• Still

    Table Rock Lake, Piney Creek Wilderness. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Day two. Fantastic view in the morning.

    That’s Buck Hollow straight ahead, and Piney Creek to the right.   

  • Waking Up in the Wilderness

    Gary Allman in a Dutchware Gear Chameleon Hammock with winter cover.
    Waking Up in Piney Creek Wilderness. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Gary in the hammock with the winter cover on.

  • Sunset at Table Rock Lake

    Sunset at Table Rock Lake – Piney Creek Wilderness. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    No clouds so a subdued, but nonetheless very nice sunset.

  • Table Rock Lake

    Table Rock Lake, Piney Creek Wilderness. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    The view of the lake from the shore near where I camped.

  • Down by the Lake

    Gary Allman, self protrait by table rock lake, January 2019.
    Gary by Table Rock Lake. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.
  • Table Rock Lake at Piney Creek

    Table Rock Lake at Piney Creek. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Day one of three days solo backpacking in Piney Creek Wilderness. 60°F Not bad for January.

  • Back at the Lake

    Back at the Lake. Table Rock Lake that is. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    I’ve not been here since July. It’s good to be back.

    The lake’s a lot higher now than it was then. The water is a lot colder too; in July it was like a warm bath, now it’s spring cold.

  • Last Leg to the Lake

    Open Spaces – Down by the lake it gets very brushy, but in places it opens up. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Back when they grew tomatoes and strawberries these were probably open fields. I presume that flooding from the lake helps keep the area clear. As can be seen, at this time of year the trail is clear. It’s a bit different in the summer.

    Very pastoral. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    And when you get near to the lake…

    Trail – And a very narrow trail at that. In the summer this growth is over my head and quite claustrophobic. Copyright © 2019 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.
  • Crossing Piney Creek

    Creek Crossing – It’s January, the water was cold!

    I wasn’t counting, but I think there were around five creek crossings. It’s January, the water was cold, and with some recent rain Piney Creek was running well! In places the water was above my knees. I was glad I was wearing huaraches and a kilt; nothing to get wet.   

    Piney Creek Crossing. We stopped here for lunch on a day hike, November 11, 2011.
  • Feeder Creek

    Feeder Creek on the Tower Trail (Hollow Route) at Piney Creek Wilderness, Mark Twain National Forest, Missouri.
    Feeder Creek – This creek feeds into Piney Creek. It’s on the Tower Trail (Hollow route).

    Feeder Creek on the Tower Trail (Hollow route)

    When I planned this trip, I knew I was in for a late start. I was at St. John’s for Communion at 08:00, followed by Breakfast, which in turn was followed by a meeting; one of my voluntary roles involves raising awareness about human trafficking in the midwest, and I’m helping my friend Mike with a workshop in March.

    April 30, 2018. It looks like we have another trail to explore.

    There’s an ‘off system’ trail at Piney Creek I’ve not hiked, and I decided if I got to the trail by 13:00 I’d give it a go. My plan was to camp at the spot I found in July, and spend a day deep in navel contemplation (or sleeping. More likely sleeping).

    The long and the short of it was that I arrived at the trail junction and 12:50, and decided to give it a go. I expected the trail to curve around to the west and join the Tower Trail at some point. In fact, it joined the Hollow route of the Tower Trail, which follows this feeder creek down to Piney Creek.

    Despite being a horse trail, it was challenging to follow, and involved lots of (cold) creek crossings.

  • Sweet Dreams Sprinky

    Sprinky in Ginger’s studio.

    Today we said goodbye to Sprinkles. Ginger called her “The most beautiful cat in the whole wide world.”

    Sprinky has been ill for a long time with kidney failure and skin cancer which made her very itchy. We’ve been giving her subcutaneous fluids for ages (150ml every day) plus pills and potions.

    She had a great summer and fall out in the backyard with Ginger, but for the past few days, she retreated into herself. It was time. She purred her last in Ginger’s arms.

    Sweet dreams.

  • My 2018 Top 100 on Spotify

    My 2018 Top 100 on Spotify; it’s a tad eclectic. Brit Pop, Bluegrass, College Rock, Electro Pop, Folk, Jazz, Prog Rock, and Soul. 

    No classical or opera in the top 100. At first I couldn’t work out why. Then I realized it’s because I’ve spent a lot of time in rental vehicles this year, and I don’t listen to a lot of classical or opera when I’m driving. New this year — Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox. I’m really enjoying all the stuff they are doing. Missed them in Kansas City in October, with everything else going on then I had to give it a miss.

    It was good to see that a friend from the seventies who I’ve lost touch with has published his albums on Spotify this year. A track of his appears in my list at #73.

    There are still a few of my favorite bands that don’t appear on Spotify. Maybe some more will be added in 2019.

    The player below plays a 30 second sample of each track. To hear the complete track you need to visit Spotify.

