Sunday, December 30, 2007
Calendar
January 7th - 13th
Saturday, January 12, 2007
*Winter Trails 2008
Winter Trails is an event where children and adults can try snowshoeing and/or cross country skiing FREE at more than 100 locations in the U.S. and Canada.
Winter Trails, now in its 13th year, offers entire families or groups of friends, regardless of age, an opportunity to get outside in the winter and enjoy a day on snow. Both snowshoeing and cross country skiing provide exercise, a chance to enjoy nature and they involve a minimal to modest learning curve.
More Info
*Winter Trails Day 2008 – Magic Mountain
Come to Magic Mountain for a FREE day of cross country skiing. Everything will be provided at no cost. The Cross Country Ski Association will provide you with everything that you need to try this sport.
More Info
*Winter Trails Day 2008 - East Mink Creek Nordic Center
Offering free rentals of both snowshoes and cross country skies. We will be fully staffed allowing for free lessons throughout the day. Available as always are the warming yurts and free hot chocolate.
More Info
*Winter Trails Day 2008 – Tamarack Nordic Center
Tamarack Nordic Center has 25 km of beautiful well groomed trails nestled between Cascade Lake and Tamarack Mountain. Tamarack is dedicated to offering the highest quality in skiing and snowshoeing experiences. Come find that “winter feels good” in Idaho. We will be offering a free snowshoe and cross country ski day with free snowshoe and ski rentals, trail pass, and free ski lesson (11:00 am only, RSVP required 24 hours in advance).
More Info
*Winter Trails Day 2008 – Schweitzer Mountain Resort
Enjoy free access to Schweitzer's Cross Country Ski and Snow Shoe Trails. Complimentary rentals are available at the Ski and Ride Center.More Info
*Winter Trails Day 2008 - Winchester Lake State Park
Free day at the Park - no park fees. At 1:00PM, there will be free snowshoe lessons; then afterwards, a free interpreter-led snowshoe hike on park trails with free snowshoe rentals for participants - weather and conditions permitting.
*Winter Walks/ Cross country ski tours/ Snowshoe walks
Join the Silver Creek Preserve manager, Dayna Gross for snowshoeing, cross country skiing or walking around the Preserve (snow dependent). Please call ahead to find out what equipment you will need (or bring it all!!).
10:00 a.m.- 11:30 a.m
More Info
Winter is a magical place at Silver Creek. Come see the beautiful scenery and wildlife. Free. Please call ahead to register, 788-7910.More Info
Friday, December 28, 2007
Tracks in the Snow
Monday, December 24, 2007
Calendar
December 31st - January 6th
Monday, December 31st, 2007
*New Year's Eve 5K Run/Walk
The New Year’s Eve 5K fun run/walk, a fundraiser for the College of Southern Idaho Student Recreation Center, will start at 11:45 p.m. Monday, Dec. 31 at the CSI Student Recreation Center.
Organizers say the walk will take place on a course that is flat, lighted, paved, and snow-free through the CSI campus. Prizes will be awarded for each age group for runners and walkers in men’s and women’s divisions.
A New Year’s Eve party will be held in conjunction with the event, which will run from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. It will include refreshments and fireworks at midnight. The entry fee is $25 before Dec. 25 or $30 thereafter. For information, contact Jaime Tigue at 732-6479 or register online at http://www.spondoro.com/
Wednesday, January 2nd, 2007
*“Rafting the Grand Canyon” – Presented by Idaho Alpine Club
Rob Thornberry and Martin Moore recently spent 18 days ushering a raft down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. They put in at Lee's Ferry in late season on October 24, 2007 and took out at Diamond Creek on November 10, 2007. This meant their party of 4 rafts and 2 kayaks had shorter days and longer nights than they would have experienced during the height of the summer season, but they were rewarded with increased solitude because of fewer people on the river. The trip was a "do it yourself trip". Rob, the outdoor editor for the Post Register for the last 17 years, and Martin, a CH2M-WG Idaho LLC employee, along with the rest of their party, had to plan the trip themselves; from obtaining the rafts and organizing the equipment to planning the food and cooking their meals. Through their slides, Rob and Martin will convey the beauty and excitement of rafting the Grand Canyon so come and enjoy.
The meeting is open to the public. All outdoor enthusiasts are invited to attend.More Info
Saturday, January 5th, 2007
*Gull 101 Workshop with Birds of Idaho
Start the new year right! Join R.L. at the landfill for his famous Gull 101 workshop and become more "gullable". The flora is lacking but the avifauna is interesting and R.L. is the expert! Note: This can be a very cold trip so dress warmly, especially on your feet.
