Monday, July 30, 2007

Daft Punk!

OK, so Jeremy and I totally bypassed the scalpers and managed to (rather easily) sneak into the sold out Daft Punk show in Seattle! Those tickets (if we could have gotten them) were $50 a pop. Never in a million years did I think I would get to see that stuff live. The show was amazing. Jeremy described it as "the Blue Man Group meets techno," which I think sums it up quite nicely! It was a great way to spend our last evening in Seattle.


This is our last night on the West Coast. The reality of it hasn't quite set in yet. It feels like tomorrow will be just another day of vacation, even though we will are checking out at 11am, and we will be on a plane by this time tomorrow. Crazy.

Love you all!

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Trying again... Yosemite Shots

Our first view of Half Dome, from a distance:
Liberty Cap and Nevada Falls, on the way to Half Dome!


Big trees on the way up the trail (sequoias... and these are TINY ones):


Near Olmstead Point at sunset... beautiful!


Those crazy cables. Apparently people keep dying on them... I wonder why??


Half Dome summit shots! Scary storm...

Old shots from Yosemite

On the way up Half Dome...
Crap! This computer is giving me error messages. I'm posting this and then trying another computer.

Mount Rainier, the *BEST* day of our trip......... ever!!

Well in my opinion the best day of our trip was Rainer (I am sure that SW would agree). So we left Mount Saint Helens and drove towards Rainier national park. There was some national forest just before the park, and you know what that means: free camping! So as soon as we hit national forest I was ready to just get out of the car and throw the tent up anywere, but Sarah was thinking a little less pragmatically and wanted to go explore the back-woods side roads. So we drove down this old logging road that had a sign that said "Bridge Out". About half a mile down the road was the closed bridge (sagging from major flooding that Rainier had last fall. Rainier national park had millions of dollars of road wash out from a major flood last fall we learned and it almost did not open this year). We had reached paradise! We found the best camp spot in the world. Beautiful camping spots, right next to a mountain river with a sand beach. The river is fed from Rainer's glaciers and was literally emerald green because it was so clean. We fell in love with that spot, and set up the tent.

The next day we drove up to Rainier and WOW! It is my new favorite Mountain (you're still cool Colden). This dormant volcano juts up from nowhere, and totally dominates the skyline. At 14,410 feet above sea level it is snowcapped all year with a total of 77 glaciers on it. It has green wooded valleys, beautiful glacial melt waterfalls, lakes, streams, an abundance of wildlife, an alpine zone, permanent glaciers, and its own weather system. Rainier is so tall that all of the weather fronts hit it, the air rises to forms clouds, and then rains on it. We were SO lucky to hit it when we did. Driving in just took my breath away. White milky clouds started to form as we got closer, but it did not matter. We went to the information center (appropriately called "Paradise") and found out that the best hike for us was called the Skyline trail to Panorama Point.

The trail started off as a paved sidewalk into clouds. It gained 2000 feet in the first two miles, so we were getting moist from literally walking "into" the clouds. We saw a fox, marmots, and two deer fighting. They looked like adolescent siblings who were just playing, but they kept locking antlers and driving each other around, totally indifferent to our presence twenty feet away.

The next little bit was a standard hike and then WOW! We climbed ABOVE the clouds and entered the Alpine zone. This was my first expeience like this with Sarah, and it was my best to date. We were above the trees walking on rocks, next to fragile plants and glaciers. We walked over glaciers, threw snow balls, and saw waterfalls. The single best moment of the trip was looking straight at Rainier's summit rising out of the clouds. The tops of the clouds looked exactly like they look when viewed from a plane - like a fuzzy wool blanket over the world. The Alpine zone was so lush and alive with plant life, so green and yet so rocky. So rugged to survive up there, yet so fragile (a single boot print could kill one hundred years of growth). As we neared Panorama Point we saw a mountain goat! He was so chill that he didn't care how close we were to him. He just looked at us, continued eating, and then walked towards us. He came within 10 feet of us, crossed the trail, and continued on to graze next to us. He had two horns that stood straight up with a slight curve and had pure white fur.

Once we got to Panorama Point I just about crapped my pants (metaphorically) at how beautiful the view was. The clouds were 1000 feet below us, the sky was pure blue (not a cloud in the sky! well... above us) We could see pinnacles of neighboring peaks sticking out like stalagmites from the milky cloud blanket. Dominating the skyline was the tops of volcanoes: we could see Mount Adams, Mount Saint Helens, and Mount Hood (which was over 100 miles away!) Apparantly you can see the tip of Mount Shasta from the summit of Rainier, but most of it is blocked by the curvature of the earth since it is over 200 miles away. Now the cool thing about volcanoes is that they look more impressive than other mountains since they just stand up out of nowhere. Most mountians have ridges and other mountains connected to them, but volcanoes are like a single mountain with nothing around it, so it rises from the surrounding landscape more dramatically.

