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Artwork, Design, & Photography of Paydn Augustine
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Eureka!


Vagabonds along the

Tintic Valley

Eureka! Vagabonds in the Tintic Valley

May 08, 2024

The morning starts before sunrise, just as the golden light kisses the snow-capped mountains above the budding green Ogden Valley. Spring is in the air, and this will be the first time I’ve ever had to open a chicken coop before I embark on an adventure. It’s just an overnight trip, but with baby chicks in the garage and these birds having to luck out on predators overnight, there’s a heavy sense of dreadful undertones to the start of the day. We’ve still got tilling to do, and the compost bin needs to be filled before the spring really hits and we start dropping transplants in the soil; suffice it to say, there’s work to be done here.


But once the work gets to a place I feel comfortable holding off for a day, we pack up the truck and hit the road for the inaugural trip of the new Roam Vagabond tent that’s up top on the bedrack of the Tacoma. Rooftop tents have been something of a contentious issue for me personally over the few years they’ve been out: it seems comfortable, but the price tag being what it is along with the vast majority of reviewers online seeming to be more glampers than good ol’ backpacking trout fishermen, I had a bit of a bias against the bundle of heavy ripstop and canvas.


It’s a two-and-a-half hour drive down to the Tintic mountain range, and all said it’s a spot that I’ve never been to before. The ride passes by slowly, picking up groceries and dog leashes along the way, stopping by an oil tycoon dinosaur who was supposed to have the best damn poultry strips I’ve ever tasted, but like many words in the petrol industry, the words came back as snake oil. Just as things get to a total standstill in the misery that is Eagle Mountain, we break through the barrier of Californian tech runaways and are blazing on the butterfly hills along the western coast of Utah Lake. That body of water is in itself is a bit of an enigma. It looks beautiful from here–emerald blue water that cracks along the surface with crystalline shimmers in crowned waves–but I know if I were to walk down a few hundred yards to the sandbar, I’d be greeted by decrepit lake monsters the size of bloated carp, sitting beneath the frame of an umbrella in lawn chairs straight out of the town Megaton. In no time at all, however, we’re past the puzzle of “garbage lake”, and into a goliath field of green alfalfa, blazing past slower traffic and maintaining a steady 50/50 split of time occupied in South and Northbound lanes.


Just at the end of the pastures we rip a sharp right turn and begin down an old dirt road at 55mph 4WD, a trail of dust shooting out behind us as we make our way down. The first stop on the adventure is the primary reason we’re clear out west, and it’s a simple, primordial experience that I believe anyone who owns a vehicle should experience at one time or another in their life: I wanted to drive through a hole in the rocks. This tunnel in particular is a fun little bit of offroading to get to, with most of the other patronage we interacted with along the route being families grouped up in side by sides, wondering why the fuck I’m here and why the hell I’ve got a grin on my face.

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It’s after this that we continue down a few dirt roads, turning round, and heading on down the main road until we happened upon a couple with some of the most magnificent horses Taylor and I have ever seen. We pulled over and asked if we could take a few shots of the critters and they offered us a full shoot plus horse petting, to my dearest’s chagrin, and gave us a hot tip to head out west on the highway at the end of the dirt trail, to grab burgers and see the sights in the old town of Eureka, Utah. So, with no good plan before us, no good idea of where we want to sleep for the night, and everything we could ever need in the back of my truck, we carry on to the tiny gold rush town. 

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In the city of Eureka, there’s an estimated population of 706 people. That’s just a little less than my new hometown of Huntsville, and a whole lot less than anywhere else I’ve lived–Salt Lake City metro, for example, coming out to a whopping 1.1 million people, these numbers seem almost unbelievable in comparison, but the further to the coasts you get the crazier these population numbers become. Regardless, this little place is a crumbling relic of what once had been, a ghost town of the gold rush that seems to be swiftly losing population numbers, locals resorting to tourism along the US Route 6: “Build your own fairy house” attractions, smoke shops, and the omnipresent State Liquor Store, all here to provide solace and respite for us weary travelers, the longing souls who might just find paradise at the end of a glass bottle if we could catch the leprechaun in time.



