Austin Paddler West Hansen to release book about Amazon expedition at Sept. 7 event

Austin Paddler West Hansen to release book about Amazon expedition at Sept. 7 event

Amazon Express expedition leader West Hansencarries his kayak through a boulder field while negotiating the Rio Mantaro below Tablachaca Dam. Photo by Erich Schlegel

Seven years ago, Austin paddler West Hansen led an expedition down the Amazon River, navigating whitewater, encountering narco traffickers, getting held up multiple times and dodging boulders that rained from canyon walls as he followed the river from its source in the Peruvian Andes to the ocean.

West Hansen takes a break from writing in his journal during his 2012 paddling expedition on the Amazon River. Erich Schlegel photo

On Sept. 7, he’ll unveil his first book, which chronicles those adventures, at a signing at Zilker Clubhouse in Austin.

I’ve already gobbled up “Source to Sea, The Farthest Journey Down the World’s Longest River,” reading an early version via my iPhone during a surf trip to Costa Rica last year. (That says something. Who reads an entire 400-page book on a teeny screen unless it’s a pretty gripping account?)

The book takes readers on a twisting, 4,200-mile adventure from the high mountains to the jungle. Hansen, who moonlights as a social worker when he’s not paddling to all corners of the planet, manages to weave in regional history, drama with team members and a feud with National Geographic.

The book includes more than 90 color photos, graphics and maps, plus descriptions of encounters with wildlife and locals (friendly and non-friendly), visits to towns along the way and a peek at the life of a modern-day explorer out to claim a rare “first” in a world where people spend most of their time glued to computers and smart phones.

Pre-order the book by Aug. 15 at www.westhansen.comto guarantee delivery at the signing. (No pre-orders will be mailed, so if you order one you must pick it up at the event. The book will also be sold via Amazon.com, but for a higher price.)
The event begins at 6 p.m. Sept. 7 at the Zilker Clubhouse, 200 Zilker Clubhouse Road off of Rollingwood Drive.

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

My high school coach is launching a swim fitness program for seniors

My high school coach is launching a swim fitness program for seniors

Dotson Smith, who coached me for a semester when I was in high school, is reopening his Swim-A-Day business in Austin. He’ll focus on getting seniors who haven’t been exercising into shape. Photo courtesy Dotson Smith

Except for a five- or six-year period when I was in my 20s and clanged weights five days a week, I’ve always preferred the pool to an indoor gym for my workout.

For one, I can lie down while I do it. Two, the water gives me a full body hug, and I’m all about the touch.

My old high school swimming coach, Dotson Smith, gets that. Smith, now 82, is coming out of retirement to offer a pool-based fitness program for seniors who don’t currently do much exercise.

If you grew up in Austin like I did, you may remember the old Swim-A-Day indoor pool off of Spicewood Springs Road in northwest Austin. I swam there for a single semester, under Smith’s watchful eye, when I was a freshman at Anderson High School. (I graduated from Johnston High in 1982.)

Smith opened that pool in 1966, when he was just 29 years old. Over the next few decades, he taught thousands of Austin kids how to swim. He coached high school swim teams to state championships and receive a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Texas Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame in 2015.

“Swim-A-Day is not water aerobics,” Smith says of his new business. “This is a new kind of exercise program designed to offer health benefits no matter how old you are. It can improve your heart health, increase strength and flexibility, reduce risk of osteoporosis and help decrease depression. And we do it all while listening to the great music we all enjoyed when we were younger. It’s a blast,” Smith says.

Dotson Smith swims about 1,000 yards a day and says it’s kept him healthy and able to recovery from injury. Photo courtesy Dotson Smith

Swim-A-Day sessions are available to seniors on a one-on-one basis, or in groups.

Smith, who coached me a second time, through a U.S. Masters Swimming program in Mission, Texas, in the 1990s, still swims an average of 1,000 yards a day. He credits his own pool-based exercise routine with keeping himself strong and able to recover more quickly from injury.

He doesn’t need to convince me.

