Adventurers` Club News Nov 2010
Transcription
Adventurers` Club News Nov 2010
The Adventurers’ Club News © Volume 54 November 2010 Number 10 Photo by Rick Flores Photo by Shane Berry Climbing Cucamonga Peak The Adventurers' Club News The Official Publication of the Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles®, California November 2010 Volume 54 Publisher Editor Number 10 ACLA President, Allan Smith #1069 Robert G. Williscroft #1116, Clarkston, WA 99403 Cell (818) 613-9445; aclaeditor@argee.net Los Angeles, CA 90071 Asst. Editor .. Marc Weitz #1144; (323) 600-4805; weik@rocketmad.com Club ia Phone (323) 223-3948 (24 Hrs) www.adventurersclub.org ii TABLE OF CONTENTS DIRECTORY PRESIDENT'S PAGE ARTICLES CLIMBING CUCAMONGA PEAK BISMARK TO THE RESCUE! A HIGH-TECH TRAVELING COMPANION WHAT'S HAPPENING THRAWN RICKLE BOOK REVIEW: TIGRERO! LETTERS TO THE EDITOR THURSDAY NIGHTS AT THE CLUB FORTHCOMING PROGRAMS NIGHT OF HIGH ADVENTURE 1 — Allan Smith PRESIDENT INSIDE FRONT COVER 1 2 4 5 8 10 11 13 14 21 21 SECRETARY ADDRESS Mike Gwaltney Alan Feldstein 2433 N Broadway Los Angeles, CA 90086 1sT VICE PRES TREASURER Vince Weatherby Rick Flores DINNER RESERVATIONS MAILING ADDRESS 2ND VICE PRES PO Box 31226 (323)-223-3948 Deadline: Tuesday Noon Los Angeles, CA 90031 The ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS © Volume 54 November 2010 Number 10 THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE Allan R. Smith #1069 - President T It is with great pleasure that I inhe weather is chang- troduce your new president – Larry ing, and this Schutte. Next month I will be speaking more about Larry, and giving you month so is our prestigious Ad- his incredible background, It is a pleasure to hand over the gavel to venturers Club. Greeting broth- such a worthy candidate. On October 7, we had the 1st busier adventurers. It is a busy ness session, and secretary Alan time for our Feldstein stated a quorum was Club, as this month brings the elec- present. Per the by-laws Article 7, Section 11 (a), Larry Schutte (Presition ballots to your mailbox, and your new officers and Congratulations to new Club dent), Manny board of directors Gomez (1st VP), President, Larry Schutte! Robert Demott are elected. This is extremely important as we (Secretary) and Jeffery Goddard elect members that believe in our by- (Treasurer) were nominated by aclaws and follow the direction that our climation. Please give them your founding fathers had for our club. To support and assistance. often our club has seen members We had excellent members nomicome in with an agenda and a goal nated for positions on the board of only to help their own personal busidirectors. All of them worthy of the ness or a fascination with meeting position and I am happy to say the their hero’s or famous people. This is club will be in good hands next year. not the purpose of the club, and Remember to vote and never forget something that is always a challenge. that your board is here for you! I must say, however, that the past two years serving as your present have been a challenge. It is, in fact, the highest of honors that could be bestowed upon someone, and I am so grateful to have had the opportunity to serve. ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 1 November 2010 Climbing Cucamonga Climbing Cucamonga Peak – 3rd time is a charm Rick Flores (#1120) I t was on our third attempt to get to peak that you see when driving east the top of Cucamonga Peak that toward the 15 freeway on the I-10 or we finally made it. It is not the most 210 freeways. It is this location that difficult peak to hike in Southern Cal- makes it such a desirable hike. You ifornia, but it is get a fantastic more remote view of San than some betB e r n a r d i n o, ter known Orange, and higher sumLos Angeles mits. counties if the It is easier to weather is hike to the good. summits of San The peak is Antonio (a.k.a. in the middle Mt. Baldy, of the Cu10,064’), San camonga WilJ a c i n t o derness, a fedOverview of Cucamonga Peak location (10,804’), and erally designatBaden Powell (9,399’), than it is to get ed wilderness area. The most poputo the top of Cucamonga Peak (8,859’). lar and easiest way to enter this wilThe hiking disderness is tance to Cuthrough Ice camonga Peak House Canis about six yon. The trailmiles one way head for Ice and the total elHouse Canyon evation gain is is just off of about 4,300 Mt. Baldy feet. It has been Road and just on my personal past Mt. Baldy list of must-do Village. hikes for years, This year I Cucamonga – Trailhead to peak but I just never was determined seemed to find the time to do it. It would to take the time to hike to the summit, be the longest day hike with the most ele- and I convinced fellow ACLA member vation gain that I had ever attempted. Shane Berry (#1093) to make the trip Cucamonga Peak is southeast of as well. We had been hiking together Mount Baldy. It is the last prominent for the past three years, and when I had November 2010 2 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Climbing Cucamonga previously mentioned doing the hike Shane rightly pointed out that it would be an all-day affair and we would have Shane at Trail’s End over the mounds with our hands and our trekking poles. We reached a second saddle between Bighorn Peak and Cucamonga Peak where the wind was blowing hard enough to knock you off your feet. We traveled another three-quarter miles before the snow mounds got so large that they completely obliterated the trail. It was getting very dangerous and Shane didn’t want to go any further. I completely agreed with him. We stopped about 800 feet short of the peak. Our second attempt was on September 18. Three of us would be on this trip, myself, Shane, and one of our newer Club members Ralph Perez (#1150). Ralph started hiking with us several months earlier. He is plan- Photo Rick Flores to get to the trailhead very early. It just never seemed to work out for either of us until Saturday May 29 of this year, when we finally arranged the hike. At that time the snow had visibly receded from nearby Mount Baldy and was not visible at all on the south face of Cucamonga. Spring seemed a good season to hike, because