Marshall (“Roc”) Burns
Physicist, Entrepreneur, Philosopher, Explorer
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Travel and Adventures
Sections on this page:
        Hawaii
        ISU
        US Fabbers
        1st Europe
        2nd Europe
        Japan Fabbers
        Portugal
        Malibu
        Outward Bound
        San Gorgonio
        Sequoia
        Yosemite

Copyright © 1998—2000, Marshall Burns. All rights reserved.

     Many people, when they go on a trip, take a camera. I am more likely to take a journal. And when I come back, I take out a clean map and draw my route out to remind me of where I’ve been. Here I share some of those maps and some highlights of the stories that came out of some of my favorite trips.

Japan and Hawaii

Trip map on Hawaii     For Christmas vacation, 1986..87, I went to Japan. It was fascinating to experience Japanese culture and commerce and to practice the Japanese language. But due to the high cost of domestic travel there and my graduate-student budget, I couldn’t venture far from Tokyo. So I got to do more exploring on the stop-off I took in Hawaii. There I visited three islands. On Oahu I went board surfing and body surfing, and watched other people brave some of the world’s best surfing in the “Pipeline” on the north coast. Then on the “Big Island” I witnessed the devastation caused by the recent eruption of the Kilauea Volcano, and I got to fly over a bubbling lava pond in a small plane and saw bright orange streams of lava flowing slowly out of the crater. On Maui I drove to the Seven Sacred Pools, where I hiked through the bamboo forest to the uppermost Waimoku Falls and became trapped by the darkness of the rapidly setting sun. I was forced to spend the night at the base of the falls until daylight again showed me the path back into the forest.


International Space University

(Map to be scanned.)     I spent the summer of 1990 at the International Space University. ISU has, since that time, grown into a real university with a real campus in Strasbourg, France, but at the time it operated only as a summer program for graduate students and young professionals to study space science, space engineering, and space business and politics. In 1990 the program was held at York University in Toronto, Canada, which happens to be my home town. I drove there and back from Austin in my old, white Pontiac.


U.S. Fabber Odyssey

Trip map for U.S. Fabber Odyssey     From May to October 1991, I drove around the United States and Canada as a combination celebration of the completion of my Ph.D. and an exploration trip to meet many of the inventors, company founders, and customers in the infant fabber industry. The first stop on the trip was Minneapolis for the Second International Conference on Desktop Manufacturing. I had been given the job by the conference organizers of editing the procedings of the conference and turning them into an industry report. So I spent a week in a lake-front cabin in Maine where I edited the papers from the conference and wrote two additional chapters of what became the Rapid Prototyping: System Selection and Implementation Guide.


European Fabber Odyssey

Trip map for first European Fabber Odyssey     In July 1992 I was invited to give the keynote address to the First European Conference on Rapid Prototyping in Nottingham, England. In the week prior to the conference, I rented a car in Calais and drove through France, Germany, Switzerland and a few other countries visiting fabber vendors, researchers, and users.


Second European Fabber Trip

Trip map for second European fabber trip     In May 1995 I was invited to speak at the International Conference on Rapid Product Development in Stuttgart, Germany. I followed that engagement with a week-long driving trip through Germany, France, Belgium, and a few other countries, visiting fabber researchers and software developers.


Japanese Fabber Odyssey

Trip map for Japanese Fabber Odyssey     In May 1996, I was invited to deliver the keynote address to the Tenth Rapid Prototyping Symposium in Kyoto, Japan. This was followed by ten days of travel through central Japan to visit most of the major Japanese fabber vendors, as well as several researchers, resellers, and users. Rental cars are quite expensive in Japan so I stuck with the trains. Fortunately, one of the host companies provided a guide and translator for my trip, without whom I probably would have got lost.


Spain and Portugal

Map of trip in Spain and Portugal     In July 1997 I organized a special session on fabbers for a major electronics conference which was held that year in Northern Portugal. To turn this into one of my usual driving adventures, I flew into Madrid, where I rented a car to be dropped off in Lisbon. In Madrid, I had my first opportunity to see a bull fight. (I will not be rushing back to see another one.) Crossing the border from Spain into Portugal was something of a challenge because what looked on the map like a bridge at Barda d’Alva was actually a dead end into a boat dock on the Rio Duoro. Since I had not rented an amphibious car, I backtracked and found another spot upstream to cross. The mountains of Northern Portugal are lush and beautiful.


Malibu Creek State Park

Trail map for hike of Malibu Creek State Park     As part of my training preparation for the Outward Bound program, I did a 14-mile hike with Andy McMullen, my basketball trainer. Much of the hike was along the famous Backbone Trail, and for part of the time we were high enough up to see the ocean.


Outward Bound

Trip map for Outward Bound trip     In the summer of 1997, I finally got to fulfill a dream I had had since I was a child: I did an Outward Bound program. The one I did was a backpacking and conoeing trip on Ross Lake in Washington State and right up to the Canadian border. Unfortunately, I was disappointed because I had thought of Outward Bound as a rigorous course that was all about pushing the participants to their limits. It seems that the program has softened a lot since it was started as a quasi-military training program in World War II. So what I got was a pleasant camping trip in a place of magnificent natural beauty instead of a week of physical torture. One of the highlights of the program was when instructors Paul Butler and Bo Thrasher announced their engagement at the top of Desolation Peak on Day 6.


San Gorgonio Mountain

Trail map for San Gorgonio Mountain hike     In November 1997, I went on a UCLA Outdoor Adventures backpacking trip to the summit of San Gorgonio Mountain, the highest peak in Southern California at 11,499 feet. I had met Stan Cindrity on a UCLA rock climbing trip the year before. When I told Stan, who in 1997 became coordinator of the Outdoor Adventures program, of my disappointment with Outward Bound, he said I should try their San Gorgonio trip. I had started a hike on San Gorgonio with some friends a few years previous, but it was washed out by a flash flood that claimed the life of another hiker. This time I got to the top, but the trip really “kicked my butt” as we gained 4,600 feet in 14 miles each way to the summit and back. At several points, I wasn’t sure if I could make it, and I really depended on the encouragement of Stan’s staff to keep going. Afterwards, I told Stan that he had given me a better challenge in two days than Outward Bound had done in eight. Stan is now working in a national park somewhere, and has ambitions to run the National Park Service one day.


Sequoia National Park

Trail map for hike of Sequoia National Park     Since I’d been to the top of Southern California, my next adventure had to aim higher. So in August 1998 I took part in another UCLA Outdoor Adventures backpacking trip, this time to the Franklin Lakes and Franklin Pass in Sequoia National Park. We hiked about 9 miles each way in three days, with a 3,700-foot altitude gain to 11,600. The scenery was magnificent, and it was pretty incredible having snowball fights in 80-degree sunny weather.


Yosemite National Park

(Map to be scanned.)     I’ve signed up for a trip to Yosemite in June 1999. I’ve always heard a lot about this magnificent place and I’m really looking forward to finally going there.


Marshall (“Roc”) Burns
Physicist, Entrepreneur, Philosopher, Explorer
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Los Angeles
Phone: Mobile (805) 451-4507
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Copyright © 1998—2000, Marshall Burns. All rights reserved.