Saturday, September 3, 2016

RETURN TO TURKEY RUN STATE PARK

Early last month I discovered Turkey Run State Park. It is a beautiful Indiana State Park. The trails are spectacular as they are challenging but not overwhelming. Navigating the trails is not an endurance contest, but it does take a certain amount of concentration as one walks on wet rocks, narrow cliffs, over boulders and up and down steep staircases and ladders.  Yesterday was the day that I returned with my family. We had great fun. When I visited the park alone last month, I 'raced' through various trails and hardly took anytime to enjoy what I was seeing. The visit yesterday was not about trying to hike on every trail, but to enjoy the trails that we did hike. Still, when the visit to the park was over, we managed to hike 10 miles.

Park Entrance

'The Punch Bowl'

One of the three ladders that we had to navigate




You cannot imagine how difficult it was to climb up this steep, slippery rock. 

My daughter decided to experience Sugar Creek up close.

Daddy/Daughter selfie






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Your Food Diary For:

BREAKFAST Calories
kcal
Carbs
g
Fat
g
Protein
g
Sodium
mg
Sugar
g
Mccain - Steel Cut Irish Oatmeal 300 54 5 8 0 2
Read - Three Bean Salad 300 65 0 5 1,500 55
Cliff Builders - Protein Bar - Chocolate 280 29 10 20 270 21

880 148 15 33 1,770 78
L U N C H
Subway - Footlong Turkey Breast on Wheat 560 92 17 36 1,890 11

560 92 17 36 1,890 11
D I N N E R
Denny's - Avocado Chicken Caesar Salad 500 11 37 35 1,249 2

500 11 37 35 1,249 2
S N A C K S
Sun Chips - Harvest Cheddar 210 27 9 4 320 3
Jack Link's - Matador Teriyaki Jerky 240 21 5 30 1,590 18
Fiber One - 90 Calorie Chewy Bars 450 85 10 5 400 25

900 133 24 39 2,310 46
Totals 2,840 384 93 143 7,219 137
Your Daily Goal 3,423 428 114 172 2,300 128
Remaining 583 44 21 29 -4,919 -9
Calories
kcal
Carbs
g
Fat
g
Protein
g
Sodium
mg
Sugar
g
*You've earned 1,493 extra calories from exercise today

If every day were like today...   You'd weigh 194.4 lbs in 5 weeks     
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       Your Exercise Diary for:

Cardiovascular Minutes Calories Burned
319 1,773

   
Daily Total / Goal 319 / 30 1,773 / 590  
Weekly Total / Goal 915 / 210 10,409 / 4,130
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SATURDAY IS WEIGHDAY
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This week I checked in at 212.9 lbs. 
This is 2.7 pounds up from last week.
It always disappoints me when the scale points to the wrong number.
Here is my explanation.
I find it hard to believe that I really gained three pounds this week.
More likely, last week when I weighed myself, I might have been slightly dehydrated.
Perhaps this morning, I am more properly hydrated.
Anyway... What am I going to do?
I can answer that.
I am going to remember that on December 24, 2014, I weighed 309 lbs.
This means that I am 96.1 lbs less than I was on that day.
I think I will jump up and down a few times to celebrate that achievement.
And after that, I might take a hike.



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This section on the geology of the park was lifted from turkeyrunstatepark.com

GEOLOGY

In terms of history, the geology of Turkey Run State Park offers a unique view into the past. A walk into one of the ravines takes the visitor on a trip through time when the sandstone gorges represent 600 to 300 million years of nature's handiwork.
The exposed bedrock is Mansfield sandstone, after Mansfield, Indiana. This deposit was formed during the Carboniferous Period when the buildup of sand at the mouth of the ancient Michigan River was slowly compacted and cemented into solid rock. The swampy environment of this period gave birth to vast coal deposits. Coal was mined here in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Seams of coal are still visible along many of the trails.
More recently, during the Pleistocene Epoch, the sandstone bedrock was carved into today's familiar canyons and formations by the eroding action of glacial meltwaters. The Punchbowl on Trail 3 is an example of a pothole that was scoured out by glacial erratics caught in swirling backwash. Erratics are pieces of bedrock from Canada that were carried here by the glaciers. Some of the larger erratics, or boulders, can still be seen in Boulder Canyon on Trail 9, and smaller ones, pebbles, in Sugar Creek.
In the last few hundred years, the wind and water erosion of the sandstone has continued at a slower pace. The gorges are very similar to what was seen by Native Americans and pioneers.

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