Showing posts with label Fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fall. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

Fishing the San Juan in the Fall

After helping close up the cabin for the winter and getting some time on the water, I went to the river that got me hooked on catching big fish: the San Juan River in New Mexico--just south of Durango.  The weather varied from cold and dreary with light rain to cool and sunny, but the weather was good to great each day.  I fished five days and landed at least one fish 20 inches or bigger every day except the last one.  That last day I hooked a fish so big I was convinced I was hung before he took off on a run and straightened my hook.  Maybe I'll get him next time.
































Still some beautiful fall colors in Durango at the end of October
Pretty rainbow on a pretty day on the San Juan

20-inch 'bow...

...he was chubby
Fall colors on an overcast day on the San Juan


Smiling rainbow and me





21-incher, if not bigger

Sunset on the last day of my long summer of fly fishing



Sunday, April 13, 2014

Fall Fishing on the Lake Fork

Fishing in Lake City late in the fall means cold mornings and early evenings.  The window for fishing is short--the water has to warm up for the fish to become active, which means you start around lunch and are finished by five or so.  The river looked different: instead of being shrouded in green, the vegetation along the banks was now dry and golden, shimmering in the sunlight.  It was beautiful--and the fishing was surprisingly good.  And after the day was over, there was football on TV.  Tough to beat that.

Lake Fork of the Gunnison




















Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Sliding Off the Road--and the Side of a Mountain










At the end of September, Becca and I packed up the truck and headed back to Dallas and the real world.  We got up early to make the drive back in one day, but we had to check the weather first--another early winter storm was supposed to be coming through.  The reports called for a slight chance of snow, but it was raining at the cabin, so we decided to hit the road before conditions could get worse.

It was a dreary morning--low clouds, fog, and cold, persistent rain.  As we climbed Slumgullion Pass on our way out of town, the temperature steadily dropped.  A few miles from the top, the rain turned to snow, and another mile further, the snow began sticking to the road.  It was picturesque: jagged rock faces and green pine trees dusted in white snow.  We stopped to take a quick picture, but as we started moving again we rounded a bend and my truck started to skid.

I wasn't concerned: I had plenty of winter driving experience, there was hardly any snow on the road, I was in four-wheel drive, and nobody else was on the road.

But we kept skidding.  I stayed off the brakes and steered into the skid, but we continued sliding across the road.  And now we were skidding right toward the edge of the mountain.

"Ryan!?!" Becca shouted in disbelief.

Still nothing, and we were now completely out of room.  "Brace yourself!" Becca yelled, right as we went over the side of the mountain.

Now that we were off the slick road, I finally had traction again, and I steered us straight down the mountain and put all my weight on the brakes as we bounced down toward whatever lay below.

Just as suddenly as the skid started, we stopped with a light jolt.  One of our small duffel bags from the back seat landed on the console between the front two seats.  Becca and I looked at it and then at each other.

"Are you okay?" we asked each other simultaneously.  "Yeah, I think so," we answered, checking our arms and legs to make sure everything was still there.  We were in one piece--just in shock.  We turned off the truck and put on our jackets.  There was no cell service here, so we climbed the 30+ feet back up to the road to flag down a car and ask them to call for help when they reached Lake City or Creede.  But not 30 seconds after we made it back to the road, a giant snow plow came by and radioed back into town: help was on the way.

As we waited in the snow on the side of the road, we tried to piece together what had happened.  We could see the bend in the road where the skid started--right next to an almost vertical drop.  If I had hit the brakes, it would have sent us over the edge there--a spot we would not have walked back up from.  Instead we skidded a good 40 yards along the bend, into the oncoming lane, and then off the road.

A sheriff from Lake City arrived about 45 minutes later, but we had to wait another hour for a state trooper and a tow truck from Gunnison to get there.  The state trooper said that early-season snow like we had packs easily into a slushy paste that can fill your tire treads and make a road as slick as black ice.  Apparently that's what happened to us.

Amazingly, a normal tow truck was able to wench my truck back up to the road, albeit with great difficulty.  When they got my truck up, it was--incredibly--undamaged, other than a couple scrapes and a small crack in my front bumper.

Everyone was in disbelief.

After I started my truck up, we headed back to Lake City (with a convoy of a state trooper, sheriff, and a tow truck) to have a mechanic take a look and make sure there wasn't any damage we weren't seeing.  There wasn't!  So after collecting ourselves and touching base with our parents, we attempted the pass again--only this time there was no snow on the roads at all, and we were able to get back to Dallas safely.

Light snow on Slumgullion Pass.  We came to a brief stop to let this SUV get out of sight so we could take a quick picture.

Up ahead: the fateful bend in the road

We were able to walk away from this adventure!

Waiting for help--still in shock at what had transpired

In this picture you can see the end of the curve where our slid started, and you can see where we went off.  From right to left, you can see my tire tracks: front left tire, back left tire, front right tire, and back right tire. 

Over the edge!

We hit some rocks and soft dirt right that stopped us short of trees and a longer drop.

Another shot of the curve where our skid started.  We were fortunate to stay on the road until the slope mellowed some.

Tow truck working on dragging my truck back up to the road with a snow plow and emergency vehicles in the background.

The tow truck had to block traffic on the pass while it pulled me up


You can see the area of loose dirt and shattered rock where my truck came to a stop

Almost up: this shot gives a better perspective of just how steep this embankment was.

Back on the road but covered in dirt

Another shot of where my truck stopped; it really tore up the ground there

On our second attempt over the pass, the roads were clear and the sun came out

Wetterhorn and Uncompahgre

Mesa Seco and the top of Slumgullion Slide






The patch of dirt ahead on the left is where we went off the road.  I was gripping the wheel pretty tightly on our second attempt through here!

Fall colors near Creede


Headwaters of the Rio Grande