Translations

Friday, January 09, 2026

House Mountain Hike #205, 1-4-2026: Clearing the Dark Clouds (published 1-9-2026; article #542)

Introduction

Can hiking clear dark clouds from your mind? Yes, it can, and it did for this Appalachian Irishman last Sunday afternoon, 1/4/2026!

Welcome, dear reader, to the 83rd entry in the Hiking topic section. Also, as the 136th entry in the Family topic section, I will first explain the dark clouds. Why haven't I been out in the woods hiking since Saturday, 11/29/2025 (as described in my 12/1/2025 article)? Weather conditions, more pressing needs, dark clouds, and other activities delayed my call to the mountains. The mountains, by the way, are always calling.

The Dark Clouds

The first dark cloud arose before last Thanksgiving. My 87-year-old father-in-law had not been feeling well. His health was of special concern last month. (The 2/13/2025 article was about his hospitalizations early last year.)

An appointment with his specialist on Monday, 12/22/2025, led to Paw Gordon's subsequent emergency room (ER) visit that evening. After over 12 hours in the ER, which was ridiculous, he was admitted to the hospital the next morning. Thankfully, my wife's two-week Christmas break started on that Monday. In shifts, family members stayed with my father-in-law around the clock. Hospitalized through Christmas, he was discharged to home on Sunday, 12/28/2025. The family postponed the Christmas celebration until last Saturday.

Thankfully, my father-in-law's hospitalization was due to prolonged dehydration, nothing worse. Dehydration, however, is serious. Paw Gordon's symptoms, including an extremely fast pulse, were due to being dehydrated for so long. For further information, please read “Dehydration: Signs, Symptoms, and Effects,” WebMD, reviewed by Minesh Khatri, MD, 8/5/2025. In short, you can lead a person to water, but you can't make him drink. My father-in-law has set before him the goal to drink eight eight-ounce glasses of water a day.

The second dark cloud appeared on the day that the hospital discharged my father-in-law to return home. My wife came home, back from sitting with her father at the hospital, and felt under the weather. I took her to a nearby medical clinic on Tuesday, the eve of New Year's Eve. Thankfully, it was only a nasty virus, which she must have picked up at the hospital. Recovering at home, she was well enough to return to teaching this last Monday. My “long-suffering” wife, however, did not enjoy her two-week Christmas break!

Clearing the Dark Clouds by Hiking House Mountain

Last Sunday afternoon, 1/4/2026, I finally scratched the itch to hike! Even though it was too warm for this time of year, the clear blue sky called me to take my 205th hike on House Mountain State Natural Area.

With an additional desire to visit with my wife and her family at her father's house, I only hiked up and back down the west trail. The hike up took from 2:12 to 2:47 PM, 35 minutes. (This must be my slower normal, since the at-fault driver failed to yield to my right-of-way on Tuesday, 3/29/2016. My surgically repaired right foot and knee still slow me down.) As a bit of “crowing,” near the first of the six upper switchbacks, I passed a group of three young hikers, a male and two females. They looked to be in their 20s. Also, hiking up the west bluff, I thought, “Surely, they will catch up to and pass me.” Instead, they arrived a few minutes after I had reached the west bluff. I nodded to the young man. He grinned and nodded back. Unspoken and to his understanding, I was saying, “This 65-year-young man just out-hiked you!”

I photographed the following northeastern view from the west bluff at 2:51 PM. The rock outcropping was behind me. The ridge trail, which I didn't explore, begins along the right side of the image. The large rock, which I touch to check my time, is in the foreground.


After only seven minutes at the west bluff, I started hiking down and out along the west trail, up which I had hiked. Now below the ridge with the west bluff just behind and above me, I photographed the following at 3:01 PM. The view looks toward the southeast.

I was standing on a narrow rock outcropping. The trail continues to the left and down in the image. Not very much farther down are two rock formations that require me to scoot down on all fours. Before my left shoulder, right kneecap, and right heel were surgically reconstructed, I could walk down those steep areas on two feet.

Having hiked down the six upper switchbacks and the four lower switchbacks, I trekked through the final section, crossed the wooden bridge, and finished the trail at 3:50 PM. An hour and 38 minutes in the woods was better than not having been there!

Conclusion

After the hike, I joined my wife at her father's house. Her sister, who also lives there, and her youngest sister, who was in from Nashville, were also there. I told them that I had cleared from my mind the dark clouds of my father-in-law's hospitalization and my wife's subsequent illness by hiking House Mountain for the 205th time. I hope that I encouraged them to likewise clear away those clouds from their minds.

Of course, wouldn't you know it? The next day, when my wife returned from Christmas break to her teaching job, her sister, who lives with their father, came down with that new cold virus (COVID-19)! Two days later, my father-in-law tested positive for it. Well, we are clearing these new dark clouds. Our niece, the daughter of my wife's next-to-youngest sister, has been working remotely from my father's house and helping care for her sick Papaw and mother. Nearby, I have helped as needed. Thankfully, both are recovering from that pesky new cold virus.

Until next time, dear reader, please ensure that you are hydrating yourself properly and keeping your immune system strong. I look forward to another trek into the woods soon! Of course, today, we are getting much-needed rain.

Thursday, January 01, 2026

Appalachian Irishman by the Numbers in 2025 (published 1-1-2026; article #541)

Introduction

Happy New Year, dear reader, and welcome to the 112th entry in the topic section, Life (such as it is)! We certainly hope that 2026 will be a happy and good year. The undiscovered future is before us. Come what may, let us continue to “turn right and go straight,” for that path through Christ leads us to everlasting life and unimaginable joy in heaven.

