Showing posts with label Utah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Utah. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

A Week in Escalante on My Own

Again it has been a long time since I have posted anything on my blog.  A lot has happened, and I have had quite a few adventures which I feel should have been put up here.  But alas, I am lazy.

After spending a summer in Texas selling alarms door to door, I had a month off to basically be a bum.  I was running low on funds, but I had all the time in the world.  I spent more than a couple nights camping.  Part of my camping was because I missed the fresh air and the wilderness of Utah.  Part of my camping was because I had nowhere else to go.  I did end up crashing on a friend's couch for a week or so while I was waiting to go on the company cruise that we had won.  More on that later.
I love my Subaru.  It is the perfect car for me.  My Subaru has allowed me to travel cross country so many times.  It has never let me down, and it has proven to be quite a comfortable porta-bedroom.  With the seats folded down, and an air mattress rolled out, I can sleep quite comfortably.  On most road trips I push my body too far and stay awake on the road as long as possible.  I can't afford hotel room every time I get drowsy.  Whenever I would finally pull over to sleep, I used to have to recline the seat as far as possible and scrape together 45 minutes of shut eye before hitting the road again.  In my Subaru Outback though, I can easily sleep 6-7 hours and get back going as if I had planned to spend the night in such a fashion.  It's not quite an RV, but for the amount of "softroading" I do, and the gas mileage I need to travel as far as I do, it is perfection.


After spending a few days camping out at my favorite spot in the mountains near Tooele, I decided to saddle up and head off on adventure.  I would liked to have had some friends along, but I didn't want to go through the hassle of making sure I had the right mixture of personalities, and everyone coming along had the right gear.  I've been gradually hording outdoorsy gear for a few years, and knew I could pick up and go wherever whenever because after all, all of my worldly possessions were in the back of my car.
I had been backpacking with a wilderness group a couple years ago.  They take maladjusted youth out into the wild to allow the healing effects of nature to take place.  Being out away from technology, having time to think, having a goal in mind, and a simplified almost primitive form of living can work wonders on the soul.
After spending 8 days backpacking in Southern Utah I learned that the job was not for me, but the location was too breathtaking not to revisit.  My plan was to take 5-8 days and go solo backpacking in Escalante, Utah.  I hoped that my memory of the location would not get me lost.  The multiple slot canyons and vastness of the terrain still leave me in awe to this day.

Pictured above is the gear I packed for my trek.
 50 Liter Internal frame backpack (probably should have used my 65)
10 degree sleeping bag
Hard Shell from my Columbia 3-in-1 coat
Handheld GPS (invaluable for the lazy orienteer)
Inflatable camp mat 
cook kit
(2) 1 liter nalgene bottles
(1) 3 liter water bladder (in the backpack)
3 dry bags of various sizes to contain food, clothing, and electronics
30' of webbing
hammock
4 caribiners
(1) 10x12 Tarp
(2) trekking poles
(1) knock off GoPro
my Nikon DSLR and 2 lenses
Wool hat my mom knitted for me
Goretex waterproof mid ankle hiking boots
stove with fuel
Bear Grylls Gerber pocket knife
I also had some toiletries in the backpack, tent stakes, some basic first aid equipment, and a hundred feet of cordage.

I'm sure I forgot some items, but all in all, it was quite heavy when loaded up.  Some of the stuff I used just so that I wouldn't have felt dumb for bringing it along.  I wasn't going up Everest or anything, but any hike of respectable length makes to wonder how many items you could do without.  On my particular trip, I learned that I could have done without the freeze dried food variety that I brought.

I loaded up my gear; checked and double checked that I had all with me that I would need.  I made sure that my memory cards had plenty of room left on them, and my camera batteries were full.  I left mid afternoon for the 5 hour drive south from Provo, UT.

