The Itinerate Mommy-- yes, I can read

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Judd's, Mine and Ours - Fishing the Elk*

(*reference to blog post from 10/5/17 "They didn't call it "Catching the Rogue.")

  We decided to get use out of our fishing license before the end of 2017 so booked a second trip with Charlie from the outfit he and his wife Rochelle run:  Fishing the Rogue.
You'll recall from the October trip that we didn't catch anything on the Rogue.  But November is a good time for salmon nearer the coast, so we booked a hotel and made the arduous-over-the-mountains-in-the-dark trip Friday night after work.  We keep arriving in these scenic villages in the dark and then get to wake up to views and vistas.  We stayed in Bandon (where we have lunched before) but headed south Saturday morning to meet up with our guide in Port Orford (about 30 minutes south.)  SIDE NOTE:  Judd reminds me that when we wanted cedar siding for the house we built in Maine, the siding was Port Orford cedar.
Small world.

  About 3 other float boat guides were meeting up with their clients in the same Ray's shopping center parking lot.  Turns out the recent rains have made the nearby rivers too full to fish efficiently and this particular Saturday was going to be the best conditions of the Thanksgiving weekend. The water level had dropped 3 feet in the last couple days which is better for catching fish. Another guide, Mike,  checked out our license plate and was happy to see Oregon.  (Judd's car--finally the right license plate.  I wonder what they think when they see my Maine plates.) 

 We (i.e. actually Charlie and Rochelle) put the boat in by a hatchery on the Elk River......by headlamp in the pitch black of pre-dawn, their little Chihuahua Button standing guard on the console between the front seats.  We had to wait in line as there already were other fishing boats ahead and way behind us.  Being the best day of the weekend and the best river conditions around, everyone and their outta- town-company were on the Elk. It was slated to rain all day and we were ready for it, but happily it only showered a little mid-morning and it was just warm and overcast the rest of the day. The boat is decked out with a propane heater under the foc'sc'le if that's what it's called. (Look THAT up in your Funk and Wagnall's.)   Any way, just to the right of my coffee holder there's a slit under that front deck. The slit is just big enough for a boxed pizza, thus the name "pizza oven."  It's located just above that propane heater and, better than pizza, it's keeps your "Danish Kringles"  from Trader Joe or "ham and cheese sandwiches" warm until about Elevensies when you need a snack. 

 Judd and I reclined in the dry, cushioned, swivel seats and Charlie sat behind us doing all the dirty work.  We cruised down the Elk using headlamps the first hour but enjoying the sunrise and the wildlife. Charlie changed out our rod with either massive lures the size of your hand, or bait (eggs and tuna) and  he knows which holes the salmon run which way and which method to use.  Mike in the parking lot had called him "the fish whisperer" so we were confident we had the right guide. 



SIDE NOTE:
What I called red fire balls in the last blog looked like what I used to fish with in my childhood:  plastic jars of individual red eggs, actually called Balls of Fire.  Turns out Charlie harvests the fresheggs from whatever we catch and seasons them with soda or sugar to get them to congeal together.  He scoops them up into rectangular hunks and hangs them with a sand shrimp when we bob.


from Pautzke.com

 Dragging lures seems slightly less virtuous to me than back bouncing although I see that experience sure makes a difference knowing when to use a lure and when to bounce with bait. The bouncing requires a technique (i.e. practice) where you let your the weight on your line fall to the bottom and then gently tap before lifting and getting it to tap the bottom again. Of course the bottom varies between  3 feet deep and 8-10? feet  and the current varies with how much line comes out so Charlie would have us bring in our hooks and change out the weights depending on on the current. Sometimes it was hard to tell if you hit bottom or were just dragging along, but Charlie from the back seat could tell by how slack our line was.  He expertly told you to reel it in or to let out more line. Judd and I got mediocre enough to notice when the bottom was sandy or when it was rocky and we got better at knowing that we needed to let out more line or reel in for less.  (At least we thought we got better and Charlie is the ultimate polite teacher and gives feedback to encourage you to succeed and never looked disgusted with us.)