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Once we’re done there we head back into the winding dirt trails of the Tintic, where I end up opting to follow a trail certainly too small for a mid-size truck, more appropriate for a 4x4 ATV than anything else, in some points nearing single track territory, but we continue on: pinstriping the tacoma I’ve dubbed “Diana” until she’s got dusty scratches every millimeter along her sides, and the trail we followed disappears into the juniper without a trace. It’s here I end up taking one of the most relieving constitutionals of my entire life, one which I’m still sighing in relief over since needing to hit the porcelain throne since before we left the house earlier that morning, then we turn back.



God damn, that was great. Read it and weep.

Well, anyway, we end up rolling down a few more rocky bits and I’m finally starting to get a little more confidence in tackling some offset / off-camber approaches in the taco, hitting some 20º rolls without too much danger in the off chance that I slip into oblivion, but still enough risk to have a little fun and feel the tug of gravity and seatbelt at play. We pass by a few other camp sights, one, in particular, I was quite interested in, but the presence of abandoned/burned camp chairs and tents gives Tay the heebeegeebees thinking there just might be a non-zero chance that a psych hillbilly murderer just might be out in these hills after all. We keep driving until we come to the very end of this particular trail, and it’s clearly the culmination of magnificence for a campground that I might bring some friends out to another time in the future: A prickly gully between two trails that loop together up a 25º slope. It’s enough to drive up and see nothing but sky, and coming down it feels like you might as well be driving off of a cliff with the visibility you have, but it’s fantastic training that really amps me up and gets me to feel far more comfortable on more challenging terrain. I’m still new to all these off-road shenanigans, but damn if I don’t take joy in it.



At the top of this loop is where we establish camp, just large enough to put the truck up and spread out the rooftop tent as if this spot, in particular, was fucking made for it. I couldn’t have crafted a cooler place to sleep for our first time in the rooftop tent and I’ll never forget how awesome it was to have this thing up out there. The night starts off strong with Taylor trying her hand at trad archery for the first time in her life, landing a very respectable 50% of shots without a nock, rest, or any other bow add-ons. It was all just raw wood, string, arrows, and human instinct, and that’s a badass way to get a foot in the door that I couldn’t be happier to see success with. I didn’t do badly myself considering I haven’t had archery practice for damn near two years, landing all but 2 arrows which I sent careening off deep into the adjacent canyon never to be found by mortal eyes again. I like to think one day it might be a relic to some future people, who think back on who could have been dumb enough to lose an arrow or two here.

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As the wind begins to pick up and Taylor, Venus, and I finish our Chicken, Bone, and Carne Asada taco meals for the night–primo, btw–we set to packing up things as a fear of snow prompts me to prep the family for an early out. I might be building confidence on dirt, but I sure as shit ain’t trying to tackle technical trail covered in inches of snow. Once things are put away, I start nerding out a bit and take some of the best hand-held long exposures of my life. It’s a far cry from some good stacked photos or solid exposures, but I’m happy with them for this trip since I’m almost as tired as our husky, Venus, who’s been passed out in a dirt nap for the past hour and a half when I beckon her with me and prep her to be lifted up and into the tent some 10ft in the air. She couldn’t care less at this point, slinking into the cozy little shelter, finding her spot next to my pillow, and going so zombie mode she wouldn’t even stir while I’m pushing her back trying to make room for myself. Taylor’s cozied up into her own sleeping bag now, and I set myself off to sleep as well. 


It’s a battle. A war is raging between the tent and the whipping wind beyond the ripstop barrier, and every 15 seconds my feet are getting whipped by the entry port that’s currently covered up. It’s enough to send a little shiver down my spine every time the wind blows up and under my top quilt, so most of the night I spent fighting back against the winter storm, closing up sections and dealing with the classic desert camp grit of sand being blown up and into the tent. I wouldn’t replace that sensation for the world, it’s one of the last few things I’m able to hold close to the heart and say, at least some part of me, is truly a desert rat out in the dusty wilderness of Utah’s public land.

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When I first started writing this whole damn thing up I thought I might want to write a review about the Roam Vagabond. Maybe that’s what this all ends up being. But if I were to give one solid note about the Vagabond, it’s that the whole experience that night wasn’t about the Vagabond. It was about the journey, the early start, the adventure, the going to a fro, not ever knowing really where you’d end up, but knowing it’ll be great wherever that is. I think that’s the entire point of a nice rooftop tent: Don’t worry about whatever the hell you have happening for the day, because as long as you’re driving, you’ve got home on your back, and it’s only 15 minutes set away. Yeah, it can be noisy in the wind. But it’s also the best damn sunshade I’ve ever slept in, it never got too bright or overbearingly hot, and its mattress is easily one of the most comfortable sleeping situations I’ve ever had in a campout since I’ve been in hammocks. I still might prefer the cocoon style, but for a long time I’d say ground sleepers should live life elevated, a hammocker’s mockery of Utah’s state motto: but the Vagabond has my hanging pitch beat by a longshot, and man it feels really good to be up there. I can’t wait to take this tent out with my family for more trips, more memories, and more silly pointless blog posts.


