But really what I'm trying to do now, I think, pasts are coming through onto the other side of that the 10 year mark of taking some of the work that I do on photography pretty seriously. And so with that, I'm kind of trying to move into Well, what what is Billy want to do with this, you know, what is the thing that, that my interest is drawn toward, instead of trying to make some kind of</p>



<p>some kind of what I think should work sort of thing, I really want to try and go to just what I am interested in, I think that that position of interest is really going to be where I'm going to make the best work that I can, instead of trying to figure out, you know, what other people think I should do, or, or trying to follow the directions of people that really haven't thought about these things as hard as I have, which is certainly the circumstance that probably any creative person has found themselves in for years now, you know, trying to follow the direction of someone who's, who's your boss, or your director, or your project manager, who really hasn't ever spent any time actually participating in the, the actual process of the art that you do, you know, and I bet that that's the circumstance probably as old as time. But people kind of move through it. And it's sort of a signup process, what would you call it, it's a phase, it's a phase. It's a phase, it's kind of just, you know, how it is for a while, and then and then someday, you're the old guy telling people what to do, and things you don't understand. So I bet it's just kind of the what the lifecycle, you know, part of the lifecycle. So good times, but my fire is now pretty completely out, see the embers burn in there. But I think that's gonna be where I call it for this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you guys for listening, SAS, and people tune in to the last one. So that's cool. I want to try and build out a few more of these and having fun recording mobily and recording up in the studio in the loft at home. That's been a lot of fun, too. So hoping to try and get some more of these podcasts out on my website. That's Billy Newman photo calm. And I've done a rebuild on that one looking a bit cleaner. Links are going to actual websites now you know, any of that stuff that was kinda like, Oh, that's a dead link, or Oh, that's not</p>



<p>filled out or</p>



<p>this isn't. This isn't where it should be. Those kinds of things have been sort of rearranged and, you know, kind of edited down and changed some of the text out and stuff. So I'm trying to make it fresh. Got a lot of time for it. You know, man, this COVID stuff. It's like Alright, well, I'll rewrite my website code. How about how about that? So I did that. And then yeah, now I got a jam. I got to go out, taketake some photos and stuff. So I'm happy to be out here. taking some pictures. These are just regular ones. I got to go through a bunch of 360 ones too. That'll be cool. But yeah, good times. I do a photo stuff camping out by myself. Thanks for keeping me company. Have a good one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Creek Camp



Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge!



Creek Camp











If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.







144-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 6, 2020. How's it going? Thanks a lot for tuning into this episode, I'm catching up on sun, national forest land right now about cold Creek in an area, kind of outside of where I'm living in Oregon. And it's gone pretty well, we're having a good day, I'm just here by myself. So I'm doing a solo camping trip. It's the first solo night out I've done this year, and I'm excited to be doing it. I think it's gonna be kind of cool. It's been fun. So far too. It's been,



it's been pretty mellow. I'm out here at my campsite, I got my recording gear, rigged up and I'm at the tailgate of my truck, and made a fire earlier in the fire rank. And it's a pretty clear night, pretty mellow weather seems kind of cold up here. It's sort of a mountain. And I think it's close-ish to the snow level. But still a few. It's still a bit above me, I drove up to it earlier. So earlier, when I was coming in, I left at about noon today. And I took off and drove to town up into the forest and then up kind of on this meandering Forest Service road. And you think right now that you know, maybe a lot of stuff would be empty or or you're not in a lot of use. But really, when I got out here, I noticed a good bit of traffic, it's a nice day, it's May, it's may 6. So I bet people are kind of getting out and and just kind of given the environment that we're in right now where people don't get to, or you know, that are just kind of stuck at home or they didn't they're not at work or something, they're probably the for the first time, you know, a lot of free time for a lot of these people do. So it seems like this area here. As soon as I got to the region that you could camp, it was full of campers, I was noticing that when I was coming up. So there's an area where I think you have to go at 17 miles up the road before you hit the area where you can begin just camping on the side of the road. And I think that's that's probably the spot where the national forest land begins. And before that, I think you're in a region of BLM land that structured out below there as you get kind of closer down toward the highway. And so this further out, made it through the BLM land, that's I guess there's no camping, I think you can do like a lot of day-use area stuff out there a couple campgrounds a past just sort of like Forest Service campgrounds, or BLM campgrounds but sort of a more organized, pull out with the bathroom, those were closed, or you know, there's ]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>38:23</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Creek Camp



Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge!



Creek Camp











If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about fi]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
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<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 143 Lockdown</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-143-lockdown/</link>
	<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2020 17:45:49 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=8442</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Lockdown</p>



<p>Photography during lockdown... </p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>







<p>143-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded. I think, What is it now? May 1, 2020. Wow, the way we went through the year, I hope everybody's doing good through the coronavirus pandemic that's been going on and going over the whole world now; it's pretty crazy. Here in Oregon, fortunately, it's maybe a little lighter, though, there's kind of the social dynamics that have changed pretty recently, or, you know, over the last 45 days has been a lot of businesses that are closed, you know, with the lockdowns and stuff and a lot of people not really getting out or moving around and really been the same for me. So I figured I</p>



<p>should be</p>



<p>doing some podcasting, which sounds like a good time. But yeah, I wanted to talk a little bit about some public land stuff that I've been doing, which has always been kind of fun. And there's still a little bit of stuff that you can do even with during a time like, like right now. Where there's the state lockdowns, I'm not sure which state you're in or how it is. There's different regulations in each of the states. And really, some of them are actually more flexible than they had been prior to this. But there's really still a lot of land access on public lands through the western states. And I think through a lot of the states through the the east to hear a lot about the beach closures and some of these populated city areas. But that's not really the same across the United States in every capacity. Now there's parks that are closed parks are a different type of land management. Then your your public lands like BLM, or national forest land, national parks are closed. State Parks are closed state forests are closed. But really in a lot of places, there's public access to a lot of waterways, and a lot of land and forest areas that would be out in the western United States. I'm not sure quite what it is in California, they might have they might have gone through and done more specific closures here. In Oregon, as I looked up the US, fish and wildlife, I, their site, they had some COVID related information and they were instructing that bear season is still in fact starting April 15. turkey season is in effect, General hunting is in effect. fishing season is in effect fishing was close to out of state fishers. So I guess you couldn't come in from another state. Maybe Washington is what they're thinking about. They also closed the Columbia River to all fishing, I think because Washington is closed, all fishing shoot. So I don't know what Washington's rules are, they might have more more strict land access than what we've got here. But as it goes, you can go out in Oregon to public lands and walk around or hike or camp as long as you're kind of doing the social distancing stuff. Now there is an issue with I think the governor here in Oregon had instructed that people are not to use trailheads. That had been I suppose mistaken for not to use trails, but apparently by instruction of one of the directors of I think it's the Fremont Wynnum a national forest down in the Lake County area of Oregon had, I think posted a news article to like the Lake County local paper, but I was reading it, it instructed that rain, which is sort of a funny way to follow this up. But it didn't instructed that the governor's rules would be followed, so the trailhead would remain closed. But if you were to park off the side of the road in a way that didn't interfere with traffic, you could hike in to the trail from the side, but while avoiding the trailhead and this therefore would follow the governor's instruction, abide by social distancing regulations, and allow for access of the land in a continued fashion. So I guess that's how you're supposed to do it. I've done it a couple times. I've gotten out to a few public land locations and tried to do some traveling around and getting out and stuff I was trying to do some some some 360 degree photo work over the last couple of weeks, which has been really cool and I've enjoyed it a lot. I really liked doing the 360 stuff I think back in June of 2018 we had done a bunch of podcasts about some of the 360 photography stuff that we were trying to do some of the video stuff we were doing with the GoPro fusion at the time and that was all really cool and I liked that video a lot this time I was working with a Ricoh Theta zone and I was going around to a few locations to try and get some photographs. Specifically I think photographs a lot in this circumstance not so many videos. But but yeah really interested in the in the 360 photography stuff that I was able to, to edit together and to capture during that time. So that was cool, but I went out to an area in in Central Oregon. That was pretty cool and went up on like a hillside to do some 360 Working is cool out there because you can really see the topography of how the Great Basin was formed at the well, I guess like during the whole era of the Pleistocene as it was for a long-standing period of time, like a lake, it was just a big lake out there. And then as things started changing at the end of the Pleistocene, I think there were huge changes that ended the Great Basin stuff that ended a lot of the megafauna that was in the area. And that kind of changed the topography of the landscape over the last 10,000 years to be something that's much more of the high desert, sagebrush Juniper tree exposed rock landscape that we see today and a lot less of the forested, temperate kind of mountain climate that we have through the Cascades. And though part of Oregon, I'm sure it was always more dry,</p>



<p>given the range out of the Cascade Mountains there. But I think for a long period of time, as according to science signs posted on my drives, in areas where I go hiking sometimes, but you know, like when you get up to someplace and it says, you know, this area so such and such time ago had these animals in it? Well, you see, like giant beavers, or you see, like camels, or giant sloths, I guess, out of the area, too. There's all sorts of stuff that they had. That ended up being wiped out 100,000 years ago, 60,000 years ago, to, what 1020 10,000 years ago, something like that. There's a lot of changes that happened over the period of the Pleistocene, I guess, during what they call the quarternary period, a period of glaciations that the Earth has been involved in for the last 100,000 or 200, maybe million years. I'm not sure it's its last couple 100,000 years we've been going in these cycles of glaciations, or you know, we're in an ice age period. So we go into an ice age like we have ice on the Earth right now. It'll be more ice at a point and then less ice at a point. More ice at a pointless ice at a point. I guess it's been going on for what they say somewhere around like 200,000 years, these 30,000 year periods of glaciation to non glaciation. were like, I think we're coming. We're like on the far end of the Glacial Maximum now. So we had the with the Glacial Maximum about like, what, 11,000 12,000 years ago? Or is that right? No, I must have been, like 15 20,000 years ago that we are the maximum, then it started receding. I suppose. That's when we were able to No, that doesn't make sense. We had like the land bridge, like the Beringia stuff where people got over that was probably 15 to 20,000. sea levels were low, or they say, like, 400 feet, they squared along the coastlines.</p>



<p>They came over through the land. So that was all pretty long ago. Why anyway, at some point, like I was there, like, I'm</p>



<p>gonna figure out Wait, let me remember. Let me think back to 15,000 years ago, where was I? Yeah, I wasn't here. So I don't know what happened. But apparently, there's been some recorded evidence that I was learning about. And I think it's like Montverde, down in Chile. And that's a location where I think they carbon-dated something to 15,000 years old, like human remains, human element, remains, there's, there's like a few locations here in Oregon, where they, I guess, have evidence of the Clovis people that sort of around like the 1112 13,000 year mark. And then there's other evidence of things that are I don't know within like the it's time it's like anything from like 7500 years to 15,000 years ago seems to all kind of be in flux have a date, because there's really not many, not many perfect ways to date that. And if it's a cultural artifact, like a, an arrowhead, or a pot chart, or a scraper, there's there's some indication of how those things are going to be created, or how those artifacts are going to be created and how there's going to remain like Folsom points, or Clovis points are pretty distinct from each other, but they're not really culturally distinct from each other. So it could be like a variation of many different tribes and languages and peoples. All well unrelated to each other, but related with a similar vein of technology for a few 1000 years of you know, their tool use shape was kind of similar because they're all kind of from a similar descendency. But I think when you get like</p>



<p>more than 100 miles away, your language is separate over like a couple generations. You just got to speak different languages.</p>



<p>But man wild stuff anyway, so I don't remember where we started with this, but I was out in Eastern Oregon, exploring the Great Basin. I went up on a hillside and public land and I was doing some 360 photography work with the Ricoh zeta Oh, Ricoh Theta zone. That's what it is. And yeah, it was capturing some stuff on a hillside. Really beautiful areas up there where those ridges kind of drop in and out. And so it's cool when you get Like up to a higher elevation, you can kind of see the pockets of where these lakes and pools of water and kind of sat and rested for what seems like I think I was saying something about recording some 360 photographs up on some public land in the high desert, in the Lake County in Great Basin area of Eastern Oregon, beautiful spot over there. I really enjoy it. And yeah, it was awesome to use the Ricoh Theta zone to be capturing some images up in that area, it's cool when you're at a higher elevation. And with a 360 camera, you can kind of you can kind of it provides a little bit of a different perspective, it seems silly to see like wider, but when you re when you kind of replay those images, and you're able to sort of look around in context of what's the left and to the right, if you can't able to put together the context of the landscape a little better, a little faster than you could if you just had a series of individual photographs that had segments of the wider landscape captured and it was cool at that higher elevation, you can you can kind of look down to areas that we had been hiking around earlier in the day through some of the ridges and troughs, that would be over in that area.</p>







<p> And you can look down, you know, it's like 500 feet down in elevation to what we thought was kind of the mountain top pass and then pass that as another maybe 1000 foot or a couple of 100 foot drop in elevation as it goes down toward the lake basin area. So all that was pretty cool. And what was also cool about it is just sort of visualizing how popular that area had been in the past, I think, you know, prior to the Western expansion of the United States. And as 1000s of years passed by in this region of land in the northwest, it had been populated and that region specifically been populated by nomadic tribes that had been able to travel and subsist off of the wild game that was there, I think a lot of like antelope and deer, and it looks like bighorn sheep by some of their wedding or some kind of sheep, but it looks like that from from some of their their pictographs and petroglyphs information that they left there. And the dynamics of some of those populations of animals have changed in the time. Now given like modern data, no, I don't know if we're gonna see a lot of sheep out there in Lake County. But there's one drawn on a rock out there. So they must have been trying to look for it. There's a lot of them in the southwest as he moved into the I think the Mohawk tribes. for them. That's why I have a 3000 to 25 2000. I don't know, it's probably about 3600 years ago, so everything but or 100 years ago, really, I think it was like Captain jack over there Captain jack stronghold for the Murdoch Indian Reservation area. And that was like in the Indian Wars, the 1850s. So they'll ask to tell them, but yeah, there's some information about some of the piute, the pirate Indians, I think the Northern piute that were in that area of Southern southeastern Oregon, Nevada, then into Utah, Arizona and New Mexico if I kind of understood right, but I know there's some fluctuations in there. And differences and timing and stuff. But yeah, pretty cool stuff. It was really, it was awesome to get out there. It's getting, it's cool to get out and kind of walk around in some areas of some public land, where we still have some access and still get out to try and do some photography stuff. Even in this period where you're supposed to stay home and there's a lockdown it was, it was cool to kind of get out and try and do some exploring, and some social distance conscious. I mean, it's fine with me, I don't, I don't really have to be around a lot of people, it's better to do landscape wildlife photography worked while you're sort of in some type of isolation, I'm sure like a lot of hunters are kind of considering something like that too. You know, hunters, fishermen, people like hiking or, you know, a lot of those solo activities. It's cool that, you know, this kind of this time, sort of is provided a little bit of a reset for probably a lot of people out there to have a bit more time to invest in some of the things that they'd want to, I suppose a lot of folks are probably stuck more in their local area but</p>



<p>but it's a great time to, to get to invest in some things that seemed more important to you. So that's what I've been trying to do. I hope you guys are doing well. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can check out more at Billy Newman photo calm. I'll be doing a ton of updates over there. Airplane taking off. Sounds like prop plans about to fly over my head. It's like that scene in North by Northwest where Cary Grant starts getting run down by that biplane. That'd be scary. So that's not In the future. Anyway, check out more AbilityOne photo comm and doing a ton of updates over there. A lot of blog posts updated. New portfolio. New about page new homepage, new links to stuff. It's looking sharp guy, check it out. Thanks a lot.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Lockdown



Photography during lockdown... 



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worke]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lockdown</p>



<p>Photography during lockdown... </p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>







<p>143-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown</p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded. I think, What is it now? May 1, 2020. Wow, the way we went through the year, I hope everybody's doing good through the coronavirus pandemic that's been going on and going over the whole world now; it's pretty crazy. Here in Oregon, fortunately, it's maybe a little lighter, though, there's kind of the social dynamics that have changed pretty recently, or, you know, over the last 45 days has been a lot of businesses that are closed, you know, with the lockdowns and stuff and a lot of people not really getting out or moving around and really been the same for me. So I figured I</p>



<p>should be</p>



<p>doing some podcasting, which sounds like a good time. But yeah, I wanted to talk a little bit about some public land stuff that I've been doing, which has always been kind of fun. And there's still a little bit of stuff that you can do even with during a time like, like right now. Where there's the state lockdowns, I'm not sure which state you're in or how it is. There's different regulations in each of the states. And really, some of them are actually more flexible than they had been prior to this. But there's really still a lot of land access on public lands through the western states. And I think through a lot of the states through the the east to hear a lot about the beach closures and some of these populated city areas. But that's not really the same across the United States in every capacity. Now there's parks that are closed parks are a different type of land management. Then your your public lands like BLM, or national forest land, national parks are closed. State Parks are closed state forests are closed. But really in a lot of places, there's public access to a lot of waterways, and a lot of land and forest areas that would be out in the western United States. I'm not sure quite what it is in California, they might have they might have gone through and done more specific closures here. In Oregon, as I looked up the US, fish and wildlife, I, their site, they had some COVID related information and they were instructing that bear season is still in fact starting April 15. turkey season is in effect, General hunting is in effect. fishing season is in effect fishing was close to out of state fishers. So I guess you couldn't come in from another state. Maybe Washington is what they're thinking about. They also closed the Columbia River to all fishing, I think because Washington is closed, all fishing shoot. So I don't know what Washington's rules are, they might have more more strict land access than what we've got here. But as it goes, you can go out in Oregon to public lands and walk around or hike or camp as long as you're kind of doing the social distancing stuff. Now there is an issue with I think the governor here in Oregon had instructed that people are not to use trailheads. That had been I suppose mistaken for not to use trails, but apparently by instruction of one of the directors of I think it's the Fremont Wynnum a national forest down in the Lake County area of Oregon had, I think posted a news article to like the Lake County local paper, but I was reading it, it instructed that rain, which is sort of a funny way to follow this up. But it didn't instructed that the governor's rules would be followed, so the trailhead would remain closed. But if you were to park off the side of the road in a way that didn't interfere with traffic, you could hike in to the trail from the side, but while avoiding the trailhead and this therefore would follow the governor's instruction, abide by social distancing regulations, and allow for access of the land in a continued fashion. So I guess that's how you're supposed to do it. I've done it a couple times. I've gotten out to a few public land locations and tried to do some traveling around and getting out and stuff I was trying to do some some some 360 degree photo work over the last couple of weeks, which has been really cool and I've enjoyed it a lot. I really liked doing the 360 stuff I think back in June of 2018 we had done a bunch of podcasts about some of the 360 photography stuff that we were trying to do some of the video stuff we were doing with the GoPro fusion at the time and that was all really cool and I liked that video a lot this time I was working with a Ricoh Theta zone and I was going around to a few locations to try and get some photographs. Specifically I think photographs a lot in this circumstance not so many videos. But but yeah really interested in the in the 360 photography stuff that I was able to, to edit together and to capture during that time. So that was cool, but I went out to an area in in Central Oregon. That was pretty cool and went up on like a hillside to do some 360 Working is cool out there because you can really see the topography of how the Great Basin was formed at the well, I guess like during the whole era of the Pleistocene as it was for a long-standing period of time, like a lake, it was just a big lake out there. And then as things started changing at the end of the Pleistocene, I think there were huge changes that ended the Great Basin stuff that ended a lot of the megafauna that was in the area. And that kind of changed the topography of the landscape over the last 10,000 years to be something that's much more of the high desert, sagebrush Juniper tree exposed rock landscape that we see today and a lot less of the forested, temperate kind of mountain climate that we have through the Cascades. And though part of Oregon, I'm sure it was always more dry,</p>



<p>given the range out of the Cascade Mountains there. But I think for a long period of time, as according to science signs posted on my drives, in areas where I go hiking sometimes, but you know, like when you get up to someplace and it says, you know, this area so such and such time ago had these animals in it? Well, you see, like giant beavers, or you see, like camels, or giant sloths, I guess, out of the area, too. There's all sorts of stuff that they had. That ended up being wiped out 100,000 years ago, 60,000 years ago, to, what 1020 10,000 years ago, something like that. There's a lot of changes that happened over the period of the Pleistocene, I guess, during what they call the quarternary period, a period of glaciations that the Earth has been involved in for the last 100,000 or 200, maybe million years. I'm not sure it's its last couple 100,000 years we've been going in these cycles of glaciations, or you know, we're in an ice age period. So we go into an ice age like we have ice on the Earth right now. It'll be more ice at a point and then less ice at a point. More ice at a pointless ice at a point. I guess it's been going on for what they say somewhere around like 200,000 years, these 30,000 year periods of glaciation to non glaciation. were like, I think we're coming. We're like on the far end of the Glacial Maximum now. So we had the with the Glacial Maximum about like, what, 11,000 12,000 years ago? Or is that right? No, I must have been, like 15 20,000 years ago that we are the maximum, then it started receding. I suppose. That's when we were able to No, that doesn't make sense. We had like the land bridge, like the Beringia stuff where people got over that was probably 15 to 20,000. sea levels were low, or they say, like, 400 feet, they squared along the coastlines.</p>



<p>They came over through the land. So that was all pretty long ago. Why anyway, at some point, like I was there, like, I'm</p>



<p>gonna figure out Wait, let me remember. Let me think back to 15,000 years ago, where was I? Yeah, I wasn't here. So I don't know what happened. But apparently, there's been some recorded evidence that I was learning about. And I think it's like Montverde, down in Chile. And that's a location where I think they carbon-dated something to 15,000 years old, like human remains, human element, remains, there's, there's like a few locations here in Oregon, where they, I guess, have evidence of the Clovis people that sort of around like the 1112 13,000 year mark. And then there's other evidence of things that are I don't know within like the it's time it's like anything from like 7500 years to 15,000 years ago seems to all kind of be in flux have a date, because there's really not many, not many perfect ways to date that. And if it's a cultural artifact, like a, an arrowhead, or a pot chart, or a scraper, there's there's some indication of how those things are going to be created, or how those artifacts are going to be created and how there's going to remain like Folsom points, or Clovis points are pretty distinct from each other, but they're not really culturally distinct from each other. So it could be like a variation of many different tribes and languages and peoples. All well unrelated to each other, but related with a similar vein of technology for a few 1000 years of you know, their tool use shape was kind of similar because they're all kind of from a similar descendency. But I think when you get like</p>



<p>more than 100 miles away, your language is separate over like a couple generations. You just got to speak different languages.</p>



<p>But man wild stuff anyway, so I don't remember where we started with this, but I was out in Eastern Oregon, exploring the Great Basin. I went up on a hillside and public land and I was doing some 360 photography work with the Ricoh zeta Oh, Ricoh Theta zone. That's what it is. And yeah, it was capturing some stuff on a hillside. Really beautiful areas up there where those ridges kind of drop in and out. And so it's cool when you get Like up to a higher elevation, you can kind of see the pockets of where these lakes and pools of water and kind of sat and rested for what seems like I think I was saying something about recording some 360 photographs up on some public land in the high desert, in the Lake County in Great Basin area of Eastern Oregon, beautiful spot over there. I really enjoy it. And yeah, it was awesome to use the Ricoh Theta zone to be capturing some images up in that area, it's cool when you're at a higher elevation. And with a 360 camera, you can kind of you can kind of it provides a little bit of a different perspective, it seems silly to see like wider, but when you re when you kind of replay those images, and you're able to sort of look around in context of what's the left and to the right, if you can't able to put together the context of the landscape a little better, a little faster than you could if you just had a series of individual photographs that had segments of the wider landscape captured and it was cool at that higher elevation, you can you can kind of look down to areas that we had been hiking around earlier in the day through some of the ridges and troughs, that would be over in that area.</p>







<p> And you can look down, you know, it's like 500 feet down in elevation to what we thought was kind of the mountain top pass and then pass that as another maybe 1000 foot or a couple of 100 foot drop in elevation as it goes down toward the lake basin area. So all that was pretty cool. And what was also cool about it is just sort of visualizing how popular that area had been in the past, I think, you know, prior to the Western expansion of the United States. And as 1000s of years passed by in this region of land in the northwest, it had been populated and that region specifically been populated by nomadic tribes that had been able to travel and subsist off of the wild game that was there, I think a lot of like antelope and deer, and it looks like bighorn sheep by some of their wedding or some kind of sheep, but it looks like that from from some of their their pictographs and petroglyphs information that they left there. And the dynamics of some of those populations of animals have changed in the time. Now given like modern data, no, I don't know if we're gonna see a lot of sheep out there in Lake County. But there's one drawn on a rock out there. So they must have been trying to look for it. There's a lot of them in the southwest as he moved into the I think the Mohawk tribes. for them. That's why I have a 3000 to 25 2000. I don't know, it's probably about 3600 years ago, so everything but or 100 years ago, really, I think it was like Captain jack over there Captain jack stronghold for the Murdoch Indian Reservation area. And that was like in the Indian Wars, the 1850s. So they'll ask to tell them, but yeah, there's some information about some of the piute, the pirate Indians, I think the Northern piute that were in that area of Southern southeastern Oregon, Nevada, then into Utah, Arizona and New Mexico if I kind of understood right, but I know there's some fluctuations in there. And differences and timing and stuff. But yeah, pretty cool stuff. It was really, it was awesome to get out there. It's getting, it's cool to get out and kind of walk around in some areas of some public land, where we still have some access and still get out to try and do some photography stuff. Even in this period where you're supposed to stay home and there's a lockdown it was, it was cool to kind of get out and try and do some exploring, and some social distance conscious. I mean, it's fine with me, I don't, I don't really have to be around a lot of people, it's better to do landscape wildlife photography worked while you're sort of in some type of isolation, I'm sure like a lot of hunters are kind of considering something like that too. You know, hunters, fishermen, people like hiking or, you know, a lot of those solo activities. It's cool that, you know, this kind of this time, sort of is provided a little bit of a reset for probably a lot of people out there to have a bit more time to invest in some of the things that they'd want to, I suppose a lot of folks are probably stuck more in their local area but</p>



<p>but it's a great time to, to get to invest in some things that seemed more important to you. So that's what I've been trying to do. I hope you guys are doing well. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can check out more at Billy Newman photo calm. I'll be doing a ton of updates over there. Airplane taking off. Sounds like prop plans about to fly over my head. It's like that scene in North by Northwest where Cary Grant starts getting run down by that biplane. That'd be scary. So that's not In the future. Anyway, check out more AbilityOne photo comm and doing a ton of updates over there. A lot of blog posts updated. New portfolio. New about page new homepage, new links to stuff. It's looking sharp guy, check it out. Thanks a lot.</p>]]></content:encoded>
	<enclosure url="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast-download/8442/billy-newman-photo-podcast-143-lockdown.mp3" length="11081826" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Lockdown



Photography during lockdown... 



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.







143-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown



Hey, what's going on? Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded. I think, What is it now? May 1, 2020. Wow, the way we went through the year, I hope everybody's doing good through the coronavirus pandemic that's been going on and going over the whole world now; it's pretty crazy. Here in Oregon, fortunately, it's maybe a little lighter, though, there's kind of the social dynamics that have changed pretty recently, or, you know, over the last 45 days has been a lot of businesses that are closed, you know, with the lockdowns and stuff and a lot of people not really getting out or moving around and really been the same for me. So I figured I



should be



doing some podcasting, which sounds like a good time. But yeah, I wanted to talk a little bit about some public land stuff that I've been doing, which has always been kind of fun. And there's still a little bit of stuff that you can do even with during a time like, like right now. Where there's the state lockdowns, I'm not sure which state you're in or how it is. There's different regulations in each of the states. And really, some of them are actually more flexible than they had been prior to this. But there's really still a lot of land access on public lands through the western states. And I think through a lot of the states through the the east to hear a lot about the beach closures and some of these populated city areas. But that's not really the same across the United States in every capacity. Now there's parks that are closed parks are a different type of land management. Then your your public lands like BLM, or national forest land, national parks are closed. State Parks are closed state forests are closed. But really in a lot of places, there's public access to a lot of waterways, and a lot of land and forest areas that would be out in the western United States. I'm not sure quite what it is in California, they might have they might have gone throu]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:duration>15:23</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Lockdown



Photography during lockdown... 



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide.&nbsp;I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you c]]></googleplay:description>
	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>Billy Newman Photo Podcast &#124; 142 Smith Rock Camping</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast-142-smith-rock-camping/</link>
	<pubDate>Tue, 13 Aug 2019 20:09:16 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">https://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=7260</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Smith Rock Camping</p>



<p>by Billy Newman </p>



<p>
 Link
 Blog <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts">https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts</a>
 Podcast <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/</a>
 Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a>
 About &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



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<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About   <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>142 </p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman and you're listening to the Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking it out again. I wanted to touch into the day and talk about a trip that I just just finished up going on out to have to Central Oregon over to the high desert area in Eastern Oregon, I guess it's Eastern Oregon kind of over near the bend area. We went up to Smith rock this last week and did some camping out over there. Had a great time is it's pretty nice but we did the the hike over there at Smith rock and I guess I wanted to do just to kind of show podcast about the area over by blacksmith rock some of the hiking that you can do and some of the the trip and photo stuff that we were working on over there. But yeah, I had a great time and over to Smith rock took off for a pretty quick, easy weekend trip. You know what's great about living here in Oregon on like the I five corridor is you can just kind of jump over to Eastern Oregon over over the cascade pass, which is definitely tracking a drive. It's different than just being on the freeway. But it's pretty cool. Yeah, jumping over the highways and getting over kind of into the backcountry in the Cascades and then heading over over the past and then down into the high desert area of Eastern Oregon over there. So yeah, with three sisters headed over to Tara bond, and then went into the Smith rock State Park area. Really, man. The thing I guess I should say is Yeah, Smith rock is just world-class camping or hiking area. You really can't camp there. I guess you can kind of camp out in an attempt you can kind of bivouac there. I guess some of the rock climbers do that. But there's also like another spot the area we can to is this campground called skull hollow, which is about maybe five miles away or so it's really not too far of a drive but yeah, hop in the car, go around the mountain. And then on the backside of that you can you can hang out and set up a camp I think it's there we were at was probably, I guess, I guess it's BLM maybe it's like state forest or something stuff. But it was dispersed camping areas. So you can kind of drive up this road, pull out on the side and kind of walk your tent over and you know just a couple of feet and set it up, hang out there is all free. And you know, you're just sitting out there in the, in the scrub of the sagebrush and on some lumpy ground. And I think there's like open-range cattle that walk through there to other times we can't there in the past. I think Marina and I had been there maybe years ago, and we had camped just a couple spots from the place that we were this weekend. We put up the tent, hung out there had the car park there and then that morning, we woke up in the tent, we could hear like a bunch of big footsteps around and sounds and animals and we were thinking, oh man, that's weird. And we hands up the screen on the tent looked outside and we were surrounded by cows. So yeah, the cows the cows just kind of walkthrough in their little group during the night or during the morning and ended up in the acreage around where we were. Yeah, kind of cool about open range cattle and stuff but it's fun hanging out over there. Yeah, check it out. The skull hollow campground was cool. Get our camp set up over there was cool. Had a couple tenths going and yeah, took off, went over to Smith rock did the hiking trip over that that was pretty cool. That's where we did some of our photo staff. Most of the hike was like kind of a cool afternoon hike. It's really a great one because it's, it's a couple miles. It's definitely challenging. If you're not super used to hiking, you could do it, but you could try it and try out for a little bit. We're not trained for Urbino Get ready. I got busted up my feet, I got some hotspots and stuff. So it's like maybe there's three miles four miles, I'm not sure it takes about four hours or so. Okay, taking like an average sort of mellow pace to it, but it's cool, you'll be the lower part Yeah, it goes around like the crooked River. Maybe it's only two hours. I don't know. We went around the lower part around the crooked River, which is really cool how the way that the area was formed is really like if you kind of look at it from the outside me the ranch land it's all surrounding is this pretty high or it's higher in elevation, it's just kind of this this flatter area and then it comes up to the crooked river where it drops off into this rim Rock Canyon and then Smith rock is is the volcanic remnant that's been left there as the erosion of the river is kind of wrapped by and pulled away all the sediment that was there that would just kind of make it look like a average boring hillside. And so now you have these these really exposed like vivid kind of crisp volcanic rocks that are just alien to the activity that we see in erosion commonly across the earth here so smooth rock yeah pretty cool pretty unique kind of spot to go hike around at but yeah really fun to kind of jump in there really interesting kind of spot to be yeah did the hike around the crooked riverside up to the backside where like monkey faces I was really cool with with a couple people that hadn't been there before. So we got to catch on that that area for the first time and yeah, monkey faces such as Cool phenomenon because really when you come around that corner it does. anthem is the anthropomorphic I guess it's animal. Yeah, anthropomorphic look like and</p>



<p>like that's when you make an animal a person, right? When is it when you make a rock an animal? Hmm, I don't know that word, but it looks like a monkey. It just looks like a monkey's face. It's what's called monkey face. No way. So, so yeah, we hiked around that spire of monkey face and started going up the Misery Ridge trail. It's just a bunch of switchbacks. It kind of gets you up in elevation to get you to the top of the the Smith rock rock there and yeah walked around the top here for a bit and then hiked down the backside of it. Yeah Really cool spot to check out over on this with rock side there's a bunch of other camping and hiking and stuff you can kind of do there other than just the the top over loop of the trail but there's there's other trails that kind of go around the east side of the park that's got some really cool stuff and then we're just talking about hiking and taking pictures and stuff a little bit so far but really the cool thing there is all the rock climbing stuff that you do all the the sport climbing that goes on. And and I think that's really cool. There's there's a there's really a lot more hikers that today that there were there were sport climbers. There's there's definitely like a handful of people that were out there, but I didn't see. And it's probably because the conditions were I think scheduled to be pretty bad. Like I think it was raining a lot of the day so I don't think a lot of people probably set up their their rock climbing rigs for a day in the rain but but I've definitely seen people there and really odd times of the year like super early March, middle of the winter, early April and stuff, maybe there's a better time of the year to to do some of the types of climbs and stuff. But yeah, I was hoping to find some people do like a multi pitch climb. I remember seeing that a couple years ago on one of the surfaces where you're just thinking like, Wow, those people are hundreds of feet up. That means they like to bring the rope up once and then pull it all up and then lead climbing again. And then like Malaysia is just like wow, how do you do that? That's so so yeah, really scary, kind of interesting stuff, how they do all the all the rock climbing stuff. But man, I wish I wish I knew a little bit more about how I got into it, kind of what I don't know as I guess it'd be like gym sport climbing for weeks, not not months even. And it's fun, it's fun to check out and learn about, but man like being on the rock over it's with rock is a lot different I got to go climb over there one time years ago. And just like getting on the rock and trying to like fill out the routes and stuff is so much different than kind of going for that hole on the wall and the rock gym and stuff is just really interesting kind of get the experience of being hot and cold. And having all your like outdoor gear on stuff and you know, just kind of exposed to the wind and the elements and stuff. And then you're also trying to like pull up this pull up this mountainside to at the same time. So it's kind of fun. It's it's cool getting used to data no trying to rock climb stuff, but but man, yeah, interesting, doing the climb and being delayed and doing all that stuff. But as far as stuff goes, we did a couple a couple 360 things that was kind of cool. Going over to Smith rock in June, we're trying to get into some 360 photo work where last year, we did like a lot of a lot of video clips, which is really cool. I really liked those stock video clips we produced in a lot of places. And we shot a ton of photos too, which is awesome. But But now I'm also trying to get into a bunch of a bunch of pieces where we can, well, I want to try and get the I want to try and get like collections of photos. And then I'm sort of starting to learn about where you can put these in like virtual tours. So you can put maybe four or five or whatever would take you know, you kind of go to the specific spots in a location or something and then you you get the 360 photograph and then you can kind of pieces together as a tourist, you can go from one 360 to the next 360 is sort of this immersion. Well, so I'm trying to check that out, trying to learn about it, if that'll work for me very well. But But yeah, I've tried to do some 360 photo stuff where you take the photo, then you pull it into Affinity Photo, that's another program. I'm using it on the Mac right now, I think it's available on PC as well. It's sort of a Photoshop competitor, you can buy outright, I think for maybe $79 or something like that. It's it's really not as expensive as the Creative Cloud purchases for a continuation. But the reason I guess I bring up affinity photos, it's kind of noted as one of the better tools right now to project your stitch to 360 photo as an actual equo rectilinear projection in the program. And then you can still use the editing programs in the program. So um, so like, I guess like the new Final Cut Pro has an ability to project the 360 photograph while you're editing it. So you could add in new materials to it like, I don't know, like just plates of information that'll stay up in the 360 space that you're at as you move through it. It's interesting how it is you can kind of stitch things into the fabric of the scene within Final Cut in the video and you can heal</p>



<p>your Nadir point. So the base view is your Nadir at the top of you as your Zenith point. So the Either point in a 360 photograph is where that tripod is going to be or where you are going to be in the photographer is going to be below it sort of thing. So. So that's kind of a, I don't know, an interesting part of it, where you got to kind of go through and I guess this is what affinities for is you open up the photo, after it's stitched, you open it in affinity, and then you can go down and he'll put the base there where your tripod was or where the person was that was taking the picture. And then you can have this kind of full 360 photograph without kind of a block at the bottom that says it's just a couple people. So yeah, it's kind of cool. So I'm trying to open it up in affinity and do a couple color adjustments to it, which is cool, that you can go through and do do kind of like post color correction stuff to some of the photographs, you can kind of do that with the 360 video, but you also kind of can't do it with the 360 video as well. You kind of had some Oh, yeah, color correction. Like you can't have been Final Cut. But it's it's really not the same as photo editing, I guess, you know, obviously. But it's kind of cool. We've been having a good time trying to edit together those the 360 photos. I'm trying to go through a bunch of the photos I'd taken last year as well. And put those together and hope to well, no is it? What is that 361? I skipped in my mind right now. There's like this 360 view year. I think it's V or VR. And it's sort of like a YouTube channel for 360 videos and stuff. YouTube also takes 360s as well as many other places. But it's again, it's kind of a cool little photo and video sharing site for 360 content and and social network and app and all that kind of stuff. But But yeah, I put some stuff up there. And that's kind of people that are specifically interested in looking at 360 images and content would go But yeah, it's it's kind of fun. So yeah, 360 staff, some photo stuff had the Canon equipment out there. I was trying to take some landscape photos was cool. The weekend weather was, I think I had mentioned there was kind of a forecast to rain. Really, that was like some thunderstorms that were blowing across the Cascades. I think they're just a bigger weather system overall this weekend. Not to mention the Perseids, which is you get back to on another podcast that was probably this but they got kind of clouded out for me. Shoot, I want to see some meteor showers. So not talking about the Perseus but I guess kind of going back just the campus stuff, it was cool. We were really happy that we got to go out and do the camping stuff. Sorry that we didn't get to see the Parisians. But I don't know, I guess we're camping out and stuff. So that was pretty cool. It was thunderstorms that rolled over the Cascades. And then we have these big heads. We're really fortunate that I guess the big system, which I live a really active, I pulled up the weather map on on dark sky, the weather app that I have on my phone. And you can see just this big red hotspot, maybe 25 miles or 30 miles to the north east of us. And it was probably just you know, a ton of rain, hail ton of lightning. So I'm really glad we didn't get wiped over by that. That's pretty cool. But it really was a cool kind of textured night where there's just a lot of clouds. And like a lot of kind of thunderstorms and stuff. It's cool that the airplanes are kind of coming in real low, they had to go around around this huge thunderstorm system. So they were coming in real low. And kind of making these sort of strange routes was just kind of fun to see that I remember seeing that a couple of times in the past when thunderstorms have come in, and airlines would have to take just these kind of big alternate routes to get around this, this thunderstorm cells. So that was kind of cool. Check it out, we were taking pictures of it as the sun was going down, there's a rainbow kind of red as the evening was coming, coming to a close of our camps. That was pretty fun, get some cool pictures, that and that's what I love. I love that that time of day or you know, right at the end of the day, as a certain type of lighting effect that happens when there's really like mostly clouds over the sky. But right as the evening the western sky has a gap where it's clear, and the sun is able to shine through that pocket there. And you get a lot of light that bounces back between the cloud surface above you and the ground below you where you're kind of in this little pocket where it just sort of sort of reflects against itself, but you get this kind of warmer, sort of diffuse town around everything kind of changes the way the shadows are. It's different than overcast, you know where you get a diffusion of the shadows. But this one, you get a really crisp kind of saturated quality to the light. And it's a lot better than I think the softer sort of white light that you get in the diffuse circumstances of overcast days. But yeah, you get a lot of cool kind of rich contrast in those landscape photos with that kind of lighting condition. Sort of during that golden hour time with the right kind of cloud effect and stuff. Really beautiful, really soft kind of easy to expose for photography kind of lights up. Yeah beautiful spot to be really kind of surreal, colorful looking. location and evening and yeah, fun hanging out. Watch</p>



<p>the thunderstorms, camping out getting rained on, maybe getting one a little bit. All part of the experience of being outside being an Easterner Again, definitely got a little sunburn. sore. All the rest of it. But yeah, good going out and keep it out and stuff. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of the building human photo podcast appreciate guys tuning in, checking it out again, and listen to me talk for a little while about what was it? photos in Eastern Oregon and Smith rock. Appreciate it.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Smith Rock Camping



by Billy Newman 




 Link
 Blog https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts
 Podcast https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/
 Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/
 About &nbsp;&nbsp;http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/


]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Smith Rock Camping</p>



<p>by Billy Newman </p>



<p>
 Link
 Blog <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts">https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts</a>
 Podcast <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/</a>
 Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a>
 About &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>



<p>Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp; <a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About   <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>142 </p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman and you're listening to the Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking it out again. I wanted to touch into the day and talk about a trip that I just just finished up going on out to have to Central Oregon over to the high desert area in Eastern Oregon, I guess it's Eastern Oregon kind of over near the bend area. We went up to Smith rock this last week and did some camping out over there. Had a great time is it's pretty nice but we did the the hike over there at Smith rock and I guess I wanted to do just to kind of show podcast about the area over by blacksmith rock some of the hiking that you can do and some of the the trip and photo stuff that we were working on over there. But yeah, I had a great time and over to Smith rock took off for a pretty quick, easy weekend trip. You know what's great about living here in Oregon on like the I five corridor is you can just kind of jump over to Eastern Oregon over over the cascade pass, which is definitely tracking a drive. It's different than just being on the freeway. But it's pretty cool. Yeah, jumping over the highways and getting over kind of into the backcountry in the Cascades and then heading over over the past and then down into the high desert area of Eastern Oregon over there. So yeah, with three sisters headed over to Tara bond, and then went into the Smith rock State Park area. Really, man. The thing I guess I should say is Yeah, Smith rock is just world-class camping or hiking area. You really can't camp there. I guess you can kind of camp out in an attempt you can kind of bivouac there. I guess some of the rock climbers do that. But there's also like another spot the area we can to is this campground called skull hollow, which is about maybe five miles away or so it's really not too far of a drive but yeah, hop in the car, go around the mountain. And then on the backside of that you can you can hang out and set up a camp I think it's there we were at was probably, I guess, I guess it's BLM maybe it's like state forest or something stuff. But it was dispersed camping areas. So you can kind of drive up this road, pull out on the side and kind of walk your tent over and you know just a couple of feet and set it up, hang out there is all free. And you know, you're just sitting out there in the, in the scrub of the sagebrush and on some lumpy ground. And I think there's like open-range cattle that walk through there to other times we can't there in the past. I think Marina and I had been there maybe years ago, and we had camped just a couple spots from the place that we were this weekend. We put up the tent, hung out there had the car park there and then that morning, we woke up in the tent, we could hear like a bunch of big footsteps around and sounds and animals and we were thinking, oh man, that's weird. And we hands up the screen on the tent looked outside and we were surrounded by cows. So yeah, the cows the cows just kind of walkthrough in their little group during the night or during the morning and ended up in the acreage around where we were. Yeah, kind of cool about open range cattle and stuff but it's fun hanging out over there. Yeah, check it out. The skull hollow campground was cool. Get our camp set up over there was cool. Had a couple tenths going and yeah, took off, went over to Smith rock did the hiking trip over that that was pretty cool. That's where we did some of our photo staff. Most of the hike was like kind of a cool afternoon hike. It's really a great one because it's, it's a couple miles. It's definitely challenging. If you're not super used to hiking, you could do it, but you could try it and try out for a little bit. We're not trained for Urbino Get ready. I got busted up my feet, I got some hotspots and stuff. So it's like maybe there's three miles four miles, I'm not sure it takes about four hours or so. Okay, taking like an average sort of mellow pace to it, but it's cool, you'll be the lower part Yeah, it goes around like the crooked River. Maybe it's only two hours. I don't know. We went around the lower part around the crooked River, which is really cool how the way that the area was formed is really like if you kind of look at it from the outside me the ranch land it's all surrounding is this pretty high or it's higher in elevation, it's just kind of this this flatter area and then it comes up to the crooked river where it drops off into this rim Rock Canyon and then Smith rock is is the volcanic remnant that's been left there as the erosion of the river is kind of wrapped by and pulled away all the sediment that was there that would just kind of make it look like a average boring hillside. And so now you have these these really exposed like vivid kind of crisp volcanic rocks that are just alien to the activity that we see in erosion commonly across the earth here so smooth rock yeah pretty cool pretty unique kind of spot to go hike around at but yeah really fun to kind of jump in there really interesting kind of spot to be yeah did the hike around the crooked riverside up to the backside where like monkey faces I was really cool with with a couple people that hadn't been there before. So we got to catch on that that area for the first time and yeah, monkey faces such as Cool phenomenon because really when you come around that corner it does. anthem is the anthropomorphic I guess it's animal. Yeah, anthropomorphic look like and</p>



<p>like that's when you make an animal a person, right? When is it when you make a rock an animal? Hmm, I don't know that word, but it looks like a monkey. It just looks like a monkey's face. It's what's called monkey face. No way. So, so yeah, we hiked around that spire of monkey face and started going up the Misery Ridge trail. It's just a bunch of switchbacks. It kind of gets you up in elevation to get you to the top of the the Smith rock rock there and yeah walked around the top here for a bit and then hiked down the backside of it. Yeah Really cool spot to check out over on this with rock side there's a bunch of other camping and hiking and stuff you can kind of do there other than just the the top over loop of the trail but there's there's other trails that kind of go around the east side of the park that's got some really cool stuff and then we're just talking about hiking and taking pictures and stuff a little bit so far but really the cool thing there is all the rock climbing stuff that you do all the the sport climbing that goes on. And and I think that's really cool. There's there's a there's really a lot more hikers that today that there were there were sport climbers. There's there's definitely like a handful of people that were out there, but I didn't see. And it's probably because the conditions were I think scheduled to be pretty bad. Like I think it was raining a lot of the day so I don't think a lot of people probably set up their their rock climbing rigs for a day in the rain but but I've definitely seen people there and really odd times of the year like super early March, middle of the winter, early April and stuff, maybe there's a better time of the year to to do some of the types of climbs and stuff. But yeah, I was hoping to find some people do like a multi pitch climb. I remember seeing that a couple years ago on one of the surfaces where you're just thinking like, Wow, those people are hundreds of feet up. That means they like to bring the rope up once and then pull it all up and then lead climbing again. And then like Malaysia is just like wow, how do you do that? That's so so yeah, really scary, kind of interesting stuff, how they do all the all the rock climbing stuff. But man, I wish I wish I knew a little bit more about how I got into it, kind of what I don't know as I guess it'd be like gym sport climbing for weeks, not not months even. And it's fun, it's fun to check out and learn about, but man like being on the rock over it's with rock is a lot different I got to go climb over there one time years ago. And just like getting on the rock and trying to like fill out the routes and stuff is so much different than kind of going for that hole on the wall and the rock gym and stuff is just really interesting kind of get the experience of being hot and cold. And having all your like outdoor gear on stuff and you know, just kind of exposed to the wind and the elements and stuff. And then you're also trying to like pull up this pull up this mountainside to at the same time. So it's kind of fun. It's it's cool getting used to data no trying to rock climb stuff, but but man, yeah, interesting, doing the climb and being delayed and doing all that stuff. But as far as stuff goes, we did a couple a couple 360 things that was kind of cool. Going over to Smith rock in June, we're trying to get into some 360 photo work where last year, we did like a lot of a lot of video clips, which is really cool. I really liked those stock video clips we produced in a lot of places. And we shot a ton of photos too, which is awesome. But But now I'm also trying to get into a bunch of a bunch of pieces where we can, well, I want to try and get the I want to try and get like collections of photos. And then I'm sort of starting to learn about where you can put these in like virtual tours. So you can put maybe four or five or whatever would take you know, you kind of go to the specific spots in a location or something and then you you get the 360 photograph and then you can kind of pieces together as a tourist, you can go from one 360 to the next 360 is sort of this immersion. Well, so I'm trying to check that out, trying to learn about it, if that'll work for me very well. But But yeah, I've tried to do some 360 photo stuff where you take the photo, then you pull it into Affinity Photo, that's another program. I'm using it on the Mac right now, I think it's available on PC as well. It's sort of a Photoshop competitor, you can buy outright, I think for maybe $79 or something like that. It's it's really not as expensive as the Creative Cloud purchases for a continuation. But the reason I guess I bring up affinity photos, it's kind of noted as one of the better tools right now to project your stitch to 360 photo as an actual equo rectilinear projection in the program. And then you can still use the editing programs in the program. So um, so like, I guess like the new Final Cut Pro has an ability to project the 360 photograph while you're editing it. So you could add in new materials to it like, I don't know, like just plates of information that'll stay up in the 360 space that you're at as you move through it. It's interesting how it is you can kind of stitch things into the fabric of the scene within Final Cut in the video and you can heal</p>



<p>your Nadir point. So the base view is your Nadir at the top of you as your Zenith point. So the Either point in a 360 photograph is where that tripod is going to be or where you are going to be in the photographer is going to be below it sort of thing. So. So that's kind of a, I don't know, an interesting part of it, where you got to kind of go through and I guess this is what affinities for is you open up the photo, after it's stitched, you open it in affinity, and then you can go down and he'll put the base there where your tripod was or where the person was that was taking the picture. And then you can have this kind of full 360 photograph without kind of a block at the bottom that says it's just a couple people. So yeah, it's kind of cool. So I'm trying to open it up in affinity and do a couple color adjustments to it, which is cool, that you can go through and do do kind of like post color correction stuff to some of the photographs, you can kind of do that with the 360 video, but you also kind of can't do it with the 360 video as well. You kind of had some Oh, yeah, color correction. Like you can't have been Final Cut. But it's it's really not the same as photo editing, I guess, you know, obviously. But it's kind of cool. We've been having a good time trying to edit together those the 360 photos. I'm trying to go through a bunch of the photos I'd taken last year as well. And put those together and hope to well, no is it? What is that 361? I skipped in my mind right now. There's like this 360 view year. I think it's V or VR. And it's sort of like a YouTube channel for 360 videos and stuff. YouTube also takes 360s as well as many other places. But it's again, it's kind of a cool little photo and video sharing site for 360 content and and social network and app and all that kind of stuff. But But yeah, I put some stuff up there. And that's kind of people that are specifically interested in looking at 360 images and content would go But yeah, it's it's kind of fun. So yeah, 360 staff, some photo stuff had the Canon equipment out there. I was trying to take some landscape photos was cool. The weekend weather was, I think I had mentioned there was kind of a forecast to rain. Really, that was like some thunderstorms that were blowing across the Cascades. I think they're just a bigger weather system overall this weekend. Not to mention the Perseids, which is you get back to on another podcast that was probably this but they got kind of clouded out for me. Shoot, I want to see some meteor showers. So not talking about the Perseus but I guess kind of going back just the campus stuff, it was cool. We were really happy that we got to go out and do the camping stuff. Sorry that we didn't get to see the Parisians. But I don't know, I guess we're camping out and stuff. So that was pretty cool. It was thunderstorms that rolled over the Cascades. And then we have these big heads. We're really fortunate that I guess the big system, which I live a really active, I pulled up the weather map on on dark sky, the weather app that I have on my phone. And you can see just this big red hotspot, maybe 25 miles or 30 miles to the north east of us. And it was probably just you know, a ton of rain, hail ton of lightning. So I'm really glad we didn't get wiped over by that. That's pretty cool. But it really was a cool kind of textured night where there's just a lot of clouds. And like a lot of kind of thunderstorms and stuff. It's cool that the airplanes are kind of coming in real low, they had to go around around this huge thunderstorm system. So they were coming in real low. And kind of making these sort of strange routes was just kind of fun to see that I remember seeing that a couple of times in the past when thunderstorms have come in, and airlines would have to take just these kind of big alternate routes to get around this, this thunderstorm cells. So that was kind of cool. Check it out, we were taking pictures of it as the sun was going down, there's a rainbow kind of red as the evening was coming, coming to a close of our camps. That was pretty fun, get some cool pictures, that and that's what I love. I love that that time of day or you know, right at the end of the day, as a certain type of lighting effect that happens when there's really like mostly clouds over the sky. But right as the evening the western sky has a gap where it's clear, and the sun is able to shine through that pocket there. And you get a lot of light that bounces back between the cloud surface above you and the ground below you where you're kind of in this little pocket where it just sort of sort of reflects against itself, but you get this kind of warmer, sort of diffuse town around everything kind of changes the way the shadows are. It's different than overcast, you know where you get a diffusion of the shadows. But this one, you get a really crisp kind of saturated quality to the light. And it's a lot better than I think the softer sort of white light that you get in the diffuse circumstances of overcast days. But yeah, you get a lot of cool kind of rich contrast in those landscape photos with that kind of lighting condition. Sort of during that golden hour time with the right kind of cloud effect and stuff. Really beautiful, really soft kind of easy to expose for photography kind of lights up. Yeah beautiful spot to be really kind of surreal, colorful looking. location and evening and yeah, fun hanging out. Watch</p>



<p>the thunderstorms, camping out getting rained on, maybe getting one a little bit. All part of the experience of being outside being an Easterner Again, definitely got a little sunburn. sore. All the rest of it. But yeah, good going out and keep it out and stuff. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of the building human photo podcast appreciate guys tuning in, checking it out again, and listen to me talk for a little while about what was it? photos in Eastern Oregon and Smith rock. Appreciate it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Smith Rock Camping



by Billy Newman 




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 Podcast https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/
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Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



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142 



Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman and you're listening to the Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking it out again. I wanted to touch into the day and talk about a trip that I just just finished up going on out to have to Central Oregon over to the high desert area in Eastern Oregon, I guess it's Eastern Oregon kind of over near the bend area. We went up to Smith rock this last week and did some camping out over there. Had a great time is it's pretty nice but we did the the hike over there at Smith rock and I guess I wanted to do just to kind of show podcast about the area over by blacksmith rock some of the hiking that you can do and some of the the trip and photo stuff that we were working on over there. But yeah, I had a great time and over to Smith rock took off for a pretty quick, easy weekend trip. You know what's great about living here in Oregon on like the I five corridor is you can just kind of jump over to Eastern Oregon over over the cascade pass, which is definitely tracking a drive. It's different than just being on the freeway. But it's pretty cool. Yeah, jumping over the highways and getting over kind of into the backcountry in the Cascades and then heading over over the past and then down into the high desert area of Eastern Oregon over there. So yeah, with three sisters headed over to Tara bond, and then went into the Smith rock State Park area. Really, man. The thing I guess I should say is Yeah, Smith rock is just world-class camping or hiking area. You really can't camp there. I guess you can kind of camp out in an attempt you can kind of bivouac there. I guess some of the rock climbers do that. But there's also like another spot the area we can to is this campground called skull hollow, which is about maybe five miles away or so it's really not too far of a drive but yeah, hop in the car, go around the mountain. And then on the backside of that you can you can hang out and set up a camp I think it's there we were at was probably, I guess, I]]></itunes:summary>
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by Billy Newman 




 Link
 Blog https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts
 Podcast https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/
 Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/
 About &nbsp;&nbsp;http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/



Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to ]]></googleplay:description>
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	<title>Get Out There &#124; 11 Suunto Core Watch Review</title>
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	<description><![CDATA[<p>Billy Newman Marina Hansen</p>
<p>Suunto Core</p>
<p>Truck Canopy- Floor storage</p>
<p>Get Out There | 11 Suunto Core Watch Review</p>
<p class="p1">â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”â€”</p>
<p class="p1">Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>
<p class="p1">Link</p>
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	<title>Get Out There &#124; 10 Rafting Equipment</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-10-rafting-equipment/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 27 Apr 2017 04:05:44 +0000</pubDate>
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	<description><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment</p>


<p>Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting.</p>
<p>How to spend 30K at SotarÂ&nbsp;and NRS.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p>Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment</p>


<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



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<p>Get-out-there-10-Outfitting-Raft-Equipment_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. And I'm here today with Robert Vickery. Robert, how are you doing? Hey, doing well, Billy, how you doing? Doing good, man. Thanks a lot for doing Episode 10 of the podcast. It's pretty cool. Yeah, no, I'm excited, man. What is it? What episode is it? Episode 10. Now, Episode 10. Yeah, moving into double-digit. So sets. That's a big. That's our first milestone. It's great, man. That's right. But But yeah, definitely. Daddy at the beginning, it'll be cool. I think it'd be cool to see like, what what we kind of build on or like how the show kind of grows or evolves over the next few months as we put it together a little bit more.</p>



<p>Yeah. Interesting. I like you know, the more we do it, the more it evolves. And I am kind of curious, these things. Like when you do stuff like this, whether it's any type of project, when you work with somebody, it always evolves in some different way that reflects personalities. And it's always fun.</p>



<p>Yeah, I want to grow it a bit. And I want to try and make it like a little bit unique or, you know, just so it's kind of kind of interesting to us at least. But I like it being honest. And being about like some of the cool stuff that we remember about. About our trips in the outdoor stuff that we've done. We need Intro music. Oh, yeah. No, I want to I want to work on our sound design.</p>



<p>Yeah. And again, just like Slayer.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. That's, that's the the grand outdoors sound. It's exactly what nature sounds like. A babbling brook? Sounds like Yeah. I was thinking about it. This week, I wanted to talk to you about some of the raft experience that you'd had. Yeah, on the road river, and probably how to apply a lot of that rafting experience outside of that to just other rivers and other experiences more more in general about like the equipment use of rafting and of doing like, well probably do a multi-day trips, but I was also thinking about people who are interested in doing like smaller trips. And you you, you tell me, I was thinking about it in this way of sort of like three different categories of if you were going to be like a like a bigger trip, like what you would think about for like setting up a raft chip for for like a guide company or an outfitter, what you're looking at there as a guide, or maybe like what you did to rig a raft and have it set up and like what kind of equipment that was or probably what kind of expands to or what kind of investment it is to get into that level a raft and then maybe like what it's like for someone that was going to set up a private trip. And we're trying to figure out the difference between like the the public commercial side of rafting. Yeah, what it would be like for a hobbyist like for what you did, picking up your your first draft and trailer and frame. I want to think about that a little bit. And then there's also kind of the other end to have, we use what you and I used to be of people that would like pick up a day rental, or pick up, like, you know, whatever smaller thing that they had, and there's kind of that like day trips section of it, too. So we're going to talk about those three levels of kind of getting ready or, or what's involved equipment-wise. For doing.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's, those are good topics. I like that. Um, yeah, there's there's a few different levels of it. And I guess it all comes, like how serious you are about it, how much you love being on the water. And, you know, when it comes down to it, everybody, for the most part, enjoys being on the water when it's, you know, a hot summer day or something. But it's it's constantly it's like anything you do. Oh, yeah, everything's good. Any hobby? Yeah, hobbies, man.</p>



<p>It seems like the minimum cost for a hobby is about $1,000. So it seems like I remember them, but there's different tiers to it. Because there's $1,000 hobbies, there's $10,000 hobbies, there's like 50 that, like if you want to be a racecar driver?</p>



<p>Well, let's see. I think that's the difference between a hobby and a lifestyle, though, I think that's when your hobby becomes part of your lifestyle. I so, so perfect example is, is I'm in like that $10,000 obvious thing now, but when you're voting, but it's also a huge part of my life. And I you know, I use it for my work as well as my as well as my pleasure. So yeah,</p>



<p>I mean that I think that's where really a lot of adults end up taking their hobbies eventually, to a place where it's, it's pretty serious. It's like a pretty serious component of their lifestyle. Okay, interesting. That is, but yeah, I definitely believe that that your investments probably pushed up to the $10,000 range. Amanda said about like a lot of the photography stuff that I've gotten. We've pulled up a bunch of this stuff, and we've been laying it out. And yeah, investments like way up above that range of sound. But you imagine like early on when we were getting into guitars in high school. Yeah, like if you get the half stack and a guitar, you kind of look into like the 1000 dollar range. If you're looking at like a season pass, and like a new snowboard, that's like $1,000 or so like every every hobby was like 1000 like 1000 bucks. There's kind of like a market price point around that, that amount. That's funny. I've never really looked at it, though. Right is weird. Yeah, there's just yeah, there's invisible numbers out there that seem to be the, the limits of what will pay but I paid for it every time it seems like</p>



<p>so, ya know, so I guess I'll start with like, you know, your basic basic hobbyist that just want us</p>



<p>with the family or whatever, just get on the water for a day. Your best bet for something like that. Especially if you don't have any experience with the water, you're going to get on to his rentals. You can do like guided day tours, which you know, everything's provided you guys are just out on the water doing your thing. You can get into those for about 100 bucks. I've done a few of those at a good time. Yeah, they're they're pretty fun. Um, I mean, most of the time you're gonna get a high school kid that probably from the area on their summer vacation getting ready to go to college or whatever but they're usually from the area fairly knowledgeable about the about the river they're running and and for the most part you can have a good time everybody's safe and you know all the all the work and labor-intensive ends are taken care of. So if you're not a big time water enthusiast, I would say that would be the best way to go check it out. But kind of stepping up from there you know being from the area you get a lot of people that you know own boats in the area</p>



<p>yeah that's what I was thinking about was all those have their own boats set up so that they would go down and you know, they had hardly really any any professional setup but just I mean like well we took down hundreds or you know, dozens of times during the handful of summers was just real simple stuff that we pulled from biomart</p>



<p>Yeah, exactly. And that's that's the way you get involved in it and stuff and get a you find out that you when you go to price wraps and stuff you're looking at you know, four to $5,000 just for you know an intro introduction level wrap I was looking at that</p>



<p>RAM and ores it looked pretty excited I wanted to talk about like the big time RAF prices and if you guys but yeah, I was really I was interested in that. I was surprised but I remember like the cheap like seven or sevi war tahini kayak that we'd inflated and tacos on nine bucks, man. There we go. that got us through June. At least though. We're we're going down yeah, it was great. I love doing that was like after work or something and we cruise down to down to like the Hells Canyon, put in went to go lease I think one time. It was great. It was cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, a ton of fun. Get serious about doing that you really enjoy doing that in your area where you can access this all the time. That's when you start getting into that like, I don't know, I'm gonna just call it the middle ground and say that that $5,000 Yes, problem. floors and stuff. is, um, you know, you want to bring your friends and stuff feels good about getting in a kayak. ruins a ton of fun. And you just can't pack enough beer. So all these kind of accumulate into, you know, stepping up your your water game and getting a little bit more involved.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think I think having a raft having a good rap. Well, what would you recommend for the Rogue River? So there's like, Well, probably like above a 10 foot draft. I'm sorry, I lost connection. Oh, yes. you when you were on the road, maybe even on like the day trip section. Are you? Are you running like a 16 foot boat or an 18 foot boat?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Typically, anything we do on the road is going to be 16 foot boats. We're running rubber rafts for rafting, obviously. For the little inflatable kayaks or I cases they're called right. So yeah, I mean, for that section, if it's just like you and your wife and the dog or something like for somebody that's not a serious multi day rafter, I would suggest getting into like a 14 foot boat. A 14 foot boat is perfect. You can put the cooler in there. Yeah, you can put two to three people in there and have a great day. The only problem with that is if you start getting into multi day trips, the amount of gear you start bringing adds up really, really quick, and a lot of times you can't accommodate your equipment. The people in the boat.</p>



<p>Yeah, okay. Yeah. Was that about the size of a town? There's dad's boat that we'd see go down on the river. Yeah, yeah. Did you say Tyler? Yeah, Tyler's dad. Yeah, I was wondering if that was about the size of his boat setup. I thinking about him and yeah, yeah, okay.</p>



<p>Okay. He's got like a late 80s. So tar wrap. That thing's awesome. It's like a second collectible man. That thing's one of the originals. Yeah, but he had a he had a self bailing floor put into it. Then all that stuff, but yeah, that's that's like the perfect size for like those weekend trips that you just want to do. Right? You know, on a Saturday, it's 100 degrees. I was good at the river. That's perfect.</p>



<p>That sounds really cool. Yeah, it seems to be the best setup for it. And so what was what was the size of raft that you got? Like, was it two years ago that you bought your own raft?</p>



<p>I got a 16 foot, just because the 14 ended up being too small for because that's typically what I do, or the multi day trips. And that's, that's the problem you end up with a lot of times as you just can't fit your gear in a 14 foot boat. Okay, and still put two people in there. And that's why you just was 16 Yeah, it's just a little more breathing room. I just think it's more comfortable. Far, far better experience. I had a great time. I had a good experience and you about I think, yeah, works really well. So funny. Oh, good.</p>



<p>Oh, I was gonna ask about, about like, the lifespan of boats are about like maintenance and about, like how old your boat is? How long you expect to keep a raft on the river.</p>



<p>Man, you can keep it okay. It's like any good equipment you buy for any form of outdoor recreation. It's all in how you take care of it. Um, I, you know, everybody wants to get a boat. And I really kind of downplay it for a lot of people unless they're serious about maintenance, and upkeep and storage and things like that. It's, there's a lot that goes into it. You know, if you're going to store it over the winter, try not to roll it keep it inflated. Those rolls become creases, and then become weak.</p>



<p>I've seen PVC. Yeah, I've seen where it becomes weak. I've had I've had a dry bag that I put in the closet, you know, six or seven years old. But when I pull it out, yeah, where it increased and it's sad. It got brittle and it cracked. They're just as bad as weird. Yeah, weird to see it. But. But it's interesting, though, like when it's deflated. That's when that's when you get creases. And that's when you get the extreme amount of weathering.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's not weathering. I mean, you got to figure these things out in the sun all the time. Another thing you got to do is they make a boat conditioner, and it's called like 303, I think, but it's like that terrible band. Hey, remember those guys? Of course. Yeah.</p>



<p>There's I get but you you put it on is a polypropylene or what was it? With Cheerio that those that the wraps are made out of</p>



<p>the older rafts, if it's a good raft is made out of Hypalon hype. Yeah, and then the newer rafts are PVC. Really? Okay. Yeah. So But anyway, they make this boat conditioner what it does. It's kind of like sunscreen for your boat, basically. Okay, and just prolongs the life by a lot of years. And, sure. It's kind of the, the end of the season gig before you before you break everything down.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. And the plan is that during the cold season, you keep it inflated, and you just have it stacked up in a dry area to store it.</p>



<p>That's That's the idea. If you're gonna be serious about having a boat, I suggest investing in kind of somewhere to keep it, I suppose. I don't know. If you're any serious boater? What was that?</p>



<p>Oh, I was just gonna say if you would invest in somebody to keep it.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, absolutely. You got to figure you're gonna have a frame you're gonna have probably two maybe three sets of oars. You know, life jackets, Cam straps. Just abundance of things. And yeah, okay, for for just anybody with a single car garage. That's</p>



<p>a lot of stuff to store. Oh, yeah, it's a ton of stuff to try and put together on the ones Yeah.</p>



<p>So then you're rolling your boat and things like that. So if you can, the best way to take care of plated over the winter.</p>



<p>That's kind of a good idea to try and keep it inflated during the cold season or like, wow, get brittle. You know, I had some neighbors that I think it had like a big rubber raft that they put up out in the field. And I just let it sit there for like winter and summer and then winter and summer deflated. And you know, like whatever happens with the earth and the grass of how you know do you know like when you pull up stuff and there's like all the like little running audience and</p>



<p>this like kind of yeah also theme yeah it's crazy yeah</p>



<p>and it was just crazy to see like this really nice Raph just go to like nothing and just kind of be just become compost over over 24 months or something. That's pretty crazy. I'm upset with those people I know. Well, okay, so I was wanting to ask you about this where do you go about sourcing all the other materials? So there's the raft itself that you can get, but then there's the frame and then like everything else like you would you go through it like a lot of the Outfitters they buy a lot of their stuff from like, NRS. Yeah. And then they, at least in Southern Oregon, right, everybody's pretty pretty well hooked on sotah rafs. Uh-huh. Now is that like, pretty common? West Coast wide or so? Tara? Like a smaller company? No, no. So Tara is known worldwide. That's what I thought and seen. And everybody likes some time deal. Yeah, hit set a time but they're in Maryland, right?</p>



<p>Yeah, they're right out of Merlin, Oregon. That's outrageous. That they say so tar stands for? Well, a bunch of different people argue that A stands for different things. But what so tar is an acronym for is a state of the art rafts. And okay, so they do they produce rafts, and they do a lot of dry boxes and camping cookware and there. And then they're also just kind of a retailer for for NRS stuff. Also, I've noticed that before in the past, yes. out of there stuff in there. Yeah, you can go on there and buy your life jacket and tacos, or tivos is the way to go. Man. But yeah. If you're like me, man, okay, so. So your like little $5,000 raft can easily turn into a $20,000 raft if you're buying everything new.</p>



<p>Oh, really? Yeah. You know, from NRS. Or so far? Well, yeah. This So type page earlier. And I saw it listed. I wrote it down. It was for an 18 foot RAF, one of those purple ones. Oh, 70 $800.</p>



<p>And that's just the raft. Just through after? Yep. That's not the friend. That's crazy. Nobody runs steel frames anymore. Unless you acquired it somehow or built it yourself. Oh, everything's aluminum now. Yeah. And that's all powder coated. For a frame, you're probably looking. Honestly. 2500 for a good frame. Really? Wow. Yeah. And then your oarlocks are, you know, 60 bucks apiece. Because they don't come as a pair. You buy him separate? Well, then you start getting into orders. You're probably looking at 400 bucks for a nice set of orders. Yeah, I'd say that. That's kind of on the low end to like, Yeah, I got mine. Yes, order makes great. Great orders. Is that Yeah, I</p>



<p>remember seeing those at a few of the places. And I remember like, just like the blade was just an insane amount of money.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, so a blade itself is like 120 550 bucks. Wow, retail. And then you start getting into your composite shafts and stuff like that. And yeah, man, it becomes really expensive. I got my set of nine and a half footers for I want to say 495. And I got like, because they had been used once on a river trip. So they kind of had some scratches on the blades. And because I was an outfitter, I got like, you know, 30% knocked off. So I mean that. Yeah, so I got a screaming deal. And,</p>



<p>and it's still, it's still fine. Yeah. Well, so I wanted to ask you that too. How do people kind of find their way into to doing rafting or doing stuff on the river. I mean, for us, like we kind of grew up in Southern Oregon. And even still, I wouldn't say I'm an avid rafter I'd gone like the times that we did, or I'd done like small-time rentals, but like, it's the people that like yourself, like worked as a guide for a while and then they do something else. And then they come back to the river. They want to do more outfitting or, you</p>



<p>know, it's it's a variety of different things that happens. You know, some people you know, they do the guiding thing for a little bit, they get involved somehow and then they, you know, come back to it or they grew up with somebody that had a boat, maybe their dad had a boat with their kid, they got you some time in on the sticks. It's like, it's like anything, though, that you pursue, you always find a way. You know, when I started playing guitar, you just start associating with the people that are doing what you want to do. And so you start as a guitar player, you start looking for other guitar players and you pick their brains and seek answers and help</p>



<p>Yeah, well, yeah, I was yes about that. Because I mean, I know I'd spent like, a couple summers down there on the Rogue River too. And you'd watch how those chips go by. But I was always wondering, like, Where are these people getting their expertise to do this, I mean, it's kind of like a technical level of skill to operate, especially like the lower road, or some of these, these private trips that would come through and they get the shuttle to, like, go to the other side, and they like rent out. They ran out all their equipment from from the outfitter that I worked at, and then they'd go down, but you just think like, what is this guy's past? Like, how did this guy jump into it? Was he like, 20? When he got into rafting was he 30 or something like is just something he did when he's a kid started a long time ago that was kind of passed down by generations, like what you're talking about? It seems like it almost has to be connected a little bit like that. Maybe like hunting, like what we talked about a few episodes back, but it seems like recreational activity seems like you have to be sort of brought into it a little bit when you're younger. at a stage like,</p>



<p>Ah, you know, I, I would argue I mean, oh, yeah. Well, yeah, I would I mean, those I mean, I would say majority of people probably do start that way. But I, I mean, I'm a perfect example of it. I had, I had never rode a boat until I started guiding. So it was just, it was something I wanted to do. Yeah, but you're 23. Right. or joy, you know, but but i i don't understand. Definitely. Yeah. But I mean, but it's, you know, you can also be 50 and just say, you know, make a friend with a boat and just say, hey, teach me the way. Yeah, yeah.</p>



<p>I bet there's a lot of rivers that you could grow, rub pretty well. But I was always surprised just like the magnet like the the number of people that would come through that were travellish mother as it comes through for their summer vacations. And they'd like set up and book a trip, like a private trip for themselves to go to the lower road or for themselves to spend a couple days on the on the river. That was kind of cool. It was interesting. It seems like it'd be fun to jump out like some other part of the country. Have you thought about that? Robert, like other rivers and other parts of the country, maybe up and down the West Coast? That'd be cool. I'd always wondered about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so a lot of there's a variety of good rivers you could go to. There's the the Umpqua which is out of Roseburg. So still kind of Southern Oregon area. Yeah. Okay. That's, that's got a couple technical runs on it. And you know, you'd want a smaller boat for that. But you can also cruise up to the john day. There's the Hawaii there. And this is just an Oregon. Yeah.</p>



<p>Well, what are the sign after rivers? Alright, it seems like, Robert, you should correct me because you've had some experience some years down on the Rogue River when I was in the office. And when I was around, like the section doing support stuff for the river chips, like I was for a few years working as a photographer, you'd, you'd seen you talk to people, and they were kind of seeking out the Rogue River is like a destination outside of like, General tourism stuff. And it seemed like that was kind of the case without they're booking trips, with larger groups for the downriver trips, for a few days, or for the private ships that would go out to the lodges. And yeah, so I was wondering, like, well, like maybe in a list of priority, like where does a Rogue River rank? as like a destination number for people to go to?</p>



<p>surprisingly high? It seems like it would be Yeah, so it's, it's a world class River. It may not seem like it just because we brought up near it, but it really is. So it's I mean, it starts at the crater lake, you've got the gourd. You've got the lower road that everybody knows about. And then also it was one of the eight rivers instilled in the the national rivers act where they were the protected zone where they put it into Wild and Scenic. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. So when they did the protection act on on, I forget what the other ones are. But is that was one of the eight. No, no, it was. Wow. So they did eight of them in the row was one of them. Oh, wow. So that was a part of it. It's got cinematic history. Sure. You know, john Wayne films, river wild, you know, few other TV shows and stuff. In a lot of those things, it's kind of made a name for itself over the years. And then also, it was I mean, historically, it's where the where the Indian Wars, the 1850s were going on. It has a rich mining history. I mean, so the history is rich.</p>



<p>Yeah. It's definitely there's a lot of mining history back there. A lot of Indian history back there that I'd heard about. Yeah. And it seems like over probably the last 1520 years, seems like the tourism part of sport rafting. And like sport tourism through that areas kind of increase a little bit. I don't know if the numbers reflected in the same way, but it seems like in general, the whole, like the national trend of people going to Rei seems up. Does that make sense? A little bit?</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I absolutely. I think a lot of that is just this, this younger generation. You know, are you look at our parents generation, the baby boomers, and they were, you know, really career-oriented and things like that. Sure. And to be fair, they set our generation up pretty decent, as far as having enough free time to go recreate a little more frequently than they were able to. Yeah. And I think that's, that's where I think a lot of that comes from, and as a result, we've just seen a lot more people recreating in different ways in shopping at places like Rei and things like that.</p>



<p>Yeah, I've seen it a lot to it seems like the promotion of the level lifestyle, the recreational lifestyles, has increased a lot in the last like five years in the last 10 years, it seems like it's up, you know, from from 2005 to 2010 to 2015 2017. Now, like what it is, stress? It seems like it's kind of ramping ramping up by quite a bit. Maybe that's just been me and my involvement. No, I think. Well, yeah, it definitely doesn't mean you see, like, like the last handful of years. So the the angle of marketing that Oregon is taken as being sort of this Pacific Northwest Wonderland. environment where I think really, that's just the marketing department of travel Oregon, really trying to push like tourism dates. In the Northwest. It's kind of interesting.</p>



<p>Absolutely. And a big, big component that was his wine culture kind of blowing up in this area as well. Oh, yeah. The wine culture. Yeah, that's been a that's created a huge spark as far as tourism goes, because now everybody's going Wait, I can go do a legitimate wine tour. And still go whitewater rafting. You know, I don't have to go to Napa to go do wine. Yeah. You know, I</p>



<p>watched a rash the Russian River down there, man. Yeah, I don't know what that one is. But Sacramento River? Yeah, but yeah, it's probably it's, I'm sure there's a lot of fun opportunities up here. You know, you should tell me, Robert, I remember cuz you probably interacted with more guests than I ever did. But when I was interacting with guests, it was kind of interesting to see the cycles throughout the summertime. Because you would see a lot of people coming in from just different areas, like from Illinois, and they'd be on a six week vacation where they started in Southern California. And they were on their way up north or some reverse of that, where this was just a stop, and a whole number of different things and places that they were going to go to so the day before they were in the red was the day before that they were in San Francisco, you know, and so forth, like a road trip would go. But it was interesting to hear about that. I was wondering if you had heard or had experienced the same kind of thing with the people that were kind of interacting with the river?</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I have a ton of experience with that. I'm sorry, I just said no, I just, I always say, ya know, when I started stuff, and I just catch it, sometimes it makes me laugh.</p>



<p>Anyway, anyway, people coming up, it kind of depends on the type of trip you're running. So if I'm running a day trip, I'm gonna get a lot of people that are a three week vacation, kids are on summer break, or they're retired and they got the RV or something like that. That's where I get a lot of that, you know, the redwoods, the morrow that type of deal. Running the multi day trips, you get people that are a little more serious, like they've been planning this for the last year and a half. They saved money, they got everybody together. And then this is their trip. So a lot of times we get those people are flying in for their trip. A lot</p>



<p>of those I've ever seen that where it was like for chiropractors and their wives or going on a rafting trip. And it was this it was very well planned out structured. Everybody's paid in advance, like back in March. It's interesting. And that was you know, I wanted to get into that with you to a little bit of like, the the shows that you went to, I think what did you say you went to one in Colorado? And then one in Las Vegas? Yeah. Yeah. I was interested in that because that was the that's like the other side of it. Like where they're trying to like book some of those chips. In the book. I'm like a year out. Or I remember like the book even like, two years out sometimes.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. No, we were booking two years out when I was on these trips. Wow.</p>



<p>Yeah, I remember that a road wilderness when I was working with them, you know, they'd have they'd have weekends set up for people already. Yeah, I have a chips for guided chips and they just have that stuff already scheduled out.</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, if you're if you're waiting until summertime to try to book a rafting trip. It's just it's probably not gonna happen unless there's a cancellation, but At that point, you're kind of at the mercy of the dates available. Absolutely. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. It seems like everyone had had their their things already sorted out. And just everybody had their equipment set up. Everybody had their, their bookings, their flights. All that was well, well made in advance of that, especially for travelers, you know, especially for that. But first local people, it seems like it's a lot easier. Yeah, it's been cool. But so you were talking about? Well, I was just trying to figure out about, like, the NRS. equipment, the cost, you were saying that's what lives up to like, the $20,000 range pretty quickly, like when you're equipping about, and it was, yeah, interested in that, like, just different things you'd seen or different ideas you had when you were trying to price out and set up your own? Like you. you purchased us, right?</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's the way to do it, in my opinion, is, is understand the equipment, make sure you're not getting hustled by somebody. Yeah. But, um, but yeah, just just scope around man. Craigslist is such a helpful tool, like it really has, you're serious about buying something. It's just look every single day, you know, when you get home from work, just scan, like, you know, every day, I would just type in rafts and I that page, phone all the time, and it's just, you know, on my lunch break, click through the rest, and eventually, something's gonna pop up. I got my whole I got my raft just from association of the company, there was a raft that they came came upon. And then we're getting rid of and I just happened to Yeah. And I spent $600 on it, rather than, you know, 6000 then but then I found I found my nice aluminum frame which is really a great frame. I found that on Craigslist for 100 I mean, it took it took like an hour of modifying and it's not like I'm I'm an experienced you know, I yeah. Run that by one more time. It was how much for the frame. Yeah, it was 150 bucks. I mean, super minimal customization, when I got home</p>



<p>to get it to fit the way I wanted it to and it's been a great frame, and I'll keep that frame forever. That's really cool. It seems like a great opportunity to get one for for a lower cost.</p>



<p>Yeah, and that's the thing too is it just it all depends on how serious you are if you have the money and you want the Ferrari of the water you want to just like be decked outlook good just scooped out and ditching that and you know go buy new and do all that stuff. But if you just want to get on the water and not break bank look used</p>



<p>Yeah, I think they used to have sounds great. So what would you say to set up for fishing a little bit more? like would you still go with a raft?</p>



<p>Yeah, it's funny you say that. It's kind of a point of debate between fishermen and rafters. Anybody that's been fishing for a long time and Roza drift boat will typically argue that you need to have a drift boat for fishing for practical reasons and just for tradition as well. There's kind of a pride factor that comes with growing the drift boat it that just kind of encompasses the culture of fishing</p>



<p>I absolutely see that I think that makes a lot of sense again Yeah. Yeah. from seeing the other drift boat like fisherman and drift boat guides that have moved through the river it's interesting to watch what they're able to do and I can see where it's a point of pride</p>



<p>it's it's in you know the practicality level of it is you can hold a drift boat in a spot while people fish a lot longer shoot in a raft a lot less surface area for drag</p>



<p>right a lot less work a lot less drag a lot less</p>



<p>but then also that the fishing and tends to be more Zen and kind of peaceful and one with the river nature. I was thinking it was a more intense experience. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. It kind of provides a more intimate experience if if you can understand that I guess. But yeah, and then also I mean it with a raft you got tissue hooks and knives and things like that going on. You start thinking about the logistics of that. Yeah, just not really a great idea.</p>



<p>Yeah, I understand that, but when you guys do, what do you guys do any fishing off the off the back of the raft in the summertime when you're fishing with trips or with groups? Or is that like just for the fishing trips?</p>



<p>Um, you know, we we typically will let people bring fishing rods and stuff, but we'll let them fish out at Camp rather than the boats. Typically, there's, you know, five other people in the boat with them. Right? So somebody getting hooked or</p>



<p>to drop them back to throw a cast and exactly Tommy right in the face. Yeah. Well, Trump Yeah, I run a rod off the back of my boat. Well,</p>



<p>I remember that when were Yeah, he had. He were kind of trolling for. Yeah, for some bites, which is a good time. It's fine.</p>



<p>I'm in the I'm in the gear boat. So I kind of make my own. Make your own rules back then. Exactly. Exactly. unless anybody that I work with isn't this and that I follow totally, by the rule, follow all the rules out there. That's what I do on</p>



<p>the high seas of the Rogue River. No, it's cool is a cool experience. You know, I really appreciate the time that I had done down on the river, like working on a river, if anybody else has had that type of that type of experience. And being a guide or being like support. I had a really cool time. Well, I think support like you were talking about like chucking rafts up onto a trailer, that job would suck. But my job was pretty cake. It was just like, it was just photos, I just drive down in the morning. And like, you'd watch everybody get in, you photograph them in one spot, then you drive down ahead of them, you wait. And then you kind of like timeout and you could you could run stuff by clockwork really like of when people were going to go by when you could get photographed. But yeah, I would use interesting you just get so used to that rhythm of what people are doing or like what the little time is for for people moving down the river. And is interesting getting used to that for ourselves too. Like when when you and I were like our bigger group would go on raft trips. And we just ran a raft and the days we weren't working, pick up and then put in from hogs Creek, take a lease as to how you can kind of get to that point, like what you did, I'm sure after what, like a week or something, you know, and probably to every other part of the lower road to where you get kind of well-paced on that day of work on the river. So that was a cool part of</p>



<p>Well, that's that's kind of like the art of it. So I mean, our job right is to to, to keep a pace and a schedule, but still make it feel like you're on vacation show. Yeah, the idea is like, we still need to be at these places at these times. But that's kind of the fun in difficult balance. And not everybody can do that. You know, of keeping people on schedule without rushing them or stressing them out and still giving them a good time. Yeah, yeah. Yeah,</p>



<p>I can see that a lot. I know it's a specific personality type that seems to be pulled in to work as a guide, or you know, work in that kind of a field I don't know if you've noticed that too. It's like the the personality types of people that self select to become guide Oh, or to work at downriver industry.</p>



<p>It's, it's so funny. Yeah, it's everybody's got pretty much the same. The same personality deep down, and it's not all it's not always as chipper and fun as we make you believe. Yeah, I've seen there's also the salty end.</p>



<p>Yeah, there's a salty end of that. Sometimes. I remember hanging out with a few of those guys after hours after work. And they get down with a thing and we'd go, you know, just burn down. Merlin. There's like one bar is that the Rome ours? Have you been down there? like yeah, I've never been in Rome. ours. Oh my gosh, I go to ball deenis Ah, but the highlight for Merlin out there. That's it, man. Yeah, yeah, those guys can be troublemakers though. It turns out, but it's fun to their their lively group is kind of cool.</p>



<p>Oh, man, I love hanging out with those guys. It's if anybody gets you the way you want to be understood. It's definitely river guides for me anyway.</p>



<p>I've had a good time with it, man. It's cool. Yeah, it's It was a fun time being down there. And I was I had a great time. I mean, it's just there's no cooler place to work, right? Or till I get to hang out for a while just being down on the river. It's what I appreciated the most. It was fun. I remember working like every single day of August and like almost every single day of July. It was just like super packed and then right up till Labor Day. And boom, it's done. It was weird at that part of the season work. At least my part of it right of doing photos doing it in that section. But yeah, as soon as school starts, remember, like, died off completely for that upper section.</p>



<p>Yeah. And it does that in the in the canyon, too. You're working. And it's crazy because you're working back to back to back to back trips all summer long from the springtime. And it seems like as soon as Memorial Day hits, you're just like out of a job. Yeah, you know, it was just like, everything just stopped. Go back to your life. No, no, it's it's so sudden that you don't even it takes you a while to adjust that of that.</p>



<p>It was really tough. Well, the first year it was great because I was a college student. I think the first two years I was a college student. So it was like the summer job. I'd come home from college. And then I'd work on the river. doing that, like every day of the summer break and then right you know, as soon as it would stop, that's right at the time I needed to move back up and started stuff for that next year. And so that worked out really well and then the last bit of it is when is when I did stuff to go on those trips, right? Like, when I finished up college, I worked like all the time that summer to save up money. And then as soon as that stopped, I took off. And and I went into work, or like I went into working on those long like 50 day road trips that I did wear like a went down river or not downriver, but I went out to like, well, Robin just dropped off the line there. I should just notice sorry for being a little distracted for a second. But to wrap up, I guess everything we were talking about. What I did is we finished up a ton of the photography that we're doing on the Rogue River, like supporting all those day trips those downriver chips. And then I took all that money that I saved up to do those long road trips of camping and traveling and backpacking and stuff in the fall. And that's after I finished up college, which was a super awesome ability to afford that, like during that year of your life when you're flexible, and you get to do that kind of stuff. It was super fun. I was really glad that I got to do it during that time. But shoot, it's too bad. Robert. Robert, wish he was here? I'm sure he does. He just dropped off the line a second ago. And he didn't, didn't pick up back when we tried to Skype him back. One of the things about doing little Skype things. Maybe I should call them or you know, try? You guys give me dial in. Robert, are you there? No, no pickup. I'm just kind of teasing them. But I guess I'll wrap up everything on the podcast. And I'm sure Robert wishes that he was here to announce that we have a Facebook page that I think we're putting together. That's what he talked about Episode 10. Right. So we had that figured out. But we have a little bit of a Facebook page going on. I think Robert is going to be working on that. I'll try and post a link to that sometime soon. But outside of that, we have everything at the Billy Newman photo calm. And I think it's at the podcast section of that page. And then you go to the get out there section. You can also search for get out there on iTunes, of course. And it seems to come up right away. It's pretty cool. Having a little podcast and I've been looking at the numbers going, it seems like that has grown a little bit. But if anybody has any questions or any interest that they'd want to listen to us talk about, or that we'd have any stories about. I mean, I guess it's a lot of what the podcast focuses on is just stories that Robert and I have about past experiences doing stuff out in the outdoors. It's kind of cool stuff. So I won't talk anymore without Robert I'm sure he wishes he was here. So what I will say is on behalf of Robert beskar at my name is Billy Newman and thank you all very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment


Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting.
How to spend 30K at SotarÂ&nbsp;and NRS.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment
]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment</p>


<p>Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting.</p>
<p>How to spend 30K at SotarÂ&nbsp;and NRS.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p>Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment</p>


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<p>Get-out-there-10-Outfitting-Raft-Equipment_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. And I'm here today with Robert Vickery. Robert, how are you doing? Hey, doing well, Billy, how you doing? Doing good, man. Thanks a lot for doing Episode 10 of the podcast. It's pretty cool. Yeah, no, I'm excited, man. What is it? What episode is it? Episode 10. Now, Episode 10. Yeah, moving into double-digit. So sets. That's a big. That's our first milestone. It's great, man. That's right. But But yeah, definitely. Daddy at the beginning, it'll be cool. I think it'd be cool to see like, what what we kind of build on or like how the show kind of grows or evolves over the next few months as we put it together a little bit more.</p>



<p>Yeah. Interesting. I like you know, the more we do it, the more it evolves. And I am kind of curious, these things. Like when you do stuff like this, whether it's any type of project, when you work with somebody, it always evolves in some different way that reflects personalities. And it's always fun.</p>



<p>Yeah, I want to grow it a bit. And I want to try and make it like a little bit unique or, you know, just so it's kind of kind of interesting to us at least. But I like it being honest. And being about like some of the cool stuff that we remember about. About our trips in the outdoor stuff that we've done. We need Intro music. Oh, yeah. No, I want to I want to work on our sound design.</p>



<p>Yeah. And again, just like Slayer.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. That's, that's the the grand outdoors sound. It's exactly what nature sounds like. A babbling brook? Sounds like Yeah. I was thinking about it. This week, I wanted to talk to you about some of the raft experience that you'd had. Yeah, on the road river, and probably how to apply a lot of that rafting experience outside of that to just other rivers and other experiences more more in general about like the equipment use of rafting and of doing like, well probably do a multi-day trips, but I was also thinking about people who are interested in doing like smaller trips. And you you, you tell me, I was thinking about it in this way of sort of like three different categories of if you were going to be like a like a bigger trip, like what you would think about for like setting up a raft chip for for like a guide company or an outfitter, what you're looking at there as a guide, or maybe like what you did to rig a raft and have it set up and like what kind of equipment that was or probably what kind of expands to or what kind of investment it is to get into that level a raft and then maybe like what it's like for someone that was going to set up a private trip. And we're trying to figure out the difference between like the the public commercial side of rafting. Yeah, what it would be like for a hobbyist like for what you did, picking up your your first draft and trailer and frame. I want to think about that a little bit. And then there's also kind of the other end to have, we use what you and I used to be of people that would like pick up a day rental, or pick up, like, you know, whatever smaller thing that they had, and there's kind of that like day trips section of it, too. So we're going to talk about those three levels of kind of getting ready or, or what's involved equipment-wise. For doing.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's, those are good topics. I like that. Um, yeah, there's there's a few different levels of it. And I guess it all comes, like how serious you are about it, how much you love being on the water. And, you know, when it comes down to it, everybody, for the most part, enjoys being on the water when it's, you know, a hot summer day or something. But it's it's constantly it's like anything you do. Oh, yeah, everything's good. Any hobby? Yeah, hobbies, man.</p>



<p>It seems like the minimum cost for a hobby is about $1,000. So it seems like I remember them, but there's different tiers to it. Because there's $1,000 hobbies, there's $10,000 hobbies, there's like 50 that, like if you want to be a racecar driver?</p>



<p>Well, let's see. I think that's the difference between a hobby and a lifestyle, though, I think that's when your hobby becomes part of your lifestyle. I so, so perfect example is, is I'm in like that $10,000 obvious thing now, but when you're voting, but it's also a huge part of my life. And I you know, I use it for my work as well as my as well as my pleasure. So yeah,</p>



<p>I mean that I think that's where really a lot of adults end up taking their hobbies eventually, to a place where it's, it's pretty serious. It's like a pretty serious component of their lifestyle. Okay, interesting. That is, but yeah, I definitely believe that that your investments probably pushed up to the $10,000 range. Amanda said about like a lot of the photography stuff that I've gotten. We've pulled up a bunch of this stuff, and we've been laying it out. And yeah, investments like way up above that range of sound. But you imagine like early on when we were getting into guitars in high school. Yeah, like if you get the half stack and a guitar, you kind of look into like the 1000 dollar range. If you're looking at like a season pass, and like a new snowboard, that's like $1,000 or so like every every hobby was like 1000 like 1000 bucks. There's kind of like a market price point around that, that amount. That's funny. I've never really looked at it, though. Right is weird. Yeah, there's just yeah, there's invisible numbers out there that seem to be the, the limits of what will pay but I paid for it every time it seems like</p>



<p>so, ya know, so I guess I'll start with like, you know, your basic basic hobbyist that just want us</p>



<p>with the family or whatever, just get on the water for a day. Your best bet for something like that. Especially if you don't have any experience with the water, you're going to get on to his rentals. You can do like guided day tours, which you know, everything's provided you guys are just out on the water doing your thing. You can get into those for about 100 bucks. I've done a few of those at a good time. Yeah, they're they're pretty fun. Um, I mean, most of the time you're gonna get a high school kid that probably from the area on their summer vacation getting ready to go to college or whatever but they're usually from the area fairly knowledgeable about the about the river they're running and and for the most part you can have a good time everybody's safe and you know all the all the work and labor-intensive ends are taken care of. So if you're not a big time water enthusiast, I would say that would be the best way to go check it out. But kind of stepping up from there you know being from the area you get a lot of people that you know own boats in the area</p>



<p>yeah that's what I was thinking about was all those have their own boats set up so that they would go down and you know, they had hardly really any any professional setup but just I mean like well we took down hundreds or you know, dozens of times during the handful of summers was just real simple stuff that we pulled from biomart</p>



<p>Yeah, exactly. And that's that's the way you get involved in it and stuff and get a you find out that you when you go to price wraps and stuff you're looking at you know, four to $5,000 just for you know an intro introduction level wrap I was looking at that</p>



<p>RAM and ores it looked pretty excited I wanted to talk about like the big time RAF prices and if you guys but yeah, I was really I was interested in that. I was surprised but I remember like the cheap like seven or sevi war tahini kayak that we'd inflated and tacos on nine bucks, man. There we go. that got us through June. At least though. We're we're going down yeah, it was great. I love doing that was like after work or something and we cruise down to down to like the Hells Canyon, put in went to go lease I think one time. It was great. It was cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, a ton of fun. Get serious about doing that you really enjoy doing that in your area where you can access this all the time. That's when you start getting into that like, I don't know, I'm gonna just call it the middle ground and say that that $5,000 Yes, problem. floors and stuff. is, um, you know, you want to bring your friends and stuff feels good about getting in a kayak. ruins a ton of fun. And you just can't pack enough beer. So all these kind of accumulate into, you know, stepping up your your water game and getting a little bit more involved.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think I think having a raft having a good rap. Well, what would you recommend for the Rogue River? So there's like, Well, probably like above a 10 foot draft. I'm sorry, I lost connection. Oh, yes. you when you were on the road, maybe even on like the day trip section. Are you? Are you running like a 16 foot boat or an 18 foot boat?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Typically, anything we do on the road is going to be 16 foot boats. We're running rubber rafts for rafting, obviously. For the little inflatable kayaks or I cases they're called right. So yeah, I mean, for that section, if it's just like you and your wife and the dog or something like for somebody that's not a serious multi day rafter, I would suggest getting into like a 14 foot boat. A 14 foot boat is perfect. You can put the cooler in there. Yeah, you can put two to three people in there and have a great day. The only problem with that is if you start getting into multi day trips, the amount of gear you start bringing adds up really, really quick, and a lot of times you can't accommodate your equipment. The people in the boat.</p>



<p>Yeah, okay. Yeah. Was that about the size of a town? There's dad's boat that we'd see go down on the river. Yeah, yeah. Did you say Tyler? Yeah, Tyler's dad. Yeah, I was wondering if that was about the size of his boat setup. I thinking about him and yeah, yeah, okay.</p>



<p>Okay. He's got like a late 80s. So tar wrap. That thing's awesome. It's like a second collectible man. That thing's one of the originals. Yeah, but he had a he had a self bailing floor put into it. Then all that stuff, but yeah, that's that's like the perfect size for like those weekend trips that you just want to do. Right? You know, on a Saturday, it's 100 degrees. I was good at the river. That's perfect.</p>