we would have cool temperatures and lots of water in the stream that flows year round through Icehouse Canyon. We were right on both those counts, but as we neared Icehouse saddle, 3.5 miles from the trailhead, we encountered something we had not expected – snow and ice. There were large patches just beyond the saddle on the north faces of Bighorn Peak and Cucamonga Peak. We hadn’t brought any crampons or ice picks to help us pass over these mounds. This was an issue because the drop-offs on some sections of the trail were daunting. One slip could drop you hundreds of feet. We very carefully made our way Photo Shane Berry Rick arriving at the summit ning on hiking the Pacific Crest Trail after he retires sometime next year as a Postal Inspector. We met at 6:00 AM in Cerritos at Shane’s house. We ate breakfast and headed off in Shane’s van. Many early morning (Cucamonga continued on page 6) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 3 November 2010 Bismark Bismark to the Rescue! Bob Walters (#1047) S cientists have long recognized a years of age, in the water. The older predilection for species to exhibit boy was in about chest deep and the some form of behavior that is innate younger was in to his thighs. Immediately upon seeing the boys, as opposed to learned. For instance, a chicken hatched in a brooder with- Bismarck “galumphed” down the out ever observing any other chick- bank and into the river. He swam rapen knows to eat and drink without idly to the farthest boy who was assistance. There have recently been amused to see the puppy. Bismarck circled behind the articles suggesting boy, ducked his more advanced behead into the water havior that cannot and latched onto the be attributed to inboy’s trunks. With struction. the boy laughing the We recently acwhole way, Bisquired a 3-month marck towed him to old Newfoundland the shore. He then puppy, Bismarck. In returned for the secour first month toond boy who was gether, he has been also laughing but introduced to varinow exiting the waous bodies of water on his own. The ter—beaches, rivers mother, who was and lakes—and has witnessing the envoluntarily swum in tire scene, was also, all of these. He was Photo Bob Walters fortunately, laughable to obser ve Newfoundland puppy – Bismark ing. Soon, a happy dogs swimming but had seen humans only wading. None Bismarck was roughhousing with the of these images elicited any particu- boys at the water’s edge. We are certain that Bismarck has lar reaction other than friendly play. Just a day short of his being four never had any “rescue” training. We have known that Newfoundlands are months of age, and already having achieved about one-third of his antici- famed for their water rescue capabilpated adult weight of 165 pounds, Bis- ities, but we never expected a puppy, marck was taken to a tributary of the with no experience, to instinctively Columbia River in Washington state. be driven to the task. Now, if only I can teach him which There, a mother sat on shore watching particular girls need rescuing… her sons, probably about six and eight November 2010 4 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Magellan A High-tech Traveling Companion Pierre Odier (#988) M y annual summer travels take me to some of the most remote places on this planet in search of people who are largely untouched by the progress and the problems of the present century. Reaching such places as the Amazon rain forest, the interior of China, mountain ranges of Bhutan and the Altai Gobi Desert of Mongolia is difficult at best, and sometimes risky. Many locales are only reachable by ways not marked on any map. And once you arrive, it’s a challenge to make a connection with the people you are seeking. As I prepared for my most recent trip, little did I realize my new traveling companion was about to change all that. For last summer’s trip into the western Gobi Desert of Mongolia, my constant companion was Magellan. This explorer, however, is the Magellan NAV 5000 Global Positioning System receiver. The latest in navigation and location equipment, this piece of high-tech electronics can tell me my location any place on earth. The hand-held Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver provided me with instantaneous link-up with the eighteen satellites orbiting the earth, giving me an unfailingly accurate fix on my position and tracking my course regardless of where on earth I might be. This was the addition to my traveling gear I had been missing! As the far corners of our world draw closer together, it’s difficult for us to imagine that there exist people, even whole societies, who have maintained their isolation. In truth however, there are many such people who live from generation to generation much as their ancestors did centuries ago. Such are the nomads of Mongolia’s Altai Gobi Desert whom I recently had the honor of visiting. These remote people are self-sufficient, living in a symbiotic relationship with their environment. The need to somehow improve their life has not, for the most part, occurred to them. And it inevitably causes intense curiosity (usually turning to amusement) when an outsider like myself tries to adapt to their ways. I, too, try to maintain a harmonious relationship to my environment. But I must confess that I feel more primitive in their world than those people whom we label “primitive.” For example, without the benefit of clocks or calendars, these nomads always know the time of day and the time of year. They gather this infor- Photo Pierre Odier Pierre’s solar powered Magellan 5000 GPS (Magellan continued on page 12) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 5 November 2010 Cucamonga (Cucamonga continued from page 3) clouds blanketed the city so the views would be limited, but you have to take what the hiking gods give you. We traveled north on the 605 freeway, made the transition to the 210 freeway, where everything seemed fine until we hit some traffic. We searched the radio for some traffic news and found none, but it soon became apparent that we were being diverted off the freeway. We found out later that there was a huge fuel spill on the freeway, and it would remain closed