{"ai_pass_count":6,"analysis_step_count":18,"confidence":0.8330453932285309,"created_at":"2026-07-13T15:33:52.554396+00:00","id":160014,"node_number":"66296","processing_time":2.6338858604431152,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":163313,"text":"I mentioned Blue Glacier. The Olympics used to have several glaciers. I haven't been in for a long time now since we quit climbing. But there's several glaciers up there. Blue Glacier is a huge glacier. You cannot see it from Seattle. Nor can you see a Mount Olympus from most places in Seattle. But the Blue Glacier is on the direct route to climb Olympus. And it's great in the spring when all the crevasses are covered. Later in the year, it's a route finding nightmare. But it is a big glacier. I'm not sure what else is left up there, though, with all the warming we've had. Solar-wise, there was a little s*** yesterday, which really screwed up the HF 75-meter boating nets. It's just really touching go on both of those. What we managed to get through it. Today, the propagation is back up again, both directions out of this QTH, almost all on 20 meters. It looks really more extensive than I would expect from the number."}