<p>That sounds really cool. Yeah, it seems to be the best setup for it. And so what was what was the size of raft that you got? Like, was it two years ago that you bought your own raft?</p>



<p>I got a 16 foot, just because the 14 ended up being too small for because that's typically what I do, or the multi day trips. And that's, that's the problem you end up with a lot of times as you just can't fit your gear in a 14 foot boat. Okay, and still put two people in there. And that's why you just was 16 Yeah, it's just a little more breathing room. I just think it's more comfortable. Far, far better experience. I had a great time. I had a good experience and you about I think, yeah, works really well. So funny. Oh, good.</p>



<p>Oh, I was gonna ask about, about like, the lifespan of boats are about like maintenance and about, like how old your boat is? How long you expect to keep a raft on the river.</p>



<p>Man, you can keep it okay. It's like any good equipment you buy for any form of outdoor recreation. It's all in how you take care of it. Um, I, you know, everybody wants to get a boat. And I really kind of downplay it for a lot of people unless they're serious about maintenance, and upkeep and storage and things like that. It's, there's a lot that goes into it. You know, if you're going to store it over the winter, try not to roll it keep it inflated. Those rolls become creases, and then become weak.</p>



<p>I've seen PVC. Yeah, I've seen where it becomes weak. I've had I've had a dry bag that I put in the closet, you know, six or seven years old. But when I pull it out, yeah, where it increased and it's sad. It got brittle and it cracked. They're just as bad as weird. Yeah, weird to see it. But. But it's interesting, though, like when it's deflated. That's when that's when you get creases. And that's when you get the extreme amount of weathering.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's not weathering. I mean, you got to figure these things out in the sun all the time. Another thing you got to do is they make a boat conditioner, and it's called like 303, I think, but it's like that terrible band. Hey, remember those guys? Of course. Yeah.</p>



<p>There's I get but you you put it on is a polypropylene or what was it? With Cheerio that those that the wraps are made out of</p>



<p>the older rafts, if it's a good raft is made out of Hypalon hype. Yeah, and then the newer rafts are PVC. Really? Okay. Yeah. So But anyway, they make this boat conditioner what it does. It's kind of like sunscreen for your boat, basically. Okay, and just prolongs the life by a lot of years. And, sure. It's kind of the, the end of the season gig before you before you break everything down.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. And the plan is that during the cold season, you keep it inflated, and you just have it stacked up in a dry area to store it.</p>



<p>That's That's the idea. If you're gonna be serious about having a boat, I suggest investing in kind of somewhere to keep it, I suppose. I don't know. If you're any serious boater? What was that?</p>



<p>Oh, I was just gonna say if you would invest in somebody to keep it.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, absolutely. You got to figure you're gonna have a frame you're gonna have probably two maybe three sets of oars. You know, life jackets, Cam straps. Just abundance of things. And yeah, okay, for for just anybody with a single car garage. That's</p>



<p>a lot of stuff to store. Oh, yeah, it's a ton of stuff to try and put together on the ones Yeah.</p>



<p>So then you're rolling your boat and things like that. So if you can, the best way to take care of plated over the winter.</p>



<p>That's kind of a good idea to try and keep it inflated during the cold season or like, wow, get brittle. You know, I had some neighbors that I think it had like a big rubber raft that they put up out in the field. And I just let it sit there for like winter and summer and then winter and summer deflated. And you know, like whatever happens with the earth and the grass of how you know do you know like when you pull up stuff and there's like all the like little running audience and</p>



<p>this like kind of yeah also theme yeah it's crazy yeah</p>



<p>and it was just crazy to see like this really nice Raph just go to like nothing and just kind of be just become compost over over 24 months or something. That's pretty crazy. I'm upset with those people I know. Well, okay, so I was wanting to ask you about this where do you go about sourcing all the other materials? So there's the raft itself that you can get, but then there's the frame and then like everything else like you would you go through it like a lot of the Outfitters they buy a lot of their stuff from like, NRS. Yeah. And then they, at least in Southern Oregon, right, everybody's pretty pretty well hooked on sotah rafs. Uh-huh. Now is that like, pretty common? West Coast wide or so? Tara? Like a smaller company? No, no. So Tara is known worldwide. That's what I thought and seen. And everybody likes some time deal. Yeah, hit set a time but they're in Maryland, right?</p>



<p>Yeah, they're right out of Merlin, Oregon. That's outrageous. That they say so tar stands for? Well, a bunch of different people argue that A stands for different things. But what so tar is an acronym for is a state of the art rafts. And okay, so they do they produce rafts, and they do a lot of dry boxes and camping cookware and there. And then they're also just kind of a retailer for for NRS stuff. Also, I've noticed that before in the past, yes. out of there stuff in there. Yeah, you can go on there and buy your life jacket and tacos, or tivos is the way to go. Man. But yeah. If you're like me, man, okay, so. So your like little $5,000 raft can easily turn into a $20,000 raft if you're buying everything new.</p>



<p>Oh, really? Yeah. You know, from NRS. Or so far? Well, yeah. This So type page earlier. And I saw it listed. I wrote it down. It was for an 18 foot RAF, one of those purple ones. Oh, 70 $800.</p>



<p>And that's just the raft. Just through after? Yep. That's not the friend. That's crazy. Nobody runs steel frames anymore. Unless you acquired it somehow or built it yourself. Oh, everything's aluminum now. Yeah. And that's all powder coated. For a frame, you're probably looking. Honestly. 2500 for a good frame. Really? Wow. Yeah. And then your oarlocks are, you know, 60 bucks apiece. Because they don't come as a pair. You buy him separate? Well, then you start getting into orders. You're probably looking at 400 bucks for a nice set of orders. Yeah, I'd say that. That's kind of on the low end to like, Yeah, I got mine. Yes, order makes great. Great orders. Is that Yeah, I</p>



<p>remember seeing those at a few of the places. And I remember like, just like the blade was just an insane amount of money.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, so a blade itself is like 120 550 bucks. Wow, retail. And then you start getting into your composite shafts and stuff like that. And yeah, man, it becomes really expensive. I got my set of nine and a half footers for I want to say 495. And I got like, because they had been used once on a river trip. So they kind of had some scratches on the blades. And because I was an outfitter, I got like, you know, 30% knocked off. So I mean that. Yeah, so I got a screaming deal. And,</p>



<p>and it's still, it's still fine. Yeah. Well, so I wanted to ask you that too. How do people kind of find their way into to doing rafting or doing stuff on the river. I mean, for us, like we kind of grew up in Southern Oregon. And even still, I wouldn't say I'm an avid rafter I'd gone like the times that we did, or I'd done like small-time rentals, but like, it's the people that like yourself, like worked as a guide for a while and then they do something else. And then they come back to the river. They want to do more outfitting or, you</p>



<p>know, it's it's a variety of different things that happens. You know, some people you know, they do the guiding thing for a little bit, they get involved somehow and then they, you know, come back to it or they grew up with somebody that had a boat, maybe their dad had a boat with their kid, they got you some time in on the sticks. It's like, it's like anything, though, that you pursue, you always find a way. You know, when I started playing guitar, you just start associating with the people that are doing what you want to do. And so you start as a guitar player, you start looking for other guitar players and you pick their brains and seek answers and help</p>



<p>Yeah, well, yeah, I was yes about that. Because I mean, I know I'd spent like, a couple summers down there on the Rogue River too. And you'd watch how those chips go by. But I was always wondering, like, Where are these people getting their expertise to do this, I mean, it's kind of like a technical level of skill to operate, especially like the lower road, or some of these, these private trips that would come through and they get the shuttle to, like, go to the other side, and they like rent out. They ran out all their equipment from from the outfitter that I worked at, and then they'd go down, but you just think like, what is this guy's past? Like, how did this guy jump into it? Was he like, 20? When he got into rafting was he 30 or something like is just something he did when he's a kid started a long time ago that was kind of passed down by generations, like what you're talking about? It seems like it almost has to be connected a little bit like that. Maybe like hunting, like what we talked about a few episodes back, but it seems like recreational activity seems like you have to be sort of brought into it a little bit when you're younger. at a stage like,</p>



<p>Ah, you know, I, I would argue I mean, oh, yeah. Well, yeah, I would I mean, those I mean, I would say majority of people probably do start that way. But I, I mean, I'm a perfect example of it. I had, I had never rode a boat until I started guiding. So it was just, it was something I wanted to do. Yeah, but you're 23. Right. or joy, you know, but but i i don't understand. Definitely. Yeah. But I mean, but it's, you know, you can also be 50 and just say, you know, make a friend with a boat and just say, hey, teach me the way. Yeah, yeah.</p>



<p>I bet there's a lot of rivers that you could grow, rub pretty well. But I was always surprised just like the magnet like the the number of people that would come through that were travellish mother as it comes through for their summer vacations. And they'd like set up and book a trip, like a private trip for themselves to go to the lower road or for themselves to spend a couple days on the on the river. That was kind of cool. It was interesting. It seems like it'd be fun to jump out like some other part of the country. Have you thought about that? Robert, like other rivers and other parts of the country, maybe up and down the West Coast? That'd be cool. I'd always wondered about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so a lot of there's a variety of good rivers you could go to. There's the the Umpqua which is out of Roseburg. So still kind of Southern Oregon area. Yeah. Okay. That's, that's got a couple technical runs on it. And you know, you'd want a smaller boat for that. But you can also cruise up to the john day. There's the Hawaii there. And this is just an Oregon. Yeah.</p>



<p>Well, what are the sign after rivers? Alright, it seems like, Robert, you should correct me because you've had some experience some years down on the Rogue River when I was in the office. And when I was around, like the section doing support stuff for the river chips, like I was for a few years working as a photographer, you'd, you'd seen you talk to people, and they were kind of seeking out the Rogue River is like a destination outside of like, General tourism stuff. And it seemed like that was kind of the case without they're booking trips, with larger groups for the downriver trips, for a few days, or for the private ships that would go out to the lodges. And yeah, so I was wondering, like, well, like maybe in a list of priority, like where does a Rogue River rank? as like a destination number for people to go to?</p>



<p>surprisingly high? It seems like it would be Yeah, so it's, it's a world class River. It may not seem like it just because we brought up near it, but it really is. So it's I mean, it starts at the crater lake, you've got the gourd. You've got the lower road that everybody knows about. And then also it was one of the eight rivers instilled in the the national rivers act where they were the protected zone where they put it into Wild and Scenic. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. So when they did the protection act on on, I forget what the other ones are. But is that was one of the eight. No, no, it was. Wow. So they did eight of them in the row was one of them. Oh, wow. So that was a part of it. It's got cinematic history. Sure. You know, john Wayne films, river wild, you know, few other TV shows and stuff. In a lot of those things, it's kind of made a name for itself over the years. And then also, it was I mean, historically, it's where the where the Indian Wars, the 1850s were going on. It has a rich mining history. I mean, so the history is rich.</p>



<p>Yeah. It's definitely there's a lot of mining history back there. A lot of Indian history back there that I'd heard about. Yeah. And it seems like over probably the last 1520 years, seems like the tourism part of sport rafting. And like sport tourism through that areas kind of increase a little bit. I don't know if the numbers reflected in the same way, but it seems like in general, the whole, like the national trend of people going to Rei seems up. Does that make sense? A little bit?</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I absolutely. I think a lot of that is just this, this younger generation. You know, are you look at our parents generation, the baby boomers, and they were, you know, really career-oriented and things like that. Sure. And to be fair, they set our generation up pretty decent, as far as having enough free time to go recreate a little more frequently than they were able to. Yeah. And I think that's, that's where I think a lot of that comes from, and as a result, we've just seen a lot more people recreating in different ways in shopping at places like Rei and things like that.</p>



<p>Yeah, I've seen it a lot to it seems like the promotion of the level lifestyle, the recreational lifestyles, has increased a lot in the last like five years in the last 10 years, it seems like it's up, you know, from from 2005 to 2010 to 2015 2017. Now, like what it is, stress? It seems like it's kind of ramping ramping up by quite a bit. Maybe that's just been me and my involvement. No, I think. Well, yeah, it definitely doesn't mean you see, like, like the last handful of years. So the the angle of marketing that Oregon is taken as being sort of this Pacific Northwest Wonderland. environment where I think really, that's just the marketing department of travel Oregon, really trying to push like tourism dates. In the Northwest. It's kind of interesting.</p>



<p>Absolutely. And a big, big component that was his wine culture kind of blowing up in this area as well. Oh, yeah. The wine culture. Yeah, that's been a that's created a huge spark as far as tourism goes, because now everybody's going Wait, I can go do a legitimate wine tour. And still go whitewater rafting. You know, I don't have to go to Napa to go do wine. Yeah. You know, I</p>



<p>watched a rash the Russian River down there, man. Yeah, I don't know what that one is. But Sacramento River? Yeah, but yeah, it's probably it's, I'm sure there's a lot of fun opportunities up here. You know, you should tell me, Robert, I remember cuz you probably interacted with more guests than I ever did. But when I was interacting with guests, it was kind of interesting to see the cycles throughout the summertime. Because you would see a lot of people coming in from just different areas, like from Illinois, and they'd be on a six week vacation where they started in Southern California. And they were on their way up north or some reverse of that, where this was just a stop, and a whole number of different things and places that they were going to go to so the day before they were in the red was the day before that they were in San Francisco, you know, and so forth, like a road trip would go. But it was interesting to hear about that. I was wondering if you had heard or had experienced the same kind of thing with the people that were kind of interacting with the river?</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I have a ton of experience with that. I'm sorry, I just said no, I just, I always say, ya know, when I started stuff, and I just catch it, sometimes it makes me laugh.</p>



<p>Anyway, anyway, people coming up, it kind of depends on the type of trip you're running. So if I'm running a day trip, I'm gonna get a lot of people that are a three week vacation, kids are on summer break, or they're retired and they got the RV or something like that. That's where I get a lot of that, you know, the redwoods, the morrow that type of deal. Running the multi day trips, you get people that are a little more serious, like they've been planning this for the last year and a half. They saved money, they got everybody together. And then this is their trip. So a lot of times we get those people are flying in for their trip. A lot</p>



<p>of those I've ever seen that where it was like for chiropractors and their wives or going on a rafting trip. And it was this it was very well planned out structured. Everybody's paid in advance, like back in March. It's interesting. And that was you know, I wanted to get into that with you to a little bit of like, the the shows that you went to, I think what did you say you went to one in Colorado? And then one in Las Vegas? Yeah. Yeah. I was interested in that because that was the that's like the other side of it. Like where they're trying to like book some of those chips. In the book. I'm like a year out. Or I remember like the book even like, two years out sometimes.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. No, we were booking two years out when I was on these trips. Wow.</p>



<p>Yeah, I remember that a road wilderness when I was working with them, you know, they'd have they'd have weekends set up for people already. Yeah, I have a chips for guided chips and they just have that stuff already scheduled out.</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, if you're if you're waiting until summertime to try to book a rafting trip. It's just it's probably not gonna happen unless there's a cancellation, but At that point, you're kind of at the mercy of the dates available. Absolutely. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. It seems like everyone had had their their things already sorted out. And just everybody had their equipment set up. Everybody had their, their bookings, their flights. All that was well, well made in advance of that, especially for travelers, you know, especially for that. But first local people, it seems like it's a lot easier. Yeah, it's been cool. But so you were talking about? Well, I was just trying to figure out about, like, the NRS. equipment, the cost, you were saying that's what lives up to like, the $20,000 range pretty quickly, like when you're equipping about, and it was, yeah, interested in that, like, just different things you'd seen or different ideas you had when you were trying to price out and set up your own? Like you. you purchased us, right?</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's the way to do it, in my opinion, is, is understand the equipment, make sure you're not getting hustled by somebody. Yeah. But, um, but yeah, just just scope around man. Craigslist is such a helpful tool, like it really has, you're serious about buying something. It's just look every single day, you know, when you get home from work, just scan, like, you know, every day, I would just type in rafts and I that page, phone all the time, and it's just, you know, on my lunch break, click through the rest, and eventually, something's gonna pop up. I got my whole I got my raft just from association of the company, there was a raft that they came came upon. And then we're getting rid of and I just happened to Yeah. And I spent $600 on it, rather than, you know, 6000 then but then I found I found my nice aluminum frame which is really a great frame. I found that on Craigslist for 100 I mean, it took it took like an hour of modifying and it's not like I'm I'm an experienced you know, I yeah. Run that by one more time. It was how much for the frame. Yeah, it was 150 bucks. I mean, super minimal customization, when I got home</p>



<p>to get it to fit the way I wanted it to and it's been a great frame, and I'll keep that frame forever. That's really cool. It seems like a great opportunity to get one for for a lower cost.</p>



<p>Yeah, and that's the thing too is it just it all depends on how serious you are if you have the money and you want the Ferrari of the water you want to just like be decked outlook good just scooped out and ditching that and you know go buy new and do all that stuff. But if you just want to get on the water and not break bank look used</p>



<p>Yeah, I think they used to have sounds great. So what would you say to set up for fishing a little bit more? like would you still go with a raft?</p>



<p>Yeah, it's funny you say that. It's kind of a point of debate between fishermen and rafters. Anybody that's been fishing for a long time and Roza drift boat will typically argue that you need to have a drift boat for fishing for practical reasons and just for tradition as well. There's kind of a pride factor that comes with growing the drift boat it that just kind of encompasses the culture of fishing</p>



<p>I absolutely see that I think that makes a lot of sense again Yeah. Yeah. from seeing the other drift boat like fisherman and drift boat guides that have moved through the river it's interesting to watch what they're able to do and I can see where it's a point of pride</p>



<p>it's it's in you know the practicality level of it is you can hold a drift boat in a spot while people fish a lot longer shoot in a raft a lot less surface area for drag</p>



<p>right a lot less work a lot less drag a lot less</p>



<p>but then also that the fishing and tends to be more Zen and kind of peaceful and one with the river nature. I was thinking it was a more intense experience. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. It kind of provides a more intimate experience if if you can understand that I guess. But yeah, and then also I mean it with a raft you got tissue hooks and knives and things like that going on. You start thinking about the logistics of that. Yeah, just not really a great idea.</p>



<p>Yeah, I understand that, but when you guys do, what do you guys do any fishing off the off the back of the raft in the summertime when you're fishing with trips or with groups? Or is that like just for the fishing trips?</p>



<p>Um, you know, we we typically will let people bring fishing rods and stuff, but we'll let them fish out at Camp rather than the boats. Typically, there's, you know, five other people in the boat with them. Right? So somebody getting hooked or</p>



<p>to drop them back to throw a cast and exactly Tommy right in the face. Yeah. Well, Trump Yeah, I run a rod off the back of my boat. Well,</p>



<p>I remember that when were Yeah, he had. He were kind of trolling for. Yeah, for some bites, which is a good time. It's fine.</p>



<p>I'm in the I'm in the gear boat. So I kind of make my own. Make your own rules back then. Exactly. Exactly. unless anybody that I work with isn't this and that I follow totally, by the rule, follow all the rules out there. That's what I do on</p>



<p>the high seas of the Rogue River. No, it's cool is a cool experience. You know, I really appreciate the time that I had done down on the river, like working on a river, if anybody else has had that type of that type of experience. And being a guide or being like support. I had a really cool time. Well, I think support like you were talking about like chucking rafts up onto a trailer, that job would suck. But my job was pretty cake. It was just like, it was just photos, I just drive down in the morning. And like, you'd watch everybody get in, you photograph them in one spot, then you drive down ahead of them, you wait. And then you kind of like timeout and you could you could run stuff by clockwork really like of when people were going to go by when you could get photographed. But yeah, I would use interesting you just get so used to that rhythm of what people are doing or like what the little time is for for people moving down the river. And is interesting getting used to that for ourselves too. Like when when you and I were like our bigger group would go on raft trips. And we just ran a raft and the days we weren't working, pick up and then put in from hogs Creek, take a lease as to how you can kind of get to that point, like what you did, I'm sure after what, like a week or something, you know, and probably to every other part of the lower road to where you get kind of well-paced on that day of work on the river. So that was a cool part of</p>



<p>Well, that's that's kind of like the art of it. So I mean, our job right is to to, to keep a pace and a schedule, but still make it feel like you're on vacation show. Yeah, the idea is like, we still need to be at these places at these times. But that's kind of the fun in difficult balance. And not everybody can do that. You know, of keeping people on schedule without rushing them or stressing them out and still giving them a good time. Yeah, yeah. Yeah,</p>



<p>I can see that a lot. I know it's a specific personality type that seems to be pulled in to work as a guide, or you know, work in that kind of a field I don't know if you've noticed that too. It's like the the personality types of people that self select to become guide Oh, or to work at downriver industry.</p>



<p>It's, it's so funny. Yeah, it's everybody's got pretty much the same. The same personality deep down, and it's not all it's not always as chipper and fun as we make you believe. Yeah, I've seen there's also the salty end.</p>



<p>Yeah, there's a salty end of that. Sometimes. I remember hanging out with a few of those guys after hours after work. And they get down with a thing and we'd go, you know, just burn down. Merlin. There's like one bar is that the Rome ours? Have you been down there? like yeah, I've never been in Rome. ours. Oh my gosh, I go to ball deenis Ah, but the highlight for Merlin out there. That's it, man. Yeah, yeah, those guys can be troublemakers though. It turns out, but it's fun to their their lively group is kind of cool.</p>



<p>Oh, man, I love hanging out with those guys. It's if anybody gets you the way you want to be understood. It's definitely river guides for me anyway.</p>



<p>I've had a good time with it, man. It's cool. Yeah, it's It was a fun time being down there. And I was I had a great time. I mean, it's just there's no cooler place to work, right? Or till I get to hang out for a while just being down on the river. It's what I appreciated the most. It was fun. I remember working like every single day of August and like almost every single day of July. It was just like super packed and then right up till Labor Day. And boom, it's done. It was weird at that part of the season work. At least my part of it right of doing photos doing it in that section. But yeah, as soon as school starts, remember, like, died off completely for that upper section.</p>



<p>Yeah. And it does that in the in the canyon, too. You're working. And it's crazy because you're working back to back to back to back trips all summer long from the springtime. And it seems like as soon as Memorial Day hits, you're just like out of a job. Yeah, you know, it was just like, everything just stopped. Go back to your life. No, no, it's it's so sudden that you don't even it takes you a while to adjust that of that.</p>



<p>It was really tough. Well, the first year it was great because I was a college student. I think the first two years I was a college student. So it was like the summer job. I'd come home from college. And then I'd work on the river. doing that, like every day of the summer break and then right you know, as soon as it would stop, that's right at the time I needed to move back up and started stuff for that next year. And so that worked out really well and then the last bit of it is when is when I did stuff to go on those trips, right? Like, when I finished up college, I worked like all the time that summer to save up money. And then as soon as that stopped, I took off. And and I went into work, or like I went into working on those long like 50 day road trips that I did wear like a went down river or not downriver, but I went out to like, well, Robin just dropped off the line there. I should just notice sorry for being a little distracted for a second. But to wrap up, I guess everything we were talking about. What I did is we finished up a ton of the photography that we're doing on the Rogue River, like supporting all those day trips those downriver chips. And then I took all that money that I saved up to do those long road trips of camping and traveling and backpacking and stuff in the fall. And that's after I finished up college, which was a super awesome ability to afford that, like during that year of your life when you're flexible, and you get to do that kind of stuff. It was super fun. I was really glad that I got to do it during that time. But shoot, it's too bad. Robert. Robert, wish he was here? I'm sure he does. He just dropped off the line a second ago. And he didn't, didn't pick up back when we tried to Skype him back. One of the things about doing little Skype things. Maybe I should call them or you know, try? You guys give me dial in. Robert, are you there? No, no pickup. I'm just kind of teasing them. But I guess I'll wrap up everything on the podcast. And I'm sure Robert wishes that he was here to announce that we have a Facebook page that I think we're putting together. That's what he talked about Episode 10. Right. So we had that figured out. But we have a little bit of a Facebook page going on. I think Robert is going to be working on that. I'll try and post a link to that sometime soon. But outside of that, we have everything at the Billy Newman photo calm. And I think it's at the podcast section of that page. And then you go to the get out there section. You can also search for get out there on iTunes, of course. And it seems to come up right away. It's pretty cool. Having a little podcast and I've been looking at the numbers going, it seems like that has grown a little bit. But if anybody has any questions or any interest that they'd want to listen to us talk about, or that we'd have any stories about. I mean, I guess it's a lot of what the podcast focuses on is just stories that Robert and I have about past experiences doing stuff out in the outdoors. It's kind of cool stuff. So I won't talk anymore without Robert I'm sure he wishes he was here. So what I will say is on behalf of Robert beskar at my name is Billy Newman and thank you all very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment


Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting.
How to spend 30K at SotarÂ&nbsp;and NRS.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment


If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



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Get-out-there-10-Outfitting-Raft-Equipment_otter.ai



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. And I'm here today with Robert Vickery. Robert, how are you doing? Hey, doing well, Billy, how you doing? Doing good, man. Thanks a lot for doing Episode 10 of the podcast. It's pretty cool. Yeah, no, I'm excited, man. What is it? What episode is it? Episode 10. Now, Episode 10. Yeah, moving into double-digit. So sets. That's a big. That's our first milestone. It's great, man. That's right. But But yeah, definitely. Daddy at the beginning, it'll be cool. I think it'd be cool to see like, what what we kind of build on or like how the show kind of grows or evolves over the next few months as we put it together a little bit more.



Yeah. Interesting. I like you know, the more we do it, the more it evolves. And I am kind of curious, these things. Like when you do stuff like this, whether it's any type of project, when you work with somebody, it always evolves in some different way that reflects personalities. And it's always fun.



Yeah, I want to grow it a bit. And I want to try and make it like a little bit unique or, you know, just so it's kind of kind of interesting to us at least. But I like it being honest. And being about like some of the cool stuff that we remember about. About our trips in the outdoor stuff that we've done. We need Intro music. Oh, yeah. No, I want to I want to work on our sound design.



Yeah. And again, just like Slayer.



Oh, yeah. That's, that's the the grand outdoors sound. It's exactly what nature sounds like. A babbling brook? Sounds like Yeah. I was thinking about it. This week, I wanted to talk to you about some of the raft experience that you'd had. Yeah, on the road river, and probably how to apply a lot of that rafting experience outside of that to just other rivers and other experiences more more in general about like the equipment use of rafting and of doing like, well probably do a multi-day trips, but I was also thinking about people ]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment


Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting.
How to spend 30K at SotarÂ&nbsp;and NRS.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment


If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy ]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 09 Overland Truck Travel</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-09-overland-truck-travel/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2017 04:50:10 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5452</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Overland Truck Travel</p>



<p>Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



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<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



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<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



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<p>Get-out-there-09-overland-truck-travel</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert Busker at Robert. How are you doing? Here? What's going on Billy, thanks for doing another podcast, man. It's great. episode eight. Here we are. Yeah, man. I think this is episode nine. isn't really we did that yeah, I think we're moving. Oh, you're right. You're right. Because you did that. Yeah, we got through that one last week too. Yeah, I can't really count that well, so yeah, it's hard to get the first 10 numbers and straight to man, but I but no, it's great. I'm really glad we got we got this one. Coming together again. today. It's gonna be cool. And yeah, man. What's your overtime? That's that's the first hurdle. That's it, man. so to speak. No, it's good. I'm glad that we've, we've got we've got through a handful of these. And yeah, it's fun, man. It's cool. Putting together a handful of them. But this week, I wanted to talk about some of the past truck travel stuff that we've done. And I think you're the guy who's inspired me to get a truck at first man, I got a truck gotta have a truck. Strangely, though, most most of my road trip travel has been a Camry and the old camera, man. But that camera was legendary. It was legit. It was absolutely legendary. But for today's episode, we're thinking about doing was kind of breaking down a couple of the stories in the past we had about doing some overland stuff. Some overland, like travel, if you can call it overland. I don't know. That's like a heavy word. I think that's a modern world. Right? Like this term. I've seen that around like overland where people get a lot of that. Yeah, it seems to be kind of the trendy sort of rich guy word to say for Whelan. Going but in Landrover Madden, or for four-wheel or something, you take that Overlanding overland excursion? Oh, yeah, it's always that but, but I think that's kind of a funny part of it. But I see like a ton of that stuff. I got into that, like, I got into that stuff back in 2011. Like the overland travel Have you ever seen like the magazine overland journal? Is that inactive? I think so. Yeah, I don't know. It's like sort of a niche. It's a niche category. Like this whole thing. So it's where it's like that thing. You'd never find it unless you looked for it. But it's kind of it's interesting. There's tons of stuff out there like that, but that's one of the first ones that I ran into. And that's like, that's when I had like the Camry and I was back in college and stuff and you know, that's when I first really wanted to get because I couldn't get a Landrover from the 70s I really wanted to get like a roof rack and a top box. I was I was like set on that because if I could get that that was like that was like my that was my version of making like a Camry into an overland vehicle you know cuz I'm going to get into this but I'm 20 and I've got 138 bucks so with that Yeah, but that was a part of it. So yeah, I remember setting up like like setting up the car that the roof the rooftop or the top box you know, man those are those are like super handy like and that was great on the on the camera when I had it. But that was all kind of what was yours you had like that that top box? Yeah, it was a I forget what it is now I think there's like the excursion that I had at a time and then there was like the summit model that you didn't have the overland model didn't I missed out on both of these were like oh man, they were like you know I don't know the early 90s maybe late early-mid 90s or something that's like when the plastic was produced that's when that thing was called New. And now it was just sitting on my my equally old aged car gonna go around and grab those things hold their value like crazy I picked mine up both of mine I think now three of them in total I picked three of those top boxes up oh on Craigslist was for different cars and stuff. I got a little fat one for the for the Camry I've had one for the truck and we got one from Marina CRV or what do you say the truck I mean the old Forerunner let's just get into that later too but that long one on the old foreigner so I bought like a few of them and I always bought them on us like on Craigslist or something right like yeah, and it was like new they're like five or 600 bucks to get into this cheap man yeah it's yeah super frustrating so even when they're used they're they're still floating in like for good ones or for like stuff from the 2000s that sort of the more modern clamping systems or you know when they actually made it they made it better you know where you can put it on take it on and off your car without putting together like a bunch of plates brackets made out to spend the whole afternoon doing yeah it's great cuz he would always like you know mess up you get stuck in some situation like that when you like I think one time we had to move we'd like it was you and I Robert and Scott and we had to like move that that that top box we're talking about to the Oh yeah, to the raft right and we were going on that snowboard trip so we had to like pack we had to put it on and like put like a bunch of snowboards on or something. And it was just like it was just like snow and slash and it's kind of raining you got like</p>



<p>you don't even have a headlamp you just got like a light kind crimped on your shoulder and neck. As you're kind of trying to twist this wing that back and forth to make sure that this thing's tight in the right spot. It was such a pain, man; it was so awful. So after that they made like more simple clamp systems that work better. But man, those are like still like 300 250. Like the low end range, like this. Yeah, the stuff broken. I just sold one for like, 85 that was that like a big chunk missing out of it? Oh, geez. Yeah, it's nuts. Yeah, it's like it's a gold. At least I don't know. It seems like in Eugene May. In Southern Oregon, it was a lot harder. I think I had one and never sold. But it seems like in Eugene and in Corvallis and Portland, are like, you know, where that that string of Hebrews and topsoccer? Yeah, right. exists all those, all those overlanders out there. Mm-hmm. But that was my foray into into understanding what Overlanding was because I was interested in like that overland journal. And so I'd like watch or watch the stuff that was coming out in that and it was just really all stuff, all equipment that was unattainable. But you look like the sweet trucks. And there's so many cool, like land or the land that the Toyota Land Cruisers, but they never said that they never built in America. Have you seen those? Oh, yeah, they're awesome. They're so cool. Yeah, like all the other ones that Australia got. And like South Africa, God, those are like the coolest cars ever like that you see out there. Yeah, they're so great. I would love to have Yeah, just this sweet diesel. Left hand drive. Right hand drive. Like, yeah, Land Cruiser track. Like there's the the Toyota trooper, if anybody's listening and they Google that it's like this, this crazy track that they made for the military that Toyota made for the military. That's like a troop carrier. But it's a Land Cruiser, but it's just got like a long back end. And it's kind of squared off. So you can you can fit two benches in there to load 12 guys, or whatever, whatever. psyllium is in the back. But it just looks like Oh, man, that'd be the coolest like camper. Yeah, you take that thing. It's like, so like the fJ. 40 see, like the old ones that look like the the Willys Jeep, have you seen that? Oh, yeah. That and that was kind of like the, one of the Jeep models that they look Yeah, Toyota's Japanese right. Yeah, of course they are. But I don't know where else they they sold like their equipment to for like military use. But it seemed like the F j and the Land Cruiser line is used like with them as a military vehicle all over the world. Have you seen that? Like, it's the I'm not really familiar with that? No, or not like a military vehicle, but like, like, we have a jeep. And then we have a tank, but we have the Jeep? Like they have they have the Toyota they have a Land Cruiser? Or like a Ilex, right, like your old truck. Your old pickup truck.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. I know what you're talking about. Yeah, the old pickup truck. Yes. Our 1980 it was the best part about my old one. Yeah. And so but it won't get rid of it. I still have</p>



<p>the coolest track, but I remember learning about like, Oh, it was just weird when I found out like about American nations. Where in America that's called a pickup. Like that's, that's a pickup truck. But out of the country. The truck is called a Hi Alex. I need to see that. Yeah, yeah, the international version. The International name for the pickup was the Toyota Hilux. And it's like, it's got that like emblem in it. Yeah. So they'd sell these Toyota pickup trucks like Saudi Arabia or like ISIS, man, like, okay, so yeah, like all the ice like the footage from ISIS. That's like, why are they all in these like us? Toyota's best known across the section in Syria, it's because the military had bought Toyota's as helixes like new ones they're like it's just like sweet Tacoma or something you know, it's just like rigged up to ride around out in the desert it's probably a great truck for it but that's why we should be is is to get all we need all those sweet Toyota's back now it was a big land that was like a gag in the news for a while because like all the footage from from whatever was going on which show these people but they were like next to these like old like old pickups like yours with with a with like a gun mounted mounted in the back like the war a lot of that Yeah. But yeah, you think about like all that all that crazy stuff that I think that was like the highlight stuff that Toyota was like for runners out of the country they're called serfs. Really? Yeah, way cooler name to kind of call a foreigner a serve I'm not gonna run it it's kind of redundant like I mean, no matter what you have, it's like well, I mean, we expected it would it would have four wheels or big truck I guess it should have four-wheel drive or whatever whatever. It's insinuating. But, but yeah, out of the country was called the surf. I've seen a few of them pass by like you'd see him out there. You'd be driving around and people are real proud of it, especially in the overland scene or that like not backward See, man. People get real proud of their Their rigs that they have set up but but we saw one that was like this diesel surf that this guy had imported I don't know what the rules are on that either.</p>



<p>Yeah</p>



<p>if it's I think if the if the guy's a US citizen I think it couldn't happen but I think if you're in Canada, you can you can have you can have one registered and then drive it into the united states i think is where we see a lot of those vehicles. Well, we need to make some buddies in Canada if we need that, man I need I need a diesel 90s foreigner I don't know like I knew commuting Well, have you seen like the Mitsubishi Delica that's another that's another sought after it. Yeah, it's low in my mind here. Yeah, that Miss it's a it's another kind of wasn't that wasn't built in the United States. Right. But it's for Well, it's become really popular and like that van life. Van life culture where people you know, like I pretty much like what we were doing the Camry six years ago. But But finding it relatively decently and they get like a van. And like it's become really popular to get this Mitsubishi Delica. They made it through the 80s. It was sort of a competitor to the to the Volkswagen line of vans that were out at that time that were kind of camping focused. But this was cool. The Delica was cool because it was a diesel van. But it was four wheel drive. It was like this. It was timing. Like Mitsubishi was just making a bunch of four wheel drive stuff probably like the Colt Vista.</p>



<p>That's exactly what was just you don't know what a call list is. And you're listening to this podcast. Go. Go look it up. And that was that was your first car, Billy.</p>



<p>Oh, man, it was the best car. It was the best. It was the best car. It was the worst guy but it was really though it was the worst car.</p>



<p>I bet if you had that now and just put a little bit of money into it somebody? Yeah, somebody would pick that up. Yeah, in the Portland area.</p>



<p>I put some studded tires on that and a roof rack. Oh, yeah. an LED bar. You want to talk about rig? led bar? CV? Yeah, man. You remember that hatchback. If you could fit 10 people in that car. I think eight people I think I did. I don't think that's what they approved it for. No, I just where it was. I think it was seven people. It was what it was like rated for seven. Yeah, it was it was three roses seats. Robert, in a compact soccer balls are driving around in 1983. Yeah, it was. It's not Yeah, there was the front two seats. The back two seats that were like bucket seats. Two. And then behind that, there was another bench seat for three. So you had 1234567 man? Yeah, yeah, it was crazy. What a silly.</p>



<p>Hey, it wasn't aesthetically great, but it was uh, you know, economy friendly. That's, that's for sure.</p>



<p>The worst guy? So not not an overland vehicle there. I guess you could say and even still like, man, it was had like 14 inch tires. So yeah, no clearance to get over anything. What have you. You made it You made it happen with the camera though? I yeah, I did, man. And I was gonna mention that too. Because that I had a couple experiences in the Camry. You've always had a truck. I guess outside of like the short time you had you had a sedan for to commute and stuff. But you had like had a rig that could get some places, which I always appreciated. And I really noticed running into a few limitations when I was in the Camry. I wanted to talk about those. It was great with the camera because you really benefit from the gas mileage. Which man I would say yeah, because I mean the most of a road trip, in some ways, like is highway miles. You know, you're out. You got to drive from here. Oh, yeah. Wyoming. So yeah, put a lot of distance in between you and where you're going? Yeah, and it man. It's great. Having kind of a light, easy car to like, just bomb out to somewhere that works really well. So I appreciated some of those parts. But man, we ran into a few spots where we just couldn't get through. And the one of the most upsetting ones to me was the sailing stones. Have you heard of those before? Is that in Utah? It's in. It's in the southwest. It's it's Near-Death Valley in California. And the sailing stones is a really cool spy was in Death Valley. It's like it's in the park area. But the park area is just so immense, but it's it's all desolate, almost nothing out there, you know, but you take this road, it cuts back for a really long way. And then we were on that gravel road for ever going back there. You have to go it's it's the kind of deep wilderness you would almost call it but it's like deep in desolate country out there. It's sort of well-traveled because there's there's people kind of moving in and out of the park system. But we were traveling there in December, I think, you know, when we were moving move in that direction. Like early December of 2012, I think is when we were there. And when we were we were driving up just just on the gravel road as it was it said it was a it was a gravel road the whole way there. And this part of it, it just kind of went up a little bit of a grade, you know, just the hill, the slope of the road just kind of went up maybe 1215 feet or so and then kind of rounded off, leveled off and then kept going. It seemed like almost nothing at all. But my car was nearly as high centering on it basically like you can feel like did you feel like the body like start scraping because the roll off of it was like, it was just, it was deeper than than my cart like the angle the car and the clearance I could handle it. And I like I couldn't get there and I'd wanted to go there all my life. Oh, so frustrated. We were like two miles or so it was like two-three miles or something like, well, we didn't know that cuz you're like in backwoods stuff. And it's like, like, I'm not gonna park there and hike it or something. Yeah, and then somebody else rolls up in a vehicle that can handle it. This Camry parked in the middle of the road. There was a there was like a group of kids are like teenagers on little dirt bikes like little to hundreds and they were just like bouncing they just zoomed right past us. Like a little, a little bike. And they cruise. Right. It was nothing but yeah, it's it was not it was you would it would be totally. Everything could get over that except for my cars. Except the camera. So yeah, no overland that day is what is what it was. But that story really is what ended up inspiring me to sell that Camry that winter. And then like come back in and get a foreigner like when I got that that 89 four render that. That was good. That was a good truck. I liked that is a good track. I bet it was a better truck earlier. But man, it was a great truck for me. And I really had a great time doing stuff with it was super fun. Like, yeah, I do more candy seven that was really cool. But that that was the first time that I had like that truck clearance. You know?</p>



<p>Yeah, it means just like a whole new world of opportunities opened up to you, when you when you have that clearance. It's like okay, and you got four wheel drive, so you can get a little more daring with where you're going. And even with that, though, I found that now with my current truck, I don't have the winch on it yet. And and even that kind of dictates to what I will and will not do up in the hills. Especially if there's not another rig with me. Sure. Yeah. I really enjoyed having that. That kind of that lifeline. And then security. I guess I'm having that winch that I can get out of trouble if I really got myself into it.</p>



<p>I think that's pretty interesting. Yeah, I've never had I have had a rig with a winch on it. But I really liked the the you always did. It was cool. I don't think we've ever used it together when we were out. I've used it on Tyler. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Pulling out of that sandbank. Is that what it was?</p>



<p>Yeah. I've used it a couple times. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. You just get into a rough spot got a tree or something you can tether off of, and get yourself out of it. But</p>



<p>I think that's pretty cool. I remember you telling me a little bit about that in the past. And it seems like it'd be pretty necessary if you wanted to do something more serious or more long term, if you're doing like an overland trip or if you're doing some, some trucks four by four stuff.</p>



<p>Oh, that's not a big like, you know, off-road or it's, you know, yeah. But it's Well, I mean, off-road in the sense of like, let's go mud and rock climbing. Yeah, not I'm not that, but I do like trying to get into places where typically the you know, the road kind of ends or, you know, somebody hasn't been back then 30 years and there's still roadway going.</p>



<p>I think it's really explore it. Yeah, I really like that part of it. I really like getting to those different areas and any you really get to get through so much more land. You know, that way, it's I found it to be really cool.</p>



<p>You do especially Oregon in the wintertime, you know, this area gets so much rain and stuff. It's hard to like, you know, when you after the winner, you get to the end of the route. Back Back. This is I don't want to beg begging. I want to stay in the rig as long as I can.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, it's it's definitely that's a huge part of it for me too. And that's Yeah, think about. Well, yeah, you should tell me about Tell me about your pickup. Chuck. Your first one that you got in high school, did you that was like an ad with a straight axle, right.</p>



<p>It was a 1980 straight axle Toyota four by four long. And that was a great truck. It still is a great truck. It's currently sitting under a canopy right now. It hasn't run in three or four years. But no, I love that truck. Man. I drove that from the time I was 15 years. So four years ago. Yeah, I mean, that was that was a blast. That was that was the coolest job. Yeah, no, I have always loved that truck and that truck would go anywhere. I mean, the really the only reason I got out of it was just I needed something more reliable. Yeah, fact it's last trip was the trip that amber and I took down to Joshua Tree I put like, you know, 4000 miles on it. No way. I remember that trip. That was Yeah, that was pretty cool, man. Yeah. And so that was a great trip, take it out on the harsh reality was, you know, at the time, gas in California was around $5 a gallon is Yeah, insane. I was getting about 12 miles to the gallon. And, you know, that was rough. You know, it didn't have AC. You know, that's just little stuff. Like, people didn't get along with that forever. But</p>



<p>now it makes me different. So I've learned a little bit too. I mean, like, like, what we both learned a little bit in this last year, like having a newer truck. It just solves a lot of those stresses about transportation, man.</p>



<p>Well, it does. And that's the thing is when you're committing to a trip like that, you need to know that rigs got to be reliable. It's been a huge part. You need to know it's gonna start back up when you're ready to go. Yeah, 2000 miles away from home. Kill the battery. I gotta tell my truck or so. Yeah. And the battery is not the proper Oh, no. Yeah. Like, it's just like, Oh, you know? Yeah, my transmission went out or like, that probably just, you know, blew a head gasket or something. You know, I mean, that truck when I took it, it had over 400,000 miles on it. And, and so you're just going, Wow, this is fun, but really, I just need to make sure I get it home. Yeah, you know that. That's what it came down to.</p>



<p>Yeah, I feel like sometimes it's like driving a classic car around. Just doesn't run as well. It's maybe basil.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. So yeah. And then I got out from that, and I bought myself a little 93 I guess it was that's our five Toyota v six. Pick up a little extended cab. I liked having the extra room. That was a great little pickup to have that nice canopy with the roof racks on it. I really enjoyed that. Yeah, I like that canopy sad to see it go.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was too bad. It's too soon, you know, but too soon. But I understand to think that Daddy's gonna move on. Or you know, it's good. He use it. You can</p>



<p>see it around town every now and then. Nice. Yeah. But yeah, and so since I've gotten into a full size truck, which I I just wonder why I didn't do so much earlier. Oh, yeah. You know, it's just just having the room. The reliability you know, just all the difference in the world.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think so. too. I was in your track like we were on when we were on that last chip and yeah, get out of it. Yeah, super clean. Like I dig been in there as cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's a it's far more comfortable than it used to be, you know, cramming into the little single cab and yeah, manual transmission and trying to get around.</p>



<p>I remember that first trip we did in your and your old try your your, your Yeah, cap. When we were What 16? Are we are going to camp up at Union Creek. Yeah. What is like, what is that? I've been I guess it's Central Oregon. I don't know. What do you call that? I don't know what you would call that. It's like Crater Lake area. Yeah, it's not really central National Forest. Almost. Right. Yeah, it's ro River National Forest. Because it's the rogue that it is. Yeah. Yeah. I think yeah, it's that that area up there. Man. That was such a cool trip. And I had a great time. But man, like you're saying that we just there was like the three of us, right? Yeah, just packed in tight. Yeah. And I was the one that had a ride, bitch in the center. Throw in the third gear, then what was it? Four years? Three years? Yeah, it was four. I ended up putting a five speed transmission. I remember that at the end.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. But yeah, it was just that for speed. You know, you get it out. It was great in town stuff. Then he goes on to the freeway, and you're just tapped out like 65. Just, you know, semis are trying to pass you is not built to go that fast, I guess. Yeah, exactly. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, that was a sweet track though. Man. I really had a good time in that, but I remember that back in high school, it was fun, like making that road trip up to go camping thrown everything in the back. And everybody's just crammed, crammed into the bench seat. Now used to work I guess it's a little more luxurious now with the with the space, I suppose. But it's been cool, man. I like to have like, Well, you've always known more about like, how to use your four-wheel drive. And like, yeah, I started it.</p>



<p>I learned how to drive and kind of like, you know, just kind of remote is using four-wheel drive and, and all that stuff. You know, my dad when we go hunting, he drive when I was like eight, you know, nice and I drive us to wherever we're going out there because it's all just, you know, old logging roads and traffic and all that stuff in there. And so as a result, yeah, I learned to use four-wheel drive, especially working on a running on a manual transmission four-wheel drive, you know gives you a little more leniency on your clutch when you're eight years old and you can barely reach the pedals and you're trying to figure out how to handle a vehicle.</p>



<p>Yeah, a ton more. I wish someone had shown that to be the first time, my goodness, but yeah, yeah. But But how does that work? explain that a little bit of like, for low.</p>



<p>Your gearing is way lower. I mean, essentially, like you really don't even know how to have to know how to use the clutch, you can just basically let it out. And you're good, so low that the rig is gonna take off on its own, basically, I mean, you got to give it just a little bit of gas, and it's gonna do its thing. But I mean, it's great for a beginner when you've never never driven a manual transmission before. because it lets you lets you get a feel for that clutch before you're actually in a in a higher gear trying to do it. Yeah, that stopper. Yeah, something like that. So that was Yeah, super beneficial to learning how to drive. But then, yeah, I guess you know, we're always in a lot of like tight places that required four wheel drive. And that's the other thing is you learn how to drive on those back roads and what it takes to get turned around when you're when you know, I mean, you get up in those tight spots and you</p>



<p>have to stop gotta turn Yeah, here it's a cliff on one side. It's just weird. Ditch and rocks on this other side. I'm just going to back my truck into exactly tight little spy backing down a hill. Oh, yeah, I've done that. Well, we're not doing anything right here. It says yeah, I think I got I got stuck like nose to nose on like with another vehicle on this one-lane section that just like dropped off. He was out in Eastern Oregon when we were there and it just like, Oh, yeah, what like so I probably like what we'd read into it the Iliad, but it's a thing where I think</p>



<p>person</p>



<p>the person going uphill has to back down. Is that the rule? Yeah, right.</p>



<p>I don't I don't really know what the rule is. If there is a rule, it's definitely unwritten. But I think it just kind of seems like the person that has the most leeway should probably grant it. Oh,</p>



<p>yeah. Yeah. You know, which seems to not happen as much as I would want. When I've been seems like people just like blow-by center the thing and they just expect I'll get out of the way seems like a crazy choice to me. They've very rude people out there sometimes. Give me a berth stretched out a little bit, man. Don't run into me. But I guess I haven't been running into yet. It's weird. I remember. Like, what what I was talking about? Yeah, we got like, there was six inches on either or a foot or something I said, but it was like tight. There's no go around me sort of a thing. So I just had to back down, like 500 600 feet to the spot where there's there's a wide enough pull out where I could kind of tuck in and he could get around me. Man Oh, that doesn't happen a few more times. person I run into Yeah, gotta get through this section. At least. I'm gonna be I'm just gonna have to go down here to miles and back out there. So that'd be awful. Yeah. But I remember that years back of like people at the Illinois River, they'd run into that same thing on that. That tight little paved one lane road. God knows how sober they were driving back out toward cave junction again. At the end of the day, I'm just, you know, sitting in the river river all day. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. World's Best people out there.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah, just a really stand up Susan's I mean, anywhere that you have to like, Ban alcohol. Did they ban it? Yeah, it's no alcohol allowed at the Illinois River anymore. What? What is the Yeah, then? I don't know. sobriety and self development. Yeah, that's crazy. No, yeah. They, they actually end up doing that. And you know what, I really am glad now. Me too. Really? Yeah. Much of the boozehound is I am I you know, I know. It's glass everywhere. Well, and that's the thing too, and so much of that just became like your personal responsibility to pack out the things that you bring? Oh, no, I never understood that. You know, you pack into 30 rack of beer that was you know, 2530 pounds on your back. You hike it into miles, you drink all the beer, and then you just leave the cans that now way essentially nothing packed into something that you can put in a gallon ziplock bag. Right, crushing. Just gonna leave it there. Yeah. And so that was kind of this verb what was going on? And then just too many fights, I think. Yeah, yeah. Get all God if anyone's familiar with Southern Oregon, you know the story, but it's, you know, it is. Yeah, it just became kind of a mess. I think the people that were out there Dealing with it just had enough and they they instated that little that rule now, man,</p>



<p>the future is gonna be no fun, Robert, we're gonna tell you it's Sunday. Yeah, you used to go out to the river and just drink and throw glass. Yeah. The good old days. Well, I heard this same it to the token he falls hotsprings they close that whole camping area down. Yeah, because it was just too much trash, too much drinking, too much fighting. Nobody to regulate it. No money to regulate it. I mean, God knows what. Douglas County, Josephine Jackson County, curry County. That's like the poorest. You look at like income. It's like the poorest part. Are some of the poorest levels of county income across the United States.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, it really is. Well, yeah. Yeah. I mean, so many of those places were all timber industry and that no longer produce. And so I mean, a lot of the economy went down with that. But, I mean, it's just, it's a shame that it ruins it. For all the people that like to go recreate these areas. Yeah. No, it's like, unfortunately, these places of beauty also draw people of lesser beauty, I guess.</p>



<p>It's what it's curious. I like the tone of places seems to change a little bit. I remember I was at, I think it was out in like Lone Pine, California. Really cool spots used to become super popular over the last six, seven years or so I see so much more from now. But it was it was this area where back in the 50s they shot like people like Burbank Hollywood would come up. And they would shoot like Gunsmoke. And like the westerns and stuff they would shoot like a bunch of Yeah, cuz, you know, it's like, I think there was a couple scenes in Django Unchained from a few years back that was shot in that same area. And there's like, parts of Iron Man were shot there when they had to pretend they were in Afghanistan, like, anytime they need, like the sort of desolate, but mountain area. Yeah, they go out here to this area and drive around and pretend pretend they're in Humvees and Afghanistan or something, you know, or, or old west stuff but but out in this area, like it seemed like it had kind of turned into like a rougher area for a while there's like tons of broken glass in the past and then like now, it's like an outdoors like rock climbers area, like the market for it kind of changed, I guess. Or like it just kind of got pushed out a little bit. Maybe over time. I don't think it I don't think they were they were crazy, but it seems like it's way different. Now. Interest is way different. But maybe it's the same maybe it's like, you know, I don't know, in 10 years or something. It's like, super a super big deal to go to go camp or you know, go to go look at waterfalls or something down on the Illinois. Yeah, but no, never, never down there. It's just gonna be cave junction people. I guess. That's what it's gonna always be. is is it's a chip, that stuff happens, but but I was gonna ask you about. So you're talking about truck stuff. I wanted to ask you. Have you ever used the hijack before? Let's say that again, a hijack. Have you heard of that? or seeing that? It's like that tool. I think Dave has one our buddy Dave. I think he wanted to show me Show me how to use it one time, but like, you probably wouldn't because you have a winch. But I think it was supposed to do some of that. But it's like a jack tool like like a manual thing. Like so you can use it as a as a lever to like ratchet stuff down or if that's like if you had a webbing chain. Okay. Okay, so what hasn't changed in the strap? And it looks like it's like a it's like a four foot piece of like steel, right? It's like a big steel bar. And it's got like a hook in it. And yeah, and then like one of the kind of moves through but you can you can jack something like fourth or two feet or three feet or something like that.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. So I've always known that to be called a come along. Come along, huh? Yeah, that's what I've always done knows are super handy to have great tool. How do you use? Yeah, fantastic. Yeah, basically, you find a point of anchor. You would hook by, for example, let's say a tree. Okay, you're stuck in a ditch. You can take this come along. And essentially, yeah, it's like a it's a lever on a section of chain with a hook on it. You can wrap it around said tree. Okay. Now from there, you tie off to, let's say your truck. It's stuck in a ditch. And then it has this ratcheting. Yeah, this this ratcheting mechanism on it that gives you like a huge pull ratio. And you're using that lever as well. And basically, you can pull a lot of stuff out. I mean, before, before tow trucks were super manual, and everything was hydraulic. They always use those on them. Really. Yeah. I've used it to straighten out bumpers on vehicles before. I mean, they have a huge cooling capacity. So Oh, wow, really? Yeah, great tool, great investment. That's just one of those things. I mean, I don't have one of my truck right now. But that's definitely something I would love to keep in there. Just for the sake of let's say, you know your vehicle into a spot that you can't get out of. And now your winches are unusable because it's on the front of your truck, right? It's something you could hook on to the tow hooks of your rear bumper or something like that, and still pull yourself out.</p>



<p>Yeah, wow. Oh, that makes sense. A bit. Yeah. Like, why you'd want to have one there. I've seen how they've been used a couple of times, and it seemed like it'd be really useful. Yeah, some of the stuff that it was that they do, but yeah,</p>



<p>so that's something also I kind of want to talk about, like, you know, outfitting your rig for these overland excursions, if</p>



<p>you will, yeah.</p>



<p>Just, you know, being prepared, you know, kind of just being ready for that unseen circumstance that could potentially ruin a trip. It's like, I like having I like having tow chain, or tow strap or something like that. Something that I can pull somebody or have somebody pull me out of with, right, because you never really know where you're going. A lot of times you're looking at old BLM maps or Forest Service maps, and you're just kind of going on a whim gonna</p>



<p>fall down many times. Road. Yeah. Or like, what if a tree fell down? You know, it's like, yeah, it's just blah, or whatever it is. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.</p>



<p>Yeah, I saw that on on somebody else's chip. They did like five days in British Columbia, they're traveling through and they they took photos and they posted it later. Because all the all the trees that were falling over that they had to like, sit and like cut-through for an hour, you know, yeah. And then kick out of the way and then and then keep going because they like couldn't there like hundreds of miles out and they got to go through again. So you know, they're set up to they're this big, like Firemen's Polanski that they're just, you know, chopping away at these big trees that have come down.</p>



<p>God, I would love to have a class game. I trucked it is expensive, man. Oh, yeah. Look, I should have taken one when I worked fire, but But no, um, yeah, having something to cut with. I usually do carry an axe. Yes, usually in my toolbox. I mean, if you can take a chainsaw, especially if you're going to be doing a lot of backcountry stuff like that where you're going, right? people haven't been for years, especially if it's the springtime, you just had a heavy winter, anything like that all things that take into account just kind of be ready for or you get up there in a windstorm and you find you're in an area and retirees have root rot and stuff. And, you know, you get to where you're going. You're driving back out. Now you've got, you know, a 24 inch tree lane in the middle of the</p>



<p>road. Now you're stuck. You're stuck there. Yeah. If you were ready. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, Oh, well. I figured it out until until some Forest Service truck gets back in here in a month. You're ever Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, that'd be bad news. Or Yeah, something like that happen. But that makes a lot of sense. What other stuff? What other stuff do you carry around your truck for things, for instance? Like when you're gone?</p>



<p>I always I always err on the side of just like, what if I got stuck, you know, I always have I have a first aid kit. You know, I keep I keep probably like six to 10 bottles of water in my truck at all times. generally have food as some of it I wouldn't want to eat because it's been floating around between my vehicles for like seven years now. That's good. But But you know, if it came down to it, I</p>



<p>did it. Yeah, I've got a few a few things set up like that. So yeah, dude, I'd be happy is around.</p>



<p>Yeah, I know. I've got I've got plenty of rope rope is like one of the handiest things you can ever have. You know, I've got lighters, couple knives, just things, things of that nature. Where you could really work yourself out. And if I'm, if I'm planning for a trip or something, then I'm obviously going to step it up a little bit more, but those are the things I keep in there daily. You know, like a, like a jump station is super great. We talked about that. other episodes.</p>



<p>I've saved myself a couple of times by having a jump station around. That's really yeah. Yeah, yeah, man. You get out to those places. Nobody jumped you. Yeah, you know, I need a better one. I need a more robust. Well, it seems like you have to update them every few years. Well, okay.</p>



<p>There's this new one. Yeah. I just saw and it's made by gold zero. It's called the Yeti. Oh, yeah. Yeah, if you have an extra grand laying around.</p>



<p>is a grant. Just an easy easy 1000 bucks. But it's like a full on generator man. Oh, yeah. Ron's for like 12 hours. You can like power. Your house</p>



<p>I've I've seen people go for setup. I've heard people that get that as a kind of a core and then they they get a few of the bigger solar panels that connect to it and so they do solar and they charge that and then they've got the power bank to draw like heavy power items off of that it seems really cool. Yeah, it seems like I've seen people take that it's kind of like their their like RV power system or their camp power system like what we're talking about where they run like yeah, just just everything everything that they need to I remember being at at the gorge for the concert I think with you guys. Today Matthew's been in and like yeah, the one of the one of the party camps You know, I'm talking about like where they have like yeah, going all the time. I think one of those was was just running one of them you know, the bro camps from from University of Washington. And they're in their mom's minivan, but they've got this this like $1,000 this like, I remember seeing a Yeti, one of those Yeti power packs and they'd have it plugged in to run the stereo until the battery was like that whole weekend and they were just pumping out pumping out the beats.</p>



<p>No, you know what, one thing I really do want to do is take a little bit of fabrication but not much I mean for 100 bucks you can you can fabricate this. I want to clear a little bit of room on the passenger side of my truck in the engine compartment. Yeah, I want to mount another battery in there. Oh yeah. And then have an isolation switch to it so I can isolate it cut all power from it so it'll just sit charge and then anytime I need that I have a spare battery that I can either jump my current battery off of or you know worst case scenario I could swap it with my other battery man that's</p>



<p>a sweet idea but well yeah cuz you probably want on both as car batteries but I had heard of in the past I think Scott talked about it our buddy Scott talked about it when they were doing that music trip the music tour thing but but I'd also heard a bit from this other guy from from one of these overland places or you in one of these trips that we're doing Overlanding were in the back yet an SUV but he took a marine battery like one from above one of those deep cycle yeah a deep cycle one or like what you'd haven't seen in the RV is to when I'm working out with those they have the deep cycle marine batteries in there that run the house you know when the power to the engines off but it's yeah where they have like the car battery charge like trickle charge the deep cycle marine battery during the time that it's running and then they draw you know like the law yeah your your alternator is still charging that battery all the time. Yeah, it looked like it was a really cool solution for like they ran they just ran all their all their stuff like they would when they were traveling or you know like had stuff charged or whatever it is that they would they would want to do. I think that you know work on your laptop at night when your car's off. They can do all that sort of stuff. Just run it run it right off the power from the car, but you don't have to worry about killing the battery. Man. Yeah, same thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, same same principle, basically. Yeah, but yeah, that's something I want to do. I think I can get by cheaper with just doing another car battery. But regardless, you know, it's I think it's a great setup to have. And that's something I'd like to do. I'm getting this. I'm getting a commuter track just for work, I think is a sweet idea, man. Yeah, so I'm going to be spending a lot of time just really turn it might crack into just you know, full time read trip, camping hunting angling rig that's just ready to go for any time any situation. Jump in it and go That's so cool. Yeah, go job, man. Forget about it. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I just have, man. I don't know if I told you but I was. So I did a couple of these outdoor shows this year. Right. And I did one in Denver and then one in Las Vegas. And both of them man, they have all these different you know, Outfitters and sponsors and stuff that show up so they had like, in Denver they had Ford and Chevy and all these different all these different car manufacturers there with like, you know, like the 2017 you know, 2500 Silverado just fully loaded just just so rigged out for you know, just anything. And they had a you know, the Toyota the Tacoma just fully loaded so so yeah, just like the dream vehicle for for the stuff we do, you know, totally Yeah, it's just such envy I have for Oh, I know, but you're looking at it to go this is probably like $100,000 rig.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. For new track. And then like the like, yeah, the whole like,</p>



<p>oh, all the custom modifications and everything to it. But But Man spectacular. I mean, somebody owns one somewhere.</p>



<p>Now it looks like it'd be a blast. It'd be so fun. It would suck to scratch it though. Oh, yeah. Oregon pinstriping right. Yeah. Just blackberries scraping the sides as you go down the driveway. Yeah, that's exactly. That's sweet, man. You know, I want to get a canopy for my truck. I think you were talking about getting a canopy for your truck. I was looking into it. I was looking about what how much of a tax return does a man need to get to own his own new canopy. I was looking at new canopies. Well, because I know that there's I know that there's other canopies out there. I know that there's a lot of canopies out there. Really, I should look into the reseller market more for it I know like I would Oh yeah.</p>



<p>And a lot of places that just specialize in selling nothing but refurbished canopies Yeah, I can have a painted to match your vehicle and whatever else</p>



<p>which yeah is what I want to go forward to and I mean it's gonna be super basic it's gonna go black it's gonna kind of to town with the truck is what I figured to go with the the other stuff but so that should be easy enough but I want to get one that that does match that truck. Have you looked into that a little bit? I was looking into a little bit of between like a RV and Lear and snug top lamb snug top are the two that I'm really familiar with. I've had one of each Yeah, and I found out the other day that they're the same brand or like or yeah or it's snug top Oh definitely make the same product are they actually know it? Yeah, snug top owns leered now and I think AR is different. Okay, that's what the that's what the like I went to some some hokey dealership down here. And they're like, it's like this, and then this is weird. I've heard that in the in the RV side, too. We're saying like GM, you know, it's like a GM and a Pontiac and Saturn and the Chevy. It's all it's all like the same master company. But it seems like the same guy. Same kind of game in the, in the truck canopy racket. Yeah, so I was looking at that. It seemed like it's 1600 bucks to get like the new like, brand new. Nice. Well, yeah, bill for my year of a truck, which is pretty it's pretty expensive. It's kind of what I figured for for like brand new stuff, though. But I want to drop down and and look at the US market and get some sub 1000 bucks, which I'm sure is out there. Oh, man, you can you can get in over 300 bucks for a nice canopy. I bet. Yeah, I bet that I can. And I want to be pretty smart about it. I'd love to get to save that much money. I was trying to figure out what to do. Cuz Yeah, the Colorado, which is like the smaller size. It's like, mid size or something. I guess it's the same truck bed size as the s 10. Back in the 90s. Yeah, I'm part of the 2000s. And then and then I guess like a lot of the other Colorado's have that that extended cab type. So apparently, there's gonna be a ton of of canopies out there that would fit the dimensions of the truck bed, but I am going to insert are what I want to do. I want to try and match it up pretty well. You know, I want it to be kind of like have the same stock or something like fits pretty well. But I figured they all got or they if it fits, it's gonna kind of fit. You know, I've I decided I could probably figure it out. I don't know. It seems cool, though. The other thing I want to figure out is like the drawers, I talk to you about that before too long. It seems like I've seen people build them out of plywood. I've seen companies now making them where they have like, like I think AR ri like you can buy the canopy right? But then you can also buy this, this this piece. I don't know what it is, but it's shaped like your truck bed. And yeah, I fit it in there kind of around the wheel wheel well. And it's like these, these two long drawers like these kitchen drawers that pull out, but they're just like four feet long. And you just you just slide it out you like you drop your tailgate, and you just slide these these two sweet drawers out, load all your stuff in there. And then you put your pads and your mattress or whatever it is over the top. And you just have all your storage and then your sleeping area and stuff right inside your canopy.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I've seen those. Those are awesome. And actually, I've seen a couple people do that same thing out of plywood, and I kind of Drive for Work vehicle one time. Cool. You know, I mean, if you have a canopy and it's gonna stay out of the rain, I would say go out of plywood. If you have any type of like building ability rows, you can be into, you know, 150 bucks and a Saturday and have a pretty legitimate setup. Oh, yeah, I would go that route. Definitely. Yeah. And another thing like, and on the same lines of building stuff like that, not just for your truck. Yeah, I built that kitchen box. Right. For for going along on trips. And now that's been so helpful to have.</p>



<p>But yeah, it's just like some constructed box where you put that that set of things in. That's a lot too. We figured that kind of early on to but like, yeah, we were like just out of college. So instead of building a sweet kitchen box that was actually functional for a long time. We got like a filing box. Like if you go down like for everybody's doing their taxes last minute, and they have to go through you know, there's like these little file boxes that are that are for like manila folders to sit in. And you'd like you're supposed to stack your stuff in and store it in the closet or whatever. It's like an office space or you know, office keeping supply thing, but they're like five bucks or something, a piece is just like these cheap, but like 1212 by 12 little plastic containers. We're like, man, okay, we're gonna get like two of these. This one's gonna be our kitchen. Like everything that's part of the kitchen stuff and augers in this one but that's how so much to contain. And sort of separate between like, I this is all the shower stuff that we want to have. That's gonna be all over there. This is all the kitchen stuff. Foodstuff, man that helped the house so much like just organize a small pieces and camping.</p>



<p>Well, so much of that. Yeah, so much of that, like, you know, road trip and stuff is like, or that weekend warrior type thing where you're gonna get out there and go do it really takes organization because I mean, otherwise, you're spending, you know, all of Wednesday, Thursday and Friday trying to get stuff ready. And then you can leave on a, you know, Friday night or Saturday morning and get the most out of your weekend. But when you have all that stuff ready organized, it always stays there, it never leaves it. It's so much better, man that takes off so much of the stress of doing that. Because you just get to get to go and then come back and deal with it later.</p>



<p>I think that's a that's a huge improvement. And I could definitely see how valuable that would be. I mean, even for I mean, it's the beginning of the season. So I'm Rusty. But I consider myself fairly well prepared for some camping stuff here to get to get started to jump into it. And when we went on that trip together, we met up with you out in plush. That was like, two whole evenings after works worth of like prepping different types of things. So you're ready to go. And you Oh, oh, yeah, I forgot about how much work this is.</p>



<p>No. And that's it. That's it do is like as ready as I was. I mean, I still pack from probably like Tuesday on you know, just kind of cuz. And also let's, let's be fair, this is like one of the first trips of the season, you know, it's kind of like, well, what am I missing in that kitchen box? Like, what do I need to do here? He gets cleaned up organized again. Yeah. But once you're in the swing of things, then then you're good to go.</p>



<p>Yeah, once you get to utilize your time. Yeah, you get kind of like you kind of evened out to it all after a bit of time. It's kind of it goes, I like that part. When you get you get you get a couple couple experiences under your belt, you practice a couple times, and then it's smooth sailing from there. Exactly. Yeah. Sometimes when you run into stuff,</p>



<p>it's like anything you do. Get more efficient at it. Yeah, I believe it. Robin, thanks for doing this podcast. Man. I</p>



<p>really appreciate you</p>



<p>talking about talking about Chuck stuff, talking about chips and stuff. We got so many other trips and stuff that we did in the track, too. I want to talk about that some other time.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I'd like to know we got we got enough to keep going for a while. But hey, on a side note, we were talking about all these places that we enjoy going that have been getting shut down or, you know, heavily monitored due to people like littering and doing stuff like that. If you're an outdoor recreator. And you like join these places, which you should, because you're listening to this podcast, pack your stuff out, leave stuff better than you found it and take care of it. It's not just for us, it's for future generations. Yeah. And if we want to keep having rights to these areas and things, then we need to kind of maintain them and be responsible with them.</p>



<p>So</p>



<p>that's a no, it's my concluding thought, I suppose.</p>



<p>I think it's a super important. And, yeah, it really makes a lot of sense. I think it was like Roosevelt when he put together the Parks Service. And he said that these resources. Everybody was mad. They're like, no, give us give us the stuff. It's our land. If it's the public, we give give us those trees. Now we want to cut them down. We want to burn it. He said now it's left to the to the womb of time, I think is right, that is what he said. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Right, like we we need, it's still in the future. And people in the future from us now still are gonna need it. And</p>



<p>it's funny, because now he's a hero. And at the time, he was, you know, everybody</p>



<p>staying at the stage. But we see it even still, I mean, Robert, you know, going out a few weeks ago, seeing seeing what's out there in Lakeview. And you just look around at that kind of landscape and how unchanged it's been for a few 100 years and then you know, kind of seeing seeing those areas where Wow, there used to be water here. There's these artifacts here. You see these petroglyphs on the rocks out here from the native people that lived in the area. Yeah, and you go, man, this is unchanged. This needs to be protected in some way, or it can't be just disturbed and you know, just just ruined by, by people. Yeah,</p>



<p>I think that area would look a lot better with some duplexes,</p>



<p>rents and tracks. housing in there, put some put some oil pumps in there. Get the uranium mining industry up and running. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. Take care of those lands there for all of us if you're an American citizen, you own them.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's, it's, you know, it's still Yeah, and amazing benefit that we have in this country to have so much public land and really just so much wilderness area that is hardly managed at all. There's so much that's ours, that we have a lot of agency over, but even just as people.</p>



<p>I mean, we're the world leaders as far as land conservation goes, you know, as far as like, you know, maintain public lands, there's no place in the world that has the same, the same opportunities that we do as far as that goes.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think it's a really cool thing. And it's just super awesome that we have, you know, so much opportunity now to get access. But yeah, man, it is. It's cool. Robin. Oh, good. Photo calm. Hey, thanks, man. Yeah, gotta plug the site at Billy Newman on Instagram. I don't know. But that's Yeah, it's best stuff. Yeah, find some photos and stuff we've got. Yeah, check out the podcast like you probably are. Subscribe if you can shoot us an email, get notes. If anybody actually listens to this. Yeah. shoot us an email or a message or something? Or leave a leave a comment on the YouTube or the I think it's maybe I'm going to be on YouTube or the iTunes listing. leave us a review or comment there. Wherever there's, there's places you can contact us. Yeah, leave us something. Give us some fodder something to work with.</p>



<p>Yeah, what do you what do you guys want to know about? They want to know about how we drove our trucks around the Illinois River.</p>



<p>I'm sure that I should. That's number one topic of this podcast in the future. But Robert, thanks, man, for doing this podcast. I really appreciate it's really cool. Hey, absolutely. Thank you guys for listening. Yeah, episode nine, man. We're working it out. And you say right tonight he came through really clear on FaceTime is where his work yeah, that's fantastic. That's that's a rarity. These parts good internet day. It's weird how it is. It's like a burn day. Right. You know, when the smoke would stay low, like a no-burn day? Yeah. It's like a no podcast day. There's no bandwidth. Yeah. No bandwidth to the countryside today. No podcast. Right. Robin, thank you very much, man. I really appreciate you doing it. Yep, we're coming back next week, episode. 10. It's gonna be the same. Yeah, that's okay. We'll get through it. It'll be great. It's gonna be better than all the other ones. Oh, yeah. Oh, that's all that's what I meant to say.</p>



<p>Yeah, I got a</p>



<p>robbery. Yeah. I think it's fantastic. Man. We're gonna come back next week. Next Wednesday. We'll probably put up another episode of The get out there podcast episode 10. It's gonna be sweet man. Appreciate? You betcha. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, thank you very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Overland Truck Travel



Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Overland Truck Travel</p>



<p>Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>



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<p>Get-out-there-09-overland-truck-travel</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert Busker at Robert. How are you doing? Here? What's going on Billy, thanks for doing another podcast, man. It's great. episode eight. Here we are. Yeah, man. I think this is episode nine. isn't really we did that yeah, I think we're moving. Oh, you're right. You're right. Because you did that. Yeah, we got through that one last week too. Yeah, I can't really count that well, so yeah, it's hard to get the first 10 numbers and straight to man, but I but no, it's great. I'm really glad we got we got this one. Coming together again. today. It's gonna be cool. And yeah, man. What's your overtime? That's that's the first hurdle. That's it, man. so to speak. No, it's good. I'm glad that we've, we've got we've got through a handful of these. And yeah, it's fun, man. It's cool. Putting together a handful of them. But this week, I wanted to talk about some of the past truck travel stuff that we've done. And I think you're the guy who's inspired me to get a truck at first man, I got a truck gotta have a truck. Strangely, though, most most of my road trip travel has been a Camry and the old camera, man. But that camera was legendary. It was legit. It was absolutely legendary. But for today's episode, we're thinking about doing was kind of breaking down a couple of the stories in the past we had about doing some overland stuff. Some overland, like travel, if you can call it overland. I don't know. That's like a heavy word. I think that's a modern world. Right? Like this term. I've seen that around like overland where people get a lot of that. Yeah, it seems to be kind of the trendy sort of rich guy word to say for Whelan. Going but in Landrover Madden, or for four-wheel or something, you take that Overlanding overland excursion? Oh, yeah, it's always that but, but I think that's kind of a funny part of it. But I see like a ton of that stuff. I got into that, like, I got into that stuff back in 2011. Like the overland travel Have you ever seen like the magazine overland journal? Is that inactive? I think so. Yeah, I don't know. It's like sort of a niche. It's a niche category. Like this whole thing. So it's where it's like that thing. You'd never find it unless you looked for it. But it's kind of it's interesting. There's tons of stuff out there like that, but that's one of the first ones that I ran into. And that's like, that's when I had like the Camry and I was back in college and stuff and you know, that's when I first really wanted to get because I couldn't get a Landrover from the 70s I really wanted to get like a roof rack and a top box. I was I was like set on that because if I could get that that was like that was like my that was my version of making like a Camry into an overland vehicle you know cuz I'm going to get into this but I'm 20 and I've got 138 bucks so with that Yeah, but that was a part of it. So yeah, I remember setting up like like setting up the car that the roof the rooftop or the top box you know, man those are those are like super handy like and that was great on the on the camera when I had it. But that was all kind of what was yours you had like that that top box? Yeah, it was a I forget what it is now I think there's like the excursion that I had at a time and then there was like the summit model that you didn't have the overland model didn't I missed out on both of these were like oh man, they were like you know I don't know the early 90s maybe late early-mid 90s or something that's like when the plastic was produced that's when that thing was called New. And now it was just sitting on my my equally old aged car gonna go around and grab those things hold their value like crazy I picked mine up both of mine I think now three of them in total I picked three of those top boxes up oh on Craigslist was for different cars and stuff. I got a little fat one for the for the Camry I've had one for the truck and we got one from Marina CRV or what do you say the truck I mean the old Forerunner let's just get into that later too but that long one on the old foreigner so I bought like a few of them and I always bought them on us like on Craigslist or something right like yeah, and it was like new they're like five or 600 bucks to get into this cheap man yeah it's yeah super frustrating so even when they're used they're they're still floating in like for good ones or for like stuff from the 2000s that sort of the more modern clamping systems or you know when they actually made it they made it better you know where you can put it on take it on and off your car without putting together like a bunch of plates brackets made out to spend the whole afternoon doing yeah it's great cuz he would always like you know mess up you get stuck in some situation like that when you like I think one time we had to move we'd like it was you and I Robert and Scott and we had to like move that that that top box we're talking about to the Oh yeah, to the raft right and we were going on that snowboard trip so we had to like pack we had to put it on and like put like a bunch of snowboards on or something. And it was just like it was just like snow and slash and it's kind of raining you got like</p>



<p>you don't even have a headlamp you just got like a light kind crimped on your shoulder and neck. As you're kind of trying to twist this wing that back and forth to make sure that this thing's tight in the right spot. It was such a pain, man; it was so awful. So after that they made like more simple clamp systems that work better. But man, those are like still like 300 250. Like the low end range, like this. Yeah, the stuff broken. I just sold one for like, 85 that was that like a big chunk missing out of it? Oh, geez. Yeah, it's nuts. Yeah, it's like it's a gold. At least I don't know. It seems like in Eugene May. In Southern Oregon, it was a lot harder. I think I had one and never sold. But it seems like in Eugene and in Corvallis and Portland, are like, you know, where that that string of Hebrews and topsoccer? Yeah, right. exists all those, all those overlanders out there. Mm-hmm. But that was my foray into into understanding what Overlanding was because I was interested in like that overland journal. And so I'd like watch or watch the stuff that was coming out in that and it was just really all stuff, all equipment that was unattainable. But you look like the sweet trucks. And there's so many cool, like land or the land that the Toyota Land Cruisers, but they never said that they never built in America. Have you seen those? Oh, yeah, they're awesome. They're so cool. Yeah, like all the other ones that Australia got. And like South Africa, God, those are like the coolest cars ever like that you see out there. Yeah, they're so great. I would love to have Yeah, just this sweet diesel. Left hand drive. Right hand drive. Like, yeah, Land Cruiser track. Like there's the the Toyota trooper, if anybody's listening and they Google that it's like this, this crazy track that they made for the military that Toyota made for the military. That's like a troop carrier. But it's a Land Cruiser, but it's just got like a long back end. And it's kind of squared off. So you can you can fit two benches in there to load 12 guys, or whatever, whatever. psyllium is in the back. But it just looks like Oh, man, that'd be the coolest like camper. Yeah, you take that thing. It's like, so like the fJ. 40 see, like the old ones that look like the the Willys Jeep, have you seen that? Oh, yeah. That and that was kind of like the, one of the Jeep models that they look Yeah, Toyota's Japanese right. Yeah, of course they are. But I don't know where else they they sold like their equipment to for like military use. But it seemed like the F j and the Land Cruiser line is used like with them as a military vehicle all over the world. Have you seen that? Like, it's the I'm not really familiar with that? No, or not like a military vehicle, but like, like, we have a jeep. And then we have a tank, but we have the Jeep? Like they have they have the Toyota they have a Land Cruiser? Or like a Ilex, right, like your old truck. Your old pickup truck.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. I know what you're talking about. Yeah, the old pickup truck. Yes. Our 1980 it was the best part about my old one. Yeah. And so but it won't get rid of it. I still have</p>



<p>the coolest track, but I remember learning about like, Oh, it was just weird when I found out like about American nations. Where in America that's called a pickup. Like that's, that's a pickup truck. But out of the country. The truck is called a Hi Alex. I need to see that. Yeah, yeah, the international version. The International name for the pickup was the Toyota Hilux. And it's like, it's got that like emblem in it. Yeah. So they'd sell these Toyota pickup trucks like Saudi Arabia or like ISIS, man, like, okay, so yeah, like all the ice like the footage from ISIS. That's like, why are they all in these like us? Toyota's best known across the section in Syria, it's because the military had bought Toyota's as helixes like new ones they're like it's just like sweet Tacoma or something you know, it's just like rigged up to ride around out in the desert it's probably a great truck for it but that's why we should be is is to get all we need all those sweet Toyota's back now it was a big land that was like a gag in the news for a while because like all the footage from from whatever was going on which show these people but they were like next to these like old like old pickups like yours with with a with like a gun mounted mounted in the back like the war a lot of that Yeah. But yeah, you think about like all that all that crazy stuff that I think that was like the highlight stuff that Toyota was like for runners out of the country they're called serfs. Really? Yeah, way cooler name to kind of call a foreigner a serve I'm not gonna run it it's kind of redundant like I mean, no matter what you have, it's like well, I mean, we expected it would it would have four wheels or big truck I guess it should have four-wheel drive or whatever whatever. It's insinuating. But, but yeah, out of the country was called the surf. I've seen a few of them pass by like you'd see him out there. You'd be driving around and people are real proud of it, especially in the overland scene or that like not backward See, man. People get real proud of their Their rigs that they have set up but but we saw one that was like this diesel surf that this guy had imported I don't know what the rules are on that either.</p>



<p>Yeah</p>



<p>if it's I think if the if the guy's a US citizen I think it couldn't happen but I think if you're in Canada, you can you can have you can have one registered and then drive it into the united states i think is where we see a lot of those vehicles. Well, we need to make some buddies in Canada if we need that, man I need I need a diesel 90s foreigner I don't know like I knew commuting Well, have you seen like the Mitsubishi Delica that's another that's another sought after it. Yeah, it's low in my mind here. Yeah, that Miss it's a it's another kind of wasn't that wasn't built in the United States. Right. But it's for Well, it's become really popular and like that van life. Van life culture where people you know, like I pretty much like what we were doing the Camry six years ago. But But finding it relatively decently and they get like a van. And like it's become really popular to get this Mitsubishi Delica. They made it through the 80s. It was sort of a competitor to the to the Volkswagen line of vans that were out at that time that were kind of camping focused. But this was cool. The Delica was cool because it was a diesel van. But it was four wheel drive. It was like this. It was timing. Like Mitsubishi was just making a bunch of four wheel drive stuff probably like the Colt Vista.</p>



<p>That's exactly what was just you don't know what a call list is. And you're listening to this podcast. Go. Go look it up. And that was that was your first car, Billy.</p>



<p>Oh, man, it was the best car. It was the best. It was the best car. It was the worst guy but it was really though it was the worst car.</p>



<p>I bet if you had that now and just put a little bit of money into it somebody? Yeah, somebody would pick that up. Yeah, in the Portland area.</p>



<p>I put some studded tires on that and a roof rack. Oh, yeah. an LED bar. You want to talk about rig? led bar? CV? Yeah, man. You remember that hatchback. If you could fit 10 people in that car. I think eight people I think I did. I don't think that's what they approved it for. No, I just where it was. I think it was seven people. It was what it was like rated for seven. Yeah, it was it was three roses seats. Robert, in a compact soccer balls are driving around in 1983. Yeah, it was. It's not Yeah, there was the front two seats. The back two seats that were like bucket seats. Two. And then behind that, there was another bench seat for three. So you had 1234567 man? Yeah, yeah, it was crazy. What a silly.</p>



<p>Hey, it wasn't aesthetically great, but it was uh, you know, economy friendly. That's, that's for sure.</p>



<p>The worst guy? So not not an overland vehicle there. I guess you could say and even still like, man, it was had like 14 inch tires. So yeah, no clearance to get over anything. What have you. You made it You made it happen with the camera though? I yeah, I did, man. And I was gonna mention that too. Because that I had a couple experiences in the Camry. You've always had a truck. I guess outside of like the short time you had you had a sedan for to commute and stuff. But you had like had a rig that could get some places, which I always appreciated. And I really noticed running into a few limitations when I was in the Camry. I wanted to talk about those. It was great with the camera because you really benefit from the gas mileage. Which man I would say yeah, because I mean the most of a road trip, in some ways, like is highway miles. You know, you're out. You got to drive from here. Oh, yeah. Wyoming. So yeah, put a lot of distance in between you and where you're going? Yeah, and it man. It's great. Having kind of a light, easy car to like, just bomb out to somewhere that works really well. So I appreciated some of those parts. But man, we ran into a few spots where we just couldn't get through. And the one of the most upsetting ones to me was the sailing stones. Have you heard of those before? Is that in Utah? It's in. It's in the southwest. It's it's Near-Death Valley in California. And the sailing stones is a really cool spy was in Death Valley. It's like it's in the park area. But the park area is just so immense, but it's it's all desolate, almost nothing out there, you know, but you take this road, it cuts back for a really long way. And then we were on that gravel road for ever going back there. You have to go it's it's the kind of deep wilderness you would almost call it but it's like deep in desolate country out there. It's sort of well-traveled because there's there's people kind of moving in and out of the park system. But we were traveling there in December, I think, you know, when we were moving move in that direction. Like early December of 2012, I think is when we were there. And when we were we were driving up just just on the gravel road as it was it said it was a it was a gravel road the whole way there. And this part of it, it just kind of went up a little bit of a grade, you know, just the hill, the slope of the road just kind of went up maybe 1215 feet or so and then kind of rounded off, leveled off and then kept going. It seemed like almost nothing at all. But my car was nearly as high centering on it basically like you can feel like did you feel like the body like start scraping because the roll off of it was like, it was just, it was deeper than than my cart like the angle the car and the clearance I could handle it. And I like I couldn't get there and I'd wanted to go there all my life. Oh, so frustrated. We were like two miles or so it was like two-three miles or something like, well, we didn't know that cuz you're like in backwoods stuff. And it's like, like, I'm not gonna park there and hike it or something. Yeah, and then somebody else rolls up in a vehicle that can handle it. This Camry parked in the middle of the road. There was a there was like a group of kids are like teenagers on little dirt bikes like little to hundreds and they were just like bouncing they just zoomed right past us. Like a little, a little bike. And they cruise. Right. It was nothing but yeah, it's it was not it was you would it would be totally. Everything could get over that except for my cars. Except the camera. So yeah, no overland that day is what is what it was. But that story really is what ended up inspiring me to sell that Camry that winter. And then like come back in and get a foreigner like when I got that that 89 four render that. That was good. That was a good truck. I liked that is a good track. I bet it was a better truck earlier. But man, it was a great truck for me. And I really had a great time doing stuff with it was super fun. Like, yeah, I do more candy seven that was really cool. But that that was the first time that I had like that truck clearance. You know?</p>



<p>Yeah, it means just like a whole new world of opportunities opened up to you, when you when you have that clearance. It's like okay, and you got four wheel drive, so you can get a little more daring with where you're going. And even with that, though, I found that now with my current truck, I don't have the winch on it yet. And and even that kind of dictates to what I will and will not do up in the hills. Especially if there's not another rig with me. Sure. Yeah. I really enjoyed having that. That kind of that lifeline. And then security. I guess I'm having that winch that I can get out of trouble if I really got myself into it.</p>



<p>I think that's pretty interesting. Yeah, I've never had I have had a rig with a winch on it. But I really liked the the you always did. It was cool. I don't think we've ever used it together when we were out. I've used it on Tyler. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Pulling out of that sandbank. Is that what it was?</p>



<p>Yeah. I've used it a couple times. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. You just get into a rough spot got a tree or something you can tether off of, and get yourself out of it. But</p>



<p>I think that's pretty cool. I remember you telling me a little bit about that in the past. And it seems like it'd be pretty necessary if you wanted to do something more serious or more long term, if you're doing like an overland trip or if you're doing some, some trucks four by four stuff.</p>



<p>Oh, that's not a big like, you know, off-road or it's, you know, yeah. But it's Well, I mean, off-road in the sense of like, let's go mud and rock climbing. Yeah, not I'm not that, but I do like trying to get into places where typically the you know, the road kind of ends or, you know, somebody hasn't been back then 30 years and there's still roadway going.</p>



<p>I think it's really explore it. Yeah, I really like that part of it. I really like getting to those different areas and any you really get to get through so much more land. You know, that way, it's I found it to be really cool.</p>



<p>You do especially Oregon in the wintertime, you know, this area gets so much rain and stuff. It's hard to like, you know, when you after the winner, you get to the end of the route. Back Back. This is I don't want to beg begging. I want to stay in the rig as long as I can.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, it's it's definitely that's a huge part of it for me too. And that's Yeah, think about. Well, yeah, you should tell me about Tell me about your pickup. Chuck. Your first one that you got in high school, did you that was like an ad with a straight axle, right.</p>



<p>It was a 1980 straight axle Toyota four by four long. And that was a great truck. It still is a great truck. It's currently sitting under a canopy right now. It hasn't run in three or four years. But no, I love that truck. Man. I drove that from the time I was 15 years. So four years ago. Yeah, I mean, that was that was a blast. That was that was the coolest job. Yeah, no, I have always loved that truck and that truck would go anywhere. I mean, the really the only reason I got out of it was just I needed something more reliable. Yeah, fact it's last trip was the trip that amber and I took down to Joshua Tree I put like, you know, 4000 miles on it. No way. I remember that trip. That was Yeah, that was pretty cool, man. Yeah. And so that was a great trip, take it out on the harsh reality was, you know, at the time, gas in California was around $5 a gallon is Yeah, insane. I was getting about 12 miles to the gallon. And, you know, that was rough. You know, it didn't have AC. You know, that's just little stuff. Like, people didn't get along with that forever. But</p>



<p>now it makes me different. So I've learned a little bit too. I mean, like, like, what we both learned a little bit in this last year, like having a newer truck. It just solves a lot of those stresses about transportation, man.</p>



<p>Well, it does. And that's the thing is when you're committing to a trip like that, you need to know that rigs got to be reliable. It's been a huge part. You need to know it's gonna start back up when you're ready to go. Yeah, 2000 miles away from home. Kill the battery. I gotta tell my truck or so. Yeah. And the battery is not the proper Oh, no. Yeah. Like, it's just like, Oh, you know? Yeah, my transmission went out or like, that probably just, you know, blew a head gasket or something. You know, I mean, that truck when I took it, it had over 400,000 miles on it. And, and so you're just going, Wow, this is fun, but really, I just need to make sure I get it home. Yeah, you know that. That's what it came down to.</p>



<p>Yeah, I feel like sometimes it's like driving a classic car around. Just doesn't run as well. It's maybe basil.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. So yeah. And then I got out from that, and I bought myself a little 93 I guess it was that's our five Toyota v six. Pick up a little extended cab. I liked having the extra room. That was a great little pickup to have that nice canopy with the roof racks on it. I really enjoyed that. Yeah, I like that canopy sad to see it go.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was too bad. It's too soon, you know, but too soon. But I understand to think that Daddy's gonna move on. Or you know, it's good. He use it. You can</p>



<p>see it around town every now and then. Nice. Yeah. But yeah, and so since I've gotten into a full size truck, which I I just wonder why I didn't do so much earlier. Oh, yeah. You know, it's just just having the room. The reliability you know, just all the difference in the world.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think so. too. I was in your track like we were on when we were on that last chip and yeah, get out of it. Yeah, super clean. Like I dig been in there as cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's a it's far more comfortable than it used to be, you know, cramming into the little single cab and yeah, manual transmission and trying to get around.</p>



<p>I remember that first trip we did in your and your old try your your, your Yeah, cap. When we were What 16? Are we are going to camp up at Union Creek. Yeah. What is like, what is that? I've been I guess it's Central Oregon. I don't know. What do you call that? I don't know what you would call that. It's like Crater Lake area. Yeah, it's not really central National Forest. Almost. Right. Yeah, it's ro River National Forest. Because it's the rogue that it is. Yeah. Yeah. I think yeah, it's that that area up there. Man. That was such a cool trip. And I had a great time. But man, like you're saying that we just there was like the three of us, right? Yeah, just packed in tight. Yeah. And I was the one that had a ride, bitch in the center. Throw in the third gear, then what was it? Four years? Three years? Yeah, it was four. I ended up putting a five speed transmission. I remember that at the end.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. But yeah, it was just that for speed. You know, you get it out. It was great in town stuff. Then he goes on to the freeway, and you're just tapped out like 65. Just, you know, semis are trying to pass you is not built to go that fast, I guess. Yeah, exactly. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, that was a sweet track though. Man. I really had a good time in that, but I remember that back in high school, it was fun, like making that road trip up to go camping thrown everything in the back. And everybody's just crammed, crammed into the bench seat. Now used to work I guess it's a little more luxurious now with the with the space, I suppose. But it's been cool, man. I like to have like, Well, you've always known more about like, how to use your four-wheel drive. And like, yeah, I started it.</p>



<p>I learned how to drive and kind of like, you know, just kind of remote is using four-wheel drive and, and all that stuff. You know, my dad when we go hunting, he drive when I was like eight, you know, nice and I drive us to wherever we're going out there because it's all just, you know, old logging roads and traffic and all that stuff in there. And so as a result, yeah, I learned to use four-wheel drive, especially working on a running on a manual transmission four-wheel drive, you know gives you a little more leniency on your clutch when you're eight years old and you can barely reach the pedals and you're trying to figure out how to handle a vehicle.</p>



<p>Yeah, a ton more. I wish someone had shown that to be the first time, my goodness, but yeah, yeah. But But how does that work? explain that a little bit of like, for low.</p>



<p>Your gearing is way lower. I mean, essentially, like you really don't even know how to have to know how to use the clutch, you can just basically let it out. And you're good, so low that the rig is gonna take off on its own, basically, I mean, you got to give it just a little bit of gas, and it's gonna do its thing. But I mean, it's great for a beginner when you've never never driven a manual transmission before. because it lets you lets you get a feel for that clutch before you're actually in a in a higher gear trying to do it. Yeah, that stopper. Yeah, something like that. So that was Yeah, super beneficial to learning how to drive. But then, yeah, I guess you know, we're always in a lot of like tight places that required four wheel drive. And that's the other thing is you learn how to drive on those back roads and what it takes to get turned around when you're when you know, I mean, you get up in those tight spots and you</p>



<p>have to stop gotta turn Yeah, here it's a cliff on one side. It's just weird. Ditch and rocks on this other side. I'm just going to back my truck into exactly tight little spy backing down a hill. Oh, yeah, I've done that. Well, we're not doing anything right here. It says yeah, I think I got I got stuck like nose to nose on like with another vehicle on this one-lane section that just like dropped off. He was out in Eastern Oregon when we were there and it just like, Oh, yeah, what like so I probably like what we'd read into it the Iliad, but it's a thing where I think</p>



<p>person</p>



<p>the person going uphill has to back down. Is that the rule? Yeah, right.</p>



<p>I don't I don't really know what the rule is. If there is a rule, it's definitely unwritten. But I think it just kind of seems like the person that has the most leeway should probably grant it. Oh,</p>



<p>yeah. Yeah. You know, which seems to not happen as much as I would want. When I've been seems like people just like blow-by center the thing and they just expect I'll get out of the way seems like a crazy choice to me. They've very rude people out there sometimes. Give me a berth stretched out a little bit, man. Don't run into me. But I guess I haven't been running into yet. It's weird. I remember. Like, what what I was talking about? Yeah, we got like, there was six inches on either or a foot or something I said, but it was like tight. There's no go around me sort of a thing. So I just had to back down, like 500 600 feet to the spot where there's there's a wide enough pull out where I could kind of tuck in and he could get around me. Man Oh, that doesn't happen a few more times. person I run into Yeah, gotta get through this section. At least. I'm gonna be I'm just gonna have to go down here to miles and back out there. So that'd be awful. Yeah. But I remember that years back of like people at the Illinois River, they'd run into that same thing on that. That tight little paved one lane road. God knows how sober they were driving back out toward cave junction again. At the end of the day, I'm just, you know, sitting in the river river all day. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. World's Best people out there.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah, just a really stand up Susan's I mean, anywhere that you have to like, Ban alcohol. Did they ban it? Yeah, it's no alcohol allowed at the Illinois River anymore. What? What is the Yeah, then? I don't know. sobriety and self development. Yeah, that's crazy. No, yeah. They, they actually end up doing that. And you know what, I really am glad now. Me too. Really? Yeah. Much of the boozehound is I am I you know, I know. It's glass everywhere. Well, and that's the thing too, and so much of that just became like your personal responsibility to pack out the things that you bring? Oh, no, I never understood that. You know, you pack into 30 rack of beer that was you know, 2530 pounds on your back. You hike it into miles, you drink all the beer, and then you just leave the cans that now way essentially nothing packed into something that you can put in a gallon ziplock bag. Right, crushing. Just gonna leave it there. Yeah. And so that was kind of this verb what was going on? And then just too many fights, I think. Yeah, yeah. Get all God if anyone's familiar with Southern Oregon, you know the story, but it's, you know, it is. Yeah, it just became kind of a mess. I think the people that were out there Dealing with it just had enough and they they instated that little that rule now, man,</p>



<p>the future is gonna be no fun, Robert, we're gonna tell you it's Sunday. Yeah, you used to go out to the river and just drink and throw glass. Yeah. The good old days. Well, I heard this same it to the token he falls hotsprings they close that whole camping area down. Yeah, because it was just too much trash, too much drinking, too much fighting. Nobody to regulate it. No money to regulate it. I mean, God knows what. Douglas County, Josephine Jackson County, curry County. That's like the poorest. You look at like income. It's like the poorest part. Are some of the poorest levels of county income across the United States.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, it really is. Well, yeah. Yeah. I mean, so many of those places were all timber industry and that no longer produce. And so I mean, a lot of the economy went down with that. But, I mean, it's just, it's a shame that it ruins it. For all the people that like to go recreate these areas. Yeah. No, it's like, unfortunately, these places of beauty also draw people of lesser beauty, I guess.</p>



