Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Washington Trails Hike-a-thon 2009!

It's that time of year again. I am getting ready for the WTA Hike-a-thon. Studying trail maps and reading trip reports to pick some great trails to hike on in August and spreading the word to everyone I know to help raise money for Washington State Trails.



First of all, thanks to everyone who supported me in 2008 for the Washington Trails Association hike-a-thon. We raised over $1600! Ryan and I did some trail work this year at Mt. Rainier for Earth Day




and we saw first hand the amazing things that WTA accomplishes by rebuilding and repairing the trails every season. As usual, I will be hiking during the entire month of August, I hope to get in at least 50 miles. You can pledge a flat donation, such as $50 or an amount per mile, such as $1 per mile. Any contributions over $35 will be eligible for Washington Trails Association Membership. (With membership you receive a Washington Trails Magazine) and all donations are tax deductible. Every little bit helps! Last year I had pledges as low as 10 cents per mile or a flat $3. It all adds up. Just to let you know what your dollars can accomplish, WTA sent me a breakdown of how they use the money.


$25-$99 Can provide treats for a team of volunteers

$100-$249 Can Outfit a crew in hardhats

$250-$499 WTA can purchase 5 or more new trail tools

$500-$749 WTA can lead 1 annual maintenance trip on a popular trail

$750-$999 WTA can lead two rehabilitation work parties

$1,000+ WTA can restore 1 mile (or more) of backcountry trail


I will be updating my blog with all my hiking adventures and the WTA has a webpage for me to track my pledges:




You can donate directly through that page with your credit card. Or if you do not want to make a pledge by credit card to the website, checks can be made out to WTA (Washington Trails Association) and mailed to me. Of course, cash is always welcome.


Thanks so much!

Friday, June 19, 2009

Lassen is Not Lesser

There are the Well Known National Parks like Yellowstone and Yosemite....The Grand Canyon and the Great Smokies...but Ryan and I like to travel off the beaten path to some of the more remote and less visited National Parks. They are often referred to as the Lesser known National Parks. They don't get the crowds that the more popular parks do and they still have amazing natural wonders and fascinating history. Lassen Volcanic National Park is one of these parks.




Tucked way up north in the upper reaches of California, it is a mini-Yellowstone with all kinds of interesting volcanic features. The park contains all four types of volcanoes: shield, cinder cone, lava dome and composite. Hydrothermal features in Lassen include roaring fumaroles (steam and volcanic-gas vents), thumping mud pots, boiling pools, and steaming ground. Native Americans, emigrants and pioneers all give Lassen a unique history. There are amazing photos and research from the volcanic eruption in 1915. The visitor's center has been newly remodeled and has wonderful exhibits detailing all aspects of the park. All in all, it is a hidden gem of a park.



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Ryan and I decided to hike to Bumpass Hell. It is a popular area of the park that has the largest fumarole in the park. This fumarole (called Big Boiler) has high-velocity steam coming out of it that has been measured as high as 322°F, making it one of the hottest fumaroles in the world. The trail is supposed to be quite easy, even though you are hiking at an altitude of about 8,000 ft. There is not too much change in elevation from the trailhead at Lake Helen. The active area can be seen (and smelt!) from far away. It is filled with various steaming pools and unusual multi-colored soils, stained orange, brown, yellow and green by sulphur and other minerals. The sulphur/rotten egg smell fills the air. I was going to hike out to Bumpass Hell from Lake Helen. Ryan was going to take a longer route up from the Visitor's Center.



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I left Ryan to start his hike and I drove around to the trailhead at Lake Helen. That is when I noticed the Trail Hazardous signs and the warnings that the trail was supposed to be closed because of the heavy snow. I had no idea if Ryan would be seeing signs like these at the lower elevations....he was hiking up from about 6,500 ft. I was a little leery to start the 3 mile hike, but the trail from the parking lot was well trod and pretty busy. Families with small children and grandparents were coming back from the trek, so I figured that it couldn't be too bad! Ryan would have another story to tell from his end of the hike.


