Saturday, October 10, 2009

Alpine Lake & Pine Ridge

It seems that it's possible to get from the southern edge of the Fairfax golf course up to the road near the Pine Ridge fire trail, which connects to the Pine Mountain loop and to trails going to the brewery in San Gernonimo.

This could be added on at the end of one version of the Lake Loop around the Sky Oaks side of the golf course.

Note Sod-donistas whacking it on would you believe it a day in October:

The beginning of the trail, which goes off Bullfrog, is not advised for cyclists:

However, no one can see you after the first couple hundred feet, and you come out on an unnamed and long unused fire trail that does not appear on maps.

It looks like a good place to practice uphill technical stuff--a fair amount of rocks, but gentle grade.

There are a few sketchy places, like this twenty feet of washed out gravel.

Eventually you come out on the road a few hundred feet from the Pine Ridge trail head.

Ugly hill to get up, but only a couple hundred feet:

Then you can go all the way out to hells have acre, north to intersect with Repack . .

. . . or south towards Kent Lake, which I explored a little:

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Big Rock Ridge Part I

How to get on Big Rock Ridge without dying or wishing you were dead . . . .

Here's the starting point, going north from Lucas Valley Road near LucasFilms:


Up . .

Several cutbacks:

Views:

After three miles of easy, looping cutbacks seems like you're at the top:

But then there's this:

And This:

And this:

Actually, the photo above is what you see looking back--starting where we left off on the Smith Fire Road circuit makes this whole thing relatively pleasant. At this point I had no desire to go back up that.

But starting at the 650 elevation near LucasFilms means that net-net you're going a lot more down than up.  

More evil hills in part II . . . 

Big Rock Ridge Part II


In the picture below, this is facing east towards where we reached the point on Chicken Shack Fire Road where you stop climbing and descend into Marinwood. It's  pretty far away at this point.



One of many long ass hills you want to make sure you go down--and don't come back.  Unfortunately, there's not avoiding this one:




 

View east & south from top of Queenstone Fire Road:


Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The Gathering Darkness: Freakish Fraud Events Cloud Year's End


Recent bizarreness in investment fraud seems to be a product of cosmic alignment in the weeks leading to Christmas. This year's manger features a con man with his hand out, lit by a helicopter search light. No angels in the budget this year.


High (or low) points so far:


Pay By Touch honcho John P. Rogers puts the touch on VC investors for $340 million


Attorney Marc Dreier hung out to dry for issuing $100 million in fake notes


Boots Del Biaggio nailed by Feds in $65 million scam


Add your own bailout insanity item here!




Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Utah-Based 4NExchange: Just Another Ponzi Scheme


In a state more knowned for Latter Day Saints and basements full of canned peaches, Forex futures "trading" company 4NExchange stuck out like the proverbial sore thumb.


Or at least it did to regulators, who arranged for proprietors Paul Grant and Ronald Bassett to pay $720,000 in civil fraud penalties. No word on the poor saps who poured untold amounts of money down the 4NExchange rathole. Some 220 customers lost about $18 million of the $30 million they invested.


Generally guys like this ignore warnings against similar practices in the future, but Grant and Bassett are in a place where fraud may be a little more difficult to commit: federal prison. Both are servering five year sentences for fraud, money laundering, and other do-re-mi related offenses.


They've also been ordered to repay the $18 million swindled out of investors. Note to investors: that's a when-monkeys-fly-out-of-my-ass scenario. The boys may not be in the Caymans, but you can damn straight bet that there money is.

Friday, October 31, 2008

SoCal Resident Fined $11 Million in Forex Ponzi


There's nothing like money, especially when it comes from suckers. Southern California fraudster Jinsup Choi was ordered to fork over $11 million after he was find guilty of swindling 83 people out of about $19 million over a five year period from 2002-2005.

Choi took money from investors who believed he was investing it in commodity futures. Instead, Choi took the dough and placated customers with fake account statements. In time honored Ponzi style, he fed old investors with funds fleeced from new ones.

Customer cash went for Choi's purchases of items like a yacht, cars, and bling.

Earlier this year Choi pled guilty to criminal wire fraud charges stemming from the scam.

The time frame illustrates how slow suckers are to get wise, and how equally slow the justice system works to make things right. It remains to be seen whether Choi can or will pay back investors as ordered by U.S.D.C. Judge Howard Matz.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

NYMEX Clerk to Pay $3.6 million for Fraud


This is getting a bit off my currency trading fraud focus, but there's something about fraud committed by bitter clerks that's just irresistible.


The CFTC recently announced that it's making NYMEX clerk Matthew Doyle pay back about $3.5 million to his employer, a NYMEX floor broker.


Doyle attempted to assign losing natural gas futures trades to client accounts, and then to his boss's account when the first plan fell through.


The great thing is the extent of the damage that come from the actions of a seeming bit player in the futures circus. Of course, if you screw up really big time in energy futures, there's a special term for it: Amaranth.


Don't know if the guy still has the $3 mil to pay back . . . .