Trip Leader/Contact:
RL Rowland 336-9808
More Info
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
A Consumption Manifesto
Since now is a prime time for some serious consumption - I thought it the perfect opportunity to introduce Ask Umbra's Consumption Manifesto. Ask Umbra is an advice column on the Grist website - "gloom and doom with a sense of humor." They offer very informative environmental news all the while keeping it fresh and funny with they're clever (albeit corny at times) headlines and commentary.
Here is the manifesto:
Article One. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. This brilliant triad says it all. Reduce: Avoid buying what you don't need -- and when you do get that dishwasher/lawnmower/toilet, spend the money up front for an efficient model. Reuse: Buy used stuff, and wring the last drop of usefulness out of most everything you own. Recycle: Do it, but know that it's the last and least effective leg of the triad. (Ultimately, recycling simply results in the manufacture of more things.)
Article Two. Stay close to home. Work close to home to shorten your commute; eat food grown nearby; patronize local businesses; join local organizations. All of these will improve the look, shape, smell, and feel of your community.
Article Three. Internal combustion engines are polluting and their use should be minimized. Period.
Article Four. Watch what you eat. Whenever possible, avoid food grown with pesticides, in feedlots, or by agribusiness. It's an easy way to use your dollars to vote against the spread of toxins in our bodies, land, and water.
Article Five. Private industries have very little incentive to improve their environmental practices. Our consumption choices must encourage and support good behavior; our political choices must support government regulation.
Article Six. Support thoughtful innovations in manufacturing and production. Hint: Drilling for oil is no longer an innovation.
Article Seven. Prioritize. Think hardest when buying large objects; don't drive yourself mad fretting over the small ones. It's easy to be distracted by the paper bag puzzle, but an energy-sucking refrigerator is much more worthy of your attention. (Small electronics are an exception.)
Article Eight. Vote. Political engagement enables the spread of environmentally conscious policies. Without public action, thoughtful individuals are swimming upstream.
Article Nine. Don't feel guilty. It only makes you sad.
Article Ten. Enjoy what you have -- the things that are yours alone, and the things that belong to none of us. Both are nice, but the latter are precious. Those things that we cannot manufacture and should never own -- water, air, birds, trees -- are the foundation of life's pleasures. Without them, we're nothing. With us, there may be nothing left. It's our choice.
Click here to get Grist by email. You can get Daily Grist, Weekly Grist, Ask Umbra and more "green news to amuse."
Monday, December 10, 2007
December 17th - 23rd
Sunday, December 23rd, 2007
*Christmas in City Park
Get into the holiday spirit at our beautiful city park. The whole family will enjoy the lights and entertainment provided by local musicians. Bundle up and feel the magic of the season.
More info, call 736-2265
Time: 5PMLocation: Twin Falls City Park Band Shell
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Southern Idaho Outdoors in Picture Form - In the South Hills Once Again
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Monday, December 3, 2007
Calendar
December 10th - 16th
Friday, December 14th, 2007
*Madrigal Ensemble Mini Festival and Concert
The CSI Madrigal Ensemble will host a small choir festival which will culminate in an evening concert
More Info
Saturday, December 15th, 2007
*The Dance Center Winter Show
The Dance Center's Winter Dance Showcase
More Info
*CSI Percussion Ensemble Concert
Concert for the CSI percussion ensemble and percussion students
More Info
*Discover Scuba
Discover the joys of scuba diving. Dive Magic will introduce you to the basics through professional instruction. These workshops are designed to give participants ages 8 and older an opportunity to try scuba diving. Register at Twin Falls Parks & Recreation. Bring your swimming suit and towel.
Time: 9 – 11:30 AM
Fee: $20
Location: YMCA/City Pool
Min 2/Max 20
Sunday, December 16th, 2007
*Christmas in City Park
Get into the holiday spirit at our beautiful city park. The whole family will enjoy the lights and entertainment provided by local musicians. Bundle up and feel the magic of the season.
More info, call 736-2265
Time: 5PM
Location: Twin Falls City Park Band Shell
Monday, November 26, 2007
Same, But Different
View out my front door today.
Just love the bright red berries on the hawthorn tree - and so do the birds and squirrels!
© 2007 SegoLily
Calendar
December 3rd - 9th
Tuesday, December 4th, 2007
*Sounds of the Season
A Christmas Concert presented by both the CSI Symphonic Band and Percussion Ensembles
More Info
Wednesday, December 5th 2007
*CSI Theatre Department Presents: The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
In 1846, Henry David Thoreau spent a night in jail for refusing to pay his taxes as a way to protest the United States’ involvement in the Mexican War. Playwrights Jerome Lawrence and Robert Lee (Inherit the Wind) take this incident and spin it into an interesting and very provocative drama that weaves dream sequences in and out of the past and present as Thoreau serves out his short sentence, giving us a very intimate look at what Thoreau’s mindset might have been, even before he penned his own reflections on Civil Disobedience.
