Seasons

This New Years I resolve not to change

This New Years I resolve not to change

New Years resolutions are a big thing. People are always promising themselves the need to change, make their life better. I’ve done that many times before too. But not this year.

I’ve decided that this year I don’t need to change or introduce novelty into my life but instead just double down on what is good in my life and what is making me successful. Not fret on my struggles but be more grateful for what I have and who I am. And enjoy life more – because there really is a lot wonderful in this world.

Now not everything is perfect in my life. I’m the first one to admit it. But why dwell on what is bad? For all the bad there is a lot of good things happening. It’s not to say that I should abandon the conservative approach I take to many things in my life but it’s also to say maybe I don’t have to press harder to improve things that are good enough. Nothing wrong with a little radical acceptance of the way things are.

End of the Year

Well folks, another year has come to a close. 2021 is one for the books, one that will be at some point in the future looked back at with nostalgia, as we look back those silly cars we used to drive back in the day. The times come and go, in a few short weeks we enter the next era of our country’s history.

Change is good, and indeed the flipping of the calendar will mean change. But then it’s just a continue, history doesn’t start or end on a calendar day. Sure there will be new laws that will go in effect and we’ll have to write 2022 on all our paperwork, but really is December 31st that much different then January 1st?

Enjoy the egg nog and fondue one more night. Soon the Christmas lights will be shut off and we will be in the cold of January. But fear not, another spring isn’t that far away.

8-14 Day Outlook – Wednesday December 29

If you were hoping for a cold to start to the New Year, you won’t be getting it in most of New York, but the upper mid-west will be cold, so you can at least watch videos of cattleman on the Youtube breaking ice with axes in the Upper Midwest. I am sure it will arrive though some time in late January or early February.

I think often people think the only way to be warm is with artificial heat

I think often people think the only way to be warm is with artificial heat. But actually I prefer to sleep without heat – only my own body heat under the covers.

I never heat or insulate my truck cap – I’ve camped down to about ten degrees. Likewise when I winter tent – including during the coldest time of the year, Martin Luther King Day in the Adirondacks , I only use the heater before bed and when I awake in the morning, not while I’m sleeping.

The key is insulation and blocking drafts. Now they sell fancy below zero sleeping bags but they are unnecessary if you have enough layers. I use multiple, old sleeping bags. Many are ripped and old. I haul them back in the woods on a plastic sled in garbage bags. I wear long johns, wool socks and several layers of clothes to bed. They sell fancy winter tents and maybe they’re good for heavy snow expected to fall but unnecessary for ordinary a few inches of snow. Remember body heat will tend to melt a lot of snow from the roof of a tent. My winter tent is just an ordinary Kmart end of season special I got for $30 about a decade and a half old.

Staying warm in the woods is actually quite simple. Wear multiple insulating layers. Block drafts from your body. Stay dry or if you get wet quickly change into dry clothes. Wool stays drier then cotton. Use a heavy duty tarp for a ground cloth. Exposure to wind is much quicker to cool then exposure to cold – wind pull heat from the body. Focus most importantly on  insulating your toes and fingers first – they’ll get cold first. Hand lotion is essential – you’ll have cracked and bloody hands otherwise. Doesn’t have to be expensive girly stuff, just the big bottle from Wally World I’ve used for decades. 

You don’t need much if any heat to be warm except for your body, although I will be the first to admit being able to warm my hands and legs on the Big Buddy Heater first thing in the morning when I get up is nice – and makes winter camping all the more bearable.