Friday, January 24, 2020

15th Anniversary of My Near Death Experience

Every day is a bonus day for me since January of 2005, the day I committed one of the most egregious judgment errors of my life, one which nearly ended my life. I was visiting and photographing the site of my new townhome under construction, something I had also done throughout the construction of my first two homes. It was just after work hours and I was taking photos of the first floor studding, ever so careful realizing full well that I was trespassing and that I was alone, but curious as to progress of my retirement home and desirous of documenting the construction with photos -- photos which in my prior homes I often referred to when hanging shelves, tracing electric and plumbing runs, etc.



The air was nippy in the upper 20s and snow adorned the ground. Dusk would soon fall. I arrived after workmen had left for the day, and realizing full well that I was alone, I was being very cautious, for work sites have boards and nails and the like strewn about, a veritable obstacle course fraught with danger. I had walked the wood decking the day before, and today I was checking the craftsmanship of the studding and window openings erected that day.




After taking a few photos, I headed back to my car, but then returned to see if the sump pump hole in the basement was in the proper location. In the model home, the plumbers had put it on the wrong side of the basement. I had pointed out the error to the construction superintendent, Jon, and he had assured me it would be placed correctly in my unit, an important issue since I wanted the sump pump to be in the workshop, not the family room, when I finished the basement. So I cautiously ventured to the edge of the flooring near the cinder block common wall (on the left in photo above) where I could extend the camera through an opening in the floor to take basement photos.

And that’s all I can recall for over 24 hours.

My sons went to the accident site the next day at the behest of the police to retrieve my blood-spattered vehicle. They talked to the responding officer, retrieved my camera, and talked to the construction boss. Scott, a licensed architect, snuck into the basement and took photos of it and the first floor in an attempt to reconstruct what had occurred. We also got a copy of the police report to assist in determining the sequence of events. Using my photos and those taken by Scott, along with the police report, we later reconstructed the missing hours for my memory.

There were no stairs into the basement yet because the concrete basement floor had not been poured due to several inches of ice accumulation. On the first floor, the plywood covering the basement stairway opening was only loosely-placed plywood, not the secure solid wood I'd walked on the day before. No guard rails blocked access to the loose plywood. Three 2x4s were standing diagonally on the loose plywood floor and leaning against the cinder block common wall, giving the appearance of a secure floor. A comparison with Scott’s photos from the next day showed the loose plywood and the 2x4s down in the basement (photo below), so I obviously stepped or fell onto the loose plywood thinking it was secure and went down with them, nine feet to the ice floor. My cap and blood are also seen below...




The photo below, taken by my son the day after my fall, clearly shows that the builder had belatedly installed OSHA-mandated guard rails around the three sides of the basement opening and had even spray painted these guard rails orange to make them more visible (they are missing in the photo 2 photos above.). “No trespassing” signs had also been posted outside the garage. In the photo below, you can see the opening on the far right where the loose plywood flooring took me downstairs.




The photo below was also taken by my son and shows the 2 pieces of the plywood flooring that took me down when they fell, as well as the 2x4s that had been leaning vertically on the plywood pieces.





I was probably briefly unconscious from the fall. My head was profusely bleeding from a foot-long cut from the metal straps in the concrete wall. I somehow managed to crawl to the back window, climbed out, made my way alongside the building back to my car, turned it around, and drove two blocks to the corner, but could go no farther. A grandmother awaiting the school bus bringing her grandson home saw me bleeding and flagged another driver who had a cell phone. He called 911, the paramedics declared me a “Trauma 1” case, summoned the Flight-for-Life helicopter, and I was flown to Lutheran General Hospital where nearly three dozen stitches were administered. I have a vague memory of someone in the ER asking, "How am I supposed to stitch this laceration up?"



A CAT scan was taken and it was determined that I had cracked three vertebrae (C1, C2, and C5), so they planned surgery the next day to remove bone chips, but an MRI the next day revealed surgery was unnecessary, though I had to wear a neck brace constantly for three months.

For months, I had numbness along the head laceration due to severed nerves. Apparently I landed on my right side since my right elbow, hand, and shoulder were painful to move and my neck had some loss of mobility. Fifteen years later now, I still have no memory of the fall, of my self-rescue from the basement, or of driving my vehicle for help. I have no memory of talking to the police, of the paramedics arrival, or of my Flight-for-Life helicopter ride to the emergency room. I have only snatches of memory of being in the ER and snippets of the first day in Surgery Intensive Care Unit. But other than some reduction in neck range-of-motion, all has healed.

I have a disdain for the way Americans so readily file lawsuits, even when they are at fault for their own injuries. Examples of this abound in the news and such lack of personal responsibility is abhorrent to me. I realize I should not have been at the site unescorted and that it is a poor excuse to claim that “everyone does it” -- though many new homeowners do make unauthorized visits to their future homes. So despite my lawyer and others encouraging me to sue the builder because he hadn’t abided by OSHA safety rules, I refused to sue. Quite simply -- if I hadn’t been trespassing, I wouldn’t have fallen.

Two months after moving in, I began finishing the basement into several rooms, using that immense project as “therapy” for my body and my mind. I did all the carpentry, electric wiring, wall-boarding, painting, and trim work myself -- albeit slowly and for short stretches of time. I was still wearing the neck brace those first few weeks of construction and needed naps after only a few hours of labor. As the summer progressed, the brace was unnecessary and I took fewer and fewer naps and worked longer hours in the basement, and by October the project was done. Here's part of the finished basement...



That summer, my rehabbing of the basement had likewise rehabbed myself, and I felt strong enough to embark on a five week Fall trip to New England where I participated in a volunteer trail project and two Elderhostel programs -- one biking and one biking, hiking, and kayaking. That was when I truly knew I was fully healed.

But I feel eminently blessed. I am alive and fully mobile. Realizations of what “might have been” rush through my mind on occasion and I cherish what God had done for me in sparing my life and mobility. To this day, my bedtime prayers still begin with, “Thank you, God, for another bonus day of life!” for that is how I feel. Every new day is an extra day granted to me, so I endeavor to make the most of each. My good pal Greg, a guide in Florida, always introduces me to new folks with these words: “Here’s Chuck, who does more in one year than most people do in their lifetime!” May it be so for years to come!

This lifestory is truly a LIFE story, and for the record, I now use the stairs when I descend into the basement!

Saturday, January 18, 2020

24th Anniversary of My Website

Twenty-four years ago (January of 1996) I began a website called Chuck's Backpacking Bonanza which documented with photos and information my 60+ backpacking adventures across the country. There were very few Internet gateways to such information back then (no Google yet either!) and my site became one of the go-to tools for such information. I regularly got questions about where and how to backpack and answered every question. For those who recall, uploading photos and webpages back then was slow and arduous and done by slow telephone modem. What takes seconds now took minutes back then and the resolution of the photos was poor.

As the years progressed and technology improved, I added my biking, rafting, kayaking, and canoeing adventures to the site and changed the name to Bike, Hike, and Paddle which now serves as the index for my Chuck's Adventures site. Together the two sites have had over 610,000 visits and contain over fifteen thousand photos. Then a decade ago I began making videos of my adventures, and my YouTube channel has over 150 movies with over 500,000 views. It's rewarding to share my outdoor adventures with so many people! Enjoy!

Saturday, January 11, 2020

White Sands National Park





White Sands National Park, our 62nd and newest national park as of December, 2019, is located in New Mexico at an elevation of 4,235 feet. It comprises the southern part of a 275 square mile field of white sand dunes crystals (calcium sulfate) located in this, the northernmost portion of the Chihuahuan Desert. It represents the largest such field of gypsum on Earth and includes gypsum hearthmounds found nowhere else, and the park preserves a major portion of this unique dune field along with the indigenous flora and fauna living there.




The idea of creating a national park to protect the white sands formation dates to 1898, but it wasn't until January 18, 1933, that President Herbert Hoover, using the 1906 Antiquities Act, authorized White Sands National Monument "to preserve the white sands and additional features of scenic, scientific, and educational interest."

The monument is completely surrounded by military installations and has always had an uneasy relationship with the military due to "misguided" missiles falling on the park and at times destroying visitor areas. Unfortunately, planes still destroy the serenity of the park at times, and the proximity of these military installations are also the reason why it hasn't been named a World Heritage Site. The bases sometimes close the park due to missile tests, so visitors are encouraged to check before heading to the park. 






Footprints of humans and ground sloths dating to the last ice age show that ground sloths lived at White Sands and were hunted by humans at least 11,700 years ago. The park is home to the Earth's largest collection of Ice Age fossilized footprints. White Sands is a living laboratory with new discoveries constantly being made. In fact, park rangers are virtually teachers who invite classrooms of students to come learn about the park and offer materials and lesson plans for teachers to use. 

Gypsum is rarely found as sand because it dissolves in contact with water, but the isolation of the area and the weather patterns of the Tularosa Basin create a unique experience here. The sand is extremely soft and can break down easily, and since the grains reflect light rather than allowing it to pass through, visitors enjoy its snowy appearance. The park considers this to be a "wet environment" with its 100% humidity. The shallow water table beneath the dunes acts like a glue that holds the dunes in place.


With about 600,000 visitors annually (comparably sized Zion National Park receives 4.3 million), White Sands is among the wildest and most pristine national parks. It offers no RV parks, campgrounds, or formal accommodations, although limited backcountry camping is allowed at designated sites in the heart of the dunes and a picnic area is available. In 2017, it spurred more than $31 million in local spending.




Reaching the sites requires a mile-long trek from the only road that runs through the park. 



Visitors can hike trails that range from easy to extremely difficult and they can also attend ranger-led programs. You can even sled down the dunes in certain areas.




In the summer, temperatures drop to the 60s at night and can exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit during the day. In the winter, the mercury only ranges between 30 and 60 degrees. Constantly blowing dust and sand create frequent white-out conditions and the wind can erase hikers’ footsteps in a matter of minutes. The winds also can cause the dunes to "travel" 12 to 13 feet per year.  Also be aware that GPS signals are sometimes unreliable.

Contact the park:

Mailing Address:

PO Box 1086 
Holloman AFBNM 88330 

Phone:


(575) 479-6124



Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Nathanael James

Nathanael James Morlock
   December 31, 2006




God opened the door
and I glimpsed us traipsing forested paths,
your tiny hand clutching mine,
eyes atwinkle and joyous smile 
radiating off trees and illuminating clouds,
as robins serenaded us in blazing sunlight
and owls scolded by crackling campfire light.
What joy I envisioned us sharing!

Then He closed the door
and the embers’ glow ceased,
extinguished by the ocean of tears
dissolving my dream.
The songbirds fell silent
and dark sorrow engulfed me, 
exiling all joy.
For your tiny perfect fingers
would never clasp mine, 
and your shining eyes 
and beaming smile
would never dispel the harsh darkness.

I now wander this darker, quieter earth
saddened and confused,
but certain through faith
that you are not lost
but surrounded by joy 
we do not yet comprehend
but will one day share with you 

for eternity.