For more about Swim-A-Day, go to https://www.swimaday.com, or find it on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/swimadayatx/.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

Spider Mountain Bike Park adds crazy new trails

Spider Mountain Bike Park adds crazy new trails

Cyclists bomb down new trails at Spider Mountain Bike Park near Burnet. Photo courtesy Spider Mountain

Spider Mountain Bike Park, where a ski lift carries cyclists to the top of a hill so they can focus on the ride down, has added two new trails to its network of twisty routes.

One, dubbed Tarantula, features a 115-foot stretch of boardwalk that’s elevated 7 feet off the ground. There’s also a wooden wall ride (painted like a huge Texas flag), bridges and ramps, so riders can fly through the air as they rumble down the 900-foot trail.

“Tarantula is designed for both those who are new to mountain biking and those who live and breathe it,” says Deseree Hernandez, director of operations. “Beginners can roll through to have fun or go expert-style and show off their freeride skills.”

The new wall feature at Spider Mountain is painted like a Texas flag. Photo courtesy Spider Mountain

Recluse, the second new trail, isn’t quite as daunting. The rolling, 300-foot route rides like a pump track between the existing Viper’s Den and Itsy-Bitsy trails.

All the trails at the park are marked green for beginner, blue for intermediate and black for expert, just like trails at a snow ski resort.

“Our concept was to make Recluse a light blue trail,” Hernandez said. “It’s a great way for riders to progress from Itsy-Bitsy, our easiest trail, to a blue run with more challenges. But it’s also super fun for more experienced riders.”

To celebrate the new trails, the park will host a party this Saturday, Aug. 3, complete with a ribbon cutting, a train of riders coming down both trails, competitions and an evening party. Activities start at 10 a.m., with the Texas State Whip-Off Championship at 11 a.m. and the Wall Ride Competition at 1 p.m. An awards ceremony is scheduled for 2 p.m. and a post-race party starts at 7 p.m.

The new Tarantula trail features five new technical features, including this one. Photo courtesy Spider Mountain

When I visited the park last February, the day after it opened, I loaded my bike onto a ski lift that once whisked skiers up Al’s Run at Taos Ski Resort in New Mexico and bombed down Itsy-Bitsy alongside the park’s crazy-like-an-over-grown-kid mastermind, James Coleman.

James Coleman, the owner of Spider Mountain. Pam LeBlanc photo

Coleman grew up in Austin and dreamed of owning ski resorts, which he now does. He lives in Durango, where he’s the managing partner of a company that owns Purgatory Resort, Arizona Snowbowl, Sipapu Ski & Summer Resort, Pajarito Mountain, Hesperus Ski Area, Nordic Valley Ski Resort, and Colorado’s largest snowcat skiing operation, Purgatory Snowcat Adventures.

Cyclists ride a ski lift up Spider Mountain near Burnet, Texas, on Feb. 9, 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

Spider Mountain is the only lift-served mountain bike park in Texas, and the only year-round park of its type in the United States.

Want an idea of what it feels like to ride the new Tarantula trail? Watch this video from Spider Mountain:

 

Spider Mountain is at 200 Greenwood Hills Trail near Burnet, about 60 miles northwest of Austin. Park hours are noon to 7 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, plus holidays and spring break. Day passes are $50 for adults ($45 youth or senior; free ages 10 and under). To ride the lift without a bike, pay $20 round-trip adult or $15 youth or senior. For more information go to spidermountain.com.Want to stay overnight? Thunderbird Lodge, a no-frills hotel and marina, is located next door.

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

When in New Mexico, attend a feast day at a Native American pueblo

When in New Mexico, attend a feast day at a Native American pueblo

William Clark plays a flute during a performance at Hyatt Regency Tamaya on July 25, 2019. The Santa Ana Pueblo, which owns the property where the hotel is located, hosts a feast day each July 26 in its nearby village. Photos are not allowed at the event. Pam LeBlanc photo

The magic of travel unfolds when you get a glimpse into the lives of people from different parts of the world – or just the next state over.

Every July 26, the Tamayame people gather at their old pueblo village, about 30 minutes from Albuquerque, to celebrate their patron saint of St. Anne. I joined a small group staying at the nearby Hyatt Regency Tamaya in visiting the pueblo village today, expecting to see some traditional dances and learn a little about the culture.