And succeed we did!!!  Early out, at the Seven Mile hole, Judd, back bouncing along sporting his plaid fedora,  snagged the first one: a female from the hatchery, noted by the tag. She was 34" and estimated at close to 20 pounds. I haven't seen Judd grin so big since his first baby was born. We hopscotched with many boats--they'd pass us, we'd pass them all morning long.  Not many boats were having luck.  We passed a couple people on the shore, also not having much luck. Near the end of the day, we found a spot where Charlie had us try the bobber technique.  He backed the boat up onto the edge of a hole and planned how deep the bait would sink below the bobber.  When Judd's line would float too far right toward me, I'd hand off my closer bobber line to him and he's reach over so I could follow the bobber in a carefully orchestrated circle around the eddy.  Charlie knew just when to tell us to hand off. Both lines kept getting stuck on the bottom and we were instructed that if your bobber disappeared you should reel, reel, reel real hard to set the hook.  We kept setting it but kept turning out to be the bottom.  Boat after boat after boat went by--more boats than we had originally been hopscotching all morning.  All were getting done for the day and heading to the output. Suddenly, one of the hooks "stuck on the bottom" turned out to be a fish on the line.  Charlie demanded hand it over.  Judd and I both thought he was going to reel in the big one, but there I was with the rod in my hand reel, reel, reeling. Something big kept pulling the line out and I thought it was getting way or would snap the line.  Charlie told me when to keep reeling and when to let the fish run.  I couldn't believe how heavy it was or how many times I had to reel it back in. I thought my hands would give out. I imagined The Old Man and the Sea. I thought, "I'm going to be really annoyed if I have to give this back to Judd or Charlie to bring in."  But then, I brought it in.  Charlie pulled out the biggest fishing net you ever saw and scooped up the wild salmon buck.  It still had sea lice on it (which can't live more than 24 hours in the fresh water river, so Charlie surmised it must have come from the ocean in the last day. ) That's fresh fish!

 Rochelle picked us up and portaged us back to the Ray's supermarket parking lot.  Charlie had done all the gutting, cleaning, bagging of our salmon steaks. We cleverly brought an ice chest with us to store the booty. A good time was had by all (except several of those other boats who didn't catch any.)  We highly recommend Fishing the Rogue to anyone who wants to catch fish in southern Oregon.  A fabulous business run by fabulous people.  Thanks Charlie and Rochelle (Rochelle not pictured.)

Must be, true because Judd NEVER puts stickers on his car yet he did for this one:

www.fishingtherogue.com/



WILDLIFE -- several snowy egrets and, yes, a cow crossing....



Beach View in BANDON:


Thursday, November 23, 2017

Last day of "Fall" and red is the new orange

Even though winter doesn't really start for a month, this is the last day (Thanksgiving) that I count Fall. I can no longer abide the orange theme. Tomorrow we start red and green. That means the gourds gotta go. Pumpkin themed seeds, chips, pancakes gotta go. The sunsets at the coast last weekend totally have to go. Even that double rainbow on the way to work yesterday looks kind of orangesque. Sure, we'll have some pie left-overs for a day or two, but then we're on to Christmas cheer.

Judd had most of yesterday off and started pre-cooking our usual Thanksgiving fare:  pearled onions, mashed potatoes, squash, stuffing, cranberry relish.  This morning after my pies came out of the oven (only 2 this year as we are kid-less:  pumpkin and apple) Judd put a turkey in. It was unseasonably warm outside (low 60s) so we went for a walk despite the 40 % chance of rain.  It did shower on us but it was warm enough we didn't care.  By accident, we found a new forest-

marked trail on the other side of town. Southern Oregon is home to a rare species of lily and this is where it lives!  (We didn't see any on this forest walk, but we saw more exotic madrone trees (where the bark falls off.) There are SO MANY trees with big round orbs of something growing in them-- parasitic aliens?  mistletoe?  We don't know yet.

(The tree movie is left-over from the Redwood forest.  It took a long time to walk around one tree.)



are those mistletoe balls in all the trees?





Sunday, November 19, 2017

Three shows in 3 days



 
View of Mt Mcloughlin as I depart the VA parking lot Fri pm 11/10/17


Last weekend when we decided to stay around town, we shopped for "things to do" around here.  Friday night the local Jacksonville theater troupe was doing a live show called Disney Musicals Mad-Libs. For $12 each, including free before the show food, we fell for it. We're total suckers for Disney musicals. We walked in the drizzle about the 4 blocks to the theater which doubles as Calvary Church.  We knew our way around (i.e. where the bathrooms were and where the food room was) as this is where the Chamber of Commerce had us meet up to dress/ get instructions for the Haunted Trolley Tours. Actors worked the audience before the show, asking for nouns and adjectives.   They didn't even have to say "kid-appropriate" nouns and adjectives.  The show then consisted of the actors singing/acting out some favorite Disney tunes with our mad-lib contributions embedded in the songs. It was a little bit improv as, at times, the audience could pick which actor they wanted to perform which number.  Of course a sing-along was included at the end.  I got every performer to sign my playbill. It was a cute evening and we walked home via the J'Ville Tavern, home of the  "Husband Day Care" sign.