More Info
*Idaho Alpine Club General Meeting - "Rowing to Alaska"
Pete Oslund was an avid climber when he severely injured his legs in a fall while doing repairs on the roof of his church. Unfortunately, he had to give up climbing and find a new pursuit. Casting about for a new activity, he took up kayaking- but in a big way. He designed and built a wooden kayak and fitted it with oarlocks and proceeded to row it 1200 miles from Bellingham, WA to Sitka, AK over the course of two summers. He rowed on the rainy days as well as the sunny ones and camped on the shoreline wherever his day ended, sometimes in places frequented by grizzly bears. What is most inspiring about Pete is that he rowed to Alaska at an age when many of us would choose to cruise the world on a comfortable recliner encamped in front of a TV. So come and enjoy Pete's slide show of this memorable trip.
The meeting is open to the public. All outdoor enthusiasts are invited to attend.
More Info
Thursday, December 6th, 2007
*CSI Theatre Department Presents: The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
More Info
Friday, December 7th, 2007
*"Woodstock" at the Herrett Center
Students in the College of Southern Idaho’s Cabinetmaking and Welding programs have scheduled their 18th annual Christmas show and auction, “Woodstock,” Friday and Saturday, Dec. 7 and 8 in the Rick Allen Community Room at the Herrett Center for Arts and Science.
Woodstock Club president Marian Frix says students from each club have increased their efforts to provide more and even finer quality works in this year’s show than in the past. For the first time, CSI Culinary Arts students will also join the event, selling specially made treats and refreshments during the viewing and auction portions of the event. They will also have elaborate gingerbread houses for sale.
More than 20 large wooden items will be displayed and sold, including an 1890 style covered wagon bench, a maple executive desk, mahogany and cedar hope chests, an oak mission style table and end tables, mahogany and red oak poker table, and a bed frame crafted from logs of mountain mahogany. There will be gun cases, armoires, chests of drawers, apothecary, and fireplace mantle. Smaller items such as fruit bowls, game and cutting boards, some made of very exotic wood such as purple heart, will be displayed and sold. Welding students will be displaying decorative art works and other metal cut-outs, coat racks, and trailer hitch covers. Money raised from the event will help the students attend next spring’s Homebuilders Show in Orlando.
The public is encouraged to visit the display from 1 to 9 p.m. Friday, Dec. 7 in the Herrett Center’s Rick Allen Community room. Additional viewing will be from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 8. Bidding begins at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.
More Info
*CSI Theatre Department Presents: The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
More Info
Saturday, December 8th, 2007
*Magic Valley Chorale Christmas Concert
Choral concert featuring the Magic Valley Chorale
More Info
*CSI Theatre Department Presents: The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
More Info
Sunday, December 9th, 2007
*Magic Valley Chorale Christmas Concert
Choral concert featuring the Magic Valley Chorale
More Info
*Christmas in City Park
Get into the holiday spirit at our beautiful city park. The whole family will enjoy the lights and entertainment provided by local musicians. Bundle up and feel the magic of the season.
More info, call 736-2265
Time: 5PM
Location: Twin Falls City Park Band Shell
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Volunteers Needed for Sagebrush Seed Collection
IDAHO FISH AND GAME HEADQUARTERS NEWS RELEASE - Boise, ID
Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter and officials from the state departments of Agriculture and Fish and Game are asking for several hundred volunteers to help gather sagebrush seed on four Saturdays - up to 80 volunteers on each day - November 17, and December 1, 8 and 15 in the southwest Idaho region.
The Magic Valley region also will need up to 60 volunteers on each of four Saturdays - November 10 and 17 and December 1 and 8. "More than 2 million acres of private, county, state and federal land burned in Idaho during this year's fire season," Otter said. "Thousands of people were temporarily forced out of their homes, and lives were put at risk. We owe it to the people we serve to act in concert with our neighboring states to reduce this annual threat and restore the lands on which our lifestyle and economy depend."
The Murphy Fire burned more than 650,000 acres of sagebrush steppe in southern Idaho and northern Nevada. Of 75 sage-grouse leks within the fire perimeter, 39 were known to be active in the past five years.
This part of Idaho and Nevada is one of the few remaining places with large areas of unfragmented sagebrush habitat. Seeding sagebrush within the burned area will speed the return of suitable habitat for sage grouse and other wildlife dependant on sagebrush. Officials plan to seed by aerial broadcast a diverse mixture of native and nonnative grasses and forbs on more than 8,000 acres, bitterbrush on more than 1,200 acres and locally collected sagebrush seed on more than 22,000 acres of burned sage-grouse nesting and wintering habitat during fall 2007 and spring 2008.
