We got up at 4 and met Stephs Dad in the ihop parking lot. He drove us to the airport which was really nice of him. The kiosk want working. I slept the first half of the flight and Steph said the I slept through the worst of the baby screaming. I got a lot of audible in on both flights. When we got to Miami we walked around a bit and then met up with Brian and Britney at the gate. Derrick was a little late but made it rihht as we started boarding. I sat next to an anthropologist who studies the interaction between the Hatian refugees and the Dominicans. She gave me a few pointers on what we should go see.
Once we got close we realized that we didn’t have the address of the house where we were staying making it hard to fill out immigration forms and rental car forms. We got everything squared away and met up with jack stephanie and carlos. He and his mom drove us to the rental house from the airport. Steph and I opted to take the floor for the first night. Carlos’ family was still there partying and we got some really tasty oreo cheesecake.
Carlos took us down by one of the developments his company has been working on for dinner. We ate at a place called Cafe Bistro. I got the fish fillet because the waiter suggested it and I was not dissapointed in the least. Driving so far has not been as crazy as Carlos had claimed but I have only been here late at night on a weekend so far.
I just had a great time playing volleyball with Ryan, Steph, Nima, Caryn, and Amy. I biked over and before starting we had some Stilton and Riesling. That makes the last of the Riesling gone, I’m tempted to get some more but I’m also tempted to try a few others and see how I like them. I’ll take a look on some of the wine rating sites and see what a good inexpensive Riesling is. Ryan had to run, but the rest of us went to Chocolate garage afterwards. I brought the rest of the Riesling and we finished it off there. I got an interesting bar from Patrick, a 100% Grenada bar, and 2 by the company with the really nice flavors and the waxy paper covers. I’m looking forward to having the vanilla one since I haven’t had it before.
We had dinner at the Creamery and Brewpub in Klymath Falls, OR. All the beer there was delicious and the food was satisfactory. After a long day of caving anything would have tasted fantastic. Nick got the beer tasting and shared it around since he was driving.
After dinner we went to a Minimart where Nick’s Dad works. He seems like a man that could never retire. From the sound of it he has plenty of money just not enough to keep him busy. He seems like an incredibly active man, and I hope to be as active as that when I am his age.
We spent the night at Nick’s mom’s house and drove up to his Dad’s place the next morning. We stopped by the grocery to get some eggs and berries. When we got there Nick’s dad made us some pancakes and eggs.
As it was father’s day I called to say hi, and ended up waking them up since they were still in Hawaii. I was surprised to have woken them since it was already 6:30 where they were.
We got on the road shortly after breakfast, only stopping once around lunchtime. We took a walk around the sundial bridge, which was pretty accurate as we were only 6 days off from when it is calibrated for.
We then stopped for lunch at a place called Grilla Bites, which was really healthy food. They also had a Ruth Goldberg Machine that we had to play with. It had 2 big panels, but also went across the ceiling.
Nick took Steph, Matt, and I to Lava Beds National Monument, which was a 45 minute drive from his mother’s house. We started out at the visitor center and got the passes to the 2pm labyrinth cave tour. Afterwards we went to Skull cave. It was a massive cave named after the remains of some humans and animals found there. The cave was very cold despite the day being quite warm. When we got to the bottom there was a small patch of ice that was barred off from letting people on it. The ice was pretty dirty, but it was frozen solid from what I could tell.
After that we went down the trail to the painted cave and symbol bridge. The lava tube that ends at Skull cave made a whole series of lava tubes and lava valleys, depending on where the ceiling had caved in. These were spread out along the path to painted cave and we stopped at nearly every one.
The painted cave had a good bit of deposition on the walls, but we couldn’t tell if there were any actual petroglyphs. At the back of the cave was a small hole that we went down to see a tiny ice lake. The hole was just big enough for us to squeeze down and about one story deep. The ice at the bottom was gorgeous.
The symbol bridge had some decent petroglyphs and it was nice.
After the painted cave we had lunch of some tasty sandwiches we had picked up in town on our way to the caves.