Saturday we pondered going to the new Murder on the Orient Express in a local cinema but instead opted for renting the middle ages version (1974) Murder on the Orient Express on Netflix. (Albert Finney, Sean Connery, Lauren Bacall, etc.) There's an even older one (1934)  but we'll save it for a cold winter's night.


Don't forget:  Ginger Rogers "had to do everything Fred Astaire did but backwards and in heels"
On Sunday afternoon, after leftovers from our chef-off food weekend, we attended the Medford Symphony at the Ginger Rogers theater. We had tickets for the 2nd row from the front but that meant we saw the conductor and the first violinist real well, but had no view of the percussionists at all. **NOTE TO SELF**  next time sit further back. The pre-show wine was pretty bad but the half-time cheese- tasting-because-it-was-the-50th-anniversary-was epic. We thought it was adorable that there is designated walker-parking for all the grey-hairs who roll down to their seats, but can't leave the walkers in the aisle.





And what the what is this?  I get a message that someone has commented on my blog post called "Cheese, Please."  When I translate the Arabic comment, this is what it says:


Sunday, November 12, 2017

Cheese, please!

Day TWO of the long weekend

Happy Veterans' Day!

Jacksonville flags the shops for Veterans/ Day

After morning coffee and blogging and internet researching next weekend's fun and games, I dropped Judd at his school for his prep work. Someone loaned him a power saw and he was pre cutting 8 foot boards so the students would only have to hand saw two cuts for their project. I went off to the Medford Veterans' Day parade to walk behind the VA banner with colleagues.  I parked on the street at the very end of the parade route and then  walked up the main street to the park where the parade was setting up.  I hiked past volunteers in vests or cops at every corner along the site as they readied for stopping traffic.  I actually passed 2-3 people per block who looked like they intended on watching the parade, either sitting on the curb or setting up a lawn chair. 

When I got to the park, I passed everyone already lined up: fire trucks, police, cars, fancy cars, ugly cars (all with engines idling.)  Then the  Scouts, various troops of Girls and Boys, with various means of transport including floats and horses.  And then the Veterans-- in all era uniforms as far back as doughboys, in cars, in jeeps, on foot, on motorcycles. I got the 1/4 mile to the end and had not seen one VA colleague. So I called my boss, the Chief of Staff and found him, then 2-6 more VA employees. We walked back up the line until we did find the VA banner and friends, just as the parade was departing. It turned out to be a very well attended event, with both sides of the streets lined with viewers all the way to the end. I even recognized a couple of people in the audience:  a couple of VA employees and a couple of Vets I've taken care of at the hospital. The worst thing I could say about it was walking in the exhaust but, as they say in Young Frankenstein, "it could be worse--it could be raining."  We had a sunny fall day.


I went back to help Judd saw wood and put up posters in his classroom and then Day TWO of the Chef off began.  We needed to stop at the store just one more time as, in yesterday's fooding frenzy, he forgot to buy his main course.  Judd developed his menus as he went.  He is really the master improviser. He substitutes easily if a core ingredient is too expensive or not available. He admitted to mixing up his two menus for a little while.  He incorporated the secret ingredient I game him, a vat of Pub Cheese, brilliantly into his had whipped salad dressing. And since we had no theater to get to, we planned a later dinner, so he was out with his headlamp, grilling cod in the dark. The menu was seared cod with spicy lentils, kale and hand crafted salsa verde; roasted carrots with smoked paprika; shaved brussels sprout salad with toasted hazelnuts and hand whipped pub cheese dressing. Very savory and much more virtuous ingredients than I prepared.  I had just explained the glycemic index to Judd and that we were going to start eating fewer white foods.  Then I brought home white rice and cream for my recipe. We gave up the "keep track of calories or carbs or cost" for the contest. Too labor intensive and totally diminishes the taste of the food.