for many hours. So we made a detour via Foothill Boulevard and lost a lot of time. The whole ordeal cost us close to an hour. I decided to call my wife because it was now past 7:00 AM. She arises at that time, and I knew we would be home much later than I had predicted; I didn’t want her to worry. She had a knee replacement surgery procedure performed three weeks previous, and was still in a lot of pain. I had made arrangements to have a care worker spend this Saturday with her so I could go hiking. I contacted her just as we got onto Mt. Baldy Road. The reception was spotty at best. I heard her say something about having to go back to the hospital because her incision was infected. I yelled “oh shit” as we were disconnected, and told the guys that I had to go back home. An infection was serious business, and I didn’t want to spend the day worrying about Doris. They graciously agreed that going back was November 2010 the right thing to do, and that ended the second attempt. The infection ended up being nothing more than an allergic reaction to the adhesive tape covering the knee. I was starting to feel snake bit. We made the last attempt one week Photo SHane Berry Shane, Rick & Ralph at the summit later on September 25. Ralph and I met Shane at his house, and we headed off to the trailhead. We made it by 7:20 AM. I noticed on the drive there that the winds were blowing, so it appeared we would summit on a clear day. We headed straight up Ice House Canyon, and Shane and I made the first saddle by 11:00 AM. Good time for the old men! Ralph is a very strong hiker and had raced up the mountain ahead of us. We thought we had agreed to meet at the first saddle, but he wasn’t there when we arrived. Five trails meet at this saddle, and we had to consider the possibility that Ralph had taken the wrong trail. Ice House Canyon is a popular trail with a lot of foot traffic, so if Ralph had taken the wrong trail he would not be alone, 6 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Cucamonga but he was the driver and we had no way to contact him. I was starting to feel snake bit again. We talked it over and decided to continue toward the summit. The trail to Cucamonga Peak was not well marked, but we figured Ralph had a GPS, and he should be able to make it to the top. Once past the saddle, the majority of hikers disappeared. Only the well-conditioned or misinformed hike up to Cucamonga. We made the second saddle where the winds were milder than on the first attempt. We started the last steep one- nated most of the smog and haze that hangs perpetually over the area. Some other hikers told me that my two buddies were already at the nearby summit. Two buddies! Great, Ralph made it. We ate lunch, took some photographs, and admired the far reaching views. To the east San Bernardino County and the mammoth peaks of San Gorgonio and San Jacinto were visible; to the far south Orange County with Santiago and Modjeska Peaks (Saddleback Mountain) peaking up from the distant light haze; and to the west Los Angeles County and the distant ghostly visions of Palos Verde and Santa Catalina Island over 50 miles away. Beautiful! Sometimes things work out just fine. After a short time at the summit, we made our way back down, stopping once at Icehouse Saddle and once at a natural spring to splash some cold water on our bodies. We ended the hike at 4:20 PM, exhausted and satisfied. We had gained 4,300 feet of elevation, walked twelve miles, and successfully made Cucamonga Peak on the third try. Photo Rick Flores Shane, Rick & Ralph at the summit (what it really looked like) and-a-half miles from there, and Shane started to move ahead of me. Of the three of us I am the slowest hiker, and I am used to being the last to arrive. I found the short side trail that covers the last 200 feet of ascent. I laboriously climbed up the steepest part of the hike, and finally reached the top. As I approached the shear south face of the mountain and caught my first glimpse of the view, I was delighted. The wind had elimiADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS View from the summit 7 Photo Rick Flores November 2010 What’s Happening... What’s Happening... Russian expedition finds diary of Georgy Brusilov’s lost expedition. the perilous Vilkitsky Strait into the Kara Sea, the expedition ran aground on thick ice floes. One of its only two survivors, navigator Valerian Albanov, described in his memoirs two gruelling winters clinging to the doomed ship and floating ever closer to the North Pole. Albanov was one of eleven of the twenty-four-member crew who abandoned the ice-locked vessel and set out across the snow drifts seeking firm land in a desperate trek romanced in Soviet author Veniamin Kaverin’s popular novel Two Captains. Until now, the Saint Anna and the rest of its crew had vanished without a trace. But pages of the sailor’s log, found well-preserved in the frigid north, offer glimpses into the lingering fight for survival aboard the ship. “Today we got our last brick of tobacco; the matches ran out long ago,” it reads, adding the crew hunted polar bear as they struggled on low supplies. Other traces of the ill-fated expedition were found nearby: a watch, snowshoes, a knife, a spoon engraved with a sailor’s initials and sunglasses made from the glass of empty rum bottles. “It was so overwhelming to find those sunglasses, which we had all been able to imagine so well after Albanov’s description,” missionmember Vladimir Melnikov said at a press conference in Moscow. Photo physorg.com A picture taken on July 27, 2010, shows members of an expedition digging on the coast of Franz Josef Land in Russia. Russian explorers said they had found a sailor’s log from aboard the legendary RV Saint Anna Arctic expedition under the command of Georgy Brusilov that vanished as it sought to forge through the ice-choked Northeast Passage in 1912. For decades mystery clouded the fate of the adventurer Georgy Brusilov -- captain of the first Russian crew to seek the elusive Arctic trade route from Asia to the West -- inspiring a generation of books and films. “There is no doubt that the skeletons and notebook pages we found at the end of July on