Today, while keeping tabs on the early College Football Playoff Quarterfinal games, I thought that I would write another year-in-review article for this website for last year.

Previous Annual Reviews

I started writing these year-end reviews for 2021. The previous four annual summaries are as follows:

Appalachian Irishman by the Numbers: New Year's Eve Snapshot on Two Platforms (published 12-31-2021; article #287)

APPALACHIAN IRISHMAN: 2022 RECORDS (published 1-1-2023; article #384)

Appalachian Irishman, by the Numbers, in 2023 (published 1-8-2024; article #448)

Appalachian Irishman, by the Numbers, in 2024: New Year's Day Terrorist Attack in New Orleans (published 1-1-2025; article #510)

Before writing this article, I reread those reviews for the last four years. My, how time does go on!

2025 in Review

I hope that last year was a good one for you, dear reader. Life, like a mountain ridgeline, does have its ups and downs. For our extended families, my wife, and I, last year gifted us with high points and challenged us with valleys. By God's grace, we endured those valleys.

The Numbers

The following is from this website's analytics page, which only I can see. All-time views, since the initial article on 3/6/2006, were 592,126 (as of today at 7:30 AM). Yesterday's views totaled 259, which was a little low. Total views in December were 21,683. Divided by 31 days, last month's average views per day were 699.45.

In total, before this article, 540 articles were published on this website. Those articles have garnered a total of 295 comments. Last year, 30 new comments were made on a number of articles. Of course, those include my replies to comments. I do wish that more readers would comment on my articles. The good or even critical comments that I receive are always welcome!

For the last 30 days, December, several articles were viewed from the following top 19 nations with view totals included: United States, 5,650. China, 2,460. Singapore, 1,600. Brazil, 1,270. Germany, 920. Russia, 790. Hong Kong, 780. France, 578. United Kingdom, 482. Vietnam, 350. Mexico, 314. India, 248. Argentina, 198. Iraq, 171. Bangladesh, 169. Spain, 157. Canada, 145. Italy, 126. Pakistan, 113. Other nations outside the top 19, 2,940.

In 2025, this website had 258,837 total views by my manual tallies for each month. Website analytics for the same period show 259,000 views, probably due to rounding up.

In 2025, I published 31 articles, roughly half the number from the last two years. I haven't lost interest in writing. Other obligations and interests, however, have needed my attention. Writing two or three articles a month seems to be my preference.

Top 20 Articles by Views

Early this morning, I searched this website's analytics for the all-time (since the initial article on 3/6/2006) top 20 articles by view totals. Those were as follows in the order of highest views:

HOW TO PRONOUNCE “APPALACHIAN” (published 3/6/2006; inaugural article): 2,590 views.

Saturday, 5/15/2021: Fearghail Clan Contact, “Mask Off” Continues, Uncle Bobby, & Armed Forces Day (published 5-15-2021): 2,420 views.

Introducing “Donnie Laws: East Tennessee Outdoors” (published 4-4-2023; article #401): 1,500 views.

Devil's Nose, 11-29-2013 Hike (published 1-1-2014): 1,100 views.

“IF I WERE THE DEVIL” – Inspired by Paul Harvey (published 7-22-2022; article #340): 979 views.

Biblical Worldview: 1st Century, 21st Century, and 6-24-2022 Pro-Life Victory (published 6-26-2022; article #336): 891 views.

My Mountain! (published 3-19-2006): 815 views.

WHY I LEFT (published 3-7-2009): 781 views.

I’M STILL ALIVE—WHY? (published 8/26/2016): 701 views.

House Mountain Hike #200, 3-23-2025: Milestone Hike with and for Family! (published 3-26-2025; article #521): 682 views.

Biblical Worldview: Book Recommendation by Barna: “American Worldview Inventory 2021-22: The Annual Report on the State of Worldview in the United States” (published 6-7-2022; article #332): 679 views.

Worldviews in Conflict: The Pro-Life Argument Easily Won (published 6-30-2022; article #337): 669 views.

Cars & Trucks: “The Significance of the Passage of Time” (published 8-14-2022; article #346): 666 views. (That was a “lucky” 666 views at that moment! Thankfully, the views for this article increased after that “lucky” tally.)

Charleston, MO, Family Reunion & Mission Moscow Reunion (published 8-5-2023; article #423): 628 views.

What Is AppalachianIrishman.com? Copilot Is Mainly Correct. (published 7-5-2025, article #532): 607 views.

THE TRUE LIGHT QUARTET: UNCLE PAUL'S LEGACY (published 9-7-2022; article #355): 594 views.

Saturday, 6-21-2025: My Sister-in-Law's Birthday, a New Fly-Killing Record, and the USA Bombed Iran (published 6-23-2025; article #530): 580 views.

How to Pronounce “Appalachian”? This Podcast Helps! (published 9-13-2023; article #430): 560 views.

Devil's Nose Mountain, Hawkins County (published 3-7-2006; article #2): 536 views.

Warning! Pro Source Home Buyers Preys on the Gullible! (published 6-10-2025; article #527): 509 views.

Conclusion

Well, that is, as they say, a wrap! The College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at the Rose Bowl between 1st-seed Indiana and 9th-seed Alabama is in the second quarter. Later, I am looking forward to watching the College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at the Sugar Bowl between 3rd-seed Georgia and 6th-seed Ole Miss (without Lane “Skippin'” Kiffin). Go Dawgs!

In this new year, come what may, let us continue to “turn right and go straight,” for that path through Christ leads us to everlasting life and unimaginable joy in heaven. That is my wish and prayer for you, dear reader!