<p>It's what it's curious. I like the tone of places seems to change a little bit. I remember I was at, I think it was out in like Lone Pine, California. Really cool spots used to become super popular over the last six, seven years or so I see so much more from now. But it was it was this area where back in the 50s they shot like people like Burbank Hollywood would come up. And they would shoot like Gunsmoke. And like the westerns and stuff they would shoot like a bunch of Yeah, cuz, you know, it's like, I think there was a couple scenes in Django Unchained from a few years back that was shot in that same area. And there's like, parts of Iron Man were shot there when they had to pretend they were in Afghanistan, like, anytime they need, like the sort of desolate, but mountain area. Yeah, they go out here to this area and drive around and pretend pretend they're in Humvees and Afghanistan or something, you know, or, or old west stuff but but out in this area, like it seemed like it had kind of turned into like a rougher area for a while there's like tons of broken glass in the past and then like now, it's like an outdoors like rock climbers area, like the market for it kind of changed, I guess. Or like it just kind of got pushed out a little bit. Maybe over time. I don't think it I don't think they were they were crazy, but it seems like it's way different. Now. Interest is way different. But maybe it's the same maybe it's like, you know, I don't know, in 10 years or something. It's like, super a super big deal to go to go camp or you know, go to go look at waterfalls or something down on the Illinois. Yeah, but no, never, never down there. It's just gonna be cave junction people. I guess. That's what it's gonna always be. is is it's a chip, that stuff happens, but but I was gonna ask you about. So you're talking about truck stuff. I wanted to ask you. Have you ever used the hijack before? Let's say that again, a hijack. Have you heard of that? or seeing that? It's like that tool. I think Dave has one our buddy Dave. I think he wanted to show me Show me how to use it one time, but like, you probably wouldn't because you have a winch. But I think it was supposed to do some of that. But it's like a jack tool like like a manual thing. Like so you can use it as a as a lever to like ratchet stuff down or if that's like if you had a webbing chain. Okay. Okay, so what hasn't changed in the strap? And it looks like it's like a it's like a four foot piece of like steel, right? It's like a big steel bar. And it's got like a hook in it. And yeah, and then like one of the kind of moves through but you can you can jack something like fourth or two feet or three feet or something like that.</p>



<p>Yeah. Okay. So I've always known that to be called a come along. Come along, huh? Yeah, that's what I've always done knows are super handy to have great tool. How do you use? Yeah, fantastic. Yeah, basically, you find a point of anchor. You would hook by, for example, let's say a tree. Okay, you're stuck in a ditch. You can take this come along. And essentially, yeah, it's like a it's a lever on a section of chain with a hook on it. You can wrap it around said tree. Okay. Now from there, you tie off to, let's say your truck. It's stuck in a ditch. And then it has this ratcheting. Yeah, this this ratcheting mechanism on it that gives you like a huge pull ratio. And you're using that lever as well. And basically, you can pull a lot of stuff out. I mean, before, before tow trucks were super manual, and everything was hydraulic. They always use those on them. Really. Yeah. I've used it to straighten out bumpers on vehicles before. I mean, they have a huge cooling capacity. So Oh, wow, really? Yeah, great tool, great investment. That's just one of those things. I mean, I don't have one of my truck right now. But that's definitely something I would love to keep in there. Just for the sake of let's say, you know your vehicle into a spot that you can't get out of. And now your winches are unusable because it's on the front of your truck, right? It's something you could hook on to the tow hooks of your rear bumper or something like that, and still pull yourself out.</p>



<p>Yeah, wow. Oh, that makes sense. A bit. Yeah. Like, why you'd want to have one there. I've seen how they've been used a couple of times, and it seemed like it'd be really useful. Yeah, some of the stuff that it was that they do, but yeah,</p>



<p>so that's something also I kind of want to talk about, like, you know, outfitting your rig for these overland excursions, if</p>



<p>you will, yeah.</p>



<p>Just, you know, being prepared, you know, kind of just being ready for that unseen circumstance that could potentially ruin a trip. It's like, I like having I like having tow chain, or tow strap or something like that. Something that I can pull somebody or have somebody pull me out of with, right, because you never really know where you're going. A lot of times you're looking at old BLM maps or Forest Service maps, and you're just kind of going on a whim gonna</p>



<p>fall down many times. Road. Yeah. Or like, what if a tree fell down? You know, it's like, yeah, it's just blah, or whatever it is. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.</p>



<p>Yeah, I saw that on on somebody else's chip. They did like five days in British Columbia, they're traveling through and they they took photos and they posted it later. Because all the all the trees that were falling over that they had to like, sit and like cut-through for an hour, you know, yeah. And then kick out of the way and then and then keep going because they like couldn't there like hundreds of miles out and they got to go through again. So you know, they're set up to they're this big, like Firemen's Polanski that they're just, you know, chopping away at these big trees that have come down.</p>



<p>God, I would love to have a class game. I trucked it is expensive, man. Oh, yeah. Look, I should have taken one when I worked fire, but But no, um, yeah, having something to cut with. I usually do carry an axe. Yes, usually in my toolbox. I mean, if you can take a chainsaw, especially if you're going to be doing a lot of backcountry stuff like that where you're going, right? people haven't been for years, especially if it's the springtime, you just had a heavy winter, anything like that all things that take into account just kind of be ready for or you get up there in a windstorm and you find you're in an area and retirees have root rot and stuff. And, you know, you get to where you're going. You're driving back out. Now you've got, you know, a 24 inch tree lane in the middle of the</p>



<p>road. Now you're stuck. You're stuck there. Yeah. If you were ready. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, Oh, well. I figured it out until until some Forest Service truck gets back in here in a month. You're ever Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, that'd be bad news. Or Yeah, something like that happen. But that makes a lot of sense. What other stuff? What other stuff do you carry around your truck for things, for instance? Like when you're gone?</p>



<p>I always I always err on the side of just like, what if I got stuck, you know, I always have I have a first aid kit. You know, I keep I keep probably like six to 10 bottles of water in my truck at all times. generally have food as some of it I wouldn't want to eat because it's been floating around between my vehicles for like seven years now. That's good. But But you know, if it came down to it, I</p>



<p>did it. Yeah, I've got a few a few things set up like that. So yeah, dude, I'd be happy is around.</p>



<p>Yeah, I know. I've got I've got plenty of rope rope is like one of the handiest things you can ever have. You know, I've got lighters, couple knives, just things, things of that nature. Where you could really work yourself out. And if I'm, if I'm planning for a trip or something, then I'm obviously going to step it up a little bit more, but those are the things I keep in there daily. You know, like a, like a jump station is super great. We talked about that. other episodes.</p>



<p>I've saved myself a couple of times by having a jump station around. That's really yeah. Yeah, yeah, man. You get out to those places. Nobody jumped you. Yeah, you know, I need a better one. I need a more robust. Well, it seems like you have to update them every few years. Well, okay.</p>



<p>There's this new one. Yeah. I just saw and it's made by gold zero. It's called the Yeti. Oh, yeah. Yeah, if you have an extra grand laying around.</p>



<p>is a grant. Just an easy easy 1000 bucks. But it's like a full on generator man. Oh, yeah. Ron's for like 12 hours. You can like power. Your house</p>



<p>I've I've seen people go for setup. I've heard people that get that as a kind of a core and then they they get a few of the bigger solar panels that connect to it and so they do solar and they charge that and then they've got the power bank to draw like heavy power items off of that it seems really cool. Yeah, it seems like I've seen people take that it's kind of like their their like RV power system or their camp power system like what we're talking about where they run like yeah, just just everything everything that they need to I remember being at at the gorge for the concert I think with you guys. Today Matthew's been in and like yeah, the one of the one of the party camps You know, I'm talking about like where they have like yeah, going all the time. I think one of those was was just running one of them you know, the bro camps from from University of Washington. And they're in their mom's minivan, but they've got this this like $1,000 this like, I remember seeing a Yeti, one of those Yeti power packs and they'd have it plugged in to run the stereo until the battery was like that whole weekend and they were just pumping out pumping out the beats.</p>



<p>No, you know what, one thing I really do want to do is take a little bit of fabrication but not much I mean for 100 bucks you can you can fabricate this. I want to clear a little bit of room on the passenger side of my truck in the engine compartment. Yeah, I want to mount another battery in there. Oh yeah. And then have an isolation switch to it so I can isolate it cut all power from it so it'll just sit charge and then anytime I need that I have a spare battery that I can either jump my current battery off of or you know worst case scenario I could swap it with my other battery man that's</p>



<p>a sweet idea but well yeah cuz you probably want on both as car batteries but I had heard of in the past I think Scott talked about it our buddy Scott talked about it when they were doing that music trip the music tour thing but but I'd also heard a bit from this other guy from from one of these overland places or you in one of these trips that we're doing Overlanding were in the back yet an SUV but he took a marine battery like one from above one of those deep cycle yeah a deep cycle one or like what you'd haven't seen in the RV is to when I'm working out with those they have the deep cycle marine batteries in there that run the house you know when the power to the engines off but it's yeah where they have like the car battery charge like trickle charge the deep cycle marine battery during the time that it's running and then they draw you know like the law yeah your your alternator is still charging that battery all the time. Yeah, it looked like it was a really cool solution for like they ran they just ran all their all their stuff like they would when they were traveling or you know like had stuff charged or whatever it is that they would they would want to do. I think that you know work on your laptop at night when your car's off. They can do all that sort of stuff. Just run it run it right off the power from the car, but you don't have to worry about killing the battery. Man. Yeah, same thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, same same principle, basically. Yeah, but yeah, that's something I want to do. I think I can get by cheaper with just doing another car battery. But regardless, you know, it's I think it's a great setup to have. And that's something I'd like to do. I'm getting this. I'm getting a commuter track just for work, I think is a sweet idea, man. Yeah, so I'm going to be spending a lot of time just really turn it might crack into just you know, full time read trip, camping hunting angling rig that's just ready to go for any time any situation. Jump in it and go That's so cool. Yeah, go job, man. Forget about it. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I just have, man. I don't know if I told you but I was. So I did a couple of these outdoor shows this year. Right. And I did one in Denver and then one in Las Vegas. And both of them man, they have all these different you know, Outfitters and sponsors and stuff that show up so they had like, in Denver they had Ford and Chevy and all these different all these different car manufacturers there with like, you know, like the 2017 you know, 2500 Silverado just fully loaded just just so rigged out for you know, just anything. And they had a you know, the Toyota the Tacoma just fully loaded so so yeah, just like the dream vehicle for for the stuff we do, you know, totally Yeah, it's just such envy I have for Oh, I know, but you're looking at it to go this is probably like $100,000 rig.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. For new track. And then like the like, yeah, the whole like,</p>



<p>oh, all the custom modifications and everything to it. But But Man spectacular. I mean, somebody owns one somewhere.</p>



<p>Now it looks like it'd be a blast. It'd be so fun. It would suck to scratch it though. Oh, yeah. Oregon pinstriping right. Yeah. Just blackberries scraping the sides as you go down the driveway. Yeah, that's exactly. That's sweet, man. You know, I want to get a canopy for my truck. I think you were talking about getting a canopy for your truck. I was looking into it. I was looking about what how much of a tax return does a man need to get to own his own new canopy. I was looking at new canopies. Well, because I know that there's I know that there's other canopies out there. I know that there's a lot of canopies out there. Really, I should look into the reseller market more for it I know like I would Oh yeah.</p>



<p>And a lot of places that just specialize in selling nothing but refurbished canopies Yeah, I can have a painted to match your vehicle and whatever else</p>



<p>which yeah is what I want to go forward to and I mean it's gonna be super basic it's gonna go black it's gonna kind of to town with the truck is what I figured to go with the the other stuff but so that should be easy enough but I want to get one that that does match that truck. Have you looked into that a little bit? I was looking into a little bit of between like a RV and Lear and snug top lamb snug top are the two that I'm really familiar with. I've had one of each Yeah, and I found out the other day that they're the same brand or like or yeah or it's snug top Oh definitely make the same product are they actually know it? Yeah, snug top owns leered now and I think AR is different. Okay, that's what the that's what the like I went to some some hokey dealership down here. And they're like, it's like this, and then this is weird. I've heard that in the in the RV side, too. We're saying like GM, you know, it's like a GM and a Pontiac and Saturn and the Chevy. It's all it's all like the same master company. But it seems like the same guy. Same kind of game in the, in the truck canopy racket. Yeah, so I was looking at that. It seemed like it's 1600 bucks to get like the new like, brand new. Nice. Well, yeah, bill for my year of a truck, which is pretty it's pretty expensive. It's kind of what I figured for for like brand new stuff, though. But I want to drop down and and look at the US market and get some sub 1000 bucks, which I'm sure is out there. Oh, man, you can you can get in over 300 bucks for a nice canopy. I bet. Yeah, I bet that I can. And I want to be pretty smart about it. I'd love to get to save that much money. I was trying to figure out what to do. Cuz Yeah, the Colorado, which is like the smaller size. It's like, mid size or something. I guess it's the same truck bed size as the s 10. Back in the 90s. Yeah, I'm part of the 2000s. And then and then I guess like a lot of the other Colorado's have that that extended cab type. So apparently, there's gonna be a ton of of canopies out there that would fit the dimensions of the truck bed, but I am going to insert are what I want to do. I want to try and match it up pretty well. You know, I want it to be kind of like have the same stock or something like fits pretty well. But I figured they all got or they if it fits, it's gonna kind of fit. You know, I've I decided I could probably figure it out. I don't know. It seems cool, though. The other thing I want to figure out is like the drawers, I talk to you about that before too long. It seems like I've seen people build them out of plywood. I've seen companies now making them where they have like, like I think AR ri like you can buy the canopy right? But then you can also buy this, this this piece. I don't know what it is, but it's shaped like your truck bed. And yeah, I fit it in there kind of around the wheel wheel well. And it's like these, these two long drawers like these kitchen drawers that pull out, but they're just like four feet long. And you just you just slide it out you like you drop your tailgate, and you just slide these these two sweet drawers out, load all your stuff in there. And then you put your pads and your mattress or whatever it is over the top. And you just have all your storage and then your sleeping area and stuff right inside your canopy.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I've seen those. Those are awesome. And actually, I've seen a couple people do that same thing out of plywood, and I kind of Drive for Work vehicle one time. Cool. You know, I mean, if you have a canopy and it's gonna stay out of the rain, I would say go out of plywood. If you have any type of like building ability rows, you can be into, you know, 150 bucks and a Saturday and have a pretty legitimate setup. Oh, yeah, I would go that route. Definitely. Yeah. And another thing like, and on the same lines of building stuff like that, not just for your truck. Yeah, I built that kitchen box. Right. For for going along on trips. And now that's been so helpful to have.</p>



<p>But yeah, it's just like some constructed box where you put that that set of things in. That's a lot too. We figured that kind of early on to but like, yeah, we were like just out of college. So instead of building a sweet kitchen box that was actually functional for a long time. We got like a filing box. Like if you go down like for everybody's doing their taxes last minute, and they have to go through you know, there's like these little file boxes that are that are for like manila folders to sit in. And you'd like you're supposed to stack your stuff in and store it in the closet or whatever. It's like an office space or you know, office keeping supply thing, but they're like five bucks or something, a piece is just like these cheap, but like 1212 by 12 little plastic containers. We're like, man, okay, we're gonna get like two of these. This one's gonna be our kitchen. Like everything that's part of the kitchen stuff and augers in this one but that's how so much to contain. And sort of separate between like, I this is all the shower stuff that we want to have. That's gonna be all over there. This is all the kitchen stuff. Foodstuff, man that helped the house so much like just organize a small pieces and camping.</p>



<p>Well, so much of that. Yeah, so much of that, like, you know, road trip and stuff is like, or that weekend warrior type thing where you're gonna get out there and go do it really takes organization because I mean, otherwise, you're spending, you know, all of Wednesday, Thursday and Friday trying to get stuff ready. And then you can leave on a, you know, Friday night or Saturday morning and get the most out of your weekend. But when you have all that stuff ready organized, it always stays there, it never leaves it. It's so much better, man that takes off so much of the stress of doing that. Because you just get to get to go and then come back and deal with it later.</p>



<p>I think that's a that's a huge improvement. And I could definitely see how valuable that would be. I mean, even for I mean, it's the beginning of the season. So I'm Rusty. But I consider myself fairly well prepared for some camping stuff here to get to get started to jump into it. And when we went on that trip together, we met up with you out in plush. That was like, two whole evenings after works worth of like prepping different types of things. So you're ready to go. And you Oh, oh, yeah, I forgot about how much work this is.</p>



<p>No. And that's it. That's it do is like as ready as I was. I mean, I still pack from probably like Tuesday on you know, just kind of cuz. And also let's, let's be fair, this is like one of the first trips of the season, you know, it's kind of like, well, what am I missing in that kitchen box? Like, what do I need to do here? He gets cleaned up organized again. Yeah. But once you're in the swing of things, then then you're good to go.</p>



<p>Yeah, once you get to utilize your time. Yeah, you get kind of like you kind of evened out to it all after a bit of time. It's kind of it goes, I like that part. When you get you get you get a couple couple experiences under your belt, you practice a couple times, and then it's smooth sailing from there. Exactly. Yeah. Sometimes when you run into stuff,</p>



<p>it's like anything you do. Get more efficient at it. Yeah, I believe it. Robin, thanks for doing this podcast. Man. I</p>



<p>really appreciate you</p>



<p>talking about talking about Chuck stuff, talking about chips and stuff. We got so many other trips and stuff that we did in the track, too. I want to talk about that some other time.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, I'd like to know we got we got enough to keep going for a while. But hey, on a side note, we were talking about all these places that we enjoy going that have been getting shut down or, you know, heavily monitored due to people like littering and doing stuff like that. If you're an outdoor recreator. And you like join these places, which you should, because you're listening to this podcast, pack your stuff out, leave stuff better than you found it and take care of it. It's not just for us, it's for future generations. Yeah. And if we want to keep having rights to these areas and things, then we need to kind of maintain them and be responsible with them.</p>



<p>So</p>



<p>that's a no, it's my concluding thought, I suppose.</p>



<p>I think it's a super important. And, yeah, it really makes a lot of sense. I think it was like Roosevelt when he put together the Parks Service. And he said that these resources. Everybody was mad. They're like, no, give us give us the stuff. It's our land. If it's the public, we give give us those trees. Now we want to cut them down. We want to burn it. He said now it's left to the to the womb of time, I think is right, that is what he said. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Right, like we we need, it's still in the future. And people in the future from us now still are gonna need it. And</p>



<p>it's funny, because now he's a hero. And at the time, he was, you know, everybody</p>



<p>staying at the stage. But we see it even still, I mean, Robert, you know, going out a few weeks ago, seeing seeing what's out there in Lakeview. And you just look around at that kind of landscape and how unchanged it's been for a few 100 years and then you know, kind of seeing seeing those areas where Wow, there used to be water here. There's these artifacts here. You see these petroglyphs on the rocks out here from the native people that lived in the area. Yeah, and you go, man, this is unchanged. This needs to be protected in some way, or it can't be just disturbed and you know, just just ruined by, by people. Yeah,</p>



<p>I think that area would look a lot better with some duplexes,</p>



<p>rents and tracks. housing in there, put some put some oil pumps in there. Get the uranium mining industry up and running. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. Take care of those lands there for all of us if you're an American citizen, you own them.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's, it's, you know, it's still Yeah, and amazing benefit that we have in this country to have so much public land and really just so much wilderness area that is hardly managed at all. There's so much that's ours, that we have a lot of agency over, but even just as people.</p>



<p>I mean, we're the world leaders as far as land conservation goes, you know, as far as like, you know, maintain public lands, there's no place in the world that has the same, the same opportunities that we do as far as that goes.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think it's a really cool thing. And it's just super awesome that we have, you know, so much opportunity now to get access. But yeah, man, it is. It's cool. Robin. Oh, good. Photo calm. Hey, thanks, man. Yeah, gotta plug the site at Billy Newman on Instagram. I don't know. But that's Yeah, it's best stuff. Yeah, find some photos and stuff we've got. Yeah, check out the podcast like you probably are. Subscribe if you can shoot us an email, get notes. If anybody actually listens to this. Yeah. shoot us an email or a message or something? Or leave a leave a comment on the YouTube or the I think it's maybe I'm going to be on YouTube or the iTunes listing. leave us a review or comment there. Wherever there's, there's places you can contact us. Yeah, leave us something. Give us some fodder something to work with.</p>



<p>Yeah, what do you what do you guys want to know about? They want to know about how we drove our trucks around the Illinois River.</p>



<p>I'm sure that I should. That's number one topic of this podcast in the future. But Robert, thanks, man, for doing this podcast. I really appreciate it's really cool. Hey, absolutely. Thank you guys for listening. Yeah, episode nine, man. We're working it out. And you say right tonight he came through really clear on FaceTime is where his work yeah, that's fantastic. That's that's a rarity. These parts good internet day. It's weird how it is. It's like a burn day. Right. You know, when the smoke would stay low, like a no-burn day? Yeah. It's like a no podcast day. There's no bandwidth. Yeah. No bandwidth to the countryside today. No podcast. Right. Robin, thank you very much, man. I really appreciate you doing it. Yep, we're coming back next week, episode. 10. It's gonna be the same. Yeah, that's okay. We'll get through it. It'll be great. It's gonna be better than all the other ones. Oh, yeah. Oh, that's all that's what I meant to say.</p>



<p>Yeah, I got a</p>



<p>robbery. Yeah. I think it's fantastic. Man. We're gonna come back next week. Next Wednesday. We'll probably put up another episode of The get out there podcast episode 10. It's gonna be sweet man. Appreciate? You betcha. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, thank you very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Overland Truck Travel



Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret



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Get-out-there-09-overland-truck-travel



Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert Busker at Robert. How are you doing? Here? What's going on Billy, thanks for doing another podcast, man. It's great. episode eight. Here we are. Yeah, man. I think this is episode nine. isn't really we did that yeah, I think we're moving. Oh, you're right. You're right. Because you did that. Yeah, we got through that one last week too. Yeah, I can't really count that well, so yeah, it's hard to get the first 10 numbers and straight to man, but I but no, it's great. I'm really glad we got we got this one. Coming together again. today. It's gonna be cool. And yeah, man. What's your overtime? That's that's the first hurdle. That's it, man. so to speak. No, it's good. I'm glad that we've, we've got we've got through a handful of these. And yeah, it's fun, man. It's cool. Putting together a handful of them. But this week, I wanted to talk about some of the past truck travel stuff that we've done. And I think you're the guy who's inspired me to get a truck at first man, I got a truck gotta have a truck. Strangely, though, most most of my road trip travel has been a Camry and the old camera, man. But that camera was legendary. It was legit. It was absolutely legendary. But for today's episode, we're thinking about doing was kind of breaking down a couple of the stories in the past we had about doing some overland stuff. Some overland, like travel, if you can call it overland. I don't know. That's like a heavy word. I think that's a modern world. Right? Like this term. I've seen that around like overland where people get a lot of that. Yeah, it seems to be kind of the trendy sort of rich guy word to say for Whelan. Going but in Landrover Madden, or for four-wheel or something, you take that Overlanding overland excursion? Oh, yeah, it's always that but, but I think that's kind of a funny part of it. But I see like a ton of that stuff. I got into that, like, I got into that stuff back in 2011. Like the overland travel Have you ]]></itunes:summary>
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Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/get-out-there-08-spring-camping-in-the-oregon-high-desert/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 05 Apr 2017 10:38:09 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?p=5421</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert</p>


<p>Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert.</p>
<p>Rabbit hunting in Oregon</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert</p>


<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



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<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>About   <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert.
Rabbit hunting in Oregon
 
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Han]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert</p>


<p>Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert.</p>
<p>Rabbit hunting in Oregon</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert</p>


<p>Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp; <a href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp; <a href="https://twitter.com/billynewman">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp; <a href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; <a href="mailto:billy@billynewmanphoto.com">Drop Billy Newman an email here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; <a href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/">GoldenHourWedding.com</a> or <a href="mailto:goldenhourwedding@gmail.com">you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here</a>.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, <a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on <a href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, <a href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: <a href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876"><strong>Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/"><strong>Visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find <a href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>About   <a href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert.
Rabbit hunting in Oregon
 
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.



You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



About   https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/]]></itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert.
Rabbit hunting in Oregon
 
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert


Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp; https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp; https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp; https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp; https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or&nbsp; a podcast interview, please drop me an email.&nbsp; Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,&nbsp; please visit&nbsp; GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.



If you want to pu]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-07-camping-in-the-rabbit-hills/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:50:53 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5412</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Camping In The Rabbit Hills</p>


<p>Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p>Guest: Marina Hansen</p>
<p>Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>


<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a target="_blank" href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About  <a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>Get-out-there-07-Rabbit-Hills-Camping-trip_otter.ai.txt</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast via is Billy new and I'm here today with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? How you doing? I'm doing well. We're in a truck right now we're also here with Marina Hanson. Hey, how are you? I'm good. Thanks for having me on your show, guys. We're doing a truck podcast as we were driving up a mountain road in Eastern Oregon near plush. And the rabbit hills, right, correct. Yeah. So today's Saturday, we've been here. Robert, you got here. I got here Thursday on Thursday afternoon early. Sorry about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was a nice drive. And I got here the weather was nice. I kind of drove around for a bit. Kind of looking for somewhere to camp. Ended up heading up this, this kind of grassy knoll area and found a pretty remote spot. Anyway, set up camp. Nice day. went out for an evening rabbit hunt. No luck. And the weather's pretty nice, though, right? Yeah, the weather is really pretty nice. I mean, that's like, I couldn't ask for a better day for this time of year. Yeah, for this time of year. Same thing that it's really pretty nice. But so I go out for that rabbit hunt. And I come back. And as I'm coming back, it's getting like pretty windy, though. And whatever. It's dark. I decided I'm gonna go to bed because it's pretty cold out and the wind just took off and just beat the tent up. Yeah, there's all night long, man.</p>



<p>I mean, what you know and you guys go we when we showed up when you when you found us and brought us up to the campsite, man. Yeah, your tent was folded over sideways. Like the only thing that was keeping the car set up inside already. Yes. a sturdy piece. No, that's why I just started packing gear in there so it wouldn't float float away. Yeah, exactly. I'd be worried about that, too. I think we talked about it and before like Marina and I like we had that 10 break from the wind back and I was asked,</p>



<p>you mentioned that episode for like a broken arm. Yeah, I was just snapped at the angle of it. Not actually poking through the fly. The Fly.</p>



<p>It was a wrestler But yeah, I was thinking like something like that. I remember when I was a kid and I had a tent set up in the backyard even with whatever, a couple steaks, probably not a ton. And it was just one of those July windstorms give you like little summer thunderstorms. Yes. My tent like took off, blew over and got caught in the blackberry bushes. Let's just do that. Yeah. Is that normally? Oh, yeah, we did not come to that yesterday. I remember coming out and that's where we started jackrabbit. Yeah. That's cool. Yeah.</p>



<p>I like like Billy was saying we're out here. just west of heart mountain. North of plush and a place called the rabbit hills. We're just kind of driving around exploring right now just had a camp. did a pretty nice hike yesterday. We just passed one of the bridges. We have got to Yeah, okay, so wait, what's the Tell me about that first rabbit first, I went out went out too early. I went out at like 615 not dark enough yet. You know, they they don't really come out until the later evening just because of predators and stuff. So yeah, they're not not very visible during the day. Anyway, I went out there. Did a hunt I saw probably 10 or 11 jackrabbits, I couldn't get a shot at any of them because they're already that way. And you know, they're, they're about as tall as the sagebrush. So you see your ears. It's just kind of like flashing.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's pretty small. In the past, I really only like walked up on it. Yeah, I was like hiking around in the sagebrush out here. And you come around a corner. Correct the way we were talking about the grass too, when you come around a corner jackrabbit, just like, yeah, just Cz books. takes off. Yeah. And</p>



<p>yeah, so I went on that hot saw a ton of jagaran. I couldn't get a shot at any of them. I got back a little after dark. I got in around eight o'clock, I guess. Okay. Just about that last little bit of daylight that you could possibly see where you were. Okay. And then. Yes, not the night. It was a good night. I mean, other than, yeah, when did the weather shift? Like, like went crazy? Yeah. between six and seven, it really started picking up. But it didn't get real bad until I was just getting back. And at that point, it was just like, it was more than I wanted to be out. And that's why I went to bed at eight o'clock. I didn't even start a fire or anything. I just passed out.</p>



<p>Yeah. So like for us, like well, I remember talking to you about the forecast earlier in the week and we're planning out stuff for this trip. Yeah. And it was saying that today. I think like last night like Friday night, it was supposed Like be raining and then snow in that like cold night that we had we got lucky. I guess it's the snow level didn't drop it with the storm it did a little faster. And so we got the rain was the wave of the rain during the daytime. Maybe earlier like you got it. Yeah. You guys yeah. And we added like when we came over with Lana pass that was snowy. And then like it was pretty good. But we saw the snow line for a lot of the areas we came out to like 31 passport rock, and then like Silver Lake and summer lake and then a bit rim. And then once we got out here, it was pretty nice. Well, he was still super windy when he showed up to me you but it started getting like nicer and nicer. That's when they kind of threw that latter half of the day. So I was happy that we got a bit of that. I yeah, I</p>



<p>mean, this turnaround. I I'm really happy with this. Oh yeah, I'd be okay. If the weather stand just like me. Well, like we talked about, it's like this is the type of risk you take in March when you decide to go on multi day camping. You know, it's just like, what do you really expect when you go out? And well, I guess spring that might as well be winter</p>



<p>here. Yeah, yeah. Here this is about the same as it would be in winter. But I'm really happy to see like that, you know, it stays out later later. And yeah, nice relatively like it's gonna be April soon, you guys. I know. It's pretty nice coming around, man. Yesterday, we showed up to the camp. It's a really cool site. I like to say I would say pretty remote size BLM land up here us around that. Coyote hills, rabbit hills. I guess you're saying this is the rabbit hole. This is the rabbit hills and coyote hills. It's kind of a little bit yeah, yeah, I've seen him. I know like this range kind of fills in a little bit like over on the heart mountain side. When you're on the ridge. You can look back and look like just a little north. Really. But yeah, but yeah, you can see him really pretty well. It was crazy to remember over on Hart mountain is really the first time I learned about it, you can really kind of see it, especially that period, you start to look around like where the water level is out there. But yeah, heartlake is, I guess where was it? Crump Lake further south, down toward it down. And then I think it's like Flagstaff lake. Lake. Yeah, kind of all run through this area. But I remember learning that was like, like, around 500 years ago. And then I guess I further back in time before that, this whole area, that whole section was just one big leg like everything from the coyote hills, the rabbit holes over here all the way up to the base of current mountain used to be</p>



<p>used to be one big lake. That's what I understood to like, if you go up on Hart mountain, they have that placard.</p>



<p>She's the water level used to be up here. Look at the rocks and you see the erosion lines, and you go, Oh, she's</p>



<p>a trip. 100 feet. Yeah, it's a huge lake. And now it's just these seasonal wetlands that like even on some years, they won't get, you know, they won't fill up just because of low water. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Most of the years that I've been out here from like, I don't know, like 2003 four or 567 I think I've only seen water in these spots maybe once or twice. Really? Well. Yeah, like significant amounts of man. A lot of the times we come out like heartlake was just like dropped way, way back. It was almost just mud, like the Flagstaff like anything up here. All of this was just Marsh, really. So it's really weird to think like I was looking at the drainage basin from around here how a lot of the water comes off the Fremont National Forest, your heart mountain over here. And what is that? Like? I think like you see that one over there that that snowcapped. I think it's like, Drake's peak that drew me right, thinking of the wrong thing. But I think like, yeah, some of the creeks that run off of that hill and off of like, the Fremont national forest or Gearhart and whatever comes in over here, that draws like eastward, it fills in this water basin here, I guess, the watershed for it. So I don't know it's weird to think like how is just all these little creeks? There's no significant river in this area?</p>



<p>No, it's honestly it's crazy how things even water out here in the first place. Wasn't for small melt and just like occasional rain. I mean, this place is pretty bear with me. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I mean, not much going when we look out here. I mean, like, as far as I can see, the only lights are just the few that make up plush. Yeah, but a plush weren't here. Like there would be I mean, this this Yeah, it's absolutely plush this hardly anything. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Seriously, it's just like that little general store and like a couple homes. And that's it.</p>



<p>Yeah, like it's hardly anything. But yeah, one of my favorite areas. That's really cool.</p>



<p>So Alright, so you guys came in to camp last night? You guys met up with me? Yeah. What did we do?</p>



<p>Well, we took Oh, well, we tried to move camp because like the wind was coming through like crazy. Like we were still in the middle of that storm. Yeah. And we had a ton of wind blowing from the side. Southwest over there south east. man it was coming in so hard like I was probably I remember looking at the forecast is a 20 mile an hour winds I bet that it was probably it felt like more than that. I felt like man yeah that was yeah yeah they didn't seem like toy yeah it seems to me seemed like it was gonna rip that easy if apart Marina fine yeah we yeah yeah we move the easy app we move the test put all the stuff in the back of the truck bed and then we chucked it over. I was like 100 yards or so. Yeah, we got into that little draw there. Yeah, there's like a little a little draw. That seemed to be a pretty good windbreak from from the north and south side. And then we kind of park their cars around level a little bit of ground. Yeah. Put in a new little spot for the kitchen and stuff and yeah, it's a great set. I really dig that little Kim. Kim berry</p>



<p>it's been really nice man. I i right now we're in an area that I was kind of scouting yesterday for potential campaign to get out of that win. Yeah. And obviously didn't get a better appear. But no, we got a great spot. And I mean, the win is really kind of died down and it's just made this trip a lot more enjoyable</p>



<p>by the wind right now is great. Like last night, yesterday evening, like what once we got like, kind of down into that draw. It was a lot better. Even when we were shooting like I went up on the hill. We pulled out the 22 team, and we did some target practice. Yeah, side of the 22 for the hunt. That was cool, man. I had a good time doing that. But I hiked up on the hill with the with the camera and as soon as that guy just like above that draw, it was just like, beat me in the side of the face with wind. But, but I tried to get a handful of pictures and we came back down. We set it in the 22 marinas data. Yeah, we're gonna</p>



<p>Yeah, great. It's pretty cool. Sniper McGee over here. Scope before or gotten set up to be seated for shooting. So So how was that? Like, what did you notice by using the scope? I liked. I liked having that accuracy. It was really cool. Because uh, you Robert had your binoculars and you were telling me kinda where were my last one hit? Yeah. And I love that part of it. That was really cool. Getting to have like that. That confirmation of where it hit and then getting to readjust from where I tried decided the last time Yeah, to get it closer. And that's really cool. I like I like that. That kind of shooting</p>



<p>is cool. What do you think about the time? Yeah, like trying to steady yourself? Yeah, I like that part of you see where like the breathing plays a huge factor in it.</p>



<p>Yeah. Body the most still. Yeah. And exhale. It's really tough. Sometimes it is actually. It was like, during the first two shots it was it was almost hard or distracting trying to focus. Yeah, getting my breath. Right. Just to like, practice with those a lot of fun though. I liked was it the 17 that I use? Yeah, yeah, you're shooting? Oh, yeah. You did? Yeah. It's not the same as the 22. It's just like a better rifle. is something we took out last night?</p>



<p>Yeah. So we decided in the rifles. Yep. We set up evening. I was incredible. So the weather cleared out. got like, partly cloudy man. And out here. The view of heart mountain that no one's ever seen it. Like from the side of the hill. It's so cool. It's one of the most impressive. Like masons, they're like pop up and rise over the ground. It's huge on top. It's huge. It is really huge. On top, it's read have the land out here is because it comes out from one side and then it's shelf soft. You think about the Steen's it does the opposite, you know. Yeah. So it's like there's Warner rim out here. We look out we see like the ledge come up and drop off on the east side. Then we see heart mountain come up on the west side, and then slope off to the east. Yeah. And then we see the Steen's kind of slope up from the west. And then like drop off really steeply on the east side. It's really trippy, like how it kind of goes like around here but these little shelves of land that like tipped up they like rows or something underneath pushing up that one side.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's really interesting. topography it's Yeah. I mean, how wide across is hard, man? I mean, it takes you like an hour and a half to dry. It's a bit big. Yeah, that seems like a long time. Let's do it like 55 miles an hour on a gravel road, you know?</p>



<p>Seems like a ton of time on a gravel road. Right is really cool. Like the view from Arizona. Can you see that whole front face Yeah. of the other mountain set of apart mountain,</p>



<p>especially in the sunset in the morning. So cool looking. You guys got some cool pictures last night when we</p>



<p>went last night was easy. Light was so cool. But yeah, so we set up Marina can we take some pictures for a while and then Robert like we set up, we got the I have the 22 you had the 17. And then we went out for another rabbit hole, which is really cool. I was my first time that good i was i never I never done any hunting stuff before I went I got my hunting license just a couple of days before the trip. And it was cool work with a 22 bit it's cool talking with you for a few and going over what to do but at a really fun time. Like getting set up. Walking out kind of cruising through the stage. Yeah, and like you keep an eyes up but let's see what we we got packed up. We started. You went for what two miles or three miles yesterday saw him? Yeah. Didn't get a shot out. We started yesterday evening together, took off. What was what was that? What was our hanstone</p>



<p>we leave camp I give I give bill here quick little run over like rundown of what we're gonna do, you know, safety behind this net. And so we take off over out of camp. I don't know, what do we hike 200 yards, maybe? Maybe? Yeah, maybe maybe that'd be a generous assessment and then bam, all of a sudden, I don't know, probably 30 or 40 yards off and you see a jackrabbit kind of cruising across the sagebrush. And I just kind of pulled up on my song. And then I pulled up where I thought it would be.</p>



<p>I saw you do that. And I looked over I was like, what really? robber spotted something already? I wasn't even bored. like walking, walking around. Yeah, like, like when you're fishing. You're like, Oh, come on. Yeah, I've been. Yeah, it's been like, like, I haven't seen a jackrabbit forever. Like, there's no shot today, but then like, Yeah, what, like 130 minutes into the hunt. robbers posted out by the COVID. Once you see you over there. Robert, seas move. You said if you take a shot, take a shot Blaine. Got a beautiful shot to you. I'm not I'm not trying to be full of myself. It was a really good shot. Yeah, we cruise up. We cruise up on his up on them. Like that. The puncture was like</p>



<p>right in the breadbasket man right behind the shoulder and like, about an inch and a half, two inches back behind the shoulder. Wow. Which all the vitals are in there. So it got him he was dead instantly. Because I usually like when you get them drive to school. But yeah, usually when you get on I mean, there's you know, they'll kick around for a second or two. And you can usually see where they are. But he just dropped I didn't see him at all. Yeah, you know, so I ended up walking up over there kind of right where I thought I'd hit him. And yeah, so then we feel dressed them right there.</p>



<p>I've never not really like seen that. Done out there in the wild. Yeah. No, it was cool. Like it was. It was Yeah. Interesting to see what what you went through. And like, it's interesting to see like, also like, I mean, at least for Robin is a smaller size, but how quick you can go through and clear out an animal. Yeah, yeah. Be Done. Yeah.</p>



<p>It seemed like a pretty quick cleanup of you. skinning it and then taking out the organs and stuff. Yeah, prepared me. Well, it took about 15 minutes to finish it. Yeah,</p>



<p>it was really quick I thought but man for like, as big as it is like, when you when you get it down. Like that's a lean animal. And like without that, like the cap pounds. I like the ribs. There's no meat on the ribs. Which seems like a little bit of me. And like the the arms and legs or something or like kind of around behind but that's about it. Yeah, it was like the back around the spine and stuff like that for muscles but back strap on it. Like, a little bit bigger than a pencil. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, no. So okay, so we got that. I ran it back to camp, washed it. hung it up to cool. And then I met back up with you. Yeah,</p>



<p>that was what five minutes into? Yeah. So still. Still. I was like, Alright, let's go. Let's keep doing it. Yeah. So we ended up high. We hiked the good distance last night. Did you like it? We came over a couple of rises across that Creek. Yeah. And then like coming when we when we came around? It took a while to get back to that Creek, but we pass those Yeah, it's like a little bit but yeah, we had like, yeah, we just like walked around and kept cruising. I don't think we saw. We didn't we didn't see anything</p>



<p>else. Then we got back far after dark. Where I was pretty dry. There was a point where I was like, if this isn't the ridge, like I mean, I know where I was, you know, I was using this this Mesa kind of out here as a as a landmark. Yeah. And I could still see it kind of highlighted in the, in the waning sunlight of</p>



<p>the sun, you know.</p>



<p>Anyway, yeah. So I was kind of using that as my reference, but then it was to the point where I was like, man, I thought this was our ridge. Oh, yeah, like and the hill is rolling. enough that you're like, Well, I hope we just like yeah, it was a little ways down, but we just kept going. Yeah, I see we hit the road or something. I mean, yeah. There was no way we were lost. There was there's definite possibility that we weren't sure where we were. But there was no way we were lost. Yeah, yeah. But yeah, we ended up when we came out, like right on top of the truck. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. It seemed like I felt like we were on track. But remember when we got there? Like, we stopped for a second. We hit the coyotes.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Because often that is that was cool, man. Like, you're crazy, man. Yeah. Yeah. They're smelling like, hey, these guys. Let's go rabbits. Let's go raid their camp. Oh, we gotta go see if those Cody's packed off that</p>



<p>pile. Oh, yeah, I wanted I was thinking they're gonna be trying to hunt that down.</p>



<p>Well, okay, so then. Quick little story. Last night. You guys didn't wake up to this, but I stick through it. I slept. I slept straight through. I can't believe it. Yeah, for 19 this morning, I'm waking up to some coyotes howling right near camp. And I'm listening to him. It was probably five or six of them. And they're going back and forth. And I've got Layla, my Australian Shepherd with me and she's in the tent. And I didn't know. I mean, I'm hearing all this. I'm I'm kind of like, you know, I don't hear anybody stirring. I don't hear her like growling or barking out here. Failure Marina and the 10 over. I'm like, I know this is really loud right now. But anyway, that these coyotes that come up and then the one was barking, like I mean, it couldn't have been 15 feet outside my head. Whoa, you know, and that's why I couldn't believe you guys. I wonder what else is cruise right outside? Oh, it stopped. And I've had that happen before on other hunting trips where they'll come up and it's like, I don't know if the wind was at its back and it can sent us or something. And it just got right there. And all of a sudden was like, whoa, I'm in camp because we had that honey one year with my dad and I were laying in our on our beds there. And they came right into camp, just like howling, howling Hill and all of a sudden, they all just stop. And then they bailed. They're just like, all of a sudden they figured it out that they're like in somebody's camp. That's kind of the vibe I got last night because he was just going nuts. And then Laila kind of started to freak out. Like, this is attack dog. She's I had to hold her wine.</p>



<p>Good.</p>



<p>Bye, but yeah, it took off but that was pretty neat.</p>



<p>That is cool. Yeah. Yeah, like who's in the camp? But so I was there coyote running crews bags camp. We got dinner going. Yeah, we had the fire going. We had that rabbit. hole we prepped that rabbit. You You butchered are you?</p>



<p>So I cut all the usable meat out of it. We discarded the carcass I guess. But then what we did is we well, salt and pepper did and then some garlic powder. And then Honestly, I just threw it out right over the fire. Yeah. And let that cook. Made sure it was definitely well done. But honestly, we had that first bite, which I think was part of like, what would be like the tenderloin part of it. Which is like as big around as your pinky. It seems like a pretty tiny. Me. But anyway, yeah, we we sampled that because that was the first thing that was, you know, fully cooked for us to sample. And that kind of had like, it was a definite game. changer. You know, like, it almost had a fish.</p>



<p>I swear. Like a little bit of fish flavor. Yeah. Well, it's a rabbit out here. I don't know.</p>



<p>I mean, it's just a little</p>



<p>I always hate that. You know, we spend so much time like figuring out the answers to really difficult questions and theories. And then you don't know what a rabbit eats carrots. Yeah, I know.</p>



<p>Yeah, let's go play and I don't know why. But yeah, I was like, why don't I like my state's like, the high desert.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's gonna be one of those questions like, kids ask you when you're older. You sound like a dumb ass just like one of the kid inquiries and you're like, I have no idea.</p>



<p>No, it was really it was cool. Getting the like the lace cooktop. Yeah, we got him The fire for a bit. I chewed on for a while you did or Yeah, I ended up a bit and I just got stopped out a bit but but it was really good. It was cool.</p>



<p>Honestly, I thought the legs the legs had a way better taste kind of fun thing was gone after that one. Yes. But yeah, I put a little bit of barbecue sauce on which I don't think hurt him at all. I don't think that that that you know I was actually pretty happy with that I</p>



<p>was like yeah for doing it just over the coals on the fire. I was really yeah, sounded like, rabbit. We got the ridge over for my camp and we have our well I guess it's a couple hours ago. Oh, yeah, we made a creative. Yeah, that was really that was cool.</p>



<p>That was really cool. I really appreciated that process of it of I've never had any kind of hunting experience before. It was cool. I can follow you guys. I was like 30 feet back while Yeah, I mean, I brought my camera, stop taking pictures, taking some pictures. And it was cool. Robert is a hunting Pro. As far</p>



<p>as everything in three minutes,</p>



<p>I definitely made it look like those are those. I'd like to say that happens all the time. That was one of those precious moments.</p>



<p>just gone out from Camp like your Santa and just catching a little rabbit in our feed for the night and Robert processing it.</p>



<p>cooking it on the fire or just kind of like you could you could slow cook it or boil it or there's probably some other ways to go about it. It's fun. Like just eat it like Yeah, okay. primitive form. Yeah, like the American Indian that used to live out in this area too. Like Yeah, they probably did a lot of the same kinds of things.</p>



<p>Well, we got to try again the night and if we do well we're gonna make a stew out of it. Oh, I'd love to do it. Yeah, get some boiling water going.</p>



<p>Yeah. cooked up in there and dig a little rabbit potatoes. Yeah, we got a bunch of carrots. a madman I think that's gonna be great.</p>



<p>It was makes me think of that Bugs Bunny cartoon. You know, there was like picking them up and putting the carrots in there. Eating the carrots.</p>



<p>Yeah. Or the Porky Pig one but I was always thinking like, why would you put a live pig in the oven?</p>



<p>Yeah, that's gonna create some complications. That's gross was not the way you do that.</p>



<p>Yeah, previous to this. That's like my experience with game with game. You need a big boiling. Why did you teach me while game prep? Yeah, I think it comes down to a lot about life. Oh, absolutely.</p>



<p>You know, and it's funny because I couldn't get it out of my head. It's just like the Elmer Fudd thought going into my head Oh my god. Why you keep practice you will start paying off your learning for</p>



<p>now but that's like that's one of the sweet moments of honeymoons like the way that worked out. Because there's so many times I mean, like perfect example the night before you guys got here. I was out for like, two hours and I got skunked. Big time. I didn't even meant I didn't get a shot off. I didn't even get a good look. I saw a ton of them. I mean, I saw 10 times the rabbit we saw yesterday. Right? I was surprised but I got one.</p>



<p>Yeah, that was an interesting part of hunting yesterday. Was the you got that one rabbit just immediately but then there were not any other I swear there weren't any Yeah. Did you know I didn't see any anything. I didn't see a thing I did I got the watch. Oh, boy.</p>



<p>Yeah, so we finished up the rally last night we packed away dinner we tried to suffer through the cold it cleared off did big time the wind stop to disaster was on which was really cool. That made a huge difference. Such a big difference. I mean, yeah, the night so much more comfortable to get through. But it cleared off. And it got really cold. We could see like it was cool. We started you can see a bunch of the winter constellations. Yeah, that was like over the ridge over here and then we stayed up pretty late and you saw Jupiter pull up over the top of our mountain. A few like the summer constellations that was kind of cool. And it's so dark out here like this. You can see a lot of the deeper like fire pits. I</p>



<p>love that. Zero light pollution. Yeah, you know, I guess plushes out there but Oh, three flashlights by eight miles was ruined.</p>



<p>Yeah, great, great view out here for skywatching. So it's cool. How much? How many more layers of stars you can see out in a really dark sky?</p>



<p>How many more? Yeah, we, Robert and I were talking about that cuz we were looking at the North Star. And we were looking at the Big Dipper. And we're kind of moving around a little bit and you're like, wow, there's like so many more stars right there that you can normally see. Like, yeah, a number of the stars in. In the Little Dipper. They're almost like too faint to see. And most in most situations for most people's eyes. I think it's like it's like a fifth or sixth magnitude star. And we can see it no problem when you're just like, oh, whoa, it's like, absolutely right there. You just see this like little tiny structures so much. Such a brighter way. Ben's really cool.</p>



<p>You guys got some great photos. I hope we got some good ones. Yeah, we did get some cool ones. We did some long exposure photos while we were there.</p>



<p>Yeah, we should get a new set of hot hands each. Those are super necessary. For easy like we saw the frost in the hood of the car.</p>



<p>Yeah, I didn't want the fire and then we decided to go do those photos. And when we lived by the truck, you guys pointed out that it is cool. That's</p>



<p>cool, man. Yeah, it was super icy out but that was cool. Yeah, we hiked down to the to the end of the little room where I can't set that. Set up the tripod with the camera on it. Yeah. And yeah, took a handful of photos of like, apart mountain as part of it. And then the stars and stuff above it. That was pretty cool. I thought that was pretty fun. That was awesome. So</p>



<p>below is push your photo. Yeah, so I'm sure you can check out some of those photos. Marina though. If you guys don't know her from other podcasts that she co hosts with Billy Newman, the night sky podcast. Check it out. Pretty interesting stuff. Space Marina is quite the photographer as well.</p>



<p>Thank you very much. Appreciate it. It's</p>



<p>a little like, a little background on you. How long have you been doing photography?</p>



<p>I've been doing photography. Seriously since 2011. Probably. And I've always been really interested in Visual Arts. I guess I was really into drawing and painting.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're just artistic by nature, like so. Yeah, photography was bound to be good.</p>



<p>Yeah, I loved it. I had a lot of I was really into photography. When I was a kid. I had a lot of disposable cameras.</p>



<p>And some nice</p>



<p>little point and shoot cameras. Later on that were Yeah, you know, those little single lens ones? Oh, yeah. You put batteries in. Take your filming. Like still would feel like really extreme for me. Camera. So yeah, I was really into that. And then Billy and I did that first big road trip that we went on in the fall or end of summer and into fall of 2011. And that was my first time getting to use like real professional camera equipment. With detachable lenses and a body that was like made out of metal.</p>



<p>Yeah, and I know. You guys pack around. It's like it's so heavy. Glass. Yeah. glass and metal. is a bag full of glass. Yeah. Awesome. I want a couple fragile, expensive. No, like, last night like I had my backpack. You know, which is pretty. I mean, it's got some weight to it. But it's like it's pretty light in comparison to like what you're packing around following along. You know, maybe we don't even Honey, you just like just taking photos. Thank you. Yeah, it's pretty cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, you got a bunch of cool photos. Yeah, I'm really excited about it. It was so beautiful yesterday. Yeah, colors were amazing. And the clouds were just straight to</p>



<p>Yeah, this is really one of the nice nicer times I've been out here. It's cool having all the texture along the hillside. So yeah, one of my other favorite times a year out here and is it October in the early fall because the season starts to shift a bit. There's the Aspen cheese. I hear that a lot where we are at right now. But there's like a handful of groves closer to heart mounted up on Warner rim. And it's super cool because you get in those and it's just like bright gold and orange. Yeah, it's super beautiful. But yeah, like that's me here. I guess like this is the earliest I've ever been over here. Other than that had been like may like early May or something.</p>



<p>Yeah, I was gonna say I'm probably about the same time like late spring. Yeah, that's about Tom's I've made the trip out of here.</p>



<p>Oh, sorry. Go ahead. No,</p>



<p>I didn't really. I was gonna say it's interesting getting to be out here during different seasons where you get to experience the different weather. It only been out here or out in this area a few times that I've come with Billy. And it was really during very dry times a year. Yeah. And it's interesting being out here now and having there be a bunch of clouds in the sky and rain storms and, and there's water in the lakes. Yeah,</p>



<p>there's a lot more water. There's some green out here. I mean, that's obviously like alfalfa. No, we're gonna You and I were talking about that last night. We're like, you know, if you come out in the summertime to the same place, no matter where you are, or like, you come out of the same season every year. Like, that's all you ever know of that place. You know? Yeah. And if, like, if you really enjoy a place and want to, like experience it, I think it's good to kind of suffer through those wet windy days and really get to understand I</p>



<p>think it was so worth it. Honestly, it's like, I think even more beautiful.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think so. I mean, whether, yes, that it's that take on it that nobody else gets to see. Oh, yeah, I</p>



<p>think some of the extreme weather you get out here is one of the best parts of it. Yeah, especially Yeah, for photos or for dynamics, or just the visual part of being here that experience of like, I mean, cuz you know, like Eastern Oregon, like it seems arid, or it seems like maybe there isn't something here. But man it is like super interesting and has a really strong presence about it. Like just the way the way it feels being out here. A man teeming with life. Like I like Yeah, why don't come here in the Coyote. Yeah, here are like getting a rabbit here. Here in the rabbits. Yeah, classic. But yeah, it's this whole area is like is really full of a lot more life than you would first thing given that it's like 200 miles until you get to another small town.</p>



<p>Yeah, I know. It's It's crazy. Like Yeah, rock as far as you can see,</p>



<p>when you go north there. It's like there's nothing like there's nothing to to the west until the edge of a bit rim. Yeah, from here. There's nothing to the east. Like I mean, French glide if you can count that. But you can jump over to the Steen's there's nothing. The alvord there's nothing like out to McDermott. McDermott. Yeah. Who's heard of McDermott? Yeah. And then like from your north, it's like, all the way up to like highway 20 when you get up to wagon tire, and Riley and burns. Yeah. Like we're really kind of away from everything. Oh, yeah. Oh, here it is. Yeah, is really remote. I remember. I remember seeing like some fighter jet. Like tests out here. You'd see him come up. And yeah, you seem like whoa, coming out of Klamath Falls doing their like simulated dogfights and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You seem like both. I remember one time we sound like Bolton over Australia in between, like heart mountain in the scenes, but they came out that senate Bay is Yeah, a few seconds to get to the top. We came up to the north end here. And then like, shot back down this way south into Nevada. Okay. And then, you know, went on from there. But yeah, it's like, Wow, she's moving around all the time. I remember like we have when we were out in the Steen's for that ship like, and to the scenes and alvord. One of those days, maybe even two of them. There was like, one of the fighter jets that came over. Hey, do you see that afterburner, like roaring anywhere? And then you finally do spot it and it's like, just like a speck like small fingernail your pinkies Yeah, in the sky, you know, arm's length when you look out to there's just like some little black speck that looks like what got to be that just like, yeah, to do that. You know? Yeah. Just for the afterburner on you actually. bolt through half of Oregon in 10 seconds. Yeah. Your blast, man. Just like 15 minutes. Yeah, I'll be over Spokane in two minutes. from wherever in area 51. That was like kind of the old can see to like area 51 out in Nevada, you know, remote Nevada. But what's north of remote Nevada? remote or? Like pick up here? And like, if you look at the map, it's one of the most remote sections of the United States. We're really almost all this is a public land.</p>



<p>Yeah. It's awesome. When you look at the map like that, it's you get to see how much of this is just open. Like, that's what's cool is you're not like we're just going wherever we want camping wherever we want. I really don't have to worry about Yeah, trespassing. Yeah.</p>



<p>Part of it. Yeah, we were talking about that a little bit. Last night or yesterday, too. So how cool it is that there's so much out here that we just get to drive around and hike through any part of it that we want. Yeah. And I really, I really love that for outdoor stuff. I always have a hard time when you get into places where you really have to just stick to the designated</p>



<p>area. handle it, especially a couple of times I have to do this you know, I want to go cowboy. Truck over one. I know how to walk in the</p>



<p>ins I can get her. I just feel like a dog on a leash. Yeah, like, like at a rest stop. Yeah. All right, go use the ground, but not too much.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't want to camp somewhere where there is a higher density of people then. Like the house that I live at in town.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's another thing that I love about you out here. Is there is nobody else out here. You can't be neighbors. Like, daddy. I love that. I love the generator. A lot of the day hope you don't mind. Yeah, let's march to right like this time of year. Oh, yeah. No competition besides out here.</p>



<p>Yeah, you can do anything out here right now. there nobody around like this. Yeah, zero competition. We should maybe even have to the hotsprings Oh, yeah. Yeah. What is that right now? Or it's a way of looking like right at the mouth.</p>



<p>Yeah, but it's</p>



<p>a three hour roundtrip? Yeah.</p>



<p>Past past 130 last night, so who knows? Maybe we'll have some time or something like that. Yeah. I mean, tomorrow, Sunday. It's kind of like,</p>



<p>do whatever we got to do tonight. Got to do. Yeah, it'd be really fun. I want to get a bunch of stuff done. I'm glad we're doing this podcast. I want to do some bonus stuff. I wonder who's shooting stuff?</p>



<p>Yeah. taking it easy.</p>



<p>Oh screws out somewhere. They can make a picnic lunch. Yeah, baloney down here at the plush store. Got a loved one.</p>



<p>You know what I was impressed though. When I started like you to fill up I paid 15 cents less and gown and I didn't tell before I left. Oh, but which always trips me out. It's like you get out to these remote areas where like, you got to figure the shipping to get it in here was so much more costly than what it was to bring him to a place that's five minutes off the interstate. You know? We never seems to be that way. Sorry. We dropped the phone. It rattled loose around a gravelly washboard road because he doesn't know I don't know washboard is very much like driving over a washboard it's the old cat tracks to get stuck in the road when they're paving them. I thought it was a natural erosion path also too and then I talked to a guy that was doing a bunch of machine work and he was saying that washboard was for older cats bringing leveling out when they</p>



<p>graded Okay, so I couldn't believe it but man I've seen it like get worse you know? Or does it is it does it start with the cat track and</p>



<p>then the erosion is like it's packing only certain areas and then as it rains and stuff it just like erodes out those areas that haven't been as heavily packed. Oh,</p>



<p>man, I've been on somewhere like it's been graded and it's alright but then like after a while like rains and stuff. Ah, man it just gets super bad. I think she's still back there. She's sitting here but you get on that watch for like going like 20 miles an hour that wrong frequency and it's just like rattles the whole car.</p>



<p>It'll like rally off the road. Have you ever felt out? Oh, yeah, you know, yeah. But honestly, the only way to really get through washboard like cuz I didn't really realize that was there until just now because I've been doing like 60 on it. I've driven out so far. She's like me, just like standing up with one leg on the rail and</p>



<p>it's freaks me out when he passed he bought like flat in the back or some word track and they're just like standing there. Yeah, like that. That's where you beg you guys just cruising through down the corners and stuff with your dog just standing in the back.</p>



<p>I don't know some people might have badass dogs man. Layla is a she's a city slicker man. She looks like a sea slugger. And she does face in the wind. Well, you know she's she's adjusting get a couple more ticks on her a little more does. She's gonna look like she's born. She's a wild dog. She's gonna look like can I now run off of Robin, thanks for doing this podcast with me. This is Episode Seven. Read it. Thanks for hanging out for joining us our first guest star Thank you so much. Yeah, you guys. Yeah, that's pretty cool. All right.</p>



<p>So yeah, we're gonna cruise into forgot keys in the big city plush. Yeah. Pick up a couple. I don't even know me but more water water. Water. That's why we're going out of water. We're gonna cruise into flash. We're gonna poke around some of the Larry's around the lakes out here for a bit. Yeah. Try figure out some more stuff. Do another podcast tonight. That'll be cool. We'll keep you posted. Thanks, everybody for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. Tune in again next time. We'll have some more stuff. Thanks. Bye bye</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Camping In The Rabbit Hills


Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Guest: Marina Hansen
Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills
&nbsp;


Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional fil]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Camping In The Rabbit Hills</p>


<p>Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p>Guest: Marina Hansen</p>
<p>Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>


<p>Gear that I work with&nbsp;</p>



<p>Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;<a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color">https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color</a></p>



<p>I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/">https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/</a></p>



<p>When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/">https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/</a></p>



<p>A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm</a></p>



<p>The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3</a>&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h</a></p>



<p>Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;</p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm</a></p>



<p><a href="https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm">https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm</a></p>



<p>Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r</a></p>



<p>I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D</p>



<p><a href="https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii">https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii</a></p>



<p>If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.</p>



<p>If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourwedding.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">GoldenHourWedding.com</a>&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.</p>



<p>If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/photographs/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current portfolio is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?assettype=image&amp;mediatype=photography&amp;photographer=Billy%20Newman%20%2F%20EyeEm&amp;sort=mostpopular" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my current Stock photo library is here.</strong></a></p>



<p>If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="http://goldenhourexperience.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>GoldenHourExperience.com</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://nightskypodcast.com/podcast/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>



<p>If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://books.apple.com/us/book/working-with-film-billy-newman/id1451556964?mt=11&amp;app=itunes" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>you can download Working With Film here</strong></a>. Yours free.</p>



<p>Want to hear from me more often?<a target="_blank" href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/billy-newman-photo-podcast/id1019312876" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/support/" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>visit the Support Page here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>You can find&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.amazon.com/author/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>my latest photo books all on Amazon here</strong></a>.</p>



<p>I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.</p>



<p>My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.</p>



<p>Link</p>



<p>Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://billynewmanphoto.com/</a></p>



<p>YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto</a></p>



<p>Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/</a></p>



<p>Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/billynewman" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://twitter.com/billynewman</a></p>



<p>Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;<a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/</a></p>



<p>About  <a rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" href="https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/">https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/</a></p>







<p>Get-out-there-07-Rabbit-Hills-Camping-trip_otter.ai.txt</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast via is Billy new and I'm here today with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? How you doing? I'm doing well. We're in a truck right now we're also here with Marina Hanson. Hey, how are you? I'm good. Thanks for having me on your show, guys. We're doing a truck podcast as we were driving up a mountain road in Eastern Oregon near plush. And the rabbit hills, right, correct. Yeah. So today's Saturday, we've been here. Robert, you got here. I got here Thursday on Thursday afternoon early. Sorry about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was a nice drive. And I got here the weather was nice. I kind of drove around for a bit. Kind of looking for somewhere to camp. Ended up heading up this, this kind of grassy knoll area and found a pretty remote spot. Anyway, set up camp. Nice day. went out for an evening rabbit hunt. No luck. And the weather's pretty nice, though, right? Yeah, the weather is really pretty nice. I mean, that's like, I couldn't ask for a better day for this time of year. Yeah, for this time of year. Same thing that it's really pretty nice. But so I go out for that rabbit hunt. And I come back. And as I'm coming back, it's getting like pretty windy, though. And whatever. It's dark. I decided I'm gonna go to bed because it's pretty cold out and the wind just took off and just beat the tent up. Yeah, there's all night long, man.</p>



<p>I mean, what you know and you guys go we when we showed up when you when you found us and brought us up to the campsite, man. Yeah, your tent was folded over sideways. Like the only thing that was keeping the car set up inside already. Yes. a sturdy piece. No, that's why I just started packing gear in there so it wouldn't float float away. Yeah, exactly. I'd be worried about that, too. I think we talked about it and before like Marina and I like we had that 10 break from the wind back and I was asked,</p>



<p>you mentioned that episode for like a broken arm. Yeah, I was just snapped at the angle of it. Not actually poking through the fly. The Fly.</p>



<p>It was a wrestler But yeah, I was thinking like something like that. I remember when I was a kid and I had a tent set up in the backyard even with whatever, a couple steaks, probably not a ton. And it was just one of those July windstorms give you like little summer thunderstorms. Yes. My tent like took off, blew over and got caught in the blackberry bushes. Let's just do that. Yeah. Is that normally? Oh, yeah, we did not come to that yesterday. I remember coming out and that's where we started jackrabbit. Yeah. That's cool. Yeah.</p>



<p>I like like Billy was saying we're out here. just west of heart mountain. North of plush and a place called the rabbit hills. We're just kind of driving around exploring right now just had a camp. did a pretty nice hike yesterday. We just passed one of the bridges. We have got to Yeah, okay, so wait, what's the Tell me about that first rabbit first, I went out went out too early. I went out at like 615 not dark enough yet. You know, they they don't really come out until the later evening just because of predators and stuff. So yeah, they're not not very visible during the day. Anyway, I went out there. Did a hunt I saw probably 10 or 11 jackrabbits, I couldn't get a shot at any of them because they're already that way. And you know, they're, they're about as tall as the sagebrush. So you see your ears. It's just kind of like flashing.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's pretty small. In the past, I really only like walked up on it. Yeah, I was like hiking around in the sagebrush out here. And you come around a corner. Correct the way we were talking about the grass too, when you come around a corner jackrabbit, just like, yeah, just Cz books. takes off. Yeah. And</p>



<p>yeah, so I went on that hot saw a ton of jagaran. I couldn't get a shot at any of them. I got back a little after dark. I got in around eight o'clock, I guess. Okay. Just about that last little bit of daylight that you could possibly see where you were. Okay. And then. Yes, not the night. It was a good night. I mean, other than, yeah, when did the weather shift? Like, like went crazy? Yeah. between six and seven, it really started picking up. But it didn't get real bad until I was just getting back. And at that point, it was just like, it was more than I wanted to be out. And that's why I went to bed at eight o'clock. I didn't even start a fire or anything. I just passed out.</p>



<p>Yeah. So like for us, like well, I remember talking to you about the forecast earlier in the week and we're planning out stuff for this trip. Yeah. And it was saying that today. I think like last night like Friday night, it was supposed Like be raining and then snow in that like cold night that we had we got lucky. I guess it's the snow level didn't drop it with the storm it did a little faster. And so we got the rain was the wave of the rain during the daytime. Maybe earlier like you got it. Yeah. You guys yeah. And we added like when we came over with Lana pass that was snowy. And then like it was pretty good. But we saw the snow line for a lot of the areas we came out to like 31 passport rock, and then like Silver Lake and summer lake and then a bit rim. And then once we got out here, it was pretty nice. Well, he was still super windy when he showed up to me you but it started getting like nicer and nicer. That's when they kind of threw that latter half of the day. So I was happy that we got a bit of that. I yeah, I</p>



<p>mean, this turnaround. I I'm really happy with this. Oh yeah, I'd be okay. If the weather stand just like me. Well, like we talked about, it's like this is the type of risk you take in March when you decide to go on multi day camping. You know, it's just like, what do you really expect when you go out? And well, I guess spring that might as well be winter</p>



<p>here. Yeah, yeah. Here this is about the same as it would be in winter. But I'm really happy to see like that, you know, it stays out later later. And yeah, nice relatively like it's gonna be April soon, you guys. I know. It's pretty nice coming around, man. Yesterday, we showed up to the camp. It's a really cool site. I like to say I would say pretty remote size BLM land up here us around that. Coyote hills, rabbit hills. I guess you're saying this is the rabbit hole. This is the rabbit hills and coyote hills. It's kind of a little bit yeah, yeah, I've seen him. I know like this range kind of fills in a little bit like over on the heart mountain side. When you're on the ridge. You can look back and look like just a little north. Really. But yeah, but yeah, you can see him really pretty well. It was crazy to remember over on Hart mountain is really the first time I learned about it, you can really kind of see it, especially that period, you start to look around like where the water level is out there. But yeah, heartlake is, I guess where was it? Crump Lake further south, down toward it down. And then I think it's like Flagstaff lake. Lake. Yeah, kind of all run through this area. But I remember learning that was like, like, around 500 years ago. And then I guess I further back in time before that, this whole area, that whole section was just one big leg like everything from the coyote hills, the rabbit holes over here all the way up to the base of current mountain used to be</p>



<p>used to be one big lake. That's what I understood to like, if you go up on Hart mountain, they have that placard.</p>



<p>She's the water level used to be up here. Look at the rocks and you see the erosion lines, and you go, Oh, she's</p>



<p>a trip. 100 feet. Yeah, it's a huge lake. And now it's just these seasonal wetlands that like even on some years, they won't get, you know, they won't fill up just because of low water. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Most of the years that I've been out here from like, I don't know, like 2003 four or 567 I think I've only seen water in these spots maybe once or twice. Really? Well. Yeah, like significant amounts of man. A lot of the times we come out like heartlake was just like dropped way, way back. It was almost just mud, like the Flagstaff like anything up here. All of this was just Marsh, really. So it's really weird to think like I was looking at the drainage basin from around here how a lot of the water comes off the Fremont National Forest, your heart mountain over here. And what is that? Like? I think like you see that one over there that that snowcapped. I think it's like, Drake's peak that drew me right, thinking of the wrong thing. But I think like, yeah, some of the creeks that run off of that hill and off of like, the Fremont national forest or Gearhart and whatever comes in over here, that draws like eastward, it fills in this water basin here, I guess, the watershed for it. So I don't know it's weird to think like how is just all these little creeks? There's no significant river in this area?</p>



<p>No, it's honestly it's crazy how things even water out here in the first place. Wasn't for small melt and just like occasional rain. I mean, this place is pretty bear with me. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I mean, not much going when we look out here. I mean, like, as far as I can see, the only lights are just the few that make up plush. Yeah, but a plush weren't here. Like there would be I mean, this this Yeah, it's absolutely plush this hardly anything. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Seriously, it's just like that little general store and like a couple homes. And that's it.</p>



<p>Yeah, like it's hardly anything. But yeah, one of my favorite areas. That's really cool.</p>



<p>So Alright, so you guys came in to camp last night? You guys met up with me? Yeah. What did we do?</p>



<p>Well, we took Oh, well, we tried to move camp because like the wind was coming through like crazy. Like we were still in the middle of that storm. Yeah. And we had a ton of wind blowing from the side. Southwest over there south east. man it was coming in so hard like I was probably I remember looking at the forecast is a 20 mile an hour winds I bet that it was probably it felt like more than that. I felt like man yeah that was yeah yeah they didn't seem like toy yeah it seems to me seemed like it was gonna rip that easy if apart Marina fine yeah we yeah yeah we move the easy app we move the test put all the stuff in the back of the truck bed and then we chucked it over. I was like 100 yards or so. Yeah, we got into that little draw there. Yeah, there's like a little a little draw. That seemed to be a pretty good windbreak from from the north and south side. And then we kind of park their cars around level a little bit of ground. Yeah. Put in a new little spot for the kitchen and stuff and yeah, it's a great set. I really dig that little Kim. Kim berry</p>



<p>it's been really nice man. I i right now we're in an area that I was kind of scouting yesterday for potential campaign to get out of that win. Yeah. And obviously didn't get a better appear. But no, we got a great spot. And I mean, the win is really kind of died down and it's just made this trip a lot more enjoyable</p>



<p>by the wind right now is great. Like last night, yesterday evening, like what once we got like, kind of down into that draw. It was a lot better. Even when we were shooting like I went up on the hill. We pulled out the 22 team, and we did some target practice. Yeah, side of the 22 for the hunt. That was cool, man. I had a good time doing that. But I hiked up on the hill with the with the camera and as soon as that guy just like above that draw, it was just like, beat me in the side of the face with wind. But, but I tried to get a handful of pictures and we came back down. We set it in the 22 marinas data. Yeah, we're gonna</p>



<p>Yeah, great. It's pretty cool. Sniper McGee over here. Scope before or gotten set up to be seated for shooting. So So how was that? Like, what did you notice by using the scope? I liked. I liked having that accuracy. It was really cool. Because uh, you Robert had your binoculars and you were telling me kinda where were my last one hit? Yeah. And I love that part of it. That was really cool. Getting to have like that. That confirmation of where it hit and then getting to readjust from where I tried decided the last time Yeah, to get it closer. And that's really cool. I like I like that. That kind of shooting</p>



<p>is cool. What do you think about the time? Yeah, like trying to steady yourself? Yeah, I like that part of you see where like the breathing plays a huge factor in it.</p>



<p>Yeah. Body the most still. Yeah. And exhale. It's really tough. Sometimes it is actually. It was like, during the first two shots it was it was almost hard or distracting trying to focus. Yeah, getting my breath. Right. Just to like, practice with those a lot of fun though. I liked was it the 17 that I use? Yeah, yeah, you're shooting? Oh, yeah. You did? Yeah. It's not the same as the 22. It's just like a better rifle. is something we took out last night?</p>



<p>Yeah. So we decided in the rifles. Yep. We set up evening. I was incredible. So the weather cleared out. got like, partly cloudy man. And out here. The view of heart mountain that no one's ever seen it. Like from the side of the hill. It's so cool. It's one of the most impressive. Like masons, they're like pop up and rise over the ground. It's huge on top. It's huge. It is really huge. On top, it's read have the land out here is because it comes out from one side and then it's shelf soft. You think about the Steen's it does the opposite, you know. Yeah. So it's like there's Warner rim out here. We look out we see like the ledge come up and drop off on the east side. Then we see heart mountain come up on the west side, and then slope off to the east. Yeah. And then we see the Steen's kind of slope up from the west. And then like drop off really steeply on the east side. It's really trippy, like how it kind of goes like around here but these little shelves of land that like tipped up they like rows or something underneath pushing up that one side.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's really interesting. topography it's Yeah. I mean, how wide across is hard, man? I mean, it takes you like an hour and a half to dry. It's a bit big. Yeah, that seems like a long time. Let's do it like 55 miles an hour on a gravel road, you know?</p>



<p>Seems like a ton of time on a gravel road. Right is really cool. Like the view from Arizona. Can you see that whole front face Yeah. of the other mountain set of apart mountain,</p>



<p>especially in the sunset in the morning. So cool looking. You guys got some cool pictures last night when we</p>



<p>went last night was easy. Light was so cool. But yeah, so we set up Marina can we take some pictures for a while and then Robert like we set up, we got the I have the 22 you had the 17. And then we went out for another rabbit hole, which is really cool. I was my first time that good i was i never I never done any hunting stuff before I went I got my hunting license just a couple of days before the trip. And it was cool work with a 22 bit it's cool talking with you for a few and going over what to do but at a really fun time. Like getting set up. Walking out kind of cruising through the stage. Yeah, and like you keep an eyes up but let's see what we we got packed up. We started. You went for what two miles or three miles yesterday saw him? Yeah. Didn't get a shot out. We started yesterday evening together, took off. What was what was that? What was our hanstone</p>



<p>we leave camp I give I give bill here quick little run over like rundown of what we're gonna do, you know, safety behind this net. And so we take off over out of camp. I don't know, what do we hike 200 yards, maybe? Maybe? Yeah, maybe maybe that'd be a generous assessment and then bam, all of a sudden, I don't know, probably 30 or 40 yards off and you see a jackrabbit kind of cruising across the sagebrush. And I just kind of pulled up on my song. And then I pulled up where I thought it would be.</p>



<p>I saw you do that. And I looked over I was like, what really? robber spotted something already? I wasn't even bored. like walking, walking around. Yeah, like, like when you're fishing. You're like, Oh, come on. Yeah, I've been. Yeah, it's been like, like, I haven't seen a jackrabbit forever. Like, there's no shot today, but then like, Yeah, what, like 130 minutes into the hunt. robbers posted out by the COVID. Once you see you over there. Robert, seas move. You said if you take a shot, take a shot Blaine. Got a beautiful shot to you. I'm not I'm not trying to be full of myself. It was a really good shot. Yeah, we cruise up. We cruise up on his up on them. Like that. The puncture was like</p>



<p>right in the breadbasket man right behind the shoulder and like, about an inch and a half, two inches back behind the shoulder. Wow. Which all the vitals are in there. So it got him he was dead instantly. Because I usually like when you get them drive to school. But yeah, usually when you get on I mean, there's you know, they'll kick around for a second or two. And you can usually see where they are. But he just dropped I didn't see him at all. Yeah, you know, so I ended up walking up over there kind of right where I thought I'd hit him. And yeah, so then we feel dressed them right there.</p>



<p>I've never not really like seen that. Done out there in the wild. Yeah. No, it was cool. Like it was. It was Yeah. Interesting to see what what you went through. And like, it's interesting to see like, also like, I mean, at least for Robin is a smaller size, but how quick you can go through and clear out an animal. Yeah, yeah. Be Done. Yeah.</p>



<p>It seemed like a pretty quick cleanup of you. skinning it and then taking out the organs and stuff. Yeah, prepared me. Well, it took about 15 minutes to finish it. Yeah,</p>



<p>it was really quick I thought but man for like, as big as it is like, when you when you get it down. Like that's a lean animal. And like without that, like the cap pounds. I like the ribs. There's no meat on the ribs. Which seems like a little bit of me. And like the the arms and legs or something or like kind of around behind but that's about it. Yeah, it was like the back around the spine and stuff like that for muscles but back strap on it. Like, a little bit bigger than a pencil. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, no. So okay, so we got that. I ran it back to camp, washed it. hung it up to cool. And then I met back up with you. Yeah,</p>



<p>that was what five minutes into? Yeah. So still. Still. I was like, Alright, let's go. Let's keep doing it. Yeah. So we ended up high. We hiked the good distance last night. Did you like it? We came over a couple of rises across that Creek. Yeah. And then like coming when we when we came around? It took a while to get back to that Creek, but we pass those Yeah, it's like a little bit but yeah, we had like, yeah, we just like walked around and kept cruising. I don't think we saw. We didn't we didn't see anything</p>



<p>else. Then we got back far after dark. Where I was pretty dry. There was a point where I was like, if this isn't the ridge, like I mean, I know where I was, you know, I was using this this Mesa kind of out here as a as a landmark. Yeah. And I could still see it kind of highlighted in the, in the waning sunlight of</p>



<p>the sun, you know.</p>



<p>Anyway, yeah. So I was kind of using that as my reference, but then it was to the point where I was like, man, I thought this was our ridge. Oh, yeah, like and the hill is rolling. enough that you're like, Well, I hope we just like yeah, it was a little ways down, but we just kept going. Yeah, I see we hit the road or something. I mean, yeah. There was no way we were lost. There was there's definite possibility that we weren't sure where we were. But there was no way we were lost. Yeah, yeah. But yeah, we ended up when we came out, like right on top of the truck. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah. It seemed like I felt like we were on track. But remember when we got there? Like, we stopped for a second. We hit the coyotes.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Because often that is that was cool, man. Like, you're crazy, man. Yeah. Yeah. They're smelling like, hey, these guys. Let's go rabbits. Let's go raid their camp. Oh, we gotta go see if those Cody's packed off that</p>



<p>pile. Oh, yeah, I wanted I was thinking they're gonna be trying to hunt that down.</p>



<p>Well, okay, so then. Quick little story. Last night. You guys didn't wake up to this, but I stick through it. I slept. I slept straight through. I can't believe it. Yeah, for 19 this morning, I'm waking up to some coyotes howling right near camp. And I'm listening to him. It was probably five or six of them. And they're going back and forth. And I've got Layla, my Australian Shepherd with me and she's in the tent. And I didn't know. I mean, I'm hearing all this. I'm I'm kind of like, you know, I don't hear anybody stirring. I don't hear her like growling or barking out here. Failure Marina and the 10 over. I'm like, I know this is really loud right now. But anyway, that these coyotes that come up and then the one was barking, like I mean, it couldn't have been 15 feet outside my head. Whoa, you know, and that's why I couldn't believe you guys. I wonder what else is cruise right outside? Oh, it stopped. And I've had that happen before on other hunting trips where they'll come up and it's like, I don't know if the wind was at its back and it can sent us or something. And it just got right there. And all of a sudden was like, whoa, I'm in camp because we had that honey one year with my dad and I were laying in our on our beds there. And they came right into camp, just like howling, howling Hill and all of a sudden, they all just stop. And then they bailed. They're just like, all of a sudden they figured it out that they're like in somebody's camp. That's kind of the vibe I got last night because he was just going nuts. And then Laila kind of started to freak out. Like, this is attack dog. She's I had to hold her wine.</p>



<p>Good.</p>



<p>Bye, but yeah, it took off but that was pretty neat.</p>



<p>That is cool. Yeah. Yeah, like who's in the camp? But so I was there coyote running crews bags camp. We got dinner going. Yeah, we had the fire going. We had that rabbit. hole we prepped that rabbit. You You butchered are you?</p>



<p>So I cut all the usable meat out of it. We discarded the carcass I guess. But then what we did is we well, salt and pepper did and then some garlic powder. And then Honestly, I just threw it out right over the fire. Yeah. And let that cook. Made sure it was definitely well done. But honestly, we had that first bite, which I think was part of like, what would be like the tenderloin part of it. Which is like as big around as your pinky. It seems like a pretty tiny. Me. But anyway, yeah, we we sampled that because that was the first thing that was, you know, fully cooked for us to sample. And that kind of had like, it was a definite game. changer. You know, like, it almost had a fish.</p>



<p>I swear. Like a little bit of fish flavor. Yeah. Well, it's a rabbit out here. I don't know.</p>



<p>I mean, it's just a little</p>



<p>I always hate that. You know, we spend so much time like figuring out the answers to really difficult questions and theories. And then you don't know what a rabbit eats carrots. Yeah, I know.</p>



<p>Yeah, let's go play and I don't know why. But yeah, I was like, why don't I like my state's like, the high desert.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's gonna be one of those questions like, kids ask you when you're older. You sound like a dumb ass just like one of the kid inquiries and you're like, I have no idea.</p>



<p>No, it was really it was cool. Getting the like the lace cooktop. Yeah, we got him The fire for a bit. I chewed on for a while you did or Yeah, I ended up a bit and I just got stopped out a bit but but it was really good. It was cool.</p>



<p>Honestly, I thought the legs the legs had a way better taste kind of fun thing was gone after that one. Yes. But yeah, I put a little bit of barbecue sauce on which I don't think hurt him at all. I don't think that that that you know I was actually pretty happy with that I</p>



<p>was like yeah for doing it just over the coals on the fire. I was really yeah, sounded like, rabbit. We got the ridge over for my camp and we have our well I guess it's a couple hours ago. Oh, yeah, we made a creative. Yeah, that was really that was cool.</p>



<p>That was really cool. I really appreciated that process of it of I've never had any kind of hunting experience before. It was cool. I can follow you guys. I was like 30 feet back while Yeah, I mean, I brought my camera, stop taking pictures, taking some pictures. And it was cool. Robert is a hunting Pro. As far</p>



<p>as everything in three minutes,</p>



<p>I definitely made it look like those are those. I'd like to say that happens all the time. That was one of those precious moments.</p>



<p>just gone out from Camp like your Santa and just catching a little rabbit in our feed for the night and Robert processing it.</p>



<p>cooking it on the fire or just kind of like you could you could slow cook it or boil it or there's probably some other ways to go about it. It's fun. Like just eat it like Yeah, okay. primitive form. Yeah, like the American Indian that used to live out in this area too. Like Yeah, they probably did a lot of the same kinds of things.</p>



<p>Well, we got to try again the night and if we do well we're gonna make a stew out of it. Oh, I'd love to do it. Yeah, get some boiling water going.</p>



<p>Yeah. cooked up in there and dig a little rabbit potatoes. Yeah, we got a bunch of carrots. a madman I think that's gonna be great.</p>



<p>It was makes me think of that Bugs Bunny cartoon. You know, there was like picking them up and putting the carrots in there. Eating the carrots.</p>



<p>Yeah. Or the Porky Pig one but I was always thinking like, why would you put a live pig in the oven?</p>



<p>Yeah, that's gonna create some complications. That's gross was not the way you do that.</p>



<p>Yeah, previous to this. That's like my experience with game with game. You need a big boiling. Why did you teach me while game prep? Yeah, I think it comes down to a lot about life. Oh, absolutely.</p>



<p>You know, and it's funny because I couldn't get it out of my head. It's just like the Elmer Fudd thought going into my head Oh my god. Why you keep practice you will start paying off your learning for</p>



<p>now but that's like that's one of the sweet moments of honeymoons like the way that worked out. Because there's so many times I mean, like perfect example the night before you guys got here. I was out for like, two hours and I got skunked. Big time. I didn't even meant I didn't get a shot off. I didn't even get a good look. I saw a ton of them. I mean, I saw 10 times the rabbit we saw yesterday. Right? I was surprised but I got one.</p>



<p>Yeah, that was an interesting part of hunting yesterday. Was the you got that one rabbit just immediately but then there were not any other I swear there weren't any Yeah. Did you know I didn't see any anything. I didn't see a thing I did I got the watch. Oh, boy.</p>



<p>Yeah, so we finished up the rally last night we packed away dinner we tried to suffer through the cold it cleared off did big time the wind stop to disaster was on which was really cool. That made a huge difference. Such a big difference. I mean, yeah, the night so much more comfortable to get through. But it cleared off. And it got really cold. We could see like it was cool. We started you can see a bunch of the winter constellations. Yeah, that was like over the ridge over here and then we stayed up pretty late and you saw Jupiter pull up over the top of our mountain. A few like the summer constellations that was kind of cool. And it's so dark out here like this. You can see a lot of the deeper like fire pits. I</p>



<p>love that. Zero light pollution. Yeah, you know, I guess plushes out there but Oh, three flashlights by eight miles was ruined.</p>



<p>Yeah, great, great view out here for skywatching. So it's cool. How much? How many more layers of stars you can see out in a really dark sky?</p>



<p>How many more? Yeah, we, Robert and I were talking about that cuz we were looking at the North Star. And we were looking at the Big Dipper. And we're kind of moving around a little bit and you're like, wow, there's like so many more stars right there that you can normally see. Like, yeah, a number of the stars in. In the Little Dipper. They're almost like too faint to see. And most in most situations for most people's eyes. I think it's like it's like a fifth or sixth magnitude star. And we can see it no problem when you're just like, oh, whoa, it's like, absolutely right there. You just see this like little tiny structures so much. Such a brighter way. Ben's really cool.</p>



<p>You guys got some great photos. I hope we got some good ones. Yeah, we did get some cool ones. We did some long exposure photos while we were there.</p>



<p>Yeah, we should get a new set of hot hands each. Those are super necessary. For easy like we saw the frost in the hood of the car.</p>



<p>Yeah, I didn't want the fire and then we decided to go do those photos. And when we lived by the truck, you guys pointed out that it is cool. That's</p>



<p>cool, man. Yeah, it was super icy out but that was cool. Yeah, we hiked down to the to the end of the little room where I can't set that. Set up the tripod with the camera on it. Yeah. And yeah, took a handful of photos of like, apart mountain as part of it. And then the stars and stuff above it. That was pretty cool. I thought that was pretty fun. That was awesome. So</p>



<p>below is push your photo. Yeah, so I'm sure you can check out some of those photos. Marina though. If you guys don't know her from other podcasts that she co hosts with Billy Newman, the night sky podcast. Check it out. Pretty interesting stuff. Space Marina is quite the photographer as well.</p>



<p>Thank you very much. Appreciate it. It's</p>



<p>a little like, a little background on you. How long have you been doing photography?</p>



<p>I've been doing photography. Seriously since 2011. Probably. And I've always been really interested in Visual Arts. I guess I was really into drawing and painting.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're just artistic by nature, like so. Yeah, photography was bound to be good.</p>



<p>Yeah, I loved it. I had a lot of I was really into photography. When I was a kid. I had a lot of disposable cameras.</p>



<p>And some nice</p>



<p>little point and shoot cameras. Later on that were Yeah, you know, those little single lens ones? Oh, yeah. You put batteries in. Take your filming. Like still would feel like really extreme for me. Camera. So yeah, I was really into that. And then Billy and I did that first big road trip that we went on in the fall or end of summer and into fall of 2011. And that was my first time getting to use like real professional camera equipment. With detachable lenses and a body that was like made out of metal.</p>



<p>Yeah, and I know. You guys pack around. It's like it's so heavy. Glass. Yeah. glass and metal. is a bag full of glass. Yeah. Awesome. I want a couple fragile, expensive. No, like, last night like I had my backpack. You know, which is pretty. I mean, it's got some weight to it. But it's like it's pretty light in comparison to like what you're packing around following along. You know, maybe we don't even Honey, you just like just taking photos. Thank you. Yeah, it's pretty cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, you got a bunch of cool photos. Yeah, I'm really excited about it. It was so beautiful yesterday. Yeah, colors were amazing. And the clouds were just straight to</p>



<p>Yeah, this is really one of the nice nicer times I've been out here. It's cool having all the texture along the hillside. So yeah, one of my other favorite times a year out here and is it October in the early fall because the season starts to shift a bit. There's the Aspen cheese. I hear that a lot where we are at right now. But there's like a handful of groves closer to heart mounted up on Warner rim. And it's super cool because you get in those and it's just like bright gold and orange. Yeah, it's super beautiful. But yeah, like that's me here. I guess like this is the earliest I've ever been over here. Other than that had been like may like early May or something.</p>



<p>Yeah, I was gonna say I'm probably about the same time like late spring. Yeah, that's about Tom's I've made the trip out of here.</p>



<p>Oh, sorry. Go ahead. No,</p>



<p>I didn't really. I was gonna say it's interesting getting to be out here during different seasons where you get to experience the different weather. It only been out here or out in this area a few times that I've come with Billy. And it was really during very dry times a year. Yeah. And it's interesting being out here now and having there be a bunch of clouds in the sky and rain storms and, and there's water in the lakes. Yeah,</p>



<p>there's a lot more water. There's some green out here. I mean, that's obviously like alfalfa. No, we're gonna You and I were talking about that last night. We're like, you know, if you come out in the summertime to the same place, no matter where you are, or like, you come out of the same season every year. Like, that's all you ever know of that place. You know? Yeah. And if, like, if you really enjoy a place and want to, like experience it, I think it's good to kind of suffer through those wet windy days and really get to understand I</p>



<p>think it was so worth it. Honestly, it's like, I think even more beautiful.</p>



<p>Yeah, I think so. I mean, whether, yes, that it's that take on it that nobody else gets to see. Oh, yeah, I</p>



<p>think some of the extreme weather you get out here is one of the best parts of it. Yeah, especially Yeah, for photos or for dynamics, or just the visual part of being here that experience of like, I mean, cuz you know, like Eastern Oregon, like it seems arid, or it seems like maybe there isn't something here. But man it is like super interesting and has a really strong presence about it. Like just the way the way it feels being out here. A man teeming with life. Like I like Yeah, why don't come here in the Coyote. Yeah, here are like getting a rabbit here. Here in the rabbits. Yeah, classic. But yeah, it's this whole area is like is really full of a lot more life than you would first thing given that it's like 200 miles until you get to another small town.</p>



<p>Yeah, I know. It's It's crazy. Like Yeah, rock as far as you can see,</p>



<p>when you go north there. It's like there's nothing like there's nothing to to the west until the edge of a bit rim. Yeah, from here. There's nothing to the east. Like I mean, French glide if you can count that. But you can jump over to the Steen's there's nothing. The alvord there's nothing like out to McDermott. McDermott. Yeah. Who's heard of McDermott? Yeah. And then like from your north, it's like, all the way up to like highway 20 when you get up to wagon tire, and Riley and burns. Yeah. Like we're really kind of away from everything. Oh, yeah. Oh, here it is. Yeah, is really remote. I remember. I remember seeing like some fighter jet. Like tests out here. You'd see him come up. And yeah, you seem like whoa, coming out of Klamath Falls doing their like simulated dogfights and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You seem like both. I remember one time we sound like Bolton over Australia in between, like heart mountain in the scenes, but they came out that senate Bay is Yeah, a few seconds to get to the top. We came up to the north end here. And then like, shot back down this way south into Nevada. Okay. And then, you know, went on from there. But yeah, it's like, Wow, she's moving around all the time. I remember like we have when we were out in the Steen's for that ship like, and to the scenes and alvord. One of those days, maybe even two of them. There was like, one of the fighter jets that came over. Hey, do you see that afterburner, like roaring anywhere? And then you finally do spot it and it's like, just like a speck like small fingernail your pinkies Yeah, in the sky, you know, arm's length when you look out to there's just like some little black speck that looks like what got to be that just like, yeah, to do that. You know? Yeah. Just for the afterburner on you actually. bolt through half of Oregon in 10 seconds. Yeah. Your blast, man. Just like 15 minutes. Yeah, I'll be over Spokane in two minutes. from wherever in area 51. That was like kind of the old can see to like area 51 out in Nevada, you know, remote Nevada. But what's north of remote Nevada? remote or? Like pick up here? And like, if you look at the map, it's one of the most remote sections of the United States. We're really almost all this is a public land.</p>



<p>Yeah. It's awesome. When you look at the map like that, it's you get to see how much of this is just open. Like, that's what's cool is you're not like we're just going wherever we want camping wherever we want. I really don't have to worry about Yeah, trespassing. Yeah.</p>



<p>Part of it. Yeah, we were talking about that a little bit. Last night or yesterday, too. So how cool it is that there's so much out here that we just get to drive around and hike through any part of it that we want. Yeah. And I really, I really love that for outdoor stuff. I always have a hard time when you get into places where you really have to just stick to the designated</p>



<p>area. handle it, especially a couple of times I have to do this you know, I want to go cowboy. Truck over one. I know how to walk in the</p>



<p>ins I can get her. I just feel like a dog on a leash. Yeah, like, like at a rest stop. Yeah. All right, go use the ground, but not too much.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't want to camp somewhere where there is a higher density of people then. Like the house that I live at in town.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's another thing that I love about you out here. Is there is nobody else out here. You can't be neighbors. Like, daddy. I love that. I love the generator. A lot of the day hope you don't mind. Yeah, let's march to right like this time of year. Oh, yeah. No competition besides out here.</p>



<p>Yeah, you can do anything out here right now. there nobody around like this. Yeah, zero competition. We should maybe even have to the hotsprings Oh, yeah. Yeah. What is that right now? Or it's a way of looking like right at the mouth.</p>



<p>Yeah, but it's</p>



<p>a three hour roundtrip? Yeah.</p>



<p>Past past 130 last night, so who knows? Maybe we'll have some time or something like that. Yeah. I mean, tomorrow, Sunday. It's kind of like,</p>



<p>do whatever we got to do tonight. Got to do. Yeah, it'd be really fun. I want to get a bunch of stuff done. I'm glad we're doing this podcast. I want to do some bonus stuff. I wonder who's shooting stuff?</p>



<p>Yeah. taking it easy.</p>



<p>Oh screws out somewhere. They can make a picnic lunch. Yeah, baloney down here at the plush store. Got a loved one.</p>



<p>You know what I was impressed though. When I started like you to fill up I paid 15 cents less and gown and I didn't tell before I left. Oh, but which always trips me out. It's like you get out to these remote areas where like, you got to figure the shipping to get it in here was so much more costly than what it was to bring him to a place that's five minutes off the interstate. You know? We never seems to be that way. Sorry. We dropped the phone. It rattled loose around a gravelly washboard road because he doesn't know I don't know washboard is very much like driving over a washboard it's the old cat tracks to get stuck in the road when they're paving them. I thought it was a natural erosion path also too and then I talked to a guy that was doing a bunch of machine work and he was saying that washboard was for older cats bringing leveling out when they</p>



<p>graded Okay, so I couldn't believe it but man I've seen it like get worse you know? Or does it is it does it start with the cat track and</p>



<p>then the erosion is like it's packing only certain areas and then as it rains and stuff it just like erodes out those areas that haven't been as heavily packed. Oh,</p>



<p>man, I've been on somewhere like it's been graded and it's alright but then like after a while like rains and stuff. Ah, man it just gets super bad. I think she's still back there. She's sitting here but you get on that watch for like going like 20 miles an hour that wrong frequency and it's just like rattles the whole car.</p>



<p>It'll like rally off the road. Have you ever felt out? Oh, yeah, you know, yeah. But honestly, the only way to really get through washboard like cuz I didn't really realize that was there until just now because I've been doing like 60 on it. I've driven out so far. She's like me, just like standing up with one leg on the rail and</p>



<p>it's freaks me out when he passed he bought like flat in the back or some word track and they're just like standing there. Yeah, like that. That's where you beg you guys just cruising through down the corners and stuff with your dog just standing in the back.</p>



<p>I don't know some people might have badass dogs man. Layla is a she's a city slicker man. She looks like a sea slugger. And she does face in the wind. Well, you know she's she's adjusting get a couple more ticks on her a little more does. She's gonna look like she's born. She's a wild dog. She's gonna look like can I now run off of Robin, thanks for doing this podcast with me. This is Episode Seven. Read it. Thanks for hanging out for joining us our first guest star Thank you so much. Yeah, you guys. Yeah, that's pretty cool. All right.</p>



<p>So yeah, we're gonna cruise into forgot keys in the big city plush. Yeah. Pick up a couple. I don't even know me but more water water. Water. That's why we're going out of water. We're gonna cruise into flash. We're gonna poke around some of the Larry's around the lakes out here for a bit. Yeah. Try figure out some more stuff. Do another podcast tonight. That'll be cool. We'll keep you posted. Thanks, everybody for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. Tune in again next time. We'll have some more stuff. Thanks. Bye bye</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Camping In The Rabbit Hills


Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Guest: Marina Hansen
Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills
&nbsp;


Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4&nbsp;



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm



Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r



I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D



https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii



If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.



If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit&nbsp;&nbsp;GoldenHourWedding.com&nbsp;or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.



If you want to look at my photography,&nbsp;my current portfolio is here.



If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman,&nbsp;my current Stock photo library is here.



If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on&nbsp;GoldenHourExperience.com.



If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman,&nbsp;you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.



If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography:&nbsp;you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.



Want to hear from me more often?&nbsp;Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.



If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution,&nbsp;visit the Support Page here.



You can find&nbsp;my latest photo books all on Amazon here.



I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.



My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.