He did eventually meet with me in the trailhead parking lot....but our estimates of how long the hike would take were off completely! The heavy snows made for slow going. We each had hiking poles which were a great help and my only regret is that I did not have my YakTrax with me for better traction.

On the way back to the parking lot, I encountered a Marmot along the trail.


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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

They're changing the guard at Buckingham Palace...

Buckingham Palace by A. A. Milne

(from When We Were Very Young)


They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. Alice is marrying one of the guard. "A soldier's life is terribly hard," Says Alice.



They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. We saw a guard in a sentry-box. "One of the sergeants looks after their socks," Says Alice.



They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. We looked for the King but he never came. "Well, God take care of him, all the same," Says Alice.



They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. They've great big parties inside the grounds. "I wouldn't be King for a hundred pounds," Says Alice.



They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. A face looked out, but it wasn't the King's. "He's much too busy a-signing things," Says Alice.



They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace - Christopher Robin went down with Alice. "Do you think the King knows all about me?" "Sure to, dear, but it's time for tea," Says Alice



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I had a lovely day in London. The weather was wonderful as you can see from the photos. I had perfect timing to catch the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace. It was very crowded. I was lucky to get a spot by the fence. The crowd was at least 3 rows deep and once you were in the front, you didn't want to leave because you might not get back up there again. The queen was not in residence. The Union Jack was flying over the Palace. If the queen is at home, they fly a different flag, called the Royal Standard. It is much like standing around and watching a parade go by. The guards march up and down and to and fro, it gets old after a while. I took the videos by holding my hands up through the bars of the fence. The last video of the guards leaving reminded me of the scene in the Wizard of Oz when they sneak into the castle.


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Earth Day


Ryan and I signed up to do trail work with the WTA (Washington Trail Association) for Earth Day this year. This was my first time ever doing anything like this!! I don't even do yard work, don't have a yard. :-) Gardening....nope. So wielding a shovel and/or an adz would be a new experience for me. I do the hike-a-thon for the WTA every August to raise money to help out the trails in Washington State, but I have never actually gotten my hands dirty doing the work. So Earth Day seemed like the perfect time to get outside and give back!


My Hike-A-Thon Page

We signed up to do work on the Skookum Flats Trail near Greenwater, WA. This trail is used by mountain bikers and hikers.


Skookum Flats Trail

We drove up early in the morning in order to be at the trailhead by 8:30 am. On the way through Greenwater, WA we saw an Elk by the side of the road. This is common in places like Yellowstone, but I am not used to seeing Elk wandering around in Washington!

My first job on the Skookum Flats Trail was to clear it of storm debris and reduce the grade in a section very near the trailhead.


Then I went to another area to clear a place where a tree had fallen. The day before, guys with chainsaws had come through and broken up the tree into pieces, but we still had to reroute the trail around a huge rootball.



I dug out beautybark...sawed off part of a root and worked on tread... I have many before and after photos here...We had a great day doing trail work and we will definitely be back out here again in the future!



On the way home away from Greenwater I took this photo of a lovely Trillium.



Monday, March 16, 2009

Dutch Treat!


For my 43rd birthday this year, Ryan and I traveled to the Netherlands to visit with my friend Jenny. Her family is living in Wassenaar near The Hague and very conveniently located near many of the major touristy sites in the Netherlands. Our first day we were pretty tired from the long flight. We had flown directly from Seattle to Philadelphia and then on to Amsterdam in one day. We arrived around 9:30am local time, so the day was spread before us, but we were pretty wiped out. We stopped by the beach at Meijendel Dunes because it was an incredibly sunny day and supposedly these don't happen that often in this area. Or at least not until June or July.

