Friday, January 31, 2025

2025.1.27-31 Company annual get-together

1/27, Monday, I attended all planned events at work.

1/28, Tuesday, after I came back from Mission Peak, our HVAC broken down. Had to tread carefully to set up my demo system. Team dinner tonight.

1/29, Wednesday. Left the hotel at 7am to walk along the dykes near Alviso Marine Park. This time, I got another coworker to come along. Overcast today, so no sunrise. Water is low, not as many birds as I remembered. Saw only 2 snowy egrets, and 1 great egret. On the way back, drove my the old office. Back to work before 9am, in time for the first talk of the day.

Lunar new year. I skipped a women-only event, managed to call a few of my family members and friends after work. I initially wanted to attend a meetup in the evening, but I was late preparing my demo, and the the traffic of Bay Area is too bad: killed my desire to drive.

1/30, Thursday. Demo in the morning, and more talks. 3:30pm, Top Golf. I arrived late. After getting a beer, walked around to join a table. I'm so bad, thankfully the next table had space, and none are golfers. I left at 5pm. Saw another large group poured in. Seems Top Golf is popular with company event organizers.

Drove to Bay Trail Sunnyvile (along the bay, there're many trails), next to a water treatment facility, a little too late for sunset. Walked ~an hour around. Saw a few ducks and stilts. It was getting too dark, but still a few coming in with head lamps.

Drove to Santa Clara Santana Row area to see Fleurs de Villes installation (1/29-2/2). Bad traffic on the way. Out of 19 large floral displays, I found only 13. One at Hotel Valencia entry, one at Eataly, 11 in the center of Westfield Valley Fair (shopping mall). I should have allocated more time here so I can find the other 6.

Drove to San Jose downtown for dinner. Arrived ~7:30.

1/31, Friday. Didn't do anything useful. Managed to lose my glasses when packing. Flew back home. Picked up some flu-like bug on the plane :(

Conclusion:
  • I'll probably rent a car again next year.
  • Should allocate more time for traffic.
  • Should wear a face mask in the airport.

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

2025.1.28. Mission Peak

1/28, Tuesday. Skipped the first talk at work, and went for a hike. This time, a coworker came along, and we were in a more relaxed pace. The TH is supposed to open at 6:30am, so we left the hotel at 6:15, in the dark. I didn't bring a headlamp. This is a very popular trail, even this early in the dark, we saw a few others running and walking.

Trailhead parking is free, and the gate is unlatched. So, probably I can come anytime. We did Mission Peak loop clock-wise. Most of the hike is on very wide gravel roads, on grassy hills (no shade). The last half a mile is trail, still gravel. Without trekking pole nor proper hiking boots, some minor care is needed. But overall, fairly easy. Nice view, as the sun rose. Of course, this would be better for sunset. But traffic in SF Bay Area is unthinkable to come hike ~5pm.

The summit has this post with many scopes. But no labels of what they are aiming at. Large rocky summit area. The south end is a fenced cell towel "jungle". Even though it's only ~2500', the view is quite good. Met an old guy, who hikes here once a week.

Coming down. More trail than road. Walked through a spring (McClure), and by a small pond. I like this part better. It connects to the gravel road back to the TH. Today ~5.6 miles, 2100'.

Back to the hotel to take a shower. No hot water! Thankfully, I didn't sweat much during the hike, so a quick rince. I don't know how hotels get their ratings. It's a 4 star hotel: 1) only 1 out of the 3 elevators work, 2) hot water stops without any warning, 3) the pool is closed.

Sunday, January 26, 2025

2025.1.26. History of Drawbridge,

1/26, Sunday, 3:30-5pm. San Francisco Bay Wildlife Society hosts author and reseacher Cecilia D Craig at Don Edwards NWR Environmental Education Center who gave a talk on Drawbrdge and the cumminity at Drawbridge station over South Bay salt ponds. I arrived a few minutes late. The building was locked. Had to bang on the door to be let in, even though no light inside to indicate of anything live.

The talk is interesting, maybe more to the locals. In the late 1800s - early 1900s, few families lived here in cabins on stilts. Winter time, more came to hunt ducks. No sewage system, no garbage collection. Twice a day, the tide came in and swept away the refuse. The community rely on well water, fish and duck for food. In the 1900s, the aquafer water level started to deplete, eventually, salt water went in. The US Fish and Wildlife Refuge bought out most lands, and converted to a water treatment. Now, trying to convert it back to marsh.

