Silver Joe's Adventure Journal


Posted by Greg Vernovage in Other on 3/29/2009 at 3:22 AM

At this time, I have decided to reflect a bit and let everyone at Silver Joe's know that you have helped me.  I love drinking coffee with my friends and clients.

I went home two days after I returned from Antarctica and a successful climb of the Vinson Massif.  I spent a week with my Dad before I had to promise to him that I would not miss "work" because of his cancer.  I did not.

During the week that I was home, my Dad and I spent a lot of time together.  We spoke and tried to eat and get our hands around this inevitable conclusion.  We were both pissed off.

Dad had a hard time getting food and drink in.....

One morning, I walked into the living room and had a cup of coffee, he asked me what I was drinking and i said it was coffee, "Silver Joe's Coffee Dad, you know, the kind i take up all the mountains and you read the adventure book about!"

Posted by Dwayne Bell in Other on 12/27/2008 at 5:47 PM

Recently, I had a chance to take a break in Morocco – and thanks to the help of a friend who's been living there learning Arabic and the culture for the past year, I also had the good fortune of guided tours. We visited Rabat, the capital, and the ancient city of Fes and Barnaby.

Before our outings - we always started with a good cup of coffee.  And in Morocco…lets just say, I must be part Moroccan, because they make it just the way I like it!  I drank a lot of their coffee and it was all very good!

Each morning I had breakfast in my friendly and nice, well worn hotel near the train station in Rabat. It was a small European style buffet, with some mystery meat I tried for the experience. But I quickly settled for the excellent OJ, fresh baked baggets and real butter, with several GREAT cups of hot, rich, strong, smooth black coffee that couldn't have complimented the bread and butter more. Ahh! The simple pleasures of life. Coffee, good bread and butter, a good book, and a Moroccan morning awash in sunshine with freindly people ambling about. This was the routine that started each day!

The Moroccan streets were just as you might expect, vibrant, colorful, pleasing and ancient.  A terrific backdrop for a spiritual retreat and reading the Koran, The Shack, and the New Testament book of James – amazingly fresh and as insightful as I  hoped it would be.

A great trip now becomes a sweet memory and a personal moment in my spiritual journey.

Posted by Holly Beck in Other on 9/9/2008 at 11:00 PM

My life is too often crowded with people, photographers, time constraints, expectation, and clutter. Those things combine to distract me from inspiration and meditation. So, taking advantage of a twelve day window in Australia between contests, I turned away from the multitude of options involving standard experiences with familiar people, rented a campervan in Brisbane with the goal to drive solo to Melbourne. I asked friends and locals how long that would take and they estimated 26 hours. A 26 hour drive spread out over 12 days, perfect!

I had quite a few people offer to come along, and several others absolutely shocked that I was eager to make the journey alone. It was something I needed to do and I was determined to do it. I began every morning by brewing a strong cup of coffee on the small propane stove, then looked at the map, made a goal of how many kilometers to cover, looked for a good hike, a great wave, and a peaceful campground in which to spend the night, then popped a beer, did some reading and writing. It's been a few months now, and the memories of that trip have helped sustain my excitement through the doldrums of summer. Looking back through my journal, below are some excerpts:

Driving along in my Sopranos van, left hand stick shifting on the “wrong” side of the road, I look out over the calm highway at the expanse of green surrounding me and feel giddiness bubbling up into a smile not to be erased anytime soon. All the responsibility of the last so many months to family, friends, boyfriend, photo shoots, contests is left in the dust as the dashboard kilometer ticker spins. Sure I’ll meet up with those things once again, but right now the sense of freedom and adventure is so dangerously euphoric to my addiction prone personality that I’m a bit worried about losing any impetus whatsoever to return home. This morning marks day four. Four days wandering alone down the beautiful coast of Eastern Australia. It’s been one long candy necklace of perfectly sweet moments in which I fully realize that at this all-important “now”, I’d prefer to be absolutely nowhere else in the world.

Sandy dry grass beneath adventurous toes
White rocky plain and shadow fallen cliff
Topped with trees a rustlin’,
Wind a dustin’ off the cobwebs,
And inspiration rushes in.
The steady sound of nature roaring to spite the din
Of the drone of a thousand hands reaching
Now left behind
Allowing me retreat within

An effervescent feeling’s rising,
And sunshine’s closing in.
There’s a smile that warms completely,
Beneath this devilish grin.
Certain evidence to be used by those insisting
That solitude pleasures are a sin.

Smooth black pavement stretching
Two lanes through plains of grass
Left hand controlling shifting
From this right here
To that long since passed
And now my thoughts are circling
Round how might I make this feeling last?

for more, go here: http://hollybecksurfs.blogspot.com/2008/03/galloping-time.html

Posted by Katie Rogers in Other on 8/25/2008 at 9:05 PM

My little sister and I have been riding weekday mornings early before work. It has been so fun to get out there while it’s still relatively cool, the morning fog is out, and I think it helps us both get a good start on the day. Although we both missed it this morning, for the last five weeks, we’ve made it out there almost every weekday.

The first week or two, we used saddles to ride the horses, but since then (to save time, energy, and to work a little more on quality riding skills) we have been riding exclusively bareback. At first, we were a bit unstable, but we’ve both gotten much more stable and I have even gotten up to trotting and cantering bareback, which I thought was going to be hard, but actually isn’t.

Anyway, something I’ve always wanted to do is to learn how to ’swing up’ on a horse. I’ve seen others do it and have been told that virtually anyone can learn with tons of practice, so we thought we’d give it a go. While it isn’t impossible, it is quite challenging and it looks like we may have a fairly long road ahead to being very reliable at making it up on the horse. As a benchmark on how we look starting out this journey, I’ve included a link to a video of some of our first attempts to get up without any help. To get us practicing at least once a week, Fridays were dubbed “Swing-Up Fridays”, then later changed to “Fling-Up Fridays”, the change due to added alliteration value as well as more accurately describing what we look like. As we progress (and I’m pretty sure we will since I’m already better than is seen in the video), I’ll keep you updated.

It's always rewarding to find something and make it a personal challenge. From here on out, I'm going to make sure I'm always working on something either mself or someone else challenged me to do. And I'm not afraid of failing.

THE MOVIE

Couldn't figure out if I can attach video here or not, so it's just a link.

Posted by Caitlin Ciccone in Other on 8/20/2008 at 5:05 PM

Finally...........I have arrived to add a chapter to the adventure Journal!

I have been around the world drinking far too much Silver Joe's Coffee(well thats not possible), enjoying my life and getting myself injured. My adventure is more like a 5 month ongoing adventure. After my ski season and rigorous travel schedule throughout Europe and then North America in the spring, I decided it was time to take a little me time. So I joined two of my teamates on Maui, where one of them now returns home to when she is done her long season in Europe. My other teamate who was staying wtih her boyfriend--a professional windsurfer (with a lot of toys, thats why i mention it more adventure opps), was who I stayed and trained with. I brought my road bike over so we could trek around Maui and get our aerobic basis back to start out our summer training! We had a blast! We did so many new things that were just amazing and the ocean is an unbelievable natural healer. Did some down wind stand up paddleboarding, windsurfing, camping, surfing, yoga, you name it we did it. It was unreal.....then I headed back home to Park City, UT and was planning my move to Jackson Hole, WY where I live now. I didn't realize how much stuff I actually owned, needless to say it took a lot longer than expected to pack it all up. I finally did it though, moved my stuff up and was ready to enjoy the amazing summer in Jackson. It was right after I moved, second weekend out camping and I decided to jump on a dirtbike for a little cruise. It was a 450yz and I shouldn't have been riding it. There was still snow up in the mountains, and the bike hit it, fishtailed, and fell towards my left kinee and my knee fell towards the bike, spraining my mcl and what I thought after six weeks of rehab for the mcl was a tear in my meniscus. I went for a scope two weeks ago and walked out of surgery no problems. They took some irritated tissue out of the joint and I am working on getting back on my mountain bike and 100% back to my adventures.

Although in the last six weeks I did enjoy two ski trips, more for the little kids I was coaching, but I did get to get out on some snow. I traveled to Mt. Hodd for a camp around the 4th of July and then Whistler....which is an amazing, amazing place, two weekis ago. I had so much fun with the little kids it really made me remember the days that hooked me to the sport for life. I had a moment in Whistler that I felt that child back in me just so happy to be on snow! Glad I could share with you and until the next adventure I gotta go drink some Espresso Roast!

Ciao for now,

Caitlin

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