The next day we started out bright and early and took a walking tour of The Hague. This town is where the Royal Family lives and there are a lot of interesting buildings and history around the area. One thing that interested me was the mail slots with nee and ja on them. The mailman will look at the nee and ja and that will indicate what kind of junk mail you will receive. If you want everything it will say ja-ja. If you don't want any junk mail it will say nee-nee and if you only want certain kinds of junk mail....maybe catalogs or coupon paks, then it says nee-ja. Pretty cool. Our Dutch Treat today was Appelgebak with Slag. That's dutch apple pie with whipped cream. :-)

On Friday we went into Amsterdam. Since we are staying in the Hague, this required us to take a bus to the train station and then a train into Amsterdam. We had been on the bus the day before when we did the Hague tour, so we were fine with that and we thought we would be fine with the train. They have these machines where you can buy your ticket and it is in English. The only problem was that it did not like any of our credit cards or debit cards and it would not take paper money, only Euro coins. Well, it was 37 euros to take the train into town and we didn't have that in coins! So we went to the ticket counter to purchase our ticket. We told the lady at the counter that we wanted two return tickets to Amsterdam Central Station. She printed out the tickets and told us it was leaving from track #5 in 5 minutes and we should hurry over there! So we hustled over to track #5 and got on the train just before it left the station. We settled in for our 45 minute trip to Amsterdam. I was reading the guide book to see what we wanted to do first in the city while Ryan was looking out the window at the countryside. We came into the first station along the route and it was Gouda. Hmmmm that didn't seem quite right to me, we should be going through Leiden. Maybe we have to change trains somewhere...what do our tickets say? Ryan gets our tickets out and they say Utrecht Central Station. That is not where we want to go! The fare from The Hague to Utrecht was the same as the fare from The Hague to Amsterdam, so we didn't see anything unusual when we purchased the tickets. But all is not lost, we can change trains at Utrecht and eventually get to Amsterdam. We might have to pay more money. So we get off at Utrecht and go to an information counter to explain our dilemma. The girl there says we should just get on the train to Amsterdam and when the ticket taker comes along explain it to them, but it should be okay. So off we go to track #14 and a train to Amsterdam. Once there, we also go to the ticket counter to try to get our tickets changed for our return to the Hague, but again they tell us to just get on a train and explain it to the ticket person and it should be okay. These Dutch, they are so easy going, they just shrug their shoulders and say it will be okay. :-)

At Amsterdam Central Station, the first thing we see is the HUGE bicycle parking garage. It is several stories. Everyone who commutes in to work keeps a bike here (they don't always allow them on the trains...especially during rush hour)-- so people keep a bike here to ride around town. So many bikes!!

We signed up for the Hop On/Hop Off canal boat tour. I am a huge fan of these types of tours. They have them in almost every European City (and many American Cities). Your ticket is good for the whole day and you can get on and off the bus wherever you want. Well, it is usually a bus, but here in Amsterdam it is a canal boat. Our first stop would be the Anne Frank House. It is wildly popular with tourists and there is usually a long line, so it is best to get it out of the way early in the day. We got there around 11am (we were a little late due to our detour to Utrecht) but there wasn't a line and we went right in. When we were done and came out (about an hour later) the line was wrapped around the building.


We had a wonderful day hopping on and off the boat and touring Amsterdam. In Amsterdam, the term coffeeshop has come to mean a place where hashish and marijuana are available. If you really want coffee, you have to go to a cafe. I have random drug tests at work, so we stayed away from the coffeehouses. On our way back to the train station that evening we got a glimpse of the Red Light district. It dates back to the 14th Century when sailors would arrive in town in need of some female company. Women stand in the famous windows dressed in eye-popping underwear (and they are not always women). It makes you think again about the term window-shopping. Taking pictures of the Red Light windows is not allowed. Our Dutch Treat today was french fries with Mayonaise which is pretty much standard in Europe. But they will give you ketchup too if you ask.

On Saturday Jenny drove us out to Kinderdijk where there are 19 or so windmills along one canal. We had had terrific weather up until this day. But on Saturday it started to rain and we were in a torrential downpour as we walked along the dike.
One of the windmills is open to the public and you can go inside and see how a family would have lived in the mill. When we were inside the mill, the windmill sails were turning and it was very noisy. From Kinderdijk we went on to Leiden to see where the Pilgrims came before they went to America. The Pilgrims came to the Netherlands because the Dutch are supposed to be very tolerate to pretty much every thing. But even the Pilgrims were a little much for the Dutch and the Pilgrims decided to leave on the Speedwell and ended up in Plymouth, England where they got on the Mayflower and left for the new world. Our Dutch Treat today was the stroopwafel that we bought at a street stand. It is a thin Dutch waffle with a caramel like syrup filling. They were first made in Gouda, in the 1700s.