I think I told enough people where I was going that they would be able to send a search party if I didn't reappear within a week.  It was fun to be off on an excursion, but a little bit daunting to be doing it alone.  I knew that I wasn't as familiar with the area as I should have been, and that there was no way of getting any cell reception once I entered the canyons.  

After navigating my way to the Town of Escalante, I learned that I would actually have to backtrack about 5 miles to find a service highway, and then drive about 30 miles down that to reach the trail head I was aiming for.  Bombing down the dark dusty trail at nightfall was amazing.  I blasted my music and rolled down the window.  The cool October air keeping me awake.  It had been raining for the past few days which made the road very muddy, and 2 or 3 times I came across a puddle that was over 100 feet long, and splashing up against my bumper.  I am admittedly over-confident in the Subaru All-Wheel drive system, and perhaps I should not be so foolhardy when I'm miles from any help, and going into the back country at a time of year that almost guarantees I won't see another soul, but oh well.  I made it through every mini-lake just fine, and kept on driving.  It was only after the road got especially gnarly that I realized that I had gone past the trail head.  The road was not marked, and there was nothing to make it look like an official spot to start a hike, so I had blown right past it.  
As I was driving about 45 MPH down this dark road, I felt a little uneasy every time I saw a patch of dirt that showed where a river had crossed only hours before.  The dry desert floor mixed with recent rainfall is the perfect recipe for quicksand.  I knew that if I happened to get buried up to my axles, that there would be no way out until a bigger truck came along.  Stuck in such a predicament would make me all that much more vulnerable to a flash flood.  They come without warning, and can still wash your car away down a torrent of muddy water though the rain fell miles away.  So, driving too fast as I was, I rounded a bend, and suddenly came upon a spot of the road that had been washed out.  Not just that I couldn't see where the road was meant to go, but a culvert had collapsed, and 3/4 of the roadway suddenly dropped 6' down off to my right.  I was able to skid to a halt just before my tires went into the ravine, but it was way too close for comfort.  I surveyed my options and decided to cut up into the brush to the left of the chasm.  My tires spun a little bit, protesting as I pushed the wagon up into dryer pastures.  I was only a couple hundred feet beyond the obstacle when I realized I had gone too far.  Creeping back past the gaping, car-swallowing, sink hole was more daunting on the return trip.

In a few moments I had driven myself back to the proper fork in the road and parked.  I was still not very sure I was at the right trail head.  I didn't want to get my car ticketed while I was away.  I had dreams of crawling my way out of the wilderness, beaten and bruised, only to find that my car had been towed away and I would be left stranded. 
I decided that rather than start out my trek in the dead of night, I would sleep and pick my trail at first light; a good thing too, because it wasn't long after I unrolled my sleeping bag that great drops of water came down pelting the roof of my car.  It was so loud that I occasionally got up to check that it wasn't hail hitting the sheet metal.  I slept uneasily, again dreaming of my car getting washed away in a flash flood.  (I later found out that 20 people had died in similar conditions only a month prior) Click here for story.

First light ended up being about noon by the time I finally woke up, ate the remaining hot dog in my snack stash, and clicked lock on my car.  I left a note on the dash with a phone number and an expected return date.  Hopefully no one would loot my car while I was away.  Finding a trail proved to be more difficult.  I zigged and zagged across the scrubby desert terrain looking for any semblance of a path.  My backpack felt heavy, my legs were not yet used to balancing the extra 40-50 pounds on my frame.  I was grateful to have my trekking poles along.  They helped me scramble up smooth rocky surfaces, and helped me stay at a decent marching pace as I crossed the dusty landscape  Those poles probably saved my life more than a few times on this trip.  At length I came across an old barbed wire fence that served to keep livestock from tumbling into the slot canyons and dying.  I figured that I should be on the opposite side of this fence since my goal was to get into the canyons.  After following the fence, I finally started to notice a crack open up in the earth.  As I hiked, the crack became a trench, then a ravine.  I lowered my backpack gently down over the edge of a cliff, using the webbing to get it as low as possible.  After I carefully released my grip, however, the backpack still took a tumble and scooped up some unwanted soil onto my camera.  I hopped down after my pack, dusted it off, and continued trekking.  
Not long after dropping into the canyon, things began to be familiar.  The landscape had changed a little bit due to the weather, and the passage of time.  The path wasn't as worn as the last time I had hiked Coyote Gulch (the name of the trail).  