After being used to stocking our pantry in Maine so we could feed kids or entertain neighbors at the drop of a sombrero, we've been so diligent each week here to shop only for two of us, only for the week of dinners and lunches so we wouldn't waste food.  Now we're going into the week with 8 home made frozen gourmet dinners. We will eat like royalty! AND:







Left over ingredients:  
double bunches of cilantro
most of a bunch each of parsley, and kale, and spinach, and red cabbage
half a stalk of brussels sprouts
1/2 bag each of lentils and green split peas
3/4 each of a red onion, yellow onion, shallot, 4 green onions
cheeses including: gouda, parmesan, blue and Oregon cheddar, oh, and pub
jars of garam masala, cardamon, cayenne, red pepper flakes, paprika (and although both           our recipes called for saffron neither of us could splurge for that)
7 of 8 ounces of heavy organic cream
9/10th of a box of vegetable stock 
and
11/12th of a jar of capers

It sounds like a Christmas song.



Stolen off the internet




  

Saturday, November 11, 2017

The Lady or the Tiger?

Day ONE of the Chef OFF!

Oh my word!  Is this just a Medford Oregon thing?  Veterans' Day FRIDAY was thee most crowded affair I've seen.  Is it pre-black FRiday or something?  We went to do some shopping chores for Judd's latest school project which required us visiting, possibly in the correct order: a Goodwill-esque Catholic thrift store, a Walmart, Fred-Meyer (a triple Target-size department-everything-store-chain), a Dollar Tree, Bi-Mart (Sam's club-look alike with a free membership and key chain ID), Trader Joe's and then, our usual grocery store, Albertsons.  EVERY PARKING LOT HAD A WAITING LINE/TRAFFIC JAM.   It took us hours to amass Judd's equipment:  8 non-LED flashlights; a dozen glass jars with lids but without Ball-jar etchings so light could pierce them; colored cellophane or plastic for which light could pierce the bottles of various liquids; nails;  sand paper (to build "light boxes" from the 8 foot boards he bought last weekend with the 5 hammers,  5 saws, tape measures.......Plus, we had to Chef-OFF food shop.   I was starting to feel time pressured about cooking my meal with only 2 hours prep time before the show.  (more later on that) We made it home by 2:45 so I could soak my split peas for 30 min and start cooking.

Since we'd missed lunch, I said I'd make my appetizer dish fast and we could eat it before I finished cooking the rest.Judd then delivered by secret ingredient:  fresh Oregon pears.

Dang!

When we had planned the challenge the night before, we talked about whether someone would give an awful/challenging secret ingredient to thwart the opposite chef or if it would be like "The Lady or the Tiger."  We sort of had to look up how that was an analogy as I recalled most of the punch line from my 8th grade English Mr. Limoli training but not all of it.***

http://www.eastoftheweb.com/short-stories/UBooks/LadyTige.shtml

I guess my point was, if I really loved Judd, would I give Judd the pub cheese or the sauerkraut to incorporate into his gourmet menu?  Would Judd give me Oregonian pears or BBQ sauce????  And there was mention of anchovies... we'll see.

***I just googled Mr. Limoli and he still lives in San Diego at 82yo.  I'm gonna find out how to write him a thank you note!!!



 My Menu for Judd-- an Indian theme

Appetizer: 
 Parmesean/Panko encrusted cauliflower with
  Pan-seared cherry tomatoes

Main course:
  Shrimp biryani w/basmati rice
  Saag paneer (a spicy spinach/cheese dish)
  Dal (a spicy split pea/ tomato dish)
  Raita (plated with sliced Oregonian pears!)
    (a cool cucumber/yogurt side dish)

Exotic marigolds as table decoration-- every dish in the house dirtified.

Namaste!




Thursday, November 9, 2017

Change of Change of Plans

Initial plan:

 Thur pm - drive to Eugene, find a cheap hotel
 Fri - drive to the coast and stay at Lincoln City, look for:  http://www.oregoncoast.org/glass-floats/
which I still want to do at some point.   But the 10 days of rain forecast discouraged us
 
Plan B:  drive to the further -outh coast:  Gold Beach -- get our fishing guide to boat us up the source of the Rogue and catch some mammoth steelhead trout.  But he is sold out for the long weekend.  
SO:

New plan C: 

Thur pm - dinner in  J' ville, place TBD

 Friday  am " grocery shopping"
We decided to do an Iron Chef weekend.  I will cook a  3 course meal for Judd on Friday and he will cook a 3 course meal for me on Saturday.  We will spend not more than $50 on ingredients which will include a  "secret ingredient" that the other chef will have to incorporate into the meal plan. The secret ingredient will not be revealed until the opposite chef is done shopping.