So when it was all said and done we made it above 7,000 feet in elevation. We did not summit: it is an expedition to summit, not a simple day hike. You need full alpine gear to summit: ice axe, crampons, crevasse rescue techniques, etc. Is it out of the realm of possibility for me? No, definitely not. It typically takes 3 days to summit. More than anything I want to go back and summit. It would have to be the focus of a future trip since it is such a commitment, and it is now one of my future dreams. But it did not matter at all. We had a best day of our trip (in my opinion), and one of the best moments that we have ever shared together. After our hike was finished we drove back to our campspot near the glacial melt emerald green river, sat on the sand beach and watched the stars.

Thank you Mount Rainier!

Filling in the gaps...

OK, time to catch you all up. We left Portland and went to the coast again, camped in Washington at Long Beach, and hung out in Oregon at Astoria and Sea Side. There the ocean had huge rock pinnacles called sea stacks sticking out and this is where that ocean scene from "Goonies" was shot. We played in a water cave only accessible at low tide. Then we hopped in the car, went through Portland, slept in the car at a truck stop (with a bar that we closed!), then drove along the Columbia river gorge (beautiful). The gorge had waterfalls, parasailers, paragliders, sailboats, and the Bonneville Dam: which had windows in the fish ladders to watch the Steelhead swim upstream. They also had a Sturgeon hatchery, and those fish look prehistoric! After that we drove to Mount Hood and went to the Timberline Lodge (where the Shining was filmed) and camped for free at an old airstrip in the middle of the woods. A camp fire, smores, shooting stars and a bottle of wine topped off the evening. The next day we drove to Mount Saint Helens and hiked in Ape Cave, which was a 2 mile underground lava tube. The lava from thousands of years ago flowed underground, made a tunnel, and then cooled and eroded away, leaving the hollow "tube" tunnel. Headlamps and flashlights were a must. We camped in the town of Cougar at an RV camp (and finally got showers). After "charging our batteries" up we drove to Mount Saint Helens and saw all of the devastation. Spirit lake was filled with trees from the 1980 blast, and it looked like popsicle sticks were lining the surface of the lake. Every tree was knocked over facing north from the 1980 blast and it was a powerful sight. Pardon the cliche but seeing this disaster was humbling. After we left Mount Saint Helens we went to Rainier national park and had what I would say is the BEST DAY of the entire trip! In fact it deserves its own post.

By: Jeremy Proofread, corrected, spellchecked, and revamped to make sense by SW :)

Thursday, July 26, 2007

We made it... Seattle!

After quite a long journey, we are finally in Seattle. I can't write long, as we are about to drop off the rental car (and then check out the huge REI store), but more details will certainly follow! We are having a wonderful time, and we don't want it to end.

Love you all!

Thursday, July 19, 2007

From Portland continued...

Alright, sorry about that! For some reason I had to wait for Boris's computer to catch up with every single sentence I typed, so writing was taking forever. Let's try this again, shall we?

Well, I left off with Mt. Lassen and its amazing views. Before we left Lassen for the night, we made dinner in the parking lot, and saw a bunch of people setting up telescopes in the parking lot! Apparently it was the week of the "Lassen Star Party," a week-long camping event where over 200 people had scopes and were looking at the summer sky... the Milky Way, faraway galaxies, etc... cool! Apparently the extra elevation and dry weather made the star gazing particularly clear.

So that night, we left Lassen and drove most of the way to Mt. Shasta, before we parked our car on the side of the road in National Forest and camped for free for the evening (yay!). The next day, we drove the rest of the way into the town of Mt. Shasta and up to the trailheads, the closest we could get to the top without actually making the multi-day mountaineering excursion ourselves! It was gorgeous!

That same day, after checking out Shasta, we worked our way through the last little bit of California, and crossed over into Oregon. It was sad to go, since we had so much fun in Cali, but it was also time to move on. Just as soon as we passed through the Mt. Shasta area, the sky got very hazy and smoky, and we had to turn on the A/C since the air was thick and acrid with the smell of something burning. While we were stopping for lunch, we discovered that there was a wildfire (started by lightning) that was causing the smoke, and the shifting wind carried it for miles! Luckily we drove out of the smoke before reaching the Crater Lake area.

On our way into the park, we stopped off at a trailhead for the Pacific Crest Trail, a trail that Jeremy has wanted to hike on for a long time. He went for a little jaunt (which made him very happy) while I hung back at the car, and chatted with a couple of hikers that were on their way through. After that, we drove the loop around the rim of Crater Lake. It was beautiful! The sky was a little hazy, so the view was not crystal clear, but it cleared up by the next morning. We had a picnic dinner at the lake, and camped inside the park boundary, where we met an awesome couple from San Francisco. We had a great time chatting with them around a warm campfire.

The next day, we got showers at the park, did some more sightseeing at the Lake, and continued on our way north. We took some random little back-road as a shortcut to the Eugene area and Rt 5, which ended up being really beautiful! Then we stopped for a fantastic Thai dinner in Eugene. We thought about spending the night in Eugene, but neither of us was impressed or terribly excited about it, so we just drove the rest of the way to Portland!