Franz Josef Land are the remains of Georgy Brusilov’s expedition – which were thought forever lost,” Oleg Prodan, who led the mission in the expedition’s footsteps, said. Midway into its epic journey along the Siberian coast, after navigating November 2010 8 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS What’s Happening... When I first saw the snake I believed it was a garter snake. When I checked out the photo later, I saw enough detail in the face to identify it as a striped racer. This one was particularly patient and allowed me to get very close. Rick hikes on...and on...and on... Rick Flores (#1120) I (Photos Rick Flores) haven’t been hiking much lately, been busy helping Doris rehabilitate from her knee operation. She has made amazing progress in five weeks and no longer needs a walker or a cane to get around. Her doctor was very impressed with her progress and I am very proud of her. I have managed to sneak away a few times, I am lucky to live in an area where you can hike year-round. The butterflies have been fantastic this year. I have seen a greater variety this year than in all the previous years that I have been trying to identify them. Identification is always tricky (particularly with the blues); but if you pay attention to the minor details, it becomes easier. I think that I am right about 80% of the time! I had seen this type of spider before in Catalina about three years ago. At that time I only shot the underside and was able to identify it even though it had very distinct markings. It has bothered me ever since that I couldn’t identify it!. This one was had built its web across our trail in San Mateo Canyon and was much easier to photograph. I can now say with full confidence that it is a Silver Garden Spider. A mundane name for a beautiful spider! Woodland Skipper High Mtn Blue Ringlet Editor’s Note: Each month we will feature recent activities of members and friends on this page. Please send your material along with any photos to the Editor by email or snail mail. Designate it for “What’s Happening....” Marine Blue Gray Hairstreak ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 9 November 2010 Thrawn Rickle THE THRAWN RICKLE From the Ancient Scottish: thrawn = stubborn; rickle = loose, dilapidated heap Robert G. Williscroft #1116 – Editor C ongratulations, Larry Schutte, on your election at the 80th President of the Los Angeles Adventurers’ Club! I anticipate a continuation of Allan Smith’s excellent work, with some innovations of your own that will keep our fine Club moving into the future. Don’t forget NOHA on October 30. The tickets are now $75, but they are worth every penny. NOHA will be in The Hacienda Hotel in El Secundo. (See page 21 for the full address.) Brian Binny, pilot of Spacecraft One, Zac Sunderland, the first under18 person to circumnavigate the globe, and fellow member Don Walsh (#1042), who piloted the Triest to the bottom of the Challenger Deep, the dee pest spot in the world’s oceans, will regale us with their exploits. It will be a wonderful evening. You won’t want to miss it! We are trying to update our membership book. This is the loose-leaf handbook that contains all the members’ photos and bios. Strange as it might seem, without your cooperation, we cannot do the job very well. PLEASE send any updates directly to me at my official email address: aclaeditor@argee.net. Include a new photo if you wish, and update your bio to reflect what has happened since your original bio. If you are a new Club member with no bio page in the handbook, then be sure to look over November 2010 some of the earlier ones and then write up something about you that we can include in the new edition. Thanks to everybody who took up the challenge and wrote a letter to the editor this month. It really makes the News more interesting for all of us. Now, don’t be shy. Keep those letters coming! Remember that every month I need fresh material for the News. I have personal material that I can use to fill in occasional gaps, but without your regular story submissions, the News loses some of its luster. And stories need photos to come alive. Just email me the highest resolution photos you can. I’ll take it from there. Also, be sure to tell me who did the photography. I want to be sure to credit the proper person. I regret having to miss NOHA this year, but the distance is just too far. I trust several of you will send me photos so I can run a feature in next month’s News. Perhaps I can also get one or two letters describing the event from your personal perspective. This would enliven the reading for members who, like me, were unable to make the festivities. The password for the online fullcolor edition is “acla1011”. 10 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Book Review - Tigrero! BOOK REVIEW – TIGRERO! Author: Sasha Siemel, Prentice-Hall, Inc., New York, NY, 1953 (266p; 8 x 5.5 hardcover), ASIN: B0006ATIQQ. Review adapted by Robert G. Williscroft (#1116 – Editor) from an online review by Ron Braithwaite, author of Hummingbird God, and a 1953 review in the Nashville Tennesseean I n Brazil the jaguar is called a tigre, and in the jungles of that country Sasha Siemel was known as Tigrero – the man who kills tigres with a spear. Siemel spent thirty years in the Brazilian jungles where both men and beasts live much as they existed for thousands of years. Tigrero! is not only the great personal adventure of Siemel’s hunting, but swift, stark narratives of strange jungle characters, feuds, and love triangles. Siemel describes his training at the side of an Indian tigrero from which he learns the tactics of killing a jaguar with only a spear. He describes his killing of a man-eating tigre with nothing between him and the lethal animal but a stick tipped with iron. Siemel went on to kill a number of tigres with a variety of weapons, but he is most famous for his use of the spear. Siemel reports that a tigre, when pursued with hounds, does not usually ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS climb a tree, as does a puma; ordinarily, it bays up on the ground and fights. It also frequently charges through the pack to get at the hunter. This is the instinct that Siemel relied on when spearing tigres. The animal would charge and Siemel would catch it, frontally, on the tip of his spear. Fortunately, Siemel was a large, unusually powerful man, and could drive the spear through the beast and pin it to the ground, eventually killing it. In his forward, Siemel acknowledges the help of the New York Adventurers’ Club and the Explorers’ Club, and specifically thanks “Theon Wright, Past-President of The Adventurers’ Club,” who assisted him in assembling and preparing the material, and in the editing of the book. Although out of print, Tigrero! is available in hardback and paperback online at Amazon.com, and in many used book stores. 11 November 2010 Magellan (Magellan continued from page 5) mation by observing and understanding what is happening around them. The position of the sun, the movement of the animals, the changes in the landscape – all the signals given by Mother Nature – these are their time pieces. And they have worked beautifully for millennia. Year in and year out, these nomads navigate around the vast Mongolian plains, traversing distances inconceivable to a city person. There are no roads, no maps, no signs to show the way or to pinpoint the correct location to set up camp – none are needed. When visiting with one family group, I asked one of the older herders how many times he had made camp at this particular spot. He looked at me, then fixed his gaze on some distant point and said, “This is my first time here as a father.” Seeing my puzzlement, he quickly explained that once, long ago, as a little boy, he had camped on this spot. He said he remembered it well, pointing toward an outcropping of rocks and calling my attention to an eagle’s nest. Looking in that direction and hoping to see it, I saw no nest. What I did see were faint, white streaks on the rocks where he pointed, evidence of large bird droppings marking the rim of a former nesting place. The next morning, I walked up to the nesting place, turned on my GPS locating device, waited, and realized as the numbers appeared on my November 2010 screen, that I was creating a permanent record of this spot on earth. I entered 47 degrees 20’51 North, 95 degrees 46’71 East into my log. Now, I too, could return to this spot – days, weeks or even years from today, long after my Altai friend has become a grandfather. I scrolled down on the display screen of my “traveling companion” to obtain other information. To my surprise, the date was July 4, 1992. This eagle’s nest was empty, but my thoughts quickly connected with another eagle, that which represents the United States. After all, July 4th marks the day of independence for the American Eagle, whose satellites now give me the independence to move about the globe, secure in knowing that I will never be lost. Though still bathed in daylight, it was 10:20 PM when I arrived back in camp that evening, Magellan leading the way. A Mongolian boy on his horse greeted me and, pointing to the GPS receiver, asked what I had in my hand. Being a teacher, I can never turn Photo Pierre Odier Pierre with the Mongolian nomad 12 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Magellan / Letters down a learning opportunity, so I sat down with him and was immediately surrounded by everybody in the camp. People of all ages were listening to me as I attempted to explain how the space-age navigation device worked. “When I push this button,” I said, “it begins to receive signals from satellites in the sky.” And on cue, five satellite numbers appeared on the screen. I told my audience that I was making contact on five different channels and that I needed signals from four satellites to give me my location in longitude, latitude and altitude. The machine informed us that satellites 2, 7, 13 and 24 were in view. Being gracious people, my hosts let me continue to ramble about the satellites and signals and atomic clocks and position location. As we watched the numbers and symbols flash upon the small display screen of the locator, I realized that my audience was lost – none of us really seemed to comprehend the other’s world. It was dark now and the mood was soft, gentle and warm. It was a moment of quiet and reflection, broken only when the father of the boy pointed to the heavens. I looked up and, following his gaze, saw something streaking across the sky. A wide smile spread across his face and he reached for my hand and said, “There goes number 24.” We smiled and laughed together. The connection was made. I will forever be grateful and amazed at what my new traveling companion helped me find. Photo Pierre Odier LETTERS TO THE EDITOR To the Editor: Ralph recently joined me on a trip on the Sepik River in New Guinea. The cowboys from Calgary on board added to the fun of the trip. Ralph also visited New Britain and studied some Japanese WWII wrecks in Rabaul, the capital. – Roger Haft #1098 tang Island in a place where FDR, Wrong-WayCorrigan, and Oppenheimer have stayed. An old but charming two-story place with rocking chairs and overhead fans on the verandas. On the way back Marie wanted to see a large reservoir so we detoured. She is always looking for a place to swim. While on the shore watching a couple of Caracaras devouring a fish, we heard a thrashing commotion and turned to see a 8-10 foot alligator devouring a blue heron while its mate stood by scolding. Two more gators appeared. Marie has second thoughts. – Bob Walters #1047 Ralph may become the most traveled Club member ever. – Editor To the Editor: Just returned from a fighter pilots reunion in San Antonio. Took a side trip to Corpus Christi and stayed on Mus- Maybe even third thoughts! – Editor (Letters continued on page 20) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 13 November 2010 Minutes – September 9, 2010 THURSDAY NIGHTS AT THE CLUB It all started when Ms Westmorland discovered the books Headhunting in the Solomon Islands and New Guinea Headhunt by Caroline Mytinger. Ms Westmorland had visited Papua New Guinea in 1991 and realized how diverse the culture was. But it was the discovery of the amazing Ms Mytinger and her works the drove her pasPhoto Headhunt Revisited sion for this project. Caroline