Cheers,

PA

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King Peak

September 15, 2023

I think the word "epic" has been so oft overused and bastardized in today's vernacular that the true scope of it's sentiment has been washed away over the past ten years, now meaning something more ironic and detrimental, a mockery of it's former grandeur.

But my hike up to King's Peak truly was epic in the antiquated sense, an adventure whose proportion and beauty I will never be able to capture in words, photos or video. I believe a long hike into the Uinta highlands, far above the treeline, is something that most people should try out before disparaging the state for its empty worthlessness.

The journey to King's has been one that I've been wanting to do for several years now, and I certainly underestimated the difficulty of the hike itself. With that said, I would and plan to do it again, hopefully with friends at my side, because the utter majesty of the entire trip is simply unimaginable until you're really there, just the same as seeing the Milky Way or a solar eclipse for your first time.

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Frary Peak

A peakbagger speed run training for the Skyline Marathon,
and a bittersweet ascent for circumstances pending.

Frary Peak

May 10, 2023

The sun was peaking through the white blinds, casting white light on the white sheets I found myself wrapped in when the subtle plucking twangs of Harry Nilsson telling me Everybody’s Talkin’ faded into consciousness as I drew myself up from the bed. 730am. “I should get started then”, I blurt out, half in my mind and half aloud like a lich casting it’s first spell after resurrection. Despite the “early” rise this Saturday morning, it’d be another hour before I left the house bound up in socks I wasn’t happy to wear in boots that I’ve worn too much. The Salomons are peeling at the seam, exposing the gortex and cotton interior, clearly no longer waterproof but they’ve got at least 20 more miles in them I think.

Hunger pangs hit on the way out Antelope Drive, a long road carved through suburban Syracuse, and I stop in the closest ‘erto’s restaurant for a compulsory breakfast burrito. It’s one of the good ones that hits just right—mixed, no potatoes per usual order—with cheese melted to the bottom and that overwhelmingly decadent sauce ladle that forms on the tail end of a well folded tortilla. It’s just after finishing the eight pound behemoth whose volume alone is testament to the human ability to adapt, in this case through stomach expansion, has me realizing I probably aught to take a break at the local gas station before I start hiking a peak with no bathrooms, likely high traffic, on an island covered in bugs. “To hell with it” I think, “I’ll hold it. This really won’t take too long lad. Just get up and come down, easy peasy”, and I roll on out to the toll station before I start the ride down the causeway I haven’t been on since I was 7 years old.

This is my first time out on Antelope Island since I was just a young boy, and the only thing I remember from that is learning about Brine Shrimp and their winged evolution. It seems justified that the first wildlife to greet me along the stark road are flies in greater numbers than I could have imagined. The Brine flies are so thick I had at first thought a diesel engine had blown past the road, and left a cloud of smoke. After travelling some while after I realized that the plumes of somewhat ethereal black was in fact columns of brine flies starting from the shoreside bushes and spiraling up some twenty feet in cyclones of buzzing insects hungry for reproduction in the spring spawning frenzy. At last I hit the island proper, and am greeted with several tourist buildings, lines of cars not quite sure where they’re headed, and of course, the innumerable lines of Bison drifting along the prairie-like hillsides and salty shorelines.

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I start the hike around 11, and the first thing I notice is the winding trail of friendly hikers working their way along the well travelled dirt, rising right from the parking lot some hundred or more feet before disappearing over the first of many hilltops. It’s a surprisingly tough start to my first real hike of the season, and even though I’m able to pass a few on the trail I find myself dissapointed in what feels like should be an easier ascension given my abilities in the past. I catch my breath a moment and remind myself I’ve been eating like shit and ignoring cardio workouts (and still recovering from a 2 week battle with my first covid infection ever) for the past 3 months, and this is just the way it’ll be for a while. After the reality check, I’m able to get a solid pace and continue along the trail, running in some sections of flat ground to cover distance and stopping to snag a few shots here and there.