We then decided to go to Valentine cave, as it was pretty easy and supposed to be a different kind of formation. When we got there it was very smooth, very round, and there wasn’t much rubble. This is also where we got our first glimpse of cave slime. The slime was interesting in that it looked silver and gold. The slime is a lot of bacteria colonies that are hydrophobic. Being hydrophobic they make the water they get into tiny droplets that are suspended on their surface. The droplets make the cave walls shine. Any bacteria that brown or yellow will glow gold and any grey bacteria will glow silver from the lights mixing with the water droplets. For the good pictures of this skip down to the section about Golden Dome cave that was named for these hydrophobic bacteria and their effects.
Valentine cave was also fun due to the number of routes that could be taken, all leading to the same place. There were points where a large tunnel would break off to the left and a small one to the right, with a tiny tunnel right down the middle. I had to go through all of them of course. While coming up the tiniest of them I started imitating golem.
Valentine cave was well developed and had a good bit of smoothing of the already smooth floor. Below are Steph, Matt, and Nick standing at the entrance to Valentine Cave.

When we got back to the Visitor Center there was still a little time before the tour so we took that time to go through Mushpot Cave, which was set up as an introduction to the caves in general. It was ok, but not very exciting, as it was the only cave to be electrically lit. Then we had a short nap in the visitor center.
We started out the Labyrinth tour with Jesse the ranger and Niko the intern. Jesse was leading with Niko following. We started out by going into the Labyrinth down a ladder and squeezing through a small area to a lava waterfall. off the waterfall were a couple small passages that merged with other caves. We also some some roots making their way through the ceiling. In the roots was a cave millipede, but I wasn’t able to get a picture of it.
Jesse also talked about how the things that were in the cave had built up over thousands of years. Anything that wasn’t black had been brought in from outside. So the bacteria and deposition came from water vapor that had seeped in. Below you can see a wall where the lava hardened in a melting shape with white deposition of calcium carbonate on it.
We got to see some deposition in the form of corals. These were said to cover the caves from top to bottom before people came, but they were so fragile that the people had broken nearly all of them in the developed caves.
We went through a few more caves and down a little lava slide.
After the tour the guide, Jesse, told us we should finish up the cave that we had started and that Niko should do it as well. We went through the cave and found a small brown bat. It was alone and tiny, but really cool to see. All the caves that had large numbers of bats had been closed down so that the bats could raise their young in peace. We made it back to the labyrinth entrance and decided to continue through the cave loop.
We started out with Golden Dome, which very much lived up to it’s name. Getting into the cave was pretty easy and the actual dome part had 12 foot tall ceilings in most places. It wasn’t easy to capture the gold on the phone’s camera, but here is the best I got.
And also the best silver shot I could get.
Golden dome was much like Valentine cave in that it was easy to get in and out, with multiple paths that all came together along the way.
After that we made a short stop by Hopkin’s Chocolate cave, named for the formations on the wall that look like melted chocolate. These formations come about when the lava that had previously melted is reheated by another flow, but not remelted. It is more or less firing them like ceramics in a kiln.
After the chocolate cave we walked around the Garden Bridges, which was a collection of small bridges.
It was getting pretty late in the day so we decided to stop by the last cave of the day, and the one we wanted to see most. This was the major ice cave, Meryl cave. Niko had given us the hint that if we wanted to make it to where the ice still stood we should go to the back of the cave and ignore the railing and platform. We did that it was amazing. The ice formations were stunning and I got some decent pictures, that don’t do the formations justice.
We even found what I think was a young cave centipede crawling on one of the ice structures.
While we were at the back of the cave two other groups came down. We didn’t want anyone else back there with use, especially since we didn’t trust them to be as careful as we were being, and not touching the ice. When they reached the platform we turned our lights off and waited for them to go away. It was an exhilarating experience.
The whole experience felt like real life minecraft and I’d love to go back again.
The ice was our diamonds, the chocolate melt was our coal, and the gold and silver were our gold and iron. There are few places I’ve been that have lived up to my expectations and then some as much as this place did. I was more than pleasantly surprised by how varied and magnificent all the formations were.
After going through the caves we stopped by Captain Jack’s Stronghold, which is where the Native Americans held off the US Cavalry for several months. The only reason the Natives gave up was that the Cavalry captured their water supply. It was a maze of rocks and caves. On our way back to the car we saw an adorable cotton tail rabbit.