That little squiggly line to the left of the blue dot is Coyote Gulch.  With all the twists and turns it ends up being about 12-14 miles from the trail head.
It is hard to capture in a photo, or describe in writing how truly amazing the canyons in southern Utah are.  It' almost a spiritual experience to be back in the country, away from other people.  Just your wits and your preparation.  In hindsight, I do wish I had someone to share the adventure with, but there's always next time.
On the first day I found out how scary it can be to sink into quicksand.  Early on in the trip I was trying to keep my boots dry, and my pants clean.  I wanted to be comfortable and not deal with damp, gravelly socks.  The effort only lasted the first day because after a while you realize that you are constantly crossing over the river, and treading on shifting sand.  One time the river bed seemed just as solid as any other spot; but upon trying to check for quicksand, I suddenly sank up to my knees.  I was in a hurry to get out of it, but the whole ground gave way beneath me like I had gone from standing on gravel to standing on jello pudding.  It was a very real possibility that I could get sunk, and stuck, well out of ear shot of any other human being.  It would be one way to die, but as for me, I'm glad I'm still here. 
The first night I slept in my hammock, high and dry.  I stretched the tarp over my minuscule campsite to protect against the rain.  I stopped all the time to take pictures, and am only now realizing that I haven't posted that many of them.  Hammock camping in October...is cold.  Be warned.  I did not sleep at all the first night because the blood kept draining from my arms and legs and the wind swept away and heat from beneath me.  If the ground hadn't been littered in thorns and mule deer bones, I would have slept on the ground.  
My dinner was made by scooping up some river water, boiling it to kill any bugs, and to get it up to cooking temperature, and then dumping my freeze-dried mix into the pot.  It was sandy, and not good...at all.  I like the idea of freeze dried food.  For the most part it tastes good, and is nutritious.  The benefit is that it doesn't take up much space, and is fairly light.  The negative is that it kinda makes you fart a lot, and may or may not turn your poop odd colors....is what I read... in a book... not first hand knowledge by any means.  REI was having a sale on this type of food.  It was only after I had opened the box and loaded all 18 meals into my pack that I realized that it was all 100% Vegan.  That's great for you Vegans out there, but it did not do well for my required calorie or protein intake.  One meal was a measly 180 calories, and they tasted nasty.  
So if anyone wants 12 packets of "beefish stew", let me know.  I would have been much better served by carrying extra clif bars.  That, and oatmeal was my main diet.
By the second day I was getting into the swing of things.  I recognized all the places I had passed by before.  Constantly amazed by the scale and magnitude of what I was seeing. 
Only ended up using the coat and the hammock once.


If you have never experienced Zion national Park, or Moab, or Escalante, or Arches...you need to reevaluate what you're doing with your life.

The contrast between the massive red cliffs, and the lush greenery along the river was stark.  Around the winding bends of the sandstone canyon I saw arches carved away by years of wind and water.