After the talk, walked a bit over the marsh. However, due to the work on raising the dyke, the loop was blocked. Nice sunset. Low water level, not as many birds as I expected. Quite a bit of black necked stilts.

Saturday, January 25, 2025

2025.1.25. Little Spart Plug Mountain

1/25, Saturday. I got picked up from Mercer St. We are to follow this recent trip report to Little Spark Plug Mountain.

We started at Surprise Creek TH next to a train track and power lines, a short jaunt from Hwy-2. First car today. ~8am. ~24°F. No snow for the first 1/4 mile. Then, we put spikes on. The trail follows Surprise Creek south, and cross it ~1 mile in. Another mile or so later, the trail goes slightly uphill, above the creek. Trail is packed down. All in the shade, chilly.

~10:25, about 4 miles and 2300' later, we reached Surprise Lake. The last hour, the trail wasn't clear to follow. Quite a few zigzags to gain the elevation. More rocks, better view. Put on snowshoes. Crossed the creek and up a few feet to the lake. The lake is prestine. Very pretty, with cute snow "sculptures" over rocks around the edges. Mountains to east and west.

Now at the west side of the lake, followed some track up the ridge, while not really staying on the ridge. There's a bend to avoid a cliff-out. The track was clear and easy to follow here. Otherwise, would be some route-finding. Leading to the little Spark Plug Lake after the trees is obvious. It's just a pond.

Walk over the pond, and heading up to Spark Plug Lake. This is a very pretty lake. From here, scramble up the hill. This is maybe the steepest section of today. But fairly safe, in the trees.

The top ledge is narrow, we had to route to its left side instead of tackling each of the top rocks. Again, follow the track. The last bit needs a bit of care. The top is small. One guy (Chris) already here. His water bottle slid down, and he tried to go down to fetch it twice. Gave up. Calm, sunny, quiet. No one else in sight. 360° view. Chris was heading up to Spark Plug Mountain. I had an appointment this evening. We turned around at 1:20pm.

Cutting some corners going down. Switched to spikes south of Surprise Lake. I took them off, and slipped on icy trail twice. Mostly in shade once we left little Spark Plug Lake. Got to the trail head ~4:40pm. Sun was still lighting up the hills and the power cables. ~50 min delay through Gold Bar. Got dropped off on Mercer ~7:15pm.

Total ~10.5 miles, 4170' EG. A fabulous day.

Friday, January 24, 2025

2025.1.24 Downtown Art Walk

1/24, Friday, 6pm. I joined Public Display Art for another walk. Not raining this time. Many a dozen of us. Again, not quite liking the walk. Sure, visited some venues that otherwise I wouldn't have gone to, but no commentory or explaination at all this time. The guide is very nice. Out of the 5 on his itinerary, I've been to two, 1 was too busy so wouldn't let us in.

The window display in Ghost (a gift shop with horoscope leaning) has a motorized sculpture. Interesting.

The one I liked the most is Gallery Mack, quality pieces from established artists. Especially Paul Cunningham (glass), David Vernau (bronze), Raymond Wiger (wire). Mack has been around for 50 years. It recently moved to Belltown. I definited will come back.

Monthly self-guided art walk in Seattle:
  • Pioneer Square: 1st Thursday
  • Capitol Hill: 2nd Thursday
  • Belltwon: 2nd Friday
  • Downtown: 4th Friday

Thursday, January 23, 2025

2025.1.23. Arlington Microgrid

1/23, Thursday. Sierra Club organized this tour of the microgrid in Arlington operated and owned by Snohomish PUD. I got a ride from David at Lynnwood lightrail station. Coincidentally, he and wife are going to Jeju in a month, which I visited just 2 months ago.

3 PUD employees, 2 worked at PUD for 17-18 years, 1 a recent hire for this project. This is a small solar installation, no wonder these are called micro-grid. No solar panel on the roof of the visitor center, even though its roof is angled towards the south. Few things I learned:
  • recycling aged lithium-ion battery is in the planning, but doesn't yet have good solution.
  • more micro-grids like this are being installed.
  • currently, electricity price is the same 24/7 for the final user, but cost is different due to usage spikes throughout the day.
  • diesel is used for the backup.
  • battery tower generates a lot of heat: I saw water dripping constantly from the roof.
  • multiple step-downs from the power line to household 120V.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

2025.1.22. US-China relation panel at Rainier Club

1/22. Wednesday 5:30pm, Washington State China Relations Council organized this panel of experts:
  • David Bachman, Associate Director at the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington.
  • Nelson Dong, Of Counsel in the Seattle office of the Dorsey & Whitney law firm and co-heads its National Security Law Group.
  • Tong ZhuChief Commercial & Strategy Officer at the Northwest Seaport Alliance.
  • moderator: Kristi Heim
I very much enjoyed the candidness of their discussion. West Coast US relies on China and other east Asia trading partners. One of the risks predicted by Dong during the Q&am;A is the possibility of the current bird flu causing another COVID-like pandemic. Trump's leadership team is not prepared to handle. A disaster could ensuite.
This is my first time in Rainier Club. It has some art deco elements, nicely decorated, but not as oppulent as I expected. Much busier than I expected. A few events going on tonight.

