This blog records various activities that my wife and I enjoy within one day's drive of our cabin on Lake Norfork in the Arkansas Ozarks. Of course, many of these activities take place right on the lake outside our window, so the earliest entry begins with a little factual information (culled from various web sites) about the lake and its history.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
2008 re-cap & Penny Wood Stove
January 1, 2009
New Year's Day -- a time to look backwards and forwards. In terms of adventures I had hoped to bike 5,000 miles, to do 60 consecutive push-ups, to remaster my trick-skiing routine, to re-explore the waterfalls in the Ozark National Forest, and to pursue countless other adventures.
Well, the water skiing and the waterfalls were stymied by the vagaries of the weather -- including the hundred-year flood of Norfork Lake which made it difficult to put our ski boat in the water. Waterfall hunting should have been great in last year's record spring rains, but I happened to be either in Jonesboro or on the Buffalo River during the opportune moments.
Sue and I did fulfill a number of other adventures. We floated the Norfork River and Bryant's Creek. I rode the MS150 at Petit Jean. My brother Page and I floated the upper 45-miles of the Buffalo River over four days--surviving a flash flood that engulfed our campsite and raise the river by over four feet! And we enjoyed a number of other short and long trips, but I didn't quite achieve my major goals.
Instead of biking 5,000 miles, a cold and rainy December limited me to 4,743. So I came up short, but I did reach 94.9% of my goal, which merits an A in my book! Similarly, the best I could do was 54 consecutive push-ups, but that is also at the 90% level--not too shabby, especially since I am continuing to make progress, having increased my five-set routine to a total of 225 push-ups.
Most recently, I am looking forward to some spring camping trips (river floats or waterfall quests). To that end, yesterday I built a new "Penny Wood Stove" for overnight camping. Penny stoves or Pepsi stoves are the standard in light-weight camping, burning 91% alcohol or "Yellow Heet." Their advantages are small size, light weight, and cheap, readily available fuel. Great as they are, though, the "Penny Wood Stove" might be better. I built mine out of a metal coffee tin, cut down so that it could be stored inside my cooking pot. A single load of broken-up pencil-thick sticks will burn for over fifteen minutes and boil a cup of water in under six minutes. One can easily boil two cups of water for a rice dish in a single load of wood, and the stove can be replenished as it burns to keep the final dish simmering. . . . Perfect! Furthermore, in dry weather the fuel is free, and the stove is nearly as light as a Pepsi stove. The pot supports (made out of 4/0-guage electrical copper wire) double as tent stakes. They were easily bent into the requisite shapes with pliers and vice-grips.
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