    Annie lennox — I didn’t see that coming.
  • Rinse and Repeat

    British Passport (2018)
    The shop assistant squealed, she’d never seen a passport before, … Copyright © 2018 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Fashion

    I am not implying that I am in the least bit fashion conscious, or fashionable, but when I first arrived in the Ozarks I stood out a bit. It was probably the linen shirts, linen capri pants, sandals and no cap that did it.

    That and my accent.

    On being strange in a strange land

    The shop assistant squealed, she’d never seen a passport before,

    Over the years shopping has been my primary interaction with average Ozarkian, and at first, no trip past a checkout could go by without someone asking where I was from.

    I was buying some gifts with my credit card, this was before I had my American driving license. I was asked for my ID so I handed over my passport. The shop assistant squealed, she’d never seen a passport before, let alone a British one …

    Checking out our groceries at one store, the checker asked me a question and was confused by my reply (Odd. That still seems to happen a lot). Ginger quickly stepped into the breach with the helpful observation, “It’s okay, he doesn’t speak English.” The checker then totally ignored me and I kept my mouth firmly closed until we left, at which point I loudly said: “Thank You!”

    Where are you from?

    Once I’d emigrated, the answer to the question of where I came from became easier in theory, “Springfield.” It sometimes perplexed people, but more often produced some variant of, “No really, where are you from originally?” Then there are those bold enough to take a guess unbidden– They are almost always wrong. “Are you Australian?”

    Personally, I would never be so presumptuous as to call out someone’s country of origin. Unless that is, someone has a very clear Brit accent — like my fellow expat ‘Airbourne Rambler’. And now I’m doubly cautious since I discovered that a guy working in Lowes, who I thought was a Brit, turned out to be Australian.

    After ten years the questions about my origins and the faux Cockney imitations that often follow are getting a bit old (Dick Van Dyke has a lot to answer for when it comes to appalling Cockney). But it still keeps on happening … ‘Rinse & repeat.’

    I still need an interpreter and odd pronounciations

    To this day I need an interpreter to get a drink of water at a restaurant. I am congenitally unable to ask for water in the local dialect — “Wadder.” Though I have caught myself feeling sorry for the servers at Subway and asking for … Toe-mate-toes. Am I feeling sorry for them, or am I just working on my disguise?

    I once caught myself using the dreadful US version of the word herb — ‘erb.

    Which reminds me, I cannot bring myself to say the US version of the ‘erb they pronounce baze-ill. Haven’t these people ever watched Fawlty Towers?

    Blending in

    I don’t think I’ve lost my accent, but my manner of speech and vocabulary have become more localized, as has my clothing. I venture out in camo or plaid and wear a cap. That means that nowadays, apart from the eccentricism of my footwear, most of the time I pass through life unnoticed for the legal alien and Brit that I am.

    However, from time to time I still get the “I love your accent,” and “Where are you from,” comments. Ginger has come up with the perfect answer to the former.

    Stranger: “I love his accent.”
    Ginger: “He sounds just like a husband to me.”

  • Fall In The Forest

    Mark Twain National Forest - Hercules Glades Wilderness, rock outcrop and fall leaves in the forest.
    Fall in the Forest. Hercules Glades Wilderness.
    Mark Twain National Forest - Hercules Glades Wilderness, rock outcrop and fall leaves in the forest.
    I like fall and winter, they expose the bones of the land.
    The trail is there. Somewhere.

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • Dressed for chilly weather

    Gary Allman on the Pees Hollow trail at Hercules Glades Wilderness.
    Blurry but the only picture of me dressed for chilly weather. Copyright © 2018 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Looking a bit chubby again. Especially as I forgot to fasten my backpack hip belt for the picture (I’d taken off my backpack to get the tripod).

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • Fall Carpet

    Fall leaves on the forest floor at Hercules Glades Wilderness, Missouri.
    Fall Carpet

    On the top of a ridge I came across this vista of leaves. Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • Sunday – Time to head back

    Dutchware Chameleon hammock with winter cover, and Hammock Gear Tarp and Econ Incubator 10° Under quilt. Hercules Glades Wilderness.
    Camped near Brushy Creek. Copyright © 2018 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    It was a cold and dreary morning to be hiking out. The forecast was for rain and/or snow.

    Enjoying my morning cup of chocolate, camped near Brushy Creek. Copyright © 2018 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • Lunch

    Boiling water on a Trangia alcohol stove. Titanium wind screen, and Toaks 850ml cook pot.
    Making a hot drink on the trail.
    Stopped for lunch on the Pete (Pole) Hollow Trail.

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • Self and Sky

    Gary Allman. Color self portrait,  December 2018.
    Self and Sky. Resting in the wilderness. Copyright © 2018 Gary Allman, all rights reserved.

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

  • On the Pete (Pole) Hollow Trail heading North

    On the Pete (Pole) Hollow Trail heading North.

    Read the full write up of my trip here.

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