Sunday was challenging. In Europe most everything is closed on Sundays, so Ryan and I decided to spend the day hiking through the Meijendel dunes
and walking along the beach and pier at Scheveningen. Scheveningen is like the Atlantic City of the Netherlands. There is a board walk with all kinds of crazy bars and games for the kids (trampolines) and there are Casinos. Because it was another pretty day, the beach was packed with people. The concrete structures in the sand dunes are the remains of The Atlantic Wall. This was an extensive system of coastal fortifications built by Hitler. The Netherlands was occupied by the Germans during WWII and the
Atlantic Wall was built to defend against an anticipated Allied invasion from Great Britain. Many Resistance supporters were executed in the dunes. Each year a memorial service is held in their honor. Space is at a premium in the Netherlands. The whole country is about the size of Maryland. Here is a picture of a golf course that

shares it's fairway with a soccer field. Our Dutch Treat today was the Bitterballen at McDonalds! The Croquette in the Netherlands is a fried, roll-formed snack containing some kind of meat. You will see these at almost every restaurant in the Netherlands. They even had it at McDonalds. You could get a sandwich of Kroket or on their 1 Euro Menu they had Bitterballen which are basically Krokets, only round, not oval.

Monday was our last full day in the Netherlands and we went to Delft on the trolley from the Hague. We toured many sites where the artist, Vermeer lived and worked while in Delft and we climbed the tower of the New Church. The Old Church is where Vermeer is buried and it has a brick tower that leans about 6 feet from the vertical. We had a lovely lunch at an outdoor cafe in the main Market Square where we finally tried Poffertjes, which are little dutch pancakes. They are served with powdered sugar and butter. Temporary poffertjes "houses" appear across The
Netherlands from March to September, selling the little treats by the dozen.


The one dutch treat that I did not get was the haring. A Dutch delicacy is eating a raw herring with raw onions. You pick the fish up by the tail and let it slide into your mouth gradually. Of course the head is removed and the fish has been cleaned. The first catch of the season is called Hollandse nieuwe and is considered a special treat. I definitely plan to do this on a layover one day. We were shown the best place to do it in the Hague on our walking tour.

Friday, March 06, 2009

Going Dutch


Ryan and I are getting ready to leave for our vacation to the Netherlands, Holland, the land of the Dutch, Amsterdam....all of the above.

HUH?

I have been there several times before on layovers, but I haven't been into Amsterdam proper. I usually just hang around the layover hotel in the Hague near Scheveningen beach. My good friend, Jenny just moved to Holland last year and they live near the Hague, so we will be staying with them while we adventure around the country. So watch this space for information about our adventures in the land of Windmills, Tulips, Wooden Clogs, Anne Frank and Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

The Pause that Refreshes



Ryan and I went to Costco today and we came home with a case of Coca-cola. Now ordinarily we would not buy soda at Costco. We have cut back on drinking sodas and it just isn't something we shop for....but today we were walking down the aisle and something caught Ryan's eye. "Hecho en Mexico" is written on the side of the case and they are GLASS bottles. Hmmmm Real Cane Sugar NOT High Fructose Corn Syrup! Wow. We were sold. We had to buy a case of Coke. :-)



I am not a huge Coke fan. I'm not like those people who will only drink Coke and not Pepsi or anything else. I will generally drink whatever cola drink is being offered. It never seems to matter to me. But Real Sugar instead of High Fructose Corn Syrup, that is something that I can understand! Will it taste different? Are our Cola palates sophisticated enough to appreciate the difference?

I do like the glass bottles and I swear it tastes better icy cold coming from a glass bottle than from plastic or a can! But that might be nostalgia talking. And then there is the adventure of purchasing a Coca-cola in a glass bottle in Honduras and having them pour it in a plastic bag for you to take away. Priceless! :-)