May 2026
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Color’s Hitting Their Prime

Are the fall colors in your area starting to reach their peak? Yeah I know… you really have not had a chance to get outside and enjoy because you are buried at work (or some other similar reason).  Well, the colors are about to go away soon and all you are going to have to show for it are the physical signs from a little more stress and a few extra pounds.

So do me and yourself a favor; put the budget numbers down, or the contract negotiations aside, or let the family fend for itself, or miss one episode of XYZ show, and take a few minutes or an hour or better yet a couple of hours and soak in the fall-time.  I feel safe in saying that you will actually perform better at the task(s) you think are keeping you from taking a brake in the first place.

And I am not speaking to everyone else on this mailing list – I am talkin to you!

The view of the Boulder Mountains (Silver Peak 11,112 feet) right after work.

 

Looking back into the Wood River Valley (and the spot from which the photo displayed above was taken) at the top of the ridge-line just below Silver Peak

Larry Lloyd at 9,648 feet elevation just below the ridge line of Silver Peak. Larry wants everyone to know the actual trail is just 48 inches below.

And then there is the ole’ picture off the car window

 

The views on the drive home are pretty nice too.

 

 

Return to Horton Peak

On this day I am much like the Swallow returning to Capistrano.  Only in my case it is to Horton Peak during the colors of fall.  I try to reach the top of Horton Peak at least once each year.  At 9,900 feet in height, Horton Peak sits at the southwest corner of the White Cloud Mountain Range in Idaho just across the Sawtooth Valley from Smiley Creek Lodge.  The hike to the top is 2,780 vertical feet in 2.7 miles from the trailhead. Although 1,000 of gain per mile is relatively steep, the trail-bed is single-track and in superb condition. With each foot gained in the ascent, Alturas, Perkins, Pettit and Yellow Belly lakes are revealed on the other side of the valley,  At times the lakes, combined with the view of the Sawtooth Range and its 41 peaks above 10,000 feet is nothing short of breath taking.

From the Horton Peak trail; Alturas, Perkins, Pettit and Yellow Belly lakes on September 16th, 2010

Although reaching the summit and taking in the fire lookout and The White Cloud Mountain Range is really cool and will be achieved, my real goal is to return to the spot I call the Golden Path.  The Golden path is a section of Aspen trees between 8,600 and 8,800 feet on the trail.  Each year I try to hike up and run on the trail back at the time of their peek golden color.

The Golden Path on the trail for Horton Peak Lookout on September 22nd 2012.

 My son Kyle decides to join me.  The trek is more of a surgical strike as we decide to make the hike after completing a few chores and dropping off the dogs for a Spa Day that includes nail trimming and a bath.  Linda is working the Blaine County Health fair.  We make it to the trailhead and leave at 12:30 PM.  Kyle suggests we set a double-time hiking pace, so we can take pictures casually.  We take pictures at all the spots I want and reach the summit a little after 2PM.  We figure the hiking of the 2,700+ vertical and 2.75 miles was accomplished between an hour and a hour and 15 minutes.  After a spot of water, more pictures and the completion of some human administrative tasks we depart at 2:30 PM.

On the trip up Kyle had mentioned how impressive our friend Dave Pruder’s basement/museum was on our recent trip to East Lansing MI.  Pruder has completed 79 marathons and is one of the first people to have completed one in each and every state in the US.  Pruder has a wall with a medal and time posting for each completed race. With Dave’s accomplishments in mind Kyle and I decide to do one of the things we enjoy together; running in the back-country in the mountains.

Although the route is tricky for running, we drop from almost two miles in the sky back to the Jeep in a little over 20 minutes.  We trade odd running with the camera gear backpack.  Kyle says that running through the Golden Path section is one of the most enjoyable things he has done in life and the pictures are awesome. However, they do not compare to the feeling of experiencing it first hand.

Kyle at the Trail-head of the Horton Peak Trail.

Kyle at the Summit of the Horton Peak Trail.  Castle Peak in the background.

Horton

Map of hiking route to Horton Peak

Please Ignore the Truth; I Got a Deal to Close – Arbitrage *** 1/2

Arbitrage

A person’s drive to protect perception and others attempt to uncover reality are portrayed in a convincing and entertaining manner in Nicholas Jarecki’s Arbitrage.  As the Writer and Directer of his first feature film Jarecki tells the story of a highly noted and equally flawed business icon working every possible angle to cross the finish line one last time.  Success for the business icon is not necessarily in the interest of everyone involved – including those he claims to be protecting.

Richard Gere (American Gigolo, An Officer and A Gentleman, Pretty Women) is the business icon on the verge of selling his Hedge Fund empire to a large banking concern.  Gere as usual, is superb at playing the handsome, bright and highly flawed Richard Miller.  Miller has a family-run business.  His life includes a smart and striking daughter as Hedge Fund’s Chief Financial Officer (Brit Marling), a Rock of Gibraltar spouse (Susan Sarandon), a Pouty mistress/artist (Laetitia Casta) and a bevy of aides and confidant’s whom are paid to look the other way and make things happen.  This all seems plausible given what we have learned through traditional, tabloid and internet journalism over the last decade.

What makes Arbitrage so successful is that the storyline flows smoothly – yet introduces all of the elements mentioned above (and then some) in a 107 minute feature.  Although Gere as the Icon takes center stage for the bulk of the film, the supporting cast steps up and delivers on their mark when called.  Sarandon looks and acts the part.  England-er Tim Roth (Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Rob Roy) plays a convincing NYPD Detective. I really liked Marling in her role.  As a real-life graduate from Georgetown University with a degree in Economics she was believable as a finance oriented person.  It should also be noted that Marling was the writer and producer of the Sundance Film Festival award winner Another Earth – a very fine work. Nate Parker (The Secret Life of Bees, Red Tails) is exceptionally good in a small but crucial role.  Another surprise in Arbitrage is the short but very cleaver performance of Vanity Fair Editor Graydon Carter as the head of the Banking concern.  He looked and acted the part with aplomb.