We routinely walk a trail with the dogs near our home, but we were recently disappointed to arrive there and discover it was closed for trail maintenance. The dogs are always excited when we go for a car ride, undoubtedly anticipating the walk. So we certainly didn’t want to return home with dejected pups. We instead drove a bit further to another nearby trail. I had my camera in tow to capture the recent snowfall and discovered this abandoned farm equipment off one of the trails. As you can see, it has certainly been here for quite some time! Long enough for a tree or two to grow up through it! I wonder what circumstances left it here?
Category Archives: Title
Weekly Photo Challenge: Threes
Can Fish Hear?
Submitted by Joe Panfalone
When I was visiting a supplier in Japan, our host was extremely proud of their koi pond and wanted to demonstrate something. He took us to the pond’s edge and clapped his hands. From the murky depths of the pond emerged huge koi breaking the surface with mouths open. As their reward, he tossed them a handful of fish food.
While everyone else was enamored with his ability to have trained the fish, I was awestruck with the fact that they could hear the sound of clapping deep down into the pond. No wonder dad kept telling me to be quiet or I’d scare the fish away. I just thought it was his way of getting some peace and quiet.
According to the National Wildlife Federation, fish don’t have ears that we can see, but they do have ear parts inside their heads. They pick up sounds in the water through the lateral lines that run down each side of its body and is transmitted to their internal ear. The lateral line also acts like a sonar. Most bodies of water have limited range of sight so the lateral line enables the fish to sense movement around them. Some fishing lures have small BB’s inside to make noise and supposedly attract fish.
So the next time you are fishing, remember Dad’s words…be quiet or you will scare the fish away.
The Camper’s Journal
Camper’s Journal
by Joe Panfalone (Guest Contributor)
Thirty five years ago we met a retired couple in an Airstream camper trailer. As we had just a pop up camper, we were interested in a hard sided one so we struck up a conversation with them. The both of them were retired Air Force and were traveling the country side living out of their trailer. I was fascinated with the concept and was something that I wanted to do when I retired. Things have changed since then. For one, gasoline was only 35 cents a gallon back then!
We were on a vacation tour of Michigan and kept running across this couple. We shared where we have been and recommended things to do and see. The one thing I found most significant about this encounter is that they asked if we would sign their guest book. It was filled with names of people they had encountered along their journey with notes about them. I thought it to be a novel idea. They suggested we keep one with the goal of socializing with campers around us and come back with at least one entry for each day.
In todays digital age keeping a journal has never been easier. Here is a Camper’s journal template. If you are old school, you can print a few pages and fill them in by hand and keep them in a binder. Preferably, load it to your touch pad or lap top and take it with you. With the digital version you can do a search by pressing CTRL F and then enter a key word.
MONTH/YEAR___________
|
CAMPGROUND |
ACTIVITIES / NOTES / PEOPLE MET |
|
| Check-In Day/Time | ||
| Check-Out Day/Time | ||
| Name | ||
| Address | ||
| City, State Zip | ||
| Phone Number | ||
| Website | ||
| Rating | ||
MONTH/YEAR___________
|
CAMPGROUND |
ACTIVITIES / NOTES / PEOPLE MET |
|
| Check-In Day/Time | ||
| Check-Out Day/Time | ||
| Name | ||
| Address | ||
| City, State Zip | ||
| Phone Number | ||
| Website | ||
| Rating | ||
-Enjoy and HAPPY CAMPING!
The Bucket List For the Avid Camper
So, turning 39 back in December made me start thinking about what life is going to be like during my 40’s. I think it is normal that those approaching their 40’s begin to worry about how age is going to slow them down, how life is fragile, and how life is short so live life to the fullest. So, call it a mid-life crisis or call it a bucket list, I have been thinking a lot about what I want to accomplish in the next decade. Some of my aspirations do not involve camping. However, many do include travel/camping. As I was thinking the other night, over a tall, cold beer, I was attempting to put together a bucket list of places I want to travel to/camp. I came up with a top ten list. In the next decade, my hope is to…
1. Travel to Italy with my wife and visit the land where our ancestors came from. We have both been to Italy but not together.
2. Try a 2-3 night backpack camping trip in a national forest or state park. I think Cloudland State Park in northern Georgia would be a great place to try backpack camping. Or Shawnee State Park in Southern Ohio.
3. Camp in South Dakota/North Dakota/Montana and explore some of the terrain that Lewis and Clark traversed over two centuries ago.
4. Camp in Acadia National Park (Bar Harbor, Maine) and enjoy the beauty of its wildlife and the ocean scenery.
5. Tent camp on an actual beach, less than 100 yards from the water. This could be in Florida, North Carolina, or better yet….Hawaii.
6. Camp and hike the state parks of the Upper Peninsula (Michigan).
7. Camp at every state park in Ohio (our home state) just to be able to say I have done it.
8. Be a camp host for an entire summer and enjoy the life of campground living.
9. Camp in Canada, specifically Manitoba, Ontario, and Saskatchewan.
10. Camp at a place like Kelly’s Island (Lake Erie, Ohio) or Outer Banks (North Carolina) where it requires you to take your vehicle and camper over to the campground by ferry.
Maybe you can relate to some of my ideas. Maybe not. So, what’s your bucket list when it comes to traveling or camping? I would love to hear your ideas!
HAPPY CAMPING!
Borderline Genius DIY: Matches
I was trolling the internet looking for options for turning a mason jar into a lamp and ran across this little gem at TheBurlapBag.com You need to use strike anywhere type matches for it to work but I love how simple and convenient this is: small mason jar, sandpaper, matches.