Link



Website Billy Newman Photo&nbsp;https://billynewmanphoto.com/



YouTube&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto



Facebook Page&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/



Twitter&nbsp;&nbsp;https://twitter.com/billynewman



Instagram&nbsp;&nbsp;https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/



About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/







Get-out-there-07-Rabbit-Hills-Camping-trip_otter.ai.txt



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast via is Billy new and I'm here today with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? How you doing? I'm doing well. We're in a truck righ]]></itunes:summary>
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Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
Guest: Marina Hansen
Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills
&nbsp;


Gear that I work with&nbsp;



Professional film stock I work with&nbsp;https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color



I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag&nbsp;



https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/



When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod&nbsp;



https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/



A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm



https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm



The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3&nbsp;https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h



Two lenses I am using all t]]></googleplay:description>
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	<title>Get Out There &#124; 06 Fishing The Alsea River</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/getoutthere6/</link>
	<pubDate>Tue, 14 Mar 2017 20:39:39 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5379</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>


<p>Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm</p>



<p>I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.</p>



<p>It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances that you might run into. And then you can</p>



<p>Yeah, you do the thing where like, you know, you're going for three days also and you're like, well, wow, I have so much room. You know, I only have three days worth of stuff, which is pretty minimalist. And then you end up going, oh, well I got this and this and then snacks before you before you know it. Yeah, you just pack.</p>



<p>Six Pack in the top. Yeah. Yeah. And that's happened a couple of times. I was trying to think about how that worked out for me. I remember early on when I did when I did like a couple early backpacking trips. We talked about this in that first episode, I think doing some stuff on the lower road. Maybe the second one. We're, yeah, that first chip, I did the 40 whatever, miles down the lower road. And it was just way rushed. And it was way too heavy and all the stuff you like, we brought a bunch of cans, we didn't have a can opener and like, like, What was this? What was the system that was going behind this, like, you get things that work in a kitchen, but there's no system and that that helps you? You know, do that in the backcountry, I guess. Or to keep things good or, like purify enough water to have a that's always that was always one having so otter with you. So that's something I want to ask you what kind of what kind of water purification? I have always been under, under attack about this. Like I really wanted more equipment for water purification, it's probably well, you know, I've been fortunate a lot of the time. But yeah, it's it's been risky, maybe one or two times, but I've only ever had this squeeze bottle charcoal filter, like you fill it up with maybe 12 ounces of water and you squeeze it out of this filter. What we would do Marina and I when we go backpacking, we were up in the well, ours we were up in the Trinity Alps, we were up in the Tetons, it was a lot of spots where it was like really clean snowmelt. So worked out on our favor a lot of times on the other hand, there was times where we were on the lower rogue in the canyon, and there's really no good you know, as mosquito puddles or whatever it is,</p>



<p>that's, that's where I caught Giardia. Oh, yeah, mosquito puddle. But that's Yeah, that was that was nasty. And that was my filter broke. And that was the biggest thing I learned was a, I don't know, you always hear an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Yeah, like it's man, just maintaining your equipment, cleaning it after every trip doing, just doing the basic maintenance that your equipment requires.</p>



<p>That's something I've not understood for a long time. And yeah, that the system that we had for water was super, basically we just we'd fill up the 12 ounces, we put the top on and we'd like squeeze, you have to like kind of crush it through the charcoal filter to get it to those those moves slow to way slow. So you fresh it out. So we'd have like our Nalgene bottle, like between our knees and our hand just kind of like crushing down on this creek water that we were trying to push. We're trying to put an analogy, we had like three or four of them that we had to sit at the creek at to pump out you know, I don't know two or three liters of water to take back the camp with us or to go hiking with for the next rest of the day. So I used that I use just that one filter for like three years. I'm like, wait, you wait too many gallons of water, I think for that until the chocolate is finally broke off. Or you know, like the whole filter unit just finally broke off. I figured it's probably it's probably does it have that break off on a trip? It did? Yeah. That's when they always do. Yeah, well, I think it was. I know we were on a trip and we realized we really couldn't get water. So that was tough. But I think I think that was up in the Trinity app. So that was Yeah, that was in like Northern California. And we were fortunate enough that we just didn't get sick, but it was like it was snowing. I mean it was super, super cold. super crisp water like right up above the treeline.</p>



<p>So yeah, when you're the treeline, you're usually pretty safe. I mean, your your chances of having an animal defecate or die in the creek or something is pretty minimal. Yeah, but But yeah, I know. We're in Kings Canyon. There were a ton of places where I mean after the Giardia incident was kind of like you know I'm not taking any chances but sure the same time you know if if it was if I were ever in the situation where I needed to take the risk I couldn't really picture a better place to take it.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, it was like that. What do you do? Okay, like iodine tablets with you for water purification ever? No, I haven't. I've heard they've kind of got a funky taste. I don't know. I've heard that they do too. But I guess I've heard like well I think maybe this this situation like we're talking about is you said that maybe around for your your backup water supply? No, no would you not do it? I just GRT all the way man what's your what was the water filter that you picked or pick now?</p>



<p>Cuz I need to buy with this specific name of it, but it's a attitude or and I love it man. It's like It's like to two liters a minute. So it's actually pretty Yeah, it's super-efficient. And but it's got like a filter band on a hose. And then it's basically got like a hand lever like he would see the old the well pumps back at like the turn of the century how people would gather the groundwater. Sure, that makes the same same basic setup, and then it runs through a filter. as like a sediment trap that'll catch any large sediment coming in. And then it goes up through like a carbon disk. And then it comes down through a charcoal filtration system. And then back through an actual, like, I don't know, some kind of cloth filter. So it has three, three variants of filtration before it actually gets through to your</p>



<p>to your G Nalgene bottle or whatever your Yeah, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Has it worked out pretty well for you? Like, did you use that down river a lot? Or did you guys have other systems on the boat when you're doing?</p>



<p>You know, we carry all of our own water on the boat? Like, before we leave? We'll we'll load up, you know, five or six, five gallon cans of water. Yeah. Okay, that's bigger that makes, so we just bring all that? Yeah, I mean, when you're running commercial, stuff like that. It's just, I mean, any type of risk you can mitigate?</p>



<p>Yeah, I figured you wouldn't use it for commercial stuff. But I was wondering for you, or like, if you had, like, if you'd put it through a lot of repetitions of its pace, you know? Or what I guess what I was wondering is like, how long does it last? What's the kind of maintenance that you ran into with the issues you had with your Okay, so,</p>



<p>so what I didn't do, they have new gaskets that come with it, okay. They have new carbon discs, they have new charcoal that you put in there. You need to keep the gaskets lubricated. So that way, when you let it sit for a year and a half before your next trip, you don't pull it out. And those gaskets are cracked. Oh really. And that I just kind of had, you know, the hailstorm of all three of those things, where it was just like my sixth trip that I'd used it over the period of like three and a half years. Yeah. And I just, yeah, I just didn't maintain it, and ultimately ended up kind of paying for that.</p>



<p>Man, that's so sad. That stuff. Well, you know, lesson learned, though. Oh, yeah, sure. Hit that. Yeah. I remember there was a there was one ship that we did. She This is the nutty thing is that, like when in origin, it's great, because you have this luxury of just being able to carry a water filter with you and have this assurance that you're going to run into consistent water supply, for your whole backpacking trip through the wilderness. We have a lot of creeks and stuff, a lot of the places maybe you and I'll probably go are in like mountain areas where like we're talking about like going up into an Alpine lake or something like that. There's no way that Creek feeding off of that, or some kind of snowmelt system through that draw. And you're going to be able to pull water from that for the for the time that you're there. But what was tricky is, is when we were out further east, I think we were out in Utah, we went to Capitol Reef, and we did a backpacking trip there. And yeah, it's tricky because out there, when you get into Utah, or probably anywhere in the southwest region there, you have to bring all the water with you on a backpacking trip. So it's just part of the way you pack. It's pretty nuts. And it's I think it's like a ratio of about two gallons per person per day, which seems, you know, relative reasonable, really, but if you're doing just a couple days, that means like each person is carrying another eight pounds or, you know, eight gallons of water, which is a ton. Yeah, which is 64 pounds of water. It was I remember we did we did Capitol Reef. We had, I think, four gallons. So I think Marina and I both had two gallons, maybe I think I might add more gallons. But she probably cared a lot of gallons of water. And we get all this water up there, and it was a lot. It was ridiculous. But uh yeah, it was probably another 30 pounds each. Yeah, no, I believe it I mean water is super heavy and it takes up a lot of space. It takes up so much space. Yeah, there's a picture of me just kind of strapped and gallon jugs. We didn't even have like a system of like, we don't like even a camel pack. That's like you know two liters that's ounces. Yeah, you're gonna get an hour Yeah, so So yeah, you have that full that's on your chest and you have like three just gallon bottles of water kind of strapped around your back</p>



<p>Did you did you have like a like a pole strapped across your shoulders with</p>



<p>the big bucket side? I put over the top of my head is a high ground. Yeah, there that's like the environment that it seems like you'd need it but it was strange because they were I think they were a couple water sources around but they had dried up by that time in the year, you know, they're seasonal. I think they're like, in that area the desert and it's it's really remote out there when you get out the Capitol Reef because there's no big town near there. Really? Oh, you know what I mean? I mean even I guess Death Valley is kind of the same way but but Las Vegas is sort of close to it. But out in Capitol Reef, man, there was nothing out there. And it was just super dry and super. It was super caustic to your your being what you were out there. What kind of what time of year were you? We were there in October. And it was okay. And it was still pretty high. It was that it was still like oh man like in the day. This is kind of hard. To do, but we did, I think like a handful of miles in to this arch that was back there that we were at a camp by and we had a couple days out there. It was cool. It was really remote. It was interesting to see some of that landscape out there. But man, there was no water to be found. It was just high desert. Like, there was like a mud pit. There was maybe four or five miles further. You know that that was like the saving grace back in the 1800s. When you're a frontiersman in that area. Imagine that with no gear no water filter. No, yeah, you're out of water for a while, but there's a chance that there's this muddy pit. That's like a natural spring a few miles up this way. And you might be able to get enough water to survive to your next drop off. days, man, it'll days, that would have been terrible. Yeah, yeah. You think about what the frontiersman would have had to have George just get through to get through dealing with waterfalls, or, I mean, obviously, they're not filtering their water, but just dealing with the water sources that they have to encounter.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't even want to think about that. They'd argue that we're probably live in the good old days. That's probably</p>



<p>But yeah, I don't think I've had like a big problem with the water filter before we've done what we because we'd always like have it so that we just have like a big store of water on it's where we were when we were moving. And then well, I was gonna ask you about like, if we were moving on from, from what we were talking about, I wanted to talk to you about like the stoves that you that you would bring. Have you brought like a stove with you much backpacking or or do you try like, not well, yeah, cuz you do. Just the jet bow food all the time. Right.</p>



<p>Yeah. So that's, that's my primary is my jet boil. I mean, you can really do just about anything in there. Yeah, it's great. I mean, they're there. And there's so many different ways to use it. Like, one thing you can do is just, I mean, if you have time, I mean, YouTube is such a vast Information Center. You can go in there and just look stuff up and just like ways to be creative with the Jetboil. I mean, they have they have instructions on how to how to bake in your Jetboil Oh, you can bake a mountain cake while you're up there.</p>



<p>I didn't know that I burned I lost. Like is it just like it just goes to like, hot right away? There's I don't know, I don't know how you bake in it. But that's really cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it honestly it seemed like more hassle than it was worth, but yeah, so I have a slice. But I mean, but it is possible. That's cool. So other than that, I've just got this like this cheap little. What is that? It's like the isobutane. Is that what we run those?</p>



<p>I yes. I remember what it is. I don't remember that little stove. That's a cool one. That's a good backup stove.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's just like, you know, I think I paid like 30 bucks for it, man, the things tiny. Like, it's just a little backpack and stuff. It's awesome.</p>



<p>Sure. I think those are really useful. You know, we did. We did like our 50 day trip. We did that with just the Jetboil. And we did as much as we could with that, that second trip that we did for like 100 and 110 days or whatever it was. Yeah, we did that with the Jetboil. We had to buy like a propane stove. Like just a single kind of the same idea as a jet boil or a backpacker stove where it's just the burner that fits on top of the top of the tank. We had a buy one of those halfway through the chip. And it was nuts because like we just worn out the jet boil. It was nuts because like so I guess when you use one for 110 days straight. They have a hard time. Yeah, if you unscrew and screw back together, but we still cobbled it together to work because we like we needed to boil water. I remember it was out on the Oregon coast. I think it was a spot that we had taken you to after that. Was it like sisters rock area? Oh, you remember when we were there. That was really cool. That was a cool spot it was fun to so we were there the year before I took you guys there. And we had camped there for the better half of a week or so. And we were using the Jetboil to make coffee and do everything with it. But the the stove part, the threading that goes down where we connect to the gas candidate canister had started to wear out. So it would pop it would blow the stove off of the tank. Like the threading would just it would just pull apart and so it was like it was leaking and you couldn't get it to seal tight enough so that you could you could get a connection from the stove to the tank to draw to burn.</p>



<p>So that brings me to something I want to bring upon this. Yeah, is a big thing that I factor in when I'm packing is materials to fix stuff. Oh yeah. Like that's huge. I mean, like one thing that was good to have in your pack is that it's it's like the plumbers tape. It's like a thin nylon that you wrap around threading to to make a gasket essentially. They make it for for gas. So like propane. stuff. It costs like a buck 29 at, you know, your local plumbing store, Home Depot or something. And, and that's great to have in your pack for exactly that situation because those threads are like a thin aluminum, you know? Yeah. I mean, they're not meant to be taken apart and put back together 1000s of times. Yeah, I have a lot in a situation like that. I mean, that gives you, you know, it's going to create a seal. And you could probably, you know, milk it for another month or two. doing that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's exactly what we did in the moment, when we were out there is we took, we took the electrical tape that was in the glove box, and we kind of like a slip of that, just like, we had to do this, like, all the time we, we've set it up on a new canister, and then we would not break it down. We wouldn't touch it until that canister was finished. But we use it for almost the rest of it. Like the part on his sister's rock on the coast. That was like day 15 of 100. So he's using the rest of the time. We had a we had to kind of supplement it with some other thing. Yeah, but But yeah, we just we had to put a little bit of electrical tape around the threading, and then try and like gently work it together. So that would hold enough so we can boil our water and cook our food. But we did that a lot of times, man, we ran through like another half dozen canisters of fuel before we finally probably retired that thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's great, man. I mean, that's that's what it's about. That's what's cool is like, being on those long trips, or you know, even just a trip or you're away from things, like it forces you to be resourceful and kind of, oh, man, I love that you're on what you can do with what you have.</p>



<p>Yeah, I can't broke our tent pole broke. At one point it was in the wind, a tent was set up, it was weighted down, the wind came in while we were hiking it, it crushed that time and it like it just torque that thing over. it snapped one of the poles. it snapped the one that was kinda under the the heavier tension load. There's a few that were, it was an interesting tent design. But there's there's, like, you know, one that was like, it didn't matter. There's the other one that was torqued around 180 degrees; it was almost like both points were almost touching each other. That thing just like crashed as the tent rolled over on its side. We were like, well shoot. And it was kind of a weird town, we couldn't really get a replacement pole in that length and that size. And so we had to like figure out a way I think what happened is if you would imagine now that the there's the aluminum piece, and then there's the peg of the next aluminum pole as it comes together with your template selection color. Yeah, that color. What had happened is that is that the it just broke out of that, like whatever piece inserted into the piece next to it, it just snapped out it kind of like broke out that that first top inch of a piece of aluminum. And so we went over to this can that we wasn't like a coke Can I think was just like some Tin Can that we that Chilean, something like that, or some canned tomato. And so we like clipped that down and had a roll that with a pencil to get like a little tube. And we'd like to roll that around the broken part to be a splint for our tent pole. So we could keep together on a camping trip. But we still I mean, the tents still like that we use that tent for like another lightning like we're saying, and they're like six or seven months. Way too. Yeah, that's awesome, man. What was that, like? On the 115 days, man, it was so cool. Well, that that goes back around to what we were talking about a little bit at the beginning, when we were saying It's nuts when you think about what you need to bring for three days, versus what you need to bring for. In this case, like 100 days, my thinking about it was not very clear, I was only thinking about like the first week it was really just bring everything, bring everything, have it in your car, be loaded down. I even did this the year before in the car. And I thought I like knew better. But I didn't know that I cut down a lot of stuff, it was a lot easier the second time around. But you really notice that almost everything you can leave home in a big way. As long as you're yourself and in some level of resources around you. You can probably get through or, you know, like survive most days and get to the next one in in a significant amount of comfort. You know if you don't put yourself through hell, I suppose. But it worked out really well. It's time like for it was strange because I guess what I would say is after maybe the first two weeks, first three weeks, I'd say after 15 days, your body acclimates. To do what it's doing in a kind of weird way. I don't know if you had the firefighting or, or if you've had it in like some other situation. But it seems like after maybe some number of days, it seems like you just get a little less dirty every day. Or you're you slam a little better at night. When you Yeah, there was no way you can sleep that well.</p>



<p>Exactly. But that's what happens, man. It's like your body just acclimating. Actually, I was talking about that with my dad yesterday. We were talking about how You know, where we live, it's pretty quiet. So like, we go and stay somewhere like in the, in the center of like a city or something and you can hear people talking and you've got street lamps on total and you'll, you'll lay wide awake for the first few nights, but then by night three, you know, it's like you just get used to the background noise and stuff and you just tune it out, you're just falling asleep. But it's the same thing with being on the road or being up in the hills. It's like, Alright, you know, you get past that initial Oh, I'm dirty feeling and then that's just the way you are. Yeah, it's really just, you adapt to what you do. And there's, there's physical</p>



<p>things to that happen. Like, I swear that I mean, maybe like a suntan is a good example of it. When you're on you have no exposure, and then you're put underexposure, a lot more than you're used to you get burned is sort of what happens so like, if you bet if you build up a tolerance to if you build up a tan, then you don't get burned. You don't get that caustic effect from the exposure, the sun, sort of the same way of camping or being out in the wilderness for a handful of days. It seems like he got a little bit a little bit better at it. Like I remember, I mean probably similar to a sunburn, but man, my lips would chap like crazy as soon as I got over into a different type of climate, or I guess, just a drier atmosphere or something like that. But yeah, as soon as you go east of the Cascades, man, my lips would chap immediately or if you went up in elevation, like up into like an Alpine area. Oh, yeah. But then after I know what, one week, two weeks or something like that, it just wouldn't happen again. And then just thing Yeah, where you get, or like I The thing that I remember the most, this is maybe more of just an awareness piece. I don't know if this happened to you. But I remember I would get cut a lot when I first went camping. Or Yeah, like now like at the beginning of the season, if I went out I'd probably like get, I don't know, some kind of weird, some number of Nicks. From circumstances I was putting myself in with a pocket knife or with wood or with something I had to do. But I my hands would get cut up more. And then, after a pretty short amount of time, I didn't run into any more injuries like that. Just the circumstantial injuries, the small like, Look, yeah, so you get into it just well stop. Yeah. And</p>



<p>that's, that's funny. It's the same thing like, so I work in carpentry, and I can I can count probably 27 cuts between the two of my hands, that, like they're just little one. I mean, a couple of them, you know, are there, you know, oh, yeah, you keep hitting them or hurt when you got them. But it's just like, they're everywhere. And you come home at night, you look at your hands and go What? Like, you're like, Oh, that's a pretty open wound. I didn't know about that, you know, that's just your body just stops interpreting that is like a distress signal. And it's like, this is the norm, this is just what happens. Yeah. And it's kind of like the scent, you know how, like a new smell will be really overpowering. But like, obviously, you go to the landfill, right? And then you spend an hour there and you can't smell it. Yeah, so what that that is, I'm sure you know, but it's a it's your body's defense, you know, it detects new sense and makes them strong, so you're aware of them. But once your body figures out that it's not a threat to you, and your livelihood, then it dissipates and just becomes, you know, a subconscious scent that you're not actively selling.</p>



<p>Yeah, I totally get that. I've heard that before about like different scents and stuff that come through. It's weird. Yeah, it's probably it's probably an effect. It's really similar to that with the stuff about cutting but but man, I remember it was so weird, because we were just in the Camry at the time this old 92 Camry. And like we would notice that we really just wanted to get rid of most of the weight of the things that were in the car, we only needed a backpack or two backpacks, you know, is just nuts. When you figure out like, oh, man, none of this stuff is really like what we need to get at. We really only do these two or three or four things. And we do this pretty repetitively. You don't need the rest of this stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, you don't. And that's, that's what I always enjoy that. Like when by the time you get done with a backpacking trip, or a road trip or something, it really makes you realize how little you need to actually function in your day to day life. Yeah, absolutely. Just just how much excess stuff you just carry around for no reason. You know, you come off a trip like that. And you're thinking to yourself, you know, I live with nothing but a toothbrush and just like, you know, a lot of talking to you. Oh, yeah, exactly. Yeah. And then you come home and you're like, Well, what do I have all this stuff for? No. Yeah.</p>



<p>It's definitely happened. I wanted to ask you about like the downriver stuff that you did on the road. When you were like, Well, I know three or four day trips. Like what that was like and are like so how much gear Do you guys carry down? I mean, there's there's for the guests and stuff, but kind of cutting that out a bit like for yourself, how much gear would you think that is per person? Maybe</p>



<p>so much. Okay, so, so us as guides, pack, I don't want to say minimally, but we pack them, the necessities while staying comfortable. As you know, it's like, you don't want to, to under pack because we live down there, you know, 90 to 100 days out of the year. So it's like you start, you know, really trying to figure out what you enjoy, like good sleeping equipment. Nobody. Nobody goes light on that everybody brings great sleeping equipment. What's the best equipment to bring for the letter of dammit, man, I've got what's called a roller caught. It's like a nylon material that is it's like a rubberized head-on even that explain it. But it's like a measurement.</p>



<p>I saw yours. And I really want that look cool.</p>



<p>It's great. They're super durable. I mean, they're really strong. They're waterproof. You know, I couldn't ask for anything better. And they roll up to the the, you know, the length of your arm and everything's lightweight and aluminum. It's just a good caught. But anyway, that's called a roller caught. But yeah, we take that I take a sleeping pad to kind of create a barrier between the air beneath mean, and shaking bag. Yeah. Yeah, and bring yourself a nice pile of a sleeping bag. And you're good to go,</p>



<p>man that it looks like a really good setup. I like that that cart system that you had, and it says happened, like almost no time at all. Yeah, you</p>



<p>can have it put together in a matter of, you know, less than a minute.</p>



<p>And it seems super durable to like it's not really going to be affected by being weathered over a couple seasons.</p>



<p>Well, yeah, you get like fabric carts and stuff like that. No, you know, just between the Sun and the water and whatever else. What other elements are getting to them, they'll just kind of rip and tear eventually. Yeah. But now when we go on those trips. We the guides for the company pack a pretty happy setup, should we bring in? We bring a full kitchen. So we've got four, you know, stand ups those. We've got tables and pots and pans and jugs of water and coolers and you know, I mean, it's really it's really a big operation that we do. Yeah. And then you know, the guests bring whatever they think they need to be comfortable with. Over the course of three or four days. And like we were talking about when we can potentially overpack on a backpacking trip. People can really overpack when they're not carrying their own bag around. Oh, yeah. You know, they're like, and you get a lot of people do that are from, you know, really urban settings and getting down there and the candy and it's kind of really outside their comfort zone. Totally. I understand just got so much stuff. Yeah. But that's why they hire a gear boater, right.</p>



<p>Yeah, yes. Yeah. That's cool. So um, so like, probably a good amount of equipment. What if you and I just went on a trip, and we had to haul out to a different river, it was a little further away. So you're kind of trying to cut down a little bit? Like what kind of equipment would you bring a sort of a lightweight, single boat trip</p>



<p>with a lot of that would depend on what the fishability of the river was. If it was potentially eating fish. I would cut down on food a good deal. It depends on just how comfortable you want to be. I mean, if you're if you're interested in just having kind of a you know, a back to the basics really kind of fend for yourself experience. You can go really light. I mean, you could go backpacking and light with just a little isobutane stove. Oh, that'd be cool. I don't really want to do something like that. We should. Yeah. Well, I've thought about that a lot. I really want to do one of those. And I want to do like a high desert trip like that, too.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, high desert rafting ship. Now, a high desert camping chip that was like backpacking, like that kind of</p>



<p>Alpine. cottontails and in streams, man. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Yeah, like hunt, hunt, and fish for all the food that you have. Or have a couple backpack meals or something? Yeah, yeah, obviously bring it back up. But yeah, that would be the idea. That's a cool idea. Yeah, well, I like the idea of doing it on the on the river that I thought that'd be kind of fun. I have it set up kind of like a like a backpacking ship with a raft. I was wondering how self sustaining Could you be from a raft on a raft ship like, like, how many days do you think you can do?</p>



<p>a raffle? Well, I just had some friends that went on the Colorado and they just did</p>



<p>33 days, 33 days, but they run into stores, right, or do they have anything like that? Like, it's it's probably planned that day.</p>



<p>I, I, from what I understand they packed everything because I Oh, wow, if you're not familiar with river guide culture, everyone's pretty poor. So it's not like, got a ton of money to spend on places. So, I mean, really, it's like you kind of go on the cheap. But I mean, you bring the biggest hang-up is what you need to keep cold. Like if you need to put stuff on ice and things like that. Yeah. If you can cut that stuff back, you can really be very self sustaining. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, I figured that was what we noticed car traveling to is man, like having a having a cooler was a constant liability, where we just have to keep doing it. I always lose. Yeah, and we're always losing energy. Like, it's always it's always going out. We're spending a hand like probably a good bit just on ice traveling around. And we finally figured out like one of the things we were talking about earlier, what you think about beginning versus what you think of the end, man cutting down on a cooler or cutting down on ice and things you have to keep cold constantly. That was the biggest improvement of the the maintenance that we had to do for like our trip travel. Yep. stuff. It was it was so frustrating to try and like always keep that and like you're always throwing away stuff that's gone rotten in some way.</p>



<p>Exactly. And then also, when you're in a car, you know, the heat inside the car generally is amplified when you're in? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But the big thing on like, if you're packing a cold cooler, whether it's rafting or camping, or whatever it is, keep it shut as much as possible. You know, every time you open it, you're gonna lose. It's gonna heat up in there. So I mean, just keep it shut. A lot of times, you can duct tape the seal. So you don't lose any, any cold air from there. And do that. And you can really keep food cold for a long time. Or just go to the store. If you know, you're going to be gone for 10 days, get a couple blocks of dry ice and put those into a cooler that just a cooler for your eyes. And then you keep that in there. You keep that wrapped with duct tape. And you only open it when you need to swap it into the cold. Cool. That's a smile. Really? Yeah. Yeah. You know, you've got an icebox and then a cooler essentially.</p>



<p>Okay. I like that. I like that thinking that's kind of that's kind of interesting. You know, we finally invested in a Yeti cooler, like one of those thicker, lined coolers with like the rubber straps that come down. So like clamps itself down the lid. Yeah. How do you? How do you feel about that? They don't they don't sponsor us so I can talk. I can speak my mind. I think that they are I think that they are too expensive. I think that they do keep ice. Well, and it is. It's like one of the better, better ways I've seen of a cooler. What do you what's your experience with them?</p>



<p>Well, I have little experience with them. But I don't know. I mean, it just seems like I mean, yeah, they hold eyes really well. And if I was buying it, for the only reason is to keep ice cold. Sure, then then I could validate that but it just seems like your pain. You know, like 75 bucks on a cooler that it's interior area would hold a six-pack of beer, maybe? Oh, yeah. Yes.</p>



<p>That laid out. 20 court one that we have is small. Yeah. I think that the concept guide right. Nuts use device. Is that you okay? So first you have your cooler Of course, just in the back of your truck. You get a bag of ice. You put the bag ice in the cooler. You shake it around, you leave it there for a half-hour just to chill the cooler. Just because it's too hot inside. Right? Then you dump that bag ice completely. That's gone. Then you put then you put three bags of like, cold ice in there. I think there's like coal ore. What is it? Like? There's wet ice? Have you heard of that? Like, it's like around like, what? 32 or seven? It's like kind of Yeah, running in a liquid. It's what you get at every convenience store. Because they turn up their their freezers to like, as high as it Yeah. But then yeah, so you throw in another three bags of ice, like almost it's like three quarters full at that point. And then you can put in what you're talking about maybe a six-pack of beer in there to keep it in its system, you know, to keep as much ice in the ratios what it thinks you're supposed to. But at that point, it says at least you can keep that for like five days. If you keep the lid shut like you're talking about it's it's Yeah, really well so you can keep that for a long time. It's not often something I've run into as needing but okay.</p>



<p>Oh, that No, I was just saying I I find they work fantastic. I mean, we use them on the river. And I mean they're they're great for keeping eyes but I mean using them as a cooler but you need to get in and out of and that's where you lose that so much of your cold air and stuff is those leads all the time. Yeah. So it kind of doesn't really matter whether or not you've got a Yeti or Coleman or whatever it is. It's when you're in and out of them. You lose the axe. Yeah, yeah, no. Yeah, I see. And that's just kind of what it boils down to. So in that case, I'd prefer to have something with a little bit more area to actually keep food and stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, the the Yeti one that you see like maybe at all right? Yeah, that was a pretty tiny one. Have you seen the big ones like are? Well, probably stuff that you guys would have figured it'd be the same. Yeah, same size coolers. We have the really large Eddie's Yeah. And I've seen the stuff that goes on, like the commercial fishing boats. Like the batches like is huge. Why? Like, I mean, like, see seafaring boats, like these giant, like, bench size Yeti coolers that they build into the side of the thing that they're supposed to throw in fresh catfish. But that's got to be expensive. Oh, yeah. It's got to be an insane custom order, like $5,000. I mean, I guess at that point, it's just like, Well, yeah, we'll make whatever cooler you want. You know, it's just like plastic and styrofoam at some point. So Exactly. There's another company. There's like this other company called Arctic. Like, I think it's our T IC. And they do knockoff Yeti coolers. They they I don't know, drop shipping from China or something like that. But they're like, they're like maybe 100 $150 cheaper than the Yeti cooler price. So it kind of brings, it brings him back in that range of like a Coleman cooler, or like something else that's, you know, more real. Yeah.</p>



<p>And that's, that's the thing, and you start price and coolers, and it doesn't really matter what level of cooler you want to get. Honestly, I mean, for anything decent. You're looking around the 100 bucks. Yeah, yeah. It's really charming. Yeah. And I mean, that's, that's just kind of like, you know, your average. Yeah. I mean, with the</p>



<p>Yeah, snaps on the side that you take to the to the tailgate,</p>



<p>you can get those guys for like 39 bucks, or something, you know, but it's like, but if you get into like a steel-belted cooler, or anything that actually supposed to function correctly, right when you're out on a trip. Yeah. I mean, you're kind of looking at a minimum of 100 bucks.</p>



<p>I figure that's, that's definitely true. Yeah, man. Yeah, that's what that's that's another thing too, is like how much money you can invest in your equipment like that? Well, we were talking about that boat, you know, getting a custom Yeti cooler. It's five grand. Yeah, I know. But yeah, man. I don't know. Do you have any other stuff to bring upon this? I'm sure we're going to talk way more in the future about like hiking equipment.</p>



<p>Well, I did I did want to touch on you. Aside from like, your basics, like a water filter, your freeze-dried foods, things like that. What are some things that you bring in your pack? Not on a car trip, but on a backpacking trip? That you know, just just the important things aside from the the obvious?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, that's a good question. So I mean, I know. I try and keep my pack under 40 pounds. is what I've done it Yeah, each of the tabs. Well, yeah, I really try to keep it pretty light, which I guess is a little bit what we're talking about. I don't know what to bring at a point. I got my tent. Which is a it's just a couple pounds. I got like the stove. You know, the I got, let's say like, three of those or you know, like a handful of backpacker meals and some Clif Bars. I've got a way to start a fire. I've got Yeah, I've got like my iPod, or you know, like my phone or something like that charged up. Yeah. And so I'm trying to think of the other stuff. I mean, it's probably close that I bring, that's always been the spot where I bring more weight than I need to because it's always like, some kind of like, it's it's like cotton t-shirts, or another pair of jeans or something like yeah, oh man. And the worst one is like another pair of shoes. That's been the, I mean, cuz you want that. Like, like, at least like a pair of boots. And then like a pair of like river sandals. Like there's always been a situation where I want that. I know that's been for you. Like when honestly that's</p>



<p>that's been huge for me. I did that on a king strip, you know, bring sandals. I mean, if even if you're not getting into the water, it's just nice to let your feet breathe and, and just give your feet some type of different support than the hiking boot that you just put 20 miles on.</p>



<p>Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I noticed a turn that Yeah, I really needed to switch back and forth between the two, but I was always frustrated cuz you got to like store the pair of shoes somewhere. Yeah, which isn't that much way it's fine, but they're always kind of an awkward sort of bulky size. I was trying to think other stuff see, like when I go out or I think I was looking at a picture from the flowers. And I was thinking back to that ship of like special things that I brought or like different things. And what I would do, I think like we talked about last time, I always bring the camera bag with me so is the there's the backpack of whatever it is. But then like around the front, there's like the camera bag with a couple lenses. And that's just not glass. So there's really no economy of weight going on there. Yeah. And, and yeah, there's like a tripod, which is like metal, legs and stuff you don't need To be carrying, but it's just like a lot of weight that you have to like heave up to the top of the mountain. The other thing that I was gonna say that I brought was like a keyboard. This is and that thing probably in your mind. Yeah, yeah, you're losing me here. Go ahead and explain. Yeah, I brought a keyboard that I connected to my phone, and like to my iPad, so that I could do some of the like editing stuff that I was trying to do. Yeah, which is silly. And I probably wouldn't do it again, if</p>



<p>you guys did want a lot of editing and stuff. And a lot of journaling. When you guys were out there</p>



<p>was what we were trying to do. Yeah, so it was a lot of like, there's a lot of stuff, it was a weird job where you go like out in the woods, and you take a bunch of photos and you try and like file and write about the photos while you're there. And I'm like this kind of thing. You see it on Instagram, every once in a while, like these, these cool tent offices, you know, somewhere on the back entry and someone you know, hanging out in the in the tent with the window up and out to wherever and they just got their, their like iPad, or their, their MacBook or something like that in the tent on top of the sleeping bags as they're working through and editing, whatever, but you kind of think about like how light some of these things are. And you can haul them up there and work with them pretty easily now, but the problem is power. So is the thing about like a MacBook or a laptop. I couldn't support that. I couldn't power it up there. But what I did do, and I think your dad turned me on to this for the first time it was that gold zero. Solar Panel kit. Do you remember that? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I bought one of those. It was just like that. And I use that thing a time on those backpacking ships if you workout for you. Yeah, I, it was the first time I've been using solar power. And really the only thing that it does, it's like two panels, maybe about about the size of your, you know, your two open palms or so, you know, it's like the size of like a good book. So it's really not very big at all for like solar energy. And all that it produces is enough to run out to a USB charger. So you can charge your phone. And that was really what I was going for. So it was cool that you could just be out for a week or indefinitely if you wanted. And you could keep your phone or your iPod on. And you know, when you turn it into airplane mode, the battery lasts for really quite a long time. Oh, yeah, yeah. So we use that we had a couple apps on it that we're using the donor to connect anything, but it's you can use that to file stuff or to write stuff or to record a video or to do whatever else. And and so we could do that as much as we wanted to. And then just recharge it the next day. Yeah, the sunlight on the solar panel. It was cool.</p>



<p>That's great. Yeah, we when we did Joshua Tree, I was taking like a photo journal or sorry, a video journal of the whole the whole trip. And that was eating up a lot of battery and I was I always use airplane mode for that. Just to save that battery, but we took with us a little charging station, which is actually kind of cool on those road trips. It has enough amperage to actually jumpstart your vehicle. Yeah, I've got one of those. And then yeah, you've got you know, you got USB ports and stuff like that in there. And I think those are greatly useful. Yeah, yeah, super great. I mean, because honestly, sometimes you get out there and it's just like, man, if you woke up with a dead battery and you're just 15 miles from anywhere Oh, yeah, see another person? It's been a huge concern a number of times Yeah. And with the way vehicles are going anymore, everything's in automatic. So it's not like you're gonna compression start your rig. Sure. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was scary. I remember there was a couple of texts I was driving around that Oh, camera you man. You remember that? Like that was not that was not always reliable car. Especially. It was it was the best guy but I remember there was a him like had this problem you know, if you left it in an accessory or with with over that your lights could be on mode was it would kill the battery in like a half-hour or less. Like if you if you left if you just left it on accidentally or you know, the the stereo was on while you were away or the door was open or something like that. It would it would kill the battery. It was like you walk into the gas station. Yeah, I mean, you probably could do that. It did that. In fact, a number of times, man, little things you had to do. But so how many how many 1000s of miles did you put on that car when I sold it? When I bought it? It was 250,000 miles, which is a lot to buy across just the spring chicken at that point. Just a smooth quarter million. And then when I sold it, I sold it for the same price. I bought it and that was with 367,000 miles on it.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're the only person I've known that made money on a vehicle. You just put 100,000 miles on it and made money off that car man you to drive it that Camry That was great. No. It's</p>



<p>a cool car. It was a blast in free as basic of a little sedan as it was. It really did a lot of stuff. And yeah, it was it was really fun. But it was scary though. Yeah, sometimes I remember being at this campsite. Where like the battery, I think died. Unfortunately, I think there was someone around that helped us like jump it right then. But yeah, there was always like something about that in my mind. And I think the next trip that we went in, I did have one of those jumper kits in the car. And it works pretty well. Most of the time, I would recommend, I think what you were talking about earlier of, of, would you say like keeping up with and maintaining your equipment, man, maintain that charger, because it's got to keep that thing charged, kind of in the wheelhouse of the same season that you might use it in, because it does kind of lose it after a little while like I had one. Like you know what, I don't know that next winter after it went from 100 degrees out to freezing out that battery is toast. And it's not really going to give you the amps. You need to jump your car. I think I ran into that one time. Yeah. Or I don't know. I did what I drained it on the charger my cell phone,</p>



<p>something like that. Oh, God. Yeah, yeah. That's a one thing I can say in especially is like, I don't know, for me anyway, as I get into better equipment. I'm more motivated to take care of it. Oh, yeah. Then really maintain it. You know, when you're starting in your, in your teens, and whatever, you kind of just Oh, yeah. 30 $30 sleeping bag, not a big deal or whatever. And then, you know, you just ruin things I burn through unintentionally. But yeah,</p>



<p>I mean, those things that they don't hold up the same way. And so it's like, that's, I think a good bit of why they've been replaced over time is that burned through a couple $30 sleeping bags? And you know, season two in the zippers are twisted and split. And you know, what, what's going on? Right? stuff with the 10 stuff stoves, stuff with filters. So</p>



<p>yeah, and, and honestly, when it comes to outdoor recreational equipment, you really do you just get what you pay for. Oh, yeah. Man, I, I, I just got to that point where I was, like, do I want to buy the $30 sleeping bag three times? Or do I want to buy $120 the bag once? Yeah. And you know, and that's just what it came down to. And so I started getting a little more picky when it came to choosing my equipment</p>



<p>I've been trying to buy. Yeah, and there's a there's a range of equipment, there's some equipment, like you're talking about, I want to be specific. I want to get the good stuff. I want it to work. And then there's another class of it. I don't it's kinda I don't know if I've really honed it down well, but I almost want it to be as cheap as possible because it's so likely to break or likely to get lost. Yeah, I don't know what that is. So yep. I know. There's like a handful of things that I've gone out. And for unfortunately, for me, it's sometimes like, well, it's not always pocketknives but it's like some sunglasses. sunglasses are perfect when travel sunglasses for me. Exactly. River sunglasses. I go for the cheapest ones. If they blow off my head, and you know, you know in water, whatever. There's nothing gone I don't care. It's funny. I don't want the best gear.</p>



<p>And unfortunately, the only way to come to that conclusion is to live through that situation multiple times.</p>



<p>Man I've lost Yeah, I've lost some stuff that wasn't super valuable. But it was just like Ah, it's just at the bottom of the river now. Like even if it wasn't really expensive, you're still like, Oh, I was 20 bucks. Yeah, I don't have it anymore. Yeah, it's a bummer, so there's that there's a handful of those things that have that oh, this is probably just gonna get damaged and get brought blown out whatever that is. I'm trying to like cut down on a few of those things but but yeah, I think that I remember the time I learned that was sleeping mats. You're talking about your sleeping bag I've learned so many times from a sleeping mat of not investing enough in that every night like two or three the hour and a half after I finally fallen asleep after blowing up my my bad excuse for a little camping that bed at two hours after that I always wake up in the sleeping bag kind of on the rocks under the tent you know what I'm talking about? Yeah. It's that like thing where you're still asleep and coming into awaking when you know you just have a rock in your kidney anything and now only spent 15 more dollars on this mat.</p>



<p>You know what I disagree with you there? Like I've spent good money. Oh, several times on ads. And better. No, you know what I got to the point like so well, first off, when I'm when I'm backpacking. I just got to the point where like, I'm probably going to be comfortable no matter what. Yeah, I yeah, I've been there. But man, I was just like, I'm going to use the cot and use as little of the sleeping bag. had his I can't because I have had nothing but bad experiences with sleeping pads. But they always seem to they last a trip or two and then they've got a hole in them. You got to patch them, or they just don't seem to hold air. I don't know, man. I mean, I guess you could you can get into some I've seen them, you know, there are $200 sleeping pads. One I got,</p>



<p>I got it, I got a Thermarest like, like an M, or one that didn't have a lining on it. Some of them like the Rei, when you get it's got this nylon lining that makes it a little tougher. This one was just sort of the rubbery inside lining of that. But I had one of those it was I think, less than $50. That's the one that I still have packs down to almost nothing. It's kind of cool. I don't, I've never turned it down, like on the rocks, as it were, or you know, something like that. So it's always had like a tarp or some kind of lining under it and the ground. But I've slept. I mean, I don't know. Not to say that it's been inflated all these nights, but I've probably put about 250 300 nights on that on that mat over the last handful of years. And it's been working out pretty well for No, it's like it was it was deflated, maybe maybe three or four weeks after I got it. But anyway, you gotta you gotta like, it's just sort of you come to this point where you're like, Oh, no, I just wake up at 215 and a 410. And it's 635. And I just reflate the mat, and then I go back to bed. It just becomes part of your nightly routine. Yeah, it's just just what you do. Yeah, just like getting up to take up the old air mattress. Yeah, it's a Yeah, it's on the same schedule. It's like, it's like auto timing. When when I needed to get up and but yeah, it was it's it's been silly. I got that's on the list for this year for 2017. I'm gonna try and get a new mat. Yeah.</p>



<p>So she got to do man figure out what's important. It's like, yeah, every year you try to buy like two things that will make your camping experience much better.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yes. Have you seen around with those, those like, it's not foil, but it's just like a dense foam mat that sort of collapses down into a little block. I've seen that like strapped to some backpackers. Kids before, but it's just sort of like this light foam mat that they crunch down into a little, little deck. I don't know, it was weird. I've not I've never really used anything like that. But I bet it probably works really well for him. Yeah, I've</p>



<p>kind of been curious about those. And the other one I've heard good reviews on this is from some people that I backpack with that had one. But it's like, it's it kind of contraries your body in a way that it kind of holds you inside the mat. It's inflatable. But it's got this kind of like it's almost the same shape as your mummy bag, but the sides kind of like protrude upward to keep you in it. Because I don't know. I mean, I'm sure you know, man, you get the lightweight sleeping pads and stuff. And you find out really quickly that you just roll off of them in the middle of the night. Yeah. Or whatever. You know, it's just like, they're hard to stay on. I mean, yeah, like, I'm not a large individual by any stretch of the imagination. And like, they're narrow, though. They're like, yeah, they're super narrow and thin. And yeah, I guess this guy Jimmy that I was backpacking with was telling me that he loved it. And I forget the name of the producer. But anyway, yeah, I guess it was really great. That's sweet.</p>



<p>Um, I'm away I'm probably way under-educated to really get in deep about like, a lot of different gear, the different manufacturers of outdoor gear, you know, and yeah, like that. That catalog of equipment is sort of swimming around in my mind. But I can't really pin down like a ton of different things. I'd be like, oh, what about this? Robert, what about this? What have you talked about the feather day? I don't, I don't have anything really? I don't know. I think we've probably talked about a lot of it. Man. I'm a basics kind of person. I don't really care if it's like North Face, or Patagonia or Acer tech, or Marmot or something like that. You know, it's not really like super important. And I know you're kind of most my gear, most of my layers are from goodwill. That's Yeah, they're old to men. And actually, that's one of the best pieces of advice I might I might give to anyone who's bothered to listen to this point deep in our podcast, which Thank you, by the way. But it's not so like, it's, it's one of the best values that you can get for outdoor equipment was cruising through and having a really specific clear agenda of the of the types of things you want to get out of goodwill. depends on your area. And you got to go like I did in Corvallis. Man Corvallis was a goldmine for Hey, don't be giving away. All the hardships Corvallis, goodwill, I pulled out I bought like a great North Face fleece out that fit me. Yeah, it was pretty It was $8 boom, there. Go Marina got me this, this Marmot shell, this blue Marmot shell for like less than 12 bucks. It was awesome. That's like a $200 jacket. I replaced it with a new one. And it was it was like 200 bucks at Rei.</p>



<p>It was so expensive even like, yeah, I mean, yeah, you're getting quality. But man, there's got to be some point where it's just like, Ah, it's too much money. Yeah, I like I go in there and I'll shop the like the clearance rack with my gift card that I get for like a birthday or something. You know? But you're still like, wow, this is a $60 flannel or something.</p>



<p>I don't see the value in some of it. Like we were talking about, there's like good things and bad things. Man, I went big on a rain jacket. I'm a work outside all the time you like you You have big on like the boots that you have for for fire season. And like, there's like sometimes it's like, oh, that's I need that. I need that thing. A lot of the time. Maybe you don't need a new one of those. Yeah, or whatever, whatever it might be. But I go big on rain gear. Yeah, that's what I'm your big. I put my money in having a having a good thermal layer. And I got a pretty expensive but like a nicer rain jacket, like a GoreTex rain jacket to go over. And man that thing is saved me like being out here in Oregon. I don't need really any other layers Other than that, and I've noticed that you can go from like snow, to warm weather to like really intense rain. And you can pretty much keep that same, like set of layers go in that whole time. And it worked well. Like Yeah, but it's rad when you finally like get something and say, oh, this is like this is what I need. This is good enough to answer for all these different situations will be in.</p>



<p>And that's what yeah, I won't go light on on anything that keeps you warm and dry. I'm sure yeah. First off, I don't even know if this is a really good way around. Going. You know going getting around the expensive stuff on that. Oh, yeah, it all seems to be pretty steep no matter where you go. But yeah, like I mean when it's hot, you can always shed layers like you can always remove clothing sure cooler but when it comes to being cold and wet, man that that's the difference between a good trip and a bad trip or a good trip and a serious change</p>



<p>right my experience a ton I mean just just kind of working outside of gigabit through the day. Like data coming through with like some snow on the on the hills like a little bit higher up in the elevation right on the valley floor. It's nothing, but it's it's pretty lousy. Winter weather. It seems like right now. But it's like it's just waves of rain. Like every 45 minutes or so. It's like 45 minutes on 45 maybe 10 2030 minutes off. Then back on to just kind of this drizzle this light rain drizzle. It's coming down all the time. And if it weren't for the like, whole head cover hood and an GoreTex like outfit I've caught on. I'd be soaked all the time. Oh, man. Yeah. shoes. Shoes are a huge one. Like, we should talk about hiking shoes sometime. Like cuz you gotta like Well, what's it What's it the boot that you go for a lot. Mine are the marrow. Yeah, the marrows. Yeah. Yeah, I like those man. I I've never had Merrill's. But they seem pretty.</p>



<p>They're a great boot. They've got you know what, honestly, when you price shoes, shoes are expensive. They're expensive when you're looking for, honestly, so I'm not even gonna say these are expensive. The $150 range.</p>



<p>Yeah, but same as a pair of Jordans. Yeah, exact same as a pair of weigh less. weigh less than Yeezys. Uh, yeah, no, they're great boots, man. I love them the mid top. But we'll save that for another podcast. Oh, yeah. Hey, um, so, you know, we always talk a lot about electronics in the field and things like that in different ways that you take your stuff out there. And that's because you are a photographer Billy extravert you take great photos. So for anybody listening if you want to check out Billy's photography, I believe what it's Billy Newman photo comm.com you</p>



<p>got it right man I appreciate all right. Yeah, check out check it out photos, check out this podcast there. It's it's hosted on that site if you want to check it out. And yeah, the get out there podcast, the feed is up and going. We've got information about that Billy Newman photo comm you can check it out on iTunes. That's what I recommend. If you're hearing this, you probably already figured out how to get into the podcast app and look for this but if you are, give us a review, or rate it or subscribe to the podcast that helps us out a lot in the first eight weeks. We read that those numbers are going to be three and then two of them are you and I Probably it's probably you and me and our girlfriends respectively. But it's but but we have passed. And this is great news, and it's under a week, and we're under five episodes. In total. We've had 100 downloads. Whoa. Which is big time. It's again, mostly me and you I think. I think it's like, yeah, we've got around 11 listeners a show. Maybe some I know, but it's all it's all. It's all ephemeral at this stage. You can't really tell for a long time. But but overall though, man, it's really fun I did doing a podcast with even if it's zero people that that are listening to it. It's still been a blast. Yeah, but you say, Hey, you know about the outdoor stuff, man, you get to talk to you about this stuff.</p>



<p>No, it's great. I love I love picking your brain to you because you've spent, I mean, just as much time as anybody I know. doing various types of camping. Yeah, so it's good. I like I like speaking with like minded people about these topics. It's cool, man. It's great. Hey, um, sounds like we might have a trip planned for this weekend. We don't know. Oh, yeah. Harley what it is. Yeah, but we got some things in the works. Maybe we'll do a do a little podcast from wherever we are.</p>



<p>We got to do on Yeah. If we if we meet up in person, we'll definitely do a live podcast. It'd be cool.</p>



<p>Absolutely. So hey, for those 11 listeners out there, you guys. Stay tuned. We got a little something for you.</p>



<p>That's gonna be a special treat. Episode Six. Yeah, it's just like, Hey, we hung out today. There you go. No, but we'll, we'll put it together. It'll be fun. That'd be cool. But yeah, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast in it. Yeah. Thank you, Billy. It's been good. I appreciate it, man. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast.</p>



<p>Transcribed by https://otter.ai</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 


Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of Th]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>


<p>Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm</p>



<p>I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.</p>



<p>It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances that you might run into. And then you can</p>



<p>Yeah, you do the thing where like, you know, you're going for three days also and you're like, well, wow, I have so much room. You know, I only have three days worth of stuff, which is pretty minimalist. And then you end up going, oh, well I got this and this and then snacks before you before you know it. Yeah, you just pack.</p>



<p>Six Pack in the top. Yeah. Yeah. And that's happened a couple of times. I was trying to think about how that worked out for me. I remember early on when I did when I did like a couple early backpacking trips. We talked about this in that first episode, I think doing some stuff on the lower road. Maybe the second one. We're, yeah, that first chip, I did the 40 whatever, miles down the lower road. And it was just way rushed. And it was way too heavy and all the stuff you like, we brought a bunch of cans, we didn't have a can opener and like, like, What was this? What was the system that was going behind this, like, you get things that work in a kitchen, but there's no system and that that helps you? You know, do that in the backcountry, I guess. Or to keep things good or, like purify enough water to have a that's always that was always one having so otter with you. So that's something I want to ask you what kind of what kind of water purification? I have always been under, under attack about this. Like I really wanted more equipment for water purification, it's probably well, you know, I've been fortunate a lot of the time. But yeah, it's it's been risky, maybe one or two times, but I've only ever had this squeeze bottle charcoal filter, like you fill it up with maybe 12 ounces of water and you squeeze it out of this filter. What we would do Marina and I when we go backpacking, we were up in the well, ours we were up in the Trinity Alps, we were up in the Tetons, it was a lot of spots where it was like really clean snowmelt. So worked out on our favor a lot of times on the other hand, there was times where we were on the lower rogue in the canyon, and there's really no good you know, as mosquito puddles or whatever it is,</p>



<p>that's, that's where I caught Giardia. Oh, yeah, mosquito puddle. But that's Yeah, that was that was nasty. And that was my filter broke. And that was the biggest thing I learned was a, I don't know, you always hear an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Yeah, like it's man, just maintaining your equipment, cleaning it after every trip doing, just doing the basic maintenance that your equipment requires.</p>



<p>That's something I've not understood for a long time. And yeah, that the system that we had for water was super, basically we just we'd fill up the 12 ounces, we put the top on and we'd like squeeze, you have to like kind of crush it through the charcoal filter to get it to those those moves slow to way slow. So you fresh it out. So we'd have like our Nalgene bottle, like between our knees and our hand just kind of like crushing down on this creek water that we were trying to push. We're trying to put an analogy, we had like three or four of them that we had to sit at the creek at to pump out you know, I don't know two or three liters of water to take back the camp with us or to go hiking with for the next rest of the day. So I used that I use just that one filter for like three years. I'm like, wait, you wait too many gallons of water, I think for that until the chocolate is finally broke off. Or you know, like the whole filter unit just finally broke off. I figured it's probably it's probably does it have that break off on a trip? It did? Yeah. That's when they always do. Yeah, well, I think it was. I know we were on a trip and we realized we really couldn't get water. So that was tough. But I think I think that was up in the Trinity app. So that was Yeah, that was in like Northern California. And we were fortunate enough that we just didn't get sick, but it was like it was snowing. I mean it was super, super cold. super crisp water like right up above the treeline.</p>



<p>So yeah, when you're the treeline, you're usually pretty safe. I mean, your your chances of having an animal defecate or die in the creek or something is pretty minimal. Yeah, but But yeah, I know. We're in Kings Canyon. There were a ton of places where I mean after the Giardia incident was kind of like you know I'm not taking any chances but sure the same time you know if if it was if I were ever in the situation where I needed to take the risk I couldn't really picture a better place to take it.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, it was like that. What do you do? Okay, like iodine tablets with you for water purification ever? No, I haven't. I've heard they've kind of got a funky taste. I don't know. I've heard that they do too. But I guess I've heard like well I think maybe this this situation like we're talking about is you said that maybe around for your your backup water supply? No, no would you not do it? I just GRT all the way man what's your what was the water filter that you picked or pick now?</p>



<p>Cuz I need to buy with this specific name of it, but it's a attitude or and I love it man. It's like It's like to two liters a minute. So it's actually pretty Yeah, it's super-efficient. And but it's got like a filter band on a hose. And then it's basically got like a hand lever like he would see the old the well pumps back at like the turn of the century how people would gather the groundwater. Sure, that makes the same same basic setup, and then it runs through a filter. as like a sediment trap that'll catch any large sediment coming in. And then it goes up through like a carbon disk. And then it comes down through a charcoal filtration system. And then back through an actual, like, I don't know, some kind of cloth filter. So it has three, three variants of filtration before it actually gets through to your</p>



<p>to your G Nalgene bottle or whatever your Yeah, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Has it worked out pretty well for you? Like, did you use that down river a lot? Or did you guys have other systems on the boat when you're doing?</p>



<p>You know, we carry all of our own water on the boat? Like, before we leave? We'll we'll load up, you know, five or six, five gallon cans of water. Yeah. Okay, that's bigger that makes, so we just bring all that? Yeah, I mean, when you're running commercial, stuff like that. It's just, I mean, any type of risk you can mitigate?</p>



<p>Yeah, I figured you wouldn't use it for commercial stuff. But I was wondering for you, or like, if you had, like, if you'd put it through a lot of repetitions of its pace, you know? Or what I guess what I was wondering is like, how long does it last? What's the kind of maintenance that you ran into with the issues you had with your Okay, so,</p>



<p>so what I didn't do, they have new gaskets that come with it, okay. They have new carbon discs, they have new charcoal that you put in there. You need to keep the gaskets lubricated. So that way, when you let it sit for a year and a half before your next trip, you don't pull it out. And those gaskets are cracked. Oh really. And that I just kind of had, you know, the hailstorm of all three of those things, where it was just like my sixth trip that I'd used it over the period of like three and a half years. Yeah. And I just, yeah, I just didn't maintain it, and ultimately ended up kind of paying for that.</p>



<p>Man, that's so sad. That stuff. Well, you know, lesson learned, though. Oh, yeah, sure. Hit that. Yeah. I remember there was a there was one ship that we did. She This is the nutty thing is that, like when in origin, it's great, because you have this luxury of just being able to carry a water filter with you and have this assurance that you're going to run into consistent water supply, for your whole backpacking trip through the wilderness. We have a lot of creeks and stuff, a lot of the places maybe you and I'll probably go are in like mountain areas where like we're talking about like going up into an Alpine lake or something like that. There's no way that Creek feeding off of that, or some kind of snowmelt system through that draw. And you're going to be able to pull water from that for the for the time that you're there. But what was tricky is, is when we were out further east, I think we were out in Utah, we went to Capitol Reef, and we did a backpacking trip there. And yeah, it's tricky because out there, when you get into Utah, or probably anywhere in the southwest region there, you have to bring all the water with you on a backpacking trip. So it's just part of the way you pack. It's pretty nuts. And it's I think it's like a ratio of about two gallons per person per day, which seems, you know, relative reasonable, really, but if you're doing just a couple days, that means like each person is carrying another eight pounds or, you know, eight gallons of water, which is a ton. Yeah, which is 64 pounds of water. It was I remember we did we did Capitol Reef. We had, I think, four gallons. So I think Marina and I both had two gallons, maybe I think I might add more gallons. But she probably cared a lot of gallons of water. And we get all this water up there, and it was a lot. It was ridiculous. But uh yeah, it was probably another 30 pounds each. Yeah, no, I believe it I mean water is super heavy and it takes up a lot of space. It takes up so much space. Yeah, there's a picture of me just kind of strapped and gallon jugs. We didn't even have like a system of like, we don't like even a camel pack. That's like you know two liters that's ounces. Yeah, you're gonna get an hour Yeah, so So yeah, you have that full that's on your chest and you have like three just gallon bottles of water kind of strapped around your back</p>



<p>Did you did you have like a like a pole strapped across your shoulders with</p>



<p>the big bucket side? I put over the top of my head is a high ground. Yeah, there that's like the environment that it seems like you'd need it but it was strange because they were I think they were a couple water sources around but they had dried up by that time in the year, you know, they're seasonal. I think they're like, in that area the desert and it's it's really remote out there when you get out the Capitol Reef because there's no big town near there. Really? Oh, you know what I mean? I mean even I guess Death Valley is kind of the same way but but Las Vegas is sort of close to it. But out in Capitol Reef, man, there was nothing out there. And it was just super dry and super. It was super caustic to your your being what you were out there. What kind of what time of year were you? We were there in October. And it was okay. And it was still pretty high. It was that it was still like oh man like in the day. This is kind of hard. To do, but we did, I think like a handful of miles in to this arch that was back there that we were at a camp by and we had a couple days out there. It was cool. It was really remote. It was interesting to see some of that landscape out there. But man, there was no water to be found. It was just high desert. Like, there was like a mud pit. There was maybe four or five miles further. You know that that was like the saving grace back in the 1800s. When you're a frontiersman in that area. Imagine that with no gear no water filter. No, yeah, you're out of water for a while, but there's a chance that there's this muddy pit. That's like a natural spring a few miles up this way. And you might be able to get enough water to survive to your next drop off. days, man, it'll days, that would have been terrible. Yeah, yeah. You think about what the frontiersman would have had to have George just get through to get through dealing with waterfalls, or, I mean, obviously, they're not filtering their water, but just dealing with the water sources that they have to encounter.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't even want to think about that. They'd argue that we're probably live in the good old days. That's probably</p>



<p>But yeah, I don't think I've had like a big problem with the water filter before we've done what we because we'd always like have it so that we just have like a big store of water on it's where we were when we were moving. And then well, I was gonna ask you about like, if we were moving on from, from what we were talking about, I wanted to talk to you about like the stoves that you that you would bring. Have you brought like a stove with you much backpacking or or do you try like, not well, yeah, cuz you do. Just the jet bow food all the time. Right.</p>



<p>Yeah. So that's, that's my primary is my jet boil. I mean, you can really do just about anything in there. Yeah, it's great. I mean, they're there. And there's so many different ways to use it. Like, one thing you can do is just, I mean, if you have time, I mean, YouTube is such a vast Information Center. You can go in there and just look stuff up and just like ways to be creative with the Jetboil. I mean, they have they have instructions on how to how to bake in your Jetboil Oh, you can bake a mountain cake while you're up there.</p>



<p>I didn't know that I burned I lost. Like is it just like it just goes to like, hot right away? There's I don't know, I don't know how you bake in it. But that's really cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it honestly it seemed like more hassle than it was worth, but yeah, so I have a slice. But I mean, but it is possible. That's cool. So other than that, I've just got this like this cheap little. What is that? It's like the isobutane. Is that what we run those?</p>



<p>I yes. I remember what it is. I don't remember that little stove. That's a cool one. That's a good backup stove.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's just like, you know, I think I paid like 30 bucks for it, man, the things tiny. Like, it's just a little backpack and stuff. It's awesome.</p>



<p>Sure. I think those are really useful. You know, we did. We did like our 50 day trip. We did that with just the Jetboil. And we did as much as we could with that, that second trip that we did for like 100 and 110 days or whatever it was. Yeah, we did that with the Jetboil. We had to buy like a propane stove. Like just a single kind of the same idea as a jet boil or a backpacker stove where it's just the burner that fits on top of the top of the tank. We had a buy one of those halfway through the chip. And it was nuts because like we just worn out the jet boil. It was nuts because like so I guess when you use one for 110 days straight. They have a hard time. Yeah, if you unscrew and screw back together, but we still cobbled it together to work because we like we needed to boil water. I remember it was out on the Oregon coast. I think it was a spot that we had taken you to after that. Was it like sisters rock area? Oh, you remember when we were there. That was really cool. That was a cool spot it was fun to so we were there the year before I took you guys there. And we had camped there for the better half of a week or so. And we were using the Jetboil to make coffee and do everything with it. But the the stove part, the threading that goes down where we connect to the gas candidate canister had started to wear out. So it would pop it would blow the stove off of the tank. Like the threading would just it would just pull apart and so it was like it was leaking and you couldn't get it to seal tight enough so that you could you could get a connection from the stove to the tank to draw to burn.</p>



<p>So that brings me to something I want to bring upon this. Yeah, is a big thing that I factor in when I'm packing is materials to fix stuff. Oh yeah. Like that's huge. I mean, like one thing that was good to have in your pack is that it's it's like the plumbers tape. It's like a thin nylon that you wrap around threading to to make a gasket essentially. They make it for for gas. So like propane. stuff. It costs like a buck 29 at, you know, your local plumbing store, Home Depot or something. And, and that's great to have in your pack for exactly that situation because those threads are like a thin aluminum, you know? Yeah. I mean, they're not meant to be taken apart and put back together 1000s of times. Yeah, I have a lot in a situation like that. I mean, that gives you, you know, it's going to create a seal. And you could probably, you know, milk it for another month or two. doing that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's exactly what we did in the moment, when we were out there is we took, we took the electrical tape that was in the glove box, and we kind of like a slip of that, just like, we had to do this, like, all the time we, we've set it up on a new canister, and then we would not break it down. We wouldn't touch it until that canister was finished. But we use it for almost the rest of it. Like the part on his sister's rock on the coast. That was like day 15 of 100. So he's using the rest of the time. We had a we had to kind of supplement it with some other thing. Yeah, but But yeah, we just we had to put a little bit of electrical tape around the threading, and then try and like gently work it together. So that would hold enough so we can boil our water and cook our food. But we did that a lot of times, man, we ran through like another half dozen canisters of fuel before we finally probably retired that thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's great, man. I mean, that's that's what it's about. That's what's cool is like, being on those long trips, or you know, even just a trip or you're away from things, like it forces you to be resourceful and kind of, oh, man, I love that you're on what you can do with what you have.</p>



<p>Yeah, I can't broke our tent pole broke. At one point it was in the wind, a tent was set up, it was weighted down, the wind came in while we were hiking it, it crushed that time and it like it just torque that thing over. it snapped one of the poles. it snapped the one that was kinda under the the heavier tension load. There's a few that were, it was an interesting tent design. But there's there's, like, you know, one that was like, it didn't matter. There's the other one that was torqued around 180 degrees; it was almost like both points were almost touching each other. That thing just like crashed as the tent rolled over on its side. We were like, well shoot. And it was kind of a weird town, we couldn't really get a replacement pole in that length and that size. And so we had to like figure out a way I think what happened is if you would imagine now that the there's the aluminum piece, and then there's the peg of the next aluminum pole as it comes together with your template selection color. Yeah, that color. What had happened is that is that the it just broke out of that, like whatever piece inserted into the piece next to it, it just snapped out it kind of like broke out that that first top inch of a piece of aluminum. And so we went over to this can that we wasn't like a coke Can I think was just like some Tin Can that we that Chilean, something like that, or some canned tomato. And so we like clipped that down and had a roll that with a pencil to get like a little tube. And we'd like to roll that around the broken part to be a splint for our tent pole. So we could keep together on a camping trip. But we still I mean, the tents still like that we use that tent for like another lightning like we're saying, and they're like six or seven months. Way too. Yeah, that's awesome, man. What was that, like? On the 115 days, man, it was so cool. Well, that that goes back around to what we were talking about a little bit at the beginning, when we were saying It's nuts when you think about what you need to bring for three days, versus what you need to bring for. In this case, like 100 days, my thinking about it was not very clear, I was only thinking about like the first week it was really just bring everything, bring everything, have it in your car, be loaded down. I even did this the year before in the car. And I thought I like knew better. But I didn't know that I cut down a lot of stuff, it was a lot easier the second time around. But you really notice that almost everything you can leave home in a big way. As long as you're yourself and in some level of resources around you. You can probably get through or, you know, like survive most days and get to the next one in in a significant amount of comfort. You know if you don't put yourself through hell, I suppose. But it worked out really well. It's time like for it was strange because I guess what I would say is after maybe the first two weeks, first three weeks, I'd say after 15 days, your body acclimates. To do what it's doing in a kind of weird way. I don't know if you had the firefighting or, or if you've had it in like some other situation. But it seems like after maybe some number of days, it seems like you just get a little less dirty every day. Or you're you slam a little better at night. When you Yeah, there was no way you can sleep that well.</p>



<p>Exactly. But that's what happens, man. It's like your body just acclimating. Actually, I was talking about that with my dad yesterday. We were talking about how You know, where we live, it's pretty quiet. So like, we go and stay somewhere like in the, in the center of like a city or something and you can hear people talking and you've got street lamps on total and you'll, you'll lay wide awake for the first few nights, but then by night three, you know, it's like you just get used to the background noise and stuff and you just tune it out, you're just falling asleep. But it's the same thing with being on the road or being up in the hills. It's like, Alright, you know, you get past that initial Oh, I'm dirty feeling and then that's just the way you are. Yeah, it's really just, you adapt to what you do. And there's, there's physical</p>



<p>things to that happen. Like, I swear that I mean, maybe like a suntan is a good example of it. When you're on you have no exposure, and then you're put underexposure, a lot more than you're used to you get burned is sort of what happens so like, if you bet if you build up a tolerance to if you build up a tan, then you don't get burned. You don't get that caustic effect from the exposure, the sun, sort of the same way of camping or being out in the wilderness for a handful of days. It seems like he got a little bit a little bit better at it. Like I remember, I mean probably similar to a sunburn, but man, my lips would chap like crazy as soon as I got over into a different type of climate, or I guess, just a drier atmosphere or something like that. But yeah, as soon as you go east of the Cascades, man, my lips would chap immediately or if you went up in elevation, like up into like an Alpine area. Oh, yeah. But then after I know what, one week, two weeks or something like that, it just wouldn't happen again. And then just thing Yeah, where you get, or like I The thing that I remember the most, this is maybe more of just an awareness piece. I don't know if this happened to you. But I remember I would get cut a lot when I first went camping. Or Yeah, like now like at the beginning of the season, if I went out I'd probably like get, I don't know, some kind of weird, some number of Nicks. From circumstances I was putting myself in with a pocket knife or with wood or with something I had to do. But I my hands would get cut up more. And then, after a pretty short amount of time, I didn't run into any more injuries like that. Just the circumstantial injuries, the small like, Look, yeah, so you get into it just well stop. Yeah. And</p>



<p>that's, that's funny. It's the same thing like, so I work in carpentry, and I can I can count probably 27 cuts between the two of my hands, that, like they're just little one. I mean, a couple of them, you know, are there, you know, oh, yeah, you keep hitting them or hurt when you got them. But it's just like, they're everywhere. And you come home at night, you look at your hands and go What? Like, you're like, Oh, that's a pretty open wound. I didn't know about that, you know, that's just your body just stops interpreting that is like a distress signal. And it's like, this is the norm, this is just what happens. Yeah. And it's kind of like the scent, you know how, like a new smell will be really overpowering. But like, obviously, you go to the landfill, right? And then you spend an hour there and you can't smell it. Yeah, so what that that is, I'm sure you know, but it's a it's your body's defense, you know, it detects new sense and makes them strong, so you're aware of them. But once your body figures out that it's not a threat to you, and your livelihood, then it dissipates and just becomes, you know, a subconscious scent that you're not actively selling.</p>



<p>Yeah, I totally get that. I've heard that before about like different scents and stuff that come through. It's weird. Yeah, it's probably it's probably an effect. It's really similar to that with the stuff about cutting but but man, I remember it was so weird, because we were just in the Camry at the time this old 92 Camry. And like we would notice that we really just wanted to get rid of most of the weight of the things that were in the car, we only needed a backpack or two backpacks, you know, is just nuts. When you figure out like, oh, man, none of this stuff is really like what we need to get at. We really only do these two or three or four things. And we do this pretty repetitively. You don't need the rest of this stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, you don't. And that's, that's what I always enjoy that. Like when by the time you get done with a backpacking trip, or a road trip or something, it really makes you realize how little you need to actually function in your day to day life. Yeah, absolutely. Just just how much excess stuff you just carry around for no reason. You know, you come off a trip like that. And you're thinking to yourself, you know, I live with nothing but a toothbrush and just like, you know, a lot of talking to you. Oh, yeah, exactly. Yeah. And then you come home and you're like, Well, what do I have all this stuff for? No. Yeah.</p>



<p>It's definitely happened. I wanted to ask you about like the downriver stuff that you did on the road. When you were like, Well, I know three or four day trips. Like what that was like and are like so how much gear Do you guys carry down? I mean, there's there's for the guests and stuff, but kind of cutting that out a bit like for yourself, how much gear would you think that is per person? Maybe</p>



<p>so much. Okay, so, so us as guides, pack, I don't want to say minimally, but we pack them, the necessities while staying comfortable. As you know, it's like, you don't want to, to under pack because we live down there, you know, 90 to 100 days out of the year. So it's like you start, you know, really trying to figure out what you enjoy, like good sleeping equipment. Nobody. Nobody goes light on that everybody brings great sleeping equipment. What's the best equipment to bring for the letter of dammit, man, I've got what's called a roller caught. It's like a nylon material that is it's like a rubberized head-on even that explain it. But it's like a measurement.</p>



<p>I saw yours. And I really want that look cool.</p>



<p>It's great. They're super durable. I mean, they're really strong. They're waterproof. You know, I couldn't ask for anything better. And they roll up to the the, you know, the length of your arm and everything's lightweight and aluminum. It's just a good caught. But anyway, that's called a roller caught. But yeah, we take that I take a sleeping pad to kind of create a barrier between the air beneath mean, and shaking bag. Yeah. Yeah, and bring yourself a nice pile of a sleeping bag. And you're good to go,</p>



<p>man that it looks like a really good setup. I like that that cart system that you had, and it says happened, like almost no time at all. Yeah, you</p>



<p>can have it put together in a matter of, you know, less than a minute.</p>



<p>And it seems super durable to like it's not really going to be affected by being weathered over a couple seasons.</p>



<p>Well, yeah, you get like fabric carts and stuff like that. No, you know, just between the Sun and the water and whatever else. What other elements are getting to them, they'll just kind of rip and tear eventually. Yeah. But now when we go on those trips. We the guides for the company pack a pretty happy setup, should we bring in? We bring a full kitchen. So we've got four, you know, stand ups those. We've got tables and pots and pans and jugs of water and coolers and you know, I mean, it's really it's really a big operation that we do. Yeah. And then you know, the guests bring whatever they think they need to be comfortable with. Over the course of three or four days. And like we were talking about when we can potentially overpack on a backpacking trip. People can really overpack when they're not carrying their own bag around. Oh, yeah. You know, they're like, and you get a lot of people do that are from, you know, really urban settings and getting down there and the candy and it's kind of really outside their comfort zone. Totally. I understand just got so much stuff. Yeah. But that's why they hire a gear boater, right.</p>



<p>Yeah, yes. Yeah. That's cool. So um, so like, probably a good amount of equipment. What if you and I just went on a trip, and we had to haul out to a different river, it was a little further away. So you're kind of trying to cut down a little bit? Like what kind of equipment would you bring a sort of a lightweight, single boat trip</p>



<p>with a lot of that would depend on what the fishability of the river was. If it was potentially eating fish. I would cut down on food a good deal. It depends on just how comfortable you want to be. I mean, if you're if you're interested in just having kind of a you know, a back to the basics really kind of fend for yourself experience. You can go really light. I mean, you could go backpacking and light with just a little isobutane stove. Oh, that'd be cool. I don't really want to do something like that. We should. Yeah. Well, I've thought about that a lot. I really want to do one of those. And I want to do like a high desert trip like that, too.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, high desert rafting ship. Now, a high desert camping chip that was like backpacking, like that kind of</p>



<p>Alpine. cottontails and in streams, man. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Yeah, like hunt, hunt, and fish for all the food that you have. Or have a couple backpack meals or something? Yeah, yeah, obviously bring it back up. But yeah, that would be the idea. That's a cool idea. Yeah, well, I like the idea of doing it on the on the river that I thought that'd be kind of fun. I have it set up kind of like a like a backpacking ship with a raft. I was wondering how self sustaining Could you be from a raft on a raft ship like, like, how many days do you think you can do?</p>



<p>a raffle? Well, I just had some friends that went on the Colorado and they just did</p>



<p>33 days, 33 days, but they run into stores, right, or do they have anything like that? Like, it's it's probably planned that day.</p>



<p>I, I, from what I understand they packed everything because I Oh, wow, if you're not familiar with river guide culture, everyone's pretty poor. So it's not like, got a ton of money to spend on places. So, I mean, really, it's like you kind of go on the cheap. But I mean, you bring the biggest hang-up is what you need to keep cold. Like if you need to put stuff on ice and things like that. Yeah. If you can cut that stuff back, you can really be very self sustaining. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, I figured that was what we noticed car traveling to is man, like having a having a cooler was a constant liability, where we just have to keep doing it. I always lose. Yeah, and we're always losing energy. Like, it's always it's always going out. We're spending a hand like probably a good bit just on ice traveling around. And we finally figured out like one of the things we were talking about earlier, what you think about beginning versus what you think of the end, man cutting down on a cooler or cutting down on ice and things you have to keep cold constantly. That was the biggest improvement of the the maintenance that we had to do for like our trip travel. Yep. stuff. It was it was so frustrating to try and like always keep that and like you're always throwing away stuff that's gone rotten in some way.</p>



<p>Exactly. And then also, when you're in a car, you know, the heat inside the car generally is amplified when you're in? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But the big thing on like, if you're packing a cold cooler, whether it's rafting or camping, or whatever it is, keep it shut as much as possible. You know, every time you open it, you're gonna lose. It's gonna heat up in there. So I mean, just keep it shut. A lot of times, you can duct tape the seal. So you don't lose any, any cold air from there. And do that. And you can really keep food cold for a long time. Or just go to the store. If you know, you're going to be gone for 10 days, get a couple blocks of dry ice and put those into a cooler that just a cooler for your eyes. And then you keep that in there. You keep that wrapped with duct tape. And you only open it when you need to swap it into the cold. Cool. That's a smile. Really? Yeah. Yeah. You know, you've got an icebox and then a cooler essentially.</p>



<p>Okay. I like that. I like that thinking that's kind of that's kind of interesting. You know, we finally invested in a Yeti cooler, like one of those thicker, lined coolers with like the rubber straps that come down. So like clamps itself down the lid. Yeah. How do you? How do you feel about that? They don't they don't sponsor us so I can talk. I can speak my mind. I think that they are I think that they are too expensive. I think that they do keep ice. Well, and it is. It's like one of the better, better ways I've seen of a cooler. What do you what's your experience with them?</p>



<p>Well, I have little experience with them. But I don't know. I mean, it just seems like I mean, yeah, they hold eyes really well. And if I was buying it, for the only reason is to keep ice cold. Sure, then then I could validate that but it just seems like your pain. You know, like 75 bucks on a cooler that it's interior area would hold a six-pack of beer, maybe? Oh, yeah. Yes.</p>



<p>That laid out. 20 court one that we have is small. Yeah. I think that the concept guide right. Nuts use device. Is that you okay? So first you have your cooler Of course, just in the back of your truck. You get a bag of ice. You put the bag ice in the cooler. You shake it around, you leave it there for a half-hour just to chill the cooler. Just because it's too hot inside. Right? Then you dump that bag ice completely. That's gone. Then you put then you put three bags of like, cold ice in there. I think there's like coal ore. What is it? Like? There's wet ice? Have you heard of that? Like, it's like around like, what? 32 or seven? It's like kind of Yeah, running in a liquid. It's what you get at every convenience store. Because they turn up their their freezers to like, as high as it Yeah. But then yeah, so you throw in another three bags of ice, like almost it's like three quarters full at that point. And then you can put in what you're talking about maybe a six-pack of beer in there to keep it in its system, you know, to keep as much ice in the ratios what it thinks you're supposed to. But at that point, it says at least you can keep that for like five days. If you keep the lid shut like you're talking about it's it's Yeah, really well so you can keep that for a long time. It's not often something I've run into as needing but okay.</p>



<p>Oh, that No, I was just saying I I find they work fantastic. I mean, we use them on the river. And I mean they're they're great for keeping eyes but I mean using them as a cooler but you need to get in and out of and that's where you lose that so much of your cold air and stuff is those leads all the time. Yeah. So it kind of doesn't really matter whether or not you've got a Yeti or Coleman or whatever it is. It's when you're in and out of them. You lose the axe. Yeah, yeah, no. Yeah, I see. And that's just kind of what it boils down to. So in that case, I'd prefer to have something with a little bit more area to actually keep food and stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, the the Yeti one that you see like maybe at all right? Yeah, that was a pretty tiny one. Have you seen the big ones like are? Well, probably stuff that you guys would have figured it'd be the same. Yeah, same size coolers. We have the really large Eddie's Yeah. And I've seen the stuff that goes on, like the commercial fishing boats. Like the batches like is huge. Why? Like, I mean, like, see seafaring boats, like these giant, like, bench size Yeti coolers that they build into the side of the thing that they're supposed to throw in fresh catfish. But that's got to be expensive. Oh, yeah. It's got to be an insane custom order, like $5,000. I mean, I guess at that point, it's just like, Well, yeah, we'll make whatever cooler you want. You know, it's just like plastic and styrofoam at some point. So Exactly. There's another company. There's like this other company called Arctic. Like, I think it's our T IC. And they do knockoff Yeti coolers. They they I don't know, drop shipping from China or something like that. But they're like, they're like maybe 100 $150 cheaper than the Yeti cooler price. So it kind of brings, it brings him back in that range of like a Coleman cooler, or like something else that's, you know, more real. Yeah.</p>



<p>And that's, that's the thing, and you start price and coolers, and it doesn't really matter what level of cooler you want to get. Honestly, I mean, for anything decent. You're looking around the 100 bucks. Yeah, yeah. It's really charming. Yeah. And I mean, that's, that's just kind of like, you know, your average. Yeah. I mean, with the</p>



<p>Yeah, snaps on the side that you take to the to the tailgate,</p>



<p>you can get those guys for like 39 bucks, or something, you know, but it's like, but if you get into like a steel-belted cooler, or anything that actually supposed to function correctly, right when you're out on a trip. Yeah. I mean, you're kind of looking at a minimum of 100 bucks.</p>



<p>I figure that's, that's definitely true. Yeah, man. Yeah, that's what that's that's another thing too, is like how much money you can invest in your equipment like that? Well, we were talking about that boat, you know, getting a custom Yeti cooler. It's five grand. Yeah, I know. But yeah, man. I don't know. Do you have any other stuff to bring upon this? I'm sure we're going to talk way more in the future about like hiking equipment.</p>



<p>Well, I did I did want to touch on you. Aside from like, your basics, like a water filter, your freeze-dried foods, things like that. What are some things that you bring in your pack? Not on a car trip, but on a backpacking trip? That you know, just just the important things aside from the the obvious?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, that's a good question. So I mean, I know. I try and keep my pack under 40 pounds. is what I've done it Yeah, each of the tabs. Well, yeah, I really try to keep it pretty light, which I guess is a little bit what we're talking about. I don't know what to bring at a point. I got my tent. Which is a it's just a couple pounds. I got like the stove. You know, the I got, let's say like, three of those or you know, like a handful of backpacker meals and some Clif Bars. I've got a way to start a fire. I've got Yeah, I've got like my iPod, or you know, like my phone or something like that charged up. Yeah. And so I'm trying to think of the other stuff. I mean, it's probably close that I bring, that's always been the spot where I bring more weight than I need to because it's always like, some kind of like, it's it's like cotton t-shirts, or another pair of jeans or something like yeah, oh man. And the worst one is like another pair of shoes. That's been the, I mean, cuz you want that. Like, like, at least like a pair of boots. And then like a pair of like river sandals. Like there's always been a situation where I want that. I know that's been for you. Like when honestly that's</p>



<p>that's been huge for me. I did that on a king strip, you know, bring sandals. I mean, if even if you're not getting into the water, it's just nice to let your feet breathe and, and just give your feet some type of different support than the hiking boot that you just put 20 miles on.</p>



<p>Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I noticed a turn that Yeah, I really needed to switch back and forth between the two, but I was always frustrated cuz you got to like store the pair of shoes somewhere. Yeah, which isn't that much way it's fine, but they're always kind of an awkward sort of bulky size. I was trying to think other stuff see, like when I go out or I think I was looking at a picture from the flowers. And I was thinking back to that ship of like special things that I brought or like different things. And what I would do, I think like we talked about last time, I always bring the camera bag with me so is the there's the backpack of whatever it is. But then like around the front, there's like the camera bag with a couple lenses. And that's just not glass. So there's really no economy of weight going on there. Yeah. And, and yeah, there's like a tripod, which is like metal, legs and stuff you don't need To be carrying, but it's just like a lot of weight that you have to like heave up to the top of the mountain. The other thing that I was gonna say that I brought was like a keyboard. This is and that thing probably in your mind. Yeah, yeah, you're losing me here. Go ahead and explain. Yeah, I brought a keyboard that I connected to my phone, and like to my iPad, so that I could do some of the like editing stuff that I was trying to do. Yeah, which is silly. And I probably wouldn't do it again, if</p>



<p>you guys did want a lot of editing and stuff. And a lot of journaling. When you guys were out there</p>



<p>was what we were trying to do. Yeah, so it was a lot of like, there's a lot of stuff, it was a weird job where you go like out in the woods, and you take a bunch of photos and you try and like file and write about the photos while you're there. And I'm like this kind of thing. You see it on Instagram, every once in a while, like these, these cool tent offices, you know, somewhere on the back entry and someone you know, hanging out in the in the tent with the window up and out to wherever and they just got their, their like iPad, or their, their MacBook or something like that in the tent on top of the sleeping bags as they're working through and editing, whatever, but you kind of think about like how light some of these things are. And you can haul them up there and work with them pretty easily now, but the problem is power. So is the thing about like a MacBook or a laptop. I couldn't support that. I couldn't power it up there. But what I did do, and I think your dad turned me on to this for the first time it was that gold zero. Solar Panel kit. Do you remember that? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I bought one of those. It was just like that. And I use that thing a time on those backpacking ships if you workout for you. Yeah, I, it was the first time I've been using solar power. And really the only thing that it does, it's like two panels, maybe about about the size of your, you know, your two open palms or so, you know, it's like the size of like a good book. So it's really not very big at all for like solar energy. And all that it produces is enough to run out to a USB charger. So you can charge your phone. And that was really what I was going for. So it was cool that you could just be out for a week or indefinitely if you wanted. And you could keep your phone or your iPod on. And you know, when you turn it into airplane mode, the battery lasts for really quite a long time. Oh, yeah, yeah. So we use that we had a couple apps on it that we're using the donor to connect anything, but it's you can use that to file stuff or to write stuff or to record a video or to do whatever else. And and so we could do that as much as we wanted to. And then just recharge it the next day. Yeah, the sunlight on the solar panel. It was cool.</p>



<p>That's great. Yeah, we when we did Joshua Tree, I was taking like a photo journal or sorry, a video journal of the whole the whole trip. And that was eating up a lot of battery and I was I always use airplane mode for that. Just to save that battery, but we took with us a little charging station, which is actually kind of cool on those road trips. It has enough amperage to actually jumpstart your vehicle. Yeah, I've got one of those. And then yeah, you've got you know, you got USB ports and stuff like that in there. And I think those are greatly useful. Yeah, yeah, super great. I mean, because honestly, sometimes you get out there and it's just like, man, if you woke up with a dead battery and you're just 15 miles from anywhere Oh, yeah, see another person? It's been a huge concern a number of times Yeah. And with the way vehicles are going anymore, everything's in automatic. So it's not like you're gonna compression start your rig. Sure. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was scary. I remember there was a couple of texts I was driving around that Oh, camera you man. You remember that? Like that was not that was not always reliable car. Especially. It was it was the best guy but I remember there was a him like had this problem you know, if you left it in an accessory or with with over that your lights could be on mode was it would kill the battery in like a half-hour or less. Like if you if you left if you just left it on accidentally or you know, the the stereo was on while you were away or the door was open or something like that. It would it would kill the battery. It was like you walk into the gas station. Yeah, I mean, you probably could do that. It did that. In fact, a number of times, man, little things you had to do. But so how many how many 1000s of miles did you put on that car when I sold it? When I bought it? It was 250,000 miles, which is a lot to buy across just the spring chicken at that point. Just a smooth quarter million. And then when I sold it, I sold it for the same price. I bought it and that was with 367,000 miles on it.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're the only person I've known that made money on a vehicle. You just put 100,000 miles on it and made money off that car man you to drive it that Camry That was great. No. It's</p>



<p>a cool car. It was a blast in free as basic of a little sedan as it was. It really did a lot of stuff. And yeah, it was it was really fun. But it was scary though. Yeah, sometimes I remember being at this campsite. Where like the battery, I think died. Unfortunately, I think there was someone around that helped us like jump it right then. But yeah, there was always like something about that in my mind. And I think the next trip that we went in, I did have one of those jumper kits in the car. And it works pretty well. Most of the time, I would recommend, I think what you were talking about earlier of, of, would you say like keeping up with and maintaining your equipment, man, maintain that charger, because it's got to keep that thing charged, kind of in the wheelhouse of the same season that you might use it in, because it does kind of lose it after a little while like I had one. Like you know what, I don't know that next winter after it went from 100 degrees out to freezing out that battery is toast. And it's not really going to give you the amps. You need to jump your car. I think I ran into that one time. Yeah. Or I don't know. I did what I drained it on the charger my cell phone,</p>



<p>something like that. Oh, God. Yeah, yeah. That's a one thing I can say in especially is like, I don't know, for me anyway, as I get into better equipment. I'm more motivated to take care of it. Oh, yeah. Then really maintain it. You know, when you're starting in your, in your teens, and whatever, you kind of just Oh, yeah. 30 $30 sleeping bag, not a big deal or whatever. And then, you know, you just ruin things I burn through unintentionally. But yeah,</p>



<p>I mean, those things that they don't hold up the same way. And so it's like, that's, I think a good bit of why they've been replaced over time is that burned through a couple $30 sleeping bags? And you know, season two in the zippers are twisted and split. And you know, what, what's going on? Right? stuff with the 10 stuff stoves, stuff with filters. So</p>



<p>yeah, and, and honestly, when it comes to outdoor recreational equipment, you really do you just get what you pay for. Oh, yeah. Man, I, I, I just got to that point where I was, like, do I want to buy the $30 sleeping bag three times? Or do I want to buy $120 the bag once? Yeah. And you know, and that's just what it came down to. And so I started getting a little more picky when it came to choosing my equipment</p>



<p>I've been trying to buy. Yeah, and there's a there's a range of equipment, there's some equipment, like you're talking about, I want to be specific. I want to get the good stuff. I want it to work. And then there's another class of it. I don't it's kinda I don't know if I've really honed it down well, but I almost want it to be as cheap as possible because it's so likely to break or likely to get lost. Yeah, I don't know what that is. So yep. I know. There's like a handful of things that I've gone out. And for unfortunately, for me, it's sometimes like, well, it's not always pocketknives but it's like some sunglasses. sunglasses are perfect when travel sunglasses for me. Exactly. River sunglasses. I go for the cheapest ones. If they blow off my head, and you know, you know in water, whatever. There's nothing gone I don't care. It's funny. I don't want the best gear.</p>



<p>And unfortunately, the only way to come to that conclusion is to live through that situation multiple times.</p>



<p>Man I've lost Yeah, I've lost some stuff that wasn't super valuable. But it was just like Ah, it's just at the bottom of the river now. Like even if it wasn't really expensive, you're still like, Oh, I was 20 bucks. Yeah, I don't have it anymore. Yeah, it's a bummer, so there's that there's a handful of those things that have that oh, this is probably just gonna get damaged and get brought blown out whatever that is. I'm trying to like cut down on a few of those things but but yeah, I think that I remember the time I learned that was sleeping mats. You're talking about your sleeping bag I've learned so many times from a sleeping mat of not investing enough in that every night like two or three the hour and a half after I finally fallen asleep after blowing up my my bad excuse for a little camping that bed at two hours after that I always wake up in the sleeping bag kind of on the rocks under the tent you know what I'm talking about? Yeah. It's that like thing where you're still asleep and coming into awaking when you know you just have a rock in your kidney anything and now only spent 15 more dollars on this mat.</p>



<p>You know what I disagree with you there? Like I've spent good money. Oh, several times on ads. And better. No, you know what I got to the point like so well, first off, when I'm when I'm backpacking. I just got to the point where like, I'm probably going to be comfortable no matter what. Yeah, I yeah, I've been there. But man, I was just like, I'm going to use the cot and use as little of the sleeping bag. had his I can't because I have had nothing but bad experiences with sleeping pads. But they always seem to they last a trip or two and then they've got a hole in them. You got to patch them, or they just don't seem to hold air. I don't know, man. I mean, I guess you could you can get into some I've seen them, you know, there are $200 sleeping pads. One I got,</p>



<p>I got it, I got a Thermarest like, like an M, or one that didn't have a lining on it. Some of them like the Rei, when you get it's got this nylon lining that makes it a little tougher. This one was just sort of the rubbery inside lining of that. But I had one of those it was I think, less than $50. That's the one that I still have packs down to almost nothing. It's kind of cool. I don't, I've never turned it down, like on the rocks, as it were, or you know, something like that. So it's always had like a tarp or some kind of lining under it and the ground. But I've slept. I mean, I don't know. Not to say that it's been inflated all these nights, but I've probably put about 250 300 nights on that on that mat over the last handful of years. And it's been working out pretty well for No, it's like it was it was deflated, maybe maybe three or four weeks after I got it. But anyway, you gotta you gotta like, it's just sort of you come to this point where you're like, Oh, no, I just wake up at 215 and a 410. And it's 635. And I just reflate the mat, and then I go back to bed. It just becomes part of your nightly routine. Yeah, it's just just what you do. Yeah, just like getting up to take up the old air mattress. Yeah, it's a Yeah, it's on the same schedule. It's like, it's like auto timing. When when I needed to get up and but yeah, it was it's it's been silly. I got that's on the list for this year for 2017. I'm gonna try and get a new mat. Yeah.</p>



<p>So she got to do man figure out what's important. It's like, yeah, every year you try to buy like two things that will make your camping experience much better.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yes. Have you seen around with those, those like, it's not foil, but it's just like a dense foam mat that sort of collapses down into a little block. I've seen that like strapped to some backpackers. Kids before, but it's just sort of like this light foam mat that they crunch down into a little, little deck. I don't know, it was weird. I've not I've never really used anything like that. But I bet it probably works really well for him. Yeah, I've</p>



<p>kind of been curious about those. And the other one I've heard good reviews on this is from some people that I backpack with that had one. But it's like, it's it kind of contraries your body in a way that it kind of holds you inside the mat. It's inflatable. But it's got this kind of like it's almost the same shape as your mummy bag, but the sides kind of like protrude upward to keep you in it. Because I don't know. I mean, I'm sure you know, man, you get the lightweight sleeping pads and stuff. And you find out really quickly that you just roll off of them in the middle of the night. Yeah. Or whatever. You know, it's just like, they're hard to stay on. I mean, yeah, like, I'm not a large individual by any stretch of the imagination. And like, they're narrow, though. They're like, yeah, they're super narrow and thin. And yeah, I guess this guy Jimmy that I was backpacking with was telling me that he loved it. And I forget the name of the producer. But anyway, yeah, I guess it was really great. That's sweet.</p>



<p>Um, I'm away I'm probably way under-educated to really get in deep about like, a lot of different gear, the different manufacturers of outdoor gear, you know, and yeah, like that. That catalog of equipment is sort of swimming around in my mind. But I can't really pin down like a ton of different things. I'd be like, oh, what about this? Robert, what about this? What have you talked about the feather day? I don't, I don't have anything really? I don't know. I think we've probably talked about a lot of it. Man. I'm a basics kind of person. I don't really care if it's like North Face, or Patagonia or Acer tech, or Marmot or something like that. You know, it's not really like super important. And I know you're kind of most my gear, most of my layers are from goodwill. That's Yeah, they're old to men. And actually, that's one of the best pieces of advice I might I might give to anyone who's bothered to listen to this point deep in our podcast, which Thank you, by the way. But it's not so like, it's, it's one of the best values that you can get for outdoor equipment was cruising through and having a really specific clear agenda of the of the types of things you want to get out of goodwill. depends on your area. And you got to go like I did in Corvallis. Man Corvallis was a goldmine for Hey, don't be giving away. All the hardships Corvallis, goodwill, I pulled out I bought like a great North Face fleece out that fit me. Yeah, it was pretty It was $8 boom, there. Go Marina got me this, this Marmot shell, this blue Marmot shell for like less than 12 bucks. It was awesome. That's like a $200 jacket. I replaced it with a new one. And it was it was like 200 bucks at Rei.</p>



<p>It was so expensive even like, yeah, I mean, yeah, you're getting quality. But man, there's got to be some point where it's just like, Ah, it's too much money. Yeah, I like I go in there and I'll shop the like the clearance rack with my gift card that I get for like a birthday or something. You know? But you're still like, wow, this is a $60 flannel or something.</p>



<p>I don't see the value in some of it. Like we were talking about, there's like good things and bad things. Man, I went big on a rain jacket. I'm a work outside all the time you like you You have big on like the boots that you have for for fire season. And like, there's like sometimes it's like, oh, that's I need that. I need that thing. A lot of the time. Maybe you don't need a new one of those. Yeah, or whatever, whatever it might be. But I go big on rain gear. Yeah, that's what I'm your big. I put my money in having a having a good thermal layer. And I got a pretty expensive but like a nicer rain jacket, like a GoreTex rain jacket to go over. And man that thing is saved me like being out here in Oregon. I don't need really any other layers Other than that, and I've noticed that you can go from like snow, to warm weather to like really intense rain. And you can pretty much keep that same, like set of layers go in that whole time. And it worked well. Like Yeah, but it's rad when you finally like get something and say, oh, this is like this is what I need. This is good enough to answer for all these different situations will be in.</p>



<p>And that's what yeah, I won't go light on on anything that keeps you warm and dry. I'm sure yeah. First off, I don't even know if this is a really good way around. Going. You know going getting around the expensive stuff on that. Oh, yeah, it all seems to be pretty steep no matter where you go. But yeah, like I mean when it's hot, you can always shed layers like you can always remove clothing sure cooler but when it comes to being cold and wet, man that that's the difference between a good trip and a bad trip or a good trip and a serious change</p>



<p>right my experience a ton I mean just just kind of working outside of gigabit through the day. Like data coming through with like some snow on the on the hills like a little bit higher up in the elevation right on the valley floor. It's nothing, but it's it's pretty lousy. Winter weather. It seems like right now. But it's like it's just waves of rain. Like every 45 minutes or so. It's like 45 minutes on 45 maybe 10 2030 minutes off. Then back on to just kind of this drizzle this light rain drizzle. It's coming down all the time. And if it weren't for the like, whole head cover hood and an GoreTex like outfit I've caught on. I'd be soaked all the time. Oh, man. Yeah. shoes. Shoes are a huge one. Like, we should talk about hiking shoes sometime. Like cuz you gotta like Well, what's it What's it the boot that you go for a lot. Mine are the marrow. Yeah, the marrows. Yeah. Yeah, I like those man. I I've never had Merrill's. But they seem pretty.</p>



<p>They're a great boot. They've got you know what, honestly, when you price shoes, shoes are expensive. They're expensive when you're looking for, honestly, so I'm not even gonna say these are expensive. The $150 range.</p>



<p>Yeah, but same as a pair of Jordans. Yeah, exact same as a pair of weigh less. weigh less than Yeezys. Uh, yeah, no, they're great boots, man. I love them the mid top. But we'll save that for another podcast. Oh, yeah. Hey, um, so, you know, we always talk a lot about electronics in the field and things like that in different ways that you take your stuff out there. And that's because you are a photographer Billy extravert you take great photos. So for anybody listening if you want to check out Billy's photography, I believe what it's Billy Newman photo comm.com you</p>



<p>got it right man I appreciate all right. Yeah, check out check it out photos, check out this podcast there. It's it's hosted on that site if you want to check it out. And yeah, the get out there podcast, the feed is up and going. We've got information about that Billy Newman photo comm you can check it out on iTunes. That's what I recommend. If you're hearing this, you probably already figured out how to get into the podcast app and look for this but if you are, give us a review, or rate it or subscribe to the podcast that helps us out a lot in the first eight weeks. We read that those numbers are going to be three and then two of them are you and I Probably it's probably you and me and our girlfriends respectively. But it's but but we have passed. And this is great news, and it's under a week, and we're under five episodes. In total. We've had 100 downloads. Whoa. Which is big time. It's again, mostly me and you I think. I think it's like, yeah, we've got around 11 listeners a show. Maybe some I know, but it's all it's all. It's all ephemeral at this stage. You can't really tell for a long time. But but overall though, man, it's really fun I did doing a podcast with even if it's zero people that that are listening to it. It's still been a blast. Yeah, but you say, Hey, you know about the outdoor stuff, man, you get to talk to you about this stuff.</p>



<p>No, it's great. I love I love picking your brain to you because you've spent, I mean, just as much time as anybody I know. doing various types of camping. Yeah, so it's good. I like I like speaking with like minded people about these topics. It's cool, man. It's great. Hey, um, sounds like we might have a trip planned for this weekend. We don't know. Oh, yeah. Harley what it is. Yeah, but we got some things in the works. Maybe we'll do a do a little podcast from wherever we are.</p>



<p>We got to do on Yeah. If we if we meet up in person, we'll definitely do a live podcast. It'd be cool.</p>



<p>Absolutely. So hey, for those 11 listeners out there, you guys. Stay tuned. We got a little something for you.</p>



<p>That's gonna be a special treat. Episode Six. Yeah, it's just like, Hey, we hung out today. There you go. No, but we'll, we'll put it together. It'll be fun. That'd be cool. But yeah, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast in it. Yeah. Thank you, Billy. It's been good. I appreciate it, man. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast.</p>



<p>Transcribed by https://otter.ai</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 


Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm



I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.



