Aug 30 2008

mountains and playing

Charlene @ 3:01 pm

Today a bunch of us went to the (big? small? I know little about mountains) mountain called “Red Goat Hill” that dominates the landscape here with the idea of trying to climb it.

Wow, that was a shitty idea.

It was actually nice to walk but in the end some of us didn’t get to the top and just came back.  Amber and I got about 2/3 the way up but we’re both out of shape (despite my silly aerobics) so it was just too much. Kinda bummed me out though, that even with semi-regular exercise I can’t do such things.  I’m going to try again next time some other folks decide to go there as it’s good exercise.  Roundtrip, even not getting to the top, it was about 3-1/2 hours of walking and climbing.

Afterward I got lunch with Amber and did my shopping for the next 2 weeks or so.  I’m working on both traditional sourdough starter and the semi-sourdough yogurt french bread that I made last week which was super tasty.  Also I have lentils soaking for dinner.  Right now though I’m just tired, need a haircut, and definitely need a shower.  Hope to get a haircut tomorrow…

Speaking of playing, I wonder in general how much of work is playing at being a worker, or making progress.  For example, your funder wants statistics or justification - so we better get them! Hence, playing at knowing what is going on.  But what about stepping back and actually really looking at those numbers and what they mean?  Is it too depressing to realize how big a task is at hand?  Or is it inspiring and give you more determination to get cracking?  It hopefully at least gives you some target demographics…I would think.  Why bother to do a job if you’re not going to do it well?  Blah.

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Apr 03 2008

the buyant death march, return of vodka and more links

Charlene @ 3:10 pm

I need to write out to the contact list soon…it’ll likely be similar to this post and others though. Eh, well.

So, in grand order of the title above:

Buyant death march
Some PCV came up with a cool idea to take a long hike to visit another volunteer then take a car back. Due to the weather (it snowed an incredible amount - about 4″) the Friday night before, we instead decided to take the car there then hike back so as to let the snow/bad weather recede a little. So, we already knew it was 25km (~15 1/2 miles) by the road, but we were going to follow a river back, so it was likely going to be a bit farther than that. Big-ass hiking boots, check. Layers, check. Bullion-cube-in-case-we-get-hopelessly-lost-and-need-flavoring-per-travel-recommendations, check. What I didn’t take into account was how snow affects the basic concept of walking. That snow really saps a lot of your energy, and we had these land mogul-type humps near open bodies of (frozen-ish) water that, when covered with snow, hid where the divots between them were, so it was really easy to slip and fall if you misjudged a bump. The snow factor probably took the most out of me - I was a little nervous of getting my pants wet if I couldn’t see where ice was thin (under that snow) in wet areas, but that didn’t happen too much. I’m also lucky that my boots didn’t give me blisters - I know some people got em just after the first third of the hike and a few more did by the end. There was wind on and off too which we tended to walk into…

Still, in retrospect it was really fun - some pictures are being uploaded to Picasa, and we had some silly times and neat things to see. We found and returned a lost baby goat, saw a huge (eagle’s?) nest up in some rocks, jumped over/made rock stepping stones various rivers, and likely startled unknown numbers of countryside-dwellers with the sight of 11 foreigners tramping around in the middle of nowhere. I also near the very end almost fell (off a mogul of course) face-first into a huge pile of horse shit, which made me quite grumpy at the time.

It’s also the farthest by, oh, 10 miles at least, that I’ve ever walked, so I’m happy that I survived it. We may go on another death march, but perhaps with an overnight camping break, as it’s about half again as far as this soum. Only in Mongolia do 11 people of varying states of fitness decide to go on a 15+ mile hike after a relatively heavy snowfall and in freezing weather…

The return of vodka
On April Fool’s, coincidentally a local PCV’s birthday, vodka appeared back on the shelves all over Khovd. Insert expected shenanigans here, esp. as many people are not working this week due to school breaks. I also got to eat tasty lemon cookies.

Link of my day
As posted on Slashdot, Skewz is an unfortunately named website that does a really cool thing - it sorts news online using user submissions (on a continuum) from liberal to conservative. The submitted links also have a sort of meta-commentary in that the links with their associated blurb can have comments on their slant, and the comments themselves can be rated on a liberal-conservative continuum. That’s definitely a feature I’d like to see on other comment sections, though tagging is another idea. But the continuum idea tends to limit, obviously - but I’d also be interested in seeing continua for other slants - libertarian, etc - as the ideological spectrum is more than the one-dimensional “left” and “right”.

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Sep 02 2007

it’s that time of the year again…

Charlene @ 9:27 pm

..time for…the World Beard and Moustache Championships!! Despite my stated preferences, I do find highly sculpted facial hair to be fascinating. Be grateful that I gave the above link to the english version rather than the splash page, as that page plays facial hair-themed music. There is also a gallery of this year’s competitors via yahoo’s photo archive thingy.

As a teaser (for those of you who wouldn’t click anyway) check this out:what a moustache

Today also included a misleadingly described hike up a big old mountain? or hill? outside of Ulaanbaatar. The view from the top was great, but I am in crappy physical condition overall so it took me quite a bit longer to get up compared to others on the hike. Pictures are spiff, though, and will be posted eventually.

Also had vietnamese coffee today, a “Sloppy Dorj” (mongolian-style Sloppy Joe), and a lemonade.

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