Seeding key areas can drastically improve the probability of restoring the Jarbidge sagebrush steppe ecosystem.
Volunteers have helped Fish and Game collect locally adapted sagebrush seed every fall since 1992 in the Southwest Region. Sagebrush seeds are tiny - about the size of a pin head - and it takes about 2 million to make a pound of cleaned seeds.
To sign up or for information, contact Fish and Game at 208-327-7095 in the Southwest Region and 208-324-4359 in the Magic Valley Region.
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Southern Idaho Outdoors in Picture Form - Another Foray into the South Hills
Here is the familiar sagebrush and willow scene that I displayed on my last trip.
Further in, trees break up the horizon line.
Like a forest of skeletons - aspens leafless in the bitter cold.
My companions heading toward the creek - which creek exactly, I'm not sure. I can't quite remember where we are at this point on the map (a USGS topo map - and if you've ever tried to use one, you'd see how easy it is to wonder where the heck you are). The thing is, we weren't looking at the map as we were driving. I figured I had a pretty good idea where I was. As a member of the 2005 B.U.R.P Crew for the Department of Environmental Quality, we spent a good portion of the summer driving around this area. But still, there are a lot of roads out here and a lot of creeks. My best guess is Shoshone Creek up by Bear Gulch and I'm pretty certain that I am right. Look how well the two blend in with their surroundings.
That's because it has froze over. My Little Boy thought this concept was quite amazing. "Ice!"
See that snowy hill in the background...that's where we're headed.
Here, I believe, are the Shoshone Wildlife Ponds. This, again, I can't say with complete certainty, but there were a lot of ponds. There are also a lot of beavers and, incidentally, beaver dams. A beautiful place! The sun was setting so wonderfully and lighting up the sky with an array of sunset colors - unfortunately, my camera does not capture an array of sunset colors... (Update: This is not Shoshone Wildlife Pond. It turns out that the actual Shosone Wildlife Pond is some other thing in the vicinity that is just one pond and is fenced off. We (my husband and I) are calling them The Beaver Ponds, which certainly suits them.)
As you can see, there are patches of snow.
What a perfect Christmas-like scene! My Little Boy was SO excited about the snow. I gave him some to hold in his hand. After it would melt into a cold puddle, he would say, "More." The whole trip he was very happy and never got upset about being strapped into the carseat with only occasional journeys out onto solid ground. He loved looking out the windows at all of the beauty around him. Plus, he had a couple of rocks, a stick, and a pinecone - bits of nature we had collected along the way - to keep him satisfied. He really looks forward to these sort of outings - especially when he can explore. He enjoys looking at maps with me and repeats "South Hills! South Hills!" whenever I mention them. He's truly a Nature Boy!
OK, this is where we got a bit lost. Well not lost, per say; it was more that we were second-guessing ourselves. We knew we didn't want to go on Buckskin Road...
The road got skinnier, snowier, and bumpier as we traversed along it. This certainly helped in the decision making process - we only went so far before we decided to reverse.
But look at the view the road led to! Once again, my camera does not do the justice my eyes saw! I stood out in the freezing cold for quite some time wanting to take in every bit of this scene and experience the feelings it filled me up with. Mountains...I love mountains!!
Do you know what mountains these are? I'm quite sure they're in Nevada, but I'm having a hard time finding out just which ones they are.
After the long, anxiety-ridden drive, we landed right at the Ranger Station and Magic Mountain Ski Area. This is where we were headed - well not actually here. We meant to go hike the Eagle trail, but being that it is three miles we decided against it. At this point we were ready to head home.
You can see it's fairly dark out, but because Ross Falls trail (#244) is only .4 miles round trip, we decided to do it. I had been there before with my husband in warmer temperatures and it is really very pretty. It was pretty this time too (even while lugging my sleepy bundled up toddler).
Icicles, brrr. Mine and my mom's camera batteries both died after we snapped a few pictures of the falls. Time to head home. Little did I know that my poor husband was at that very moment looking up Deadline Ridge on Google in order to come and find us and rescue us if need be. (He had just so happened to call me at that very spot we stopped to get our whereabouts and I mentioned to him the names - luckily we were at a high enough point to get service.) He figured we must have gotten stuck or something. He called numerous times when I had no service and my phone never showed any missed calls (but it did show voicemails later). The drive home (on paved roads!) was curvy and dark and my adrenaline was still a little high. I was just intent on getting home and kept thinking I would call my husband at such and such point, but didn't ever release my death-grip from the steering wheel. Eventually he made one last call before heading out as a search party and it went through. We were just leaving Kimberly and I felt so sorry for not calling him! If it were me and I was the one waiting at home I would have been angry, but he was more relieved than anything and just a bit annoyed. He was glad to have us arrive safely at home and so was I!