I met my first people on my second day in.  This gave me a boost of morale.  Since I passed them as the were coming out, I knew that I could follow their footprints to see where solid ground was.  Much of my first day was spent checking and rechecking that I wouldn't sink into quicksand.  I traveled much faster as I got to know the pattern of that one guys crocs better.  For the temperature, I was glad I wore boots, but for the moisture comfort level, I would recommend chacos, or similar outdoorsy sandals.
I walked far too late past dinner time before pitching camp.  Before I knew it I was scrambling through the reeds trying not to fall into the river and desperately straining against the light of my headlamp to see the faintest trace of the footprints which had led me so well before.  After an hour of so of struggling against the falling temperature and the failing light, I finally found a flat, dry spot near the trail and began the slow process of setting up camp.  This time I used my tarp ad an impromptu tent, and cooked my dinner on a flat rock.  Fires weren't allowed at this part of the trail, so I had to curl up in my cold sleeping bag with no other form of heat besides my damp, tired body.
The morning revealed that I was only 30 feet or so from one of the more technically difficult descents.  I'm so glad I didn't try it at nighttime.  My water supply was continuously being refilled from the river.  Although my iodine tablets would kill any germs in the water, they did nothing for the red sand that gritted my teeth long after I was done drinking.
The third day found me passing by more waterfalls and hikers.  The temperatures seemed to be up in the 70's and there were enough groups that I no longer felt alone.  I no longer felt that I was on this crazy backpacking trip that could kill me, but rather on an extended campout that anyone could do.
One of the difficulties I ran into on the trail was that there was no trail; or rather, there were multiple options, and each one would eventually get me down the canyon.  Usually there was a high road and a low road.  Sometimes one would lead me into quicksand, and the other would lead me through thick vegetation.  I don't even want to think about how many spiders hitchhiked in my hair during these passages. 
After taking three days to reach the confluence with the Escalante river, I took a couple pictures.  Paused to breathe, and then did an about face and headed back towards civilization.
On the trip down I averaged 3-4 miles per day.  I t doesn't sound like much, but with the slow going of the river crossings, and the frequent photo stops, it was still busy days.  Since I made it part of the way back on the third day, I decided to take a rest, and set up camp early.  By about 3:30 I was set up.  I had a massive ledge over me for protection, soft sand beneath my feet for comfort, and the one outhouse in the canyon on the opposite side of the river...for convenience.  
This was the one spot that I actually lit a fire.  It is amazing the psychological effect of a small fire in the wilderness.  Something primitive is awakened, letting you know that this is home, and this is safe.  
Free from the burden of my pack, and a pressing schedule, I decided to go for a jaunt with nothing but my camera.  Since my boots were drying out, and I had no inclination to put my socks back on, I took off across the river barefoot.  
My feet were not as tough as they used to be, but after some time I grew accustomed to avoiding cactus.  I realized that this place was pure.  There was no garbage, not broken glass to be worried about.  A pristine landscape that had been successfully preserved, and posed not threat to me talking my little barefoot walkabout.  

The red rocks had absorbed amazing amounts of heat from the day's sunshine.  The darker rocks were too hot to touch.

 After gorging myself on overly sweetened oatmeal, I turned in, and watched the sky fade from perfect clear blue, to deep purple.  The moon rose early, and I could see the faint shapes of bats flying around catching their evening meal.

The next days were exhausting.  Since I had already seen most of the sights on the way down the river, I really didn't have much need to haul out my camera heading back upstream.  I powered through 5 miles on the 4th day without much to make note of.  The final day is when I turned on my GPS and started keeping track of the distance between myself and my car.  I realized that at the pace I was going, I could make it back in one push...if I made it 9 miles that day.  With my backpack no lighter, but my body feeling a little more rejuvenated, I decided to go for it.
After many sweaty hours of long strides, and sore hips, I finally emerged from the canyon.  The only problem was that I was still 2 miles from the car, and I had not emerged at the same spot I had dropped in at.  The rocks were red instead of the sandy yellow they had been before.  I followed a dried up tributary, hoping it would zig-zag me back to my car, but it only took me further away.  At least I had a footprint of another person every now and then to guide me; to let me know that I was going the right way....to his car....if he knew where he was going.
After a while, I decided to leave the relative security of the small ravine, and set out overland.  Across the flat desert.  Following the line my GPS said would lead me to my car.  As the crow flies is so much easier, if you're a crow.  I began to feel fatigued, my snack food supply was depleted, and my water was getting low.  I was in no real danger of dehydration...as long as I got to my car that night.  The sun started dropping behind the distant mountains, and I continued to drag my way through the soft sand.  
Every little hill was covered with small holes.  I now assume they were for jack rabbits, but at the time my mind was certain that each one of these thousands of dens was that of a rattlesnake.  I may come across as somewhat of a worry-wart in this entry, and that may be, but I assure you that something changes in your mind when you find yourself alone, in the literal middle of nowhere, with no way of letting anyone know where you are.  It took about 2 and a half hours to finally see areas I recognized.  It felt like eternity.  By the time I saw the barbed wire fence, I was just done.  I loved the hike, I probably shouldn't have pushed myself as far as I did on the last day, but after all that I had seen and done, I was ready to just sit down, and have my car do the work.

This was one of the most beautiful sights I saw that week.

The drive back in to town took so much longer than I thought it would, but once their, I realized that I didn't have it in me to drive all the way back to Provo.  I stopped at an amazing burger joint, ordered their biggest meal, and devoured every ounce of that grease laden bacon burger in no time flat.  I had deluded myself into thinking that a week without soda would make it that much easier to stay on a healthy beverage trend once I rejoined society.  The fist thing I ordered: Extra Large Mountain Dew.

I checked into a modest motel across from the burger shop.  The parking lot was packed full of muddy Tacomas, Subarus, and Frontiers.  Some were there to hike, others to bike, and some were just passing through.  The room was equipped with cloths specifically for washing off mud, which was invaluable.  I clogged the shower washing mud out of my hair, cleaned it out, and then showered some more.  My shirt smelled like 5 days of sweat and mud.  I found it necessary to do some laundry in the sink with the bar of soap provided before turning in for the night.  It is amazing how nice a cheap motel bed feels after sleeping a week on the ground atop a constantly deflating camp mat.


Sunday, January 15, 2012

Why I love Salt Lake City

Although the drive out to Utah was uneventful, living here has been an amazing eye opener.  I enjoy living so close to Temple Square.  It is a sight that is sacred to me.  In the short amount of time that I have been here I have already had many interesting experiences there.  It's awesome to see so many happy families strolling by, so many brides and grooms getting their photos taken in front of the massive doors.  One thing I have noticed about being in Utah is how many more young couples are actually married.  It's a different world out here.  Apart from the spiritual moments I have centered around these religious areas, I have also greatly enjoyed being back up in the mountains.  I think I'll have to start a hiking club at school or something because, although it's nice to get out on your own, it would be nice to have some company when I'm out on a mountain face.  On Friday I had nothing to do between my morning class and the dance that was to be held that evening.  I sat on my computer for a couple hours killing time and looking at places I'd like to see soon.  I began by searching for nearby hikes.  They all looked kinda lame.  So then I searched for a topographical map and narrowed down the three highest peaks within a half hour drive.  I plotted one a map and decided I would drive over to see what the hiking might be like for another day.  By the time I was don writing down the directions I had decided to bring my hiking boots in case I wanted to get out and take some pictures.  Then as I went in the closet to get the boots I figured I might as well bring along my ski poles to help if I decided to go for a little walk.  By the time I got down to my car I had loaded up with boots, poles, backpack, two water bottles, trail mix, camera, sunglasses, GPS, and about 180' of rope.  Clearly I am not one to sit back and daydream about doing something for too long.  Spontaneously doing something today trumps planning on doing it someday every time in my book.
My old Subaru Outback chugged along the freeway as I made my way closer and closer to the mountains.  Off in the distance the Wasatch mountains are a formidable sight.  As I drew nearer and nearer to them I began to realize how insanely tall 10,000 feet really was.  It's when you get right at the base of the mountain that you think you can actually climb it because: 1. at least you're starting to climb. and 2. your perspective is so thrown off at that point that it doesn't look all that bad.
The entrance tot he park was a little town catering to the needs of skiers and snowboarders.  Every signpost and store facade seemed to have some allusion to being on the slopes.  I liked it.  I stopped at a 7eleven to pick up some new batteries for my GPS. (I still say that is one of the best $95 I've ever spent). After driving up the twisty road for about 3 miles I pulled off to the side in a snow bank and geared up.  I had wisely chosen to wear my old hand-me-down Columbia jacket instead of my new pea coat this time around; it was light, it was warm, and I didn't really care if it got torn up.
It only took a few yards of hiking for me to notice the benefit of bringing the ski poles.  It only took a few more yards to realize that my body was still not used to a brisk walk with such little oxygen available.  I climbed along the gently zig-zagging path which was clearly intended to be at least bicycle (if not wheelchair) accessible.  Too tame, I thought to myself.  I looked down the narrow and inviting pathway, and then looked directly to my right at the boulders ascending high overhead.  That's the route for me.  I first tried to tuck my ski poles in between my pack and my coat; then I attempted to insert them vertically between the strap and my spine.  In the end I left them dangling from my wrists while I climbed over the first boulder.  Since the poles kept getting snagged on cracks and branches I deduced that their benefit on this particular outing was outweighed by their hindrance.  I  left them on top of my first boulder and trusted to my GPS that I would be able to recover them after I was done gallivanting. 
I scrambled up over the next few boulders only to find that the way up from that point was impeded by several scrubby looking shrubs and juniper trees that were grown too tightly together for me to pass without a machete.  I surveyed my surroundings and found the cliff on the opposite end of a small valley to be much taller, more interesting, and inevitably more fun.  As I traipsed along the edge of this ravine I took note of the slippery, sharp shale that lay all about in varying different hues.  There were some large chunks that were light green, like rusted copper; the majority, however, was a deep purple color. 

I made my way to the bottom of the canyon and began again my ascent.  The entire cliff face was comprised of multiple layers, and leaning several degrees towards the south.  It looked kind of like giant ice cream sandwiches someone had set up like dominoes that were slowly tumbling down. Often I would have to do some legitimate rock climbing to get up to a ledge where I could rest and reevaluate.  When I though I was on the right rock I could climb all the way to the top I realized that I had to switch to another one and jumped across.  It was a bit disconcerting when something I took to be a very solid rock broke off in my hand.  I let it fall and it seemed to hang in midair until it was obliterated on the other rocks below.  A lot of the climb was along the tilted face of the rocks and so I didn't really need to cling on for dear life, but I definitely couldn't have stood up and hiked.  It was a job for all fours.

One time I got as high as I could on a certain face and had to switch to another.  the gap in between the two was about 12 feet, more than I wanted to jump, and less than I could span with my body.  I had to back track a little and go at it again.  I've found that I like down climbing much less that up climbing.  When you're going up you can forget how far you've come and you don't really notice that you're 300 feet off the ground; you can also see the hand holds ahead of you.  When climbing down you have to feel around with your feet for a secure hold while your hands are getting more and more tired from supporting your body weight, and the weight of all that stupid trail mix you brought along.  Side note: Steel toed boots do not make good climbing shoes.  If ever I got nervous, or started to freeze up I had to remind myself to just keep moving.  The longer you wait, the more tired you get, and the more psychologically strenuous your activity becomes.  Besides, I was out there alone.  The only clue I had left was a vague facebook post about climbing another mountain.  I don't know if you know this or not,but there are a freaking lot of mountains in Utah.  If I slipped, fell, broke something, got mauled by a mountain lion, or got lost, there was no one coming to get me; such is the cost and risk of going off the beaten path.  -Don't worry Mom, I'm really just trying to make this sound cooler than it actually was-

I rested at the top of the final cliff and took some video.  The first set of boulders I had climbed seemed so remote.  I hadn't covered that much ground horizontally, but from my Subaru (that I could still see) to my perch atop these rock was about a 750 foot climb.  The winding road I pulled off of to park was more below me than it was beside me.  It's a strange phenomenon that's hard to describe, and feelings of vertigo can set in pretty quickly if you're not careful.  The whole mountain is tipped one way, gravity is pulling you another way, and the road that you know to be level, flat, and smooth is laid out in front of you.  I found myself leaning further back than was probably necessary just to avoid an unintended front flip. 