Mytinger was born in 1897 in Sacramento, California. A beautiful woman, she became a model and a Gibson Girl. She got Caroline Mytinger married young to a Dr. Stober, but wanted to do something more with her life. Reluctantly, her loving husband knew she needed to be free and let her go. In 1926, she and her friend Margaret Warner began a four-year journey to Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. In an age of manly explorers, two women making such a trek was novel and bold. At one point another explorer arrived, with much ado, hoping to be the first white man to reach the source of the Fly River. To his annoyance, he arrived and found the demure Ms Mytinger already there, sketching away. In a short time she was left with nothing but her pith helmet and September 9, 2010 Marc Weitz (#1144) T he meeting commenced with a welcome from Vice Weatherby, who was standing in for President Allan Smith. Those Returning from Adventure: S hane Berry #1093 – Returned from Burning Man with his son. Called it an amazing experience and recommended it highly. He reported that there were many people his age. Those Leaving on Adventure: none Israel Gursky – LA Opera efore the main speaker we were treated to some opera by a guest to the club, Israel Gurksy, a member of the LA Opera. Not needing a microphone, he sang a wonderful aria – filling the main hall with his voice. He directed his song towards Vince Weatherby’s young guest, Alyssa, sending her into shy wriggling. It was an amazing performance. B Headhunt Revisited he Headhunt Revisited project is for the preservation and recording the native cultures of Papua New Guinea and Solomon Island through photography, sound, and painting. Started by the speaker, Michele Westmorland, and her partner Karen Huntt, the project picks up on the work started by author and artist, Caroline Mytinger, in the 1920s and 1930s. T November 2010 14 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes – September 9, 2010 pearls. She lived with natives and worked on her portrayals of their life and culture, took notes, and made scrap books. She depicted them in both drawings and oil paintings. The twenty-five oils she brought back show, with magnificent color, their head dresses and body art. When she returned to America, she wrote her two books and spent the remainder of her life exhibiting and promoting her Polynesian paintings and drawings. Headhunt Revisited picks up eighty years later where Ms Mytinger left off, Mytinger painting Ms Mytinger’s portraits and accounts created a record for these tribes to rediscover their culture. A color portrait of a man with a live butterfly in his hair demonstrated the use of live insects as body art. Other paintings portray a canoe builder, a headhunter, and a traditional headdress. From the painting of the headdress, tribesmen were able to recreate a modern replica using old traditions. Comparing the then and now, using Ms Mytinger’s work, has restored credibility to such traditions as head binding, tattooing, and scarring. A man who had his head reshaped through binding spent his life being ashamed and called ugly. Now, through the project’s raising of awareness of past traditions, he walks proudly knowing that the head binding was done because of his family’s stature in the community. Much of the traditions of tattooing and scarring remain underground. A lot of these traditions are illegal because some of the methods are dangerous and have resulted in deaths. Because these traditions were driven underground, the use of dirty tools has raised the risk of infection and AIDS. Tribal sorcery still remains part of their tradition; that too is illegal and has been pushed underground. The project hopes to help native Papua New Guineans out of their impoverished state. Their lives are far from the idyllic, tropical paradise that existed when Ms Mytinger visited. Photo Vince Weatherby by preserving the amazing culture of this area. Ms Mytinger had said, “For this is the twilight hour for the earth’s exclusive tribes.” Headhunt Revisited hopes to prevent the tribal cultures of the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea from disappearing by raising awareness and giving back to the community. Much of the culture of these islands was destroyed by Christian missionaries imposing their religion and society. By “civilizing” these “savages” much of their tribal history and tradition was banned or made taboo. (Minutes continued on page 16) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 15 November 2010 Minutes – September 9 & 16, 2010 (Minutes continued from page 15) Roger Haft is going to New Guinea on Friday the 24th for three weeks. He has all of his plane flight tickets confirmed except one – the flight from Los Angeles to Brisbane. Good luck Roger. John Goddard received a spear thrower years ago during his travels in northwestern Australia. It has detailed carvings and could bring down a kangaroo. John donated the spear thrower to the list of auction items for Night of High Adventure. He obtained it from an Aborigine who lived close to nature and taught John how to do so. When walking in the Outback John saw pools and rivers that looked inviting. He was discouraged to take a dip because of the danger of sharks. Finally he saw water and his guide assured him of no sharks. John jumped in. The guide then told him that the reason for no sharks there was because of the crocodiles. John also donated a small carved figure of a shaman with an apothecary calabash to NOHA. He obtained this from a shaman of the Konga tribe in the Belgian Congo. Steve Lawson urged all to buy their tickets for the October 30th Night of High Adventure. Bob Zeman related a phone call from Bob Gilliland. Annie Jacobsen is writing a book on Area 51 and is interviewing persons with knowledge of it. Of five persons that Annie has interviewed Bob Gilliland knew Destruction from World War II and environmental degradation from industrialization have resulted in many natives living in poor conditions. Headhunt Revisited has grown in notoriety. They are producing a onehour documentary narrated by Lauren Hutton. In addition, they continue to raise money and awareness for their project. They benefit greatly from Ms Mytinger’s work. Ms. Westmorland showed off some gorgeous paintings done by Ms Mytinger. Many of these paintings can be found at the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology. A large crowed attended this Ladies’ Night. The lecture was well-presented and interesting. The accompanying Power Point presentation was fascinating and made great use of Ms M y t i n g e r ’s p a i n t i n g s. More information can be found on the project’s website: www.headhuntrevisited.org. September 16, 2010 Bob Zeman (#878) W e enjoyed Lebanese food tonight as Vince Weatherby presided. Paul Isley told of traveling to Europe on business and pleasure. He drove through the Bavarian Alps into Germany where he drank some good beer. November 2010 16 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes – September 16, 2010 three of them. How much does Bob know? It was good to see David Glackin. He left California a few years ago to work in the Washington DC area for NOAA and the US Geodetic Survey. He has now returned. ing. Unfortunately, Sudan is a divided country with the north inhabited by Moslems in what is mostly desert. The south is marshy and inhabited by blacks who are mostly Christian. When the general wanted to strafe Juba in the south, Roy went back to California. The F-5 crashed and the general died. Later the other F-5s all crashed So much for the blood of the bull. NASA is in charge of civilian development of the space program and DARPA is in charge of military development. Currently, aircraft are prohibited from flying overland faster than .92 mach because of the s o n i c boom. Both agencies were interested and came up with money to reduce the impact of the sonic boom when the sound barrier is broken. Northrop was awarded the contract over Boeing and Lockheed. Designers using computational fluid dynamics came up with a design that lengthened the nose of the F-5 and also added a bump on the lower fuselage. A model was built, tested in a simulator and it worked. Northrop then got an old F-5 from the Navy and modified it for use in a wind tunnel. Roy said that every molecule of air is tracked in a wind tunnel. Here again the plane performed according to the Fixing the Sound Barrier Charles Carmona met Gene Yano who worked in photography at Northrop. Charles asked Gene to put on a program for the Club. Gene said the guy we really needed to hear is Roy Martin. Roy is the chief test pilot of Northrop Grumman having worked there for 32 years. Roy told the F-5 story. Between 1974 and the 1990s 1,100 F-5s were sold to thirty-five countries. They were delivered from Palmdale via Canada to Greenland and then to Europe. Even the Sudan ordered four of the aircraft to an airfield across the Nile from Khartoum. As Roy flew in he saw natives dragging a Brahma bull to the plane. The throat of the bull was cut and blood was smeared on the new planes supposedly giving long life to the weapon and to the holder of the weapon – similar to a sword. Roy stayed around for a month to give guidance to the Sudanese pilots. A general wanted to practice straf- (Minutes continued on page 18) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 17 November 2010 Minutes – September 16 & 23, 2010 (Minutes continued from page 17) designed projections in reducing the effect of the sonic boom. Now the plane was ready for actual flight tests which Roy flew. A corridor was laid out in California, and Boeing and Lockheed contributed to the tracking system. Based on the fights, a properly designed plane could fly at mach 1.6 and not create a sonic boom. There were no problems on the 21 flight tests. Gulfstream and Cessna are both extremely excited about the results. But NASA said that the results do not contribute to a mission to the moon or to Mars and pulled the $150 million funding. Interestingly, Roy said that pilots do not feel a thing when they break the sound barrier. He has never refused to fly a plane because we have top notch people who design and test equipment thoroughly before there is a need for a test pilot. tion Conference (JCOC). He was one of one of 49 selected and beat out seven applicants submitted by General David Petraeus. The JCOC is a program sponsored by the Secretary of Defense for civilian public opinion leaders interested in growing their knowledge of the military and national defense issues. Allan flew to Washington DC for a tour of the Pentagon in which 20,000 employees work. While there he received the honorary order of the spur for his interest in the military. Allan had spent six years in the Marine Corps. This year’s group then flew to San Diego in a C-17 for carrier operations. Then they flew to Alaska, back to Pendleton and back to DC. He spent time on the shooting range with a 50 caliber, M-4 and M-16. He shot thirty rounds with the first eight being outside the target and the remaining 22 in the black. He also entered a building for immersion training. Inside is a replica of an Arab village with sights, sounds, smells and persons designed to distract the soldier while looking for snipers. Allan also received the John Muir Award for his entry in the Yosemite Film Festival. And he also designed the logo for the USS Richard Etheridge, the newest Coast Guard Cutter due to be launched in early 2011. Richard Etheridge was the leader of the Pea September 23, 2010 Bob Zeman (#878) P resident Allan Smith welcomed a good crowd including many guests of Ramona Cox. He called out for those returning from an adventure to tell us where they have been. Hearing none Allan told of his return from the Joint Civilian OrientaNovember 2010 18 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes – September 23, 2010 Island sailors, and Allan recently produced a movie on them. On behalf of Bill Morse, Allan Feldstein announced that Aki Ra has been selected as one of ten finalists for the CNN Hero of the Year award. You can vote for him at hero.cnn.com. Aki Ra is the leader of the de-mining in Cambodia. Bob Zeman presented a kepi blanc (military hat) of the French Foreign Legion to Mike Gwaltney for his museum. There has been a question of whether Cole Porter ever served in the Legion. So Bob wrote to Aubagne, France and in reply received a copy of Cole Porter’s membership card. moved to the desert. In 1993, participants wore costumes. The artwork has increased dramatically over the years. This year’s theme was Metropolis. Among the attractions are a maze, high-tech robotics, a gigantic temple, a ghost pirate ship, and huge statues. There is a choo-choo train, a kitty car, a car with a big mouth that opens and closes, a snail car, and a warthog car. Everyone wears a way-out costume. One woman even wears a snake. There are two naughty Santas. And there are the stilt people. Burning Man – the Olympics of Desert Flying amona Cox has been to the Burning Man event fourteen times and told of the history and this year’s colorful events. Once a year around Labor Day tens of thousands of participants gather in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert to create Black Rock City, dedicated to community, art, self-expression and self-reliance. They depart one week later, having left no trace whatsoever. It is also a seven-day and night costume party occasionally marred by wind, dust, sand storms, and rain. The event started on a beach in 1987 with eight men burning a wooden man. In 1990, the event was R Costumed girls at Burning Man Some have described Burning Man as a giant adult-kid land. Creativity is beyond your wildest expectations. There are also hundreds of lectures. Ramona flies in and hangs around with other pilots including the Baja Bush Pilots. Nothing is offered for sale. Many bring gifts to exchange. But attendees are charged a fee of about $300. One needs to bring goggles, ear plugs and all of your food and water. At the close, there is a massive (Minutes continued on page 20) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 19 November 2010 Minutes – September 2, 2010 (Minutes continued from page 19) clean-up with the goal of “leave no trace.” Gary Mortimer, and his friend Vance. Shane wore a lizard costume. The downside is that it takes about four hours to leave the area and get on the main road for home. The big highlight is the actual burning of the wooden man. The man is about thirty-five feet tall standing on a four story wooden structure. The Burning Man Shane Berry attended Burning Man for the first time this year. He joined his oldest son Scott, (Letters continued from page 13) To the Editor: Thought you would enjoy - the cams back up for the South Pole summer! – Larry Schutte #1121 To the Editor: I finally had some time to sit down and write a short story about a recent memorable hike. If you need any other info or photos let me know. I haven’t been to a weekly meeting or a board meeting for a month. I have been busy nursing my wife back to health; her knee replacement operation was successful but the rehabilitation has been long and painful. I have snuck away for a couple of hikes since the operation, more for my mental than physical health. I don’t know how well you got to know Ralph Perez before you left but he has been a great addition to the Club, very healthy and active. I have had other people tell me that they are planning to hike the Pacific Crest Trail but Ralph is the first guy I have met that I think will make it. I will try my best to provide you with material for the newsletter, we are lucky to have you doing it and supporting your efforts is the least we all can do. – Rick Flores #1120 Thanks. It’s a fascinating place - and how things have changed. When I was there in 1981/2, we explored the “old pole station” constructed in 1959 that was buried under thirty feet of snow and ice and partially crushed in 1981/2. I presume it is now entirely crushed and gone. That was an incredible contrast to our life style twenty-two years later, but the transformation that has happened during the last thirty years boggles the mind. Now anyone can watch the happenings at the pole! We were 17 people isolated from the entire world for nine months (except for occasional ham operator contact). The only place left is outer space. If they ever decide to include “old timers” I’ll be first on the list! – Editor I’m sure every active Club member agrees with your assessment of Ralph’s abilities. Thank you for all your contributions to the Club. – Editor November 2010 20 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Programs / NOHA Forthcoming Programs October 7, 2010 October 14, 2010 October 17, 2010 October 21, 2010 October 30, 2010 November 4, 2010 November 11, 2010 November 14, 2010 November 18, 2010 November 25, 2010 – First General Business Meeting followed by Minister Frank Orzio, Sergeant Retired USMC – Dave Banks – The Virtue of Risk – Survival Skills Seminar – OUTSIDE ACTIVITY (non Club sponsored trip advisory) – Bill Altaffer - Trip to the 5-Stans – NOHA – Night of High Adventure – Justin Taylan - Preserving the Living Legacy of World War II – LADIES NIGHT – Pierre Odier – Kashmir Ladakh and Pakistan – Allan Smith and Chris Nyerges – Survival Skills Seminar – Larry Schutte – Mi Vida Loca – Thanksgiving – Club Dark October 30, 2010 Location Hacienda Hotel 525 N Sepulveda Blvd El Segundo CA 90245 Auction Many exotic items Raffle Many winners Several valuable & desirable items Speakers Cost $65 mem advance purch $75 non-mem $75 for all after Oct 7 $75 online purch (PayPal) $40 Speakers only (no meal) Dress Black Tie Military Dinner Dress Ethnic Brian Binnie: Pilot of Spacecraft One, who won the X-Prize for piloting a commercial craft into space. Set a winged aircraft altitude record. Zac Sunderland: First person, under the age of 18, to solo circumnavigate the world on his sailboat Intrepid. Completed voyage on July 16, 2009. Don Walsh: Don Walsh piloted the bathyscaphe Trieste to the Challenger Deep, the deepest part of the Mariana Trench off Guam, the deepest part of the ocean, on January 23, 1960. We will be celebrating the 50th anniversary of this event, which has not been accomplished since. Dinner is Prime Rib or Chicken Piccata Night of High Adventure Above, Below & Around ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 21 November 2010 PO Box 31226 Los Angeles CA 90031 Adventurers’ Club News© The November 2010 FIRST CLASS MAIL