It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you ]]></itunes:summary>
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		<title>Get Out There &#124; 06 Fishing The Alsea River</title>
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	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:duration>32:01</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 


Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit abou]]></googleplay:description>
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	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
	<googleplay:block>no</googleplay:block>
</item>

<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 05 Backpacking Stoves and Backcountry Water Filters</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-05-backpacking-stoves-and-backcountry-water-filters/</link>
	<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2017 03:49:54 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5353</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters</p>
<p>How to source inexpensive jackets and layers.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>


<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm</p>



<p>I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.</p>



<p>It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances that you might run into. And then you can</p>



<p>Yeah, you do the thing where like, you know, you're going for three days also and you're like, well, wow, I have so much room. You know, I only have three days worth of stuff, which is pretty minimalist. And then you end up going, oh, well I got this and this and then snacks before you before you know it. Yeah, you just pack.</p>



<p>Six Pack in the top. Yeah. Yeah. And that's happened a couple of times. I was trying to think about how that worked out for me. I remember early on when I did when I did like a couple early backpacking trips. We talked about this in that first episode, I think doing some stuff on the lower road. Maybe the second one. We're, yeah, that first chip, I did the 40 whatever, miles down the lower road. And it was just way rushed. And it was way too heavy and all the stuff you like, we brought a bunch of cans, we didn't have a can opener and like, like, What was this? What was the system that was going behind this, like, you get things that work in a kitchen, but there's no system and that that helps you? You know, do that in the backcountry, I guess. Or to keep things good or, like purify enough water to have a that's always that was always one having so otter with you. So that's something I want to ask you what kind of what kind of water purification? I have always been under, under attack about this. Like I really wanted more equipment for water purification, it's probably well, you know, I've been fortunate a lot of the time. But yeah, it's it's been risky, maybe one or two times, but I've only ever had this squeeze bottle charcoal filter, like you fill it up with maybe 12 ounces of water and you squeeze it out of this filter. What we would do Marina and I when we go backpacking, we were up in the well, ours we were up in the Trinity Alps, we were up in the Tetons, it was a lot of spots where it was like really clean snowmelt. So worked out on our favor a lot of times on the other hand, there was times where we were on the lower rogue in the canyon, and there's really no good you know, as mosquito puddles or whatever it is,</p>



<p>that's, that's where I caught Giardia. Oh, yeah, mosquito puddle. But that's Yeah, that was that was nasty. And that was my filter broke. And that was the biggest thing I learned was a, I don't know, you always hear an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Yeah, like it's man, just maintaining your equipment, cleaning it after every trip doing, just doing the basic maintenance that your equipment requires.</p>



<p>That's something I've not understood for a long time. And yeah, that the system that we had for water was super, basically we just we'd fill up the 12 ounces, we put the top on and we'd like squeeze, you have to like kind of crush it through the charcoal filter to get it to those those moves slow to way slow. So you fresh it out. So we'd have like our Nalgene bottle, like between our knees and our hand just kind of like crushing down on this creek water that we were trying to push. We're trying to put an analogy, we had like three or four of them that we had to sit at the creek at to pump out you know, I don't know two or three liters of water to take back the camp with us or to go hiking with for the next rest of the day. So I used that I use just that one filter for like three years. I'm like, wait, you wait too many gallons of water, I think for that until the chocolate is finally broke off. Or you know, like the whole filter unit just finally broke off. I figured it's probably it's probably does it have that break off on a trip? It did? Yeah. That's when they always do. Yeah, well, I think it was. I know we were on a trip and we realized we really couldn't get water. So that was tough. But I think I think that was up in the Trinity app. So that was Yeah, that was in like Northern California. And we were fortunate enough that we just didn't get sick, but it was like it was snowing. I mean it was super, super cold. super crisp water like right up above the treeline.</p>



<p>So yeah, when you're the treeline, you're usually pretty safe. I mean, your your chances of having an animal defecate or die in the creek or something is pretty minimal. Yeah, but But yeah, I know. We're in Kings Canyon. There were a ton of places where I mean after the Giardia incident was kind of like you know I'm not taking any chances but sure the same time you know if if it was if I were ever in the situation where I needed to take the risk I couldn't really picture a better place to take it.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, it was like that. What do you do? Okay, like iodine tablets with you for water purification ever? No, I haven't. I've heard they've kind of got a funky taste. I don't know. I've heard that they do too. But I guess I've heard like well I think maybe this this situation like we're talking about is you said that maybe around for your your backup water supply? No, no would you not do it? I just GRT all the way man what's your what was the water filter that you picked or pick now?</p>



<p>Cuz I need to buy with this specific name of it, but it's a attitude or and I love it man. It's like It's like to two liters a minute. So it's actually pretty Yeah, it's super-efficient. And but it's got like a filter band on a hose. And then it's basically got like a hand lever like he would see the old the well pumps back at like the turn of the century how people would gather the groundwater. Sure, that makes the same same basic setup, and then it runs through a filter. as like a sediment trap that'll catch any large sediment coming in. And then it goes up through like a carbon disk. And then it comes down through a charcoal filtration system. And then back through an actual, like, I don't know, some kind of cloth filter. So it has three, three variants of filtration before it actually gets through to your</p>



<p>to your G Nalgene bottle or whatever your Yeah, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Has it worked out pretty well for you? Like, did you use that down river a lot? Or did you guys have other systems on the boat when you're doing?</p>



<p>You know, we carry all of our own water on the boat? Like, before we leave? We'll we'll load up, you know, five or six, five gallon cans of water. Yeah. Okay, that's bigger that makes, so we just bring all that? Yeah, I mean, when you're running commercial, stuff like that. It's just, I mean, any type of risk you can mitigate?</p>



<p>Yeah, I figured you wouldn't use it for commercial stuff. But I was wondering for you, or like, if you had, like, if you'd put it through a lot of repetitions of its pace, you know? Or what I guess what I was wondering is like, how long does it last? What's the kind of maintenance that you ran into with the issues you had with your Okay, so,</p>



<p>so what I didn't do, they have new gaskets that come with it, okay. They have new carbon discs, they have new charcoal that you put in there. You need to keep the gaskets lubricated. So that way, when you let it sit for a year and a half before your next trip, you don't pull it out. And those gaskets are cracked. Oh really. And that I just kind of had, you know, the hailstorm of all three of those things, where it was just like my sixth trip that I'd used it over the period of like three and a half years. Yeah. And I just, yeah, I just didn't maintain it, and ultimately ended up kind of paying for that.</p>



<p>Man, that's so sad. That stuff. Well, you know, lesson learned, though. Oh, yeah, sure. Hit that. Yeah. I remember there was a there was one ship that we did. She This is the nutty thing is that, like when in origin, it's great, because you have this luxury of just being able to carry a water filter with you and have this assurance that you're going to run into consistent water supply, for your whole backpacking trip through the wilderness. We have a lot of creeks and stuff, a lot of the places maybe you and I'll probably go are in like mountain areas where like we're talking about like going up into an Alpine lake or something like that. There's no way that Creek feeding off of that, or some kind of snowmelt system through that draw. And you're going to be able to pull water from that for the for the time that you're there. But what was tricky is, is when we were out further east, I think we were out in Utah, we went to Capitol Reef, and we did a backpacking trip there. And yeah, it's tricky because out there, when you get into Utah, or probably anywhere in the southwest region there, you have to bring all the water with you on a backpacking trip. So it's just part of the way you pack. It's pretty nuts. And it's I think it's like a ratio of about two gallons per person per day, which seems, you know, relative reasonable, really, but if you're doing just a couple days, that means like each person is carrying another eight pounds or, you know, eight gallons of water, which is a ton. Yeah, which is 64 pounds of water. It was I remember we did we did Capitol Reef. We had, I think, four gallons. So I think Marina and I both had two gallons, maybe I think I might add more gallons. But she probably cared a lot of gallons of water. And we get all this water up there, and it was a lot. It was ridiculous. But uh yeah, it was probably another 30 pounds each. Yeah, no, I believe it I mean water is super heavy and it takes up a lot of space. It takes up so much space. Yeah, there's a picture of me just kind of strapped and gallon jugs. We didn't even have like a system of like, we don't like even a camel pack. That's like you know two liters that's ounces. Yeah, you're gonna get an hour Yeah, so So yeah, you have that full that's on your chest and you have like three just gallon bottles of water kind of strapped around your back</p>



<p>Did you did you have like a like a pole strapped across your shoulders with</p>



<p>the big bucket side? I put over the top of my head is a high ground. Yeah, there that's like the environment that it seems like you'd need it but it was strange because they were I think they were a couple water sources around but they had dried up by that time in the year, you know, they're seasonal. I think they're like, in that area the desert and it's it's really remote out there when you get out the Capitol Reef because there's no big town near there. Really? Oh, you know what I mean? I mean even I guess Death Valley is kind of the same way but but Las Vegas is sort of close to it. But out in Capitol Reef, man, there was nothing out there. And it was just super dry and super. It was super caustic to your your being what you were out there. What kind of what time of year were you? We were there in October. And it was okay. And it was still pretty high. It was that it was still like oh man like in the day. This is kind of hard. To do, but we did, I think like a handful of miles in to this arch that was back there that we were at a camp by and we had a couple days out there. It was cool. It was really remote. It was interesting to see some of that landscape out there. But man, there was no water to be found. It was just high desert. Like, there was like a mud pit. There was maybe four or five miles further. You know that that was like the saving grace back in the 1800s. When you're a frontiersman in that area. Imagine that with no gear no water filter. No, yeah, you're out of water for a while, but there's a chance that there's this muddy pit. That's like a natural spring a few miles up this way. And you might be able to get enough water to survive to your next drop off. days, man, it'll days, that would have been terrible. Yeah, yeah. You think about what the frontiersman would have had to have George just get through to get through dealing with waterfalls, or, I mean, obviously, they're not filtering their water, but just dealing with the water sources that they have to encounter.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't even want to think about that. They'd argue that we're probably live in the good old days. That's probably</p>



<p>But yeah, I don't think I've had like a big problem with the water filter before we've done what we because we'd always like have it so that we just have like a big store of water on it's where we were when we were moving. And then well, I was gonna ask you about like, if we were moving on from, from what we were talking about, I wanted to talk to you about like the stoves that you that you would bring. Have you brought like a stove with you much backpacking or or do you try like, not well, yeah, cuz you do. Just the jet bow food all the time. Right.</p>



<p>Yeah. So that's, that's my primary is my jet boil. I mean, you can really do just about anything in there. Yeah, it's great. I mean, they're there. And there's so many different ways to use it. Like, one thing you can do is just, I mean, if you have time, I mean, YouTube is such a vast Information Center. You can go in there and just look stuff up and just like ways to be creative with the Jetboil. I mean, they have they have instructions on how to how to bake in your Jetboil Oh, you can bake a mountain cake while you're up there.</p>



<p>I didn't know that I burned I lost. Like is it just like it just goes to like, hot right away? There's I don't know, I don't know how you bake in it. But that's really cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it honestly it seemed like more hassle than it was worth, but yeah, so I have a slice. But I mean, but it is possible. That's cool. So other than that, I've just got this like this cheap little. What is that? It's like the isobutane. Is that what we run those?</p>



<p>I yes. I remember what it is. I don't remember that little stove. That's a cool one. That's a good backup stove.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's just like, you know, I think I paid like 30 bucks for it, man, the things tiny. Like, it's just a little backpack and stuff. It's awesome.</p>



<p>Sure. I think those are really useful. You know, we did. We did like our 50 day trip. We did that with just the Jetboil. And we did as much as we could with that, that second trip that we did for like 100 and 110 days or whatever it was. Yeah, we did that with the Jetboil. We had to buy like a propane stove. Like just a single kind of the same idea as a jet boil or a backpacker stove where it's just the burner that fits on top of the top of the tank. We had a buy one of those halfway through the chip. And it was nuts because like we just worn out the jet boil. It was nuts because like so I guess when you use one for 110 days straight. They have a hard time. Yeah, if you unscrew and screw back together, but we still cobbled it together to work because we like we needed to boil water. I remember it was out on the Oregon coast. I think it was a spot that we had taken you to after that. Was it like sisters rock area? Oh, you remember when we were there. That was really cool. That was a cool spot it was fun to so we were there the year before I took you guys there. And we had camped there for the better half of a week or so. And we were using the Jetboil to make coffee and do everything with it. But the the stove part, the threading that goes down where we connect to the gas candidate canister had started to wear out. So it would pop it would blow the stove off of the tank. Like the threading would just it would just pull apart and so it was like it was leaking and you couldn't get it to seal tight enough so that you could you could get a connection from the stove to the tank to draw to burn.</p>



<p>So that brings me to something I want to bring upon this. Yeah, is a big thing that I factor in when I'm packing is materials to fix stuff. Oh yeah. Like that's huge. I mean, like one thing that was good to have in your pack is that it's it's like the plumbers tape. It's like a thin nylon that you wrap around threading to to make a gasket essentially. They make it for for gas. So like propane. stuff. It costs like a buck 29 at, you know, your local plumbing store, Home Depot or something. And, and that's great to have in your pack for exactly that situation because those threads are like a thin aluminum, you know? Yeah. I mean, they're not meant to be taken apart and put back together 1000s of times. Yeah, I have a lot in a situation like that. I mean, that gives you, you know, it's going to create a seal. And you could probably, you know, milk it for another month or two. doing that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's exactly what we did in the moment, when we were out there is we took, we took the electrical tape that was in the glove box, and we kind of like a slip of that, just like, we had to do this, like, all the time we, we've set it up on a new canister, and then we would not break it down. We wouldn't touch it until that canister was finished. But we use it for almost the rest of it. Like the part on his sister's rock on the coast. That was like day 15 of 100. So he's using the rest of the time. We had a we had to kind of supplement it with some other thing. Yeah, but But yeah, we just we had to put a little bit of electrical tape around the threading, and then try and like gently work it together. So that would hold enough so we can boil our water and cook our food. But we did that a lot of times, man, we ran through like another half dozen canisters of fuel before we finally probably retired that thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's great, man. I mean, that's that's what it's about. That's what's cool is like, being on those long trips, or you know, even just a trip or you're away from things, like it forces you to be resourceful and kind of, oh, man, I love that you're on what you can do with what you have.</p>



<p>Yeah, I can't broke our tent pole broke. At one point it was in the wind, a tent was set up, it was weighted down, the wind came in while we were hiking it, it crushed that time and it like it just torque that thing over. it snapped one of the poles. it snapped the one that was kinda under the the heavier tension load. There's a few that were, it was an interesting tent design. But there's there's, like, you know, one that was like, it didn't matter. There's the other one that was torqued around 180 degrees; it was almost like both points were almost touching each other. That thing just like crashed as the tent rolled over on its side. We were like, well shoot. And it was kind of a weird town, we couldn't really get a replacement pole in that length and that size. And so we had to like figure out a way I think what happened is if you would imagine now that the there's the aluminum piece, and then there's the peg of the next aluminum pole as it comes together with your template selection color. Yeah, that color. What had happened is that is that the it just broke out of that, like whatever piece inserted into the piece next to it, it just snapped out it kind of like broke out that that first top inch of a piece of aluminum. And so we went over to this can that we wasn't like a coke Can I think was just like some Tin Can that we that Chilean, something like that, or some canned tomato. And so we like clipped that down and had a roll that with a pencil to get like a little tube. And we'd like to roll that around the broken part to be a splint for our tent pole. So we could keep together on a camping trip. But we still I mean, the tents still like that we use that tent for like another lightning like we're saying, and they're like six or seven months. Way too. Yeah, that's awesome, man. What was that, like? On the 115 days, man, it was so cool. Well, that that goes back around to what we were talking about a little bit at the beginning, when we were saying It's nuts when you think about what you need to bring for three days, versus what you need to bring for. In this case, like 100 days, my thinking about it was not very clear, I was only thinking about like the first week it was really just bring everything, bring everything, have it in your car, be loaded down. I even did this the year before in the car. And I thought I like knew better. But I didn't know that I cut down a lot of stuff, it was a lot easier the second time around. But you really notice that almost everything you can leave home in a big way. As long as you're yourself and in some level of resources around you. You can probably get through or, you know, like survive most days and get to the next one in in a significant amount of comfort. You know if you don't put yourself through hell, I suppose. But it worked out really well. It's time like for it was strange because I guess what I would say is after maybe the first two weeks, first three weeks, I'd say after 15 days, your body acclimates. To do what it's doing in a kind of weird way. I don't know if you had the firefighting or, or if you've had it in like some other situation. But it seems like after maybe some number of days, it seems like you just get a little less dirty every day. Or you're you slam a little better at night. When you Yeah, there was no way you can sleep that well.</p>



<p>Exactly. But that's what happens, man. It's like your body just acclimating. Actually, I was talking about that with my dad yesterday. We were talking about how You know, where we live, it's pretty quiet. So like, we go and stay somewhere like in the, in the center of like a city or something and you can hear people talking and you've got street lamps on total and you'll, you'll lay wide awake for the first few nights, but then by night three, you know, it's like you just get used to the background noise and stuff and you just tune it out, you're just falling asleep. But it's the same thing with being on the road or being up in the hills. It's like, Alright, you know, you get past that initial Oh, I'm dirty feeling and then that's just the way you are. Yeah, it's really just, you adapt to what you do. And there's, there's physical</p>



<p>things to that happen. Like, I swear that I mean, maybe like a suntan is a good example of it. When you're on you have no exposure, and then you're put underexposure, a lot more than you're used to you get burned is sort of what happens so like, if you bet if you build up a tolerance to if you build up a tan, then you don't get burned. You don't get that caustic effect from the exposure, the sun, sort of the same way of camping or being out in the wilderness for a handful of days. It seems like he got a little bit a little bit better at it. Like I remember, I mean probably similar to a sunburn, but man, my lips would chap like crazy as soon as I got over into a different type of climate, or I guess, just a drier atmosphere or something like that. But yeah, as soon as you go east of the Cascades, man, my lips would chap immediately or if you went up in elevation, like up into like an Alpine area. Oh, yeah. But then after I know what, one week, two weeks or something like that, it just wouldn't happen again. And then just thing Yeah, where you get, or like I The thing that I remember the most, this is maybe more of just an awareness piece. I don't know if this happened to you. But I remember I would get cut a lot when I first went camping. Or Yeah, like now like at the beginning of the season, if I went out I'd probably like get, I don't know, some kind of weird, some number of Nicks. From circumstances I was putting myself in with a pocket knife or with wood or with something I had to do. But I my hands would get cut up more. And then, after a pretty short amount of time, I didn't run into any more injuries like that. Just the circumstantial injuries, the small like, Look, yeah, so you get into it just well stop. Yeah. And</p>



<p>that's, that's funny. It's the same thing like, so I work in carpentry, and I can I can count probably 27 cuts between the two of my hands, that, like they're just little one. I mean, a couple of them, you know, are there, you know, oh, yeah, you keep hitting them or hurt when you got them. But it's just like, they're everywhere. And you come home at night, you look at your hands and go What? Like, you're like, Oh, that's a pretty open wound. I didn't know about that, you know, that's just your body just stops interpreting that is like a distress signal. And it's like, this is the norm, this is just what happens. Yeah. And it's kind of like the scent, you know how, like a new smell will be really overpowering. But like, obviously, you go to the landfill, right? And then you spend an hour there and you can't smell it. Yeah, so what that that is, I'm sure you know, but it's a it's your body's defense, you know, it detects new sense and makes them strong, so you're aware of them. But once your body figures out that it's not a threat to you, and your livelihood, then it dissipates and just becomes, you know, a subconscious scent that you're not actively selling.</p>



<p>Yeah, I totally get that. I've heard that before about like different scents and stuff that come through. It's weird. Yeah, it's probably it's probably an effect. It's really similar to that with the stuff about cutting but but man, I remember it was so weird, because we were just in the Camry at the time this old 92 Camry. And like we would notice that we really just wanted to get rid of most of the weight of the things that were in the car, we only needed a backpack or two backpacks, you know, is just nuts. When you figure out like, oh, man, none of this stuff is really like what we need to get at. We really only do these two or three or four things. And we do this pretty repetitively. You don't need the rest of this stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, you don't. And that's, that's what I always enjoy that. Like when by the time you get done with a backpacking trip, or a road trip or something, it really makes you realize how little you need to actually function in your day to day life. Yeah, absolutely. Just just how much excess stuff you just carry around for no reason. You know, you come off a trip like that. And you're thinking to yourself, you know, I live with nothing but a toothbrush and just like, you know, a lot of talking to you. Oh, yeah, exactly. Yeah. And then you come home and you're like, Well, what do I have all this stuff for? No. Yeah.</p>



<p>It's definitely happened. I wanted to ask you about like the downriver stuff that you did on the road. When you were like, Well, I know three or four day trips. Like what that was like and are like so how much gear Do you guys carry down? I mean, there's there's for the guests and stuff, but kind of cutting that out a bit like for yourself, how much gear would you think that is per person? Maybe</p>



<p>so much. Okay, so, so us as guides, pack, I don't want to say minimally, but we pack them, the necessities while staying comfortable. As you know, it's like, you don't want to, to under pack because we live down there, you know, 90 to 100 days out of the year. So it's like you start, you know, really trying to figure out what you enjoy, like good sleeping equipment. Nobody. Nobody goes light on that everybody brings great sleeping equipment. What's the best equipment to bring for the letter of dammit, man, I've got what's called a roller caught. It's like a nylon material that is it's like a rubberized head-on even that explain it. But it's like a measurement.</p>



<p>I saw yours. And I really want that look cool.</p>



<p>It's great. They're super durable. I mean, they're really strong. They're waterproof. You know, I couldn't ask for anything better. And they roll up to the the, you know, the length of your arm and everything's lightweight and aluminum. It's just a good caught. But anyway, that's called a roller caught. But yeah, we take that I take a sleeping pad to kind of create a barrier between the air beneath mean, and shaking bag. Yeah. Yeah, and bring yourself a nice pile of a sleeping bag. And you're good to go,</p>



<p>man that it looks like a really good setup. I like that that cart system that you had, and it says happened, like almost no time at all. Yeah, you</p>



<p>can have it put together in a matter of, you know, less than a minute.</p>



<p>And it seems super durable to like it's not really going to be affected by being weathered over a couple seasons.</p>



<p>Well, yeah, you get like fabric carts and stuff like that. No, you know, just between the Sun and the water and whatever else. What other elements are getting to them, they'll just kind of rip and tear eventually. Yeah. But now when we go on those trips. We the guides for the company pack a pretty happy setup, should we bring in? We bring a full kitchen. So we've got four, you know, stand ups those. We've got tables and pots and pans and jugs of water and coolers and you know, I mean, it's really it's really a big operation that we do. Yeah. And then you know, the guests bring whatever they think they need to be comfortable with. Over the course of three or four days. And like we were talking about when we can potentially overpack on a backpacking trip. People can really overpack when they're not carrying their own bag around. Oh, yeah. You know, they're like, and you get a lot of people do that are from, you know, really urban settings and getting down there and the candy and it's kind of really outside their comfort zone. Totally. I understand just got so much stuff. Yeah. But that's why they hire a gear boater, right.</p>



<p>Yeah, yes. Yeah. That's cool. So um, so like, probably a good amount of equipment. What if you and I just went on a trip, and we had to haul out to a different river, it was a little further away. So you're kind of trying to cut down a little bit? Like what kind of equipment would you bring a sort of a lightweight, single boat trip</p>



<p>with a lot of that would depend on what the fishability of the river was. If it was potentially eating fish. I would cut down on food a good deal. It depends on just how comfortable you want to be. I mean, if you're if you're interested in just having kind of a you know, a back to the basics really kind of fend for yourself experience. You can go really light. I mean, you could go backpacking and light with just a little isobutane stove. Oh, that'd be cool. I don't really want to do something like that. We should. Yeah. Well, I've thought about that a lot. I really want to do one of those. And I want to do like a high desert trip like that, too.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, high desert rafting ship. Now, a high desert camping chip that was like backpacking, like that kind of</p>



<p>Alpine. cottontails and in streams, man. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Yeah, like hunt, hunt, and fish for all the food that you have. Or have a couple backpack meals or something? Yeah, yeah, obviously bring it back up. But yeah, that would be the idea. That's a cool idea. Yeah, well, I like the idea of doing it on the on the river that I thought that'd be kind of fun. I have it set up kind of like a like a backpacking ship with a raft. I was wondering how self sustaining Could you be from a raft on a raft ship like, like, how many days do you think you can do?</p>



<p>a raffle? Well, I just had some friends that went on the Colorado and they just did</p>



<p>33 days, 33 days, but they run into stores, right, or do they have anything like that? Like, it's it's probably planned that day.</p>



<p>I, I, from what I understand they packed everything because I Oh, wow, if you're not familiar with river guide culture, everyone's pretty poor. So it's not like, got a ton of money to spend on places. So, I mean, really, it's like you kind of go on the cheap. But I mean, you bring the biggest hang-up is what you need to keep cold. Like if you need to put stuff on ice and things like that. Yeah. If you can cut that stuff back, you can really be very self sustaining. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, I figured that was what we noticed car traveling to is man, like having a having a cooler was a constant liability, where we just have to keep doing it. I always lose. Yeah, and we're always losing energy. Like, it's always it's always going out. We're spending a hand like probably a good bit just on ice traveling around. And we finally figured out like one of the things we were talking about earlier, what you think about beginning versus what you think of the end, man cutting down on a cooler or cutting down on ice and things you have to keep cold constantly. That was the biggest improvement of the the maintenance that we had to do for like our trip travel. Yep. stuff. It was it was so frustrating to try and like always keep that and like you're always throwing away stuff that's gone rotten in some way.</p>



<p>Exactly. And then also, when you're in a car, you know, the heat inside the car generally is amplified when you're in? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But the big thing on like, if you're packing a cold cooler, whether it's rafting or camping, or whatever it is, keep it shut as much as possible. You know, every time you open it, you're gonna lose. It's gonna heat up in there. So I mean, just keep it shut. A lot of times, you can duct tape the seal. So you don't lose any, any cold air from there. And do that. And you can really keep food cold for a long time. Or just go to the store. If you know, you're going to be gone for 10 days, get a couple blocks of dry ice and put those into a cooler that just a cooler for your eyes. And then you keep that in there. You keep that wrapped with duct tape. And you only open it when you need to swap it into the cold. Cool. That's a smile. Really? Yeah. Yeah. You know, you've got an icebox and then a cooler essentially.</p>



<p>Okay. I like that. I like that thinking that's kind of that's kind of interesting. You know, we finally invested in a Yeti cooler, like one of those thicker, lined coolers with like the rubber straps that come down. So like clamps itself down the lid. Yeah. How do you? How do you feel about that? They don't they don't sponsor us so I can talk. I can speak my mind. I think that they are I think that they are too expensive. I think that they do keep ice. Well, and it is. It's like one of the better, better ways I've seen of a cooler. What do you what's your experience with them?</p>



<p>Well, I have little experience with them. But I don't know. I mean, it just seems like I mean, yeah, they hold eyes really well. And if I was buying it, for the only reason is to keep ice cold. Sure, then then I could validate that but it just seems like your pain. You know, like 75 bucks on a cooler that it's interior area would hold a six-pack of beer, maybe? Oh, yeah. Yes.</p>



<p>That laid out. 20 court one that we have is small. Yeah. I think that the concept guide right. Nuts use device. Is that you okay? So first you have your cooler Of course, just in the back of your truck. You get a bag of ice. You put the bag ice in the cooler. You shake it around, you leave it there for a half-hour just to chill the cooler. Just because it's too hot inside. Right? Then you dump that bag ice completely. That's gone. Then you put then you put three bags of like, cold ice in there. I think there's like coal ore. What is it? Like? There's wet ice? Have you heard of that? Like, it's like around like, what? 32 or seven? It's like kind of Yeah, running in a liquid. It's what you get at every convenience store. Because they turn up their their freezers to like, as high as it Yeah. But then yeah, so you throw in another three bags of ice, like almost it's like three quarters full at that point. And then you can put in what you're talking about maybe a six-pack of beer in there to keep it in its system, you know, to keep as much ice in the ratios what it thinks you're supposed to. But at that point, it says at least you can keep that for like five days. If you keep the lid shut like you're talking about it's it's Yeah, really well so you can keep that for a long time. It's not often something I've run into as needing but okay.</p>



<p>Oh, that No, I was just saying I I find they work fantastic. I mean, we use them on the river. And I mean they're they're great for keeping eyes but I mean using them as a cooler but you need to get in and out of and that's where you lose that so much of your cold air and stuff is those leads all the time. Yeah. So it kind of doesn't really matter whether or not you've got a Yeti or Coleman or whatever it is. It's when you're in and out of them. You lose the axe. Yeah, yeah, no. Yeah, I see. And that's just kind of what it boils down to. So in that case, I'd prefer to have something with a little bit more area to actually keep food and stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, the the Yeti one that you see like maybe at all right? Yeah, that was a pretty tiny one. Have you seen the big ones like are? Well, probably stuff that you guys would have figured it'd be the same. Yeah, same size coolers. We have the really large Eddie's Yeah. And I've seen the stuff that goes on, like the commercial fishing boats. Like the batches like is huge. Why? Like, I mean, like, see seafaring boats, like these giant, like, bench size Yeti coolers that they build into the side of the thing that they're supposed to throw in fresh catfish. But that's got to be expensive. Oh, yeah. It's got to be an insane custom order, like $5,000. I mean, I guess at that point, it's just like, Well, yeah, we'll make whatever cooler you want. You know, it's just like plastic and styrofoam at some point. So Exactly. There's another company. There's like this other company called Arctic. Like, I think it's our T IC. And they do knockoff Yeti coolers. They they I don't know, drop shipping from China or something like that. But they're like, they're like maybe 100 $150 cheaper than the Yeti cooler price. So it kind of brings, it brings him back in that range of like a Coleman cooler, or like something else that's, you know, more real. Yeah.</p>



<p>And that's, that's the thing, and you start price and coolers, and it doesn't really matter what level of cooler you want to get. Honestly, I mean, for anything decent. You're looking around the 100 bucks. Yeah, yeah. It's really charming. Yeah. And I mean, that's, that's just kind of like, you know, your average. Yeah. I mean, with the</p>



<p>Yeah, snaps on the side that you take to the to the tailgate,</p>



<p>you can get those guys for like 39 bucks, or something, you know, but it's like, but if you get into like a steel-belted cooler, or anything that actually supposed to function correctly, right when you're out on a trip. Yeah. I mean, you're kind of looking at a minimum of 100 bucks.</p>



<p>I figure that's, that's definitely true. Yeah, man. Yeah, that's what that's that's another thing too, is like how much money you can invest in your equipment like that? Well, we were talking about that boat, you know, getting a custom Yeti cooler. It's five grand. Yeah, I know. But yeah, man. I don't know. Do you have any other stuff to bring upon this? I'm sure we're going to talk way more in the future about like hiking equipment.</p>



<p>Well, I did I did want to touch on you. Aside from like, your basics, like a water filter, your freeze-dried foods, things like that. What are some things that you bring in your pack? Not on a car trip, but on a backpacking trip? That you know, just just the important things aside from the the obvious?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, that's a good question. So I mean, I know. I try and keep my pack under 40 pounds. is what I've done it Yeah, each of the tabs. Well, yeah, I really try to keep it pretty light, which I guess is a little bit what we're talking about. I don't know what to bring at a point. I got my tent. Which is a it's just a couple pounds. I got like the stove. You know, the I got, let's say like, three of those or you know, like a handful of backpacker meals and some Clif Bars. I've got a way to start a fire. I've got Yeah, I've got like my iPod, or you know, like my phone or something like that charged up. Yeah. And so I'm trying to think of the other stuff. I mean, it's probably close that I bring, that's always been the spot where I bring more weight than I need to because it's always like, some kind of like, it's it's like cotton t-shirts, or another pair of jeans or something like yeah, oh man. And the worst one is like another pair of shoes. That's been the, I mean, cuz you want that. Like, like, at least like a pair of boots. And then like a pair of like river sandals. Like there's always been a situation where I want that. I know that's been for you. Like when honestly that's</p>



<p>that's been huge for me. I did that on a king strip, you know, bring sandals. I mean, if even if you're not getting into the water, it's just nice to let your feet breathe and, and just give your feet some type of different support than the hiking boot that you just put 20 miles on.</p>



<p>Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I noticed a turn that Yeah, I really needed to switch back and forth between the two, but I was always frustrated cuz you got to like store the pair of shoes somewhere. Yeah, which isn't that much way it's fine, but they're always kind of an awkward sort of bulky size. I was trying to think other stuff see, like when I go out or I think I was looking at a picture from the flowers. And I was thinking back to that ship of like special things that I brought or like different things. And what I would do, I think like we talked about last time, I always bring the camera bag with me so is the there's the backpack of whatever it is. But then like around the front, there's like the camera bag with a couple lenses. And that's just not glass. So there's really no economy of weight going on there. Yeah. And, and yeah, there's like a tripod, which is like metal, legs and stuff you don't need To be carrying, but it's just like a lot of weight that you have to like heave up to the top of the mountain. The other thing that I was gonna say that I brought was like a keyboard. This is and that thing probably in your mind. Yeah, yeah, you're losing me here. Go ahead and explain. Yeah, I brought a keyboard that I connected to my phone, and like to my iPad, so that I could do some of the like editing stuff that I was trying to do. Yeah, which is silly. And I probably wouldn't do it again, if</p>



<p>you guys did want a lot of editing and stuff. And a lot of journaling. When you guys were out there</p>



<p>was what we were trying to do. Yeah, so it was a lot of like, there's a lot of stuff, it was a weird job where you go like out in the woods, and you take a bunch of photos and you try and like file and write about the photos while you're there. And I'm like this kind of thing. You see it on Instagram, every once in a while, like these, these cool tent offices, you know, somewhere on the back entry and someone you know, hanging out in the in the tent with the window up and out to wherever and they just got their, their like iPad, or their, their MacBook or something like that in the tent on top of the sleeping bags as they're working through and editing, whatever, but you kind of think about like how light some of these things are. And you can haul them up there and work with them pretty easily now, but the problem is power. So is the thing about like a MacBook or a laptop. I couldn't support that. I couldn't power it up there. But what I did do, and I think your dad turned me on to this for the first time it was that gold zero. Solar Panel kit. Do you remember that? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I bought one of those. It was just like that. And I use that thing a time on those backpacking ships if you workout for you. Yeah, I, it was the first time I've been using solar power. And really the only thing that it does, it's like two panels, maybe about about the size of your, you know, your two open palms or so, you know, it's like the size of like a good book. So it's really not very big at all for like solar energy. And all that it produces is enough to run out to a USB charger. So you can charge your phone. And that was really what I was going for. So it was cool that you could just be out for a week or indefinitely if you wanted. And you could keep your phone or your iPod on. And you know, when you turn it into airplane mode, the battery lasts for really quite a long time. Oh, yeah, yeah. So we use that we had a couple apps on it that we're using the donor to connect anything, but it's you can use that to file stuff or to write stuff or to record a video or to do whatever else. And and so we could do that as much as we wanted to. And then just recharge it the next day. Yeah, the sunlight on the solar panel. It was cool.</p>



<p>That's great. Yeah, we when we did Joshua Tree, I was taking like a photo journal or sorry, a video journal of the whole the whole trip. And that was eating up a lot of battery and I was I always use airplane mode for that. Just to save that battery, but we took with us a little charging station, which is actually kind of cool on those road trips. It has enough amperage to actually jumpstart your vehicle. Yeah, I've got one of those. And then yeah, you've got you know, you got USB ports and stuff like that in there. And I think those are greatly useful. Yeah, yeah, super great. I mean, because honestly, sometimes you get out there and it's just like, man, if you woke up with a dead battery and you're just 15 miles from anywhere Oh, yeah, see another person? It's been a huge concern a number of times Yeah. And with the way vehicles are going anymore, everything's in automatic. So it's not like you're gonna compression start your rig. Sure. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was scary. I remember there was a couple of texts I was driving around that Oh, camera you man. You remember that? Like that was not that was not always reliable car. Especially. It was it was the best guy but I remember there was a him like had this problem you know, if you left it in an accessory or with with over that your lights could be on mode was it would kill the battery in like a half-hour or less. Like if you if you left if you just left it on accidentally or you know, the the stereo was on while you were away or the door was open or something like that. It would it would kill the battery. It was like you walk into the gas station. Yeah, I mean, you probably could do that. It did that. In fact, a number of times, man, little things you had to do. But so how many how many 1000s of miles did you put on that car when I sold it? When I bought it? It was 250,000 miles, which is a lot to buy across just the spring chicken at that point. Just a smooth quarter million. And then when I sold it, I sold it for the same price. I bought it and that was with 367,000 miles on it.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're the only person I've known that made money on a vehicle. You just put 100,000 miles on it and made money off that car man you to drive it that Camry That was great. No. It's</p>



<p>a cool car. It was a blast in free as basic of a little sedan as it was. It really did a lot of stuff. And yeah, it was it was really fun. But it was scary though. Yeah, sometimes I remember being at this campsite. Where like the battery, I think died. Unfortunately, I think there was someone around that helped us like jump it right then. But yeah, there was always like something about that in my mind. And I think the next trip that we went in, I did have one of those jumper kits in the car. And it works pretty well. Most of the time, I would recommend, I think what you were talking about earlier of, of, would you say like keeping up with and maintaining your equipment, man, maintain that charger, because it's got to keep that thing charged, kind of in the wheelhouse of the same season that you might use it in, because it does kind of lose it after a little while like I had one. Like you know what, I don't know that next winter after it went from 100 degrees out to freezing out that battery is toast. And it's not really going to give you the amps. You need to jump your car. I think I ran into that one time. Yeah. Or I don't know. I did what I drained it on the charger my cell phone,</p>



<p>something like that. Oh, God. Yeah, yeah. That's a one thing I can say in especially is like, I don't know, for me anyway, as I get into better equipment. I'm more motivated to take care of it. Oh, yeah. Then really maintain it. You know, when you're starting in your, in your teens, and whatever, you kind of just Oh, yeah. 30 $30 sleeping bag, not a big deal or whatever. And then, you know, you just ruin things I burn through unintentionally. But yeah,</p>



<p>I mean, those things that they don't hold up the same way. And so it's like, that's, I think a good bit of why they've been replaced over time is that burned through a couple $30 sleeping bags? And you know, season two in the zippers are twisted and split. And you know, what, what's going on? Right? stuff with the 10 stuff stoves, stuff with filters. So</p>



<p>yeah, and, and honestly, when it comes to outdoor recreational equipment, you really do you just get what you pay for. Oh, yeah. Man, I, I, I just got to that point where I was, like, do I want to buy the $30 sleeping bag three times? Or do I want to buy $120 the bag once? Yeah. And you know, and that's just what it came down to. And so I started getting a little more picky when it came to choosing my equipment</p>



<p>I've been trying to buy. Yeah, and there's a there's a range of equipment, there's some equipment, like you're talking about, I want to be specific. I want to get the good stuff. I want it to work. And then there's another class of it. I don't it's kinda I don't know if I've really honed it down well, but I almost want it to be as cheap as possible because it's so likely to break or likely to get lost. Yeah, I don't know what that is. So yep. I know. There's like a handful of things that I've gone out. And for unfortunately, for me, it's sometimes like, well, it's not always pocketknives but it's like some sunglasses. sunglasses are perfect when travel sunglasses for me. Exactly. River sunglasses. I go for the cheapest ones. If they blow off my head, and you know, you know in water, whatever. There's nothing gone I don't care. It's funny. I don't want the best gear.</p>



<p>And unfortunately, the only way to come to that conclusion is to live through that situation multiple times.</p>



<p>Man I've lost Yeah, I've lost some stuff that wasn't super valuable. But it was just like Ah, it's just at the bottom of the river now. Like even if it wasn't really expensive, you're still like, Oh, I was 20 bucks. Yeah, I don't have it anymore. Yeah, it's a bummer, so there's that there's a handful of those things that have that oh, this is probably just gonna get damaged and get brought blown out whatever that is. I'm trying to like cut down on a few of those things but but yeah, I think that I remember the time I learned that was sleeping mats. You're talking about your sleeping bag I've learned so many times from a sleeping mat of not investing enough in that every night like two or three the hour and a half after I finally fallen asleep after blowing up my my bad excuse for a little camping that bed at two hours after that I always wake up in the sleeping bag kind of on the rocks under the tent you know what I'm talking about? Yeah. It's that like thing where you're still asleep and coming into awaking when you know you just have a rock in your kidney anything and now only spent 15 more dollars on this mat.</p>



<p>You know what I disagree with you there? Like I've spent good money. Oh, several times on ads. And better. No, you know what I got to the point like so well, first off, when I'm when I'm backpacking. I just got to the point where like, I'm probably going to be comfortable no matter what. Yeah, I yeah, I've been there. But man, I was just like, I'm going to use the cot and use as little of the sleeping bag. had his I can't because I have had nothing but bad experiences with sleeping pads. But they always seem to they last a trip or two and then they've got a hole in them. You got to patch them, or they just don't seem to hold air. I don't know, man. I mean, I guess you could you can get into some I've seen them, you know, there are $200 sleeping pads. One I got,</p>



<p>I got it, I got a Thermarest like, like an M, or one that didn't have a lining on it. Some of them like the Rei, when you get it's got this nylon lining that makes it a little tougher. This one was just sort of the rubbery inside lining of that. But I had one of those it was I think, less than $50. That's the one that I still have packs down to almost nothing. It's kind of cool. I don't, I've never turned it down, like on the rocks, as it were, or you know, something like that. So it's always had like a tarp or some kind of lining under it and the ground. But I've slept. I mean, I don't know. Not to say that it's been inflated all these nights, but I've probably put about 250 300 nights on that on that mat over the last handful of years. And it's been working out pretty well for No, it's like it was it was deflated, maybe maybe three or four weeks after I got it. But anyway, you gotta you gotta like, it's just sort of you come to this point where you're like, Oh, no, I just wake up at 215 and a 410. And it's 635. And I just reflate the mat, and then I go back to bed. It just becomes part of your nightly routine. Yeah, it's just just what you do. Yeah, just like getting up to take up the old air mattress. Yeah, it's a Yeah, it's on the same schedule. It's like, it's like auto timing. When when I needed to get up and but yeah, it was it's it's been silly. I got that's on the list for this year for 2017. I'm gonna try and get a new mat. Yeah.</p>



<p>So she got to do man figure out what's important. It's like, yeah, every year you try to buy like two things that will make your camping experience much better.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yes. Have you seen around with those, those like, it's not foil, but it's just like a dense foam mat that sort of collapses down into a little block. I've seen that like strapped to some backpackers. Kids before, but it's just sort of like this light foam mat that they crunch down into a little, little deck. I don't know, it was weird. I've not I've never really used anything like that. But I bet it probably works really well for him. Yeah, I've</p>



<p>kind of been curious about those. And the other one I've heard good reviews on this is from some people that I backpack with that had one. But it's like, it's it kind of contraries your body in a way that it kind of holds you inside the mat. It's inflatable. But it's got this kind of like it's almost the same shape as your mummy bag, but the sides kind of like protrude upward to keep you in it. Because I don't know. I mean, I'm sure you know, man, you get the lightweight sleeping pads and stuff. And you find out really quickly that you just roll off of them in the middle of the night. Yeah. Or whatever. You know, it's just like, they're hard to stay on. I mean, yeah, like, I'm not a large individual by any stretch of the imagination. And like, they're narrow, though. They're like, yeah, they're super narrow and thin. And yeah, I guess this guy Jimmy that I was backpacking with was telling me that he loved it. And I forget the name of the producer. But anyway, yeah, I guess it was really great. That's sweet.</p>



<p>Um, I'm away I'm probably way under-educated to really get in deep about like, a lot of different gear, the different manufacturers of outdoor gear, you know, and yeah, like that. That catalog of equipment is sort of swimming around in my mind. But I can't really pin down like a ton of different things. I'd be like, oh, what about this? Robert, what about this? What have you talked about the feather day? I don't, I don't have anything really? I don't know. I think we've probably talked about a lot of it. Man. I'm a basics kind of person. I don't really care if it's like North Face, or Patagonia or Acer tech, or Marmot or something like that. You know, it's not really like super important. And I know you're kind of most my gear, most of my layers are from goodwill. That's Yeah, they're old to men. And actually, that's one of the best pieces of advice I might I might give to anyone who's bothered to listen to this point deep in our podcast, which Thank you, by the way. But it's not so like, it's, it's one of the best values that you can get for outdoor equipment was cruising through and having a really specific clear agenda of the of the types of things you want to get out of goodwill. depends on your area. And you got to go like I did in Corvallis. Man Corvallis was a goldmine for Hey, don't be giving away. All the hardships Corvallis, goodwill, I pulled out I bought like a great North Face fleece out that fit me. Yeah, it was pretty It was $8 boom, there. Go Marina got me this, this Marmot shell, this blue Marmot shell for like less than 12 bucks. It was awesome. That's like a $200 jacket. I replaced it with a new one. And it was it was like 200 bucks at Rei.</p>



<p>It was so expensive even like, yeah, I mean, yeah, you're getting quality. But man, there's got to be some point where it's just like, Ah, it's too much money. Yeah, I like I go in there and I'll shop the like the clearance rack with my gift card that I get for like a birthday or something. You know? But you're still like, wow, this is a $60 flannel or something.</p>



<p>I don't see the value in some of it. Like we were talking about, there's like good things and bad things. Man, I went big on a rain jacket. I'm a work outside all the time you like you You have big on like the boots that you have for for fire season. And like, there's like sometimes it's like, oh, that's I need that. I need that thing. A lot of the time. Maybe you don't need a new one of those. Yeah, or whatever, whatever it might be. But I go big on rain gear. Yeah, that's what I'm your big. I put my money in having a having a good thermal layer. And I got a pretty expensive but like a nicer rain jacket, like a GoreTex rain jacket to go over. And man that thing is saved me like being out here in Oregon. I don't need really any other layers Other than that, and I've noticed that you can go from like snow, to warm weather to like really intense rain. And you can pretty much keep that same, like set of layers go in that whole time. And it worked well. Like Yeah, but it's rad when you finally like get something and say, oh, this is like this is what I need. This is good enough to answer for all these different situations will be in.</p>



<p>And that's what yeah, I won't go light on on anything that keeps you warm and dry. I'm sure yeah. First off, I don't even know if this is a really good way around. Going. You know going getting around the expensive stuff on that. Oh, yeah, it all seems to be pretty steep no matter where you go. But yeah, like I mean when it's hot, you can always shed layers like you can always remove clothing sure cooler but when it comes to being cold and wet, man that that's the difference between a good trip and a bad trip or a good trip and a serious change</p>



<p>right my experience a ton I mean just just kind of working outside of gigabit through the day. Like data coming through with like some snow on the on the hills like a little bit higher up in the elevation right on the valley floor. It's nothing, but it's it's pretty lousy. Winter weather. It seems like right now. But it's like it's just waves of rain. Like every 45 minutes or so. It's like 45 minutes on 45 maybe 10 2030 minutes off. Then back on to just kind of this drizzle this light rain drizzle. It's coming down all the time. And if it weren't for the like, whole head cover hood and an GoreTex like outfit I've caught on. I'd be soaked all the time. Oh, man. Yeah. shoes. Shoes are a huge one. Like, we should talk about hiking shoes sometime. Like cuz you gotta like Well, what's it What's it the boot that you go for a lot. Mine are the marrow. Yeah, the marrows. Yeah. Yeah, I like those man. I I've never had Merrill's. But they seem pretty.</p>



<p>They're a great boot. They've got you know what, honestly, when you price shoes, shoes are expensive. They're expensive when you're looking for, honestly, so I'm not even gonna say these are expensive. The $150 range.</p>



<p>Yeah, but same as a pair of Jordans. Yeah, exact same as a pair of weigh less. weigh less than Yeezys. Uh, yeah, no, they're great boots, man. I love them the mid top. But we'll save that for another podcast. Oh, yeah. Hey, um, so, you know, we always talk a lot about electronics in the field and things like that in different ways that you take your stuff out there. And that's because you are a photographer Billy extravert you take great photos. So for anybody listening if you want to check out Billy's photography, I believe what it's Billy Newman photo comm.com you</p>



<p>got it right man I appreciate all right. Yeah, check out check it out photos, check out this podcast there. It's it's hosted on that site if you want to check it out. And yeah, the get out there podcast, the feed is up and going. We've got information about that Billy Newman photo comm you can check it out on iTunes. That's what I recommend. If you're hearing this, you probably already figured out how to get into the podcast app and look for this but if you are, give us a review, or rate it or subscribe to the podcast that helps us out a lot in the first eight weeks. We read that those numbers are going to be three and then two of them are you and I Probably it's probably you and me and our girlfriends respectively. But it's but but we have passed. And this is great news, and it's under a week, and we're under five episodes. In total. We've had 100 downloads. Whoa. Which is big time. It's again, mostly me and you I think. I think it's like, yeah, we've got around 11 listeners a show. Maybe some I know, but it's all it's all. It's all ephemeral at this stage. You can't really tell for a long time. But but overall though, man, it's really fun I did doing a podcast with even if it's zero people that that are listening to it. It's still been a blast. Yeah, but you say, Hey, you know about the outdoor stuff, man, you get to talk to you about this stuff.</p>



<p>No, it's great. I love I love picking your brain to you because you've spent, I mean, just as much time as anybody I know. doing various types of camping. Yeah, so it's good. I like I like speaking with like minded people about these topics. It's cool, man. It's great. Hey, um, sounds like we might have a trip planned for this weekend. We don't know. Oh, yeah. Harley what it is. Yeah, but we got some things in the works. Maybe we'll do a do a little podcast from wherever we are.</p>



<p>We got to do on Yeah. If we if we meet up in person, we'll definitely do a live podcast. It'd be cool.</p>



<p>Absolutely. So hey, for those 11 listeners out there, you guys. Stay tuned. We got a little something for you.</p>



<p>That's gonna be a special treat. Episode Six. Yeah, it's just like, Hey, we hung out today. There you go. No, but we'll, we'll put it together. It'll be fun. That'd be cool. But yeah, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast in it. Yeah. Thank you, Billy. It's been good. I appreciate it, man. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters
How to source inexpensive jackets and layers.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret


Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out ther]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters</p>
<p>How to source inexpensive jackets and layers.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>


<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm</p>



<p>I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.</p>



<p>It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances that you might run into. And then you can</p>



<p>Yeah, you do the thing where like, you know, you're going for three days also and you're like, well, wow, I have so much room. You know, I only have three days worth of stuff, which is pretty minimalist. And then you end up going, oh, well I got this and this and then snacks before you before you know it. Yeah, you just pack.</p>



<p>Six Pack in the top. Yeah. Yeah. And that's happened a couple of times. I was trying to think about how that worked out for me. I remember early on when I did when I did like a couple early backpacking trips. We talked about this in that first episode, I think doing some stuff on the lower road. Maybe the second one. We're, yeah, that first chip, I did the 40 whatever, miles down the lower road. And it was just way rushed. And it was way too heavy and all the stuff you like, we brought a bunch of cans, we didn't have a can opener and like, like, What was this? What was the system that was going behind this, like, you get things that work in a kitchen, but there's no system and that that helps you? You know, do that in the backcountry, I guess. Or to keep things good or, like purify enough water to have a that's always that was always one having so otter with you. So that's something I want to ask you what kind of what kind of water purification? I have always been under, under attack about this. Like I really wanted more equipment for water purification, it's probably well, you know, I've been fortunate a lot of the time. But yeah, it's it's been risky, maybe one or two times, but I've only ever had this squeeze bottle charcoal filter, like you fill it up with maybe 12 ounces of water and you squeeze it out of this filter. What we would do Marina and I when we go backpacking, we were up in the well, ours we were up in the Trinity Alps, we were up in the Tetons, it was a lot of spots where it was like really clean snowmelt. So worked out on our favor a lot of times on the other hand, there was times where we were on the lower rogue in the canyon, and there's really no good you know, as mosquito puddles or whatever it is,</p>



<p>that's, that's where I caught Giardia. Oh, yeah, mosquito puddle. But that's Yeah, that was that was nasty. And that was my filter broke. And that was the biggest thing I learned was a, I don't know, you always hear an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Yeah, like it's man, just maintaining your equipment, cleaning it after every trip doing, just doing the basic maintenance that your equipment requires.</p>



<p>That's something I've not understood for a long time. And yeah, that the system that we had for water was super, basically we just we'd fill up the 12 ounces, we put the top on and we'd like squeeze, you have to like kind of crush it through the charcoal filter to get it to those those moves slow to way slow. So you fresh it out. So we'd have like our Nalgene bottle, like between our knees and our hand just kind of like crushing down on this creek water that we were trying to push. We're trying to put an analogy, we had like three or four of them that we had to sit at the creek at to pump out you know, I don't know two or three liters of water to take back the camp with us or to go hiking with for the next rest of the day. So I used that I use just that one filter for like three years. I'm like, wait, you wait too many gallons of water, I think for that until the chocolate is finally broke off. Or you know, like the whole filter unit just finally broke off. I figured it's probably it's probably does it have that break off on a trip? It did? Yeah. That's when they always do. Yeah, well, I think it was. I know we were on a trip and we realized we really couldn't get water. So that was tough. But I think I think that was up in the Trinity app. So that was Yeah, that was in like Northern California. And we were fortunate enough that we just didn't get sick, but it was like it was snowing. I mean it was super, super cold. super crisp water like right up above the treeline.</p>



<p>So yeah, when you're the treeline, you're usually pretty safe. I mean, your your chances of having an animal defecate or die in the creek or something is pretty minimal. Yeah, but But yeah, I know. We're in Kings Canyon. There were a ton of places where I mean after the Giardia incident was kind of like you know I'm not taking any chances but sure the same time you know if if it was if I were ever in the situation where I needed to take the risk I couldn't really picture a better place to take it.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, it was like that. What do you do? Okay, like iodine tablets with you for water purification ever? No, I haven't. I've heard they've kind of got a funky taste. I don't know. I've heard that they do too. But I guess I've heard like well I think maybe this this situation like we're talking about is you said that maybe around for your your backup water supply? No, no would you not do it? I just GRT all the way man what's your what was the water filter that you picked or pick now?</p>



<p>Cuz I need to buy with this specific name of it, but it's a attitude or and I love it man. It's like It's like to two liters a minute. So it's actually pretty Yeah, it's super-efficient. And but it's got like a filter band on a hose. And then it's basically got like a hand lever like he would see the old the well pumps back at like the turn of the century how people would gather the groundwater. Sure, that makes the same same basic setup, and then it runs through a filter. as like a sediment trap that'll catch any large sediment coming in. And then it goes up through like a carbon disk. And then it comes down through a charcoal filtration system. And then back through an actual, like, I don't know, some kind of cloth filter. So it has three, three variants of filtration before it actually gets through to your</p>



<p>to your G Nalgene bottle or whatever your Yeah, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Has it worked out pretty well for you? Like, did you use that down river a lot? Or did you guys have other systems on the boat when you're doing?</p>



<p>You know, we carry all of our own water on the boat? Like, before we leave? We'll we'll load up, you know, five or six, five gallon cans of water. Yeah. Okay, that's bigger that makes, so we just bring all that? Yeah, I mean, when you're running commercial, stuff like that. It's just, I mean, any type of risk you can mitigate?</p>



<p>Yeah, I figured you wouldn't use it for commercial stuff. But I was wondering for you, or like, if you had, like, if you'd put it through a lot of repetitions of its pace, you know? Or what I guess what I was wondering is like, how long does it last? What's the kind of maintenance that you ran into with the issues you had with your Okay, so,</p>



<p>so what I didn't do, they have new gaskets that come with it, okay. They have new carbon discs, they have new charcoal that you put in there. You need to keep the gaskets lubricated. So that way, when you let it sit for a year and a half before your next trip, you don't pull it out. And those gaskets are cracked. Oh really. And that I just kind of had, you know, the hailstorm of all three of those things, where it was just like my sixth trip that I'd used it over the period of like three and a half years. Yeah. And I just, yeah, I just didn't maintain it, and ultimately ended up kind of paying for that.</p>



<p>Man, that's so sad. That stuff. Well, you know, lesson learned, though. Oh, yeah, sure. Hit that. Yeah. I remember there was a there was one ship that we did. She This is the nutty thing is that, like when in origin, it's great, because you have this luxury of just being able to carry a water filter with you and have this assurance that you're going to run into consistent water supply, for your whole backpacking trip through the wilderness. We have a lot of creeks and stuff, a lot of the places maybe you and I'll probably go are in like mountain areas where like we're talking about like going up into an Alpine lake or something like that. There's no way that Creek feeding off of that, or some kind of snowmelt system through that draw. And you're going to be able to pull water from that for the for the time that you're there. But what was tricky is, is when we were out further east, I think we were out in Utah, we went to Capitol Reef, and we did a backpacking trip there. And yeah, it's tricky because out there, when you get into Utah, or probably anywhere in the southwest region there, you have to bring all the water with you on a backpacking trip. So it's just part of the way you pack. It's pretty nuts. And it's I think it's like a ratio of about two gallons per person per day, which seems, you know, relative reasonable, really, but if you're doing just a couple days, that means like each person is carrying another eight pounds or, you know, eight gallons of water, which is a ton. Yeah, which is 64 pounds of water. It was I remember we did we did Capitol Reef. We had, I think, four gallons. So I think Marina and I both had two gallons, maybe I think I might add more gallons. But she probably cared a lot of gallons of water. And we get all this water up there, and it was a lot. It was ridiculous. But uh yeah, it was probably another 30 pounds each. Yeah, no, I believe it I mean water is super heavy and it takes up a lot of space. It takes up so much space. Yeah, there's a picture of me just kind of strapped and gallon jugs. We didn't even have like a system of like, we don't like even a camel pack. That's like you know two liters that's ounces. Yeah, you're gonna get an hour Yeah, so So yeah, you have that full that's on your chest and you have like three just gallon bottles of water kind of strapped around your back</p>



<p>Did you did you have like a like a pole strapped across your shoulders with</p>



<p>the big bucket side? I put over the top of my head is a high ground. Yeah, there that's like the environment that it seems like you'd need it but it was strange because they were I think they were a couple water sources around but they had dried up by that time in the year, you know, they're seasonal. I think they're like, in that area the desert and it's it's really remote out there when you get out the Capitol Reef because there's no big town near there. Really? Oh, you know what I mean? I mean even I guess Death Valley is kind of the same way but but Las Vegas is sort of close to it. But out in Capitol Reef, man, there was nothing out there. And it was just super dry and super. It was super caustic to your your being what you were out there. What kind of what time of year were you? We were there in October. And it was okay. And it was still pretty high. It was that it was still like oh man like in the day. This is kind of hard. To do, but we did, I think like a handful of miles in to this arch that was back there that we were at a camp by and we had a couple days out there. It was cool. It was really remote. It was interesting to see some of that landscape out there. But man, there was no water to be found. It was just high desert. Like, there was like a mud pit. There was maybe four or five miles further. You know that that was like the saving grace back in the 1800s. When you're a frontiersman in that area. Imagine that with no gear no water filter. No, yeah, you're out of water for a while, but there's a chance that there's this muddy pit. That's like a natural spring a few miles up this way. And you might be able to get enough water to survive to your next drop off. days, man, it'll days, that would have been terrible. Yeah, yeah. You think about what the frontiersman would have had to have George just get through to get through dealing with waterfalls, or, I mean, obviously, they're not filtering their water, but just dealing with the water sources that they have to encounter.</p>



<p>Yeah, I don't even want to think about that. They'd argue that we're probably live in the good old days. That's probably</p>



<p>But yeah, I don't think I've had like a big problem with the water filter before we've done what we because we'd always like have it so that we just have like a big store of water on it's where we were when we were moving. And then well, I was gonna ask you about like, if we were moving on from, from what we were talking about, I wanted to talk to you about like the stoves that you that you would bring. Have you brought like a stove with you much backpacking or or do you try like, not well, yeah, cuz you do. Just the jet bow food all the time. Right.</p>



<p>Yeah. So that's, that's my primary is my jet boil. I mean, you can really do just about anything in there. Yeah, it's great. I mean, they're there. And there's so many different ways to use it. Like, one thing you can do is just, I mean, if you have time, I mean, YouTube is such a vast Information Center. You can go in there and just look stuff up and just like ways to be creative with the Jetboil. I mean, they have they have instructions on how to how to bake in your Jetboil Oh, you can bake a mountain cake while you're up there.</p>



<p>I didn't know that I burned I lost. Like is it just like it just goes to like, hot right away? There's I don't know, I don't know how you bake in it. But that's really cool.</p>



<p>Yeah, it honestly it seemed like more hassle than it was worth, but yeah, so I have a slice. But I mean, but it is possible. That's cool. So other than that, I've just got this like this cheap little. What is that? It's like the isobutane. Is that what we run those?</p>



<p>I yes. I remember what it is. I don't remember that little stove. That's a cool one. That's a good backup stove.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's just like, you know, I think I paid like 30 bucks for it, man, the things tiny. Like, it's just a little backpack and stuff. It's awesome.</p>



<p>Sure. I think those are really useful. You know, we did. We did like our 50 day trip. We did that with just the Jetboil. And we did as much as we could with that, that second trip that we did for like 100 and 110 days or whatever it was. Yeah, we did that with the Jetboil. We had to buy like a propane stove. Like just a single kind of the same idea as a jet boil or a backpacker stove where it's just the burner that fits on top of the top of the tank. We had a buy one of those halfway through the chip. And it was nuts because like we just worn out the jet boil. It was nuts because like so I guess when you use one for 110 days straight. They have a hard time. Yeah, if you unscrew and screw back together, but we still cobbled it together to work because we like we needed to boil water. I remember it was out on the Oregon coast. I think it was a spot that we had taken you to after that. Was it like sisters rock area? Oh, you remember when we were there. That was really cool. That was a cool spot it was fun to so we were there the year before I took you guys there. And we had camped there for the better half of a week or so. And we were using the Jetboil to make coffee and do everything with it. But the the stove part, the threading that goes down where we connect to the gas candidate canister had started to wear out. So it would pop it would blow the stove off of the tank. Like the threading would just it would just pull apart and so it was like it was leaking and you couldn't get it to seal tight enough so that you could you could get a connection from the stove to the tank to draw to burn.</p>



<p>So that brings me to something I want to bring upon this. Yeah, is a big thing that I factor in when I'm packing is materials to fix stuff. Oh yeah. Like that's huge. I mean, like one thing that was good to have in your pack is that it's it's like the plumbers tape. It's like a thin nylon that you wrap around threading to to make a gasket essentially. They make it for for gas. So like propane. stuff. It costs like a buck 29 at, you know, your local plumbing store, Home Depot or something. And, and that's great to have in your pack for exactly that situation because those threads are like a thin aluminum, you know? Yeah. I mean, they're not meant to be taken apart and put back together 1000s of times. Yeah, I have a lot in a situation like that. I mean, that gives you, you know, it's going to create a seal. And you could probably, you know, milk it for another month or two. doing that.</p>



<p>Yeah, so that's, that's exactly what we did in the moment, when we were out there is we took, we took the electrical tape that was in the glove box, and we kind of like a slip of that, just like, we had to do this, like, all the time we, we've set it up on a new canister, and then we would not break it down. We wouldn't touch it until that canister was finished. But we use it for almost the rest of it. Like the part on his sister's rock on the coast. That was like day 15 of 100. So he's using the rest of the time. We had a we had to kind of supplement it with some other thing. Yeah, but But yeah, we just we had to put a little bit of electrical tape around the threading, and then try and like gently work it together. So that would hold enough so we can boil our water and cook our food. But we did that a lot of times, man, we ran through like another half dozen canisters of fuel before we finally probably retired that thing.</p>



<p>Yeah, well, that's great, man. I mean, that's that's what it's about. That's what's cool is like, being on those long trips, or you know, even just a trip or you're away from things, like it forces you to be resourceful and kind of, oh, man, I love that you're on what you can do with what you have.</p>



<p>Yeah, I can't broke our tent pole broke. At one point it was in the wind, a tent was set up, it was weighted down, the wind came in while we were hiking it, it crushed that time and it like it just torque that thing over. it snapped one of the poles. it snapped the one that was kinda under the the heavier tension load. There's a few that were, it was an interesting tent design. But there's there's, like, you know, one that was like, it didn't matter. There's the other one that was torqued around 180 degrees; it was almost like both points were almost touching each other. That thing just like crashed as the tent rolled over on its side. We were like, well shoot. And it was kind of a weird town, we couldn't really get a replacement pole in that length and that size. And so we had to like figure out a way I think what happened is if you would imagine now that the there's the aluminum piece, and then there's the peg of the next aluminum pole as it comes together with your template selection color. Yeah, that color. What had happened is that is that the it just broke out of that, like whatever piece inserted into the piece next to it, it just snapped out it kind of like broke out that that first top inch of a piece of aluminum. And so we went over to this can that we wasn't like a coke Can I think was just like some Tin Can that we that Chilean, something like that, or some canned tomato. And so we like clipped that down and had a roll that with a pencil to get like a little tube. And we'd like to roll that around the broken part to be a splint for our tent pole. So we could keep together on a camping trip. But we still I mean, the tents still like that we use that tent for like another lightning like we're saying, and they're like six or seven months. Way too. Yeah, that's awesome, man. What was that, like? On the 115 days, man, it was so cool. Well, that that goes back around to what we were talking about a little bit at the beginning, when we were saying It's nuts when you think about what you need to bring for three days, versus what you need to bring for. In this case, like 100 days, my thinking about it was not very clear, I was only thinking about like the first week it was really just bring everything, bring everything, have it in your car, be loaded down. I even did this the year before in the car. And I thought I like knew better. But I didn't know that I cut down a lot of stuff, it was a lot easier the second time around. But you really notice that almost everything you can leave home in a big way. As long as you're yourself and in some level of resources around you. You can probably get through or, you know, like survive most days and get to the next one in in a significant amount of comfort. You know if you don't put yourself through hell, I suppose. But it worked out really well. It's time like for it was strange because I guess what I would say is after maybe the first two weeks, first three weeks, I'd say after 15 days, your body acclimates. To do what it's doing in a kind of weird way. I don't know if you had the firefighting or, or if you've had it in like some other situation. But it seems like after maybe some number of days, it seems like you just get a little less dirty every day. Or you're you slam a little better at night. When you Yeah, there was no way you can sleep that well.</p>



<p>Exactly. But that's what happens, man. It's like your body just acclimating. Actually, I was talking about that with my dad yesterday. We were talking about how You know, where we live, it's pretty quiet. So like, we go and stay somewhere like in the, in the center of like a city or something and you can hear people talking and you've got street lamps on total and you'll, you'll lay wide awake for the first few nights, but then by night three, you know, it's like you just get used to the background noise and stuff and you just tune it out, you're just falling asleep. But it's the same thing with being on the road or being up in the hills. It's like, Alright, you know, you get past that initial Oh, I'm dirty feeling and then that's just the way you are. Yeah, it's really just, you adapt to what you do. And there's, there's physical</p>



<p>things to that happen. Like, I swear that I mean, maybe like a suntan is a good example of it. When you're on you have no exposure, and then you're put underexposure, a lot more than you're used to you get burned is sort of what happens so like, if you bet if you build up a tolerance to if you build up a tan, then you don't get burned. You don't get that caustic effect from the exposure, the sun, sort of the same way of camping or being out in the wilderness for a handful of days. It seems like he got a little bit a little bit better at it. Like I remember, I mean probably similar to a sunburn, but man, my lips would chap like crazy as soon as I got over into a different type of climate, or I guess, just a drier atmosphere or something like that. But yeah, as soon as you go east of the Cascades, man, my lips would chap immediately or if you went up in elevation, like up into like an Alpine area. Oh, yeah. But then after I know what, one week, two weeks or something like that, it just wouldn't happen again. And then just thing Yeah, where you get, or like I The thing that I remember the most, this is maybe more of just an awareness piece. I don't know if this happened to you. But I remember I would get cut a lot when I first went camping. Or Yeah, like now like at the beginning of the season, if I went out I'd probably like get, I don't know, some kind of weird, some number of Nicks. From circumstances I was putting myself in with a pocket knife or with wood or with something I had to do. But I my hands would get cut up more. And then, after a pretty short amount of time, I didn't run into any more injuries like that. Just the circumstantial injuries, the small like, Look, yeah, so you get into it just well stop. Yeah. And</p>



<p>that's, that's funny. It's the same thing like, so I work in carpentry, and I can I can count probably 27 cuts between the two of my hands, that, like they're just little one. I mean, a couple of them, you know, are there, you know, oh, yeah, you keep hitting them or hurt when you got them. But it's just like, they're everywhere. And you come home at night, you look at your hands and go What? Like, you're like, Oh, that's a pretty open wound. I didn't know about that, you know, that's just your body just stops interpreting that is like a distress signal. And it's like, this is the norm, this is just what happens. Yeah. And it's kind of like the scent, you know how, like a new smell will be really overpowering. But like, obviously, you go to the landfill, right? And then you spend an hour there and you can't smell it. Yeah, so what that that is, I'm sure you know, but it's a it's your body's defense, you know, it detects new sense and makes them strong, so you're aware of them. But once your body figures out that it's not a threat to you, and your livelihood, then it dissipates and just becomes, you know, a subconscious scent that you're not actively selling.</p>



<p>Yeah, I totally get that. I've heard that before about like different scents and stuff that come through. It's weird. Yeah, it's probably it's probably an effect. It's really similar to that with the stuff about cutting but but man, I remember it was so weird, because we were just in the Camry at the time this old 92 Camry. And like we would notice that we really just wanted to get rid of most of the weight of the things that were in the car, we only needed a backpack or two backpacks, you know, is just nuts. When you figure out like, oh, man, none of this stuff is really like what we need to get at. We really only do these two or three or four things. And we do this pretty repetitively. You don't need the rest of this stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, you don't. And that's, that's what I always enjoy that. Like when by the time you get done with a backpacking trip, or a road trip or something, it really makes you realize how little you need to actually function in your day to day life. Yeah, absolutely. Just just how much excess stuff you just carry around for no reason. You know, you come off a trip like that. And you're thinking to yourself, you know, I live with nothing but a toothbrush and just like, you know, a lot of talking to you. Oh, yeah, exactly. Yeah. And then you come home and you're like, Well, what do I have all this stuff for? No. Yeah.</p>



<p>It's definitely happened. I wanted to ask you about like the downriver stuff that you did on the road. When you were like, Well, I know three or four day trips. Like what that was like and are like so how much gear Do you guys carry down? I mean, there's there's for the guests and stuff, but kind of cutting that out a bit like for yourself, how much gear would you think that is per person? Maybe</p>



<p>so much. Okay, so, so us as guides, pack, I don't want to say minimally, but we pack them, the necessities while staying comfortable. As you know, it's like, you don't want to, to under pack because we live down there, you know, 90 to 100 days out of the year. So it's like you start, you know, really trying to figure out what you enjoy, like good sleeping equipment. Nobody. Nobody goes light on that everybody brings great sleeping equipment. What's the best equipment to bring for the letter of dammit, man, I've got what's called a roller caught. It's like a nylon material that is it's like a rubberized head-on even that explain it. But it's like a measurement.</p>



<p>I saw yours. And I really want that look cool.</p>



<p>It's great. They're super durable. I mean, they're really strong. They're waterproof. You know, I couldn't ask for anything better. And they roll up to the the, you know, the length of your arm and everything's lightweight and aluminum. It's just a good caught. But anyway, that's called a roller caught. But yeah, we take that I take a sleeping pad to kind of create a barrier between the air beneath mean, and shaking bag. Yeah. Yeah, and bring yourself a nice pile of a sleeping bag. And you're good to go,</p>



<p>man that it looks like a really good setup. I like that that cart system that you had, and it says happened, like almost no time at all. Yeah, you</p>



<p>can have it put together in a matter of, you know, less than a minute.</p>



<p>And it seems super durable to like it's not really going to be affected by being weathered over a couple seasons.</p>



<p>Well, yeah, you get like fabric carts and stuff like that. No, you know, just between the Sun and the water and whatever else. What other elements are getting to them, they'll just kind of rip and tear eventually. Yeah. But now when we go on those trips. We the guides for the company pack a pretty happy setup, should we bring in? We bring a full kitchen. So we've got four, you know, stand ups those. We've got tables and pots and pans and jugs of water and coolers and you know, I mean, it's really it's really a big operation that we do. Yeah. And then you know, the guests bring whatever they think they need to be comfortable with. Over the course of three or four days. And like we were talking about when we can potentially overpack on a backpacking trip. People can really overpack when they're not carrying their own bag around. Oh, yeah. You know, they're like, and you get a lot of people do that are from, you know, really urban settings and getting down there and the candy and it's kind of really outside their comfort zone. Totally. I understand just got so much stuff. Yeah. But that's why they hire a gear boater, right.</p>



<p>Yeah, yes. Yeah. That's cool. So um, so like, probably a good amount of equipment. What if you and I just went on a trip, and we had to haul out to a different river, it was a little further away. So you're kind of trying to cut down a little bit? Like what kind of equipment would you bring a sort of a lightweight, single boat trip</p>



<p>with a lot of that would depend on what the fishability of the river was. If it was potentially eating fish. I would cut down on food a good deal. It depends on just how comfortable you want to be. I mean, if you're if you're interested in just having kind of a you know, a back to the basics really kind of fend for yourself experience. You can go really light. I mean, you could go backpacking and light with just a little isobutane stove. Oh, that'd be cool. I don't really want to do something like that. We should. Yeah. Well, I've thought about that a lot. I really want to do one of those. And I want to do like a high desert trip like that, too.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, high desert rafting ship. Now, a high desert camping chip that was like backpacking, like that kind of</p>



<p>Alpine. cottontails and in streams, man. Oh, man.</p>



<p>Yeah, like hunt, hunt, and fish for all the food that you have. Or have a couple backpack meals or something? Yeah, yeah, obviously bring it back up. But yeah, that would be the idea. That's a cool idea. Yeah, well, I like the idea of doing it on the on the river that I thought that'd be kind of fun. I have it set up kind of like a like a backpacking ship with a raft. I was wondering how self sustaining Could you be from a raft on a raft ship like, like, how many days do you think you can do?</p>



<p>a raffle? Well, I just had some friends that went on the Colorado and they just did</p>



<p>33 days, 33 days, but they run into stores, right, or do they have anything like that? Like, it's it's probably planned that day.</p>



<p>I, I, from what I understand they packed everything because I Oh, wow, if you're not familiar with river guide culture, everyone's pretty poor. So it's not like, got a ton of money to spend on places. So, I mean, really, it's like you kind of go on the cheap. But I mean, you bring the biggest hang-up is what you need to keep cold. Like if you need to put stuff on ice and things like that. Yeah. If you can cut that stuff back, you can really be very self sustaining. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, I figured that was what we noticed car traveling to is man, like having a having a cooler was a constant liability, where we just have to keep doing it. I always lose. Yeah, and we're always losing energy. Like, it's always it's always going out. We're spending a hand like probably a good bit just on ice traveling around. And we finally figured out like one of the things we were talking about earlier, what you think about beginning versus what you think of the end, man cutting down on a cooler or cutting down on ice and things you have to keep cold constantly. That was the biggest improvement of the the maintenance that we had to do for like our trip travel. Yep. stuff. It was it was so frustrating to try and like always keep that and like you're always throwing away stuff that's gone rotten in some way.</p>



<p>Exactly. And then also, when you're in a car, you know, the heat inside the car generally is amplified when you're in? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But the big thing on like, if you're packing a cold cooler, whether it's rafting or camping, or whatever it is, keep it shut as much as possible. You know, every time you open it, you're gonna lose. It's gonna heat up in there. So I mean, just keep it shut. A lot of times, you can duct tape the seal. So you don't lose any, any cold air from there. And do that. And you can really keep food cold for a long time. Or just go to the store. If you know, you're going to be gone for 10 days, get a couple blocks of dry ice and put those into a cooler that just a cooler for your eyes. And then you keep that in there. You keep that wrapped with duct tape. And you only open it when you need to swap it into the cold. Cool. That's a smile. Really? Yeah. Yeah. You know, you've got an icebox and then a cooler essentially.</p>



<p>Okay. I like that. I like that thinking that's kind of that's kind of interesting. You know, we finally invested in a Yeti cooler, like one of those thicker, lined coolers with like the rubber straps that come down. So like clamps itself down the lid. Yeah. How do you? How do you feel about that? They don't they don't sponsor us so I can talk. I can speak my mind. I think that they are I think that they are too expensive. I think that they do keep ice. Well, and it is. It's like one of the better, better ways I've seen of a cooler. What do you what's your experience with them?</p>



<p>Well, I have little experience with them. But I don't know. I mean, it just seems like I mean, yeah, they hold eyes really well. And if I was buying it, for the only reason is to keep ice cold. Sure, then then I could validate that but it just seems like your pain. You know, like 75 bucks on a cooler that it's interior area would hold a six-pack of beer, maybe? Oh, yeah. Yes.</p>



<p>That laid out. 20 court one that we have is small. Yeah. I think that the concept guide right. Nuts use device. Is that you okay? So first you have your cooler Of course, just in the back of your truck. You get a bag of ice. You put the bag ice in the cooler. You shake it around, you leave it there for a half-hour just to chill the cooler. Just because it's too hot inside. Right? Then you dump that bag ice completely. That's gone. Then you put then you put three bags of like, cold ice in there. I think there's like coal ore. What is it? Like? There's wet ice? Have you heard of that? Like, it's like around like, what? 32 or seven? It's like kind of Yeah, running in a liquid. It's what you get at every convenience store. Because they turn up their their freezers to like, as high as it Yeah. But then yeah, so you throw in another three bags of ice, like almost it's like three quarters full at that point. And then you can put in what you're talking about maybe a six-pack of beer in there to keep it in its system, you know, to keep as much ice in the ratios what it thinks you're supposed to. But at that point, it says at least you can keep that for like five days. If you keep the lid shut like you're talking about it's it's Yeah, really well so you can keep that for a long time. It's not often something I've run into as needing but okay.</p>



<p>Oh, that No, I was just saying I I find they work fantastic. I mean, we use them on the river. And I mean they're they're great for keeping eyes but I mean using them as a cooler but you need to get in and out of and that's where you lose that so much of your cold air and stuff is those leads all the time. Yeah. So it kind of doesn't really matter whether or not you've got a Yeti or Coleman or whatever it is. It's when you're in and out of them. You lose the axe. Yeah, yeah, no. Yeah, I see. And that's just kind of what it boils down to. So in that case, I'd prefer to have something with a little bit more area to actually keep food and stuff.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, the the Yeti one that you see like maybe at all right? Yeah, that was a pretty tiny one. Have you seen the big ones like are? Well, probably stuff that you guys would have figured it'd be the same. Yeah, same size coolers. We have the really large Eddie's Yeah. And I've seen the stuff that goes on, like the commercial fishing boats. Like the batches like is huge. Why? Like, I mean, like, see seafaring boats, like these giant, like, bench size Yeti coolers that they build into the side of the thing that they're supposed to throw in fresh catfish. But that's got to be expensive. Oh, yeah. It's got to be an insane custom order, like $5,000. I mean, I guess at that point, it's just like, Well, yeah, we'll make whatever cooler you want. You know, it's just like plastic and styrofoam at some point. So Exactly. There's another company. There's like this other company called Arctic. Like, I think it's our T IC. And they do knockoff Yeti coolers. They they I don't know, drop shipping from China or something like that. But they're like, they're like maybe 100 $150 cheaper than the Yeti cooler price. So it kind of brings, it brings him back in that range of like a Coleman cooler, or like something else that's, you know, more real. Yeah.</p>



<p>And that's, that's the thing, and you start price and coolers, and it doesn't really matter what level of cooler you want to get. Honestly, I mean, for anything decent. You're looking around the 100 bucks. Yeah, yeah. It's really charming. Yeah. And I mean, that's, that's just kind of like, you know, your average. Yeah. I mean, with the</p>



<p>Yeah, snaps on the side that you take to the to the tailgate,</p>



<p>you can get those guys for like 39 bucks, or something, you know, but it's like, but if you get into like a steel-belted cooler, or anything that actually supposed to function correctly, right when you're out on a trip. Yeah. I mean, you're kind of looking at a minimum of 100 bucks.</p>



<p>I figure that's, that's definitely true. Yeah, man. Yeah, that's what that's that's another thing too, is like how much money you can invest in your equipment like that? Well, we were talking about that boat, you know, getting a custom Yeti cooler. It's five grand. Yeah, I know. But yeah, man. I don't know. Do you have any other stuff to bring upon this? I'm sure we're going to talk way more in the future about like hiking equipment.</p>



<p>Well, I did I did want to touch on you. Aside from like, your basics, like a water filter, your freeze-dried foods, things like that. What are some things that you bring in your pack? Not on a car trip, but on a backpacking trip? That you know, just just the important things aside from the the obvious?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, that's a good question. So I mean, I know. I try and keep my pack under 40 pounds. is what I've done it Yeah, each of the tabs. Well, yeah, I really try to keep it pretty light, which I guess is a little bit what we're talking about. I don't know what to bring at a point. I got my tent. Which is a it's just a couple pounds. I got like the stove. You know, the I got, let's say like, three of those or you know, like a handful of backpacker meals and some Clif Bars. I've got a way to start a fire. I've got Yeah, I've got like my iPod, or you know, like my phone or something like that charged up. Yeah. And so I'm trying to think of the other stuff. I mean, it's probably close that I bring, that's always been the spot where I bring more weight than I need to because it's always like, some kind of like, it's it's like cotton t-shirts, or another pair of jeans or something like yeah, oh man. And the worst one is like another pair of shoes. That's been the, I mean, cuz you want that. Like, like, at least like a pair of boots. And then like a pair of like river sandals. Like there's always been a situation where I want that. I know that's been for you. Like when honestly that's</p>



<p>that's been huge for me. I did that on a king strip, you know, bring sandals. I mean, if even if you're not getting into the water, it's just nice to let your feet breathe and, and just give your feet some type of different support than the hiking boot that you just put 20 miles on.</p>



<p>Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I noticed a turn that Yeah, I really needed to switch back and forth between the two, but I was always frustrated cuz you got to like store the pair of shoes somewhere. Yeah, which isn't that much way it's fine, but they're always kind of an awkward sort of bulky size. I was trying to think other stuff see, like when I go out or I think I was looking at a picture from the flowers. And I was thinking back to that ship of like special things that I brought or like different things. And what I would do, I think like we talked about last time, I always bring the camera bag with me so is the there's the backpack of whatever it is. But then like around the front, there's like the camera bag with a couple lenses. And that's just not glass. So there's really no economy of weight going on there. Yeah. And, and yeah, there's like a tripod, which is like metal, legs and stuff you don't need To be carrying, but it's just like a lot of weight that you have to like heave up to the top of the mountain. The other thing that I was gonna say that I brought was like a keyboard. This is and that thing probably in your mind. Yeah, yeah, you're losing me here. Go ahead and explain. Yeah, I brought a keyboard that I connected to my phone, and like to my iPad, so that I could do some of the like editing stuff that I was trying to do. Yeah, which is silly. And I probably wouldn't do it again, if</p>



<p>you guys did want a lot of editing and stuff. And a lot of journaling. When you guys were out there</p>



<p>was what we were trying to do. Yeah, so it was a lot of like, there's a lot of stuff, it was a weird job where you go like out in the woods, and you take a bunch of photos and you try and like file and write about the photos while you're there. And I'm like this kind of thing. You see it on Instagram, every once in a while, like these, these cool tent offices, you know, somewhere on the back entry and someone you know, hanging out in the in the tent with the window up and out to wherever and they just got their, their like iPad, or their, their MacBook or something like that in the tent on top of the sleeping bags as they're working through and editing, whatever, but you kind of think about like how light some of these things are. And you can haul them up there and work with them pretty easily now, but the problem is power. So is the thing about like a MacBook or a laptop. I couldn't support that. I couldn't power it up there. But what I did do, and I think your dad turned me on to this for the first time it was that gold zero. Solar Panel kit. Do you remember that? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I bought one of those. It was just like that. And I use that thing a time on those backpacking ships if you workout for you. Yeah, I, it was the first time I've been using solar power. And really the only thing that it does, it's like two panels, maybe about about the size of your, you know, your two open palms or so, you know, it's like the size of like a good book. So it's really not very big at all for like solar energy. And all that it produces is enough to run out to a USB charger. So you can charge your phone. And that was really what I was going for. So it was cool that you could just be out for a week or indefinitely if you wanted. And you could keep your phone or your iPod on. And you know, when you turn it into airplane mode, the battery lasts for really quite a long time. Oh, yeah, yeah. So we use that we had a couple apps on it that we're using the donor to connect anything, but it's you can use that to file stuff or to write stuff or to record a video or to do whatever else. And and so we could do that as much as we wanted to. And then just recharge it the next day. Yeah, the sunlight on the solar panel. It was cool.</p>



<p>That's great. Yeah, we when we did Joshua Tree, I was taking like a photo journal or sorry, a video journal of the whole the whole trip. And that was eating up a lot of battery and I was I always use airplane mode for that. Just to save that battery, but we took with us a little charging station, which is actually kind of cool on those road trips. It has enough amperage to actually jumpstart your vehicle. Yeah, I've got one of those. And then yeah, you've got you know, you got USB ports and stuff like that in there. And I think those are greatly useful. Yeah, yeah, super great. I mean, because honestly, sometimes you get out there and it's just like, man, if you woke up with a dead battery and you're just 15 miles from anywhere Oh, yeah, see another person? It's been a huge concern a number of times Yeah. And with the way vehicles are going anymore, everything's in automatic. So it's not like you're gonna compression start your rig. Sure. Yeah. Yeah.</p>



<p>Yeah, it was it was scary. I remember there was a couple of texts I was driving around that Oh, camera you man. You remember that? Like that was not that was not always reliable car. Especially. It was it was the best guy but I remember there was a him like had this problem you know, if you left it in an accessory or with with over that your lights could be on mode was it would kill the battery in like a half-hour or less. Like if you if you left if you just left it on accidentally or you know, the the stereo was on while you were away or the door was open or something like that. It would it would kill the battery. It was like you walk into the gas station. Yeah, I mean, you probably could do that. It did that. In fact, a number of times, man, little things you had to do. But so how many how many 1000s of miles did you put on that car when I sold it? When I bought it? It was 250,000 miles, which is a lot to buy across just the spring chicken at that point. Just a smooth quarter million. And then when I sold it, I sold it for the same price. I bought it and that was with 367,000 miles on it.</p>



<p>Yeah, you're the only person I've known that made money on a vehicle. You just put 100,000 miles on it and made money off that car man you to drive it that Camry That was great. No. It's</p>



<p>a cool car. It was a blast in free as basic of a little sedan as it was. It really did a lot of stuff. And yeah, it was it was really fun. But it was scary though. Yeah, sometimes I remember being at this campsite. Where like the battery, I think died. Unfortunately, I think there was someone around that helped us like jump it right then. But yeah, there was always like something about that in my mind. And I think the next trip that we went in, I did have one of those jumper kits in the car. And it works pretty well. Most of the time, I would recommend, I think what you were talking about earlier of, of, would you say like keeping up with and maintaining your equipment, man, maintain that charger, because it's got to keep that thing charged, kind of in the wheelhouse of the same season that you might use it in, because it does kind of lose it after a little while like I had one. Like you know what, I don't know that next winter after it went from 100 degrees out to freezing out that battery is toast. And it's not really going to give you the amps. You need to jump your car. I think I ran into that one time. Yeah. Or I don't know. I did what I drained it on the charger my cell phone,</p>



<p>something like that. Oh, God. Yeah, yeah. That's a one thing I can say in especially is like, I don't know, for me anyway, as I get into better equipment. I'm more motivated to take care of it. Oh, yeah. Then really maintain it. You know, when you're starting in your, in your teens, and whatever, you kind of just Oh, yeah. 30 $30 sleeping bag, not a big deal or whatever. And then, you know, you just ruin things I burn through unintentionally. But yeah,</p>



<p>I mean, those things that they don't hold up the same way. And so it's like, that's, I think a good bit of why they've been replaced over time is that burned through a couple $30 sleeping bags? And you know, season two in the zippers are twisted and split. And you know, what, what's going on? Right? stuff with the 10 stuff stoves, stuff with filters. So</p>



<p>yeah, and, and honestly, when it comes to outdoor recreational equipment, you really do you just get what you pay for. Oh, yeah. Man, I, I, I just got to that point where I was, like, do I want to buy the $30 sleeping bag three times? Or do I want to buy $120 the bag once? Yeah. And you know, and that's just what it came down to. And so I started getting a little more picky when it came to choosing my equipment</p>



<p>I've been trying to buy. Yeah, and there's a there's a range of equipment, there's some equipment, like you're talking about, I want to be specific. I want to get the good stuff. I want it to work. And then there's another class of it. I don't it's kinda I don't know if I've really honed it down well, but I almost want it to be as cheap as possible because it's so likely to break or likely to get lost. Yeah, I don't know what that is. So yep. I know. There's like a handful of things that I've gone out. And for unfortunately, for me, it's sometimes like, well, it's not always pocketknives but it's like some sunglasses. sunglasses are perfect when travel sunglasses for me. Exactly. River sunglasses. I go for the cheapest ones. If they blow off my head, and you know, you know in water, whatever. There's nothing gone I don't care. It's funny. I don't want the best gear.</p>



<p>And unfortunately, the only way to come to that conclusion is to live through that situation multiple times.</p>



<p>Man I've lost Yeah, I've lost some stuff that wasn't super valuable. But it was just like Ah, it's just at the bottom of the river now. Like even if it wasn't really expensive, you're still like, Oh, I was 20 bucks. Yeah, I don't have it anymore. Yeah, it's a bummer, so there's that there's a handful of those things that have that oh, this is probably just gonna get damaged and get brought blown out whatever that is. I'm trying to like cut down on a few of those things but but yeah, I think that I remember the time I learned that was sleeping mats. You're talking about your sleeping bag I've learned so many times from a sleeping mat of not investing enough in that every night like two or three the hour and a half after I finally fallen asleep after blowing up my my bad excuse for a little camping that bed at two hours after that I always wake up in the sleeping bag kind of on the rocks under the tent you know what I'm talking about? Yeah. It's that like thing where you're still asleep and coming into awaking when you know you just have a rock in your kidney anything and now only spent 15 more dollars on this mat.</p>



<p>You know what I disagree with you there? Like I've spent good money. Oh, several times on ads. And better. No, you know what I got to the point like so well, first off, when I'm when I'm backpacking. I just got to the point where like, I'm probably going to be comfortable no matter what. Yeah, I yeah, I've been there. But man, I was just like, I'm going to use the cot and use as little of the sleeping bag. had his I can't because I have had nothing but bad experiences with sleeping pads. But they always seem to they last a trip or two and then they've got a hole in them. You got to patch them, or they just don't seem to hold air. I don't know, man. I mean, I guess you could you can get into some I've seen them, you know, there are $200 sleeping pads. One I got,</p>



<p>I got it, I got a Thermarest like, like an M, or one that didn't have a lining on it. Some of them like the Rei, when you get it's got this nylon lining that makes it a little tougher. This one was just sort of the rubbery inside lining of that. But I had one of those it was I think, less than $50. That's the one that I still have packs down to almost nothing. It's kind of cool. I don't, I've never turned it down, like on the rocks, as it were, or you know, something like that. So it's always had like a tarp or some kind of lining under it and the ground. But I've slept. I mean, I don't know. Not to say that it's been inflated all these nights, but I've probably put about 250 300 nights on that on that mat over the last handful of years. And it's been working out pretty well for No, it's like it was it was deflated, maybe maybe three or four weeks after I got it. But anyway, you gotta you gotta like, it's just sort of you come to this point where you're like, Oh, no, I just wake up at 215 and a 410. And it's 635. And I just reflate the mat, and then I go back to bed. It just becomes part of your nightly routine. Yeah, it's just just what you do. Yeah, just like getting up to take up the old air mattress. Yeah, it's a Yeah, it's on the same schedule. It's like, it's like auto timing. When when I needed to get up and but yeah, it was it's it's been silly. I got that's on the list for this year for 2017. I'm gonna try and get a new mat. Yeah.</p>



<p>So she got to do man figure out what's important. It's like, yeah, every year you try to buy like two things that will make your camping experience much better.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yes. Have you seen around with those, those like, it's not foil, but it's just like a dense foam mat that sort of collapses down into a little block. I've seen that like strapped to some backpackers. Kids before, but it's just sort of like this light foam mat that they crunch down into a little, little deck. I don't know, it was weird. I've not I've never really used anything like that. But I bet it probably works really well for him. Yeah, I've</p>



<p>kind of been curious about those. And the other one I've heard good reviews on this is from some people that I backpack with that had one. But it's like, it's it kind of contraries your body in a way that it kind of holds you inside the mat. It's inflatable. But it's got this kind of like it's almost the same shape as your mummy bag, but the sides kind of like protrude upward to keep you in it. Because I don't know. I mean, I'm sure you know, man, you get the lightweight sleeping pads and stuff. And you find out really quickly that you just roll off of them in the middle of the night. Yeah. Or whatever. You know, it's just like, they're hard to stay on. I mean, yeah, like, I'm not a large individual by any stretch of the imagination. And like, they're narrow, though. They're like, yeah, they're super narrow and thin. And yeah, I guess this guy Jimmy that I was backpacking with was telling me that he loved it. And I forget the name of the producer. But anyway, yeah, I guess it was really great. That's sweet.</p>



<p>Um, I'm away I'm probably way under-educated to really get in deep about like, a lot of different gear, the different manufacturers of outdoor gear, you know, and yeah, like that. That catalog of equipment is sort of swimming around in my mind. But I can't really pin down like a ton of different things. I'd be like, oh, what about this? Robert, what about this? What have you talked about the feather day? I don't, I don't have anything really? I don't know. I think we've probably talked about a lot of it. Man. I'm a basics kind of person. I don't really care if it's like North Face, or Patagonia or Acer tech, or Marmot or something like that. You know, it's not really like super important. And I know you're kind of most my gear, most of my layers are from goodwill. That's Yeah, they're old to men. And actually, that's one of the best pieces of advice I might I might give to anyone who's bothered to listen to this point deep in our podcast, which Thank you, by the way. But it's not so like, it's, it's one of the best values that you can get for outdoor equipment was cruising through and having a really specific clear agenda of the of the types of things you want to get out of goodwill. depends on your area. And you got to go like I did in Corvallis. Man Corvallis was a goldmine for Hey, don't be giving away. All the hardships Corvallis, goodwill, I pulled out I bought like a great North Face fleece out that fit me. Yeah, it was pretty It was $8 boom, there. Go Marina got me this, this Marmot shell, this blue Marmot shell for like less than 12 bucks. It was awesome. That's like a $200 jacket. I replaced it with a new one. And it was it was like 200 bucks at Rei.</p>



<p>It was so expensive even like, yeah, I mean, yeah, you're getting quality. But man, there's got to be some point where it's just like, Ah, it's too much money. Yeah, I like I go in there and I'll shop the like the clearance rack with my gift card that I get for like a birthday or something. You know? But you're still like, wow, this is a $60 flannel or something.</p>



<p>I don't see the value in some of it. Like we were talking about, there's like good things and bad things. Man, I went big on a rain jacket. I'm a work outside all the time you like you You have big on like the boots that you have for for fire season. And like, there's like sometimes it's like, oh, that's I need that. I need that thing. A lot of the time. Maybe you don't need a new one of those. Yeah, or whatever, whatever it might be. But I go big on rain gear. Yeah, that's what I'm your big. I put my money in having a having a good thermal layer. And I got a pretty expensive but like a nicer rain jacket, like a GoreTex rain jacket to go over. And man that thing is saved me like being out here in Oregon. I don't need really any other layers Other than that, and I've noticed that you can go from like snow, to warm weather to like really intense rain. And you can pretty much keep that same, like set of layers go in that whole time. And it worked well. Like Yeah, but it's rad when you finally like get something and say, oh, this is like this is what I need. This is good enough to answer for all these different situations will be in.</p>



<p>And that's what yeah, I won't go light on on anything that keeps you warm and dry. I'm sure yeah. First off, I don't even know if this is a really good way around. Going. You know going getting around the expensive stuff on that. Oh, yeah, it all seems to be pretty steep no matter where you go. But yeah, like I mean when it's hot, you can always shed layers like you can always remove clothing sure cooler but when it comes to being cold and wet, man that that's the difference between a good trip and a bad trip or a good trip and a serious change</p>



<p>right my experience a ton I mean just just kind of working outside of gigabit through the day. Like data coming through with like some snow on the on the hills like a little bit higher up in the elevation right on the valley floor. It's nothing, but it's it's pretty lousy. Winter weather. It seems like right now. But it's like it's just waves of rain. Like every 45 minutes or so. It's like 45 minutes on 45 maybe 10 2030 minutes off. Then back on to just kind of this drizzle this light rain drizzle. It's coming down all the time. And if it weren't for the like, whole head cover hood and an GoreTex like outfit I've caught on. I'd be soaked all the time. Oh, man. Yeah. shoes. Shoes are a huge one. Like, we should talk about hiking shoes sometime. Like cuz you gotta like Well, what's it What's it the boot that you go for a lot. Mine are the marrow. Yeah, the marrows. Yeah. Yeah, I like those man. I I've never had Merrill's. But they seem pretty.</p>



<p>They're a great boot. They've got you know what, honestly, when you price shoes, shoes are expensive. They're expensive when you're looking for, honestly, so I'm not even gonna say these are expensive. The $150 range.</p>



<p>Yeah, but same as a pair of Jordans. Yeah, exact same as a pair of weigh less. weigh less than Yeezys. Uh, yeah, no, they're great boots, man. I love them the mid top. But we'll save that for another podcast. Oh, yeah. Hey, um, so, you know, we always talk a lot about electronics in the field and things like that in different ways that you take your stuff out there. And that's because you are a photographer Billy extravert you take great photos. So for anybody listening if you want to check out Billy's photography, I believe what it's Billy Newman photo comm.com you</p>



<p>got it right man I appreciate all right. Yeah, check out check it out photos, check out this podcast there. It's it's hosted on that site if you want to check it out. And yeah, the get out there podcast, the feed is up and going. We've got information about that Billy Newman photo comm you can check it out on iTunes. That's what I recommend. If you're hearing this, you probably already figured out how to get into the podcast app and look for this but if you are, give us a review, or rate it or subscribe to the podcast that helps us out a lot in the first eight weeks. We read that those numbers are going to be three and then two of them are you and I Probably it's probably you and me and our girlfriends respectively. But it's but but we have passed. And this is great news, and it's under a week, and we're under five episodes. In total. We've had 100 downloads. Whoa. Which is big time. It's again, mostly me and you I think. I think it's like, yeah, we've got around 11 listeners a show. Maybe some I know, but it's all it's all. It's all ephemeral at this stage. You can't really tell for a long time. But but overall though, man, it's really fun I did doing a podcast with even if it's zero people that that are listening to it. It's still been a blast. Yeah, but you say, Hey, you know about the outdoor stuff, man, you get to talk to you about this stuff.</p>



<p>No, it's great. I love I love picking your brain to you because you've spent, I mean, just as much time as anybody I know. doing various types of camping. Yeah, so it's good. I like I like speaking with like minded people about these topics. It's cool, man. It's great. Hey, um, sounds like we might have a trip planned for this weekend. We don't know. Oh, yeah. Harley what it is. Yeah, but we got some things in the works. Maybe we'll do a do a little podcast from wherever we are.</p>



<p>We got to do on Yeah. If we if we meet up in person, we'll definitely do a live podcast. It'd be cool.</p>



<p>Absolutely. So hey, for those 11 listeners out there, you guys. Stay tuned. We got a little something for you.</p>



<p>That's gonna be a special treat. Episode Six. Yeah, it's just like, Hey, we hung out today. There you go. No, but we'll, we'll put it together. It'll be fun. That'd be cool. But yeah, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast in it. Yeah. Thank you, Billy. It's been good. I appreciate it, man. So on behalf of Robert bisca rap, my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters
How to source inexpensive jackets and layers.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret


Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm



I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for.