After my short recess I continued to climb.  Hiking is a lot tougher for me than rock climbing.  After a few feet I already missed my ski poles.  My lungs ached, and each step got exponentially harder than the one before.  I finally got up to about 6,100 feet before the same scrubby brush that had stood in my way before showed up.  I couldn't go any further up the mountain, and I surely didn't want to go back the way I had come.  I decided to go down the nice sunny side of the mountain.  It still involved a lot of down climbing, and some leaping from rock to rock, but all in all it went favorably.  Near the end of my descent I came across a few boulders that were inclined too far for me to down climb in my current skill level,and too high for me to jump down.  I realized that I hadn't yet tested out my rope.  I looped it around a rock and began to slide down to the ground below.  It was about a 15 foot descent onto uneven ground.  I still didn't fully trust the rope.  It was cheap stuff I had picked up at a hardware store back in Wisconsin.  My brothers, my nephews, and I had been using it to practice rappelling down the tree in my mom's back yard.  It was only rated to 135 pounds, and I weigh 30 more than that without the backpack.  I doubled it up, and lamented the fact that I didn't have thicker gloves as I let the rope slide through my hands.  So far so good.  Once safely back on the ground I attempted to unloop the rope, but to no avail.  It had gotten stuck good and tight.  I tried a couple times to climb the difficult incline.  I would get up about 8 feet then run out of good hand holds.  I dropped back down a few times, then took a swing at it without all my gear.  Still no luck.  I realized that: 1. I'm really not that good at rock climbing, 2. Steel toed boots are really not good for rock climbing shoes, and 3. I was tired out from all the other climbing I had already done that day.  I left my stuff and walked around to find a more favorable way up.  Such a way was found only about 50 feet away; guess I didn't need to use the rope after all. 
After getting back on the trail at the base of the mountain I used my trusty GPS to get me back to the ski poles.  I hiked down to my Subaru, and collapsed into the front seat.  All in all it was a pretty good hike, and I still had time to get home and shower before the dance that night.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Oatmeal

I finally bought a stove for my boat.  I decided on an inexpensive camp stove that runs on propane.  I've heard that propane is easily obtainable and heats very well, but it sinks and if there's any stray gas in your bilge, the slightest spark could cause my boat to explode!  Not too worried about a catastrophic explosion from a 20oz. canister I decided to risk it.
After I had gotten it all set up in the galley I read the owner's manual.  Apparently it is only to be used outdoors in open spaces because it can create carbon monoxide (which also sinks but is odorless) and that can poison you.  I figure I've got pretty good ventilation on the boat, but seeing as I died from CO poisoning when I was a little kid.  We were moving out in the country in Utah and just transferring stuff out of the camper we were using as a moving van.  My brothers and I were too young to be any help so we just sat on a couch playing spaceship while my parents and older sister worked.  There was a generator running to provide power for us, and I guess we all figured since it was outside that it would be fine.  Even sitting 6 or so feet away from the generator I was still able to inhale enough exhaust to make me feel really sleepy.  My parents couldn't wake me up.  Unbeknownst to me I was hung upside down and slapped in the face to get some response out of me.  It was only after I was made to walk around for a bit in the fresh air that I regained consciousness.  A scary experience, but it was a good thing it happened than and there, otherwise we might have unwittingly parked the generator too close to the house and we all might ave died in the night.
I keep the propane cylinder outside when I sleep and just to be safe I left a candle burning on the floor as I cooked my first hot meal aboard; oatmeal.