  3-5- dinner prep by JT
   5pm dinner challenge
7pm Mad Libs at J'ville Randall Theater  http://jacksonvilleoregon.com/randal-theatres-macap-musical/
Sat 11am PARADE for Vet's Day in Medford , walking with the VA contingency
      12+  BBQ
    1:50  MOVIE:  Murder on the Orient Express

5-7 dinner prep by MT
7PM  dinner challenge

SUN am:  laundry/vacuum/shopping/homework  (usual weekend chores)
        3pm:  Medford Symphony at Crater-Ginger Rogers theater
https://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/craterian_ginger_rogers_theater/#.WgUoyBNSyT8


That's the weekend plan thus far.  Thursday turned out according to schedule:  we walked 3 blocks to Jacksonville center and had dinner at Las Palmas.  Once again, a great family run Mexican fare, with servings so big, you know you're having it for lunch tomorrow.  Two medium margaritas (each) is making it pretty mellow for menu planning.  Tomorrow, we're to town to shop for the chef off.





Tuesday, November 7, 2017

trees are old souls

After the late camp arrival, we slept in Saturday and decided not to cook all our eggs and bacon.  We went back to the Cafe in Hiouchi to thank Dave the owner. The menu included mostly 6 egg omelets. SIX EGGS.  You 'could' request a half order.  YES, a three egg omelet, which I did.  I still ended up taking half my Spanish omelet home for second breakfasties.  Sensible Judd just ordered 2 eggs and some Polish sausage. He finished his off fine.  We did take all the rye toast we couldn't eat after eating all the hash browns.  The bread ended up under brie for our happy hour. 

We enjoyed a splendidly sunny day for driving to the coastal parts of the park, hiking the coast all by ourselves, no other hikers, to Hidden Beach for a lunch picnic and then driving back through the forest to the Stout Grove in the daylight: a different kind of magical.  We just kept pulling over, gawking and saying, "WoW!" to each other.  Here are a few of the pics we took:
That Hollow Log could engulf a car

s

Clyde, the hats and "sea stacks" in the background

Turns out Redwoods aren't even the biggest--we have to get down to the Sequoias!!

Monday, November 6, 2017

...GPS failure?

We departed Friday night after work for a 2 hour trip that turned into a  4 hour trip. Damn GPS.  No matter how many times we put Jedidiah Smith State Park into mapquest we got the same directions, right until we lost signal and were winging it on our own. We drove through the dark rain and LOTS of "slow to 30mph" or ARROW< ARROW<ARROW signs around bends.  We even remarked that the arrows in California are quite large.  It would not be until departing Sunday in the daylight we actually saw what dangerous curves we were traversing.
 When we did reach a sign that said "Jedidiah Smith State Park," it was 9:30 pm so we were worrying it would be beyond check in time at the Ranger Kiosk for cabins. A sign just inside the open gate warned RVs and Campers were not advised on the park road. We followed signage, pretty scant at that the 6.3 miles to Stout Grove. It turned out to be indescribably magical.  The rain had stopped and we caught glimpses of the full moon in between gaps in the forest canopy. The road narrowed to about 3 inches on either side of the car with switchbacks in between colossal pillars of tree trunks, some the size of a truck at the base. When there were no cabins at Stout Grove, and still no cell service, it got less enchanting.  We took a camp road on the other side of the grove until it started to look like we were back in a neighborhood and then we knew we were lost again. 

        At 10:00 we were grumpy enough to say screw it, let's go to Crescent City and get a hotel. On the way, we passed a tinier town Hiouchi and stopped at their hotel which had VACANCY lit up in neon.  The owner Dave was a chatty friendly guy and told us we were literally 3/4 mile away from the cabins.  He gave us a map and directions and we arrived at the park with a big sign, a ranger kiosk and a welcoming envelope with our name printed on it. We realized, we had driven right by it about 1.5 hours ago.  How did we miss it? The cabin looked brand new--not a spider web or dust bunny anywhere. It even had an electric fire place, although it really wasn't meant to put out much heat, but the ambiance was inspiring.  Another little surprise: six clean bunks, but not a mattress in sight.  (The directions had said to bring sleeping bags and a mattress pad if you wanted.  I had assured Judd that must mean they had mattresses and if we didn't want to sleep on their plastic liners, we could bring a pad.)  So, after cocktails in front of the roaring fire, we slept on the sleeping bags as our cushion with another sleeping bag on top.  We were warm but not comfortable, but ready for adventure.