I left with much more than that.

New Mexico is home to 19 pueblos, each with its own patron saint and calendar of feast days. At the festivals, community members dance, wear traditional costume, share food, celebrate the harvest and honor their patron saint.

But it’s way more than that. The feasts highlight friendships and family, and in a way they thank the world for taking you into its fold.

We arrived a little before noon, just as lines of dancers – women with long black hair wearing black dresses and moccasins, men with sashes, white leggings and fox tails strung from their hips – lined up to file into the small plaza and dance to the beat of drums and chanting. They all carried pine boughs; some had bells strung around their legs.

We watched for 45 minutes, then ducked into an alcove of greenery at the end of the procession to pay respects to St. Anne, the mother of Mary.

Afterward, in an unplanned stroke of travel nirvana, a man named Travis invited us into his home on the edge of the plaza to sit at his family’s dinner table and share in a traditional feast. We met his wife and children, and squeezed around a huge table while bowl after bowl of homemade food made the rounds.

I ate the best green chile chicken enchiladas I’ve ever tasted. I sipped posole spiked with chicken, nibbled rich, smokey carne guisada, tasted roasted corn dusted with something that tasted like cojita, and tried a dozen other dishes bursting with the flavors of New Mexico. I left with a crunchy sweet pueblo cookie tucked in my pocket.

We thanked our hosts, who told us all we could do to return the favor was sign the guest book. And now that we’ve been taken into the fold, we were told, we were welcome to come back every July 26 for the family’s feast.

I saw a coyote during a walk this morning, before heading to the Santa Ana Pueblo to celebrate St. Anne’s Feast Day. Pam LeBlanc photo

That kind of generosity just doesn’t happen every day, and it didn’t end there.

We stepped out of the little adobe home into bright sunshine, squinted our eyes and discovered that in our absence, the villagers had brought their feast day offerings out to share. A line of food – cookies, wedges of watermelon, home-made tamales tied in corn husks, cups of stew and piles of bananas – stretched for at least 25 yards down the center of the plaza. All this, set against the gorgeous backdrop of a rugged mesa wall.

We were told to partake, lest we offend anyone. So, of course, we did.

The pueblo’s feast dates to the influence of the Spaniards, who came here in the late 1500s to spread the Catholic religion. They assigned each community a patron saint, and each pueblo holds a feast day to honor that saint. The festivals combine the cultural influences of the Spaniards and the locals.

Many of the feast days are open to the public. If you go, respect the community you are visiting. Women should wear modest clothing, and don’t attempt to photograph or even sketch what you see.

For more information about feast days go to https://www.indianpueblo.org/19-pueblos/feast-days/. For more information about the Santa Ana Pueblo, go to http://www.santaana.org.

And look for more about my visit to Tamaya in an upcoming article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

She drove us to a trailhead 9 years ago, last week we met for tea in Bozeman

She drove us to a trailhead 9 years ago, last week we met for tea in Bozeman

Pam LeBlanc and Jenny Dalimata pose outside a coffee shop in Bozeman. Dalimata shuttled Pam and five other hikers to a remote area of the park in 2010. Chris LeBlanc photo

In 2010, I backpacked the Northern Traverse at Glacier National Park with my husband and four other friends.

When we got to the park, we needed a way to get to the trailhead, located in the remote northwest corner of Glacier not served by shuttles.

That’s how we found Jenny Dalimata. We found her at a restaurant where she was waiting tables in West Glacier. She seemed nice, so we gave her $100 bucks to drive us in our rental car to the trailhead and return it to a more centrally located parking lot. We crossed our fingers that she wouldn’t disappear, but we were pretty sure it would work out fine.

It did, of course. We got a friendly ride to the trailhead and we got the car back in the end.

Jenny and I have stayed in touch via social media since then. She’s an amazing athlete, who spends lots of time skiing, hiking and trail running in and around Glacier. She and her seven brothers grew up just outside of the park, and she “ran wild” as a kid.

