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gertlush

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Posts posted by gertlush

  1. I shall singlehandedly revive spray... or I'll revive something singlehandedly anyway... :o

     

    Personally I like either strain in a pure variety, it's those crosses I can't stand, I get the classic "omg i'm having a heart attack" symptoms.

     

    But... on a desert island... I'll have to take a fat sack of sativa. Goddamn I'd have the neatest, tidiest island in the eastern hemisphere.

     

    Yes, I've been drinking.

     

    Why else would you come to Cascadeclimbers? :rawk:

  2. Jesus Christ, spray had 1 new topic in May, oh Cascadeclimbers I mourn ye....

     

    No Van Halen or other faggy bands to be nominated..

     

    I propose:

     

    Bolt Thrower

    Killing Joke (not quite "metal" but fuck it)

    Fear Factory

     

    Proceed...

     

     

    • Rawk on! 1
  3. Huh, that's some cool shit, my former employer sold power to Hydro so it sparked my interest in the big picture of how it all ties together. And sometimes we did get paid to turn it off because the dams were full. Also been reading Daniel Yergin's 'The Quest' which touches on this stuff.

     

    Back to spray...

     

     

  4. Professor Google has not given me a clear answer so I thought I'd ask the powerful minds on this forum. What I've always wondered, and never understood, is how an electrical generation company like BC Hydro balances supply & demand across their network?

     

    So they're generating 100mw from a boiler/dam/flux capacitator. The load demand is also 100mw. I turn on my espresso machine and the load jumps to 110mw, how do they instantly match that demand? By the same token if somebody turns something off, and the load goes to 90mw, do they reduce their generation? What happens to that 'extra' electricity that isn't demanded?

     

    Thank you geniuses :)

     

    Edit (My understanding is that there are extra turbines in a hydro station/whatever. So you've got generation matching that first 90/100mw. The 'extra' turbines are turning slowly to match the 'extra' requirement. As the demand increases those turbines spool up to match it, which requires some kind of sophisticated load matching software or something???

  5. Howe Sound

     

    25 years and a lot of paper, but the world has moved on. 180 people gone, I've never been through something like this and it's brutal. Seeing friends lose their jobs, having to lay off 2 people myself, ugh. :(

     

    Sad part is there is nothing coming along to replace these jobs. Newsprint was a big part of Canada's forest industry but it's ending all over the country. It's been fascinating to get in on the tail end of this whole thing and witness, firsthand, the collapse of an industry.

     

    Not an experience I wish to repeat though. If you ever get a chance to see a paper machine running full-bore I'd highly recommend it.

     

    Anyway, just posting, back to spray.

     

     

  6. Trip: Tete Jaune (130km w of Jasper) - Various

     

    Date: 2/19/2012

     

    Trip Report:

    Went with the alpine club to a new area near Tete Jaune. If you're out this way definitely worth a look. Easy access off the road leading to Mica Mountain cat ski. 1/2 hour of snowshoeing gets you into the canyon. It looked like earlier in the year the routes would've been fatter.

     

    Nice stuff, a good 100m of ice, mostly grade 3 but a couple of pitches of grade 4.

     

    TJ1_1_1.jpg

     

    TJ2_2_1.jpg

     

    TJ3_3_1.jpg

     

    Gear Notes:

    ice stuff, snowshoes

     

    Approach Notes:

    3 hours east of PG, about 1.5 hours west of Jasper

  7. Trip: Northern BC (PG to be precise) - Local stuff

     

    Date: 9/16/2011

     

    Trip Report:

    Thought I would show people some stuff from Northern BC. Prince George gets a bad rap from the effete southerners in our province but within 4-5 hours drive is a lot of stuff (Jasper, Smithers, Tumbler Ridge etc) Plus it is a very livable, cheap city (& you can hardly smell the pulp!)

     

    Remember, Squamish also used to be known as the armpit of BC... can it be long before lululemon and little yappy dogs make an appearance here???

     

    There are many touristy sites to take in:

     

    Tree_Crusher_8_1.jpg

     

    Good (but short) crack climbing to train you for Squamish:

     

    Teapot_6_1.JPG

     

    Steep granite-y stuff:

     

    Big_Eddy_2_3_1.jpg

     

    Good hiking:

     

    Erg_2_1_1.jpg

     

    With some very fantastical remote Rockies peaks to drool over:

     

    Kakwa_5_1.jpg

     

    And since it snows a shite load some skiing:

     

    IMG_2604_1_1.jpg

     

    I haven't touched on a lot because I don't have pictures...some excellent climbing out near Chetwynd (sandystone) or Fort St James (m/p limestone)... backcountry near Smithers...even more local climbing... come for a visit, smell the pulp!

     

     

     

    Gear Notes:

    Domestic pickup truck

     

    Approach Notes:

    10 hours drive from Van

  8. Wtf? That is log it & flog it at its best. I like this quote:

     

    In March 2007, recreational users were angered when Malamute Holdings principals Steve Miles and Paul Turner – also of CRB Logging – removed nearly 1,500 trees from the site, leaving noticeable scarring.

     

    The work was in contravention of the District of Squamish tree removal bylaw and carried a possible penalty of between $1,000 and $10,000 per tree, meaning the company could be liable for anywhere from $1,413,000 to $14,130,000.

     

    Three and a half years ago, it became clear to us that this land had a different importance to a lot of people,” said Miles at the handover ceremony today

     

    Haha right after they logged it they found out it was important to people. Shit they would've been glad to offload the land once they took the trees.

     

    To my knowledge they never did get fined...and now they got a parcel of land worth $1.25 mil somewhere else. And there was never any problems with access at upper malamute anyway.

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