Sunday, June 22, 2008

Moving to fast

I can't believe that Monday we will be down to nine weeks. Nine weeks left of families, nine weeks left of full staff, nine weeks left of summer fun. I am reminded of grade school and the anticipation of the final nine week quarter before summer vacation. The last quarter only nine weeks, I can make it I know I can. Yet here I feel the opposite occurring. How can there only be nine weeks left? It seems as if the staff has just arrived and in a short time most of them will all be gone again, leaving me once again to silent solitude that Mountain Sky offers during the off season. The first family week passed by so quickly with the second ending with the days setting sun. It is amazing how a consistent schedule can make the time pass so rapidly. Time is not measured by days here, but rather by activities. It is dinner ride tonight so therefore it must be Wednesday, or the talent show is tonight therefore it is Friday and another week is about to come to a close. I would be lying if I didn't say that I did find this system to be supremely enjoyable. Even though I do find myself working more here than I ever have before, the work at this point is not tedious and overbearing. At no point have I complained about having to work tonight or having to do this or that. In fact I find quite the opposite happening. As our staff grows more and more into a family rather than purely co-workers, I find my want and need to help the other staff members increasing because I know how difficult this job can be. I don't mind hopping behind the bar on my night off or clearing glasses from the lodge to make the overall appearance better for the guests and staff alike. Although Angie says I do too much it is that attention to detail that helps make the lodge run like a finely tuned machine that it is.

It's almost comfortable to know that things are always changing here but they are always staying the same. You can always count on breakfast and lunch rides, Dr. Splashball and Gourmet nights, the only thing that changes is each week you have eighty new guests to experience it all over again with. Each week I have eighty new names to memorize in twenty four hours even as the old ones still linger in my mind. The experiences get crazier and more intense as each staffer gets more comfortable with their positions. But I know that mid summer lull will hit us all soon. I have seen it before, people will get burned out and bored and to be honest, that is truly when the fun begins. Tensions rise and the staff will find interesting ways to entertain themselves and thats when my practical joking fun can really begin.

Until then I enjoy the company, the endless string of mostly well-to-do down-to-earth guests who want nothing more than to enjoy their vacation in the mountains and make sure that both you and them are hammered for at least the evenings of their stay. I will certainly enjoy the staff and the new friendships I have made. I certainly never thought that I would ever know so many people from Minnesota and certainly I did not think I would like so many of them. But we do for the most part have an absolutely amazing staff here at Mountain Sky granted we have some bad apples as one could imagine there would be where ever you go. Even in a highly seclusive place like this somebody has to fill into that role, I just thank my lucky stars that that person was not me.

With all that said as I sit here and reflect I can truly say with as little hesitation as I have ever been able to muster that I am happy and it has been a long time since I have been able to say that and actually mean it.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Rockin' Donahue



Mountain Sky sits as nothing more than an opening in an over forested gully cutting its way through the Gallatin Mountains. At least this is the image it portrays at first glance. Especially when perched high above on a rock outcropping peering a thousand feet down. This is the image that emblazons me as I look out from Donahue Rock. The ranch sits in a small opening off to my right far below. While straight down below me the sound of Big Creek rushing by still manages to make itself heard even on the mountain top. The bridge that spans Cliff Creek seems like little more than a high school physics project constructed of toothpicks.

The hike to get here has been well worth the burning sensation that now encompasses my entire body. My legs ache and flame up through my thighs and quads. My chest heaves as I struggle for air in the thin altitude. My breath comes in gasps as I struggle to take in a full breath. Which continually is harder to accomplish as every turn of my head I can do nothing but utter "my god" at the beautiful spectacle that lies before me. I attempt to take it all in but my line of sight is just to narrow to fully appreciate such an awestriking expanse as the one that lies before me. I stand high above the Big Creek Drainage system as it meanders its way to the Yellowstone River off in the distance. The hike itself was borderline crazy, just as the name of the trail would suggest. Crazy Horse as it has been dubbed, not my the likes of the National Forest Service but rather through the numerous hikers that have wandered through the doors of Mountain Sky.




The trail ascends up a drainage gully that shows its true use as a horse trail than as a path for hikers, partly because no person in their right mind would hike such a steep grade for a mid-afternoon jaunt. Thankfully I have never been in my right mind. I prefer the left. There is no break in the grade the entire way up the gully or when you make the first right hand switchback that brings you to a small mountain meadow dotted with wildflowers and surrounded on three sides with happy trees as if they were painted from the hand of Bob Ross himself. At this point the trail levels out for a short time until you reach the forested edge where it continues its upward climb to Donahue Rock. The trail continues as steep as the mountain will allow, stopping only to switch back as to work it's way around the mass amount of fallen Ponderosa pines that clutter the forest floor, each one lying criss-crossed over the next adding texture to the huge pines that still tower above them. I consider myself to be in pretty amicable shape, however, this trail is no laughing matter. Three-quarters of the way up I was forced to stop and sit, my breathing labored intensely and my vision began to blur and and go white along the outside as my body struggled for the necessary oxygen to continue it's trek. I caught my breath and continued on all the while seeing my destination in front of me as I meandered back and forth through the forest.

I climbed out sat on the edge and felt blessed for the opportunity to take in the spectacle that lay before me. How many others have felt the same? How many have climbed to this spot and felt the exhilaration of the mountain peaks and the cool wind? Blackfeet and Crow, Stampeder and Prospector, Hiker and tourist all have stepped through this point and the appreciation for this place will continue on for generations to come as it has for the generations that have passed.