Just as I crest what seemed to be one of the larger hills on the trail, the cool afternoon breeze is swallowed up whole by the cover of the mountain as the trail moves onto the Western side of the island, and within seconds I am a walking swarm of mosquitos, with so many bugs landing on me you’d not be wrong to mistake me for the Antelope Island Sasquatch. There was a time that I felt I’d be able to force through the onslaught and get up to another cool breeze to which I’d lose the bugs, but after about 15 minutes at 15 bites per minute or so it seemed, I opted to throw on the light jacket I had brought with, both as protection from the bugs and the sun. I didn’t anticipate the toll the jacket would take on me though and by the time I’d made it up to a beautiful overlook of the Eastern shore and the Wasatch Range, my progress in passing people and leaving them fairly far behind would be entirely undone; Everyone I had ran past on my way up were now passing by me as I gasped for air and water, drenched in sweat from the windless, cloudless ascension. I was close now, really close, and there were only about 45 minutes left of the climb until I’d reach the peak.

The last segment of the trail dips down into a seemingly precarious dip along the steep face of the peak on the westernmost side, with a nice little dip of elevation to leave you assured of the journey being uphill both ways. It was sketchy at first but with a little guile and care, you can pass over lost of it relatively easily, then it’s a quick jaunt up to the peak to join all the other people taking in the views. It was, frankly, far too crowded for me at the top and I opted to head out after finishing what was left in my first water bottle, then plugging in the headphones and rampaging down the hills running all the segments I could muster. It only took me about 20 minutes before I realized how poorly my choice of sock was for the day, couple with the old wornout boots that I was breaking down as impromptu trail runners. I was able to get back to the first hill and walked the rest of the way, the total journey down taking only 45 minutes, in bold contrast to the 2 hours and 15 it took me to get all the way up!

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Panorama from the top of Frary Peak

For me, Frary was a nice little way to kick off some peak bagging again and get out in the woods and back in time for games. I wish I could have done it with somebody, and in fact all my climbs seem to be lonely grueling jaunts to the top of mountains that I do for some vague notion of self gratification. It feels good to do it all, but I often end up thinking I might have cheated myself and in fact the whole experience by running to fast or not stopping enough to take everything in. But the ride back I had a view of a cool buggy stocked with eyepro wearing dogbros, so that’s a plus in my book.

Cheers.

PA

Last Chance

at Beth Lake

The good times are killing me.

Last Chance at Beth Lake

September 19, 2022

I’ve had the chance to make some of the best friends a person could ever ask for in life. I’ve had the chance to keep some of them close over the years, and the misfortune of losing too many good ones. I’ve had the chance to share my passion of the outdoors with many of those friends, and I’ve had the chance to teach them all a thing or two about making life in the wild a little bit more enjoyable, or at the very least, survivable. But of all those friends, one of the dearest and longest I’ve had is my friend Chance, and this trip was a farewell to him and our very close buddy Matt, as they both prepare to make a move from Utah out to Colorado.

The trip was a last minute scramble of sorts, Matt having texted me the weekend prior but my committing only three days beforehand. We made our way up around Noon on Saturday, the short excursion would only be a stay of 24 hours, but in that days worth of outdoors I think we had a wonderful time. We were talking about meeting up at the lake, but ran into each other at the fee station while I was filling out paperwork. Heading up along the dusty trail, I lost the lads in their Subaru as I rocketed down the trail in my new and dear Tacoma—Diana—rolling out about 40mph on the long and open stretch. Once I got the the lake, I began setting up my tarp immediately, foreboding clouds on the horizon were whispering about a storm to come and I wouldn’t be caught having my camp unprepared. It’s a quick process for me now, but not quick enough to make up for the fact the they still hadn’t found their way to camp yet. I wasn’t too concerned that they’d get too lost to find the place, but I did have some doubt that they’d have a comfortable camp setup before the rain came in. Just as I finished up my end of the trees, I heard their car doors swing shut a few hundred yards away and knew they’d made it.

After a few greetings Chance gets to work right away at setting up his sleep system for the night, and Matt asks if I’m able to give him a hand on his, which I’m more than happy to pitch at. I was surprised to see he’d be attempting to sleep in an 8ft eno-style hammock, even moreso when I folded out a tent tarp and said it’d be his rain cover for the night. I was pretty skeptical of it’s efficacy, but rigged it up as best I could figure for the odd pattern to hang between trees. Once the rain started coming down though, it was clear that Matt wouldn’t be sleeping in an elevated position, as the hammock beneath the tarp began to pool with water and eventually hail. We hadn’t tossed his sleeping bag or pad in there yet, and I’m damn glad we didn’t otherwise he may have just froze in the dark.