When I headed back to Glacier this year, I tracked her down, and we met at a coffee shop in Bozeman before I caught my flight back to Austin. She still remembers that my backpacking buddies and I all ordered grilled salmon and huckleberry pie the night we met – and did it again after we finished our 65-mile trek.

“When you came out (of the back country) you were like ‘I’ll have another,’” she says.

Pam stands at the entrance of Glacier National Park in July 2019.

These days, Jenny routinely makes a 30- to 50-mile runs through the park and other wilderness areas around Montana for fun and stress relief.

Since it’s grizzly country, she carries bear spray – and three times she’s had to deploy it, once when a grizzly bear charged her. (No worries, the griz spun and fled when she deployed.) Another time, while snow camping in the winter, she saw a wolverine near Lake Josephine.

That never happens on Austin trails, although I did meet a tiny black bear while trail running at Big Bend National Park one morning a few years ago.

The trails at Glacier, Jenny says, are pristine, nicely graded and well maintained, perfect for trail running.

“My heart lives there,” she says. “It’s powerful for me to be there.”

We shared tea and chatted about where our lives have taken us.

The thing about travel that makes it so special is the people you meet along the way. The randomness of who you cross paths with always amazes me. We met Jenny over salmon and pie, and 10 years later we saw each other again.

And I know I’ll see her the next time I get back to Montana.

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

Chili and chicken and dumplings top the menu for next week’s backpacking trip

Chili and chicken and dumplings top the menu for next week’s backpacking trip

Chris LeBlanc prepares oatmeal and dried strawberries while backpacking the John Muir Trail in 2016. Pam LeBlanc photo

I’ve been busy this week gathering food for my upcoming trip to Glacier National Park.

Yesterday, I received a shipment of dehydrated meals from Austin-based Packit Gourmet. On the menu? Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings, Texas State Fair Chili, West Memphis Grits Souffle and Mom’s Banana Puddin’.

Yum.

Here’s my shipment of Packit Gourmet meals for next week’s trip to Glacier National Park. Pam LeBlanc photo

I’ve been a fan of the brand since I met company founders Sarah Welton and her mother Debbie Mullins about three years ago. They gave me some meals to take and test when I spent 15 days backpacking the John Muir Trail in California. (Until then, my go-to brand of dehydrated meals was Mountain House, and I still like their pasta primavera and lasagna.)

Here’s what I wrote after that trip:

“My verdict? The breakfasts — especially the West Memphis Grits Souffle — tasted like real (and really good) food. The desserts, especially the banana pudding, also sent my taste buds sizzling. The entrees were more hit and miss — I loved the chicken and dumplings, and Texas State Fair chili eased my craving for nachos. But the All-American Burger Wrap (provide your own tortilla) didn’t thrill me. And one complaint: Too much packaging, especially when you have to haul out all the waste.”

The Mullins family did a lot of canoe camping when Sarah was growing up. Debbie made all the meals. When Sarah grew up, she realized she didn’t like any of the freeze-dried meals on the market for backpackers, so the two got together and came up with their own.

Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings looks like confetti until you add the hot water. Then it blooms into real – and real yummy – food. Pam LeBlanc photo

I visited the company’s humble headquarters out on Fitzhugh Road, where we brewed up a batch of Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings, named after Welton’s grandmother, for lunch. I remember thinking it looked like a bowl of confetti that bloomed into a piping hot bowl of actual food when we poured hot water over it.

Packit Gourmet launched in 2008 with just a few items, including Austintacious Tortilla Soup. Backpacker Magazine awarded the company an editor’s choice award for the soup, and Packit was on its way.

Today the company offers about 50 different meals, including vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free and dairy-free options. There’s Tuscan beef stew, shepherd’s cottage pie, Meyer lemon cheesecake and even a powdered margarita mix to pour into water or alcohol. Unlike some freeze-dried meals, they don’t taste like salted cardboard!

And look – banana puddin’ for dessert! Pam LeBlanc photo

The packaging has changed in the last few years. There are fewer individually packaged items within each meal, and most come in their own “cook-in” bags. Just add hot water. Some need only cold water. A few require a skillet for preparation.

The biggest selection is available online, but select items are sold locally at Whole Earth Provision Company.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam