08.02.2008

John Guilday Cave Preserve
Went on one last cave trip to Trout Cave before it is gated and forever closed. I got an amazing photograph of endangered Virginia Long-eared bats!!!

Buy photo here.

John Guilday Cave Preserve
Here is Chris and I at the entrance. In a month, it will be gone and the awesome scenery will be replaced with cold, long steel bars to keep people out.

07.18.2008

This is a two-week project I worked on about the Fresh Air Fund. The program offers free summer experiences New York City children from low-income communities. They come by the busloads to the Shenandoah Valley, as many Mennonite farm families open up their homes to these children. I followed Armani Magloire, 11, of Brooklyn, N.Y., when she stayed with the Rhodes family on their dairy farm in Rockingham County.
Fresh Air
Armani Magloire, 11 of Brooklyn, N.Y., stays with the Rhodes family on their dairy farm with the Fresh Air Fund.

Fresh Air
Katrina Rhodes (left), 12, shows Armani around the farm after her arrival Friday evening. Armani saw her first pig, cow and chicken. She learned that bacon, ham and pork chops came from pigs.

Fresh Air
Armani doesn’t know what to think about these baby calves. The Rhodes, who have hosted children for 25 of the 27 years since their marriage in 1981, have 100 cows, three dogs, two pigs, 10 chickens, one house cat and countless wild cats roaming the outbuildings on their dairy farm.

Fresh Air
Kathy Rhodes tucks her daughter Katrina and Armani into bed during the first night of her stay. The Rhodes had a spare bedroom for Armani, but she never slept in it. She wanted to sleep with someone since she normally shares the bed with one or two of her eight siblings in her 4-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn.

Fresh Air
To pass time at a church fundraising event at Dayton Mennonite Church Armani teaches Katrina to play a clapping game that she and her friends play in her home borough of Brooklyn.

Fresh Air
Armani Magloire, 11, (center) prays with her host sister, Katrina, and host-mother Kathy while attending church at the Dayton Mennonite Church. Armani said she didn’t attend church regularly at home, except occasionally with her grandmother. Both Steve and Kathy Rhodes agree that their children and the inner-city children have benefitted from the experience of the Fresh Air Fund. “We’re a Christian Mennonite family who hosts,” said Kathy Rhodes, “And we can form a relationship with a child from a different cultural and ethnic background that is life-long . . . I think it’s pretty awesome.”

Fresh Air
Armani holds her nose while cleaning the utters of one of the cows for milking at the Rhodes’ dairy farm, which is called Staka Holsteins Inc. “She got right in there and wasn’t afraid of the cows,” said Steve Rhodes.

Fresh Air
Armani and Katrina swim at a family friend’s pool as Kathy watches one hot summer afternoon. This luxury is something that Armani has the chance to do at home during the summer at one of her neighborhood pools in Brooklyn.

Fresh Air
Armani learns some of the music that Jessie, 17, (center) and Katrina can play on the piano before Sunday dinner as host-father Steve Rhodes rests on the couch before lunch.

Fresh Air
Katrina and Armani add a crumble topping to blackberry pies. Armani helped make pie, ice cream, donuts and Mexican pizza during her stay.

Fresh Air Page
Armani pauses to wait for her host-father, Steve Rhodes, while picking blackberries on a neighbor’s farm.

Fresh Air
Armani teaches some dance moves to her 17-year-old host sister, Jessie (right), and Katrina Sunday afternoon while listening to rapper Soulja Boy’s “Crank Dat” song on the internet.

Fresh Air Fund
Armani Magloire, 11 of Brooklyn, N.Y., stays with the Rhodes family on their dairy farm with the Fresh Air Fund.
Kathy Rhodes and Armani Magloire embrace in a goodbye after her 10-day stay on the farm. “I had fun,” Armani said, “I’m coming back next year.”

“We don’t have all the answers,” said Kathy Rhodes. “But I hope somehow we can help a child realize there’s more to life than what they know in the city.”

07.06.2008

Mystery Falls
For our final Tennessee caveing day we went to Chattanooga to rappel the famous 285-foot pit named Mystery Falls. Here Chris and Will rappel the pit together, on separate ropes.

07.05.2008

Keystone River Cave
The second day of Tennessee caving . . . (from L to R, back to front) are Aaron Moses, Dave Socky, Rickey Shortt, Chris Coates, me, Will Urbanski and Carl Cornett before our Keystone River Cave trip.

If you notice, I’m the only woman on the trip . . . this is a theme I’ve really become aware of. I guess the extreme sport of caving wards off the girly-girls. My response is “GREAT!” More drama-free adventures for me!

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Aaron in a pool before the large drop, an 248-foot pit.

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Photo by Aaron Moses
Here Aaron composted two different images into one. The drop is amazing, my favorite so far, and I was glad he had all the photography gear to capture this awesome image!

Keystone River Cave
A cool formation I found at the bottom of the pit while waiting to climb out.

07.04.2008

Rumbling Falls Cave
I celebrated the Fourth of July caving with new and old friends at Rumbling Falls, a Tennessee classic. Here is me, being silly and giddy happy, at the entrance rappel into the cave.

Rumbling Falls Cave
We saw an 10-inch long cave crawfish (crawdad) in the stream deep in the cave. The reason it is white, is because it lives its entire life cycle underground and pigment doesn’t matter down there.

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Photo by Aaron Moses
Here is the 201-foot drop in Stupendous Pit . . . it was amazing in every way humanly possible.