We then stopped by a cliff face that had lots of petroglyphs on it. It used to be a cliff that was up against the water, but the water level had been lowered in the valley to make way for more farmland. The cliff was off limits, as a few days prior to us getting there the petroglyphs had been vandalized pretty badly. We could still see many of them, but we could also make out pretty plainly lots of modern graffiti all over the cliff as well.
After my last day at Zynga I came home and packed to head up to Northeast California. I took a pad of paper and lots of colored pens for ideation along the way. I got a lot of stuff written down, most of it will be useful I think. It will certainly help when deciding where to go with Robert on Monday.
I had already met Nick’s Mom, but I also got to meet the dog Skipper.
He is a great dog and loves chasing a tennis ball that you hit as far as you like with a tennis racket. We stayed over the night and crashed hard since we didn’t get the until 2am. It was really nice for Nick to drive that far after having driven to get the Beer Revival and BBQ Cookoff tickets already that day. Steph and I slept on an air mattress and I must say that 2 people on an air mattress isn’t a great idea. Nick’s Mom made focaccia bread, which was delicious.
Today I went sailing with Jeremy B, Adam, Tina, Amit, Brian, Candice, and Steph. We went to pick up Brian and Candice and drove over the mountains with them. We got to the harbor and checked out the boat. It was hard to get the sail out, but we managed once the owner showed up and gave us tips on how to work it. The owner of the ship is a really nice guy in his 70’s. I hope he liked us, as we would like to take his ship out a lot more.
As we were preparing the ship an otter showed up in the bay hanging out around the fishing vessels. Probably picking up the scraps from the morning catch. Once we got out on the water the wind was really nice and steady. The whole time we were able to keep a speed of between 3 and 5 knots. The surge was a little big and the weather was a little cold and overcast, but all in all I had a great time sailing. Brian, Candice, Tina, Amit, and Jeremy were getting seasick, with Amit taking the worst of it.
While we were under way we had a good bit of guac and chips, with some really nice cider. Once we got back into the harbor we had lunch of salami, bread, cheese, and mustard that Adam brought. The mustard and salami were really good. We then went up to Java Junction and had some hot drinks to shake off the cold from the ocean. I realized that we were late to get to Nima’s recital when I noticed that it was in the East Bay. I feel really bad about missing it since it was a piece he composed and the first time he was performing with his Cello. I’ll have to find a way to make it up to him. The traffic to get over 17 was the worst I’ve ever seen it. It went on and on, to the point that we were in stop and go traffic before we even got over the summit. Brian and Candice were feeling the drowsy effects of the Dramamine, so they passed out in the back seat. I was feeling pretty sleepy myself, but the traffic wasn’t letting me relax for a second. We made it back to Brian and Candice’s place just fine.
Brian, Ben, Candice, and I went to the Sabercats game. The Sabercats are the Arena football team for San Jose. I have to say that this is much more entertaining to watch than almost any other sport I’ve gotten to watch. It has the mechanics of football, but the gameplay is much faster. It has the slamming people into walls like hockey. It has amazing plays much more often. The field is half as long and half as wide. The teams always go for it on 4th down. They had a harley drive out onto the field for no apparent reason. Everything was appropriately over the top. They handed out hats to everyone as we walked it. There is no sidelines, the field goes right to the stands. It was great.
The game itself was very close up to the end. With a minute to go the Sabercats turned it over to the Pittsburg Power, who returned it for a TD. They missed the extra point to make it a tied game. The Sabercats got a quick TD, and then intercepted a pass from the Power to finish off the game. This sport is incredibly offense heavy, which makes it fantastic to watch. The final score was 68/54.
When we got back to Mountain View Nima suggested that we go by the Persian Market that he frequents. It is called Rose International Market, and has a lot of really good, decently priced food. They have a kitchen in the back that will make amazing kabobs. They wrap the kabobs in flatbread and the flatbread soaks up all the juices from the cooked meat. It is tasty, a lot of food, and cheap. We took it back to his place and ate there. He also talked us into trying a carbonated yogurt drink, which was decently tasty. It isn’t good on its own, but when you are eating something fatty I could see it being pretty good. Steph also got a desert from there that Nima says translates to the ‘yellow soft’ stuff. It was really strongly flavored, but pretty good.





























