No, this isn't another throwback post, today, October 13th I welcomed in the 2013-14 ski season at Colorado's very own Arapahoe Basin Ski Resort. Ever since the first snow hit the mountains a few weeks back, my roommate and I had slowly been counting down the days until ski season started. It turns out my dances to the snow gods worked (or something like that). Thanks to a few inches of snow cover in the last week and the magic of snow making machines, A Bay officially announced on friday that they would officially open the gates 8:30 am Sunday morning. Any pre-existing plans were instantly dropped on the spot, we were going skiing.
Waking up groggy eyed to my alarm at 6:45 this morning, I rolled out of bed and began to pull on my ski gear. Wool socks were followed by shorts and snow pants. Beanies were stuffed into coat pockets, gloves into ski boots, after triple checking our passes were still hanging around our necks, we grabbed our gear and headed out the door.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Monday, October 7, 2013
Ellison Bay
This post is a little bit of a throwback in terms of what I have posted and will be posting in the next week or so. Though not much of an adventure, I found some killer pictures from the trip I wanted to share. Mid-June after my Senior year of high school I helped my dad install some cabinets for a client of his at their summer home in Ellison Bay, Wisconsin. Leaving a day after him, I made the 5 hour trek to nearly the tip of Door County, WI with a last minute door and cabinet shelving units in tow.
Growing up so close to the Wisconsin border, this sign was always... well, a sign, of good things to come. From mountain biking to the cottage to the Walworth County Fair, this sign meant freedom. |
After 5 hours and a necessary Hardy's pitstop, where I fueled up on anything and everything they would deep fry and put bacon and cheese on, I found my self at my final destination, Ellison Bay. Knowing I still had a little bit of a drive to the cottage, I stopped at the first small park I could see the water from.
After driving for 5 hours there was no better sight to see than the water. |
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Fruita, Colorado Time lapse
As I'm going through all the pictures I've taken in the last year here in Colorado, I realized I've got my work cut out for me in terms of posting stuff until I'm completely caught up, so for now I'll start with something I've had for a while but just got around to posting.
Last spring break 3 friends and I packed our bikes and a week's worth of gear and food into the back of their '99 Suburban and set off with the end goal of Moab, Utah, also known as the holy ground of mountain biking in the United States. I'll have a full trip recap up hopefully later this week, but for now here is a time lapse I took on my GoPro our last night of camping, which we spent back in Fruita, Colorado, just outside of Grand Junction.
Unfortunately because of my lack of planning my GoPro ran out of battery way faster than I anticipated, but I still managed to grab a solid chunk of the evening on footage. Set up on a picnic table to snap a photo every 60 seconds, I even had the luck of catching a shooting star (check around :08). What this whole video really captures is what I absolutely love about camping, just you and your friends sitting around a camp fire having a good time. Camped out on the edge of a cliff with nobody within a 10 mile radius, we were just enjoying our last night of freedom before having to return back to society the next day.
Again, full Moab summary to come, this is just a little teaser for now
Until next adventure,
-jf
Last spring break 3 friends and I packed our bikes and a week's worth of gear and food into the back of their '99 Suburban and set off with the end goal of Moab, Utah, also known as the holy ground of mountain biking in the United States. I'll have a full trip recap up hopefully later this week, but for now here is a time lapse I took on my GoPro our last night of camping, which we spent back in Fruita, Colorado, just outside of Grand Junction.
Again, full Moab summary to come, this is just a little teaser for now
Until next adventure,
-jf
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Going to the Mountains is Going Home - Intro
I'm Jack Foersterling. I'm a mountain biker,
skier, writer, bike mechanic, slackliner, Eagle Scout, fisherman, rock climber,
hammock-enthusiast, amateur iPhone photographer, longboarder, camper, and all
around adventurer. Graduating high school in 2012 I sought to escape the
Midwest that I had spent the last 18 years in and find something new. I landed
myself at the University of Denver in beautiful Colorado. Growing up in Boy
Scouts and eventually reaching my dream of Eagle Scout, I have always strived
for adventure, from building mountain biking trails in my backyard, to living
out of the back of a car for 5 days in Moab, Utah spending the days biking and
exploring. I have always found peace within nature. There's something about
leaving the fast-paced society that too many of us are stuck in and simply
going on an adventure. John Muir said it best over 100 years ago,
"The tendency nowadays to wander in wildernesses is delightful to see. Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity; and that mountain parks and reservations are useful not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers, but as fountains of life. Awakening from the stupefying effects of the vice of over-industry and the deadly apathy of luxury, they are trying as best they can to mix and enrich their own little ongoings with those of Nature, and to get rid of rust and disease. Briskly venturing and roaming, some are washing off sins and cobweb cares of the devil's spinning in all-day storms on mountains; sauntering in rosiny pinewoods or in gentian meadows, brushing through chaparral, bending down and parting sweet, flowery sprays; tracing rivers to their sources, getting in touch with the nerves of Mother Earth; jumping from rock to rock, feeling the life of them, learning the songs of them, panting in whole-souled exercise, and rejoicing in deep, long-drawn breaths of pure wildness. This is fine and natural and full of promise. So also is the growing interest in the care and preservation of forests and wild places in general, and in the half wild parks and gardens of towns. Even the scenery habit in its most artificial forms, mixed with spectacles, silliness, and kodaks; its devotees arrayed more gorgeously than scarlet tanagers, frightening the wild game with red umbrellas, — even this is encouraging, and may well be regarded as a hopeful sign of the times." -John Muir, Our National Parks, 1901
Looking out my dorm window I see the now snowcapped
Rocky Mountains in the not-too-far distance. To me they are more than just
something to look at, they are somewhere to go, to explore, to write about, to
be at home in, and that is exactly what I want to do for the rest of my life.
-jf
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