- Utah: Drive all night, camp in a frigid parking lot, and wake to watch the sunrise at Bryce canyon's sunrise overlook.Cycle the scenic road in Zion national park.
- Nevada: Two days of good sport climbing in Red Rocks (lead my first 11d and a handful of other proud climbs), two rainy and windy off-days of absurdity in Las Vegas, two more days climbing. Wild-turkey + Soy Nog = yes.
- California: Drive all night to get to San Francisco for breakfast pastries at Tartine, followed by a walk on the pier, a great bloody mary at Zeitgeist, life-changing al pastor mission-style burrito, cask ales at Magnolia, and a good cup of joe. (Fantastic recommendations ala Ms. E and Mr. R).
- Oregon: Drive all night and some of the next day to get to Portland. Powells and Abyss at Deschutes. Voodoo doughnuts, Spella and Stumptown coffee, lunch at Jake's with Mom, beer at Katie-O's with Ryan, Sassy's, the Lucky Lab and Roots with James. Sleep in Laurelhurst park, take a run on the waterfront, skip town.
- Washington: Seattle. The Green Tortoise hostel. Fremont, the troll, a good sandwich with BYO baguette, copious amounts of free chocolate and strong belgian beers. Art park, bubble gum wall. More strong beers at Pike brewing and fancy food elsewhere. People getting married while I drink too much Maker's and pretend I can dance. A solid BBQ sandwich and a good cup of coffee.
Since returning, I've settled back into my life in Boulder. This semester, I'm teaching a class (CSCI4113 - Unix System Administration). It's the first class I've taught, so I'm excited about it and so far am enjoying it. Although, it is a tremendous amount of work. Meanwhile, I'm a teaching assistant for a second class and am trying to squeeze in research where I can. Right now, all my research cycles and then some are getting spent on a paper I'm helping Eric with. I'm unsure whether we'll make our deadline, but I think the results and contribution are exciting no matter where they end up. I just learned today that Eric and I got a paper into TridentCom 2010. Still waiting to hear about a handful of other papers in submission. My own research is partly blocked on fellowship and grant applications, but I'm chipping away at it anyhow.
A piece of on-the-side research I did that involves using chaotic mathematics to assist in setting climbing routes has found it's way into this month's Climbing Magazine (no. 282), which is quite exciting. I've also published a tech. report about that work and have developed a website around it. I'm not sure what will become of it, but I'm pretty stoked on writing an article for Climbing, no matter how esoteric the subject.
In the month or two prior to leaving for Nevada, I dedicated myself to training, focused on climbing hard in Red Rocks. I've cut a fair amount of weight (down to 150 and change), am running my fastest (beat my PR for 5K in the Colder Bolder by almost 2 minutes), climbing my hardest, cycling my furthest (60 miles per week when the weather cooperates), and fighting my strongest (rolling jiu-jitsu when I can). I was pretty happy with my performance in Red Rocks. I had wanted to lead (however dirty) a 12a. I didn't do that, but I made a solid (if freaked out) lead of a 11d. The 12s will come. The busyness of the new semester has cut into my training regimen some, but I'm still training as much as possible when I have free time. Trying to get folks together for impromptu jiu-jitsu sessions, started playing on an intramural basketball team, climbing, running, and cycling periodically. My next training goal will probably be a trip to Shelf Road in the spring.