It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for]]></itunes:summary>
	<itunes:image href="https://i0.wp.com/billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/web-1.jpg?fit=1440%2C1440&#038;ssl=1"></itunes:image>
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		<url>https://i0.wp.com/billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/web-1.jpg?fit=1440%2C1440&#038;ssl=1</url>
		<title>Get Out There &#124; 05 Backpacking Stoves and Backcountry Water Filters</title>
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	<itunes:duration>1:06:54</itunes:duration>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters
How to source inexpensive jackets and layers.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret


Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the ]]></googleplay:description>
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	<googleplay:explicit>No</googleplay:explicit>
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<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-04-backpacking-the-wallowa-mountains-and-king-range/</link>
	<pubDate>Sat, 04 Mar 2017 05:49:39 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5339</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range</p>
<p>Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon.</p>
<p>Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>


<p>Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman, and I'm here with Robert Bisca. rat. We're recording the get out there podcast. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm doing good, Billy. How are you? It's cool, man. I'm doing good up here. And yeah, thanks for calling in tonight. Recording Episode Four of the get out there podcast. It's kind of cool, man. I like like doing this. It is. Yeah. It's been a great time. How are you liking this rain? Oh, man. It was kind of well, you know, as we said today, for part of it. It was all right. Like I was getting through the day. And then the last half of it was just like a ton of rain. How was it</p>



<p>going? Man, it was a it was pretty good for us the day it's started raining pretty heavily now. I've actually been working out in, in Northern California this last week. So I mean, the weather has been a little bit different kind of getting outside of the valley. Typically a little bit more sunshine than we get here in the valley. But But yeah, now that I'm back in the valley, it's rainy.</p>



<p>Were you were you out pass this excuse over there in that part of Northern California?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Up there in the hill area.</p>



<p>Oh, I've been out in the hill area a couple times. Yeah. I think I went out there with Tyler once to the to the Buddhist temple. Oh, been out there before? No, as far as I knew, all that existed there was a liquor store. Well, the liquor store I mean, that's what's in Hill, but I think</p>



<p>freeway exit, not where you would see a Buddhist temple. But no, there's, I think there's a road it's, it's whatever that first exit is once you get over the scuse. And into California, as you come back down that backside is that first exit, it might not Oak Hill, but it was right right there. Right in that area. You take that and, and you cut back West, along along the ridge of the South line of the mountains and you go back a little ways and you kind of cut up a bit. And it's like nowheresville out there. There's just like, there's like a couple like ghost town Aries out there, it looks like and like, I know, like one of those kind of short railroad sections, like where they stack up cars, something like Yeah, but then yeah, you just turn there you go up into the woods a little further and you end up at this pretty impressive Buddhist temple. Like it's been there for years. Yeah, I guess like that the Ashland hippies kind of bought it and set it up. And, you know,</p>



<p>I was gonna say is that a hotspot like that, that weird 150 miles between readin and Ashland that nobody lives in is that just like, I</p>



<p>think it's, it's for its tranquility. It's, it's been, it's intense. Like, you go out there, I think we've taken pictures of it before, but they like have all the Buddhist flags of flower. You know, like on the on the side of the hills that you can watch. It's got it's kind of cool. It's like a pretty impressive structure that they build out there. Like it looks like an orange a Chinese building, and then lower down. There's like these columns that are all painted red with like, you know, ornate symbols on it. And they like spin in this like, pretty big, like, drum system that goes and there's like 12 of them. And they like all spin as you go into this temple. Wow. Yeah. is a pretty heavy duty template for just out in the backcountry. Nowhere. Have you been out there much like out into some of the stuff in the skews?</p>



<p>No, not really. I mean, you and I did kind of on point with this podcast, but we did. We did the hike up pilot rock. Oh, yeah. I was thinking about that. That is up there. Yeah, I mean, that's that's really like and I mean, other than snowboarding up on Mount Ashland. That's kind of my only experience with that area.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's right. You know, the six keys is what I want to get into more like pilot rock is cool. I think. I think a pilot rock more as like something of Eastern Oregon or more like Table Rock. You know, when you think of Kind of, yeah, that side of it. But I remember hiking pilot rock with you. That was like, late last week of July 2008. I remember gas was 525 a gallon. Oh my God. He's like 550 a gallon when you went over to Ashland it was</p>



<p>isn't that when Tyler hit that rock in his Camry hatchback. And oh yeah. Ended up pushing that hole in his oil pan. Or it was his transmission pan? Oh, yes. It was he was leaking transmission fluid everywhere.</p>



<p>I remember that night there was thought that like it might be the end of the Camry and the guy now, but yeah, it was I remember that. Yeah, like the whole drive back, like loaded down with people and yeah, just I guess it dripped out over the trip. But yeah, it's too bad. I remember Dawson came with us on</p>



<p>that. That was Dawson that that turned us on to that and for those of you that may be listening Dawson was our was our high school. English teacher and still still a good friend to this day. So I did, but yeah, he took us out there showed us showed us around the area and ended up being a great hike. I recommend that anybody that has access to that area</p>



<p>Yeah, it is a it's kind of a challenging hike and sometimes I mean there's there's a little pirate, you know, you gotta you gotta kind of get up up No, you just, you just got to get up. But there's a couple challenging spots in that hike. I remember getting there thinking like, Oh, this is like 30% rock climbing or like not like actual doing but like in difficulty sometimes. It's like this greatest Steve This is like crumbly rock that's coming around. But it</p>



<p>was it's not someplace you would take like your your little kids. But I mean any any able bodied individuals would be able to get up there, you know? Yeah. And do it do it. All right.</p>



<p>I remember the the the geocache that was up there at the summit.</p>



<p>I don't know I never was able to kind of like do that with you guys. In fact, that whole geocache movement passed right? I mean, just kind of like the whole Pokemon just to two major things that just never affected my life in any way.</p>



<p>I hear you the geocaching, I hope a little different than Pokemon but, but I remember we found it. We weren't looking for it. But it was on that hike when we were there. At the summit. I think it was like one of those things. It was challenging enough to get up there that it was sort of obvious where it was located. But yeah, there's a there's just the geocache at the summit point of pilot rock. It was like some little film canister to kind of sign your name. But yeah, one of the guys we were with pulled it out. Okay. Look, I found this geocache stashed up here. Let's sign it. And remember, we like stashed up there again. Just honestly, have I ever taken you to the cave up out of waters Creek area? You did one time? Yeah. Okay. Nice. I'm not gonna go into great detail about that. Because it's kind of like a Yeah, I get a special a special place. But yeah, that's kind of neat. That little peanut butter jar therewith. It's been in that cave for 17 years. Wow. Boy, more than that. It was 17 years when I took you, so probably 20 years now. Yeah, yeah. And only one other person assigned it. That is nuts was pretty insane. Yeah. People don't find too. Yeah, I think about that, like how few times people have been in some areas, or you know how many years it takes before someone gets back to that spot?</p>



<p>Yeah. You ever wonder that when you get rid of it really out into remote places? And I thought about this a lot when I was firefighting? Oh, yeah. You know, you get out into those areas. And you're, you know, you're 1012 miles out into it, looking for a lightning strike. And it just kind of dawns on you. When was the last time that anybody was out here? You know, like, I mean, how many hundreds of years ago? Could somebody potentially walk along this area? Yeah, it would have been so long ago. Yeah. The likelihood of that happening the frequency? Yeah. I mean, what is what's the likelihood of somebody being up on this ridge at? You know, I don't know. 7000 feet out and assist us? Right. Yeah. It's just kind of like, I don't know. Yeah, that's a deep wilderness. Because, you know, yeah, it might not mean you. Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's what I mean, you could probably count the people throughout history that I've taken that path that you're walking on, probably on one hand.</p>



<p>Yeah, I gotta think about that, that there's really some super remote areas. I mean, even still out here in Oregon and Southern Oregon, especially like, some of it's still kind of the frontier. It feels like, Oh, very much. So. You know, yeah, it feels like what's left to the frontier in the in the 21st century? Yeah, there are some some pretty significant locations or wilderness or stretches a wilderness out there that I guess yeah, like, just don't have a lot of people moving through it at all.</p>



<p>Well, and honestly, that's what that's what keeps me in this area. I mean, oh, yeah, absolutely. It definitely is an economy. That is it's just kind of that unexplored wilderness and what the area has to offer as far as</p>



<p>I know.</p>



<p>No, it's really cool about that and how much I miss it. Now that I'm up here. Still in Eugene still with a lot of nature around me. I mean, gosh, is like so much the Macan Willamette wilderness to go into but I think back to just like behind our high school, you know, if we if we just wanted to skip class and go back to school, it was like this awesome mountain road that would go up, you know, into this like crazy, endless maze of mountains that goes like deep into southern or Northern California. It just Yes, it like that whole like mountain range just started right there. And that was just like mountains and wilderness, back for for miles and miles out into the next day.</p>



<p>I know it You always just kind of like, yeah, whatever is behind the mountain, but then you start thinking about what's behind the mountain. You just go. Oh, wait, this</p>



<p>is it for a long, long way. Yeah. You know, and we're lucky. I mean, a lot of people don't have that. Oh, yeah, absolutely. That, you know, and they'll never be able to experience that. Yeah, I</p>



<p>think I think some of that stuff of doing things where you're removed from, from a population for a long time is really cool. And it's something where you, you really feel like you get back. Not back to nature so much. I mean, I always have like, some kind of technology, like always been cameras and stuff like when I'm going out. So I understand like, it's not a naturalists approach. Or maybe it's not what I mean, but just the kind of the thing of preparing yourself as a person having all your equipment or you know, having your gear, having some steadiness to you and then going out away from people for a while. I always think that's a really cool Yeah. I didn't do I want to do more backpacking stuff with you? And</p>



<p>so Cinnabon point, yeah. So that's, that's what I was getting to. Oh, yeah. Kind of on point with people that may not have that opportunity. I want to talk to you, Billy, oh, maybe some good opportunities, places to go hike. I know that you've hiked in not only the lower room, but I don't want to get too hung up on that. I think we've focused on that a little bit. And the whole world and I would like to touch on it. But but there's so much more out there beyond Yeah, dairy, and that wilderness. And so I want to talk to you about I know you did a hiking trip through the walls, and that's up in Canada, North Eastern Oregon.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's a great spot. Yeah. And I kind of wanted to hear your take on that. Man. I really want to get you up there. In fact, actually, that's one of the spots that we should plan on going this summer if we're able to make a couple trips out to some spots together. But the allow is is awesome.</p>



<p>Yeah, I've I've I've heard nothing but Oh, okay. So actually, here's kind of an interesting anecdote.</p>



<p>I today I learned that will allow, and I'm assuming it's spent spelt the same way. I was listening to an Alaskan. Okay, Hunter, kind of, uh, you know, telling stories about his hunting situations. And he was telling me that, oh, williwaw, which was spelled w i l l o w A, which is the same way as the walau is correct. I there's an A in there. But a real close. Okay. Yeah. Right. So so maybe I'm maybe I am confused. But he was saying that what it is, is unpredictable winds winds that are constantly changing. So if you're out there hunting and stocking the animal, Willow. I believe that's how you pronounced it will potentially give your center away. Oh. And I'm wondering if maybe the shape of those canyons and in mountain ranges don't don't create some maybe unpredictable winds. That'd be interesting. I</p>



<p>wonder if that's where the etymology comes from? I remember Yeah. So that area is really cool. I want to get you there. It's it's one of the only glacially formed areas in Oregon. Like it's sort of getting into some of the stuff that we see a little further north when we get up to Glacier National Park. Yeah, further into to to Canada and into the Columbia range. In fact, if you look at a wide map of the Northwest, you can kind of see that the terrain, how it sort of comes down from the Rocky Mountains, if you kind of trace that up into Canada and Columbia range, as that kind of comes down. This is sort of the westernmost edge of something some of the mountains that would be down on the the edge of the panhandle of Idaho that go up into Columbia and then in the summer stuff that goes further east over to the Colorado's, but it's not really connected, but it's like one of the last thing that's over there, and it is really an unusual piece of land for that area. Like you've been over in Eastern Oregon plenty of times. Everything around there like Pendleton La Grande, everything up into Washington. It's all super flat grassland. It's just like rolling hills for really long. Yeah, like you get down to the Chico's of the Blue Mountains. There's there's terrain out there. But it's really not like the allow mountains. And so I think that will allow mountains used to be a Nez Pierce like an Indian city-state, or I don't know if that's what that would be. But it was like, it was kind of like a like a section of the Nez Perce tribe that stretched up into Washington and Idaho and Montana. And I think they they had like one of their last outposts there. And like the Oregon American or Oregon, Native American Indian Wars back in 1870, something like that. That's that was big here in Southern Oregon to during the 1850s. Yeah, I bet it probably was everywhere. But that's where we get Chief Joseph and the town of Joseph up there. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So So Joseph is that small town? That's right outside. of the allowance. And when we went there, I think the first time I went there, I did a solo backpacking trip. I got there with my dad when I was a kid. But when I when I got to the point I was on that trip to do that photoshoot back in 2011. It was fall, kind of like mid late September. It was really a nice time of year to go through. I was worried about doing Alpine hiking, as it was getting like later into September, because I really didn't want to get caught in a freeze because I didn't have the equipment for it. But I got to Joseph, I park the Camry. I said everything. I've had the backpack and like a couple days worth of supplies. And I took off I think I did nine miles up to a spot called ice lake. So is about four miles in a canyon. That was a pretty pretty easy grade. And then it was another like four miles. A switchbacks big. Yeah. Every hiker loves it. Yeah. Yeah, it's a it's a lot of switchbacks. It breaks it up. Well, but But yeah, it's a pretty it's a pretty steep incline like you do you do most of the canyon. And then you really just have to get up the side of this hill for a long time. But it's really rewarding. You get out there, you get to this. I mean, have you done? Well, yeah, you probably have definitely in in some of the firefighting stuff that you did, but probably in a lot of the other backpacking stuff you might have done. I was wondering if you'd been up to budget like that Alpine level? Or that the Alpine lakes, that sort of atmosphere terrain?</p>



<p>Yeah. Something I want to talk to you about a little later. Is my experience down in Kings Canyon near Sequoia National Park? Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I want to break that down with you in a bit. But yeah, that Yeah, that's a cool area. And so yeah, you know, like when it's like when you get up above the tree line, and you're in those, the snowmelt lakes that show up kind of high in those those areas, in the mountains there. But it's really cool, because in the world, Lao is probably like what you find in other areas where you come back back into, but in the allow is surprisingly, for naturally beautiful as they are they're really under-populated. I think they've got a lot more popular recently. But it was so cool. Because when I was there in September, I was the only person at this lake. Oh, I absolutely believe it. Yeah, see, just that kind of, um, the amount of solitude that you get, I mean, I think I saw one other person walk through a day later.</p>



<p>Well, what's so cool about that is when you get up to these remote areas, what you've done is you've eliminated about 95% of the people that are willing to go off of the the natural path, you know, they have the the tourist center, you can drive your car up for they're there for the day, take some pictures, do things of that nature, but very few people are a going to find the time or be even have the willingness to really spend the time to actually get out there and explore. And that's the beauty of doing these types of trips is you can really find that solitude and find yourself in situations where you haven't seen anybody for days on it. That's that's what I really loved about it. No, it</p>



<p>was amazing when I was up there, because that was that was really the first experience I had of solo backpacking. That's the thing I recommend to I mean, you've probably done some other version of that before I don't really, I'm not really done things like that much before. But so completely solo there was nobody else with you. The first time I went, I went backpacking out there. Yeah, it was, it was just me, Marina wasn't there for that part of the chip. So it was just me and man, I swear. Okay, so break part of the story down. I got lost the first night. It was kind of bad. And it's probably the thing that I've made the most mistakes at in something related to the outdoors, like closest to a cascade of events that would have ended in Where's Billy? Yeah, right. So yeah, there's a few points that I got concerned. It was late September, I was walking up. I had started because I had a drive to the allowance. And I got a map from from like, the local spa, I had to put in a little permit thing and just said like, this, this is me, I'm gonna be gone for these many days. It's so so did did you have to get a permit to go do that. Not really a permit, but you just,</p>



<p>but just kind of like a notification that you were going to be out there. Yeah, I think it's just a well, they would have found your body at some point.</p>



<p>Yeah, at some point. It's like this guy was supposed to move his car last week. I think that's about all the signal that it gives you is like, Oh, this guy was supposed to get this car a couple of weeks ago. He's probably he was just like an ice lake. So I was going out there. I made it all the way up the straightaway like Remember, if we imagined kind of an L shape we were going up the canyon or kind of the draw with the creek I crossed the creek. And that's about the time that that the sunset. So it was dark, I probably should just stop there.</p>



<p>So now you've now you've entered into water made yourself saturated with</p>



<p>water. That's a good thing because a little wet, and then I cross over, and now it's dark, and I just got the switchbacks as I rise 4500 feet in elevation to the top of the lake to get to. Okay, so yeah, it's easy, right just like it's, it's how you want to get set up for a long backpacking trip.</p>



<p>It was kind of I typically like to hit my switchbacks at nightfall after midnight, what I shoot for him? Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, at the witching hour. Let's go for it. I've heard of people doing this before I had my little headlamp and stuff. So I see I go, and it's relatively easy is what I'm expecting what I had to deal with myself, alright, like, I'm going to stop if it gets weird. Like, I'm not going to just like, like, scale across and escarpment of rock together as a way to, you know, end up to the, whatever their side I was supposed to go to. So I was just gonna say like, I'll stay on this easy trail, I can see it pretty well. It'll be pretty regular. I'll just get up here. And you know, I'll finish when I do or when I can. I'll try and make everything go easy. So a cruise that that I do the switchbacks I get to this zone. I cross like another really small creek. It's just when you kind of leap over pretty much, but it's it was an area where like the I guess the snow had come through. And it made like a big drift. And then now there's like, there's meltwater that's flowing through it. And when did it done? Was it in a race where the trail I was supposed to take was? So there's this whole zone in front of me that was washed out? where and what time of the year was this again, you said this was later in the fall, September 18. It was a nice evening, but it was cold out, and it was dark out. And then this was the next thing. So I stopped there. And it's like dark. There's no moon that night, really. But I have my headlamp on. I remember I had like Michael Jackson thriller playing in the chest pocket on my iPod. Because I was just by myself, right? I just had nothing to do and us. Nobody Yeah. And so I'm sitting there. I think I ate like a Clif Bar. I had my headlamp on, and I was just kind of poking around and kind of looked up, and then boom, what catches splendid eyes over there. 50 feet 10 o'clock. What's that? eyes? Wait, what's that? Well look, Lion lions like Michael jack. Another set of eyes at 12 o'clock. And so I'm looking at you like, whose eyes are these? like big eyes? Like they're not like really tight together? You know, when you see a cat or something like that. But yeah, yeah. Something predatory. Yeah, it's hard. It's hard in a way. So what they told me is that there was no bears. There's no wolves up there. There's some wolves. But it really, really no rules. But there's like, there's like sheep, I guess, which I really don't want to run to it either. But yeah, it's Yeah, better news than the other thing. So I was just really banking that they weren't interested. But you just looked down the hill, and you just or maybe deer, I guess. But you sit down the hill, and you see like these little yellow eyes, look at it and you go. This is great, especially for your first time. And it's like this is not not the type of thing you want to get into. But I ended up losing the trail right there. But it was confusing, because I had this map in front of me. And I was standing at the creek. And so what the map showed was, well, the trail is just to the south of this creek. So if we just crack if we're at that the trail and we just crossed the creek to the to the south side, the trail will be right there. I'm assuming it's running east to us. Yeah, let's see. Yeah. East to West progress. Yeah. So I hop over, hop over this little creek, but there's no trail over there. And so I'm like, Oh, well, it's got to be just like a little further over here, a little bit up here. And so I kind of like cruise back and forth. I was trying to find this trail. I couldn't find the trail. So I was like, This is weird. So I ended up getting myself into kind of this weird spot where it's sort of like up higher in this rocky area where like, because there's really like nowhere flat to camp by that point where I was at. Because you're just going up this hill, right? Yeah. So I just like laid out the the stuff there. And I just like crashed until morning where I could see where I was. I was like 10 feet from this like really big drop off.</p>



<p>But I had no idea. But yeah, I woke up that morning just kind of wedged between these like two little trees on what was the least of a slope. Just trying to hold myself in between these little rocks. I don't kind of roll down in my sleeping bag at night. But I woke up the next morning and then I found out like okay, this was a fake Creek. That wasn't even on the map. And I supposed to look at this other Creek way over here. And that's where the trail was. Okay, it was great. Yeah, but that was most of it. When I finally got up to the lake. It was great. Everything else in the trip really went fantastic. There was no one up there at the lake. You just got to go around it super pristine water. Like really cool. Great to do photos. That was really fun. Oh, yeah. And I decided when I was up there, I just should do two days. By Gosh, I should add another day because I already did all the work to get up here. And I was kind of Yeah, yes. So I thought like, well, I'll just, I'll just hang out here for another day, I got my food. And I kind of rationed it out a little bit. And I had a little extra stuff that I could cook up to. So I ended up just like, split my meals up and spent more time up there. But yeah, man, that was one of the best trips that I've done. Because what I really like about backpacking, I don't want to hear your take on this is, I like the exercise portion of, of like, doing outdoor wilderness stuff, I think that's important. Man, there's a lot of work to do. And I've definitely done it. But what I what I dig in as doing photography stuff, is I carry my camera with me in the tripod. And I like getting out to stuff with and being able to take pictures of things that, you know, I normally don't get to see just kind of around the more pedestrian stuff around town. And so it's cool to get out to a spot and set up like a base camp. This is kind of the strategy I've liked a little bit. So there's a lot of trips like the lower row where we were talking about earlier, where it's just sort of 10 miles each day, you do that until you complete the circuit, and then you're you're done with it. But I like it, where it's a little more flexible, where you go into the backcountry, you know, 10 or 12 miles or something like that you set up a base camp, and when you operate out of there with the resources that you brought in for like a couple days. Yeah. And that that's been really fun for us to do. We've done that a couple times. Man, it made it, it made it a lot more comfortable to do. But you just get to you just get to familiarize yourself with that area of the outdoors, which I think is cool, because it's tough when you just walk through a spot, and then it's gone. Yeah, man.</p>



<p>Well, it's a little like traveling, you know, hey, I did not not the same type of backpacking, but I backpacked around Europe for a bit when I was in my early 20s. And you find that you go to all these cool places, but you only spend a day or two in those places. And when you leave, you realize that you never really utilized your time there and got to understand the area, culture, the people. And it's a lot like that with backpacking, when you're hiking for a destination, you kind of in a sense, forget to enjoy the time that you're spending in that area, and you're focused on the pain and what you got to get through the mental, you know, push through mentally and get a lot of mental Yeah, yeah. And in sometimes you kind of forget about the beauty that you were just passing by, and not to sound cliche, but it becomes that stop and smell the flowers situation. Yeah, you know, and but don't get me wrong, there are those there are others great points where you find, you know, that beautiful little Brook that's kind of cruising through the area, and it's a great spot to take a nooner and, and eat an apple and sit there and put your feet in the water because they're so sore. And, and those are the little moments that you end up remembering,</p>



<p>yeah, that's the stuff I love about about that area. And it's really cool.</p>



<p>But I would love to do something like that I've never actually had the opportunity. Just kind of based on the hikes that I've chosen to do something like that, where I've had the leeway to just say, you know what, we're going to go in X amount of miles, we'll see what happens when we get there, we'll find a place we like. And, you know, we'll find our tentative destination, set up a base camp there and then explore the area. And I think that's a really cool approach to the backpacking because a lot of people, I think, take backpacking as well. We're making the loop we're doing the circuit, this is the trail or Yeah, yeah, there's 40 miles, we got two days. Yeah. And so I think, I'd like to do more of that. And I think I'd like to encourage more people to do things like that as well,</p>



<p>it was, you know, it made it a lot easier for the first couple times that I did it. And that's what I've done with Marina a few times, it's been super rewarding, because you just like, I guess a good example of this was the second time that we went up to the willows went to ice Lake the first time to smaller Lake really beautiful, you might have seen some pictures that I took of it. The next time we went up, we went a little further down that Canyon. So the first cut off-trail is up to ice lake. If you go further, there's a whole number of other mountain lakes that there are trails to cut off to i've i've only explored really a very small percent of what there is to offer up here in the willow mountains. In fact, I've thought before, if I could, I'd spend like 15 or 20 days, up in the mountains like that, you know, and have like a cache or get the resources again, one time, go back to town and then yeah, but I've only been to a couple little spots. So the second time Marina and I both went, we went one leg further over to an area called the lake basin. And this was cool because and this is what we should do. Maybe if we go up sometime, because there's so many things to do in that area is we went up to the first Lake, we set up our campsite there. And then from there, there's there's kind of a number of spoke trails that go off to different lakes that are further up in that chain. So there's like a, like a number of lakes that are kind of connected all along these these glacially formed mountain ridges that look really dramatic and really steep as they kind of cut-up along up to the top of this mountain. That's all really just sort of one thing with these big gouges carved out of it from the ground. flow. But yeah, cool area up there. Well, you know, I've</p>



<p>seen it in pictures, and you know, you always know that pictures never really do the area justice. Oh, yeah, it's totally true. But I mean, even even from the pictures, and Okay, so I just do want to touch really quick not to get off-topic. But Billy, you and Marina both do something pretty awesome. I mean, you talk about packing a camera around a lot. I think you should tell people that. You know, kind of what you guys do. I mean, you guys are photographers that yeah, that's, that's your hobby. That's your passion. And I think our field time. Yeah, this outdoor exploration is just kind of like a catalyst to what you guys love to do.</p>



<p>That's, that's the way I remember seeing it. You know, I remember watching. I remember watching 127 hours, I was still in college. Yeah, I was like, Man, I'm gonna set my camera up. With the $500 I'm able to scrap together for the summer, I'm gonna go do some kind of thing. There was also another photographer guy that I followed. And I liked I liked a lot of the images that he had. He got like an old Land Rover, or Range Rover, you know, Range Rover, like an old forum and like a like a left hand drive one. Yeah, and and like set that up with a like a tent and stuff and did this whole circuit of national parks, three parts of the West, I was like, oh, man, that is really cool. I want to do something like that I want to go through. And I was just getting out of school, I wanted to, like figure out a bunch of stuff about photography, which is what I was most interested in. And that's where I was like, man, I gotta figure out a way to travel for a long time and get a bunch of photographs taken at the same time. And that's when Yeah, that's how like Marina and I like first started doing more seriously some of the outdoor travel stuff that we got into. And I've been liking doing it. I mean, I guess it's like six years later, of just that sort of stuff. But yeah, you guys, you guys have really put out some incredible stuff, dude. Thanks, man. I appreciate it. I got it. I got to collect it more. I got to put it out.</p>



<p>I mean, like all the art in our house is is photography from the two of you? Oh, yeah,</p>



<p>man. Thank you. Thanks for putting up all our prints that we dropped. Yeah, I mean, I don't I don't do it. Because I like you. I do it because it's good pictures. Thanks, Robbie. I'm down here. Yeah. Man, that was that was one thing I always thought about is, is how cool some of these spots are that? That it seems like people don't really get to go to, you know, that's the part of photography I've always been most fascinated with is that ability Where is ice photography asserted this, this opportunity to go find the coolest looking thing in the world, and try and capture it somehow and show us? Absolutely. And so that's so part of that was kind of my drive my interest to nature into the outdoors, where that's where I always think the coolest things are. And so that's why, you know, I wanted to go out there and, and do as many types of landscape photos as I could. But backpacking, I mean, it really provides so many opportunities that are separate from what you get on that track, that tourist track of photos that you could go on if you're going to see. Yeah, natural places, like the bison in Yellowstone. Yeah, yeah, the drive by bison, in Yellowstone. Yeah, you know, whatever, whatever that shot is in, in Yosemite, are very beautiful. And I've taken those same pictures and they're great. But backpacking is super interesting, because it really makes the perspective different probably like how it is, you know, when people go skiing or snowboarding or something, you know, you take the lift up to the top of the mountain. And just that, that work of getting to the top of the mountain, you see such a different perspective on the landscape, and sometimes seems so much more dramatic.</p>



<p>And so that's something I wanted to touch on also is and and I'm not a photographer, but I would have to imagine if you were just a photographer, and let me know what you think about this, but you're a photographer, okay? And you're gonna go photograph the Eiffel Tower. Okay? Perfect. You're the 15,000th photographer to go take a professional photo of the Eiffel Tower. It doesn't have that much meaning to it. Okay. spot, you've, you've taken a great picture. Excellent, but somebody else has done it. But I think when you get out there and you, you really separate yourself from things that people are photographing, and not just about photographs, but you put in the work, you put in the time, the effort, the planning, and you get out to a remote area, you can find beauty in the simpler things, because you can appreciate that. And photography ends up being this, this, this expression of art, right? Yeah, that's what is this artistic expression? Yeah. And so I think a lot of that kind of pushes through in your guys's photography. And I mean, one that sticks out in my mind is you guys, you guys were shooting tin cans, you know, oh, yeah. out in the desert. And there's this, there's this picture of these cans lined up. And it really just kind of captures a time far beyond this. You know, I I mean, it feels like it feels like 18. You know, 70, it doesn't feel like we're running rampant it does. And, and but what's cool about that is you guys were living that moment. And that really is kind of what pushes through in that. And, and you feel that through the picture, because you guys were there and, and you being there and taking a picture of something that you guys thought was important. It really portrays to the person that's looking at that,</p>



<p>man, that's a big part of it. I mean, like it is like working on music or doing a lot of other types of creative expression. It seems like so much of it, probably like 10 years of it is just trying to figure out how to get through an app and try and figure out how to communicate or how to put the pieces together. And after that it tries to show so that that seems important. But yeah, I'd like that picture. You're talking about the one of the cans in Yeah, in eastern California. Those are all cans that we found out there. That had been, you know, it looked nuts to because like in the top seven, you can see where the the can opener tool was used on them. Yeah, the old church keys, they probably were from 1870, I had wondered about that. You might know about it. My grandpa told me you're like that you could, like tin cans would would kind of I guess what it would be oxidized, you know, rust out back to the earth and about 10 or 15 years? Yeah, I wasn't sure if that was true or not. Or like it would just be stuck out there forever. But yeah, it looked like they were old cans, like old old tin cans pop with the church key and left out there.</p>



<p>Yeah, a lot of those that I find. I always find myself out hunting or hiking and I find an old candy shop or something I end up searching through it. A lot of times I'll find cans that are typically from, like, the early to mid 60s. That you</p>



<p>know, that makes sense. It seems like the construction of it the way it's built. It's different than a modern one a lot of the time. Yeah, but yeah, I'd seen a few that seemed like they were around the 60s.</p>



<p>I mean, they're so oxidized though. you'd swear there from the beginning of time. Yeah.</p>



<p>The Indians. Yeah. Exactly. dropped in Arrowhead and this beer bottle. Indians love their canned corn. Yeah, it's pretty funny. But, but that's Yeah, that's some of the some of that that backpacking stuff that I'd done. But you were saying you're in the Kings range. I want to Yeah, about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's done, uh, almost bordering the Sequoia National Forest. And it's about, boy, this is just me throwing a number based on driving. But it seemed like it was about 65, maybe 70 miles east of Fresno. Oh says yeah, yeah. And the reason we went down there is my cousin was getting married. And as the only family member on the trip, Amber and I were able to go down and witness their marriage with just a couple friends. And really, it was kind of neat. They drew the permit for the area. And they brought along a friend of a friend and then a friend of that friend, so really, nobody knew anybody. Oh, wow. Okay, on this trip, and it became It was a fantastic trip. But I mean, such a place of grandeur. It was just, it was so beautiful. But it was the Great Lakes loop for anybody that may be interested in this. And if you are, I definitely suggest checking it out. And I really promote, you know, put yourself out there and try it. But it was it was cool. It was a I think was 55 miles. That's a long trip. That's like a good set of miles. Yeah, no. And, I mean, it was it was great. And, you know, I've done I've done several hikes, you know, multi-day hikes. But this was the first one that I This was the first time I'd ever really been tested. You know, I mean, the first day, we climbed like, 6500 feet. And that was the first day. That's significant. Yeah. And so I mean, you know, everybody's pretty beat and 6500 views and that bad when you don't have anything on your back, but it was just like, the first day was like this quick little trail through the forest. It was pretty, and then before you know it, you're just like, switchbacks for like four hours. You know, and you've got 4550 pounds on your back. But anyway, we made Basecamp up just below the Alpine level. The mosquitoes were terrible.</p>



<p>There.</p>



<p>But I mean, talk about the most pristine country, and I don't know if you've ever been to Fresno, but you're down there, and you're just thinking to yourself. Well, at least I was, you know, yeah,</p>



<p>presidents maybe not the most pristine.</p>



<p>Yeah, President and they're like, yeah, it's just east of Fresno. Oh, great. I'm like, there's not National Park anywhere near I saw pictures. This is not what this place looks like. But no, it was great the first night went up there we made camp. And yeah, I think it we were on the North Fork the Kings river, as I believe. And oh my god, what an impressive river talk about an angry pissed off river man this thing is just frozen. I mean, like you go down to wash your face or fill your water bottle or something like that. I mean, in one One false move, man. You're gone. And that's the end of you. That is that is not a river to play around? For sure. Yeah. Yeah, it's just like 50 miles of class five. is nasty.</p>



<p>Is this lower down? Or is this up into the hills? Like once you made the Alpine level?</p>



<p>Well, so there's a when you come into the Kings Canyon National Park area, there's there's a bunch of different stuff. or excuse me, there's much different campsites or campgrounds, I should say, around the area. And there's the river kind of just meanders through there. And then you're always just kind of near the river. You kind of saw like the Rogue River Trail where you kind of, you're near it, and then you end up in the hills, then you come back near it. It's always nearby, though. Oh, sure. If you head downhill, you're gonna find the river. And so there was a lot of that. But</p>



<p>how many days did you guys take up here for the for the 55 mile chip? We did five, five, and then you guys are pretty sad doing what is that? Like about 11 miles a day? Yeah.</p>



<p>Our first three days were our longest days. We did like 15. We did 15 miles like the first three days. Now we did 15 miles the first day we did 12 the second day, you know, but somewhere in that ballpark. But our last two days were our shorter days. Okay,</p>



<p>yeah, that's probably the way to do it. Man. I remember being so exhausted of there. Do you ever tell me? Well, it might be different for you. You guys are more healthy. I'm ever going out there. And I remember craving these weird foods. I talked to some other hackers about this before too. Like, were you just like, like, Oh my god, I just want this foods so much right now. But I wanted to ask you if there's anything like that, that came to mind, I got a couple of months. If you need,</p>



<p>you know, not really, I mean, what I mean, don't get me wrong. We all sat around, like fire eating are like, you know, in and I'm gonna complain about Mountain House meals. Like, like they're not good, but there's so much better than what you used to. Oh, absolutely. I mean, we're so spoiled. Like, that's actually I mean, that's just the that's like what we used to college, you know, that was like, Yeah, absolutely. No,</p>



<p>I'm pretty happy with a mountain house meal. Well, maybe not a home but but man when you're out it like it really inspired. You've been hiking 15 miles, and you've done a 6500 foot elevation gain. Mountain House meal, if it's beef stroganoff, it's gonna work.</p>



<p>Oh, stroganoff, beef stroganoff, the best meal that's in you know, my biggest tip of advice is bring Tabasco or tap to with you. I don't care if you're a weight hound, and you're worried about all those extra ounces in your backpack? Do yourself a favor. Get rid of a pair of socks and pack a bottle of Tabasco. Because, yeah, it just it livens up the mouth. And also, you can sell the basket of people while you're there because everybody else didn't think of it.</p>



<p>Tabasco, five bucks.</p>



<p>Yeah. Everybody, everybody sees you pull it out goes, Oh, yeah, that's what I should have done. No, I</p>



<p>think hot sauce was the thing that I was spicy, was the thing that I was really missing the most, like in succession after a number of days.</p>



<p>Well, and so I you know, I, I joke around and I get the Mountain House meals a hard time. But I mean, they really are good. I guess. The biggest thing is, is that you they're all kind of on the same palette. Oh, it's this I don't know how to say that. It's just, they're all kind of like the same level of flavor. Nothing like really stands out. They're all good. But I mean, they're all just, I mean, it beats the hell out of an MRI.</p>



<p>I had an MRI a couple of times and then I did I didn't really enjoy the experience. I'm way happier with the the freeze dried stuff, though. Yeah, boiling water to now.</p>



<p>Yeah, but you know, you get hungry enough, and it's all pretty good. Yeah, I totally believe that. Remember when everyone ever moved into the house. I had this box of Mountain House meals that I had for hiking and And, like, I don't know, one night I came home from work and she's just eating one. Like, what do you do? Like? Well, I've been I've been eating these for dinner the last couple nights. I'm like,</p>



<p>No, say they're pretty good. Yeah. I mean, they are good. Yeah.</p>



<p>Every day you need you need like something different. That's where it's just nice to have that space. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, it's</p>



<p>totally true. But man, I remember that. I remember I went to cupcake so bad. What was what was it? What was it like out there in the Kings range? We're going to wrap up in a minute. But But yeah, what was it like out in the in the Kings rage zone?</p>



<p>So, man, it was it was awesome. It was just such a beautiful area. And I've never really, I've never actually been to any real national parks before. I've always just kind of been, you know, in our own backyard and type of thing. Yeah. It's been out, but that was, that was my first experience like really am just like, you know, some of those public lands that have just been preserved through conservation. And it was fantastic, man. So that was day one. We played some dominoes stuff like that camped out. But one of the coolest things that I was able to experience was</p>



<p>somebody brought powdered Lipton tea. Okay, okay. Phone and, and vodka. Say you mix a little bit of this tea with water. You know, it makes your team x. You know, you mix a little vodka in and then you've got them you've got cocktails up there at the Alpine level. And, and, but you know what, it's so great at the end of the day. Oh, man, I'm sure it is. Yeah,</p>



<p>everybody just relaxes. And it's not an excess, because you can only rush it so much at night. But Nah, man, it was it was great. But so that was day one. I mean, kind of the same thing. Day two, we did 4500 feet of elevation on day two. And that's when we got up above, like into that Alpine level. And what I found that was interesting is you actually you can't burn. You can't have fires up above the Alpine line. Okay, or above the tree line. Excuse me. I've heard it. Because like erosion issues. Yeah, we're just uprooting trees, the small trees saplings and things like that. And then people were just stripping the few trees around the area of firewood. So they just kind of established a no fire above the tree line rule. So no fire that that was a cold night. Um, but we got by, you know, and that's the other thing too is your, your body kind of goes into that. biological clock mode where you're, you're in bed when it's dark. And you wake up when it's light. Yeah,</p>



<p>that happened pretty quick for me when I was out, getting used to it. Yeah.</p>



<p>Do you notice how much better you feel when that happens? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. It's just, it's like your body actually feels. You know? Like, it's been efficient. Yeah. I've noticed. Yeah. But anyway, so we did that. Day three was the most impressive of all the days. And that was when we went over Glen pass. So Glen pass, the summit is at 11,990 feet. Wow. And it was my first time actually being up into like, glacial you know, areas, I don't know. But we hiked up that day, we got into the snow. I mean, there were like snow spots here and there on the hike up. But at this point, we, I think we did like another, you know, 3000 feet in elevation that day. But we really started getting up into the snow. It started snowing quite a bit. And it was the first time that I've just like seen these glacial lakes. And it was absolutely so impressive. Yeah, they're beautiful. I know. I mean, the first time I saw and I just had to stop and just kind of really take it in to take it into account of what I was seeing. But so we get up there, and we're for anybody that's not familiar with Glen pass, if you get a chance, look it up and try to find pictures in the late spring on a good snow year. Anyway, the week before, they were actually requiring crampons and ice picks to go over. Wow. So we had purchased all these things. But last-minute we were told that we didn't eat them. So and by no means am I a mountain You know, I love the outdoors, and I'll take on about anything. But this this was a little outside of my comfort zone. Yeah, I understand. So we get up there and, man, it was it was just, it was crazy. You're looking at it, and you're just going all right, you know, one foot in front of the other. We're gonna take this one step at a time. Cuz honestly, by the time you're hitting the summit of that, of that pass, I mean, if you fell, you're on such a steep grade, like, you're going all the way down the hill, and you're gonna be cartwheeling down. You're gonna accelerate quick. It's just gonna be way too much, way too fast. Yeah. Yeah. And and we didn't have Well, yeah, I guess. I mean, we had crampons. We put them on before we went over the past. But, I mean, we all made it up. It took us about an hour and a half, I guess. Just being careful and cautious. Yeah, you're moving very, very slow at this point. Yeah. Because I mean, room for air is so marginal. So anyway, we get up there. It was like the last 15 feet was the most sketchy area that we countered. And there was there is that point where you're just thinking to yourself, you're like, I can't do this. I can't do it. And at that point, you're way too committed to start thinking like that. Absolutely. That's the worst. I hate feeling. Yeah, I remember I was just like, Hey, man, shut up. Your eight steps away from being done? Like, push through? Let's go. And so, so we did it. And I mean, my biggest concern was amber up there. You know, I know my footing is, yeah. And I've had a heavy pack on my back before, but I wasn't sure how she was doing. She did great. She killed it. did a great job. No,</p>



<p>it's awesome. It's really cool. That you guys are opposite to it's awesome to like, get up.</p>



<p>Yeah. And you know what, we get to the top and we're all celebrate, and everybody's like, so happy. We take some pictures and stuff. And then there's like this storm moving. And you can see, and when you're up at 12,000 feet comes in fast in the Sierras. Yeah. You see these things coming off in the distance, and you can see lightning and everything. And, and you can tell that it's moving towards you. And it's and I mean, the very real situation of it is you need to get off that. Yeah. You don't want to hang out there. So I decided to push off and head downward. And at this point, we kind of realized that going down is probably worse than the way up. Oh, yeah. It's the same grade. Now. You're just going downhill with all the weight on your back.</p>



<p>Oh my gosh, are you guys going like straight down? Nice. First, are you guys backing down the mountain? Well, so</p>



<p>you're backing down the mountain? Pretty much you've got your two crashes, right? Yeah. You've got your hiking poles. And, and also, before we went on this trip, I thought hiking poles were just for, like, old people and Stacy's not true. They're so helpful. They really are. I</p>



<p>mean, I remember you know, and you notice this I bet you guys are probably in better shape. But I noticed like just the my my ankles, like they just weren't in shape for four and a half straight. They are, you know, 30 or 40 miles of hiking, and they get fatigued, and you'd like you get closer to like losing it. But those hiking or the hiking poles, man, they just totally stabilized you.</p>



<p>Yeah, they did. And honestly, it kind of makes you feel like, like you got four-wheel drive or something you almost feel like a dog like you can. Honestly, though, I mean in, and I was having problems with my back. I don't care how much you situate your pack and think about how it needs to be set up and things like that. Your pack always hurts you. You're just not used to it always carrying that kind of weight around your hips and on your shoulders surgery and but the ability to use those hiking sticks is just kind of like something to take the weight off. Oh, yeah. Something to lean forward with. I mean, that helped out immensely. And especially on the way down off of Glen pass. I have kind of a pre existing knee injury that I had happened to me snowboarding several years ago. And on the way down, it kind of just kind of irritated that injury. And that nice it actually became pretty serious and it started raining and it started raining and raining and raining. And I felt quite a bit behind and Amber was cold and I told her to go on you know, I'd figure out where everybody was. And so there was this take situation of separation between everybody that's what you want. Yeah, Amber amber waited up for me because, you know, I hurt my knee. And then and then you know, somebody waited up for then my cousin waited up for amber and then somebody waited up for Matt and But anyway, it just ended up being this scattered group of people. And then we made our way into camp. That night, which I won't get into detail, but that was a long, long situation to find where we're gonna stay similar to this to Yeah, yeah, I mean, we set up camp that night and we experienced one of the most pro storms ever really, when you're up at that Alpine level, I mean, everything is intensified, like we're, we got there and it was just dumping, you know, retired. And so we set up our tents as quick as we can try to keep things as dry as we can, I guess, should get into the tents get into dry clothes, get into sleeping bags, try to get your body temperature up again. Sure. And then, you know, weathered the storm for about three hours and then it broke and we came outside it was beautiful and sunny, and we all hung out and had a good time for about an hour and a half. And then the storm came back. And we all went back to bed. Dark nightfall came perfect. And I mean, just this the most intense storm came in. And I've never experienced Thunder lightning like this. And I love thunder and lightning. But this, this was to the point where you're like, Okay, I can lead up through this one. Yeah. I mean, it was was it insane? Six hours.</p>



<p>Yeah. Really? And yeah. And you see those you see those pictures are like the the video real? Like, you know, lightning strikes in the distance and that purple cloud as it hits the desert. That picture you always see that? That's</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. Or like, or like, mountaineers on Everest, and they're huddled up in their tents in their tents just flapping around. It looks like it would just sail away if they weren't inside of it. Yeah. Yeah, it was it was all of that, you know. And you would lay there and the lightning would hit and I mean, it was, this is no exaggeration. It was almost as when the light was dissipating. The thunder would start, and I mean, it was so directly on top of us. Oh, my gosh, it was just a it was absolutely incredible. I was so happy to be able to experience that.</p>



<p>Yeah, that sounds so cool. And then it asked and you guys got through the rest of the night was it was the hike out after that. All right.</p>



<p>Yeah. The next day. We dealt with the rain. Yeah, day. That was a long, tiring day. We got into camp, same thing soaking wet. Get into whatever you have. It's dry. And you know, and I left my I left my rain fly from my pack at home because I didn't think I'd need it. Yeah. and ended up doing the trash bag thing. Okay. But yeah, anyway, I mean, the big morale booster for that was we spent about 45 minutes trying to get a fire going with everything we had. Finally, Amber came up with some sappy pine cones that were Oh, rock over here hadn't been permeated by the water yet. And we were able to get a fire going and</p>



<p>getting the fire going when it's wet is not easy. Yeah, it's nuts.</p>



<p>No, it's not. And I and I've, like I've studied different ways making fire, things you can do and different tenders you can use and man when it comes down to it, and you're actually shaking, because you're kind of at that hypothermic stage. Yeah. And you're trying to just rationalize what's best. And how do I do this most efficiently? It's just never as easy as when you practiced it in your yard in the middle of summer. It's totally true. You know? Hey, yeah, yeah, absolutely good. Yeah. Yeah, they're freezing. But anyway, yeah, I had a great fire had a great time. Last day, we hiked out now we all ended up going getting pizza and</p>



<p>hanging out. That's the way to do it, man. Celebrate with a big meal. Man every time Yeah. Go for a burger, or a big spread of Chinese food. You got to come back and just get like, whatever. Whatever it is you like needed?</p>



<p>It was it was so funny to we're all like, yeah, this this we get to the pizza place in each purse. There was like, six or seven of us, right? And each of us ordered a large pizza. Like we're gonna eat the whole thing. And we ordered like for milkshakes yourself. They're nice. You know? You drink like a third of the milk. Yeah, third of it. slices of pizza, and you're like, I can't do anymore. That we had leftovers. We had left.</p>



<p>Three different pieces of leftovers, man. That's a great story. Robert, they should tell me the the the Kings range. There's a couple others I want to get to too. We got to break these up, and we'll stretch them out over a bunch of podcasts. It's good thing we're doing a bunch, you know</p>



<p>Yeah, no I yeah, like I talked about there's a couple things that this this one actually brought up to me that I'll talk to you about later and maybe it will be the next episode. Stay tuned.</p>



<p>Thanks for doing this. This podcast with you man. We did a we did a solid hour. Got a couple of good backpacking stories in I think that a sweet Yeah.</p>



<p>So So hey, maybe I mean tentatively we talked about these hiking trips we had, but what do you really bring on a hiking trip? Ah.</p>



<p>Oh man. Yeah, that might be a point of the bait. I want to I want to talk to you about that stuff. Yeah, we should go in like a whole episode of like the gear. We think cuz I know you pack a heavier bat. You're used to it. I'm not I'm scared to heavy packs. When it comes. They suck. Yeah, I try. I try and steer every well cuz I also get stuck with the tripod and the camera bag.</p>



<p>Which is a That's true. You guys, you're you're already ahead. Yeah. Not ahead. But I mean, just the head weight. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah. So that's where it's a bulk. Yeah, I try. And I try and wrap that down a little bit. But But yeah, we should talk about that. I want to break down some of the different gear that that you're into for backpacking, or for some of the outdoor stuff. I think that might be a good another good couple of episodes to break out to. Absolutely, man, that'd be pretty cool. We got some material. Well, thanks, man, for reminding so much good outdoors material, man. It's great. I've got a feed app. It's on iTunes. You guys should check it out, review it or read it. If you end up hearing it. That'd be great for us. But hey, thanks for doing it.</p>



<p>Absolutely, Billy. So we talked about doing your photos. Is there anywhere that people could go if they wanted to find your photos got to go to</p>



<p>Billy Nieman photo.com. You can go to App Billy Newman. If you want to check out my Instagram page. All the photos make it up there. They make it up everywhere else too. You can find me at Twitter or Facebook or any of those things. But But yeah, man the website, see my portfolio. All the photos stuff up there. Bunch of landscapes. My kidding. It's a beautiful stuff. Thanks, Robert. I appreciate it. I have it. My house. shrouded it's beautiful plastered in Billy's photos. I appreciate it, man. Well, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast with me. Anytime. Let's, let's do it again soon. Thanks for doing a long one with me too. I know we went a little over but but it was great, man. Yeah. You know, we</p>



<p>always set a time limit. But I'm never opposed to going over under you know, it's I think it's all subject to conversation.</p>



<p>I dig. I like it. I think it's great. And, you know, in podcasts, they're built to go long, really, so it's not bad. But yeah, Robert, I really appreciate you doing this podcast. We got Episode Four out of the way coming into that. That next stretch of five through 10. Man, so be good. We got we got the big growth. The big growth ghanimat podcast right there, man. So yeah, man. On behalf of Robert Miska rap. My name is Billy Newman. I want to say thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range
Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon.
Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
 
 


Hey, whats]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range</p>
<p>Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon.</p>
<p>Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm.</p>
<p>Billy Newman Robert Biscarret</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>


<p>Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman, and I'm here with Robert Bisca. rat. We're recording the get out there podcast. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm doing good, Billy. How are you? It's cool, man. I'm doing good up here. And yeah, thanks for calling in tonight. Recording Episode Four of the get out there podcast. It's kind of cool, man. I like like doing this. It is. Yeah. It's been a great time. How are you liking this rain? Oh, man. It was kind of well, you know, as we said today, for part of it. It was all right. Like I was getting through the day. And then the last half of it was just like a ton of rain. How was it</p>



<p>going? Man, it was a it was pretty good for us the day it's started raining pretty heavily now. I've actually been working out in, in Northern California this last week. So I mean, the weather has been a little bit different kind of getting outside of the valley. Typically a little bit more sunshine than we get here in the valley. But But yeah, now that I'm back in the valley, it's rainy.</p>



<p>Were you were you out pass this excuse over there in that part of Northern California?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Up there in the hill area.</p>



<p>Oh, I've been out in the hill area a couple times. Yeah. I think I went out there with Tyler once to the to the Buddhist temple. Oh, been out there before? No, as far as I knew, all that existed there was a liquor store. Well, the liquor store I mean, that's what's in Hill, but I think</p>



<p>freeway exit, not where you would see a Buddhist temple. But no, there's, I think there's a road it's, it's whatever that first exit is once you get over the scuse. And into California, as you come back down that backside is that first exit, it might not Oak Hill, but it was right right there. Right in that area. You take that and, and you cut back West, along along the ridge of the South line of the mountains and you go back a little ways and you kind of cut up a bit. And it's like nowheresville out there. There's just like, there's like a couple like ghost town Aries out there, it looks like and like, I know, like one of those kind of short railroad sections, like where they stack up cars, something like Yeah, but then yeah, you just turn there you go up into the woods a little further and you end up at this pretty impressive Buddhist temple. Like it's been there for years. Yeah, I guess like that the Ashland hippies kind of bought it and set it up. And, you know,</p>



<p>I was gonna say is that a hotspot like that, that weird 150 miles between readin and Ashland that nobody lives in is that just like, I</p>



<p>think it's, it's for its tranquility. It's, it's been, it's intense. Like, you go out there, I think we've taken pictures of it before, but they like have all the Buddhist flags of flower. You know, like on the on the side of the hills that you can watch. It's got it's kind of cool. It's like a pretty impressive structure that they build out there. Like it looks like an orange a Chinese building, and then lower down. There's like these columns that are all painted red with like, you know, ornate symbols on it. And they like spin in this like, pretty big, like, drum system that goes and there's like 12 of them. And they like all spin as you go into this temple. Wow. Yeah. is a pretty heavy duty template for just out in the backcountry. Nowhere. Have you been out there much like out into some of the stuff in the skews?</p>



<p>No, not really. I mean, you and I did kind of on point with this podcast, but we did. We did the hike up pilot rock. Oh, yeah. I was thinking about that. That is up there. Yeah, I mean, that's that's really like and I mean, other than snowboarding up on Mount Ashland. That's kind of my only experience with that area.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's right. You know, the six keys is what I want to get into more like pilot rock is cool. I think. I think a pilot rock more as like something of Eastern Oregon or more like Table Rock. You know, when you think of Kind of, yeah, that side of it. But I remember hiking pilot rock with you. That was like, late last week of July 2008. I remember gas was 525 a gallon. Oh my God. He's like 550 a gallon when you went over to Ashland it was</p>



<p>isn't that when Tyler hit that rock in his Camry hatchback. And oh yeah. Ended up pushing that hole in his oil pan. Or it was his transmission pan? Oh, yes. It was he was leaking transmission fluid everywhere.</p>



<p>I remember that night there was thought that like it might be the end of the Camry and the guy now, but yeah, it was I remember that. Yeah, like the whole drive back, like loaded down with people and yeah, just I guess it dripped out over the trip. But yeah, it's too bad. I remember Dawson came with us on</p>



<p>that. That was Dawson that that turned us on to that and for those of you that may be listening Dawson was our was our high school. English teacher and still still a good friend to this day. So I did, but yeah, he took us out there showed us showed us around the area and ended up being a great hike. I recommend that anybody that has access to that area</p>



<p>Yeah, it is a it's kind of a challenging hike and sometimes I mean there's there's a little pirate, you know, you gotta you gotta kind of get up up No, you just, you just got to get up. But there's a couple challenging spots in that hike. I remember getting there thinking like, Oh, this is like 30% rock climbing or like not like actual doing but like in difficulty sometimes. It's like this greatest Steve This is like crumbly rock that's coming around. But it</p>



<p>was it's not someplace you would take like your your little kids. But I mean any any able bodied individuals would be able to get up there, you know? Yeah. And do it do it. All right.</p>



<p>I remember the the the geocache that was up there at the summit.</p>



<p>I don't know I never was able to kind of like do that with you guys. In fact, that whole geocache movement passed right? I mean, just kind of like the whole Pokemon just to two major things that just never affected my life in any way.</p>



<p>I hear you the geocaching, I hope a little different than Pokemon but, but I remember we found it. We weren't looking for it. But it was on that hike when we were there. At the summit. I think it was like one of those things. It was challenging enough to get up there that it was sort of obvious where it was located. But yeah, there's a there's just the geocache at the summit point of pilot rock. It was like some little film canister to kind of sign your name. But yeah, one of the guys we were with pulled it out. Okay. Look, I found this geocache stashed up here. Let's sign it. And remember, we like stashed up there again. Just honestly, have I ever taken you to the cave up out of waters Creek area? You did one time? Yeah. Okay. Nice. I'm not gonna go into great detail about that. Because it's kind of like a Yeah, I get a special a special place. But yeah, that's kind of neat. That little peanut butter jar therewith. It's been in that cave for 17 years. Wow. Boy, more than that. It was 17 years when I took you, so probably 20 years now. Yeah, yeah. And only one other person assigned it. That is nuts was pretty insane. Yeah. People don't find too. Yeah, I think about that, like how few times people have been in some areas, or you know how many years it takes before someone gets back to that spot?</p>



<p>Yeah. You ever wonder that when you get rid of it really out into remote places? And I thought about this a lot when I was firefighting? Oh, yeah. You know, you get out into those areas. And you're, you know, you're 1012 miles out into it, looking for a lightning strike. And it just kind of dawns on you. When was the last time that anybody was out here? You know, like, I mean, how many hundreds of years ago? Could somebody potentially walk along this area? Yeah, it would have been so long ago. Yeah. The likelihood of that happening the frequency? Yeah. I mean, what is what's the likelihood of somebody being up on this ridge at? You know, I don't know. 7000 feet out and assist us? Right. Yeah. It's just kind of like, I don't know. Yeah, that's a deep wilderness. Because, you know, yeah, it might not mean you. Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's what I mean, you could probably count the people throughout history that I've taken that path that you're walking on, probably on one hand.</p>



<p>Yeah, I gotta think about that, that there's really some super remote areas. I mean, even still out here in Oregon and Southern Oregon, especially like, some of it's still kind of the frontier. It feels like, Oh, very much. So. You know, yeah, it feels like what's left to the frontier in the in the 21st century? Yeah, there are some some pretty significant locations or wilderness or stretches a wilderness out there that I guess yeah, like, just don't have a lot of people moving through it at all.</p>



<p>Well, and honestly, that's what that's what keeps me in this area. I mean, oh, yeah, absolutely. It definitely is an economy. That is it's just kind of that unexplored wilderness and what the area has to offer as far as</p>



<p>I know.</p>



<p>No, it's really cool about that and how much I miss it. Now that I'm up here. Still in Eugene still with a lot of nature around me. I mean, gosh, is like so much the Macan Willamette wilderness to go into but I think back to just like behind our high school, you know, if we if we just wanted to skip class and go back to school, it was like this awesome mountain road that would go up, you know, into this like crazy, endless maze of mountains that goes like deep into southern or Northern California. It just Yes, it like that whole like mountain range just started right there. And that was just like mountains and wilderness, back for for miles and miles out into the next day.</p>



<p>I know it You always just kind of like, yeah, whatever is behind the mountain, but then you start thinking about what's behind the mountain. You just go. Oh, wait, this</p>



<p>is it for a long, long way. Yeah. You know, and we're lucky. I mean, a lot of people don't have that. Oh, yeah, absolutely. That, you know, and they'll never be able to experience that. Yeah, I</p>



<p>think I think some of that stuff of doing things where you're removed from, from a population for a long time is really cool. And it's something where you, you really feel like you get back. Not back to nature so much. I mean, I always have like, some kind of technology, like always been cameras and stuff like when I'm going out. So I understand like, it's not a naturalists approach. Or maybe it's not what I mean, but just the kind of the thing of preparing yourself as a person having all your equipment or you know, having your gear, having some steadiness to you and then going out away from people for a while. I always think that's a really cool Yeah. I didn't do I want to do more backpacking stuff with you? And</p>



<p>so Cinnabon point, yeah. So that's, that's what I was getting to. Oh, yeah. Kind of on point with people that may not have that opportunity. I want to talk to you, Billy, oh, maybe some good opportunities, places to go hike. I know that you've hiked in not only the lower room, but I don't want to get too hung up on that. I think we've focused on that a little bit. And the whole world and I would like to touch on it. But but there's so much more out there beyond Yeah, dairy, and that wilderness. And so I want to talk to you about I know you did a hiking trip through the walls, and that's up in Canada, North Eastern Oregon.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's a great spot. Yeah. And I kind of wanted to hear your take on that. Man. I really want to get you up there. In fact, actually, that's one of the spots that we should plan on going this summer if we're able to make a couple trips out to some spots together. But the allow is is awesome.</p>



<p>Yeah, I've I've I've heard nothing but Oh, okay. So actually, here's kind of an interesting anecdote.</p>



<p>I today I learned that will allow, and I'm assuming it's spent spelt the same way. I was listening to an Alaskan. Okay, Hunter, kind of, uh, you know, telling stories about his hunting situations. And he was telling me that, oh, williwaw, which was spelled w i l l o w A, which is the same way as the walau is correct. I there's an A in there. But a real close. Okay. Yeah. Right. So so maybe I'm maybe I am confused. But he was saying that what it is, is unpredictable winds winds that are constantly changing. So if you're out there hunting and stocking the animal, Willow. I believe that's how you pronounced it will potentially give your center away. Oh. And I'm wondering if maybe the shape of those canyons and in mountain ranges don't don't create some maybe unpredictable winds. That'd be interesting. I</p>



<p>wonder if that's where the etymology comes from? I remember Yeah. So that area is really cool. I want to get you there. It's it's one of the only glacially formed areas in Oregon. Like it's sort of getting into some of the stuff that we see a little further north when we get up to Glacier National Park. Yeah, further into to to Canada and into the Columbia range. In fact, if you look at a wide map of the Northwest, you can kind of see that the terrain, how it sort of comes down from the Rocky Mountains, if you kind of trace that up into Canada and Columbia range, as that kind of comes down. This is sort of the westernmost edge of something some of the mountains that would be down on the the edge of the panhandle of Idaho that go up into Columbia and then in the summer stuff that goes further east over to the Colorado's, but it's not really connected, but it's like one of the last thing that's over there, and it is really an unusual piece of land for that area. Like you've been over in Eastern Oregon plenty of times. Everything around there like Pendleton La Grande, everything up into Washington. It's all super flat grassland. It's just like rolling hills for really long. Yeah, like you get down to the Chico's of the Blue Mountains. There's there's terrain out there. But it's really not like the allow mountains. And so I think that will allow mountains used to be a Nez Pierce like an Indian city-state, or I don't know if that's what that would be. But it was like, it was kind of like a like a section of the Nez Perce tribe that stretched up into Washington and Idaho and Montana. And I think they they had like one of their last outposts there. And like the Oregon American or Oregon, Native American Indian Wars back in 1870, something like that. That's that was big here in Southern Oregon to during the 1850s. Yeah, I bet it probably was everywhere. But that's where we get Chief Joseph and the town of Joseph up there. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So So Joseph is that small town? That's right outside. of the allowance. And when we went there, I think the first time I went there, I did a solo backpacking trip. I got there with my dad when I was a kid. But when I when I got to the point I was on that trip to do that photoshoot back in 2011. It was fall, kind of like mid late September. It was really a nice time of year to go through. I was worried about doing Alpine hiking, as it was getting like later into September, because I really didn't want to get caught in a freeze because I didn't have the equipment for it. But I got to Joseph, I park the Camry. I said everything. I've had the backpack and like a couple days worth of supplies. And I took off I think I did nine miles up to a spot called ice lake. So is about four miles in a canyon. That was a pretty pretty easy grade. And then it was another like four miles. A switchbacks big. Yeah. Every hiker loves it. Yeah. Yeah, it's a it's a lot of switchbacks. It breaks it up. Well, but But yeah, it's a pretty it's a pretty steep incline like you do you do most of the canyon. And then you really just have to get up the side of this hill for a long time. But it's really rewarding. You get out there, you get to this. I mean, have you done? Well, yeah, you probably have definitely in in some of the firefighting stuff that you did, but probably in a lot of the other backpacking stuff you might have done. I was wondering if you'd been up to budget like that Alpine level? Or that the Alpine lakes, that sort of atmosphere terrain?</p>



<p>Yeah. Something I want to talk to you about a little later. Is my experience down in Kings Canyon near Sequoia National Park? Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I want to break that down with you in a bit. But yeah, that Yeah, that's a cool area. And so yeah, you know, like when it's like when you get up above the tree line, and you're in those, the snowmelt lakes that show up kind of high in those those areas, in the mountains there. But it's really cool, because in the world, Lao is probably like what you find in other areas where you come back back into, but in the allow is surprisingly, for naturally beautiful as they are they're really under-populated. I think they've got a lot more popular recently. But it was so cool. Because when I was there in September, I was the only person at this lake. Oh, I absolutely believe it. Yeah, see, just that kind of, um, the amount of solitude that you get, I mean, I think I saw one other person walk through a day later.</p>



<p>Well, what's so cool about that is when you get up to these remote areas, what you've done is you've eliminated about 95% of the people that are willing to go off of the the natural path, you know, they have the the tourist center, you can drive your car up for they're there for the day, take some pictures, do things of that nature, but very few people are a going to find the time or be even have the willingness to really spend the time to actually get out there and explore. And that's the beauty of doing these types of trips is you can really find that solitude and find yourself in situations where you haven't seen anybody for days on it. That's that's what I really loved about it. No, it</p>



<p>was amazing when I was up there, because that was that was really the first experience I had of solo backpacking. That's the thing I recommend to I mean, you've probably done some other version of that before I don't really, I'm not really done things like that much before. But so completely solo there was nobody else with you. The first time I went, I went backpacking out there. Yeah, it was, it was just me, Marina wasn't there for that part of the chip. So it was just me and man, I swear. Okay, so break part of the story down. I got lost the first night. It was kind of bad. And it's probably the thing that I've made the most mistakes at in something related to the outdoors, like closest to a cascade of events that would have ended in Where's Billy? Yeah, right. So yeah, there's a few points that I got concerned. It was late September, I was walking up. I had started because I had a drive to the allowance. And I got a map from from like, the local spa, I had to put in a little permit thing and just said like, this, this is me, I'm gonna be gone for these many days. It's so so did did you have to get a permit to go do that. Not really a permit, but you just,</p>



<p>but just kind of like a notification that you were going to be out there. Yeah, I think it's just a well, they would have found your body at some point.</p>



<p>Yeah, at some point. It's like this guy was supposed to move his car last week. I think that's about all the signal that it gives you is like, Oh, this guy was supposed to get this car a couple of weeks ago. He's probably he was just like an ice lake. So I was going out there. I made it all the way up the straightaway like Remember, if we imagined kind of an L shape we were going up the canyon or kind of the draw with the creek I crossed the creek. And that's about the time that that the sunset. So it was dark, I probably should just stop there.</p>



<p>So now you've now you've entered into water made yourself saturated with</p>



<p>water. That's a good thing because a little wet, and then I cross over, and now it's dark, and I just got the switchbacks as I rise 4500 feet in elevation to the top of the lake to get to. Okay, so yeah, it's easy, right just like it's, it's how you want to get set up for a long backpacking trip.</p>



<p>It was kind of I typically like to hit my switchbacks at nightfall after midnight, what I shoot for him? Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah, at the witching hour. Let's go for it. I've heard of people doing this before I had my little headlamp and stuff. So I see I go, and it's relatively easy is what I'm expecting what I had to deal with myself, alright, like, I'm going to stop if it gets weird. Like, I'm not going to just like, like, scale across and escarpment of rock together as a way to, you know, end up to the, whatever their side I was supposed to go to. So I was just gonna say like, I'll stay on this easy trail, I can see it pretty well. It'll be pretty regular. I'll just get up here. And you know, I'll finish when I do or when I can. I'll try and make everything go easy. So a cruise that that I do the switchbacks I get to this zone. I cross like another really small creek. It's just when you kind of leap over pretty much, but it's it was an area where like the I guess the snow had come through. And it made like a big drift. And then now there's like, there's meltwater that's flowing through it. And when did it done? Was it in a race where the trail I was supposed to take was? So there's this whole zone in front of me that was washed out? where and what time of the year was this again, you said this was later in the fall, September 18. It was a nice evening, but it was cold out, and it was dark out. And then this was the next thing. So I stopped there. And it's like dark. There's no moon that night, really. But I have my headlamp on. I remember I had like Michael Jackson thriller playing in the chest pocket on my iPod. Because I was just by myself, right? I just had nothing to do and us. Nobody Yeah. And so I'm sitting there. I think I ate like a Clif Bar. I had my headlamp on, and I was just kind of poking around and kind of looked up, and then boom, what catches splendid eyes over there. 50 feet 10 o'clock. What's that? eyes? Wait, what's that? Well look, Lion lions like Michael jack. Another set of eyes at 12 o'clock. And so I'm looking at you like, whose eyes are these? like big eyes? Like they're not like really tight together? You know, when you see a cat or something like that. But yeah, yeah. Something predatory. Yeah, it's hard. It's hard in a way. So what they told me is that there was no bears. There's no wolves up there. There's some wolves. But it really, really no rules. But there's like, there's like sheep, I guess, which I really don't want to run to it either. But yeah, it's Yeah, better news than the other thing. So I was just really banking that they weren't interested. But you just looked down the hill, and you just or maybe deer, I guess. But you sit down the hill, and you see like these little yellow eyes, look at it and you go. This is great, especially for your first time. And it's like this is not not the type of thing you want to get into. But I ended up losing the trail right there. But it was confusing, because I had this map in front of me. And I was standing at the creek. And so what the map showed was, well, the trail is just to the south of this creek. So if we just crack if we're at that the trail and we just crossed the creek to the to the south side, the trail will be right there. I'm assuming it's running east to us. Yeah, let's see. Yeah. East to West progress. Yeah. So I hop over, hop over this little creek, but there's no trail over there. And so I'm like, Oh, well, it's got to be just like a little further over here, a little bit up here. And so I kind of like cruise back and forth. I was trying to find this trail. I couldn't find the trail. So I was like, This is weird. So I ended up getting myself into kind of this weird spot where it's sort of like up higher in this rocky area where like, because there's really like nowhere flat to camp by that point where I was at. Because you're just going up this hill, right? Yeah. So I just like laid out the the stuff there. And I just like crashed until morning where I could see where I was. I was like 10 feet from this like really big drop off.</p>



<p>But I had no idea. But yeah, I woke up that morning just kind of wedged between these like two little trees on what was the least of a slope. Just trying to hold myself in between these little rocks. I don't kind of roll down in my sleeping bag at night. But I woke up the next morning and then I found out like okay, this was a fake Creek. That wasn't even on the map. And I supposed to look at this other Creek way over here. And that's where the trail was. Okay, it was great. Yeah, but that was most of it. When I finally got up to the lake. It was great. Everything else in the trip really went fantastic. There was no one up there at the lake. You just got to go around it super pristine water. Like really cool. Great to do photos. That was really fun. Oh, yeah. And I decided when I was up there, I just should do two days. By Gosh, I should add another day because I already did all the work to get up here. And I was kind of Yeah, yes. So I thought like, well, I'll just, I'll just hang out here for another day, I got my food. And I kind of rationed it out a little bit. And I had a little extra stuff that I could cook up to. So I ended up just like, split my meals up and spent more time up there. But yeah, man, that was one of the best trips that I've done. Because what I really like about backpacking, I don't want to hear your take on this is, I like the exercise portion of, of like, doing outdoor wilderness stuff, I think that's important. Man, there's a lot of work to do. And I've definitely done it. But what I what I dig in as doing photography stuff, is I carry my camera with me in the tripod. And I like getting out to stuff with and being able to take pictures of things that, you know, I normally don't get to see just kind of around the more pedestrian stuff around town. And so it's cool to get out to a spot and set up like a base camp. This is kind of the strategy I've liked a little bit. So there's a lot of trips like the lower row where we were talking about earlier, where it's just sort of 10 miles each day, you do that until you complete the circuit, and then you're you're done with it. But I like it, where it's a little more flexible, where you go into the backcountry, you know, 10 or 12 miles or something like that you set up a base camp, and when you operate out of there with the resources that you brought in for like a couple days. Yeah. And that that's been really fun for us to do. We've done that a couple times. Man, it made it, it made it a lot more comfortable to do. But you just get to you just get to familiarize yourself with that area of the outdoors, which I think is cool, because it's tough when you just walk through a spot, and then it's gone. Yeah, man.</p>



<p>Well, it's a little like traveling, you know, hey, I did not not the same type of backpacking, but I backpacked around Europe for a bit when I was in my early 20s. And you find that you go to all these cool places, but you only spend a day or two in those places. And when you leave, you realize that you never really utilized your time there and got to understand the area, culture, the people. And it's a lot like that with backpacking, when you're hiking for a destination, you kind of in a sense, forget to enjoy the time that you're spending in that area, and you're focused on the pain and what you got to get through the mental, you know, push through mentally and get a lot of mental Yeah, yeah. And in sometimes you kind of forget about the beauty that you were just passing by, and not to sound cliche, but it becomes that stop and smell the flowers situation. Yeah, you know, and but don't get me wrong, there are those there are others great points where you find, you know, that beautiful little Brook that's kind of cruising through the area, and it's a great spot to take a nooner and, and eat an apple and sit there and put your feet in the water because they're so sore. And, and those are the little moments that you end up remembering,</p>



<p>yeah, that's the stuff I love about about that area. And it's really cool.</p>



<p>But I would love to do something like that I've never actually had the opportunity. Just kind of based on the hikes that I've chosen to do something like that, where I've had the leeway to just say, you know what, we're going to go in X amount of miles, we'll see what happens when we get there, we'll find a place we like. And, you know, we'll find our tentative destination, set up a base camp there and then explore the area. And I think that's a really cool approach to the backpacking because a lot of people, I think, take backpacking as well. We're making the loop we're doing the circuit, this is the trail or Yeah, yeah, there's 40 miles, we got two days. Yeah. And so I think, I'd like to do more of that. And I think I'd like to encourage more people to do things like that as well,</p>



<p>it was, you know, it made it a lot easier for the first couple times that I did it. And that's what I've done with Marina a few times, it's been super rewarding, because you just like, I guess a good example of this was the second time that we went up to the willows went to ice Lake the first time to smaller Lake really beautiful, you might have seen some pictures that I took of it. The next time we went up, we went a little further down that Canyon. So the first cut off-trail is up to ice lake. If you go further, there's a whole number of other mountain lakes that there are trails to cut off to i've i've only explored really a very small percent of what there is to offer up here in the willow mountains. In fact, I've thought before, if I could, I'd spend like 15 or 20 days, up in the mountains like that, you know, and have like a cache or get the resources again, one time, go back to town and then yeah, but I've only been to a couple little spots. So the second time Marina and I both went, we went one leg further over to an area called the lake basin. And this was cool because and this is what we should do. Maybe if we go up sometime, because there's so many things to do in that area is we went up to the first Lake, we set up our campsite there. And then from there, there's there's kind of a number of spoke trails that go off to different lakes that are further up in that chain. So there's like a, like a number of lakes that are kind of connected all along these these glacially formed mountain ridges that look really dramatic and really steep as they kind of cut-up along up to the top of this mountain. That's all really just sort of one thing with these big gouges carved out of it from the ground. flow. But yeah, cool area up there. Well, you know, I've</p>



<p>seen it in pictures, and you know, you always know that pictures never really do the area justice. Oh, yeah, it's totally true. But I mean, even even from the pictures, and Okay, so I just do want to touch really quick not to get off-topic. But Billy, you and Marina both do something pretty awesome. I mean, you talk about packing a camera around a lot. I think you should tell people that. You know, kind of what you guys do. I mean, you guys are photographers that yeah, that's, that's your hobby. That's your passion. And I think our field time. Yeah, this outdoor exploration is just kind of like a catalyst to what you guys love to do.</p>



<p>That's, that's the way I remember seeing it. You know, I remember watching. I remember watching 127 hours, I was still in college. Yeah, I was like, Man, I'm gonna set my camera up. With the $500 I'm able to scrap together for the summer, I'm gonna go do some kind of thing. There was also another photographer guy that I followed. And I liked I liked a lot of the images that he had. He got like an old Land Rover, or Range Rover, you know, Range Rover, like an old forum and like a like a left hand drive one. Yeah, and and like set that up with a like a tent and stuff and did this whole circuit of national parks, three parts of the West, I was like, oh, man, that is really cool. I want to do something like that I want to go through. And I was just getting out of school, I wanted to, like figure out a bunch of stuff about photography, which is what I was most interested in. And that's where I was like, man, I gotta figure out a way to travel for a long time and get a bunch of photographs taken at the same time. And that's when Yeah, that's how like Marina and I like first started doing more seriously some of the outdoor travel stuff that we got into. And I've been liking doing it. I mean, I guess it's like six years later, of just that sort of stuff. But yeah, you guys, you guys have really put out some incredible stuff, dude. Thanks, man. I appreciate it. I got it. I got to collect it more. I got to put it out.</p>



<p>I mean, like all the art in our house is is photography from the two of you? Oh, yeah,</p>



<p>man. Thank you. Thanks for putting up all our prints that we dropped. Yeah, I mean, I don't I don't do it. Because I like you. I do it because it's good pictures. Thanks, Robbie. I'm down here. Yeah. Man, that was that was one thing I always thought about is, is how cool some of these spots are that? That it seems like people don't really get to go to, you know, that's the part of photography I've always been most fascinated with is that ability Where is ice photography asserted this, this opportunity to go find the coolest looking thing in the world, and try and capture it somehow and show us? Absolutely. And so that's so part of that was kind of my drive my interest to nature into the outdoors, where that's where I always think the coolest things are. And so that's why, you know, I wanted to go out there and, and do as many types of landscape photos as I could. But backpacking, I mean, it really provides so many opportunities that are separate from what you get on that track, that tourist track of photos that you could go on if you're going to see. Yeah, natural places, like the bison in Yellowstone. Yeah, yeah, the drive by bison, in Yellowstone. Yeah, you know, whatever, whatever that shot is in, in Yosemite, are very beautiful. And I've taken those same pictures and they're great. But backpacking is super interesting, because it really makes the perspective different probably like how it is, you know, when people go skiing or snowboarding or something, you know, you take the lift up to the top of the mountain. And just that, that work of getting to the top of the mountain, you see such a different perspective on the landscape, and sometimes seems so much more dramatic.</p>



<p>And so that's something I wanted to touch on also is and and I'm not a photographer, but I would have to imagine if you were just a photographer, and let me know what you think about this, but you're a photographer, okay? And you're gonna go photograph the Eiffel Tower. Okay? Perfect. You're the 15,000th photographer to go take a professional photo of the Eiffel Tower. It doesn't have that much meaning to it. Okay. spot, you've, you've taken a great picture. Excellent, but somebody else has done it. But I think when you get out there and you, you really separate yourself from things that people are photographing, and not just about photographs, but you put in the work, you put in the time, the effort, the planning, and you get out to a remote area, you can find beauty in the simpler things, because you can appreciate that. And photography ends up being this, this, this expression of art, right? Yeah, that's what is this artistic expression? Yeah. And so I think a lot of that kind of pushes through in your guys's photography. And I mean, one that sticks out in my mind is you guys, you guys were shooting tin cans, you know, oh, yeah. out in the desert. And there's this, there's this picture of these cans lined up. And it really just kind of captures a time far beyond this. You know, I I mean, it feels like it feels like 18. You know, 70, it doesn't feel like we're running rampant it does. And, and but what's cool about that is you guys were living that moment. And that really is kind of what pushes through in that. And, and you feel that through the picture, because you guys were there and, and you being there and taking a picture of something that you guys thought was important. It really portrays to the person that's looking at that,</p>



<p>man, that's a big part of it. I mean, like it is like working on music or doing a lot of other types of creative expression. It seems like so much of it, probably like 10 years of it is just trying to figure out how to get through an app and try and figure out how to communicate or how to put the pieces together. And after that it tries to show so that that seems important. But yeah, I'd like that picture. You're talking about the one of the cans in Yeah, in eastern California. Those are all cans that we found out there. That had been, you know, it looked nuts to because like in the top seven, you can see where the the can opener tool was used on them. Yeah, the old church keys, they probably were from 1870, I had wondered about that. You might know about it. My grandpa told me you're like that you could, like tin cans would would kind of I guess what it would be oxidized, you know, rust out back to the earth and about 10 or 15 years? Yeah, I wasn't sure if that was true or not. Or like it would just be stuck out there forever. But yeah, it looked like they were old cans, like old old tin cans pop with the church key and left out there.</p>



<p>Yeah, a lot of those that I find. I always find myself out hunting or hiking and I find an old candy shop or something I end up searching through it. A lot of times I'll find cans that are typically from, like, the early to mid 60s. That you</p>



<p>know, that makes sense. It seems like the construction of it the way it's built. It's different than a modern one a lot of the time. Yeah, but yeah, I'd seen a few that seemed like they were around the 60s.</p>



<p>I mean, they're so oxidized though. you'd swear there from the beginning of time. Yeah.</p>



<p>The Indians. Yeah. Exactly. dropped in Arrowhead and this beer bottle. Indians love their canned corn. Yeah, it's pretty funny. But, but that's Yeah, that's some of the some of that that backpacking stuff that I'd done. But you were saying you're in the Kings range. I want to Yeah, about that.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's done, uh, almost bordering the Sequoia National Forest. And it's about, boy, this is just me throwing a number based on driving. But it seemed like it was about 65, maybe 70 miles east of Fresno. Oh says yeah, yeah. And the reason we went down there is my cousin was getting married. And as the only family member on the trip, Amber and I were able to go down and witness their marriage with just a couple friends. And really, it was kind of neat. They drew the permit for the area. And they brought along a friend of a friend and then a friend of that friend, so really, nobody knew anybody. Oh, wow. Okay, on this trip, and it became It was a fantastic trip. But I mean, such a place of grandeur. It was just, it was so beautiful. But it was the Great Lakes loop for anybody that may be interested in this. And if you are, I definitely suggest checking it out. And I really promote, you know, put yourself out there and try it. But it was it was cool. It was a I think was 55 miles. That's a long trip. That's like a good set of miles. Yeah, no. And, I mean, it was it was great. And, you know, I've done I've done several hikes, you know, multi-day hikes. But this was the first one that I This was the first time I'd ever really been tested. You know, I mean, the first day, we climbed like, 6500 feet. And that was the first day. That's significant. Yeah. And so I mean, you know, everybody's pretty beat and 6500 views and that bad when you don't have anything on your back, but it was just like, the first day was like this quick little trail through the forest. It was pretty, and then before you know it, you're just like, switchbacks for like four hours. You know, and you've got 4550 pounds on your back. But anyway, we made Basecamp up just below the Alpine level. The mosquitoes were terrible.</p>



<p>There.</p>



<p>But I mean, talk about the most pristine country, and I don't know if you've ever been to Fresno, but you're down there, and you're just thinking to yourself. Well, at least I was, you know, yeah,</p>



<p>presidents maybe not the most pristine.</p>



<p>Yeah, President and they're like, yeah, it's just east of Fresno. Oh, great. I'm like, there's not National Park anywhere near I saw pictures. This is not what this place looks like. But no, it was great the first night went up there we made camp. And yeah, I think it we were on the North Fork the Kings river, as I believe. And oh my god, what an impressive river talk about an angry pissed off river man this thing is just frozen. I mean, like you go down to wash your face or fill your water bottle or something like that. I mean, in one One false move, man. You're gone. And that's the end of you. That is that is not a river to play around? For sure. Yeah. Yeah, it's just like 50 miles of class five. is nasty.</p>



<p>Is this lower down? Or is this up into the hills? Like once you made the Alpine level?</p>



<p>Well, so there's a when you come into the Kings Canyon National Park area, there's there's a bunch of different stuff. or excuse me, there's much different campsites or campgrounds, I should say, around the area. And there's the river kind of just meanders through there. And then you're always just kind of near the river. You kind of saw like the Rogue River Trail where you kind of, you're near it, and then you end up in the hills, then you come back near it. It's always nearby, though. Oh, sure. If you head downhill, you're gonna find the river. And so there was a lot of that. But</p>



<p>how many days did you guys take up here for the for the 55 mile chip? We did five, five, and then you guys are pretty sad doing what is that? Like about 11 miles a day? Yeah.</p>



<p>Our first three days were our longest days. We did like 15. We did 15 miles like the first three days. Now we did 15 miles the first day we did 12 the second day, you know, but somewhere in that ballpark. But our last two days were our shorter days. Okay,</p>



<p>yeah, that's probably the way to do it. Man. I remember being so exhausted of there. Do you ever tell me? Well, it might be different for you. You guys are more healthy. I'm ever going out there. And I remember craving these weird foods. I talked to some other hackers about this before too. Like, were you just like, like, Oh my god, I just want this foods so much right now. But I wanted to ask you if there's anything like that, that came to mind, I got a couple of months. If you need,</p>



<p>you know, not really, I mean, what I mean, don't get me wrong. We all sat around, like fire eating are like, you know, in and I'm gonna complain about Mountain House meals. Like, like they're not good, but there's so much better than what you used to. Oh, absolutely. I mean, we're so spoiled. Like, that's actually I mean, that's just the that's like what we used to college, you know, that was like, Yeah, absolutely. No,</p>



<p>I'm pretty happy with a mountain house meal. Well, maybe not a home but but man when you're out it like it really inspired. You've been hiking 15 miles, and you've done a 6500 foot elevation gain. Mountain House meal, if it's beef stroganoff, it's gonna work.</p>



<p>Oh, stroganoff, beef stroganoff, the best meal that's in you know, my biggest tip of advice is bring Tabasco or tap to with you. I don't care if you're a weight hound, and you're worried about all those extra ounces in your backpack? Do yourself a favor. Get rid of a pair of socks and pack a bottle of Tabasco. Because, yeah, it just it livens up the mouth. And also, you can sell the basket of people while you're there because everybody else didn't think of it.</p>



<p>Tabasco, five bucks.</p>



<p>Yeah. Everybody, everybody sees you pull it out goes, Oh, yeah, that's what I should have done. No, I</p>



<p>think hot sauce was the thing that I was spicy, was the thing that I was really missing the most, like in succession after a number of days.</p>



<p>Well, and so I you know, I, I joke around and I get the Mountain House meals a hard time. But I mean, they really are good. I guess. The biggest thing is, is that you they're all kind of on the same palette. Oh, it's this I don't know how to say that. It's just, they're all kind of like the same level of flavor. Nothing like really stands out. They're all good. But I mean, they're all just, I mean, it beats the hell out of an MRI.</p>



<p>I had an MRI a couple of times and then I did I didn't really enjoy the experience. I'm way happier with the the freeze dried stuff, though. Yeah, boiling water to now.</p>



<p>Yeah, but you know, you get hungry enough, and it's all pretty good. Yeah, I totally believe that. Remember when everyone ever moved into the house. I had this box of Mountain House meals that I had for hiking and And, like, I don't know, one night I came home from work and she's just eating one. Like, what do you do? Like? Well, I've been I've been eating these for dinner the last couple nights. I'm like,</p>



<p>No, say they're pretty good. Yeah. I mean, they are good. Yeah.</p>



<p>Every day you need you need like something different. That's where it's just nice to have that space. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, it's</p>



<p>totally true. But man, I remember that. I remember I went to cupcake so bad. What was what was it? What was it like out there in the Kings range? We're going to wrap up in a minute. But But yeah, what was it like out in the in the Kings rage zone?</p>



<p>So, man, it was it was awesome. It was just such a beautiful area. And I've never really, I've never actually been to any real national parks before. I've always just kind of been, you know, in our own backyard and type of thing. Yeah. It's been out, but that was, that was my first experience like really am just like, you know, some of those public lands that have just been preserved through conservation. And it was fantastic, man. So that was day one. We played some dominoes stuff like that camped out. But one of the coolest things that I was able to experience was</p>



<p>somebody brought powdered Lipton tea. Okay, okay. Phone and, and vodka. Say you mix a little bit of this tea with water. You know, it makes your team x. You know, you mix a little vodka in and then you've got them you've got cocktails up there at the Alpine level. And, and, but you know what, it's so great at the end of the day. Oh, man, I'm sure it is. Yeah,</p>



<p>everybody just relaxes. And it's not an excess, because you can only rush it so much at night. But Nah, man, it was it was great. But so that was day one. I mean, kind of the same thing. Day two, we did 4500 feet of elevation on day two. And that's when we got up above, like into that Alpine level. And what I found that was interesting is you actually you can't burn. You can't have fires up above the Alpine line. Okay, or above the tree line. Excuse me. I've heard it. Because like erosion issues. Yeah, we're just uprooting trees, the small trees saplings and things like that. And then people were just stripping the few trees around the area of firewood. So they just kind of established a no fire above the tree line rule. So no fire that that was a cold night. Um, but we got by, you know, and that's the other thing too is your, your body kind of goes into that. biological clock mode where you're, you're in bed when it's dark. And you wake up when it's light. Yeah,</p>



<p>that happened pretty quick for me when I was out, getting used to it. Yeah.</p>



<p>Do you notice how much better you feel when that happens? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. It's just, it's like your body actually feels. You know? Like, it's been efficient. Yeah. I've noticed. Yeah. But anyway, so we did that. Day three was the most impressive of all the days. And that was when we went over Glen pass. So Glen pass, the summit is at 11,990 feet. Wow. And it was my first time actually being up into like, glacial you know, areas, I don't know. But we hiked up that day, we got into the snow. I mean, there were like snow spots here and there on the hike up. But at this point, we, I think we did like another, you know, 3000 feet in elevation that day. But we really started getting up into the snow. It started snowing quite a bit. And it was the first time that I've just like seen these glacial lakes. And it was absolutely so impressive. Yeah, they're beautiful. I know. I mean, the first time I saw and I just had to stop and just kind of really take it in to take it into account of what I was seeing. But so we get up there, and we're for anybody that's not familiar with Glen pass, if you get a chance, look it up and try to find pictures in the late spring on a good snow year. Anyway, the week before, they were actually requiring crampons and ice picks to go over. Wow. So we had purchased all these things. But last-minute we were told that we didn't eat them. So and by no means am I a mountain You know, I love the outdoors, and I'll take on about anything. But this this was a little outside of my comfort zone. Yeah, I understand. So we get up there and, man, it was it was just, it was crazy. You're looking at it, and you're just going all right, you know, one foot in front of the other. We're gonna take this one step at a time. Cuz honestly, by the time you're hitting the summit of that, of that pass, I mean, if you fell, you're on such a steep grade, like, you're going all the way down the hill, and you're gonna be cartwheeling down. You're gonna accelerate quick. It's just gonna be way too much, way too fast. Yeah. Yeah. And and we didn't have Well, yeah, I guess. I mean, we had crampons. We put them on before we went over the past. But, I mean, we all made it up. It took us about an hour and a half, I guess. Just being careful and cautious. Yeah, you're moving very, very slow at this point. Yeah. Because I mean, room for air is so marginal. So anyway, we get up there. It was like the last 15 feet was the most sketchy area that we countered. And there was there is that point where you're just thinking to yourself, you're like, I can't do this. I can't do it. And at that point, you're way too committed to start thinking like that. Absolutely. That's the worst. I hate feeling. Yeah, I remember I was just like, Hey, man, shut up. Your eight steps away from being done? Like, push through? Let's go. And so, so we did it. And I mean, my biggest concern was amber up there. You know, I know my footing is, yeah. And I've had a heavy pack on my back before, but I wasn't sure how she was doing. She did great. She killed it. did a great job. No,</p>



<p>it's awesome. It's really cool. That you guys are opposite to it's awesome to like, get up.</p>



<p>Yeah. And you know what, we get to the top and we're all celebrate, and everybody's like, so happy. We take some pictures and stuff. And then there's like this storm moving. And you can see, and when you're up at 12,000 feet comes in fast in the Sierras. Yeah. You see these things coming off in the distance, and you can see lightning and everything. And, and you can tell that it's moving towards you. And it's and I mean, the very real situation of it is you need to get off that. Yeah. You don't want to hang out there. So I decided to push off and head downward. And at this point, we kind of realized that going down is probably worse than the way up. Oh, yeah. It's the same grade. Now. You're just going downhill with all the weight on your back.</p>



<p>Oh my gosh, are you guys going like straight down? Nice. First, are you guys backing down the mountain? Well, so</p>



<p>you're backing down the mountain? Pretty much you've got your two crashes, right? Yeah. You've got your hiking poles. And, and also, before we went on this trip, I thought hiking poles were just for, like, old people and Stacy's not true. They're so helpful. They really are. I</p>



<p>mean, I remember you know, and you notice this I bet you guys are probably in better shape. But I noticed like just the my my ankles, like they just weren't in shape for four and a half straight. They are, you know, 30 or 40 miles of hiking, and they get fatigued, and you'd like you get closer to like losing it. But those hiking or the hiking poles, man, they just totally stabilized you.</p>



<p>Yeah, they did. And honestly, it kind of makes you feel like, like you got four-wheel drive or something you almost feel like a dog like you can. Honestly, though, I mean in, and I was having problems with my back. I don't care how much you situate your pack and think about how it needs to be set up and things like that. Your pack always hurts you. You're just not used to it always carrying that kind of weight around your hips and on your shoulders surgery and but the ability to use those hiking sticks is just kind of like something to take the weight off. Oh, yeah. Something to lean forward with. I mean, that helped out immensely. And especially on the way down off of Glen pass. I have kind of a pre existing knee injury that I had happened to me snowboarding several years ago. And on the way down, it kind of just kind of irritated that injury. And that nice it actually became pretty serious and it started raining and it started raining and raining and raining. And I felt quite a bit behind and Amber was cold and I told her to go on you know, I'd figure out where everybody was. And so there was this take situation of separation between everybody that's what you want. Yeah, Amber amber waited up for me because, you know, I hurt my knee. And then and then you know, somebody waited up for then my cousin waited up for amber and then somebody waited up for Matt and But anyway, it just ended up being this scattered group of people. And then we made our way into camp. That night, which I won't get into detail, but that was a long, long situation to find where we're gonna stay similar to this to Yeah, yeah, I mean, we set up camp that night and we experienced one of the most pro storms ever really, when you're up at that Alpine level, I mean, everything is intensified, like we're, we got there and it was just dumping, you know, retired. And so we set up our tents as quick as we can try to keep things as dry as we can, I guess, should get into the tents get into dry clothes, get into sleeping bags, try to get your body temperature up again. Sure. And then, you know, weathered the storm for about three hours and then it broke and we came outside it was beautiful and sunny, and we all hung out and had a good time for about an hour and a half. And then the storm came back. And we all went back to bed. Dark nightfall came perfect. And I mean, just this the most intense storm came in. And I've never experienced Thunder lightning like this. And I love thunder and lightning. But this, this was to the point where you're like, Okay, I can lead up through this one. Yeah. I mean, it was was it insane? Six hours.</p>



<p>Yeah. Really? And yeah. And you see those you see those pictures are like the the video real? Like, you know, lightning strikes in the distance and that purple cloud as it hits the desert. That picture you always see that? That's</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. Or like, or like, mountaineers on Everest, and they're huddled up in their tents in their tents just flapping around. It looks like it would just sail away if they weren't inside of it. Yeah. Yeah, it was it was all of that, you know. And you would lay there and the lightning would hit and I mean, it was, this is no exaggeration. It was almost as when the light was dissipating. The thunder would start, and I mean, it was so directly on top of us. Oh, my gosh, it was just a it was absolutely incredible. I was so happy to be able to experience that.</p>



<p>Yeah, that sounds so cool. And then it asked and you guys got through the rest of the night was it was the hike out after that. All right.</p>



<p>Yeah. The next day. We dealt with the rain. Yeah, day. That was a long, tiring day. We got into camp, same thing soaking wet. Get into whatever you have. It's dry. And you know, and I left my I left my rain fly from my pack at home because I didn't think I'd need it. Yeah. and ended up doing the trash bag thing. Okay. But yeah, anyway, I mean, the big morale booster for that was we spent about 45 minutes trying to get a fire going with everything we had. Finally, Amber came up with some sappy pine cones that were Oh, rock over here hadn't been permeated by the water yet. And we were able to get a fire going and</p>



<p>getting the fire going when it's wet is not easy. Yeah, it's nuts.</p>



<p>No, it's not. And I and I've, like I've studied different ways making fire, things you can do and different tenders you can use and man when it comes down to it, and you're actually shaking, because you're kind of at that hypothermic stage. Yeah. And you're trying to just rationalize what's best. And how do I do this most efficiently? It's just never as easy as when you practiced it in your yard in the middle of summer. It's totally true. You know? Hey, yeah, yeah, absolutely good. Yeah. Yeah, they're freezing. But anyway, yeah, I had a great fire had a great time. Last day, we hiked out now we all ended up going getting pizza and</p>



<p>hanging out. That's the way to do it, man. Celebrate with a big meal. Man every time Yeah. Go for a burger, or a big spread of Chinese food. You got to come back and just get like, whatever. Whatever it is you like needed?</p>



<p>It was it was so funny to we're all like, yeah, this this we get to the pizza place in each purse. There was like, six or seven of us, right? And each of us ordered a large pizza. Like we're gonna eat the whole thing. And we ordered like for milkshakes yourself. They're nice. You know? You drink like a third of the milk. Yeah, third of it. slices of pizza, and you're like, I can't do anymore. That we had leftovers. We had left.</p>



<p>Three different pieces of leftovers, man. That's a great story. Robert, they should tell me the the the Kings range. There's a couple others I want to get to too. We got to break these up, and we'll stretch them out over a bunch of podcasts. It's good thing we're doing a bunch, you know</p>



<p>Yeah, no I yeah, like I talked about there's a couple things that this this one actually brought up to me that I'll talk to you about later and maybe it will be the next episode. Stay tuned.</p>



<p>Thanks for doing this. This podcast with you man. We did a we did a solid hour. Got a couple of good backpacking stories in I think that a sweet Yeah.</p>



<p>So So hey, maybe I mean tentatively we talked about these hiking trips we had, but what do you really bring on a hiking trip? Ah.</p>



<p>Oh man. Yeah, that might be a point of the bait. I want to I want to talk to you about that stuff. Yeah, we should go in like a whole episode of like the gear. We think cuz I know you pack a heavier bat. You're used to it. I'm not I'm scared to heavy packs. When it comes. They suck. Yeah, I try. I try and steer every well cuz I also get stuck with the tripod and the camera bag.</p>



<p>Which is a That's true. You guys, you're you're already ahead. Yeah. Not ahead. But I mean, just the head weight. Yeah,</p>



<p>yeah. So that's where it's a bulk. Yeah, I try. And I try and wrap that down a little bit. But But yeah, we should talk about that. I want to break down some of the different gear that that you're into for backpacking, or for some of the outdoor stuff. I think that might be a good another good couple of episodes to break out to. Absolutely, man, that'd be pretty cool. We got some material. Well, thanks, man, for reminding so much good outdoors material, man. It's great. I've got a feed app. It's on iTunes. You guys should check it out, review it or read it. If you end up hearing it. That'd be great for us. But hey, thanks for doing it.</p>



<p>Absolutely, Billy. So we talked about doing your photos. Is there anywhere that people could go if they wanted to find your photos got to go to</p>



<p>Billy Nieman photo.com. You can go to App Billy Newman. If you want to check out my Instagram page. All the photos make it up there. They make it up everywhere else too. You can find me at Twitter or Facebook or any of those things. But But yeah, man the website, see my portfolio. All the photos stuff up there. Bunch of landscapes. My kidding. It's a beautiful stuff. Thanks, Robert. I appreciate it. I have it. My house. shrouded it's beautiful plastered in Billy's photos. I appreciate it, man. Well, Robert, thank you very much for doing this podcast with me. Anytime. Let's, let's do it again soon. Thanks for doing a long one with me too. I know we went a little over but but it was great, man. Yeah. You know, we</p>



<p>always set a time limit. But I'm never opposed to going over under you know, it's I think it's all subject to conversation.</p>



<p>I dig. I like it. I think it's great. And, you know, in podcasts, they're built to go long, really, so it's not bad. But yeah, Robert, I really appreciate you doing this podcast. We got Episode Four out of the way coming into that. That next stretch of five through 10. Man, so be good. We got we got the big growth. The big growth ghanimat podcast right there, man. So yeah, man. On behalf of Robert Miska rap. My name is Billy Newman. I want to say thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range
Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon.
Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
 
 


Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman, and I'm here with Robert Bisca. rat. We're recording the get out there podcast. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm doing good, Billy. How are you? It's cool, man. I'm doing good up here. And yeah, thanks for calling in tonight. Recording Episode Four of the get out there podcast. It's kind of cool, man. I like like doing this. It is. Yeah. It's been a great time. How are you liking this rain? Oh, man. It was kind of well, you know, as we said today, for part of it. It was all right. Like I was getting through the day. And then the last half of it was just like a ton of rain. How was it



going? Man, it was a it was pretty good for us the day it's started raining pretty heavily now. I've actually been working out in, in Northern California this last week. So I mean, the weather has been a little bit different kind of getting outside of the valley. Typically a little bit more sunshine than we get here in the valley. But But yeah, now that I'm back in the valley, it's rainy.