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

2025.1.21. AWS re:Invent re:cap

1/21, Tuesday. I go to many tech events, including those organized by AWS User Group. This one is very good, worth a few lines. AWS re:Invent is a large tech annual conference by Amazon in December in Vegas. Always free online. This reminds me to watch some of those videos.

Darko Mesaros from AWS shared many of his highlights in a slide deck of almost 100.

Sunday, January 19, 2025

2025.1.18-19, snow camping next to Castle

A sunny but cold weekend.
1/18, Saturday. I walked almost 30 minutes to the I-5 exist at Columbia St for a pick-up at 6:15am, because, the driver is taking this exit in order to pick up another person in First Hill. She refused to walk less than 10 minutes to wait at the exit. We had to waste 10 minutes going through small streets looking for her building, and came back to I-5 for the same exit. This is not the first time. Seems many folks expect to be picked up from their home, and happily wasting others' time.

9 of us met at South Hill P&R in Puyallup. Then, we drove to a Starbuck's for coffee and bathroom (and wasting some more time). Chilly. Great sunrise on the way. Then we drove to Longmire for permit (in the museum building). That took awhile, due to 2 parties ahead of us. One more person joined us. She drove from Yakima.

Parked at Narada Falls, and walked down to see the falls. 10:45am already.

Continued onto Wonderland Trail towards Reflection Lake, where we had a long lunch break. Of the Chinese couple, the wife complained about frozen feet, lagging behind. The husband walked a heart shape on the lake for them to take photos when she arrived. The others were happily snapping pictures at the jays who were stealing food.

Finally we got going again. There are tracks to follow. This is a winter route going up the the saddle below Castle. More skiers than snowshoers. Good view once above the trees. Mount Rainier right behind us. At one point, there was a pink ribbon on a tree branch. There, I realized that I lost my phone. Immediately I went back down to look for it. All the way back to the lake. The people sitting where I was sitting said that they didn't see a phone. Despondant, I returned. There, at the junction to the road, I saw my phone. I caught up my group when this photo was taken.

At the saddle by Castle, the view is grand. When we all arrived, M.R. checked the route to Foss, and decided we'd set up camp here. It's a good call. I don't think the group is capable of moving further, especially with heavy pack. It was getting late, already ~3:30pm.

I quickly pitched my tent (away from others). Thankfully, not much wind, so I didn't need to stake it well. Packed spikes, emergency blanket, some food, water bottle (already ice inside) and the thermal bottle. Ice axe in hand, I headed down alone. Already past 4pm.

No more tracks. Some ski tracks here and there. Losing ~250' to Foss Lake. M.R. initially wanted to camp on the knoll north of this lake. I continued south of the lake.

Going up to Foss Peak requires ice axe now. There are 2 bumps a little too steep without it, especially near the summit. Snow wasn't hardened enough to support my weight, at least deep enough for the axe to get a hold. I had to take off snowshoes on my way down here, and put them back on later. Maybe I didn't choose the best route, no track to follow. Reached the summit just as the sun set. This summit is too small to setup camp. I didn't have time to explore, went back immmediately. Need clouds for a better sunset.

Back at camp, already dark. Finished setting up my tent with headlamp. Changed to clean clothes. My legs were cramping: didn't drink enough. Carried my bear can and foam mattress to the trench to cook dinner. Experimented with my new phone. It managed to catch some stars. The sky was brilliant. Some light pollution from NW and NE.

1st, down botties are cold walking on snow. I walked in my boots, and changed to down bootieds while sitting on my pad, when I can rest my feet on the pad.
2nd, hiking pants over wool base layer is not enough for this weather. I shall bring my down pants, or lay sleeping bag over my lap.
3rd, it takes forever to boil water.
I ate potato chips, roasted seaweed (for salt) and 2 bars while waiting for the water to boil. Once I got my 3/4 bottle of hot water, I had no desire sitting out in the cold to boil another cup for dinner. Went back to my tent, and crawled into my 0°F sleeping bag in all my clothes, top and bottom. With the closed tent door, and hot water bottle, I felt better soon. Tried to go to sleep shortly after 8pm.