The rain coming down was mesmerizing and cozy, bringing with it rapidly cooling temps that would climb back up with the intermittent sunrays. Eventually once the aforementioned hailstorm broke, we had to throw on the heaviey jackets and hunker down for a bit under the cover of trees or tarps, brilliant flashes of lightning striking no more than a mile away, snapping the air around us into a cacaophony of CRRRRRAAAAAACCCCKKs and thunderous roars. We waited about two hours before the storms let up, and once the weather was done, Chance and I hit the lake to cast out lines one last time. I was throwing flies and Chance had worms on tackle, myself wading in about 5 yards and chance casting from shore 20m on my three. Beth Lake had just recently been stoked with Brookies about 3 months ago, but they were just young guns and nothing larger than 4 inches would be in the lake. We were out there probably another two hours until, after 4 strikes, I was finally able to land a small, 3.75” Brook. It’s not much, but it is a fish, and those little guys always seem to have the most vibrant colors when they come out of the cool water. Looking over the lake during the sunset, the sweeping post-storm clouds tall and fresh ran across the horizon, the rays of light weaving between to gradient cobalt nimbus like scenes of biblical rapture.

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Once the night had fallen and the stars burst out from the dark, we shared a few drinks and put log after log into the ember pit. One by one we’d put our words into the fire, sharing stories of the times we’d come out before, reminiscing our lives up to the point, and thinking of plans for the future. The stories would revolve as they often do in the cold black pines; Jokes and songs and singalongs, sob stories from best friends past, growth and moving on from things that can’t be saved, and concluding with the desperate desire for just 5 more minutes of warmth around the dying coals. We extinguished the fire, Chance set back to his hammock while Matt made his way back to the car for the night as I snapped a few more shots, not putting too much effort into it all now that I was tired and exhausted from the day, then finally falling into sleep in my cozy cocoon.

The next morning I awoke first at just past 7am, having to jump out for a bathroom break. Seeing the fog on the lake and the morning sun showering Haystack Mountain in amber and gold, I grabbed my camera and starting taking a few snapshots. Once I saw a fish rise, I half-reluctantly agreed to the morning fishing in the frost-covered dew, and tied on a few flies. I tried the creek for a while with a dry, then back to the lake with a dry dropper—four different sets—but the trout seemed more interested in territorial battles rather than food, and after an hour and a half not finding any luck, I tucked myself back into the hammock. As soon as I was settled, I heard Chance from his, “Damn, I did not get any sleep man.”
”Really? I heard you snoring a good bit.”
”Oh wow, what time? It didn’t feel like I slept at all man, I was cold as hell all night. I need to get me one of those underquilts.”
I was fighting my eyelids and the soft call of a quick morning nap by this time. “Oh yeah man, they’re awesome. Out in Colorado though, you’ll be pretty close to Warbonnet, they made all my gear and are one of my favorites now. You can’t go wrong with ‘em, all their stuff is just ready to go.”
That was the last thing I remember saying before I drifted off.

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What felt like a few moments later, I heard Matt ask where I was, then I glanced out beyond the mosquito mesh and hollered to let him know I was, in fact, awake and very very cozy. His report of the night’s sleep was akin to Chance’s; cold and uncomfortable. I felt bad for both of them, I’ve certainly been in those situations before, where you never find an ounce of sleep, either due to cold or terror. Both seem to subside as the sun rises and warms the soul.

We got to packing up, the lad’s having things yet to do with their weekend time, and we set off just around 11:30. We fired off a few rounds from my recently acquired 1859 New Army .44 black powder pistol, and hugged each other in the way that brothers often do, knowing it might be a long time, if ever, that we share this adventure together. It’s not something you can dwell too deeply on or you’ll lose yourself in the sorrow, so you have to keep a stiff upper lip, shine a smile, and rip past the Subaru that’s got your friends in front of you as they avoid a puddled pothole, splashing the side of the hatchback as you whip your hat out and let loose a "YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHAWWWWW!!!” that could be heard all down the valley.




Just a little bit of fishin

August 24, 2022
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