Were you were you out pass this excuse over there in that part of Northern California?



Yeah, yeah. Up there in the hill area.



Oh, I've been out in the hill area a couple times. Yeah. I think I went out there with Tyler once to the to the Buddhist temple. Oh, been out there before? No, as far as I knew, all that existed there was a liquor store. Well, the liquor store I mean, that's what's in Hill, but I think



freeway exit, not where you would see a Buddhist temple. But no, there's, I think there's a road it's, it's whatever that first exit is once you get over the scuse. And into California, as you come back down that backside is that first exit, it might not Oak Hill, but it was right right there. Right in that area. You take that and, and you cut back West, along along the ridge of the South line of the mountains and you go back a little ways and you kind of cut up a bit. And it's like nowheresville out there. There's just like, there's like a couple like ghost town Aries out there, it looks like and like, I know, like one of those kind of short railroad sections, like where they stack up cars, something like Yeah, but then yeah, you just turn there you go up into the woods a little further and you end up at this pretty impressive Buddhist temple. Like it's been there for years. Yeah, I guess like that the Ashland hippies kind of bought it and set it up. And, you know,



I was gonna say is that a hotspot like that, that weird 150 miles between readin and Ashland that nobody lives in is that just like, I



think it's, it's for its tranquility. It's, it's been, it's intense. Like, you go out there, I think we've taken pictures of it before, but they like have all the Buddhist flags of flower. You know, like on the on the side of the hills that you can watch. It's got it's kind of cool. It's like a pretty impressive structure that they build out there. Like it looks like an orange a Chinese building, and then lower down. There's like these columns that are all painted red with like, you know, ornate symbols on it. And they like spin in this like, pretty big, like, drum system that goes and there's like 12 of them. And they like all spin as you go into this temple. Wow. Yeah. is a pretty heavy duty template for just out in the backcountry. Nowhere. Have you been out there much like out into some of the stuff in the skews?



No, not really. I mean, you and I did kind of on point with this podcast, but we did. We did the hike up pilot rock. Oh, yeah. I was thinking about that. That is up there. Yeah, I mean, that's that's really like and I mean, other than snowboarding up on Mount Ashland. That's kind of my only experience with that area.



Yeah, that's right. You k]]></itunes:summary>
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		<title>Get Out There &#124; 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range</title>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range
Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon.
Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm.
Billy Newman Robert Biscarret
 
 
 


Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman, and I'm here with Robert Bisca. rat. We're recording the get out there podcast. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm doing good, Billy. How are you? It's cool, man. I'm doing good up here. And yeah, thanks for calling in tonight. Recording Episode Four of the get out there podcast. It's kind of cool, man. I like like doing this. It is. Yeah. It's been a great time. How are you liking this rain? Oh, man. It was kind of well, you know, as we said today, for part of it. It was all right. Like I was getting through the day. And then the last half of it was just like a ton of rain. How was it



going? Man, it was a it was pretty good for us the day it's started raining pretty heavily now. I've actually been wor]]></googleplay:description>
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<item>
	<title>Get Out There &#124; 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-03-black-bears-in-southern-oregon-2/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 02 Mar 2017 21:52:14 +0000</pubDate>
	<dc:creator><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></dc:creator>
	<guid isPermaLink="false">http://billynewmanphoto.com/?post_type=podcast&#038;p=5334</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon</p>
<p>Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman</p>
<p>Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p> </p>


<p>get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Good, Billy, how you doing? I'm doing really good. Thanks a lot for doing another episode of this podcast. I think we're doing episode number three today. We are. That's pretty cool, man. Yeah, I was gonna say I wanted to talk to you about some stuff that will probably be in a few more weeks as we get into the nicer weather. But I wanted to talk to you about some of your past bear experiences. I was wondering what that was like for you, because you were doing guide stuff down on the lower Rogue River. And I know in Grants Pass really a lot of time, we didn't have a lot of bear boxes, or a lot of bear concerns about the wildlife or the wilderness right around the area of town there. I think like if you go south, into the rescues, or over into the coastal range, there's probably more stuff over there. But it was seemed always like a lot lighter than it was further south. Like when you got into California. I remember like when we went just a little bit east to like reading in the Mount Shasta area. And like up into the whiskey Lake area, there was like tons of bear boxes, it seemed like I was like a big thing that they had to protect against all the time. And it was sort of strange, because it wasn't really that much exposure for me when I was doing a lot of camping stuff in Southern Oregon or in Eastern Oregon, especially, I guess Eastern Oregon to have much exposure with like bear encounters out there. And I think it wasn't until I got into like go into the lower rogue before I even saw like the electric fences. So I was gonna ask Yeah, like, Yeah, well, what kind of stuff you had to run into when you're checking out or like when you're doing low rub trips? Well, yeah, I</p>



<p>mean, we have plenty of barren counters down there. And I think one of the big contributors to that is just the just the amount of people that are down there all the time. I mean, the bears really, really know when people are around, you know, there's food, you know, a bunch of new smells, they have an incredible sense of smell. So you know, that traffic down there really kind of brings them into the area. And not to mention, and I could be a little off, but I'm fairly certain that the lower road Canyon, I know about 10 years ago was the highest black bear population in the lower 48. Really? Yeah. Wow. 10 years ago. Yeah. I'm Well, I mean, think about it. I mean, the road going out there to gold beach and Agnes that's a that's bear camp road. I mean, you see bear fences over there all over the place. But uh, yeah, I believe Forest Service did a study and like a flyover and found that in that Canyon, there's more bears per square mile than anywhere else in the lower 48.</p>



<p>Wow, I wouldn't have really thought about that. But yeah, I do understand like bear, bear Creek and bear camp road. Seems like a lot of beer references. I knew that there was a lot of bear activity in Southern Oregon in the past, like if we go back 100 years or so I think 150 years there's a lot of talk about the bear population over in Oregon and over in this section of like the forested areas like a lot of the gold miners had to deal with them up in the up in the hills. And those areas I think even like in the like, what was it isn't? Isn't bear camp road. Park goldmine is you go up? Have you seen? Yeah, a lot of mining claims up there. Yeah, that's what I had seen. I knew like up on Mount Baldy in Grants Pass. There's a lot of a lot of claims in that area. And I'd heard about some bear encounters that happened up there like up by some loop and then over further into the hills like past Mount Baldy, kind of over in the Applegate area. It was like way back stuff or like, do you remember the story? We heard about this in high school? I think we went to the gravesite for this one time. But it was like this piece of local Yeah, rants past history, Laura. We went to this, the oldest gravesite in Grants Pass. It's like in this little park. Now. It's a really strange thing. But you go up and you see this tombstone. And it's from 1856, like sometime before the Civil War. And there's this tombstone that says that this man, bH Baird, died of a grizzly bear attack down by the Rogue River and what would today be River Park? Or like just the park downtown? Like, isn't that nuts?</p>



<p>I've seen that gravesite. Yeah. Back in elementary school. We used to walk over there on Well, we went over there on a field trip one time and we had to do like, you know, like crayon transcripts, you put the piece of transfer paper on the tombstone and do and then I and so we all had to make a rub of that of that tombstone. And but I mean, it's crazy. I mean, if you're going back that distance and time. I mean, at that time, what 1856 Oregon isn't even a state yet. Yeah, a few years. Yeah. And so you've got California, the bear state, and I mean, Grizzlies used to be down here and pretty prominent in the area. I mean, it wasn't until kind of like that, that settled. thing that happened was that that we</p>



<p>started kind of driving them all out. I was wondering about that, like how it was that we was, is that an extra patient when when you remove an animal from its range? Because it seems like we don't we don't even talk about grizzly bears in Southern Oregon and Oregon at all, right?</p>



<p>They're not even acknowledged. And so that's the thing is, I believe it was an Well, I know it was an Ashland, but I think around the it was like in the early 1900s. And I don't know, the year for sure. But um, the last group actually was taken out of that area. Oh, wow. Yeah, it was actually roaming around up in the hills, and was having some major confrontation with people in the area.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's, that seems like it would be a huge issue. Like as all those people moved in, and what I mean, like seven or eight, in every town in Oregon, it was a new town, like 1850. So yeah, sure. Yeah. You just had to think like, how many generations is that, that the animals and the wildlife that's used to like go into that area to feed or to, you know, get access to the river or whatever it is, like whatever their, their natural range is, like how long it takes before those conflicts with people push them out, or kind of just where those animals get eliminated? Because of the people in the area?</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, it's, it's, it's pretty mind boggling when you think about it, it really doesn't take that much time. I mean, between 1858 and, you know, 1900, we eradicate pretty much all.</p>



<p>I think, like nuisance animals like that. You almost have to I mean, or it seems like at the time, you would have you would have had to in that frontiers mindset. My goodness, man, if I moved out here from the east coast, and I just had to be put plopped down in the mountains of Southern Oregon. fighting off grizzly bears coming through town, eaten a guy in the park downtown. Yeah. conservation.</p>



<p>Well, and that's, that's the thing, too, is back then, you know, everything was just, you know, as far as they were concerned, just an infinite resource. It wasn't like we're running out of anything. Yeah, the whole the whole West was fairly untouched. You know, I mean, I'm sure back then. Native peoples. But what's funny is I just I just think of like current day ash lenders, you know, the, the say the same people that had a city council meeting about aggressive deer in the area, you know, dealing dealing with grizzly bears in the 1990s. Did they do that aggressive deer? Yeah, yeah, they're having a big deer problem with with deer kind of taking over the city. And they had a city council meeting about how they were going to acknowledge these deer because they had kind of just lost their fear of people became very tame. Oh, wow. And, yeah, so this was just like, a year ago.</p>



<p>Yeah. No. So I mean, I mean, I always see are for the last few years, definitely, I'd see. Deer just kind of cruising through in big numbers in that Ashlyn lithia. Park. There, you just see, like, I'm just hanging out with everybody. But even that seems to be even like it is in Grants Pass. I remember, I swear, back in 2000, 2003 2004, I didn't see deer at all in the neighborhood that I grew up in, like over it was, it was a recession. So they were were they they were drawn back during that time. Oh, yeah. Yeah. They're financially unstable. But no, before that, like in, I talked to my grandpa about this, too. He, you know, he's lived here all of his life. And he would talk about Yeah, like, we really never saw a deer come through the yard until the year 2004. Like, that's the year they had to put up, like a high fence around the garden to keep it safe. They said, yeah, we just never had a problem with it before. We had like one or two come through. But it was never in these big groups that they had, like now, I guess they were saying that, like the population in town, it just exploded over the last two decades. And see, I wonder what that is. Because that could be that could be</p>



<p>you know, deer moving down to populated areas for for lack of predators, you know, you're never typically going to see a lion in the area. I mean, there's occasional sightings, but I wonder if they kind of come into these rural areas in these kind of urban settings to kind of escape that find gardens that are out and about, but I don't know what, you know, 2004 you know, that would have how that would have correlated. You know,</p>



<p>it's interesting, I guess that was the time that there was probably the most new development in that region that there had been in a long time so I bet it probably pushed out or disturbed some of the area that that that part of animals lived and then probably got pushed over another mountain range to VR, but then it seems interesting you know, if you stay in an area for long enough, you notice about some of the animals the kind of traffic, your backyard out there, but you notice that they're kind of on a schedule like it seems like they they wander around, they have a range they kind of travel through, but it seems like that animal comes back around through the yard or something in the same way. Every day, every couple days, we see that with a with a family like a group of, of like dough. Oh, it goes through my parents yard. And they just come through, like every morning at 10am. And they just kind of cruise across the street and they go on their way. And I don't know, they may make some kind of loopback through some some time. But it's kind of funny. It's readable.</p>



<p>Yeah, just kind of stuff. And it's and that's how it is, is just like they they have they've lost that kind of instinctive fear of people in this area. You know, we're not we're not an immediate threat to them. In his city setting. You know, same with turkeys. You see him in your backyard all the time. Oh, yeah. Or you're driving down the road? Yeah, I mean, the Oh, yeah. So tell me about those turkeys. Yeah, so the other day I was driving through downtown Medford which is, you know, very populated. And I actually had to stop for a crossing of turkeys. And, and I mean, traffic just came to a complete halt. And we all just sat there and let these turkeys cross for about a minute and a half. Wow.</p>



<p>And then then everybody went about their day. How big was the group? What do you what would you call that? gaggle.</p>



<p>I was wondering, it's like a gaggle of geese. Murder flies, a flock of seagulls. Birds of a feather. Right? Yeah, you know, I don't know, all these. The avian types. They all have their own kind of segregated names that they really need all those different words to describe being in a group. So that they do. But good, how many are in a group that I mean, I've seen maybe like 20 or 30 or so. And I agree.</p>



<p>I would say this was about 20. I mean, it wasn't a good size. Well, you know, yeah, yeah.</p>



<p>I've seen like little geese. It's kind of funny. I like you know, when they're really little they stay together. Like, what is it? I guess not like, I've seen the Partridge Family. Blake quail, Riley quail, like, yeah, groups of quail those families, like all stick together, you see, like, pods of those that are around like 12 or 15 in size? It's kind of funny. Oh,</p>



<p>well, you know, what's funny, we're talking about the way animals move in and out of areas. Yeah, I'm where I'm at now. My grandparents lived out here. And I used to come up this area all the time as a kid. And there used to, we used to see tons of coil up on the driveway coming into our place. Oh, wow. But with the development of people kind of moving into the area. And this place is, I wouldn't say blown up. But it there's definitely an influx of people living out here now. Right. And with that has come some cats, you know, domestic house cats that people have brought in kind of let run wild and then they breed of feral cats. And at this point, now, I haven't seen a quail out here in probably 10 years. Really? Wow. Yeah,</p>



<p>that's interesting how that changes, you know, I've seen like that kind of move around to I remember when I was a kid, this seems like a silly thing to notice. But you probably believe me that I didn't notice it. When I was a kid in the 90s. And maybe after like 2001 2002, there was every evening in the summertime, this, this stream, this Murder of Crows, this huge group of crows that would move south at like sunset, like every night, it seemed like they would come out from from like some section kind of down by the river, or like maybe like a mile or two south or something like that. And they'd come up that, that kind of draw around like Hamilton road or something like that. And they cruise up, they go right over our house over my grandparents house every night. And it seemed like they had been doing that for years. I talked to my grandparents about it. They said, Yeah, we've been watching him do it for decades now as we sit out here and in the evening and water the garden. And then for maybe the last 810, eight, nine years, maybe 10 years. They're not there anymore. Not like they used to be at offices, we'd have a I mean, they might have just moved over, you know, boxes for whatever reason. But yeah, why are they like that? Yeah, for me, it's like the air quality. It must be like, it must be new houses or new places. Or maybe they get disturbed at a you know, wherever they would they would go to whatever place they would, or trees. Well,</p>



<p>yeah, I mean, the housing developments really blown up in this area. And I think that, I mean, there's there's no denying that that's going to have some kind of effect on wild, wild animals in the area.</p>



<p>You know, the one that my grandpa pointed out was a fox. I don't know what we used to see. But he said that like when he was a kid, and all the way up through through him growing up and being out here. He had never seen a fox out in that area, like out over on clover lawn. And he said like you saw when maybe six or seven years ago. He was like wow, that's like the first Fox like that we've ever seen out here. Do you guys see fox is that you know, I've</p>



<p>seen you know, not out here and I think that's probably because we have dogs</p>



<p>Yeah, so we've got, we've got dogs in the area, which I think kind of keep a lot of probably Fox out of the area also makes sense. But yeah, I've seen a couple Fox down near the Applegate. And then another thing is we have coyotes that show up. I was curious. Do you see coyotes pass through that area? much? Not not frequently, but there has been. Okay, so when we first got Layla, our little Australian Shepherd, right, yeah. Um, and she was just a puppy. She would bark. And there was this. There's this little pack of coyotes that was up the hill from us. And they were it was a little spooky, but a little cool at the same time. They would have one, and I watched this, they had one coyote, sit up the hill and respond to her barking. Ooh, I've heard about this. Yeah, she would bark and it would bark back to her. almost kind of enticing her to kind of go up the hill. Hey, come hang out. Do you want of us? Yeah, one of us. Were just were some dogs up here. I mean, she's about the size of a coyote. Yeah. So you know, she's gonna get up there, and there's gonna be 20 of them. And she's gonna be in trouble.</p>



<p>Yeah, do they go for dogs? Is that what they do? Are they are like, because they're not their own? Or? Or how's that work?</p>



<p>Yeah, so you kind of got to worry about that situation. You know, there's a pack of 20. And they're obviously going to take advantage of a domesticated animal. And a lot of times in urban settings, you'll see kind of the way coyotes and other different predators will actually prey on these domestic animals, because they're so familiar with humans and have kind of, in a sense, lost their natural instinct to find fear from these animals. Oh, interesting,</p>



<p>huh? You know, I've heard a story about, I think, maybe kind of similar to the dynamic, you were talking about how there was a pot of coyotes, there's one that came out, and it was kind of calling out, you're enticing the dog at this guy's house. And it's like, I don't know, they had like a dog conversation. And this coyote kind of convinced the bad attitude out of this domesticated dog. Like there's chickens in the property. And so this coyote kind of like, talked to him for a couple days, like the kind of sound like get a little closer, a little friendlier with each other as like different dogs. And then a couple days into it, the house dog like attacked a chicken. I think like the coyote got into and they both like got chickens and then like, took off and hung out together. And like, killed the chickens. Now you think like, Oh, that's a nuts thing like this. This guy, coyote, this other wild dog came in, and then like, taught like a new kind of behavior to a domesticated dog. Like, you know, got away with a bunch of livestock. It's crazy.</p>



<p>That's funny. It's just like, yeah, invoking that that natural predatorial sense. In a house dog.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Hey, follow with the pack or something. But yeah, it was like, Yeah, kinda like, Hey, come here can be with us. We're crazy. Wild. Yeah. Got it to you real fast. Some of the bear stuff that we're talking about. So like, even in your backyard there where we're talking about the coyotes, you seen bears out there, right. Did you guys have one out there? Like even right now? We're not right now. But like within our last year, don't you see? Where that kind of roams that area?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah, I do. Like, so I'm out. He's a pain man. So basically, I don't have a trash service out here. So we keep all of our, our trash. Yeah, all of our trash cans. And then, you know, once a month or so, I'll take it down to the landfill and then pay your fee and take care of that. But the problem with that is, is these bears with incredible sense of smell, smell all of your waste, and they want to come in because they're curious animals. ager, and they want to get a little, little taste of what you've been cooking in the kitchen. And so it's great, you know, you'll go to work and then you come home and you'll just find like three trash cans dumped over and you know, three trash cans worth of garbage just spread around your property. And that's great. Yeah, so you get to spend the next couple hours sitting outside just picking up trash that you already so carefully placed into a garbage bag a week</p>



<p>before, that'd be so frustrating. So what do you guys have to keep it inside or something? Or is there like a what do you do?</p>



<p>Well, so this past spring, I got really fed up with it. I actually built a little like 10 by 12 shed. Oh, that's this man. Yeah, yeah, and Yeah, so now I keep all the cans in there under lock. So I Yeah, and that's, that's honestly that's cut down significantly, I actually haven't dealt with him knock on wood for about a year now but for a while there was like every other night about three o'clock in the morning you wake up to the sound of you know, trash cans get knocked over and stuff.</p>



<p>And then furthermore, let's go ahead. Oh, you go ahead.</p>



<p>Oh, for the most part, you know they're pretty skittish you go out there and yell at them and kind of charge them, and they'll take off. But this particular bear that I was dealing with kind of got to the point where it was really standing its ground with me. That's, that's, that's a rough one. Yeah, I wasn't really a big fan of it. I mean, one one account that I can really sticks out in my mind. It's about three o'clock in the morning, and we got a heavy snow and this is two years ago. And you know, the area Southern Oregon. That's, that's not real typical of a winter. Right? But he must have been hungry, and you know who bears hibernate in the winter? Well, no, they just are less active in the winter. But he must have been hungrier for some.</p>



<p>You know, I grabbed my shotgun and run out in the yard. I'm just, I'm in my boxers and my boots. And I run out there with just my, my iPhone flashlight. You know about how powerful are nothing? Yeah, and I just and I just meet him in the yard. Standing there, you know, he's about 20 feet away, and I'm yelling at him and stuff. And he's just kind of like, what are you gonna do? You know, what do you get? Yeah, every every hour of the day, you would have done something by now. matted. Exactly, man. That's tough. So no, he stood his ground on me. And if you've been around bears that are getting fairly aggressive, they'll kind of do like a bark. It's kind of a grunt. I mean, it doesn't sound like a like a dog bark, but it's just kind of like a low grunt. Yeah. And so I kind of extra snowball out of my thing. You know, and he kind of, he grunted at me, and then I yelled at him again. Yeah, you get out of your bed. They will snowball.</p>



<p>So I was gonna ask you, I said a snowballs What? What's, what would you use as a bear deterrent? Like, did you have to bring a bear to turn with you down on the lower road to?</p>



<p>You know, and when we guide? were discouraged to bring firearms with us. Yeah, I figured I won't name any names, but some some of us do. Um, just because these bears have been so introduced the people that they've really lost that instinct of fear. And they're really kind of become quite a nuisance down there. So some of the guides, definitely not me, will carry a firearm down there.</p>



<p>So as I said, like, lethal deterrent? What do you think of the bear spray, like the pepper spray canisters that you pick up?</p>



<p>You know, I mean, we're not Grizzly country and black bears by nature are pretty skittish. I mean, they don't. They don't really want anything to do with you. They just want.</p>



<p>That's what I've seen before, too. I mean, like, I've seen a black bear maybe three times. And as soon as it even noticed, we were 100 feet around there just bolt as fast as it could, it was just scrambling up the side of the hill. And you think, Oh, my God, I can climb like that so fast. But</p>



<p>so there's a couple of points on that. I want to I want to answer your question, but then I also kind of want to talk about Oh, yeah. So to answer your question. Okay. Yeah, so to answer your question, um, when we're down there in the canyon, a lot of times, what we'll do is, you know, you want to make yourself large and loud. Typically, we'll take our coolers full of food, we'll stack them in a pile. Okay. And then we'll stack pots and pans on top of them. And then so that way, if they're getting into them, we can hear them. We would take everything out of the boat because we don't want them getting in there pop in a raft or anything like that. Yeah. But then what we'll do is we all go to sleep with like a couple of Dutch oven lids next to our cots. Oh, really? So yeah. And you got your headlamp ready so when you hear that that rustling in the pots and pans falling and stuff, you know, all the guides jump up and everybody grabs their lids and starts cleaning them together and yelling at them and and they'll take off.</p>



<p>Yeah, so the noise is enough of a deterrent. And yeah, and you said you had like a nuisance bear one night that like had come up and was like snapping Yeah, story. Yeah. What happened was that, Oh, well.</p>



<p>We had a we had a philan guide, she guides for another company on the rug. And she was with us. And this is funny too, because we cook this big salmon dinner. Nice. And you know, we have salmon drippings everywhere and all we got salmons skin everything all over the camp. And, and so typically, one of us always sleeps in the kitchen to kind of watch over everything. And that was me that night. And it was a lazy night. I think we probably had too many beers. And, you know, it was like, I'm not gonna pick this up. I'm just gonna play the odds and say, we're not going to get a Baron camp tonight. So I go to</p>



<p>do that. Yeah. So I've done it. Well, yeah, you have to I mean, it's, you know, if you can</p>



<p>I never run into a bear. I think we did it. Like, when we were doing a backpacking trip, we had to put our food into a bear safe container, and then like, put it hoisted into a tree, more than 50 metres away from our tent, something like that. And I think like we pulled in, we set up super late and we put it out always, but man, we did not do whatever we whatever absolute thing we were supposed to do for our bear Food Protection.</p>



<p>Well, you know what I mean, most of the time, I mean, you're gonna see very less times and you will, or</p>



<p>you're going to not see bear more than you will see bear. Now that seems like it's been how it is in my life. I mean, if we're talking about the most bears in that area, I mean, that was kinda like where we grew up in that area, Southern Oregon. I have only seen a bear a couple times in that area. I mean, I think I saw it. I think on two of the hikes I did down on the lower road. I think I saw another one out in the Applegate or out you know, past Applegate lake. That was California and the skis. I guess we saw a black bear out there. And then maybe one other time on the road while I was driving. That's it. That's really all I've seen. So I hardly ever see or have a black bear counter at all. But you're down there more so so Okay, so we're back. We're camping. There's salmon spread across this campsite. It's nighttime. Robert played the odds.</p>



<p>Yeah, so return over the next Cod. Yeah, no. Man. Next thing I know, I'm getting woken up not by a bear, but by a dove. And she's kicking me. And she's gonna wake up wake up and I got a flashlight in my face. And I'm like, What are you doing right now? And she's like, this bear just came over was sniffing my face. Oh, see, weighs in her face. And so she jumps up. She smokes the barrier runs off a few yards. And she's yelling at it, I guess. And and so she's yelling at it throwing stuff at it. And if if you've kind of provoked provoked the bear enough, they'll do this. This kind of like jaw grinding, they'll grind their job. This is this is kind of fast, the little barking stage that they'll do. And that's that's really a situation where you kind of need to be on point. Wow. So anyway, somehow she got this bear to kind of lose immediate interest. And she's waking me up. And honestly, the times that I have slept through bear situations and camp are way too many</p>



<p>eggs. wake up the next morning, and they're like, oh, man, where are we?</p>



<p>Robert faded again. Rob is gonna be back in just one second. We're having trouble with Robin come back into what you're talking about. I want to reset it but but so we're seeing like, Where were you last night? When are you you were just coming into that how many times you slept through a bear walking through camp?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, there's been multiple times that people have, you know, other guys were just like, Where were you last night? We had that bearing camp. And most most of the time, you know, stop.</p>



<p>We just dropped out for a second. But Robert, I was gonna ask you to come back with that story that we were talking about. Where the bear was sniffing this girl's head she woke up she moved back she got your attention you woke up? What happens next?</p>



<p>Well, at that point, she had got it to leave, and she was freaked out you know she wanted anybody awake with her? Yeah, absolutely. I guess I wouldn't know man and she she was so pissed off because I'm laying right next to the trash and all all this salmon skin and everything. And I never got bothered and she's she's sleeping on the outskirts of Captain Roberts face So, yeah, anyway, it left me alone. But But you're saying it started snapping? Did you see it snap? No, I was snapping at her. Yeah, and not not necessarily snapping but doing like a jog or jog. Right? Like it's john and almost like grind its teeth.</p>



<p>Oh, and I first see that. No, I especially in the dark when you can't see it. Yeah, I feel so.</p>



<p>Yeah. So anyway, it was it's just one of those things, you know, you got to get people awake, make noise, do stuff. But you know, the problem is with with people being with with barren, high populated areas like that, you know, they're they're losing that instinct of fear. And that can that can</p>



<p>nuisance dire situation. Yeah. And I hear like, you see the signs of the say, like nuisance bears will be destroyed. Yeah. Oh, man, that is a final sentence that's like,</p>



<p>zero. That's the Bureau of Land Management. You know, that's what their signs are all down there. Right. Yeah. You know, a Fed bears a dead bear. You know, as you start feeding these bears and leaving food around, they're gonna start showing up more and more. And then as a nuisance bear, they have to try to relocate. And if that's not going to work, then they have to exterminate that bear.</p>



<p>Man. That sounds so tough. I just like we were talking about Stephen Ellis podcast earlier, I just listened to an episode from a bear scientists that works at Yellowstone National Park studying the bear population there. Okay, they were talking about this big upset that happened years ago, when the I think the the establishment that we're in Yellowstone, like the restaurants and the lodges, and the towns just outside of Yellowstone, that were part of that ecosystem, they would all have these food dumps where they would like they would just throw it, they would have like a pit that we put all the food that people didn't need in the park or whatever went bad. And it would be this feeding frenzy or this feeding area for all the bears that were in that ecosystem, they all kind of worked off of this. And it was just kind of like an attraction for a while where bears would come in and eat the food. And so they made a decision that they were going to stop the food drops, as it were like and like change, it wasn't really intentional. At first, it was just like a dumpster is like the, you know, the area that that the trash was gonna go. I think it was kind of like the trash area of Yellowstone, which is kind of weird to think that there's such a thing, but I guess without the people that go through, there would be something like this. And this is way back to book they so they stopped these feeding sites. And then a big part of that population of bears like died off or had other types of conflicts that happened when he was trying to seek out different places to get food that had now become more scarce. But really interesting others conflicts Come on</p>



<p>see that. That's what happens is you've got you've got bear coming into this to this, you know, infinite food source that they keep coming back to you because we leave all this waste. And what happens is, you know, not that generation, but a generation or two down the road, these bears are used to feeding off of our waste, and then don't really know how to fend for themselves in the wild. And it's all fun while it's a tourist attract tree, and then people get to snap pictures. But then you've got these bears that are dying in the wild. And also you're getting your carwin</p>



<p>Alright, we're back now we faded out for one second with with Roberts call his Skype call and for us. But we were talking about that last little bit of how, how there's there were the bears in the Yellowstone range that had difficulties a couple generations after they've become dependent on these food sources, these food drops. And it's really weird this types of conflicts that happen when people enter an area that's just been wilderness and wildlife before. It's interesting how that goes for us. But there's always been types of conflicts.</p>



<p>Yeah, and as long as there's people, there will still continue to be that, that conflict between natural wildlife and, and us.</p>



<p>Yeah, it'll be interesting. You know, I think in future podcasts we should talk about, we should talk about some of the wildlife management stuff that we've learned about some of the ways that BLM works or fishing game or some of these other departments and how they they manage some of that stuff. That's a lot of that's a big learning curve for me. I'm a pretty simple hiker. Yeah. But I think part of it prior to this podcast, I think is really interesting. To learn a little bit more about some of those, maybe more serious aspects or just more, the more the governance side of how wildlife and outdoor recreation management goes. This kind of interesting stuff. I think it's, it's cool to talk about, it's been fun talking about with you to the new school.</p>



<p>Yeah. And I think that'd be something great to elaborate on. I think that's something that more and more people need to understand and acknowledge the way our national parks and public lands are run. Yeah,</p>



<p>I think it'd be cool to talk about some of that stuff and maybe give me a chance to learn about it a little bit more. But thanks for thanks for doing this podcast. Talking about some bear stuff in the past, and we have way more stories to go through. Maybe we need to make more stories to bat. I think there's a couple we can talk about in the future that be kind of fun. But thanks. Oh, yeah, looking forward to it. Yeah, I think there's some of those some of those lower rogue encounters that are kind of cool, or even like some of the stuff on an old backpacking trip that we were on. I think we had like a couple Bear Bear sightings at that one, too.</p>



<p>So yeah, we've, we've had our share of backpacking adventures, not just in the lower road, but other places do, I'd like to talk to you more about that feature as well?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, I want to do that, too. I think that'd be really cool. Thanks, Robert. I really appreciate you doing this podcast with me. We're, we're coming together. We're finally putting together I guess, what might be, you know, like a pretty consistent outdoors podcast. It's pretty sweet, man. I really appreciate it. Yeah, I'm hoping it works out. It's cool, man. No, it's, it's just the beginning. But but we got to keep doing them. And I appreciate you doing it with me. Every week here, we got to get the site going the the the stream map, it's really cool. And anybody that's bothered to listen to, to these episodes, it's, it's great. I really appreciate you taking the time to do it. Yeah. And,</p>



<p>and, you know, as I think, I think as time develops, and we continue doing this more and more frequently, you know, we're gonna have more more pressing topics and things that, you know, very entertaining.</p>



<p>We're going to be the most entertaining really, Robert, and I mean, you probably learned this a little bit about going through the podcasting. There's not that much entertainment in some podcasts out there. I mean, like to kind of breakthrough, it seems like at least it was talent-wise, or to be entertaining, we would be, I think in the in the running for it. So I think I think it's it's cool that we're doing a podcast about this stuff together. So Robert, I wanted to say thank you very much for doing this podcast with me and on behalf of Robert discret. My name is Billy Newman. And I want to say thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast. Thank you.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon
Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
 


get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_


]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon</p>
<p>Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman</p>
<p>Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p> </p>


<p>get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_</p>



<p>Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Good, Billy, how you doing? I'm doing really good. Thanks a lot for doing another episode of this podcast. I think we're doing episode number three today. We are. That's pretty cool, man. Yeah, I was gonna say I wanted to talk to you about some stuff that will probably be in a few more weeks as we get into the nicer weather. But I wanted to talk to you about some of your past bear experiences. I was wondering what that was like for you, because you were doing guide stuff down on the lower Rogue River. And I know in Grants Pass really a lot of time, we didn't have a lot of bear boxes, or a lot of bear concerns about the wildlife or the wilderness right around the area of town there. I think like if you go south, into the rescues, or over into the coastal range, there's probably more stuff over there. But it was seemed always like a lot lighter than it was further south. Like when you got into California. I remember like when we went just a little bit east to like reading in the Mount Shasta area. And like up into the whiskey Lake area, there was like tons of bear boxes, it seemed like I was like a big thing that they had to protect against all the time. And it was sort of strange, because it wasn't really that much exposure for me when I was doing a lot of camping stuff in Southern Oregon or in Eastern Oregon, especially, I guess Eastern Oregon to have much exposure with like bear encounters out there. And I think it wasn't until I got into like go into the lower rogue before I even saw like the electric fences. So I was gonna ask Yeah, like, Yeah, well, what kind of stuff you had to run into when you're checking out or like when you're doing low rub trips? Well, yeah, I</p>



<p>mean, we have plenty of barren counters down there. And I think one of the big contributors to that is just the just the amount of people that are down there all the time. I mean, the bears really, really know when people are around, you know, there's food, you know, a bunch of new smells, they have an incredible sense of smell. So you know, that traffic down there really kind of brings them into the area. And not to mention, and I could be a little off, but I'm fairly certain that the lower road Canyon, I know about 10 years ago was the highest black bear population in the lower 48. Really? Yeah. Wow. 10 years ago. Yeah. I'm Well, I mean, think about it. I mean, the road going out there to gold beach and Agnes that's a that's bear camp road. I mean, you see bear fences over there all over the place. But uh, yeah, I believe Forest Service did a study and like a flyover and found that in that Canyon, there's more bears per square mile than anywhere else in the lower 48.</p>



<p>Wow, I wouldn't have really thought about that. But yeah, I do understand like bear, bear Creek and bear camp road. Seems like a lot of beer references. I knew that there was a lot of bear activity in Southern Oregon in the past, like if we go back 100 years or so I think 150 years there's a lot of talk about the bear population over in Oregon and over in this section of like the forested areas like a lot of the gold miners had to deal with them up in the up in the hills. And those areas I think even like in the like, what was it isn't? Isn't bear camp road. Park goldmine is you go up? Have you seen? Yeah, a lot of mining claims up there. Yeah, that's what I had seen. I knew like up on Mount Baldy in Grants Pass. There's a lot of a lot of claims in that area. And I'd heard about some bear encounters that happened up there like up by some loop and then over further into the hills like past Mount Baldy, kind of over in the Applegate area. It was like way back stuff or like, do you remember the story? We heard about this in high school? I think we went to the gravesite for this one time. But it was like this piece of local Yeah, rants past history, Laura. We went to this, the oldest gravesite in Grants Pass. It's like in this little park. Now. It's a really strange thing. But you go up and you see this tombstone. And it's from 1856, like sometime before the Civil War. And there's this tombstone that says that this man, bH Baird, died of a grizzly bear attack down by the Rogue River and what would today be River Park? Or like just the park downtown? Like, isn't that nuts?</p>



<p>I've seen that gravesite. Yeah. Back in elementary school. We used to walk over there on Well, we went over there on a field trip one time and we had to do like, you know, like crayon transcripts, you put the piece of transfer paper on the tombstone and do and then I and so we all had to make a rub of that of that tombstone. And but I mean, it's crazy. I mean, if you're going back that distance and time. I mean, at that time, what 1856 Oregon isn't even a state yet. Yeah, a few years. Yeah. And so you've got California, the bear state, and I mean, Grizzlies used to be down here and pretty prominent in the area. I mean, it wasn't until kind of like that, that settled. thing that happened was that that we</p>



<p>started kind of driving them all out. I was wondering about that, like how it was that we was, is that an extra patient when when you remove an animal from its range? Because it seems like we don't we don't even talk about grizzly bears in Southern Oregon and Oregon at all, right?</p>



<p>They're not even acknowledged. And so that's the thing is, I believe it was an Well, I know it was an Ashland, but I think around the it was like in the early 1900s. And I don't know, the year for sure. But um, the last group actually was taken out of that area. Oh, wow. Yeah, it was actually roaming around up in the hills, and was having some major confrontation with people in the area.</p>



<p>Yeah, that's, that seems like it would be a huge issue. Like as all those people moved in, and what I mean, like seven or eight, in every town in Oregon, it was a new town, like 1850. So yeah, sure. Yeah. You just had to think like, how many generations is that, that the animals and the wildlife that's used to like go into that area to feed or to, you know, get access to the river or whatever it is, like whatever their, their natural range is, like how long it takes before those conflicts with people push them out, or kind of just where those animals get eliminated? Because of the people in the area?</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, it's, it's, it's pretty mind boggling when you think about it, it really doesn't take that much time. I mean, between 1858 and, you know, 1900, we eradicate pretty much all.</p>



<p>I think, like nuisance animals like that. You almost have to I mean, or it seems like at the time, you would have you would have had to in that frontiers mindset. My goodness, man, if I moved out here from the east coast, and I just had to be put plopped down in the mountains of Southern Oregon. fighting off grizzly bears coming through town, eaten a guy in the park downtown. Yeah. conservation.</p>



<p>Well, and that's, that's the thing, too, is back then, you know, everything was just, you know, as far as they were concerned, just an infinite resource. It wasn't like we're running out of anything. Yeah, the whole the whole West was fairly untouched. You know, I mean, I'm sure back then. Native peoples. But what's funny is I just I just think of like current day ash lenders, you know, the, the say the same people that had a city council meeting about aggressive deer in the area, you know, dealing dealing with grizzly bears in the 1990s. Did they do that aggressive deer? Yeah, yeah, they're having a big deer problem with with deer kind of taking over the city. And they had a city council meeting about how they were going to acknowledge these deer because they had kind of just lost their fear of people became very tame. Oh, wow. And, yeah, so this was just like, a year ago.</p>



<p>Yeah. No. So I mean, I mean, I always see are for the last few years, definitely, I'd see. Deer just kind of cruising through in big numbers in that Ashlyn lithia. Park. There, you just see, like, I'm just hanging out with everybody. But even that seems to be even like it is in Grants Pass. I remember, I swear, back in 2000, 2003 2004, I didn't see deer at all in the neighborhood that I grew up in, like over it was, it was a recession. So they were were they they were drawn back during that time. Oh, yeah. Yeah. They're financially unstable. But no, before that, like in, I talked to my grandpa about this, too. He, you know, he's lived here all of his life. And he would talk about Yeah, like, we really never saw a deer come through the yard until the year 2004. Like, that's the year they had to put up, like a high fence around the garden to keep it safe. They said, yeah, we just never had a problem with it before. We had like one or two come through. But it was never in these big groups that they had, like now, I guess they were saying that, like the population in town, it just exploded over the last two decades. And see, I wonder what that is. Because that could be that could be</p>



<p>you know, deer moving down to populated areas for for lack of predators, you know, you're never typically going to see a lion in the area. I mean, there's occasional sightings, but I wonder if they kind of come into these rural areas in these kind of urban settings to kind of escape that find gardens that are out and about, but I don't know what, you know, 2004 you know, that would have how that would have correlated. You know,</p>



<p>it's interesting, I guess that was the time that there was probably the most new development in that region that there had been in a long time so I bet it probably pushed out or disturbed some of the area that that that part of animals lived and then probably got pushed over another mountain range to VR, but then it seems interesting you know, if you stay in an area for long enough, you notice about some of the animals the kind of traffic, your backyard out there, but you notice that they're kind of on a schedule like it seems like they they wander around, they have a range they kind of travel through, but it seems like that animal comes back around through the yard or something in the same way. Every day, every couple days, we see that with a with a family like a group of, of like dough. Oh, it goes through my parents yard. And they just come through, like every morning at 10am. And they just kind of cruise across the street and they go on their way. And I don't know, they may make some kind of loopback through some some time. But it's kind of funny. It's readable.</p>



<p>Yeah, just kind of stuff. And it's and that's how it is, is just like they they have they've lost that kind of instinctive fear of people in this area. You know, we're not we're not an immediate threat to them. In his city setting. You know, same with turkeys. You see him in your backyard all the time. Oh, yeah. Or you're driving down the road? Yeah, I mean, the Oh, yeah. So tell me about those turkeys. Yeah, so the other day I was driving through downtown Medford which is, you know, very populated. And I actually had to stop for a crossing of turkeys. And, and I mean, traffic just came to a complete halt. And we all just sat there and let these turkeys cross for about a minute and a half. Wow.</p>



<p>And then then everybody went about their day. How big was the group? What do you what would you call that? gaggle.</p>



<p>I was wondering, it's like a gaggle of geese. Murder flies, a flock of seagulls. Birds of a feather. Right? Yeah, you know, I don't know, all these. The avian types. They all have their own kind of segregated names that they really need all those different words to describe being in a group. So that they do. But good, how many are in a group that I mean, I've seen maybe like 20 or 30 or so. And I agree.</p>



<p>I would say this was about 20. I mean, it wasn't a good size. Well, you know, yeah, yeah.</p>



<p>I've seen like little geese. It's kind of funny. I like you know, when they're really little they stay together. Like, what is it? I guess not like, I've seen the Partridge Family. Blake quail, Riley quail, like, yeah, groups of quail those families, like all stick together, you see, like, pods of those that are around like 12 or 15 in size? It's kind of funny. Oh,</p>



<p>well, you know, what's funny, we're talking about the way animals move in and out of areas. Yeah, I'm where I'm at now. My grandparents lived out here. And I used to come up this area all the time as a kid. And there used to, we used to see tons of coil up on the driveway coming into our place. Oh, wow. But with the development of people kind of moving into the area. And this place is, I wouldn't say blown up. But it there's definitely an influx of people living out here now. Right. And with that has come some cats, you know, domestic house cats that people have brought in kind of let run wild and then they breed of feral cats. And at this point, now, I haven't seen a quail out here in probably 10 years. Really? Wow. Yeah,</p>



<p>that's interesting how that changes, you know, I've seen like that kind of move around to I remember when I was a kid, this seems like a silly thing to notice. But you probably believe me that I didn't notice it. When I was a kid in the 90s. And maybe after like 2001 2002, there was every evening in the summertime, this, this stream, this Murder of Crows, this huge group of crows that would move south at like sunset, like every night, it seemed like they would come out from from like some section kind of down by the river, or like maybe like a mile or two south or something like that. And they'd come up that, that kind of draw around like Hamilton road or something like that. And they cruise up, they go right over our house over my grandparents house every night. And it seemed like they had been doing that for years. I talked to my grandparents about it. They said, Yeah, we've been watching him do it for decades now as we sit out here and in the evening and water the garden. And then for maybe the last 810, eight, nine years, maybe 10 years. They're not there anymore. Not like they used to be at offices, we'd have a I mean, they might have just moved over, you know, boxes for whatever reason. But yeah, why are they like that? Yeah, for me, it's like the air quality. It must be like, it must be new houses or new places. Or maybe they get disturbed at a you know, wherever they would they would go to whatever place they would, or trees. Well,</p>



<p>yeah, I mean, the housing developments really blown up in this area. And I think that, I mean, there's there's no denying that that's going to have some kind of effect on wild, wild animals in the area.</p>



<p>You know, the one that my grandpa pointed out was a fox. I don't know what we used to see. But he said that like when he was a kid, and all the way up through through him growing up and being out here. He had never seen a fox out in that area, like out over on clover lawn. And he said like you saw when maybe six or seven years ago. He was like wow, that's like the first Fox like that we've ever seen out here. Do you guys see fox is that you know, I've</p>



<p>seen you know, not out here and I think that's probably because we have dogs</p>



<p>Yeah, so we've got, we've got dogs in the area, which I think kind of keep a lot of probably Fox out of the area also makes sense. But yeah, I've seen a couple Fox down near the Applegate. And then another thing is we have coyotes that show up. I was curious. Do you see coyotes pass through that area? much? Not not frequently, but there has been. Okay, so when we first got Layla, our little Australian Shepherd, right, yeah. Um, and she was just a puppy. She would bark. And there was this. There's this little pack of coyotes that was up the hill from us. And they were it was a little spooky, but a little cool at the same time. They would have one, and I watched this, they had one coyote, sit up the hill and respond to her barking. Ooh, I've heard about this. Yeah, she would bark and it would bark back to her. almost kind of enticing her to kind of go up the hill. Hey, come hang out. Do you want of us? Yeah, one of us. Were just were some dogs up here. I mean, she's about the size of a coyote. Yeah. So you know, she's gonna get up there, and there's gonna be 20 of them. And she's gonna be in trouble.</p>



<p>Yeah, do they go for dogs? Is that what they do? Are they are like, because they're not their own? Or? Or how's that work?</p>



<p>Yeah, so you kind of got to worry about that situation. You know, there's a pack of 20. And they're obviously going to take advantage of a domesticated animal. And a lot of times in urban settings, you'll see kind of the way coyotes and other different predators will actually prey on these domestic animals, because they're so familiar with humans and have kind of, in a sense, lost their natural instinct to find fear from these animals. Oh, interesting,</p>



<p>huh? You know, I've heard a story about, I think, maybe kind of similar to the dynamic, you were talking about how there was a pot of coyotes, there's one that came out, and it was kind of calling out, you're enticing the dog at this guy's house. And it's like, I don't know, they had like a dog conversation. And this coyote kind of convinced the bad attitude out of this domesticated dog. Like there's chickens in the property. And so this coyote kind of like, talked to him for a couple days, like the kind of sound like get a little closer, a little friendlier with each other as like different dogs. And then a couple days into it, the house dog like attacked a chicken. I think like the coyote got into and they both like got chickens and then like, took off and hung out together. And like, killed the chickens. Now you think like, Oh, that's a nuts thing like this. This guy, coyote, this other wild dog came in, and then like, taught like a new kind of behavior to a domesticated dog. Like, you know, got away with a bunch of livestock. It's crazy.</p>



<p>That's funny. It's just like, yeah, invoking that that natural predatorial sense. In a house dog.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. Hey, follow with the pack or something. But yeah, it was like, Yeah, kinda like, Hey, come here can be with us. We're crazy. Wild. Yeah. Got it to you real fast. Some of the bear stuff that we're talking about. So like, even in your backyard there where we're talking about the coyotes, you seen bears out there, right. Did you guys have one out there? Like even right now? We're not right now. But like within our last year, don't you see? Where that kind of roams that area?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Yeah, I do. Like, so I'm out. He's a pain man. So basically, I don't have a trash service out here. So we keep all of our, our trash. Yeah, all of our trash cans. And then, you know, once a month or so, I'll take it down to the landfill and then pay your fee and take care of that. But the problem with that is, is these bears with incredible sense of smell, smell all of your waste, and they want to come in because they're curious animals. ager, and they want to get a little, little taste of what you've been cooking in the kitchen. And so it's great, you know, you'll go to work and then you come home and you'll just find like three trash cans dumped over and you know, three trash cans worth of garbage just spread around your property. And that's great. Yeah, so you get to spend the next couple hours sitting outside just picking up trash that you already so carefully placed into a garbage bag a week</p>



<p>before, that'd be so frustrating. So what do you guys have to keep it inside or something? Or is there like a what do you do?</p>



<p>Well, so this past spring, I got really fed up with it. I actually built a little like 10 by 12 shed. Oh, that's this man. Yeah, yeah, and Yeah, so now I keep all the cans in there under lock. So I Yeah, and that's, that's honestly that's cut down significantly, I actually haven't dealt with him knock on wood for about a year now but for a while there was like every other night about three o'clock in the morning you wake up to the sound of you know, trash cans get knocked over and stuff.</p>



<p>And then furthermore, let's go ahead. Oh, you go ahead.</p>



<p>Oh, for the most part, you know they're pretty skittish you go out there and yell at them and kind of charge them, and they'll take off. But this particular bear that I was dealing with kind of got to the point where it was really standing its ground with me. That's, that's, that's a rough one. Yeah, I wasn't really a big fan of it. I mean, one one account that I can really sticks out in my mind. It's about three o'clock in the morning, and we got a heavy snow and this is two years ago. And you know, the area Southern Oregon. That's, that's not real typical of a winter. Right? But he must have been hungry, and you know who bears hibernate in the winter? Well, no, they just are less active in the winter. But he must have been hungrier for some.</p>



<p>You know, I grabbed my shotgun and run out in the yard. I'm just, I'm in my boxers and my boots. And I run out there with just my, my iPhone flashlight. You know about how powerful are nothing? Yeah, and I just and I just meet him in the yard. Standing there, you know, he's about 20 feet away, and I'm yelling at him and stuff. And he's just kind of like, what are you gonna do? You know, what do you get? Yeah, every every hour of the day, you would have done something by now. matted. Exactly, man. That's tough. So no, he stood his ground on me. And if you've been around bears that are getting fairly aggressive, they'll kind of do like a bark. It's kind of a grunt. I mean, it doesn't sound like a like a dog bark, but it's just kind of like a low grunt. Yeah. And so I kind of extra snowball out of my thing. You know, and he kind of, he grunted at me, and then I yelled at him again. Yeah, you get out of your bed. They will snowball.</p>



<p>So I was gonna ask you, I said a snowballs What? What's, what would you use as a bear deterrent? Like, did you have to bring a bear to turn with you down on the lower road to?</p>



<p>You know, and when we guide? were discouraged to bring firearms with us. Yeah, I figured I won't name any names, but some some of us do. Um, just because these bears have been so introduced the people that they've really lost that instinct of fear. And they're really kind of become quite a nuisance down there. So some of the guides, definitely not me, will carry a firearm down there.</p>



<p>So as I said, like, lethal deterrent? What do you think of the bear spray, like the pepper spray canisters that you pick up?</p>



<p>You know, I mean, we're not Grizzly country and black bears by nature are pretty skittish. I mean, they don't. They don't really want anything to do with you. They just want.</p>



<p>That's what I've seen before, too. I mean, like, I've seen a black bear maybe three times. And as soon as it even noticed, we were 100 feet around there just bolt as fast as it could, it was just scrambling up the side of the hill. And you think, Oh, my God, I can climb like that so fast. But</p>



<p>so there's a couple of points on that. I want to I want to answer your question, but then I also kind of want to talk about Oh, yeah. So to answer your question. Okay. Yeah, so to answer your question, um, when we're down there in the canyon, a lot of times, what we'll do is, you know, you want to make yourself large and loud. Typically, we'll take our coolers full of food, we'll stack them in a pile. Okay. And then we'll stack pots and pans on top of them. And then so that way, if they're getting into them, we can hear them. We would take everything out of the boat because we don't want them getting in there pop in a raft or anything like that. Yeah. But then what we'll do is we all go to sleep with like a couple of Dutch oven lids next to our cots. Oh, really? So yeah. And you got your headlamp ready so when you hear that that rustling in the pots and pans falling and stuff, you know, all the guides jump up and everybody grabs their lids and starts cleaning them together and yelling at them and and they'll take off.</p>



<p>Yeah, so the noise is enough of a deterrent. And yeah, and you said you had like a nuisance bear one night that like had come up and was like snapping Yeah, story. Yeah. What happened was that, Oh, well.</p>



<p>We had a we had a philan guide, she guides for another company on the rug. And she was with us. And this is funny too, because we cook this big salmon dinner. Nice. And you know, we have salmon drippings everywhere and all we got salmons skin everything all over the camp. And, and so typically, one of us always sleeps in the kitchen to kind of watch over everything. And that was me that night. And it was a lazy night. I think we probably had too many beers. And, you know, it was like, I'm not gonna pick this up. I'm just gonna play the odds and say, we're not going to get a Baron camp tonight. So I go to</p>



<p>do that. Yeah. So I've done it. Well, yeah, you have to I mean, it's, you know, if you can</p>



<p>I never run into a bear. I think we did it. Like, when we were doing a backpacking trip, we had to put our food into a bear safe container, and then like, put it hoisted into a tree, more than 50 metres away from our tent, something like that. And I think like we pulled in, we set up super late and we put it out always, but man, we did not do whatever we whatever absolute thing we were supposed to do for our bear Food Protection.</p>



<p>Well, you know what I mean, most of the time, I mean, you're gonna see very less times and you will, or</p>



<p>you're going to not see bear more than you will see bear. Now that seems like it's been how it is in my life. I mean, if we're talking about the most bears in that area, I mean, that was kinda like where we grew up in that area, Southern Oregon. I have only seen a bear a couple times in that area. I mean, I think I saw it. I think on two of the hikes I did down on the lower road. I think I saw another one out in the Applegate or out you know, past Applegate lake. That was California and the skis. I guess we saw a black bear out there. And then maybe one other time on the road while I was driving. That's it. That's really all I've seen. So I hardly ever see or have a black bear counter at all. But you're down there more so so Okay, so we're back. We're camping. There's salmon spread across this campsite. It's nighttime. Robert played the odds.</p>



<p>Yeah, so return over the next Cod. Yeah, no. Man. Next thing I know, I'm getting woken up not by a bear, but by a dove. And she's kicking me. And she's gonna wake up wake up and I got a flashlight in my face. And I'm like, What are you doing right now? And she's like, this bear just came over was sniffing my face. Oh, see, weighs in her face. And so she jumps up. She smokes the barrier runs off a few yards. And she's yelling at it, I guess. And and so she's yelling at it throwing stuff at it. And if if you've kind of provoked provoked the bear enough, they'll do this. This kind of like jaw grinding, they'll grind their job. This is this is kind of fast, the little barking stage that they'll do. And that's that's really a situation where you kind of need to be on point. Wow. So anyway, somehow she got this bear to kind of lose immediate interest. And she's waking me up. And honestly, the times that I have slept through bear situations and camp are way too many</p>



<p>eggs. wake up the next morning, and they're like, oh, man, where are we?</p>



<p>Robert faded again. Rob is gonna be back in just one second. We're having trouble with Robin come back into what you're talking about. I want to reset it but but so we're seeing like, Where were you last night? When are you you were just coming into that how many times you slept through a bear walking through camp?</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, there's been multiple times that people have, you know, other guys were just like, Where were you last night? We had that bearing camp. And most most of the time, you know, stop.</p>



<p>We just dropped out for a second. But Robert, I was gonna ask you to come back with that story that we were talking about. Where the bear was sniffing this girl's head she woke up she moved back she got your attention you woke up? What happens next?</p>



<p>Well, at that point, she had got it to leave, and she was freaked out you know she wanted anybody awake with her? Yeah, absolutely. I guess I wouldn't know man and she she was so pissed off because I'm laying right next to the trash and all all this salmon skin and everything. And I never got bothered and she's she's sleeping on the outskirts of Captain Roberts face So, yeah, anyway, it left me alone. But But you're saying it started snapping? Did you see it snap? No, I was snapping at her. Yeah, and not not necessarily snapping but doing like a jog or jog. Right? Like it's john and almost like grind its teeth.</p>



<p>Oh, and I first see that. No, I especially in the dark when you can't see it. Yeah, I feel so.</p>



<p>Yeah. So anyway, it was it's just one of those things, you know, you got to get people awake, make noise, do stuff. But you know, the problem is with with people being with with barren, high populated areas like that, you know, they're they're losing that instinct of fear. And that can that can</p>



<p>nuisance dire situation. Yeah. And I hear like, you see the signs of the say, like nuisance bears will be destroyed. Yeah. Oh, man, that is a final sentence that's like,</p>



<p>zero. That's the Bureau of Land Management. You know, that's what their signs are all down there. Right. Yeah. You know, a Fed bears a dead bear. You know, as you start feeding these bears and leaving food around, they're gonna start showing up more and more. And then as a nuisance bear, they have to try to relocate. And if that's not going to work, then they have to exterminate that bear.</p>



<p>Man. That sounds so tough. I just like we were talking about Stephen Ellis podcast earlier, I just listened to an episode from a bear scientists that works at Yellowstone National Park studying the bear population there. Okay, they were talking about this big upset that happened years ago, when the I think the the establishment that we're in Yellowstone, like the restaurants and the lodges, and the towns just outside of Yellowstone, that were part of that ecosystem, they would all have these food dumps where they would like they would just throw it, they would have like a pit that we put all the food that people didn't need in the park or whatever went bad. And it would be this feeding frenzy or this feeding area for all the bears that were in that ecosystem, they all kind of worked off of this. And it was just kind of like an attraction for a while where bears would come in and eat the food. And so they made a decision that they were going to stop the food drops, as it were like and like change, it wasn't really intentional. At first, it was just like a dumpster is like the, you know, the area that that the trash was gonna go. I think it was kind of like the trash area of Yellowstone, which is kind of weird to think that there's such a thing, but I guess without the people that go through, there would be something like this. And this is way back to book they so they stopped these feeding sites. And then a big part of that population of bears like died off or had other types of conflicts that happened when he was trying to seek out different places to get food that had now become more scarce. But really interesting others conflicts Come on</p>



<p>see that. That's what happens is you've got you've got bear coming into this to this, you know, infinite food source that they keep coming back to you because we leave all this waste. And what happens is, you know, not that generation, but a generation or two down the road, these bears are used to feeding off of our waste, and then don't really know how to fend for themselves in the wild. And it's all fun while it's a tourist attract tree, and then people get to snap pictures. But then you've got these bears that are dying in the wild. And also you're getting your carwin</p>



<p>Alright, we're back now we faded out for one second with with Roberts call his Skype call and for us. But we were talking about that last little bit of how, how there's there were the bears in the Yellowstone range that had difficulties a couple generations after they've become dependent on these food sources, these food drops. And it's really weird this types of conflicts that happen when people enter an area that's just been wilderness and wildlife before. It's interesting how that goes for us. But there's always been types of conflicts.</p>



<p>Yeah, and as long as there's people, there will still continue to be that, that conflict between natural wildlife and, and us.</p>



<p>Yeah, it'll be interesting. You know, I think in future podcasts we should talk about, we should talk about some of the wildlife management stuff that we've learned about some of the ways that BLM works or fishing game or some of these other departments and how they they manage some of that stuff. That's a lot of that's a big learning curve for me. I'm a pretty simple hiker. Yeah. But I think part of it prior to this podcast, I think is really interesting. To learn a little bit more about some of those, maybe more serious aspects or just more, the more the governance side of how wildlife and outdoor recreation management goes. This kind of interesting stuff. I think it's, it's cool to talk about, it's been fun talking about with you to the new school.</p>



<p>Yeah. And I think that'd be something great to elaborate on. I think that's something that more and more people need to understand and acknowledge the way our national parks and public lands are run. Yeah,</p>



<p>I think it'd be cool to talk about some of that stuff and maybe give me a chance to learn about it a little bit more. But thanks for thanks for doing this podcast. Talking about some bear stuff in the past, and we have way more stories to go through. Maybe we need to make more stories to bat. I think there's a couple we can talk about in the future that be kind of fun. But thanks. Oh, yeah, looking forward to it. Yeah, I think there's some of those some of those lower rogue encounters that are kind of cool, or even like some of the stuff on an old backpacking trip that we were on. I think we had like a couple Bear Bear sightings at that one, too.</p>



<p>So yeah, we've, we've had our share of backpacking adventures, not just in the lower road, but other places do, I'd like to talk to you more about that feature as well?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, I want to do that, too. I think that'd be really cool. Thanks, Robert. I really appreciate you doing this podcast with me. We're, we're coming together. We're finally putting together I guess, what might be, you know, like a pretty consistent outdoors podcast. It's pretty sweet, man. I really appreciate it. Yeah, I'm hoping it works out. It's cool, man. No, it's, it's just the beginning. But but we got to keep doing them. And I appreciate you doing it with me. Every week here, we got to get the site going the the the stream map, it's really cool. And anybody that's bothered to listen to, to these episodes, it's, it's great. I really appreciate you taking the time to do it. Yeah. And,</p>



<p>and, you know, as I think, I think as time develops, and we continue doing this more and more frequently, you know, we're gonna have more more pressing topics and things that, you know, very entertaining.</p>



<p>We're going to be the most entertaining really, Robert, and I mean, you probably learned this a little bit about going through the podcasting. There's not that much entertainment in some podcasts out there. I mean, like to kind of breakthrough, it seems like at least it was talent-wise, or to be entertaining, we would be, I think in the in the running for it. So I think I think it's it's cool that we're doing a podcast about this stuff together. So Robert, I wanted to say thank you very much for doing this podcast with me and on behalf of Robert discret. My name is Billy Newman. And I want to say thank you guys very much for listening to this episode. of the good out there podcast. Thank you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon
Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
 


get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Good, Billy, how you doing? I'm doing really good. Thanks a lot for doing another episode of this podcast. I think we're doing episode number three today. We are. That's pretty cool, man. Yeah, I was gonna say I wanted to talk to you about some stuff that will probably be in a few more weeks as we get into the nicer weather. But I wanted to talk to you about some of your past bear experiences. I was wondering what that was like for you, because you were doing guide stuff down on the lower Rogue River. And I know in Grants Pass really a lot of time, we didn't have a lot of bear boxes, or a lot of bear concerns about the wildlife or the wilderness right around the area of town there. I think like if you go south, into the rescues, or over into the coastal range, there's probably more stuff over there. But it was seemed always like a lot lighter than it was further south. Like when you got into California. I remember like when we went just a little bit east to like reading in the Mount Shasta area. And like up into the whiskey Lake area, there was like tons of bear boxes, it seemed like I was like a big thing that they had to protect against all the time. And it was sort of strange, because it wasn't really that much exposure for me when I was doing a lot of camping stuff in Southern Oregon or in Eastern Oregon, especially, I guess Eastern Oregon to have much exposure with like bear encounters out there. And I think it wasn't until I got into like go into the lower rogue before I even saw like the electric fences. So I was gonna ask Yeah, like, Yeah, well, what kind of stuff you had to run into when you're checking out or like when you're doing low rub trips? Well, yeah, I



mean, we have plenty of barren counters down there. And I think one of the big contributors to that is just the just the amount of people that are down there all the time. I mean, the bears really, really know when people are around, you know, there's food, you know, a bunch of new smells, they have an incredible sense of smell. So you know, that traffic down there really kind of brings them into the area. And not to mention, and I could be a little off, but I'm fairly certain that the lower road Canyon, I know about 10 years ago was the highest black bear population in the lower 48. Really? Yeah. Wow. 10 years ago. Yeah. I'm Well, I mean, think about it. I mean, the road going out there to gold beach and Agnes that's a that's bear camp road. I mean, you see bear fences over there all over the place. But uh, yeah, I believe Forest Service did a study and like a flyover and found that in that Canyon, there's more bears per square mile than anywhere else in the lower 48.



Wow, I wouldn't have really thought about that. But yeah, I do understand like bear, bear Creek and bear camp road. Seems like a lot of beer references. I knew that there was a lot of bear activity in Southern Oregon in the past, like if we go back 100 years or so I think 150 years there's a lot of talk about the bear population over in Oregon and over in this section of like the forested areas like a lot of the gold miners had to deal with them up in the up in the hills. And those areas I think even like in the like, what was it isn't? Isn't bear camp road. Park goldmine is you go up? Have you seen? Yeah, a lot of mining claims up there. Yeah, that's what I had seen. I knew like up on Mount Baldy in Grants Pass. There's a lot of a lot of claims in that area. And I'd heard about some bear encounters that happened up there like up by some loop and then over further into the hills]]></itunes:summary>
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		<title>Get Out There &#124; 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon</title>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon
Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
 


get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_



Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Good, Billy, how you doing? I'm doing really good. Thanks a lot for doing another episode of this podcast. I think we're doing episode number three today. We are. That's pretty cool, man. Yeah, I was gonna say I wanted to talk to you about some stuff that will probably be in a few more weeks as we get into the nicer weather. But I wanted to talk to you about some of your past bear experiences. I was wondering what that was like for you, because you were doing guide stuff down on the lower Rogue River. And I know in Grants Pass really a lot of time, we didn't have a lot of b]]></googleplay:description>
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	<title>Get Out There &#124; 02 Hunting In Eastern Oregon</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-02-hunting-in-eastern-oregon/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 02 Mar 2017 21:46:20 +0000</pubDate>
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	<description><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon</p>
<p>Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>


<p>Get-out-there-02-hunting-cut_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm good. We are recording Episode Two of the get out there podcast, podcast about the outdoors about outdoor adventure tourism is about travel. I don't know anything else, probably just that we want to talk about. But Thanks, Robert, for doing this podcast with me today. Yeah, absolutely. No, it's been cool, man. But yeah, what's been going on? It's been not a whole lot. It's been a week since we last did this. Yeah, we were talking about the lower rogue stuff on our our pilot episode. And that was a crazy story. I was thinking about that, like through the week, singing about that, like, I just kind of took it as a novelty that you were telling us about that story. But then I was kind of playing it back like, man, there's a lot of situations of different moments in that chain of events that seemed like it was going to be pretty, pretty tight to get out of. Yeah, thanks for talking about it. But yeah, Robert, if you didn't listen to last week's episode was a raft guide for a number of years on the Rogue River and lower row River. Which is pretty cool, man. I think it's a it's no small no small task.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, it's a ton of fun. And it's, it's opened a lot of opportunities stuff to me, and you know, it's a passion So, so it's a win-win.</p>



<p>Now that but I've known you for a while. And I know that you haven't always been on the river. In fact, I remember like when we'd go out we had the worst gear we had like, the little biomart Tahiti that you'd play with a little yellow, yellow. Yeah, we just we just try get by going down for what like hogs to go lease or something like that. We just see that thing taco in the center a few times.</p>



<p>Yeah, it would be popping. Because we have like a 30 rack at the back sitting on top of our life jacket.</p>



<p>You know, I remember Jeremy jumping off of his kayak onto the back of my kayak and a rapid to flip it upside, you know, and roll it over anything. Oh, this is great. This is this is these are the brilliant river people that would one day guide Yeah, you know, and you wonder how I yeah, it's it's amazing that they do. But Robert, an avid outdoorsman, has been on the river for a good bit of time skilled in that. But before that, Robert, I wanted to talk to you about some of the old experience you had learning how to hunt, or learning how to do some of those some of those other types of outdoors things like, like I was thinking about trips that my dad and I did Eastern Oregon and I wanted to ask you about yes to like, because my dad and I, I think we started going in like, I don't know what 2001 2000 or something like that. And that time we go out in the early fall, we were just campers and we just dug that time of year over in that part of the country but we would always cruise out east to Klamath Falls east to Lakeview. And we go up into the mountains over there near Warner rim and plush and heart man, that's beautiful. I dug that area super cool. But we so we've gone out there like a number of times to do like photos and camping and hiking stuff. But that time of year was also I think a bit or well there's there's a few different seasons. You could probably explain that over time. But but there's always like different groups of hunters kind of coming in through that area because it was a lot of it was a big public land out there. I think it was BLM land in that section at least. I think there was a season for antelope through that area. But I'm sure</p>



<p>Well, you've probably seen tons of antelope out there. Yeah, tonight. Are you are you familiar with I mean, just how incredible their eyesight is? Not really no, do you know? Okay, I mean, crazy tangent, but I mean, antelope, their eyesight is the equivalent of a 10 power binocular. So I mean, imagine you're looking through 10 power binoculars and something that's what an antelope sees. So I typically like when people hunt antelope Well, I don't want to typically generalize everyone but I know there are a lot of hunters that will use like radio communication and kind of like us to people you know, over like the the radius of a mile and a half two miles. Oh, wow. And have somebody go way around and have somebody almost set up and one person tries to herd them towards</p>



<p>said Hunter. Oh, like someone that's like stationary, or is that is that Yeah, get into the ghillie suit kind of thing. Where they're like,</p>



<p>yeah, I mean, I don't I don't know if they're, like, you know, full on snipers status. But I mean, really close, you know, I mean, it's really, you just want to stay still in, you know, because, I mean, they just have such incredible</p>



<p>eyesight. That's amazing. Yeah, I've wondered about that. You know, we've we spotted him out there. Because, you know, in those areas, it's so flat welds, there's contour to the land, but you can see for miles and miles and as you lookout, you can you can see packs or you know groups of three or For and sometimes big pack, I think we saw maybe a brown 20 move through an area one time. Yeah. And you just go, yeah, they heard up they cruise. Yeah, it was, it was really interesting to see. And it was cool too, because in the way that the land was, you could see where hundreds of years before the Indian tribes in that area had also been to hunt probably what might have been some of the same game.</p>



<p>But well, isn't that cool to when you're out there? I mean, you're just like, you're coming across all those like obsidian areas where, you know, the Indians would sit there and like chip their chips ship their arrowheads and spearheads and everything.</p>



<p>Yeah. So cool. Yeah, really interesting. When you get to kind of reflect on how long people have been in the area, or when you get to see the natural elements still just remain there. because nothing's come by to disturb that sense. It's, it's really remote territory that we end up being in a lot of time.</p>



<p>It's amazing. Yeah, you're out there. And you're so disconnected from people. I mean, but there's still roads around. And so I mean, you just assume there's people everywhere. But it's amazing that you can walk, you know, 100 yards off of a main highway and find these just completely undisturbed. obsidian deposits, were just a, you know, 150 years ago, or even longer. There was there was some, you know, just, yeah, they're chipping chipping arrowheads?</p>



<p>Yeah, there's been a there's been a handful of areas that I think we've seen. there's a there's a museum in Klamath Falls and my dad and I went to on a trip back. I think it was the Fayetteville museum. I think it was downtown, but it was it was this guy back in the I don't know, like 20s 30s 40s 50s probably, excuse me, not not in his age, but the 1920s 1930s 1940s I think for a good portion of his life. What he did all the time was go out to Eastern Oregon just to all sorts of different places across Oregon and collect obsidian and arrowheads and spear tips and knife tools. And it was the biggest collection of things across like the Columbia River area and like things from the pirate over in Eastern Oregon and Central Oregon and stuff from bend in the in the lakes that were around there. There's like this beautiful piece. They had one from Nevada. That was an opal Arrowhead. That was like the most famous one. Yeah, it was it was almost like a like a decorative ceremonial Arrowhead. But okay, but it was like yeah, cuz it was just such a pretty jewel like kind of Arrowhead. But it was like, yeah, this opal made Arrowhead that came out of Nevada from somewhere, I guess from some open mind area. Wow. Yeah. You think about like, Wow, that's so cool. But he had some of the most most rare pieces in that area. But it was really cool. You could walk through you can just see all of these different, different pieces that were collected before the times change. And those things were, you know, restricted in collection but but at the time, yeah, it was set up and now it's just, it's just set up into a museum where you can observe a lot of the ancient history and ancient Paleolithic tools. It's cool stuff. That's, that's great. I'd love to go check that out. It's cool. We're about there. We actually we should Yeah, that'd be a fun one to check out. But I wanted to talk to you about like where you guys used to go hunting or like where you guys would would first go out when you were younger? Yeah. Was it over to Eastern Oregon at first or were you guys more local?</p>



<p>Well, yeah, I was out in the open the fort rock unit and Cod, as long as I've been out there, I still can't really explain that the significance of that area and I'm sure you could probably touch better on that. Maybe. But, but for for rock or the Yeah, the Yeah, Fort rock.</p>



<p>Rock is really cool. What is that area? That's like, I think it's in like the Deschutes area.</p>



<p>It's not quite it's like okay, so yeah, you would head south of like, of boy, what is that Ben? You know, cruise down through lupine on 97. And then you cruise down through Shilla Quinn and out that</p>



<p>Yeah, I remember Sheila Quinn and cutting ease or cutting East then because I remember coming up on highway 58 I guess I'd figure Ah, or that diamond Lake cut off. Remember that super straight road that cuts. It goes past mouthfeel soon I remember it was just like 30 miles on an absolutely straight road. I was blown away when I first saw it when I was a kid, which is silly now it's probably just pretty normal. You get out to highway 140 and then you take that that lower highway that cuts out and I remember going out there yeah going out to to Fort rock first and then there's like Silver Lake. And then further you go out to summer lake. Or you can go out to Christmas Valley out in that area. There's a whole bunch of cool little spots out there.</p>



<p>Yeah, tons tons to explore. You know, I mean, just an Oregon there's so much and it's it's so cool because it's just such a vast change of environment you know, it completely is Yeah, yeah. You come from the west coast side of Oregon, you know, and everything's kind of green and lush that you get out there and you're in the high desert. Just sagebrush and just that ground palmists from all that volcanic activity. Yeah, yeah, it's a neat area I have I have a lot of love for that area.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, me too. Yeah, that area is always been really cool and really really close to me But yeah, for rock is really cool. That's that's a really interesting geological feature where it looks like a crater almost, you know, where like, like if a meteor came down and like kind of punched out a section like I was just hearing about it was it like our, you know, that meteor crater in Arizona or is that big giant circle, and sort of brings up that image in your head, but this one's different. It's it's built like a fortress almost as it was, but what I've understood is that it was sort of like Smith rock in a way where there was an aqua offer, and then there was like an active lava flow. And I guess this type of rock came up and and created that shape. However, it was all at one time, and I guess the area around it eroded away. But that area was okay. I don't really know if that's true. Yeah, it's</p>



<p>kind of the same. The same idea is what is that Devil's Tower? And like, in Where is that? Is that like, North Dakota? I mean, North Dakota? No, actually, it's I think you're right. Or Wyoming? Oh, yeah. Yeah. But yeah, I think that was kind of the same thing. We're just like, you know, everything eroded away from it. Slept was that hard material?</p>



<p>I remember on a field trip the said that about Table Rock over in Medford?</p>



<p>Oh, no, I was just I was just gonna say that. But I'm just kind of talking out of my ass. I don't really know what I'm actually.</p>



<p>See. I don't know that. I don't know. But I'm not a geologist. But I remember that on that on the field trip in seventh grade, they said that the RO rivers erosion through the area is what created or you know that that waterway of erosion is what created much of that valley there, which is interesting. I was wondering about that because the Rogue River was from Mount mazama. I was wondering if the Rogue River exists, would the Rogue River have existed in the same channel, before Mount mazama would have blown and become Crater Lake?</p>



<p>You know, I don't so it comes from boundary springs, which is just off the left or the left off the west side of Crater Lake. Okay, about seven miles or so. But I mean, I've gotten like a little bit of a geology lesson from a couple people down there since I've been in the canyon. Yeah, I wanted to hear perspective. And actually, I got a book called, like the portrait of the rogue, which is really kind of a neat read, especially if you're from around the area. But one of the experts in there talks about how the coastal range like the coast used to be over near the Blue Mountains in the flowers. I've heard that that's where the coast was, you know, you'd walk out there to your little steamboat and go trawling for grabs. Just Just a couple billion years ago,</p>



<p>and I've heard that that was the case. I saw an animation one time that sped up time by a million years a second, but you could see the old coast being I guess what would be kind of a remnant of the Rocky Mountain played that kind of comes down from Canada where the wallflowers are and it would be that sort of section, and then it showed these clumps of different different landmasses sort of landing into into ours. Isn't there a subduction zone like some of the stuff that causes all the trouble for earthquakes down in California? There's sort of similar stuff up here where where Yeah, it was a couple of different land or types of landmass that came together.</p>



<p>Well, can you imagine I mean, this area had to be such like a geographical hotspot when all this when these tectonic shifts and volcanic oh my gosh, I turmoil was going on. Could you imagine this had to be like the most inhabitable place you know, like it would be horrible.</p>



<p>What isn't? Isn't it known as sort of an interesting geological area because of the way the redwood curtain acts or looks as a piece of land like I heard that it was it was really like mountainous and rigid because it was kind of well I don't know, it's just the nature of that that coastal zone that's come in was like a really rocky kind of lumpy, crinkled piece of land that was coming and it was like unusual for the rest of the area around the United States. It doesn't have that type of land formation. But I don't really know anything about we started to Tyler. He's got he's got he's got a degree. At least he's taking classes in this subject. So that bro Yeah, well, you know, I remember going up on a drive With my cousin Laura, we'll get back to the rogue and the mazama stuff in a second. I remember going out on a drive with my cousin Lauren, we went up to the top of us. Well, I guess was one of the top sections of the Cisco's we did that road that I think you and I had been on before. That's south of Applegate Lake as you go into California, and you can take that road a long ways back, it goes up and up and up and up and up that mountain and you can actually take it all the way through the end out on that Happy Camp highway. At the other end, maybe what is that the Klamath River? I don't know what that other?</p>



<p>I didn't. Didn't we do that drive one time? We did do that over the road. We came we came from a different direction. But yeah, similar.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, that same thing. Yeah. But I remember, I think that might have taken a lower pass. But I remember this when we came up to a point and it was just it was a super high elevation I looked at it later was almost 7000 feet above sea level. When you get to that point, then you walk out, you can see Yeah, you can see up to up to Crater Lake ec McGlothlin really well from that spot. But when I looked later, to kind of find out some information about the geology of that area that I mentioned how it was interesting, because the reason it was so high is because it was a different piece of land, that it kind of come in to that area. But it was just weird to think that you know, you're standing on something that was I guess another piece or played a land that came in and then kind of joined the coast, a rising elevation at a time, like you were saying how the coast used to be over toward Montana.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's okay, man, I could trip out on the way mountains and everything were formed just like a trip out on space. Time, Man, I wish there. It's like, it's I mean, we know so much, but still so little, you know, and we can't really wrap our heads around the magnitude of how it all formed. Oh, yeah, absolutely. No, I</p>



<p>have absolutely no way of holding, in my mind the understanding of more than 1000 years, probably, I mean, even 1000 years, it seems like a stretch to kind of imagine truly that much, or to keep track of it. But when it goes into million years, or 10,000 years, or, you know, any any number of millions of years in the past before that when things like this and our landmass would have been formed. It's just like, oh, completely beyond me. What was it 5000 years ago, they say Mount mazama blue, you see that? That the river comes out of the boundary springs, I just remember like all the lava flows, and all the you know, the what, what do they call that? Just the the cinder blocks or the I guess it would be lava flows, where you just see all that kind of piled up for miles and miles and miles around there. I always would have thought that would have diverted some of the water flow. But you said you you would talk to some people about the river and like how it how its channel was further down.</p>



<p>Yeah, this is actually I guy I would love to have on this podcast. His name is Bob Ruffalo. Vich. And he's a saltiel College. But can I be so cool? Ah, he's great, man. And he's actually the guy that you know, founded road wilderness who I now cool work for. Yeah. So that was his business for a number of years. And now it's come full circle. And now he's just an employee at his old business. That's that's the way to go. But you know, he's been on the river for 40 years. Like the guy knows everyone and everything. And he has such an array of information. And I think I think maybe getting him on some time would be really, really great. That'd be so yeah. Good to talk to a guy like that. Yeah, it he'll go for hours. I mean, put on your, you know, put on a cup a pot of coffee. comfortable. Three party. Yeah, exactly. So, so. Yeah. So what did you know about the the low? Rep. Well, yeah, sorry. Yeah, he, he just, he's taken down several geologists that that all really told him the same thing. And he had told it to me, and you know, it's just Bob hearsay at that point. Sure. Until, you know, I did a little bit of reading and stuff. And yeah, I read the same thing. I'm just horrible at handling information the way it was actually displayed. And so anytime I try to, you know, repeat something that comes out a little skewed. I won't do it any justice. But from what I read that that was that was actually a situation at one point. Wow.</p>



<p>That's cool. Yeah, I was I was always curious, like, the way that the coastal range on Oregon works is kind of kind of interesting. Like we don't see it, you know, much further down like in California. I think as you get past Northern California like past San Francisco seems like it's pretty flat up until you get closer to what I thought was part of the Cascades or the Sierras as it comes out in elevation. So it's kind of interesting, like up here. We have that coastal range that kind of runs up Probably up into Canada. But yeah, kind of nutty stuff. So we were talking about timing Eastern Oregon stuff over by fort rock. That's where you that's where you started when you were younger.</p>



<p>Yeah. So, um, yeah, I guess I mean, I can really kind of attribute my whole love the outdoors to my first time going hunting. You know? That's cool. Yeah, my dad was always all about getting me out there. I mean, my first hunting trip with him actually going east. I was eight years old. I was gonna ask how old were you? Yeah, yeah. Um, no, he used to go every year, you know? And I was always so bummed because dad leaves for two weeks, you know? And like, I can't go. And his friends are there and all the guys are going and. And so when I was finally eight, I got to go over there. It's also where I learned to drive. Oh, nice spot. Yeah, spot for it. Yeah. So anyway, got out there. And like I said, such a cool environment. And it gets so cold out there at night. But oh, yeah,</p>



<p>man, especially in the fall like that. It gets so cold at night.</p>



<p>Well, I remember always wake up, you know, we'd have the pot of coffee, we would make the pot of coffee the night before, so we just have to heat it up in the morning. and nice. You know, every morning, The coffee is just like a block of ice, just a solid block inside your coffee pot. And you know, there's there was always ice on the inside the 10 the the what is that the air mattress is all laid in from the cold air always deflated. And always then you know, you get up. And it's like, it's like seven degrees. You know, you get up, you're freezing. You're shivering just uncontrollably because you're up at the coldest part of the day that like 15 minutes before sunrise. best time to be out. Well, you know, that's when you got to do it. You know, catch catch up the deer when they're up? Yeah, absolutely. Start moving around in the early morning. But yeah, then you get out there, man, and the sun comes out. And then you always dress in layers. Because by 1130 You're sweating and you're in a T shirt. You've got your pants rolled up into shorts. Oh,</p>



<p>I totally remember that. Especially Okay, yeah, by by even 8am in the summertime, I remember the atmosphere just totally changing from being like in all of my coats just trying to stay warm a little bit. And then just like stepping down to just just having a T shirt on again, but I remember that so much about but so you when you were eight, the first time you get out that's cool. Wow. That's pretty Yeah.</p>



<p>Um, you know, my dad gave I had a little 22 that he gave me 22 rifle. And I was allowed to just kind of playing can target practice around camp and stuff. I could pack a real deer rifle, you know until later. But I remember my first confirmed kill was a bluejay that was like really? You shot a bluejay and and so I still got the picture. But we you know, we've always had it on you. You know you would you kill. Oh, yeah. So I killed this bluejay and my dad made me skin it out. Clean it up. And I bluejay breasts for dinner. Wow. Yeah, that was that was my first it was a it was a trophy game is pretty good size.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. I just didn't have the cash flow to get out of this. shoe. You missed that. What was? What was bluejay breast-like, was like chicken.</p>



<p>And I can barely remember like, last week in my life, let alone maybe the flavors</p>



<p>of a camping trip in the cold. 20 years. Yeah, that's</p>



<p>cliche as it sounds. I'm just gonna say. I mean, it was just a white poultry, a white beaded poultry. I mean, I kind of remember it being like a gamey chicken.</p>



<p>That's that's what I that's what I'd suspect. That'd be something like</p>



<p>yeah, so not even really gaming. Just kind of like lean. You know, it wasn't sitting in a little Foster Farms. pumped with steroids.</p>



<p>Blue J. Then you got a bigger rifle. You're a little older. Yeah. When when it's time you go out? Yeah.</p>



<p>When I was 13, my grandpa gave me his 30 odd six. He bought it when he was like 19 years old. It was a model 1903 really cool rifle. I so I started packing my rifle when I was 13 took the hunt. Some safety course that I went through all that kind of made it official. And then I hunted, and we hunted and we hunted and we hide. And pretty unsuccessfully. So when we were out there in that fort rock area, it became a victim do a lot of logging. Oh, really? So, you know, this is where my dad and his buddies have been going forever. They've been pulling these big, big mule deer out of there, you know, got all these great stories. You know, everybody gets a deer every year. I come of age, and there's just not a deer to be found in this area. No. Yeah. And that was because the hunting in the area of poaching. There Well, there was a combination, there was a lot of clear-cutting, and a lot of poaching. And so between those two, you know, a lot of the deer moved out of the area, just due to clear-cutting, and a lot of work killed off with the poaching. Oh, wow. So I became pretty scarce there for like a for about an eight year period. And then I guess, when I was about 16, we moved over to, to what's called the Sprague unit. And we've been hunting that area ever since.</p>



<p>I know the Sprague river, and I know Sprague mountain that I've been to is that is that kind of the same area you would say is kind of the Yeah, that was it. chilla Quinn kind of shinik and pass that area. Is that spread? Yeah,</p>



<p>there's a Sprague River. Yeah, that spring. And you know, we're the Williamson rivers. No,</p>



<p>I don't think so. Actually, is, is that over there. It's</p>



<p>Yeah, it's right out in that area. There's, there's a big casino off 97. And there's in between. Boy, in between, like shallow going in Klamath Falls. Okay. Anyway, out there is Williamson, and we're kind of over in that area now. And it's really beautiful. there's a there's a water Wildlife Refuge out there. I bet that's a cool spot. And just absolutely gorgeous area. Yeah. So you know, kind of same, same landscape and everything. And we've been out there for Well, for, I don't know, 12 years now. And, you know, I've actually still never taken a deer out there as bears as that is. Oh, really?</p>



<p>Well, so. Okay, so yeah, go back to when you're 13. You got your 36? Is that when you got your first year that year? No. Oh, no. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I like to like to assume that you just kind of walkout and just take a deer and just blast it. And that's like, a good day of hunting. No, no,</p>



<p>it's, it's supposed to be by I feel if I understand, right, I think it's supposed to be like, one in five times you might get it. Is that would that say about right?</p>



<p>Well, that's the thing too. Yeah, that's, that's very accurate. And the thing is over there, it's such a short season. I mean, if you come over here to a Western deer, you're you're looking at a 30 day season. You know, they're you're looking at a 90 Oh, Rana. So I mean, yeah, and also, the Klamath Indians are in that area, and they have full hunting rights all year long. Oh, interesting. Okay. So it's, it's, it's frequently hunted, you know, so I mean, the deer, the deer, I understand that people are, are not a good, a good sign, you know, so they're pretty skittish and hard to come by. Yeah. And mule deer are interesting. And the way they kind of sleep and watch your, their, their predator is cool. So the way they the way they set up is they like ridges, little kind of areas that they can sit just at the top. And they like to sit with the wind of their back, looking down the hill. Oh, interest. So what they're doing is they have the view down off this ridge to the flat area below so they can see anything coming from that way. Okay. And they also have the wind at their back. So they're smelling anything coming from behind them. Oh, rich. Yeah, that's</p>



<p>an interesting thing. You know, I've heard of types of maneuvers the animals do that seem far more strategic than what than what laypeople might place on an animal to do in the wild like that. But I've heard of some really interesting things like that, like the experience that a buck will have over a doe or over, over younger, male do deer the same time like how it'll go in and the buck will be the one in a group of deer as a predator comes in, and it'll scare the rest of the deer out but the buck will stay still in that same spot and not move because it's seen that before or knows that as it goes out. It's gonna expose itself to more danger than whatever was there, but it's just kind of interesting. These little behaviors like what You're talking about how they know how to evade their predators that are around them. Yeah, nature scary man. Gotta get smart out there that way. Yeah, it seems like it'd be pretty cool otherwise. Yeah. Well, that's, that's really cool, though. That's interesting. So is that? Is that where you guys try and find them? Well, you guys are out there in the Sprague area.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. And so, you know, we go out there and we beat the brush and dry out there, you're making so much noise as quiet as you try to be. And a lot of times, you jump there, you never, they can smell so much better than you can. And these mule deer are called mule deer because of their ears, they have these these large ears that are larger than other deer species. And in fact, they're much larger, other deer species. Okay. So these these ears act is like, you know, the old man and like the the horn-like, hey. Yeah, that's what they're doing. They're just amplifying everything. And, and they can hear so well. And so, I mean, you're really talking, you're trying hard. And, you know, so a lot of times you jump them and you just hear him, you know, going off to the brush. Oh, yeah. And then that promise you can kind of feel like in the ground, you know, just kind of like it's got that base, he kind of Oh, wow. feel to it. And yeah, so no, I've never had any luck out there. My luck actually has been over West, which I just kind of started hunting over here again, this last two years. And these last two years, I've been really fortunate.</p>



<p>Now, is that white tailed deer over here, or is that LaSalle black too. So what's the difference? So there's mule Tam. Or there's there's whitetail, where do you find those is that the Midwest and Canada are so whitetail?</p>



<p>You know, I'm not sure how our west I think, I know that I know their whitetail or like an East Coast deer loci, you know, like, Arkansas. Alright, that makes sense. Yeah. And then you get the black tail over here on the west, and then the mule deer are more like Arizona, Utah. They like that. deserty Oh, interesting stuff.</p>



<p>Is that why they're a little bigger as it comes? Or they're, they seem like they're they're a little bit larger for their environment out there. Is that what are it seems like they're out in the higher desert area. But you said they were a little bit of a bigger animal. Is that right?</p>



<p>Yeah. In fact, they're I yeah, I mean, a mule deer is generally going to have about you know, 40 to 50 pounds on a on a good side. blacktail. Oh, really, you know, they're, they're significantly larger. Yeah, even. It's crazy to because after being over there hunting for so many years, you see these big O's, you know, they just have a big body on. And then you come over here, and you get a nice buck over here. A nice black tail on the left side. Yeah. And, and they're smaller than, like, you know, 85% of the dose You see, over in Eastern Oregon. It's unreal. Really? Wow,</p>



<p>that's so what's it like? have like, has people in your party had each of our average got one of the deers are like I was, I was gonna ask you, what's the difference in like, the meat or the quality of the way that it tastes when you have it? Does it seem any different, like deer to deer? Or is it about the same?</p>



<p>Um, so I can't I can't really find any quality difference between a black tail and a mule deer. But there's the definite difference between a young deer and an old deer. Okay. Yeah, I could. Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. Um, you know, we we first hunt for food. We secondly, hunt for, you know, a trophy size. I mean, ideally, everybody wants to get that big buck. You know that one? Yeah, absolutely. Sure. Oh, awesome. But when it comes down to it, you know, if you shoot a fork in Horner spike or something, you're gonna have great meat when you get into that older box that have been out there for seven, eight years. That's an old gear. You know, the me's kind of gaming is just kind of chewy. Doesn't have really good flavor. I was gonna Yeah, it's been a season that a little bit more.</p>