1/19, Sunday. Got up ~3am, the half moon was so bright, that I didn't need a head lamp. Some clouds. Not any colder than dinner time. Up again ~5am, too bright.

Got out ~7:30am to wait for the sunrise. Went back into my tent to eat breakfast. Tried to cook snow, but I ran out of gas. Ate my frozen sandwich and 2 more bars. Stayed inside my sleeping bag, until the time to pack up.

I was ready ~9:30am when I went to the group. Only one person had tent down. Here's my happy group eating breakfast at their dugged seating.

Finally, everyone was ready, and we headed back to car, after a group photo. The husband and wife decided not to wear snowshoes. I gave my microspikes to the wife so she wasn't slipping. Then, we (except for the lady from Yakima) drove to Chili Thai in Puyallup (near the P&R) -- the 3rd choice of M.R.'s. The servie is good, but food no. Too much sugar and too much garlic. Seems they don't know how to make food tasty without being spicy. Mine has chicken, shrimp and tofu. The chicken is as tough as cardboard. 20% tip automatically added. The restaurant is clean and bright. My team member spent so much time sharing photos, that our lunch lasted over 2 hours. I got dropped off downtown ~5pm. Already getting dark. Walked a mile home.

Total, 7-8 miles RT, ~1700'. For Foss Peak, maybe 2 miles and 700' extra. Not much.

Lessons:
  • Need more fuel in freezing weather. Typical isobutane gas turns to liquid at −11.7°C (10.9°F), thus un-usable. Or use my "upside-down" stove.
  • Down booties are not good to walk on snow without a thick sole (cold below). Better bring 2 sturdy plastic bags to wrap over thicker socks, in boots.
  • Maybe pack a thin wind breaker for walking, and a shell for my legs when sitting at camp. I have this plastic rain pants over feet.
  • May need a 4-season tent if windy. Just ordered Air Rise 1 for the future windy/snowy outings.
  • Need a bit more salt in my water bottle.
  • Pack more salty snacks.
  • Will not bring the bear can next time as long as someone else in the group carries one (in cased checked by a ranger)
  • Even for backpacking trip, I shouldn't sign up for easy ones. These folks are nice, but more into getting their photos taken and socializing than hiking. Wasted a lot of time.
  • Avoid trips with lots of Chinese: no concept of privacy. They love to share their life stories, and want to know yours.
Gear required (+ my comment):
  • Avi gear — Transceiver (Required), Probe, and Shovel
  • Hard-sided bear-proof food container (required by the Park Services)
  • Snowshoes (Mountain terrain)
  • Trekking poles with 3” baskets (only good on powdery snow, less than 45° slope)
  • High gaiters
  • Headlamp & extra batteries
  • Full-length foam pad (also used outside of tent), along with air mattress (fold under butt and feet)
  • Puffy down jacket and layers
  • Fresh base layer for camp
  • 0–10°F sleeping system (M.R.'s thermometer says 14°F
  • Nalgene bottle (hot water bottle)
  • Stove & extra fuel (required)
  • Windproof shell (both top and bottom)
  • Mittens and Waterproof gloves
  • Snow tent pegs

Thursday, January 16, 2025

2025.1.16. Pico Iyer and David Guterson

1/16, Thurday, 7pm. Seattle Public Library and Elliot Bay Bookstore co-hosted this conversation of David Guterson and Pico Iyer, on Iyer's new book Aflame. These two appraised each other, and both seems to share an affinity to silence. Two very different person, one rooted in Seattle area for 3 generations, writes about PNW; the other known for travel writing, has 2 homes, neither near where he was born. I enjoyed their talk, and their pick of words. A little disappointed at how few came. The auditorium was ~1/4 full.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

2025.1.15. History Cafe at MOHAI

1/15 Wednesday. My first time coming to this history talk series on 3rd Wednesday evenings (except for December) at MOHAI. Will be back for more.

Tonight, Elke Hautala and Cari Simso from Invisible History used period photos and architectural drawings showcased the Seattle of early 1900s. Investigation of what happened to the 3,260 people buried at the Duwamish Cemetery (aka Seattle's Potter's Field) when it was erased in 1912 for the straightening of the Duwamish River: a crematorium was built, ashes were lost. Elke is an actress. They also recruited 2 members of the audience for an acting of a spirit sceance. Very well done.