<p>Sure. Sure. That makes a good bit of sense that I've heard that before and, and what does it what is their diet? This is just, they for</p>



<p>mushrooms, they eat a lot of mushrooms. That's a good way to track them. Really, these spots in the pine needles will that will use their hooves and kind of pop these mushrooms, okay. And so you'll find them in these like shady areas underneath the trees. The pine hills lobby torn back and they dig through that Duff layer on the forest floor there, and they'll find These mushrooms that haven't even surfaced, they smell them through the pine needles of the Duff. And in those high moisture areas, they'll pull them out and eat those. I mean, they're grazers. So I mean, whatever they can pick off of the floor in the area. Huh? That's pretty interesting.</p>



<p>So you and then on the, on the west side of the Cascades, it's black tailed deer. And where do you guys try and hunt now? You said it was like the last two years or so? You've been over here on the west side?</p>



<p>Yeah. And in fact, I've been hunting in the rogue Siskiyou National Forest. The last couple years. That makes sense. And yeah, I mean, I've been spending a lot of time in that area, kind of getting the lay of the land. And beautiful country. But man, that's the difference to the terrain over here on the west side is so steep, it's so steep. Yeah. Ah, I mean, over in Eastern Oregon, if you knock a deer down, you know, it's gonna run, but it's predominantly flat. Sure, you can track it, and you can, you can get it back out to a road or something somewhere in a short amount of time, you need to but what you find over here is, it might run, you know, 600 yards down into a ravine Oh, man, you're spending all day long, trying to pack it out, you know, hundreds of feet.</p>



<p>What's that work? Like? Are you know if that happens? I mean, yeah, you see, you have to you go down, and like, what's the process even forgetting that packed out.</p>



<p>So I always take rope with me, you know, in your pack, you take more than what you need, because you never know what you're gonna need. One thing is cool, I use one of those river systems where you can make a three point pulley out of your rope drag. So you can have a three to one pull ratio, anchor off a tree, you've got 100 foot rope, you can take it up 100 feet at a time. And you can do that by yourself pretty easily. Oh. Another option is you can just kind of just throw it on your back and hike it out at slow going.</p>



<p>And that's what I've heard. I've heard just like these health stories of these guys that like shot one in a canyon and they had to like climb down to the canyon and then and then walk this creek bed out to the road with I think they had a pig or their you know, okay, like Yeah, what is it? Like, for wild boar or something? Yeah, boy. Yeah. But yeah, so they had a pack out this pig-like, yeah, however long down that just this terrible crappy ravine of a creek. And it just sounds like a hell story of like, you know, carrying hundreds of pounds on your pack to try and get it out. Yeah, just as exhausting.</p>



<p>Well, yeah. Okay. So just today I was listening. I was telling you a little bit. Oh, yeah. Tell me about that, too. That, that Joe Rogan podcast? Yeah. And he was talking about a buddy of his, during his podcast, and his buddy hiked in 12 miles on this hunt, right, just by himself. ends up knocking down this Alec out there. So first off, you figure it out, because you know, 900 pounds. I mean, it's a big animal. And so he's 12 miles. And so he he quarters this thing out, and he bones it and everything. And now he's packing it. He he packed it out piece by piece. Of course of four days. Wow. Yeah. And it was just in, in. later on. He goes on to say, you know, it was just the most hellacious experience like yeah, it would have to be. You're walking a minimum of 24 miles a day. Oh, my goodness. It just but I mean, but not easy walking. It's not like you got a day pack and your camel pack on, you know, yeah, you've got you've got 80 to 100 pounds of meat on your back.</p>



<p>Is there a system or a technology like, you know, there's like technical backpacker backpacks and stuff are there or is there some kind of meatpacking? Like gear you get for hunting? Or is it just is it just old school?</p>



<p>Uh, you know, I? I don't know if I've never been in that situation. We've always just kind of, you know, thrown it on our packs and just gone. Yeah, sure. Yeah, secure it somehow and, and just pack it out?</p>



<p>Yeah. I felt I don't know. I've heard people will sometimes in those remote situations, though. Or at least I needed clarification on this. They'd like they got the animal there. And they, I guess, like just prep the meat and then they leave the remains as after they cleaned it. Does that make sense? And then they just pack out the meat itself instead of the whole animal?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, absolutely. So when I say deboning, you know you Removing, I mean, you're cleaning off the rib bones, you're cleaning everything off taking all the usable meat. And you're just you're essentially just leaving the waste parts, the parts that the crows and the yellow jackets and things like that will come take care of coyotes, that things of that nature.</p>



<p>How long does that take to, to debone? or What is? Is that dressing an animal? Or is that different?</p>



<p>Yeah, there's there's very variations of that. So there's, there's field dressing, which is just a quick, you remove the vitals. And you know, and you, you can do what's called caping, which some, some, like trophy hunters will do if they plan on having the animal mounted. And that's where they'll take the entire hide off of the deer, or whatever animal it is. So you can take it down to the carcass like that. We've always just feel dressed, you know, removed the vitals, cleaned out the inner cavity and then pack the deer out like that. And then once we get back to camp, that's when we'll go ahead and actually skinned deer. Sure that makes sense. Then remove those pieces. It seems like that's what I've seen before. Yeah, and it really depends on your terrain. Oh, that makes it so how are you going to keep the animal cool, like, you know, things like that. And all those things play a factor as soon as you do that. Sure. Yeah.</p>



<p>That's pretty interesting. So what's the hunting hunting experiences for you like Ben over here? Over in the the Rogue River area.</p>



<p>They've been great. They've been great. I've had some really nice deer. My first one was a young buck, but it was really, really great deer. I mean, we were still eating it. You know what? I mean? I had it made into like, I got 65 pounds of hamburger out of it and some tenderloin and stuff</p>



<p>you see is wow. Is it good? Yeah. Is it good for steaks at all? would you would you never do that you would just always go.</p>



<p>It's just not really big enough for steaks. tenderloins are like little steaks, they're like almost, you know, a little flaming yarn. You get this little bacon wrap sirloins or something you get sure they're about that size. And those are great man, you pan fry them up with like a little salt and pepper, a little garlic powder. I bet that's Pam serum and a little butter. It's fantastic. really tender. That's why they called the tenderloin. Okay,</p>



<p>for sure. So most of the time when you're preparing theme and you're kicking, are you guys making like, like burgers? Is that? Is that the kind of thing? Or what do you guys?</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, I will make like spaghetti out of it. You know? Oh, yeah, definitely. That or, I mean, anything that you would use, like ground beef or ground turkey for? Yeah. You can. You can use medicine the same way and it looks very much like beef. That's cool. That's really yeah. And it's, it's great. And you can taste the difference. You know, you can, it's so crazy. You can taste the difference between a farm animal and a wild animal.</p>



<p>I must be really strange. What do you notice in it? It's just, I don't know, I know. It's kind of Yeah, it's strange to describe what another senses is able to experience, but I was just trying to figure it out. Because I've kind of had that experience to at least at least like on a smaller scale. Or maybe like with eggs you can say even if you kind of notice the difference between like a store-bought egg and then one from a farm like where it's been out picking through bugs and grass and all sorts of different things that the chicken eats and consumes and then has those nutrients to make the egg from It's so weird this to notice how much of a different flavor or a different consistency that has when you when you put in just the pan to eat. Let's go absolutely</p>



<p>i mean i mean color, texture. Everything. Yeah, it's like milky white,</p>



<p>versus like orange like this dark Auburn color and yeah, that's the same thing even animal could have made that</p>



<p>makes you wonder man going in it. What What is different about this? Why does this look taste and smell different?</p>



<p>It's Yeah, it is. It is kind of nuts. But so do you think that just kind of comes from having a natural diet or a natural</p>



<p>diet and it's just the healthy animal shares? They're out there and they're they're moving around and staying active. I mean, they're eating natural, you know, natural fully off the land. Yeah. Yeah. How</p>



<p>old are these deer I was trying to put that in my mind a little bit too about how big an in mass these animals are. But also like how many years they are like, you know, I see him grow up pretty quick in my backyard when I when they kind of run through and after. I mean, what is it like the one you you got? How old? Would you have said that was</p>



<p>this? Oh, the the one that we currently have? He was I would say about two or three? Yeah, maybe. I mean, a long life for a deer is eight or nine years.</p>



<p>That's what I was thinking it was it was like a dog or something like that. But you also think about the size of the animal. I guess this may be true with horses sometimes to be really big animals, these animals that are able to take on a ton of mass and be pretty enormous, really quite quickly. But yeah, I was thinking about that, that me you're saying is what? Two or three years old? It's like, it's just been grown? It doesn't really seem like it'd be that old at all.</p>



<p>No, not at all. Yeah. And and that's, you know, they'd haven't had that chance to, to I mean, they. I'm sorry, did you? Did you say something about I guess I misunderstood that.</p>



<p>Oh, well, no, not too much of a question. But I just thought it was interesting, though. Yeah. Like, the deer you got is just a couple of years old. So it Are they really don't live very long. These deer, you know, when they when they come to maturity and then are available to be part of the the public trust of food to be shot at?</p>



<p>Well, yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's, I mean, they've, they're really into maturity after their brilliant stage. You know, I mean, they're already reproducing, they were pretty, you know, contributed to, to the development of more species. More of the species, not just species in general.</p>



<p>But yeah, it's kind of nutty, though. That Yeah, they're able to come about so quick, I guess. Yeah. It's kind of like a dog's timeline to I just saw is, you know, you get kind of caught up being people centric. Sometimes we you think like, oh, man, like, a one year old? Like that. Isn't that much meat on it?</p>



<p>Yeah, are you are you put this almost like, is human-like characteristic with it? Yeah, sure. You know, you're like, Well, I have a child. That's too. Like, what if? What if somebody shot that? You know, it wouldn't know any people? Yeah. And</p>



<p>let alone that it's their nature to come out of the womb walking. They're kind of different than we are.</p>



<p>Yeah, man. I mean, they come out and they're just like, let's get something to eat. Yeah, let's go. We're already at it. When we got 24 months left. And right away, I can't I can't wait around. Babies. I gotta go now. Got you ever think about that, like a cat. Terrible. We are as people. Oh, yeah. Like,</p>



<p>how do we ever survive? Like, who was the first person that survived nature? I mean, like we go out with, with nice, like, GoreTex and waterproof boots and stuff. And you get out in the elements on like, a 40 degree, or let's say, like, a 35 degree day and it's raining. It's kind of like that. sleet, the wind blowing. It's nasty. Yeah, you're like, I mean, I've been in some situations, and I'm smart about being outdoors, where you're thinking, like, I gotta get out of here.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. It's like, this is too much exposure. This is weird. Yeah, I've had that a couple of times too. And heat and cold and and you're like, oh, oh, it's like a weird signal your body gives you like, yeah. Oh, no, too much, too much.</p>



<p>How do you put like a newborn? Like the first baby? Like, how do you put the first baby out there? for like, the first?</p>



<p>I don't know, the first life. Yeah. Oh, you know, after I was reflecting on this, it's been one year since we got we went to Hawaii. Marina and I that was the first time I was in an island atmosphere, a tropical climate. And then you think it dawns on you, all of a sudden, like, oh, people didn't get born in North America. It's cold up there. Like people, people. Everywhere monkeys grow people grew where they could grow with no clothes on. That's where that's where the populations, but yeah, no, 40,000 years ago when the first I don't know, people were coming over the Bering Strait from China, or what is that part of, of Asia? Coming over into America and you think I'm just cruising through through Kamchatka and Alaska and down and through British Columbia into Oregon and then settling all the way down to the southern tip of South America and you think man, like walked that?</p>



<p>And only that like I I mean, I love this area now. Oh, yeah. You know, I love this area. This always be home, but I don't know, man. If I'm coming over the Pangea land bridge or something. And I'm walking into Oregon in the winter. No one's gonna say that bad choice. Let's go somewhere else.</p>



<p>He goes south. There's more. Yeah, let's let's try. We're just a few more days. Just Just two more months of walking. We could be in Santa Cruz.</p>



<p>Let's do it. boardwalk.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yeah, I don't know how they would have done it back then. It's amazing at all. But and it's also amazing that there are still native people kind of living the way they would have in really harsh conditions or harsh climates, kind of. So, I don't know, it seems like people adapt to it.</p>



<p>And you know, it's interesting, like when you're on these long these, like long hunting trips, and you're out in the woods for days on end, or, you know, you're out on a fishing trip or something. Right? It isgives you such an appreciation for what life would have been like back then First off, Oh, absolutely. You haven't showered in several days, you know, like, you've gotten to that point where you're like, man, I need to clean up, and then you know, you're cold. You're a little hungrier than you'd normally be. And then the thing that gets me is any little cut. I mean, you Nick, your knuckle on Sunday. Oh, that's just something here you go. Whatever. No, totally. I totally understand. You're talking. But yeah, I mean, infection it so quickly. Yeah. And that's a big time deal when you don't have access to any medicine or any way to really clean that wound. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I mean, our survival rate must have been horrible. Just horrible back then.</p>



<p>I yeah, we should count our lucky stars. We were born this century. Ways ways. We just get the podcast in our houses. And then like 200 years ago, on the spot, this was just like jungle land. Yeah. Well, I mean, it was, it was just wilderness and probably, you know, the area you live in the area. I live right now. There was nothing here. So yeah. How is that? What 1817? Like? Yeah, what would have been going on in the Willamette Valley in the in the Rogue Valley during that time is like there's no development out here. So it's just yeah, it's amazing that it's just now So recently, we have all of it. I read a lot of like, EDM festivals and things like that. Oh, yeah. There's tons. Yeah, back in like 1799. This forest raise. We're going crazy out here. Yeah. That's pretty funny. Well, Thanks, Robert. I really appreciate you doing this podcast doing Episode Two of the get out there podcast. digging out the stuff. I want to get in deeper with you about hunting stuff. I know these podcasts kind of combine time passes, but I really appreciate you hanging out with doc. No, absolutely. And I was a little rambley tonight. It was great. It's fun. You know, it's just yeah, it's for podcasters</p>



<p>exactly diggin it. I think 90% of the podcast I listen to her nothing but just you know, rambles for like three hours you know my Wow, it's a great podcast. Yeah.</p>



<p>Baby, we're gonna do a bunch more of them, and it's gonna be pretty cool. But yeah, Robert, I really appreciate it. Thank you for for doing the podcast stuff with me. Absolutely. It's great man. So on behalf of Robert Fisker at my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to Episode Two of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
billynewmanphoto.com
 
 


Get]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon</p>
<p>Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>


<p>Get-out-there-02-hunting-cut_otter.ai</p>



<p>Hey, what's going on? My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm good. We are recording Episode Two of the get out there podcast, podcast about the outdoors about outdoor adventure tourism is about travel. I don't know anything else, probably just that we want to talk about. But Thanks, Robert, for doing this podcast with me today. Yeah, absolutely. No, it's been cool, man. But yeah, what's been going on? It's been not a whole lot. It's been a week since we last did this. Yeah, we were talking about the lower rogue stuff on our our pilot episode. And that was a crazy story. I was thinking about that, like through the week, singing about that, like, I just kind of took it as a novelty that you were telling us about that story. But then I was kind of playing it back like, man, there's a lot of situations of different moments in that chain of events that seemed like it was going to be pretty, pretty tight to get out of. Yeah, thanks for talking about it. But yeah, Robert, if you didn't listen to last week's episode was a raft guide for a number of years on the Rogue River and lower row River. Which is pretty cool, man. I think it's a it's no small no small task.</p>



<p>Yeah, no, it's a ton of fun. And it's, it's opened a lot of opportunities stuff to me, and you know, it's a passion So, so it's a win-win.</p>



<p>Now that but I've known you for a while. And I know that you haven't always been on the river. In fact, I remember like when we'd go out we had the worst gear we had like, the little biomart Tahiti that you'd play with a little yellow, yellow. Yeah, we just we just try get by going down for what like hogs to go lease or something like that. We just see that thing taco in the center a few times.</p>



<p>Yeah, it would be popping. Because we have like a 30 rack at the back sitting on top of our life jacket.</p>



<p>You know, I remember Jeremy jumping off of his kayak onto the back of my kayak and a rapid to flip it upside, you know, and roll it over anything. Oh, this is great. This is this is these are the brilliant river people that would one day guide Yeah, you know, and you wonder how I yeah, it's it's amazing that they do. But Robert, an avid outdoorsman, has been on the river for a good bit of time skilled in that. But before that, Robert, I wanted to talk to you about some of the old experience you had learning how to hunt, or learning how to do some of those some of those other types of outdoors things like, like I was thinking about trips that my dad and I did Eastern Oregon and I wanted to ask you about yes to like, because my dad and I, I think we started going in like, I don't know what 2001 2000 or something like that. And that time we go out in the early fall, we were just campers and we just dug that time of year over in that part of the country but we would always cruise out east to Klamath Falls east to Lakeview. And we go up into the mountains over there near Warner rim and plush and heart man, that's beautiful. I dug that area super cool. But we so we've gone out there like a number of times to do like photos and camping and hiking stuff. But that time of year was also I think a bit or well there's there's a few different seasons. You could probably explain that over time. But but there's always like different groups of hunters kind of coming in through that area because it was a lot of it was a big public land out there. I think it was BLM land in that section at least. I think there was a season for antelope through that area. But I'm sure</p>



<p>Well, you've probably seen tons of antelope out there. Yeah, tonight. Are you are you familiar with I mean, just how incredible their eyesight is? Not really no, do you know? Okay, I mean, crazy tangent, but I mean, antelope, their eyesight is the equivalent of a 10 power binocular. So I mean, imagine you're looking through 10 power binoculars and something that's what an antelope sees. So I typically like when people hunt antelope Well, I don't want to typically generalize everyone but I know there are a lot of hunters that will use like radio communication and kind of like us to people you know, over like the the radius of a mile and a half two miles. Oh, wow. And have somebody go way around and have somebody almost set up and one person tries to herd them towards</p>



<p>said Hunter. Oh, like someone that's like stationary, or is that is that Yeah, get into the ghillie suit kind of thing. Where they're like,</p>



<p>yeah, I mean, I don't I don't know if they're, like, you know, full on snipers status. But I mean, really close, you know, I mean, it's really, you just want to stay still in, you know, because, I mean, they just have such incredible</p>



<p>eyesight. That's amazing. Yeah, I've wondered about that. You know, we've we spotted him out there. Because, you know, in those areas, it's so flat welds, there's contour to the land, but you can see for miles and miles and as you lookout, you can you can see packs or you know groups of three or For and sometimes big pack, I think we saw maybe a brown 20 move through an area one time. Yeah. And you just go, yeah, they heard up they cruise. Yeah, it was, it was really interesting to see. And it was cool too, because in the way that the land was, you could see where hundreds of years before the Indian tribes in that area had also been to hunt probably what might have been some of the same game.</p>



<p>But well, isn't that cool to when you're out there? I mean, you're just like, you're coming across all those like obsidian areas where, you know, the Indians would sit there and like chip their chips ship their arrowheads and spearheads and everything.</p>



<p>Yeah. So cool. Yeah, really interesting. When you get to kind of reflect on how long people have been in the area, or when you get to see the natural elements still just remain there. because nothing's come by to disturb that sense. It's, it's really remote territory that we end up being in a lot of time.</p>



<p>It's amazing. Yeah, you're out there. And you're so disconnected from people. I mean, but there's still roads around. And so I mean, you just assume there's people everywhere. But it's amazing that you can walk, you know, 100 yards off of a main highway and find these just completely undisturbed. obsidian deposits, were just a, you know, 150 years ago, or even longer. There was there was some, you know, just, yeah, they're chipping chipping arrowheads?</p>



<p>Yeah, there's been a there's been a handful of areas that I think we've seen. there's a there's a museum in Klamath Falls and my dad and I went to on a trip back. I think it was the Fayetteville museum. I think it was downtown, but it was it was this guy back in the I don't know, like 20s 30s 40s 50s probably, excuse me, not not in his age, but the 1920s 1930s 1940s I think for a good portion of his life. What he did all the time was go out to Eastern Oregon just to all sorts of different places across Oregon and collect obsidian and arrowheads and spear tips and knife tools. And it was the biggest collection of things across like the Columbia River area and like things from the pirate over in Eastern Oregon and Central Oregon and stuff from bend in the in the lakes that were around there. There's like this beautiful piece. They had one from Nevada. That was an opal Arrowhead. That was like the most famous one. Yeah, it was it was almost like a like a decorative ceremonial Arrowhead. But okay, but it was like yeah, cuz it was just such a pretty jewel like kind of Arrowhead. But it was like, yeah, this opal made Arrowhead that came out of Nevada from somewhere, I guess from some open mind area. Wow. Yeah. You think about like, Wow, that's so cool. But he had some of the most most rare pieces in that area. But it was really cool. You could walk through you can just see all of these different, different pieces that were collected before the times change. And those things were, you know, restricted in collection but but at the time, yeah, it was set up and now it's just, it's just set up into a museum where you can observe a lot of the ancient history and ancient Paleolithic tools. It's cool stuff. That's, that's great. I'd love to go check that out. It's cool. We're about there. We actually we should Yeah, that'd be a fun one to check out. But I wanted to talk to you about like where you guys used to go hunting or like where you guys would would first go out when you were younger? Yeah. Was it over to Eastern Oregon at first or were you guys more local?</p>



<p>Well, yeah, I was out in the open the fort rock unit and Cod, as long as I've been out there, I still can't really explain that the significance of that area and I'm sure you could probably touch better on that. Maybe. But, but for for rock or the Yeah, the Yeah, Fort rock.</p>



<p>Rock is really cool. What is that area? That's like, I think it's in like the Deschutes area.</p>



<p>It's not quite it's like okay, so yeah, you would head south of like, of boy, what is that Ben? You know, cruise down through lupine on 97. And then you cruise down through Shilla Quinn and out that</p>



<p>Yeah, I remember Sheila Quinn and cutting ease or cutting East then because I remember coming up on highway 58 I guess I'd figure Ah, or that diamond Lake cut off. Remember that super straight road that cuts. It goes past mouthfeel soon I remember it was just like 30 miles on an absolutely straight road. I was blown away when I first saw it when I was a kid, which is silly now it's probably just pretty normal. You get out to highway 140 and then you take that that lower highway that cuts out and I remember going out there yeah going out to to Fort rock first and then there's like Silver Lake. And then further you go out to summer lake. Or you can go out to Christmas Valley out in that area. There's a whole bunch of cool little spots out there.</p>



<p>Yeah, tons tons to explore. You know, I mean, just an Oregon there's so much and it's it's so cool because it's just such a vast change of environment you know, it completely is Yeah, yeah. You come from the west coast side of Oregon, you know, and everything's kind of green and lush that you get out there and you're in the high desert. Just sagebrush and just that ground palmists from all that volcanic activity. Yeah, yeah, it's a neat area I have I have a lot of love for that area.</p>



<p>Oh yeah, me too. Yeah, that area is always been really cool and really really close to me But yeah, for rock is really cool. That's that's a really interesting geological feature where it looks like a crater almost, you know, where like, like if a meteor came down and like kind of punched out a section like I was just hearing about it was it like our, you know, that meteor crater in Arizona or is that big giant circle, and sort of brings up that image in your head, but this one's different. It's it's built like a fortress almost as it was, but what I've understood is that it was sort of like Smith rock in a way where there was an aqua offer, and then there was like an active lava flow. And I guess this type of rock came up and and created that shape. However, it was all at one time, and I guess the area around it eroded away. But that area was okay. I don't really know if that's true. Yeah, it's</p>



<p>kind of the same. The same idea is what is that Devil's Tower? And like, in Where is that? Is that like, North Dakota? I mean, North Dakota? No, actually, it's I think you're right. Or Wyoming? Oh, yeah. Yeah. But yeah, I think that was kind of the same thing. We're just like, you know, everything eroded away from it. Slept was that hard material?</p>



<p>I remember on a field trip the said that about Table Rock over in Medford?</p>



<p>Oh, no, I was just I was just gonna say that. But I'm just kind of talking out of my ass. I don't really know what I'm actually.</p>



<p>See. I don't know that. I don't know. But I'm not a geologist. But I remember that on that on the field trip in seventh grade, they said that the RO rivers erosion through the area is what created or you know that that waterway of erosion is what created much of that valley there, which is interesting. I was wondering about that because the Rogue River was from Mount mazama. I was wondering if the Rogue River exists, would the Rogue River have existed in the same channel, before Mount mazama would have blown and become Crater Lake?</p>



<p>You know, I don't so it comes from boundary springs, which is just off the left or the left off the west side of Crater Lake. Okay, about seven miles or so. But I mean, I've gotten like a little bit of a geology lesson from a couple people down there since I've been in the canyon. Yeah, I wanted to hear perspective. And actually, I got a book called, like the portrait of the rogue, which is really kind of a neat read, especially if you're from around the area. But one of the experts in there talks about how the coastal range like the coast used to be over near the Blue Mountains in the flowers. I've heard that that's where the coast was, you know, you'd walk out there to your little steamboat and go trawling for grabs. Just Just a couple billion years ago,</p>



<p>and I've heard that that was the case. I saw an animation one time that sped up time by a million years a second, but you could see the old coast being I guess what would be kind of a remnant of the Rocky Mountain played that kind of comes down from Canada where the wallflowers are and it would be that sort of section, and then it showed these clumps of different different landmasses sort of landing into into ours. Isn't there a subduction zone like some of the stuff that causes all the trouble for earthquakes down in California? There's sort of similar stuff up here where where Yeah, it was a couple of different land or types of landmass that came together.</p>



<p>Well, can you imagine I mean, this area had to be such like a geographical hotspot when all this when these tectonic shifts and volcanic oh my gosh, I turmoil was going on. Could you imagine this had to be like the most inhabitable place you know, like it would be horrible.</p>



<p>What isn't? Isn't it known as sort of an interesting geological area because of the way the redwood curtain acts or looks as a piece of land like I heard that it was it was really like mountainous and rigid because it was kind of well I don't know, it's just the nature of that that coastal zone that's come in was like a really rocky kind of lumpy, crinkled piece of land that was coming and it was like unusual for the rest of the area around the United States. It doesn't have that type of land formation. But I don't really know anything about we started to Tyler. He's got he's got he's got a degree. At least he's taking classes in this subject. So that bro Yeah, well, you know, I remember going up on a drive With my cousin Laura, we'll get back to the rogue and the mazama stuff in a second. I remember going out on a drive with my cousin Lauren, we went up to the top of us. Well, I guess was one of the top sections of the Cisco's we did that road that I think you and I had been on before. That's south of Applegate Lake as you go into California, and you can take that road a long ways back, it goes up and up and up and up and up that mountain and you can actually take it all the way through the end out on that Happy Camp highway. At the other end, maybe what is that the Klamath River? I don't know what that other?</p>



<p>I didn't. Didn't we do that drive one time? We did do that over the road. We came we came from a different direction. But yeah, similar.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah, that same thing. Yeah. But I remember, I think that might have taken a lower pass. But I remember this when we came up to a point and it was just it was a super high elevation I looked at it later was almost 7000 feet above sea level. When you get to that point, then you walk out, you can see Yeah, you can see up to up to Crater Lake ec McGlothlin really well from that spot. But when I looked later, to kind of find out some information about the geology of that area that I mentioned how it was interesting, because the reason it was so high is because it was a different piece of land, that it kind of come in to that area. But it was just weird to think that you know, you're standing on something that was I guess another piece or played a land that came in and then kind of joined the coast, a rising elevation at a time, like you were saying how the coast used to be over toward Montana.</p>



<p>Yeah, it's okay, man, I could trip out on the way mountains and everything were formed just like a trip out on space. Time, Man, I wish there. It's like, it's I mean, we know so much, but still so little, you know, and we can't really wrap our heads around the magnitude of how it all formed. Oh, yeah, absolutely. No, I</p>



<p>have absolutely no way of holding, in my mind the understanding of more than 1000 years, probably, I mean, even 1000 years, it seems like a stretch to kind of imagine truly that much, or to keep track of it. But when it goes into million years, or 10,000 years, or, you know, any any number of millions of years in the past before that when things like this and our landmass would have been formed. It's just like, oh, completely beyond me. What was it 5000 years ago, they say Mount mazama blue, you see that? That the river comes out of the boundary springs, I just remember like all the lava flows, and all the you know, the what, what do they call that? Just the the cinder blocks or the I guess it would be lava flows, where you just see all that kind of piled up for miles and miles and miles around there. I always would have thought that would have diverted some of the water flow. But you said you you would talk to some people about the river and like how it how its channel was further down.</p>



<p>Yeah, this is actually I guy I would love to have on this podcast. His name is Bob Ruffalo. Vich. And he's a saltiel College. But can I be so cool? Ah, he's great, man. And he's actually the guy that you know, founded road wilderness who I now cool work for. Yeah. So that was his business for a number of years. And now it's come full circle. And now he's just an employee at his old business. That's that's the way to go. But you know, he's been on the river for 40 years. Like the guy knows everyone and everything. And he has such an array of information. And I think I think maybe getting him on some time would be really, really great. That'd be so yeah. Good to talk to a guy like that. Yeah, it he'll go for hours. I mean, put on your, you know, put on a cup a pot of coffee. comfortable. Three party. Yeah, exactly. So, so. Yeah. So what did you know about the the low? Rep. Well, yeah, sorry. Yeah, he, he just, he's taken down several geologists that that all really told him the same thing. And he had told it to me, and you know, it's just Bob hearsay at that point. Sure. Until, you know, I did a little bit of reading and stuff. And yeah, I read the same thing. I'm just horrible at handling information the way it was actually displayed. And so anytime I try to, you know, repeat something that comes out a little skewed. I won't do it any justice. But from what I read that that was that was actually a situation at one point. Wow.</p>



<p>That's cool. Yeah, I was I was always curious, like, the way that the coastal range on Oregon works is kind of kind of interesting. Like we don't see it, you know, much further down like in California. I think as you get past Northern California like past San Francisco seems like it's pretty flat up until you get closer to what I thought was part of the Cascades or the Sierras as it comes out in elevation. So it's kind of interesting, like up here. We have that coastal range that kind of runs up Probably up into Canada. But yeah, kind of nutty stuff. So we were talking about timing Eastern Oregon stuff over by fort rock. That's where you that's where you started when you were younger.</p>



<p>Yeah. So, um, yeah, I guess I mean, I can really kind of attribute my whole love the outdoors to my first time going hunting. You know? That's cool. Yeah, my dad was always all about getting me out there. I mean, my first hunting trip with him actually going east. I was eight years old. I was gonna ask how old were you? Yeah, yeah. Um, no, he used to go every year, you know? And I was always so bummed because dad leaves for two weeks, you know? And like, I can't go. And his friends are there and all the guys are going and. And so when I was finally eight, I got to go over there. It's also where I learned to drive. Oh, nice spot. Yeah, spot for it. Yeah. So anyway, got out there. And like I said, such a cool environment. And it gets so cold out there at night. But oh, yeah,</p>



<p>man, especially in the fall like that. It gets so cold at night.</p>



<p>Well, I remember always wake up, you know, we'd have the pot of coffee, we would make the pot of coffee the night before, so we just have to heat it up in the morning. and nice. You know, every morning, The coffee is just like a block of ice, just a solid block inside your coffee pot. And you know, there's there was always ice on the inside the 10 the the what is that the air mattress is all laid in from the cold air always deflated. And always then you know, you get up. And it's like, it's like seven degrees. You know, you get up, you're freezing. You're shivering just uncontrollably because you're up at the coldest part of the day that like 15 minutes before sunrise. best time to be out. Well, you know, that's when you got to do it. You know, catch catch up the deer when they're up? Yeah, absolutely. Start moving around in the early morning. But yeah, then you get out there, man, and the sun comes out. And then you always dress in layers. Because by 1130 You're sweating and you're in a T shirt. You've got your pants rolled up into shorts. Oh,</p>



<p>I totally remember that. Especially Okay, yeah, by by even 8am in the summertime, I remember the atmosphere just totally changing from being like in all of my coats just trying to stay warm a little bit. And then just like stepping down to just just having a T shirt on again, but I remember that so much about but so you when you were eight, the first time you get out that's cool. Wow. That's pretty Yeah.</p>



<p>Um, you know, my dad gave I had a little 22 that he gave me 22 rifle. And I was allowed to just kind of playing can target practice around camp and stuff. I could pack a real deer rifle, you know until later. But I remember my first confirmed kill was a bluejay that was like really? You shot a bluejay and and so I still got the picture. But we you know, we've always had it on you. You know you would you kill. Oh, yeah. So I killed this bluejay and my dad made me skin it out. Clean it up. And I bluejay breasts for dinner. Wow. Yeah, that was that was my first it was a it was a trophy game is pretty good size.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. I just didn't have the cash flow to get out of this. shoe. You missed that. What was? What was bluejay breast-like, was like chicken.</p>



<p>And I can barely remember like, last week in my life, let alone maybe the flavors</p>



<p>of a camping trip in the cold. 20 years. Yeah, that's</p>



<p>cliche as it sounds. I'm just gonna say. I mean, it was just a white poultry, a white beaded poultry. I mean, I kind of remember it being like a gamey chicken.</p>



<p>That's that's what I that's what I'd suspect. That'd be something like</p>



<p>yeah, so not even really gaming. Just kind of like lean. You know, it wasn't sitting in a little Foster Farms. pumped with steroids.</p>



<p>Blue J. Then you got a bigger rifle. You're a little older. Yeah. When when it's time you go out? Yeah.</p>



<p>When I was 13, my grandpa gave me his 30 odd six. He bought it when he was like 19 years old. It was a model 1903 really cool rifle. I so I started packing my rifle when I was 13 took the hunt. Some safety course that I went through all that kind of made it official. And then I hunted, and we hunted and we hunted and we hide. And pretty unsuccessfully. So when we were out there in that fort rock area, it became a victim do a lot of logging. Oh, really? So, you know, this is where my dad and his buddies have been going forever. They've been pulling these big, big mule deer out of there, you know, got all these great stories. You know, everybody gets a deer every year. I come of age, and there's just not a deer to be found in this area. No. Yeah. And that was because the hunting in the area of poaching. There Well, there was a combination, there was a lot of clear-cutting, and a lot of poaching. And so between those two, you know, a lot of the deer moved out of the area, just due to clear-cutting, and a lot of work killed off with the poaching. Oh, wow. So I became pretty scarce there for like a for about an eight year period. And then I guess, when I was about 16, we moved over to, to what's called the Sprague unit. And we've been hunting that area ever since.</p>



<p>I know the Sprague river, and I know Sprague mountain that I've been to is that is that kind of the same area you would say is kind of the Yeah, that was it. chilla Quinn kind of shinik and pass that area. Is that spread? Yeah,</p>



<p>there's a Sprague River. Yeah, that spring. And you know, we're the Williamson rivers. No,</p>



<p>I don't think so. Actually, is, is that over there. It's</p>



<p>Yeah, it's right out in that area. There's, there's a big casino off 97. And there's in between. Boy, in between, like shallow going in Klamath Falls. Okay. Anyway, out there is Williamson, and we're kind of over in that area now. And it's really beautiful. there's a there's a water Wildlife Refuge out there. I bet that's a cool spot. And just absolutely gorgeous area. Yeah. So you know, kind of same, same landscape and everything. And we've been out there for Well, for, I don't know, 12 years now. And, you know, I've actually still never taken a deer out there as bears as that is. Oh, really?</p>



<p>Well, so. Okay, so yeah, go back to when you're 13. You got your 36? Is that when you got your first year that year? No. Oh, no. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.</p>



<p>I like to like to assume that you just kind of walkout and just take a deer and just blast it. And that's like, a good day of hunting. No, no,</p>



<p>it's, it's supposed to be by I feel if I understand, right, I think it's supposed to be like, one in five times you might get it. Is that would that say about right?</p>



<p>Well, that's the thing too. Yeah, that's, that's very accurate. And the thing is over there, it's such a short season. I mean, if you come over here to a Western deer, you're you're looking at a 30 day season. You know, they're you're looking at a 90 Oh, Rana. So I mean, yeah, and also, the Klamath Indians are in that area, and they have full hunting rights all year long. Oh, interesting. Okay. So it's, it's, it's frequently hunted, you know, so I mean, the deer, the deer, I understand that people are, are not a good, a good sign, you know, so they're pretty skittish and hard to come by. Yeah. And mule deer are interesting. And the way they kind of sleep and watch your, their, their predator is cool. So the way they the way they set up is they like ridges, little kind of areas that they can sit just at the top. And they like to sit with the wind of their back, looking down the hill. Oh, interest. So what they're doing is they have the view down off this ridge to the flat area below so they can see anything coming from that way. Okay. And they also have the wind at their back. So they're smelling anything coming from behind them. Oh, rich. Yeah, that's</p>



<p>an interesting thing. You know, I've heard of types of maneuvers the animals do that seem far more strategic than what than what laypeople might place on an animal to do in the wild like that. But I've heard of some really interesting things like that, like the experience that a buck will have over a doe or over, over younger, male do deer the same time like how it'll go in and the buck will be the one in a group of deer as a predator comes in, and it'll scare the rest of the deer out but the buck will stay still in that same spot and not move because it's seen that before or knows that as it goes out. It's gonna expose itself to more danger than whatever was there, but it's just kind of interesting. These little behaviors like what You're talking about how they know how to evade their predators that are around them. Yeah, nature scary man. Gotta get smart out there that way. Yeah, it seems like it'd be pretty cool otherwise. Yeah. Well, that's, that's really cool, though. That's interesting. So is that? Is that where you guys try and find them? Well, you guys are out there in the Sprague area.</p>



<p>Yeah, yeah. And so, you know, we go out there and we beat the brush and dry out there, you're making so much noise as quiet as you try to be. And a lot of times, you jump there, you never, they can smell so much better than you can. And these mule deer are called mule deer because of their ears, they have these these large ears that are larger than other deer species. And in fact, they're much larger, other deer species. Okay. So these these ears act is like, you know, the old man and like the the horn-like, hey. Yeah, that's what they're doing. They're just amplifying everything. And, and they can hear so well. And so, I mean, you're really talking, you're trying hard. And, you know, so a lot of times you jump them and you just hear him, you know, going off to the brush. Oh, yeah. And then that promise you can kind of feel like in the ground, you know, just kind of like it's got that base, he kind of Oh, wow. feel to it. And yeah, so no, I've never had any luck out there. My luck actually has been over West, which I just kind of started hunting over here again, this last two years. And these last two years, I've been really fortunate.</p>



<p>Now, is that white tailed deer over here, or is that LaSalle black too. So what's the difference? So there's mule Tam. Or there's there's whitetail, where do you find those is that the Midwest and Canada are so whitetail?</p>



<p>You know, I'm not sure how our west I think, I know that I know their whitetail or like an East Coast deer loci, you know, like, Arkansas. Alright, that makes sense. Yeah. And then you get the black tail over here on the west, and then the mule deer are more like Arizona, Utah. They like that. deserty Oh, interesting stuff.</p>



<p>Is that why they're a little bigger as it comes? Or they're, they seem like they're they're a little bit larger for their environment out there. Is that what are it seems like they're out in the higher desert area. But you said they were a little bit of a bigger animal. Is that right?</p>



<p>Yeah. In fact, they're I yeah, I mean, a mule deer is generally going to have about you know, 40 to 50 pounds on a on a good side. blacktail. Oh, really, you know, they're, they're significantly larger. Yeah, even. It's crazy to because after being over there hunting for so many years, you see these big O's, you know, they just have a big body on. And then you come over here, and you get a nice buck over here. A nice black tail on the left side. Yeah. And, and they're smaller than, like, you know, 85% of the dose You see, over in Eastern Oregon. It's unreal. Really? Wow,</p>



<p>that's so what's it like? have like, has people in your party had each of our average got one of the deers are like I was, I was gonna ask you, what's the difference in like, the meat or the quality of the way that it tastes when you have it? Does it seem any different, like deer to deer? Or is it about the same?</p>



<p>Um, so I can't I can't really find any quality difference between a black tail and a mule deer. But there's the definite difference between a young deer and an old deer. Okay. Yeah, I could. Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. Um, you know, we we first hunt for food. We secondly, hunt for, you know, a trophy size. I mean, ideally, everybody wants to get that big buck. You know that one? Yeah, absolutely. Sure. Oh, awesome. But when it comes down to it, you know, if you shoot a fork in Horner spike or something, you're gonna have great meat when you get into that older box that have been out there for seven, eight years. That's an old gear. You know, the me's kind of gaming is just kind of chewy. Doesn't have really good flavor. I was gonna Yeah, it's been a season that a little bit more.</p>



<p>Sure. Sure. That makes a good bit of sense that I've heard that before and, and what does it what is their diet? This is just, they for</p>



<p>mushrooms, they eat a lot of mushrooms. That's a good way to track them. Really, these spots in the pine needles will that will use their hooves and kind of pop these mushrooms, okay. And so you'll find them in these like shady areas underneath the trees. The pine hills lobby torn back and they dig through that Duff layer on the forest floor there, and they'll find These mushrooms that haven't even surfaced, they smell them through the pine needles of the Duff. And in those high moisture areas, they'll pull them out and eat those. I mean, they're grazers. So I mean, whatever they can pick off of the floor in the area. Huh? That's pretty interesting.</p>



<p>So you and then on the, on the west side of the Cascades, it's black tailed deer. And where do you guys try and hunt now? You said it was like the last two years or so? You've been over here on the west side?</p>



<p>Yeah. And in fact, I've been hunting in the rogue Siskiyou National Forest. The last couple years. That makes sense. And yeah, I mean, I've been spending a lot of time in that area, kind of getting the lay of the land. And beautiful country. But man, that's the difference to the terrain over here on the west side is so steep, it's so steep. Yeah. Ah, I mean, over in Eastern Oregon, if you knock a deer down, you know, it's gonna run, but it's predominantly flat. Sure, you can track it, and you can, you can get it back out to a road or something somewhere in a short amount of time, you need to but what you find over here is, it might run, you know, 600 yards down into a ravine Oh, man, you're spending all day long, trying to pack it out, you know, hundreds of feet.</p>



<p>What's that work? Like? Are you know if that happens? I mean, yeah, you see, you have to you go down, and like, what's the process even forgetting that packed out.</p>



<p>So I always take rope with me, you know, in your pack, you take more than what you need, because you never know what you're gonna need. One thing is cool, I use one of those river systems where you can make a three point pulley out of your rope drag. So you can have a three to one pull ratio, anchor off a tree, you've got 100 foot rope, you can take it up 100 feet at a time. And you can do that by yourself pretty easily. Oh. Another option is you can just kind of just throw it on your back and hike it out at slow going.</p>



<p>And that's what I've heard. I've heard just like these health stories of these guys that like shot one in a canyon and they had to like climb down to the canyon and then and then walk this creek bed out to the road with I think they had a pig or their you know, okay, like Yeah, what is it? Like, for wild boar or something? Yeah, boy. Yeah. But yeah, so they had a pack out this pig-like, yeah, however long down that just this terrible crappy ravine of a creek. And it just sounds like a hell story of like, you know, carrying hundreds of pounds on your pack to try and get it out. Yeah, just as exhausting.</p>



<p>Well, yeah. Okay. So just today I was listening. I was telling you a little bit. Oh, yeah. Tell me about that, too. That, that Joe Rogan podcast? Yeah. And he was talking about a buddy of his, during his podcast, and his buddy hiked in 12 miles on this hunt, right, just by himself. ends up knocking down this Alec out there. So first off, you figure it out, because you know, 900 pounds. I mean, it's a big animal. And so he's 12 miles. And so he he quarters this thing out, and he bones it and everything. And now he's packing it. He he packed it out piece by piece. Of course of four days. Wow. Yeah. And it was just in, in. later on. He goes on to say, you know, it was just the most hellacious experience like yeah, it would have to be. You're walking a minimum of 24 miles a day. Oh, my goodness. It just but I mean, but not easy walking. It's not like you got a day pack and your camel pack on, you know, yeah, you've got you've got 80 to 100 pounds of meat on your back.</p>



<p>Is there a system or a technology like, you know, there's like technical backpacker backpacks and stuff are there or is there some kind of meatpacking? Like gear you get for hunting? Or is it just is it just old school?</p>



<p>Uh, you know, I? I don't know if I've never been in that situation. We've always just kind of, you know, thrown it on our packs and just gone. Yeah, sure. Yeah, secure it somehow and, and just pack it out?</p>



<p>Yeah. I felt I don't know. I've heard people will sometimes in those remote situations, though. Or at least I needed clarification on this. They'd like they got the animal there. And they, I guess, like just prep the meat and then they leave the remains as after they cleaned it. Does that make sense? And then they just pack out the meat itself instead of the whole animal?</p>



<p>Oh, yeah, absolutely. So when I say deboning, you know you Removing, I mean, you're cleaning off the rib bones, you're cleaning everything off taking all the usable meat. And you're just you're essentially just leaving the waste parts, the parts that the crows and the yellow jackets and things like that will come take care of coyotes, that things of that nature.</p>



<p>How long does that take to, to debone? or What is? Is that dressing an animal? Or is that different?</p>



<p>Yeah, there's there's very variations of that. So there's, there's field dressing, which is just a quick, you remove the vitals. And you know, and you, you can do what's called caping, which some, some, like trophy hunters will do if they plan on having the animal mounted. And that's where they'll take the entire hide off of the deer, or whatever animal it is. So you can take it down to the carcass like that. We've always just feel dressed, you know, removed the vitals, cleaned out the inner cavity and then pack the deer out like that. And then once we get back to camp, that's when we'll go ahead and actually skinned deer. Sure that makes sense. Then remove those pieces. It seems like that's what I've seen before. Yeah, and it really depends on your terrain. Oh, that makes it so how are you going to keep the animal cool, like, you know, things like that. And all those things play a factor as soon as you do that. Sure. Yeah.</p>



<p>That's pretty interesting. So what's the hunting hunting experiences for you like Ben over here? Over in the the Rogue River area.</p>



<p>They've been great. They've been great. I've had some really nice deer. My first one was a young buck, but it was really, really great deer. I mean, we were still eating it. You know what? I mean? I had it made into like, I got 65 pounds of hamburger out of it and some tenderloin and stuff</p>



<p>you see is wow. Is it good? Yeah. Is it good for steaks at all? would you would you never do that you would just always go.</p>



<p>It's just not really big enough for steaks. tenderloins are like little steaks, they're like almost, you know, a little flaming yarn. You get this little bacon wrap sirloins or something you get sure they're about that size. And those are great man, you pan fry them up with like a little salt and pepper, a little garlic powder. I bet that's Pam serum and a little butter. It's fantastic. really tender. That's why they called the tenderloin. Okay,</p>



<p>for sure. So most of the time when you're preparing theme and you're kicking, are you guys making like, like burgers? Is that? Is that the kind of thing? Or what do you guys?</p>



<p>Yeah, I mean, I will make like spaghetti out of it. You know? Oh, yeah, definitely. That or, I mean, anything that you would use, like ground beef or ground turkey for? Yeah. You can. You can use medicine the same way and it looks very much like beef. That's cool. That's really yeah. And it's, it's great. And you can taste the difference. You know, you can, it's so crazy. You can taste the difference between a farm animal and a wild animal.</p>



<p>I must be really strange. What do you notice in it? It's just, I don't know, I know. It's kind of Yeah, it's strange to describe what another senses is able to experience, but I was just trying to figure it out. Because I've kind of had that experience to at least at least like on a smaller scale. Or maybe like with eggs you can say even if you kind of notice the difference between like a store-bought egg and then one from a farm like where it's been out picking through bugs and grass and all sorts of different things that the chicken eats and consumes and then has those nutrients to make the egg from It's so weird this to notice how much of a different flavor or a different consistency that has when you when you put in just the pan to eat. Let's go absolutely</p>



<p>i mean i mean color, texture. Everything. Yeah, it's like milky white,</p>



<p>versus like orange like this dark Auburn color and yeah, that's the same thing even animal could have made that</p>



<p>makes you wonder man going in it. What What is different about this? Why does this look taste and smell different?</p>



<p>It's Yeah, it is. It is kind of nuts. But so do you think that just kind of comes from having a natural diet or a natural</p>



<p>diet and it's just the healthy animal shares? They're out there and they're they're moving around and staying active. I mean, they're eating natural, you know, natural fully off the land. Yeah. Yeah. How</p>



<p>old are these deer I was trying to put that in my mind a little bit too about how big an in mass these animals are. But also like how many years they are like, you know, I see him grow up pretty quick in my backyard when I when they kind of run through and after. I mean, what is it like the one you you got? How old? Would you have said that was</p>



<p>this? Oh, the the one that we currently have? He was I would say about two or three? Yeah, maybe. I mean, a long life for a deer is eight or nine years.</p>



<p>That's what I was thinking it was it was like a dog or something like that. But you also think about the size of the animal. I guess this may be true with horses sometimes to be really big animals, these animals that are able to take on a ton of mass and be pretty enormous, really quite quickly. But yeah, I was thinking about that, that me you're saying is what? Two or three years old? It's like, it's just been grown? It doesn't really seem like it'd be that old at all.</p>



<p>No, not at all. Yeah. And and that's, you know, they'd haven't had that chance to, to I mean, they. I'm sorry, did you? Did you say something about I guess I misunderstood that.</p>



<p>Oh, well, no, not too much of a question. But I just thought it was interesting, though. Yeah. Like, the deer you got is just a couple of years old. So it Are they really don't live very long. These deer, you know, when they when they come to maturity and then are available to be part of the the public trust of food to be shot at?</p>



<p>Well, yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's, I mean, they've, they're really into maturity after their brilliant stage. You know, I mean, they're already reproducing, they were pretty, you know, contributed to, to the development of more species. More of the species, not just species in general.</p>



<p>But yeah, it's kind of nutty, though. That Yeah, they're able to come about so quick, I guess. Yeah. It's kind of like a dog's timeline to I just saw is, you know, you get kind of caught up being people centric. Sometimes we you think like, oh, man, like, a one year old? Like that. Isn't that much meat on it?</p>



<p>Yeah, are you are you put this almost like, is human-like characteristic with it? Yeah, sure. You know, you're like, Well, I have a child. That's too. Like, what if? What if somebody shot that? You know, it wouldn't know any people? Yeah. And</p>



<p>let alone that it's their nature to come out of the womb walking. They're kind of different than we are.</p>



<p>Yeah, man. I mean, they come out and they're just like, let's get something to eat. Yeah, let's go. We're already at it. When we got 24 months left. And right away, I can't I can't wait around. Babies. I gotta go now. Got you ever think about that, like a cat. Terrible. We are as people. Oh, yeah. Like,</p>



<p>how do we ever survive? Like, who was the first person that survived nature? I mean, like we go out with, with nice, like, GoreTex and waterproof boots and stuff. And you get out in the elements on like, a 40 degree, or let's say, like, a 35 degree day and it's raining. It's kind of like that. sleet, the wind blowing. It's nasty. Yeah, you're like, I mean, I've been in some situations, and I'm smart about being outdoors, where you're thinking, like, I gotta get out of here.</p>



<p>Oh, yeah. It's like, this is too much exposure. This is weird. Yeah, I've had that a couple of times too. And heat and cold and and you're like, oh, oh, it's like a weird signal your body gives you like, yeah. Oh, no, too much, too much.</p>



<p>How do you put like a newborn? Like the first baby? Like, how do you put the first baby out there? for like, the first?</p>



<p>I don't know, the first life. Yeah. Oh, you know, after I was reflecting on this, it's been one year since we got we went to Hawaii. Marina and I that was the first time I was in an island atmosphere, a tropical climate. And then you think it dawns on you, all of a sudden, like, oh, people didn't get born in North America. It's cold up there. Like people, people. Everywhere monkeys grow people grew where they could grow with no clothes on. That's where that's where the populations, but yeah, no, 40,000 years ago when the first I don't know, people were coming over the Bering Strait from China, or what is that part of, of Asia? Coming over into America and you think I'm just cruising through through Kamchatka and Alaska and down and through British Columbia into Oregon and then settling all the way down to the southern tip of South America and you think man, like walked that?</p>



<p>And only that like I I mean, I love this area now. Oh, yeah. You know, I love this area. This always be home, but I don't know, man. If I'm coming over the Pangea land bridge or something. And I'm walking into Oregon in the winter. No one's gonna say that bad choice. Let's go somewhere else.</p>



<p>He goes south. There's more. Yeah, let's let's try. We're just a few more days. Just Just two more months of walking. We could be in Santa Cruz.</p>



<p>Let's do it. boardwalk.</p>



<p>Yeah. Yeah, I don't know how they would have done it back then. It's amazing at all. But and it's also amazing that there are still native people kind of living the way they would have in really harsh conditions or harsh climates, kind of. So, I don't know, it seems like people adapt to it.</p>



<p>And you know, it's interesting, like when you're on these long these, like long hunting trips, and you're out in the woods for days on end, or, you know, you're out on a fishing trip or something. Right? It isgives you such an appreciation for what life would have been like back then First off, Oh, absolutely. You haven't showered in several days, you know, like, you've gotten to that point where you're like, man, I need to clean up, and then you know, you're cold. You're a little hungrier than you'd normally be. And then the thing that gets me is any little cut. I mean, you Nick, your knuckle on Sunday. Oh, that's just something here you go. Whatever. No, totally. I totally understand. You're talking. But yeah, I mean, infection it so quickly. Yeah. And that's a big time deal when you don't have access to any medicine or any way to really clean that wound. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I mean, our survival rate must have been horrible. Just horrible back then.</p>



<p>I yeah, we should count our lucky stars. We were born this century. Ways ways. We just get the podcast in our houses. And then like 200 years ago, on the spot, this was just like jungle land. Yeah. Well, I mean, it was, it was just wilderness and probably, you know, the area you live in the area. I live right now. There was nothing here. So yeah. How is that? What 1817? Like? Yeah, what would have been going on in the Willamette Valley in the in the Rogue Valley during that time is like there's no development out here. So it's just yeah, it's amazing that it's just now So recently, we have all of it. I read a lot of like, EDM festivals and things like that. Oh, yeah. There's tons. Yeah, back in like 1799. This forest raise. We're going crazy out here. Yeah. That's pretty funny. Well, Thanks, Robert. I really appreciate you doing this podcast doing Episode Two of the get out there podcast. digging out the stuff. I want to get in deeper with you about hunting stuff. I know these podcasts kind of combine time passes, but I really appreciate you hanging out with doc. No, absolutely. And I was a little rambley tonight. It was great. It's fun. You know, it's just yeah, it's for podcasters</p>



<p>exactly diggin it. I think 90% of the podcast I listen to her nothing but just you know, rambles for like three hours you know my Wow, it's a great podcast. Yeah.</p>



<p>Baby, we're gonna do a bunch more of them, and it's gonna be pretty cool. But yeah, Robert, I really appreciate it. Thank you for for doing the podcast stuff with me. Absolutely. It's great man. So on behalf of Robert Fisker at my name is Billy Newman. And thank you guys very much for listening to Episode Two of the get out there podcast.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
billynewmanphoto.com
 
 


Get-out-there-02-hunting-cut_otter.ai



Hey, what's going on? My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm good. We are recording Episode Two of the get out there podcast, podcast about the outdoors about outdoor adventure tourism is about travel. I don't know anything else, probably just that we want to talk about. But Thanks, Robert, for doing this podcast with me today. Yeah, absolutely. No, it's been cool, man. But yeah, what's been going on? It's been not a whole lot. It's been a week since we last did this. Yeah, we were talking about the lower rogue stuff on our our pilot episode. And that was a crazy story. I was thinking about that, like through the week, singing about that, like, I just kind of took it as a novelty that you were telling us about that story. But then I was kind of playing it back like, man, there's a lot of situations of different moments in that chain of events that seemed like it was going to be pretty, pretty tight to get out of. Yeah, thanks for talking about it. But yeah, Robert, if you didn't listen to last week's episode was a raft guide for a number of years on the Rogue River and lower row River. Which is pretty cool, man. I think it's a it's no small no small task.



Yeah, no, it's a ton of fun. And it's, it's opened a lot of opportunities stuff to me, and you know, it's a passion So, so it's a win-win.



Now that but I've known you for a while. And I know that you haven't always been on the river. In fact, I remember like when we'd go out we had the worst gear we had like, the little biomart Tahiti that you'd play with a little yellow, yellow. Yeah, we just we just try get by going down for what like hogs to go lease or something like that. We just see that thing taco in the center a few times.



Yeah, it would be popping. Because we have like a 30 rack at the back sitting on top of our life jacket.



You know, I remember Jeremy jumping off of his kayak onto the back of my kayak and a rapid to flip it upside, you know, and roll it over anything. Oh, this is great. This is this is these are the brilliant river people that would one day guide Yeah, you know, and you wonder how I yeah, it's it's amazing that they do. But Robert, an avid outdoorsman, has been on the river for a good bit of time skilled in that. But before that, Robert, I wanted to talk to you about some of the old experience you had learning how to hunt, or learning how to do some of those some of those other types of outdoors things like, like I was thinking about trips that my dad and I did Eastern Oregon and I wanted to ask you about yes to like, because my dad and I, I think we started going in like, I don't know what 2001 2000 or something like that. And that time we go out in the early fall, we were just campers and we just dug that time of year over in that part of the country but we would always cruise out east to Klamath Falls east to Lakeview. And we go up into the mountains over there near Warner rim and plush and heart man, that's beautiful. I dug that area super cool. But we so we've gone out there like a number of times to do like photos and camping and hiking stuff. But that time of year was also I think a bit or well there's there's a few different seasons. You could probably explain that over time. But but there's always like different groups of hunters kind of coming in through that area because it was a lot of it was a big public land out there. I think it was BLM land in that section at least. I think there was a season for antelope through that area. But I'm sure



Well, you've probably seen tons of antelope out there. Yeah, tonight. Are you are you familiar with I mean, just how incredible their eyesight is? Not]]></itunes:summary>
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		<title>Get Out There &#124; 02 Hunting In Eastern Oregon</title>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com
billynewmanphoto.com
 
 


Get-out-there-02-hunting-cut_otter.ai



Hey, what's going on? My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm good. We are recording Episode Two of the get out there podcast, podcast about the outdoors about outdoor adventure tourism is about travel. I don't know anything else, probably just that we want to talk about. But Thanks, Robert, for doing this podcast with me today. Yeah, absolutely. No, it's been cool, man. But yeah, what's been going on? It's been not a whole lot. It's been a week since we last did this. Yeah, we were talking about the lower rogue stuff on our our pilot episode. And that was a crazy story. I was thinking about that, like through the week, singing about that, like, I just]]></googleplay:description>
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	<title>Get Out There &#124; 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River</title>
	<link>https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/get-out-there-01-navigating-the-lower-rogue-river/</link>
	<pubDate>Thu, 02 Mar 2017 21:11:09 +0000</pubDate>
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	<description><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River</p>
<p>Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman</p>
<p>Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
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<p>Hey what&#8217;s going on this is Billy Newman i&#8217;m here today recording a test podcast with my friend Robert biscarrat Robert how you doing go well how are you doing doing good man i&#8217;m happy that we&#8217;re trying out this FaceTime audio call and it sounds like it&#8217;s working pretty good so we&#8217;ll try and we&#8217;ll try to work it out over time to see if it works alright but I feel the my idea is coming over to you well yeah everything is coming in loud and clear excited to do this should be fun ya know because if we can kind of get a rhythm down doing it it would be pretty easy I mean gosh man just got your phone right now is that cake but yeah we never do a podcast with you maybe about what i figured it&#8217;s just like a lot of the outdoor topic so we&#8217;re both interested in you know are just some of the other stories or camping trips that we&#8217;ve done in the past it would be cool to talk about yeah yeah I I don&#8217;t really know anything about anything outdoors related but yeah but I know like the cock oh man you know plenty I&#8217;m sure but yeah i was thinking of well you should tell us a little bit about some of the raft guide experience that you had in the past because i think i&#8217;d be kind of just thing to start to break down a little bit like see you when did you start guiding stuff uh you mean like season or what did I just start I guess just like rowing or anything like that like yeah when did you start in general yeah I started like a four years ago and you know I kind of fell into it was something I wanted to do for a long time but the opportunity really presented itself at the time it did and and wow man what an experience it&#8217;s it&#8217;s really interesting and learning that you know you take it for granted or you know you just kind of a shame that it doesn&#8217;t take much to do and then you get behind the oars and then all of a sudden it&#8217;s just really eye-opening really gain a respect for the people that are good at it yeah I can only imagine really cuz uh like I had that job down the river on the Rogue River for a while so I kinda understand the atmosphere of what&#8217;s going on down there but like even the times that you rep lemme row just for a few minutes ago my gosh I&#8217;m out of it because this is where I got a talent or if this was a skill to build definitely but suit you so you started this season you did like the day chips like the river trips of the normal the Rogue River and then out second-year eyes when you moved into the wild and scenic section it was at that first year uh you know that first year I kind of got some got some training experience down there they wanted me to come down and learn and it was really nice I I was fortunate enough to really learn from some great oarsmen but yeah so I got down there wasn&#8217;t really working down there but I was experiencing it kind of getting a vibe for what it was like and just kind of getting you know cutting my teeth down there so it was good learned a lot but you know even though you learn a lot now and really prepare you for for working down there full time and that was my second season when when I was asked to come down and do that full time and that was that was crazy man yeah I were him I had a question about that like I wanted to know about one of those first experiences of like because there&#8217;s a couple of in the Downriver section on the Rogue River there&#8217;s the wild and scenic section of the river to catch people up and that&#8217;s how long is that is that like 42 miles 35 roughly roughly River miles always vary from shit the BLM marked trail miles but yeah it read in that ballpark okay yeah something like that so there&#8217;s this the Wild and Scenic section where there&#8217;s really no development or no modern development and there&#8217;s a limited amount of rafts that go down through the section each day right yeah absolutely there&#8217;s a permit system through the BLM Bureau of Land Management and essentially what they do is they allow 120 people down per day I know that sounds like a lot but in reality I mean it&#8217;s really sparse you really don&#8217;t know very many people it can be as many votes as you like I mean it could be a hundred and twenty votes right okay but yeah but there&#8217;s a limit of 120 people John and typically you&#8217;re running two to three if you&#8217;re a private boat or provoke us as a guide company we&#8217;re running you know six people for both so right okay the kind of come consolidate a little bit yeah I don&#8217;t have that works well so I know that there&#8217;s like a couple of those features on that lower rogue section that are like pretty heavy like blossom bar and I wanted you to remember you told me a story about that i think was it like perfect i&#8217;m where that where you were you were like learning how to navigate blossom and like yeah i guess for background like what how dangerous or like what is blah as a feature in there blossom is this is this rapid that used to be a full day portage around it commercial cheers have been running down there since the early 20s in back then they used to you know camp just above it take a full data portage and that was it and the 40 is this guy Glen wooldridge who is really the Rogue River pioneer you know I mean that really just you know commercialize this river and just did so much down there well he ended up dynamiting it out you know three separate attempts he blasted massive channel in this thing why Satan it&#8217;s not massive at all actually it&#8217;s just it&#8217;s a technical tiny channel but anyway he does it in the way that the flood water will send debris off to the side keep the channel that he blasted clear and allowing a tricky maneuver through it we are totally doable it&#8217;s entirely dependent on having that move correct right it&#8217;s it&#8217;s a move that it&#8217;s not that hard we always say it&#8217;s a class to move with uh with classified consequences yeah the first thing I thought I because that I hadn&#8217;t really got to raft the lower rogue section that many times so the first time I saw it I think was years ago and then a second time when you and I did that backpacking trip down the lower rogue trail so my first exposure to blossom bar was only ever seeing it kind of from up above I remember the first ever the first time was like what 2010 something like that I was on that backpacking trip in September with Jeremy we got down the block sand bar we waited maybe five minutes it was cake and we saw this pontoon come through and he&#8217;s like yeah man watch this it&#8217;s going to be like pretty gnarly because this is one of those scariest rapids that are out there and we saw this pontoon guy come up and he just like slipped it perfectly just went right in and out and it was nothing and I was like else that&#8217;s that looks easy like from up here 480 feet away so everybody say this is going to be like a giant terrible trauma to try and float through and then you don&#8217;t really realize until like when you and I did the trip later I think what to play two years ago a year ago now yeah yeah you&#8217;re an ass ago and I&#8217;m looking at a picture right now from of a kayaker coming in right in the pocket of that spot in blossom behind i remember now being there with you how what was it an 18-foot raft that was just edge to edge against the rock that you had to kind of here all right swing it right in between yeah so it&#8217;s a tight boat for anything I mean well wouldn&#8217;t you were there that kayaker got this is pretty serious man that was scary to what I was a hairy situation yeah that definitely kind of solidified again that it&#8217;s a pretty big dealer it&#8217;s like a a dangerous spot yeah it&#8217;s you know it&#8217;s one of those Rapids you know an expense from a lot of people are that bit of you know rapid big class 5 water they kind of look at it with this like you know oh that&#8217;s your big scary rapid approach and it&#8217;s not a big deal you know it&#8217;s not a big deal until you mess it up and then when you mess it up you you learn how quickly it changes the game and I mean what a humbling experience to go from like oh yeah it&#8217;s nothing and then you find yourself in very serious trouble very quickly so tell me about that Robert so when was it that you first you first navigated blossom as a guide your rather I just said voting yourself so yeah I guess that was 1 2014 yes I&#8217;m sorry ah yeah so I get out there you know I&#8217;ve been running for all of two weeks I kind of got this job just kind of saying yeah I know what I&#8217;m doing and on the on the premise that I would just be able to figure it out in a short amount of time so anyway I get down there I&#8217;m shadowing a great ortmann that I was stoked to learn from yeah and so he&#8217;s taking me down you know kind of giving me the overview of all these Rapids before we get there yeah and just to mention quickly I mean it&#8217;s not like the first thing on the rivers blossom there&#8217;s a lot of things to get through the said I wouldn&#8217;t want to do for my first time oh yeah and so that was that was the cool thing is a you know I had this awesome day running with him I can you know you can see him up about 60 yards up in the distance and your kind of watching what using a mimic unit and you know the first day was great man I it gave me a really false sense of confidence I can&#8217;t do that per se just feel like man I&#8217;m I&#8217;m pretty good you know so so day two you know we make it to mule Creek Canyon which is a really tight testing area we get through there when we get down into blossom and he&#8217;s like yeah this is the one man you know good luck to you in the unfortunate part of about that is you can&#8217;t really see what the oarsmen in front of you is doing oh really when they go tonight you have to cut it you have to Eddie out above it I remember the perspective they kind of drop away what are you guys yeah gone yeah it&#8217;s it&#8217;s really it&#8217;s just like they drop off and kind of disappear and you just kind of have to I mean you count the 10 and hopefully you see them you know kind of a peek out from behind the rocks so finally you know I count to 10 he comes through and I go okay you know and I guess I just had a terrible interpretation of what I was supposed to do there and I made the mistake that I&#8217;ve seen a lot of people make since then standing up on the bank and watching other boaters oh yeah and uh you know it&#8217;s a really big it&#8217;s a heavy pull move in there you&#8217;re pulling you need all that strength there&#8217;s you&#8217;re working against the current in there right I remember and remember you prepping us for it I like when we get it yeah oh we gotta pull back pull back yeah yeah yeah so you know it you&#8217;re trying to catch us Eddie to slow you down because you&#8217;ve got a lot of momentum going through there you know I was I was taught to push push on the oars rather than pool so I come in trying to push it obviously not strong enough um I missed that major that major move just the you know that pivotal move coming in there i miss it i get slammed up against what&#8217;s called the rap rock on the picket fence and for anybody listening the picket fence is a series of rocks because of the dynamiting that kind of sit up almost like fingers out of the water with just about enough space for a person to get wedged in there just right in tune stuck in yeah a lot of SIDS in there and just a place you absolutely don&#8217;t want to be a movie right you know long story short I get that I get pushed up against there the boat is you know listing I&#8217;m trying to throw I&#8217;m trying to get it around get my channel 4 and a just an idea of how strong water is you know I&#8217;ve I&#8217;m not a big guy but I&#8217;m throwing all my weight onto these oars and just doing everything I can I&#8217;ve got adrenaline going everything and I mean the current just grabs Azure and just shoots it in the air like 10 feet like a rocket I don&#8217;t even know how it happened but it just launches it at this moment I go oh no dad I need that one yeah it&#8217;s amazing how like you know time slows down in those scenarios but it grabs it grabs my upstream tube it sucks it under the boat starts to flip I don&#8217;t know how this ended up happening i ended up scrambling up over the raft as it&#8217;s flipping and I land on to this rock called the rap rock my boat flips it goes down in the channel and I watch it go right by a lack of experience made me think I would be safer not jumping on the boat in retrospect I don&#8217;t know why I didn&#8217;t jump back on the boat that&#8217;s amore you know yeah I think things you learn SAA well mr. yeah yeah and so I end up on this rock you know and to give you an idea of the size of the rock it&#8217;s about two and a half feet by two and a half feet and I&#8217;m standing out there you know on this rock in the picket fence the most dangerous part of boston bar and no way out yeah well i&#8217;m not going to jump in the water here yeah absolutely you know a bittersweet situation came up I mean it was fortunate for me unfortunate for the other boaters but some private boaters had come down and they had wrapped their boat far elastic defense and really i mean i i&#8217;m fairly certain they lost that boat entirely oh god but fortunately there was a guy on the bank with a throw rope he was able to throw a rope out to me and pull me back across to safety but I mean the whole thing from start to finish ended up taking about hour and a half really uh uh yeah who&#8217;s not long of a time that you were like figure out they&#8217;re just stuck well yeah you know you&#8217;re out there and first off they&#8217;re dealing with their situation which is pretty high stress situation yeah but then he comes out to me it&#8217;s a it&#8217;s a forest row it&#8217;s you know you got to be careful you&#8217;re not slipping or something yeah you know but it took like 20 throws to get me the rope and then each time you got to bring the Rope back in coil it back up get it flake back out and then try it again and okay yeah it was a an experience oh my gosh yeah i&#8217;m looking at the picture of the zone where would it happened right now and i&#8217;m just kind of spotting like the picket fence the rock where the people were to the left of the river that sounds like a crazy time though but so if love so your raft went down river or like was it did it deflate no I got so lucky oh my gosh everything back the oars ended back with it you know the only thing I lost was my cot which I was getting a lot of a lot of flack for anyway just because it was a super heavy cumbersome cot need to get rid of that you&#8217;re really i think its back here yeah that&#8217;s the river time yeah man that&#8217;s enough Norina that&#8217;s a crazy thing have you ever like how many other clothes cause did like your team have that season or like or since then or is that is a kind of often that you guys aren&#8217;t into that um you know I didn&#8217;t think it was a very very frequent thing until you go down and you watch people that aren&#8217;t down there every day right and you can stand there for an hour and if there&#8217;s boats coming through you know I would say one in ten both has a run the way it&#8217;s supposed to go through oh my god i would say ninety percent of the boats that go through they either get really lucky and the river smiles on that day and they get to move on yeah or they end up in trouble and flip a boat or rip a floor out or something i watch the guy rap is kayak man i was thinking about it though in like 2012 and you probably know these guys back in i think it was 2012 and marina and i were camping down there for two days that was like the beginning of october the fishing season has started I&#8217;m abandoned out there with a camera watching this like beautiful like hardwood polished terrific I just cruise right through there like it&#8217;s like it&#8217;s just nothing like you just yeah bus or something like it&#8217;s easy about yeah you just like see that guy float right through and like pull out to the side in the right spot and you just think well how does that guy do that with such like a fragile machine you know the drift boats are really such an art and I&#8217;ve been fortunate enough I got to run a season down there with it with mine this year no it&#8217;s a boy you really increase the stress by you know tenfold you don&#8217;t have the luxury of bouncing like you do with a rubber raft right em so I mean any mistake is really a potential boat sinking experience so it&#8217;s you know by the time you&#8217;re rowing a drift boat down there you really understand what you&#8217;re doing and where these channels are and the other neat thing about it your code is the way to design is there like a Ferrari not I&#8217;m not downplaying the difficulty of what&#8217;s going on and then yeah you know they&#8217;re easier to maneuver but the stakes are higher and so it&#8217;s just important that you make those moves like that and it&#8217;s it&#8217;s an art to watch your photos go down there it&#8217;s absolutely beautiful yeah I seems seems amazing like how they just able to hit that line so perfectly just move right yeah it&#8217;s really cool but yeah that&#8217;s pretty nuts time though that sounds like a crazy first time and then what sense then how many times you&#8217;ve done a lot of rope after that oh man I wouldn&#8217;t arrest member like yeah I was trying to figure that out i would say 70 times maybe Wow several rounds of the river just even like so like that&#8217;s just a couple years to that&#8217;s probably a ton of experience it is I mean it&#8217;s still there&#8217;s still so much to learn every time you go down you learn something new or some some scenario that you never planned for or even thought about happens you know just the most obscure thing and you go wow okay I&#8217;ve learned something from that you know it&#8217;s pretty cool man I&#8217;m really glad you finished up this season and they that you got that drift boat to and a trailer I did ya checked in here got into the fishing gig you know Rowan down there some really great older than and I mean really getting that drift boat experience down there yeah yeah nerve-racking but so rewarding yeah it sounds really cool we got to find a mellow spawn of water that you and I can go out on some time on your trip though I wanna check it out yeah I want to take you guys out I&#8217;d like to do some fly-fishing I mean you know that&#8217;s what I want to do though Oh have you get together out there and actually give you guys a fishing trip man I&#8217;ll be so fun I&#8217;d love to do so you know yeah yeah those trips are expensive so I mean I got to capitalize on those gotta capitalize unknown a good god man that&#8217;s gonna be great yeah you set up man you got all the gear so it&#8217;s going to be cool look forward to a there yeah right after your honeymoon this summer you can just you can just put us on a fishing trip I think it&#8217;s a good idea that sounds great to me the fall time that&#8217;s where it&#8217;s at well you know the honeymoons gonna happen and then I&#8217;m just not going to want to work at all i&#8217;m going to be out of it you know it&#8217;s gonna be like I want to go back to work we should just go fishing so that&#8217;s a great man i&#8217;ll be in are you gonna great i&#8217;ll be acclimated to time off as much as i can monopolize your time that&#8217;d be great man man i think it&#8217;d be fun but yeah we gotta playing some good camping trips this summer and I want to get you back back east in like Eastern Oregon or you know some some other River I don&#8217;t how we do it but we should just get out get out and go camping somewhere else you know I&#8217;d like to get the raft and get out there on like the Hawaii or John day or something like that be cool I know I don&#8217;t know anything about him I don&#8217;t know what a ratchet was like out there but it just seems cool till I go out to a different spot Scott so maybe we&#8217;ve camped before so you know this we&#8217;ve got river access and we just never never gone down a Terry story seems like it yeah there&#8217;s a lot of neat rivers other I love that area i mean you know we&#8217;ve always gone out there but yeah those rivers are both have known for just being incredibly scenic you know Oh class threw water at best you know not very techincal water just a really like an awesome experience from what I understand my god yes I got to do a little homework on it but well study up and then we gotta plan a trip out to summer now let&#8217;s go blind well the shit will just jump in get supplies it&#8217;s a river cut having a good time man well thanks Robert you&#8217;re doing a podcast you really appreciate it hanging out for if yes talking about that back story that&#8217;s that&#8217;s a amazing story it&#8217;s just like a crazy time ok guys you pulled it off maybe yeah I think it work everybody no man it&#8217;s really cool well yeah I really want to get you back on and i want to set up a few more of these to do to do some shows like this where we get to talk about some of the outdoor stuff that they&#8217;ve done even just that man like going through a cool story that you had of like some kind of tense situation i think that&#8217;s going to be really fun well yeah and you know i mean the cool thing is we&#8217;ve done enough of these uh these things together that i don&#8217;t think we have any shortage of stories to share i was thinking the same thing about it having it be cool alright i&#8217;m looking forward to it yeah Thank You Man I&#8217;m gonna let you go and I wanted to say thank you very much Robert and thanks for i guess anybody that ends up listen to this podcast on behalf of robert booster at my name is Billy Newman and thank you very much for listening to this podcast </p>]]></description>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
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Hey what&#8217;s going on t]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River</p>
<p>Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman</p>
<p>Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.</p>
<p>Get Out There Podcast</p>
<p>billynewmanphoto.com</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Hey what&#8217;s going on this is Billy Newman i&#8217;m here today recording a test podcast with my friend Robert biscarrat Robert how you doing go well how are you doing doing good man i&#8217;m happy that we&#8217;re trying out this FaceTime audio call and it sounds like it&#8217;s working pretty good so we&#8217;ll try and we&#8217;ll try to work it out over time to see if it works alright but I feel the my idea is coming over to you well yeah everything is coming in loud and clear excited to do this should be fun ya know because if we can kind of get a rhythm down doing it it would be pretty easy I mean gosh man just got your phone right now is that cake but yeah we never do a podcast with you maybe about what i figured it&#8217;s just like a lot of the outdoor topic so we&#8217;re both interested in you know are just some of the other stories or camping trips that we&#8217;ve done in the past it would be cool to talk about yeah yeah I I don&#8217;t really know anything about anything outdoors related but yeah but I know like the cock oh man you know plenty I&#8217;m sure but yeah i was thinking of well you should tell us a little bit about some of the raft guide experience that you had in the past because i think i&#8217;d be kind of just thing to start to break down a little bit like see you when did you start guiding stuff uh you mean like season or what did I just start I guess just like rowing or anything like that like yeah when did you start in general yeah I started like a four years ago and you know I kind of fell into it was something I wanted to do for a long time but the opportunity really presented itself at the time it did and and wow man what an experience it&#8217;s it&#8217;s really interesting and learning that you know you take it for granted or you know you just kind of a shame that it doesn&#8217;t take much to do and then you get behind the oars and then all of a sudden it&#8217;s just really eye-opening really gain a respect for the people that are good at it yeah I can only imagine really cuz uh like I had that job down the river on the Rogue River for a while so I kinda understand the atmosphere of what&#8217;s going on down there but like even the times that you rep lemme row just for a few minutes ago my gosh I&#8217;m out of it because this is where I got a talent or if this was a skill to build definitely but suit you so you started this season you did like the day chips like the river trips of the normal the Rogue River and then out second-year eyes when you moved into the wild and scenic section it was at that first year uh you know that first year I kind of got some got some training experience down there they wanted me to come down and learn and it was really nice I I was fortunate enough to really learn from some great oarsmen but yeah so I got down there wasn&#8217;t really working down there but I was experiencing it kind of getting a vibe for what it was like and just kind of getting you know cutting my teeth down there so it was good learned a lot but you know even though you learn a lot now and really prepare you for for working down there full time and that was my second season when when I was asked to come down and do that full time and that was that was crazy man yeah I were him I had a question about that like I wanted to know about one of those first experiences of like because there&#8217;s a couple of in the Downriver section on the Rogue River there&#8217;s the wild and scenic section of the river to catch people up and that&#8217;s how long is that is that like 42 miles 35 roughly roughly River miles always vary from shit the BLM marked trail miles but yeah it read in that ballpark okay yeah something like that so there&#8217;s this the Wild and Scenic section where there&#8217;s really no development or no modern development and there&#8217;s a limited amount of rafts that go down through the section each day right yeah absolutely there&#8217;s a permit system through the BLM Bureau of Land Management and essentially what they do is they allow 120 people down per day I know that sounds like a lot but in reality I mean it&#8217;s really sparse you really don&#8217;t know very many people it can be as many votes as you like I mean it could be a hundred and twenty votes right okay but yeah but there&#8217;s a limit of 120 people John and typically you&#8217;re running two to three if you&#8217;re a private boat or provoke us as a guide company we&#8217;re running you know six people for both so right okay the kind of come consolidate a little bit yeah I don&#8217;t have that works well so I know that there&#8217;s like a couple of those features on that lower rogue section that are like pretty heavy like blossom bar and I wanted you to remember you told me a story about that i think was it like perfect i&#8217;m where that where you were you were like learning how to navigate blossom and like yeah i guess for background like what how dangerous or like what is blah as a feature in there blossom is this is this rapid that used to be a full day portage around it commercial cheers have been running down there since the early 20s in back then they used to you know camp just above it take a full data portage and that was it and the 40 is this guy Glen wooldridge who is really the Rogue River pioneer you know I mean that really just you know commercialize this river and just did so much down there well he ended up dynamiting it out you know three separate attempts he blasted massive channel in this thing why Satan it&#8217;s not massive at all actually it&#8217;s just it&#8217;s a technical tiny channel but anyway he does it in the way that the flood water will send debris off to the side keep the channel that he blasted clear and allowing a tricky maneuver through it we are totally doable it&#8217;s entirely dependent on having that move correct right it&#8217;s it&#8217;s a move that it&#8217;s not that hard we always say it&#8217;s a class to move with uh with classified consequences yeah the first thing I thought I because that I hadn&#8217;t really got to raft the lower rogue section that many times so the first time I saw it I think was years ago and then a second time when you and I did that backpacking trip down the lower rogue trail so my first exposure to blossom bar was only ever seeing it kind of from up above I remember the first ever the first time was like what 2010 something like that I was on that backpacking trip in September with Jeremy we got down the block sand bar we waited maybe five minutes it was cake and we saw this pontoon come through and he&#8217;s like yeah man watch this it&#8217;s going to be like pretty gnarly because this is one of those scariest rapids that are out there and we saw this pontoon guy come up and he just like slipped it perfectly just went right in and out and it was nothing and I was like else that&#8217;s that looks easy like from up here 480 feet away so everybody say this is going to be like a giant terrible trauma to try and float through and then you don&#8217;t really realize until like when you and I did the trip later I think what to play two years ago a year ago now yeah yeah you&#8217;re an ass ago and I&#8217;m looking at a picture right now from of a kayaker coming in right in the pocket of that spot in blossom behind i remember now being there with you how what was it an 18-foot raft that was just edge to edge against the rock that you had to kind of here all right swing it right in between yeah so it&#8217;s a tight boat for anything I mean well wouldn&#8217;t you were there that kayaker got this is pretty serious man that was scary to what I was a hairy situation yeah that definitely kind of solidified again that it&#8217;s a pretty big dealer it&#8217;s like a a dangerous spot yeah it&#8217;s you know it&#8217;s one of those Rapids you know an expense from a lot of people are that bit of you know rapid big class 5 water they kind of look at it with this like you know oh that&#8217;s your big scary rapid approach and it&#8217;s not a big deal you know it&#8217;s not a big deal until you mess it up and then when you mess it up you you learn how quickly it changes the game and I mean what a humbling experience to go from like oh yeah it&#8217;s nothing and then you find yourself in very serious trouble very quickly so tell me about that Robert so when was it that you first you first navigated blossom as a guide your rather I just said voting yourself so yeah I guess that was 1 2014 yes I&#8217;m sorry ah yeah so I get out there you know I&#8217;ve been running for all of two weeks I kind of got this job just kind of saying yeah I know what I&#8217;m doing and on the on the premise that I would just be able to figure it out in a short amount of time so anyway I get down there I&#8217;m shadowing a great ortmann that I was stoked to learn from yeah and so he&#8217;s taking me down you know kind of giving me the overview of all these Rapids before we get there yeah and just to mention quickly I mean it&#8217;s not like the first thing on the rivers blossom there&#8217;s a lot of things to get through the said I wouldn&#8217;t want to do for my first time oh yeah and so that was that was the cool thing is a you know I had this awesome day running with him I can you know you can see him up about 60 yards up in the distance and your kind of watching what using a mimic unit and you know the first day was great man I it gave me a really false sense of confidence I can&#8217;t do that per se just feel like man I&#8217;m I&#8217;m pretty good you know so so day two you know we make it to mule Creek Canyon which is a really tight testing area we get through there when we get down into blossom and he&#8217;s like yeah this is the one man you know good luck to you in the unfortunate part of about that is you can&#8217;t really see what the oarsmen in front of you is doing oh really when they go tonight you have to cut it you have to Eddie out above it I remember the perspective they kind of drop away what are you guys yeah gone yeah it&#8217;s it&#8217;s really it&#8217;s just like they drop off and kind of disappear and you just kind of have to I mean you count the 10 and hopefully you see them you know kind of a peek out from behind the rocks so finally you know I count to 10 he comes through and I go okay you know and I guess I just had a terrible interpretation of what I was supposed to do there and I made the mistake that I&#8217;ve seen a lot of people make since then standing up on the bank and watching other boaters oh yeah and uh you know it&#8217;s a really big it&#8217;s a heavy pull move in there you&#8217;re pulling you need all that strength there&#8217;s you&#8217;re working against the current in there right I remember and remember you prepping us for it I like when we get it yeah oh we gotta pull back pull back yeah yeah yeah so you know it you&#8217;re trying to catch us Eddie to slow you down because you&#8217;ve got a lot of momentum going through there you know I was I was taught to push push on the oars rather than pool so I come in trying to push it obviously not strong enough um I missed that major that major move just the you know that pivotal move coming in there i miss it i get slammed up against what&#8217;s called the rap rock on the picket fence and for anybody listening the picket fence is a series of rocks because of the dynamiting that kind of sit up almost like fingers out of the water with just about enough space for a person to get wedged in there just right in tune stuck in yeah a lot of SIDS in there and just a place you absolutely don&#8217;t want to be a movie right you know long story short I get that I get pushed up against there the boat is you know listing I&#8217;m trying to throw I&#8217;m trying to get it around get my channel 4 and a just an idea of how strong water is you know I&#8217;ve I&#8217;m not a big guy but I&#8217;m throwing all my weight onto these oars and just doing everything I can I&#8217;ve got adrenaline going everything and I mean the current just grabs Azure and just shoots it in the air like 10 feet like a rocket I don&#8217;t even know how it happened but it just launches it at this moment I go oh no dad I need that one yeah it&#8217;s amazing how like you know time slows down in those scenarios but it grabs it grabs my upstream tube it sucks it under the boat starts to flip I don&#8217;t know how this ended up happening i ended up scrambling up over the raft as it&#8217;s flipping and I land on to this rock called the rap rock my boat flips it goes down in the channel and I watch it go right by a lack of experience made me think I would be safer not jumping on the boat in retrospect I don&#8217;t know why I didn&#8217;t jump back on the boat that&#8217;s amore you know yeah I think things you learn SAA well mr. yeah yeah and so I end up on this rock you know and to give you an idea of the size of the rock it&#8217;s about two and a half feet by two and a half feet and I&#8217;m standing out there you know on this rock in the picket fence the most dangerous part of boston bar and no way out yeah well i&#8217;m not going to jump in the water here yeah absolutely you know a bittersweet situation came up I mean it was fortunate for me unfortunate for the other boaters but some private boaters had come down and they had wrapped their boat far elastic defense and really i mean i i&#8217;m fairly certain they lost that boat entirely oh god but fortunately there was a guy on the bank with a throw rope he was able to throw a rope out to me and pull me back across to safety but I mean the whole thing from start to finish ended up taking about hour and a half really uh uh yeah who&#8217;s not long of a time that you were like figure out they&#8217;re just stuck well yeah you know you&#8217;re out there and first off they&#8217;re dealing with their situation which is pretty high stress situation yeah but then he comes out to me it&#8217;s a it&#8217;s a forest row it&#8217;s you know you got to be careful you&#8217;re not slipping or something yeah you know but it took like 20 throws to get me the rope and then each time you got to bring the Rope back in coil it back up get it flake back out and then try it again and okay yeah it was a an experience oh my gosh yeah i&#8217;m looking at the picture of the zone where would it happened right now and i&#8217;m just kind of spotting like the picket fence the rock where the people were to the left of the river that sounds like a crazy time though but so if love so your raft went down river or like was it did it deflate no I got so lucky oh my gosh everything back the oars ended back with it you know the only thing I lost was my cot which I was getting a lot of a lot of flack for anyway just because it was a super heavy cumbersome cot need to get rid of that you&#8217;re really i think its back here yeah that&#8217;s the river time yeah man that&#8217;s enough Norina that&#8217;s a crazy thing have you ever like how many other clothes cause did like your team have that season or like or since then or is that is a kind of often that you guys aren&#8217;t into that um you know I didn&#8217;t think it was a very very frequent thing until you go down and you watch people that aren&#8217;t down there every day right and you can stand there for an hour and if there&#8217;s boats coming through you know I would say one in ten both has a run the way it&#8217;s supposed to go through oh my god i would say ninety percent of the boats that go through they either get really lucky and the river smiles on that day and they get to move on yeah or they end up in trouble and flip a boat or rip a floor out or something i watch the guy rap is kayak man i was thinking about it though in like 2012 and you probably know these guys back in i think it was 2012 and marina and i were camping down there for two days that was like the beginning of october the fishing season has started I&#8217;m abandoned out there with a camera watching this like beautiful like hardwood polished terrific I just cruise right through there like it&#8217;s like it&#8217;s just nothing like you just yeah bus or something like it&#8217;s easy about yeah you just like see that guy float right through and like pull out to the side in the right spot and you just think well how does that guy do that with such like a fragile machine you know the drift boats are really such an art and I&#8217;ve been fortunate enough I got to run a season down there with it with mine this year no it&#8217;s a boy you really increase the stress by you know tenfold you don&#8217;t have the luxury of bouncing like you do with a rubber raft right em so I mean any mistake is really a potential boat sinking experience so it&#8217;s you know by the time you&#8217;re rowing a drift boat down there you really understand what you&#8217;re doing and where these channels are and the other neat thing about it your code is the way to design is there like a Ferrari not I&#8217;m not downplaying the difficulty of what&#8217;s going on and then yeah you know they&#8217;re easier to maneuver but the stakes are higher and so it&#8217;s just important that you make those moves like that and it&#8217;s it&#8217;s an art to watch your photos go down there it&#8217;s absolutely beautiful yeah I seems seems amazing like how they just able to hit that line so perfectly just move right yeah it&#8217;s really cool but yeah that&#8217;s pretty nuts time though that sounds like a crazy first time and then what sense then how many times you&#8217;ve done a lot of rope after that oh man I wouldn&#8217;t arrest member like yeah I was trying to figure that out i would say 70 times maybe Wow several rounds of the river just even like so like that&#8217;s just a couple years to that&#8217;s probably a ton of experience it is I mean it&#8217;s still there&#8217;s still so much to learn every time you go down you learn something new or some some scenario that you never planned for or even thought about happens you know just the most obscure thing and you go wow okay I&#8217;ve learned something from that you know it&#8217;s pretty cool man I&#8217;m really glad you finished up this season and they that you got that drift boat to and a trailer I did ya checked in here got into the fishing gig you know Rowan down there some really great older than and I mean really getting that drift boat experience down there yeah yeah nerve-racking but so rewarding yeah it sounds really cool we got to find a mellow spawn of water that you and I can go out on some time on your trip though I wanna check it out yeah I want to take you guys out I&#8217;d like to do some fly-fishing I mean you know that&#8217;s what I want to do though Oh have you get together out there and actually give you guys a fishing trip man I&#8217;ll be so fun I&#8217;d love to do so you know yeah yeah those trips are expensive so I mean I got to capitalize on those gotta capitalize unknown a good god man that&#8217;s gonna be great yeah you set up man you got all the gear so it&#8217;s going to be cool look forward to a there yeah right after your honeymoon this summer you can just you can just put us on a fishing trip I think it&#8217;s a good idea that sounds great to me the fall time that&#8217;s where it&#8217;s at well you know the honeymoons gonna happen and then I&#8217;m just not going to want to work at all i&#8217;m going to be out of it you know it&#8217;s gonna be like I want to go back to work we should just go fishing so that&#8217;s a great man i&#8217;ll be in are you gonna great i&#8217;ll be acclimated to time off as much as i can monopolize your time that&#8217;d be great man man i think it&#8217;d be fun but yeah we gotta playing some good camping trips this summer and I want to get you back back east in like Eastern Oregon or you know some some other River I don&#8217;t how we do it but we should just get out get out and go camping somewhere else you know I&#8217;d like to get the raft and get out there on like the Hawaii or John day or something like that be cool I know I don&#8217;t know anything about him I don&#8217;t know what a ratchet was like out there but it just seems cool till I go out to a different spot Scott so maybe we&#8217;ve camped before so you know this we&#8217;ve got river access and we just never never gone down a Terry story seems like it yeah there&#8217;s a lot of neat rivers other I love that area i mean you know we&#8217;ve always gone out there but yeah those rivers are both have known for just being incredibly scenic you know Oh class threw water at best you know not very techincal water just a really like an awesome experience from what I understand my god yes I got to do a little homework on it but well study up and then we gotta plan a trip out to summer now let&#8217;s go blind well the shit will just jump in get supplies it&#8217;s a river cut having a good time man well thanks Robert you&#8217;re doing a podcast you really appreciate it hanging out for if yes talking about that back story that&#8217;s that&#8217;s a amazing story it&#8217;s just like a crazy time ok guys you pulled it off maybe yeah I think it work everybody no man it&#8217;s really cool well yeah I really want to get you back on and i want to set up a few more of these to do to do some shows like this where we get to talk about some of the outdoor stuff that they&#8217;ve done even just that man like going through a cool story that you had of like some kind of tense situation i think that&#8217;s going to be really fun well yeah and you know i mean the cool thing is we&#8217;ve done enough of these uh these things together that i don&#8217;t think we have any shortage of stories to share i was thinking the same thing about it having it be cool alright i&#8217;m looking forward to it yeah Thank You Man I&#8217;m gonna let you go and I wanted to say thank you very much Robert and thanks for i guess anybody that ends up listen to this podcast on behalf of robert booster at my name is Billy Newman and thank you very much for listening to this podcast </p>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
&nbsp;
&nbsp;
Hey what&#8217;s going on this is Billy Newman i&#8217;m here today recording a test podcast with my friend Robert biscarrat Robert how you doing go well how are you doing doing good man i&#8217;m happy that we&#8217;re trying out this FaceTime audio call and it sounds like it&#8217;s working pretty good so we&#8217;ll try and we&#8217;ll try to work it out over time to see if it works alright but I feel the my idea is coming over to you well yeah everything is coming in loud and clear excited to do this should be fun ya know because if we can kind of get a rhythm down doing it it would be pretty easy I mean gosh man just got your phone right now is that cake but yeah we never do a podcast with you maybe about what i figured it&#8217;s just like a lot of the outdoor topic so we&#8217;re both interested in you know are just some of the other stories or camping trips that we&#8217;ve done in the past it would be cool to talk about yeah yeah I I don&#8217;t really know anything about anything outdoors related but yeah but I know like the cock oh man you know plenty I&#8217;m sure but yeah i was thinking of well you should tell us a little bit about some of the raft guide experience that you had in the past because i think i&#8217;d be kind of just thing to start to break down a little bit like see you when did you start guiding stuff uh you mean like season or what did I just start I guess just like rowing or anything like that like yeah when did you start in general yeah I started like a four years ago and you know I kind of fell into it was something I wanted to do for a long time but the opportunity really presented itself at the time it did and and wow man what an experience it&#8217;s it&#8217;s really interesting and learning that you know you take it for granted or you know you just kind of a shame that it doesn&#8217;t take much to do and then you get behind the oars and then all of a sudden it&#8217;s just really eye-opening really gain a respect for the people that are good at it yeah I can only imagine really cuz uh like I had that job down the river on the Rogue River for a while so I kinda understand the atmosphere of what&#8217;s going on down there but like even the times that you rep lemme row just for a few minutes ago my gosh I&#8217;m out of it because this is where I got a talent or if this was a skill to build definitely but suit you so you started this season you did like the day chips like the river trips of the normal the Rogue River and then out second-year eyes when you moved into the wild and scenic section it was at that first year uh you know that first year I kind of got some got some training experience down there they wanted me to come down and learn and it was really nice I I was fortunate enough to really learn from some great oarsmen but yeah so I got down there wasn&#8217;t really working down there but I was experiencing it kind of getting a vibe for what it was like and just kind of getting you know cutting my teeth down there so it was good learned a lot but you know even though you learn a lot now and really prepare you for for working down there full time and that was my second season when when I was asked to come down and do that full time and that was that was crazy man yeah I were him I had a question about that like I wanted to know about one of those first experiences of like because there&#8217;s a couple of in the Downriver section on the Rogue River there&#8217;s the wild and scenic section of the river to catch people up and that&#8217;s how long is that is that like 42 miles 35 roughly roughly River miles always vary from shit the BLM marked trail miles but yeah it read in that ballpark okay yeah something like that so there&#8217;s this the Wild and Sceni]]></itunes:summary>
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		<title>Get Out There &#124; 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River</title>
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	<itunes:author><![CDATA[Get Out There]]></itunes:author>	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River
Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman
Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river.
Get Out There Podcast
billynewmanphoto.com
&nbsp;
&nbsp;
Hey what&#8217;s going on this is Billy Newman i&#8217;m here today recording a test podcast with my friend Robert biscarrat Robert how you doing go well how are you doing doing good man i&#8217;m happy that we&#8217;re trying out this FaceTime audio call and it sounds like it&#8217;s working pretty good so we&#8217;ll try and we&#8217;ll try to work it out over time to see if it works alright but I feel the my idea is coming over to you well yeah everything is coming in loud and clear excited to do this should be fun ya know because if we can kind of get a rhythm down doing it it would be pretty easy I mean gosh man just got your phone right now is that cake but yeah we never do a podcast with you maybe about what i figured it&#8217;s just like a lot of the out]]></googleplay:description>
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