We have been in Portland ever since. A little road-weary and needing some relaxation, we are about to spend our third night here. We are staying at the Hawthorne Hostel, a cool old house with some interesting people and a great location. In the interest of saving a little cash, we are camped in the backyard, which is much cheaper than actually sleeping in a bed! Yesterday we walked around downtown, soaking in the culture and getting a feel for the city. It feels extremely comfortable, and doesn't really feel like the largest city in Oregon! It doesn't seem like a terribly foreign or unfamiliar place... it is laid-back, and there are lots of wonderful things going on, lots of good food, and the people are friendly. It is also a very bicycle-centered town, with bike lanes everywhere.

So after getting a good overview of the city yesterday (in addition to getting a coupon for a free appetizer at this AWESOME restaurant called South Park, where I also got the best gazpacho I have ever had in my LIFE), we had a few activities in mind for today. First we went to the Japanese Gardens in Washington Park, which were gorgeous! It was so very relaxing, all of the natural sculpture, shaped trees, rock gardens, waterfalls, and winding paths were just so beautiful. Then we had an early dinner at a famous Irish Pub downtown. Afterwards, Jeremy and I went to see Body Worlds 3, one of those "Bodies" exhibits that uses donated "plastinized" human bodies to demonstrate how the human body is constructed and functions. It was amazing! I love human biology and anatomy anyway, so it was extra exciting to see the body almost as it looks during life, only depicted in such a way that you can see all of the different systems and how they interconnect. We also saw an interesting Omnimax movie afterwards, which accomplished much the same thing with some cool technology.

This evening, we've just been hanging out and relaxing. Tomorrow we will probably leave Portland, although I am not sure when. We are thinking of heading to the Oregon coast for a day or so, checking out Cannon Beach and Astoria. After that, we'll probably explore the Mt. Hood/Columbia River Gorge loop, before heading through the Mt. St. Helens area and continuing through Washington to Olympic National Park, and our final destination, Seattle. Whew!

Well, we are certainly packing everything in, but we are trying to keep this as vacation-like as we can. I wish I could post pictures, but unfortunately I don't have access to a computer with a CD drive that I can use! So the pictures will have to wait.

Well, I guess that is all for now. I am not sure when the next post will be, but stay tuned! :)

From Portland with love!

Hello again! As I write, Jeremy and I are spending some time on the front porch of the hostel where we are staying. He is playing chess with our new buddy Boris, whose computer I am using to write this little update. It is a bit slow, but hopefully I willl be able to cover all of the big stuff!

Well, since the last post, we have been to:
  • Lake Tahoe
  • Mt. Lassen (a volcano)
  • Mt. Shasta (another volcano)
  • Crater Lake (a big volcano with a lake in it)
  • Portland, OR
Wow!

Tahoe was wonderfully relaxing, and we had a great time chatting with Jim, our camp host. Then we went to Mt. Lassen, which still has active vents... its last eruption was in 1914, fairly recent in comparison to some of the others. We actually climbed to the top of Lassen, which was tough, but well worth the hike... it had awesome views of Mt. Shasta, which was 100 miles away, and it had tons of snow on it!

OK, switching to a faster computer... more to follow!

Friday, July 13, 2007

Taking a vacation from our vacation at beautiful Lake Tahoe...

Hello everyone!

Well, my mom was right. I survived Half Dome, Jeremy is "still among the living," and we are continuing our trip through California, on our way to Oregon. So much has happened, and I only have 40 minutes in a library to write about it while Jeremy finishes the laundry!

As I recall, we left off talking about how beautiful Big Sur was, and we were about to embark on a trip to San Jose to see the Winchester "Mystery House," followed by a drive to Yosemite National Park. The Winchester Mansion is someplace I have wanted to see for a long time, and it was really neat. (http://www.winchestermysteryhouse.com/story.html) Sarah Winchester, the Winchester Rifle heiress, was convinced that the spirits of those killed by the Winchester rifle were seeking revenge, after her husband and her son passed away. So in an attempt to keep the spirits occupied, she had new rooms continuously built, torn down, and rebuilt for 38 years straight! It was certainly fascinating, especially the parts of the house affected by earthquake, or the rooms of stored windows and lumber that they have been using to keep the house in repair. The website and the pictures really say it all.

After seeing the mansion and eating in ritzy San Jose (we shared a $7 burrito, boy did we feel out of place), we drove straight out west to Yosemite. We arrived at the park around 12-12:30am, and luckily found an awesome camp spot at Tamarack Flat on the way in. We stayed there for two nights while we explored the valley, hiked to Tuolomne Grove (giant sequoias) and El Capitan (gigantic rock face famous among rock climbers). So that was our Friday night through Sunday afternoon. Then on Sunday, we got our backcountry permit to hike to the top of Half Dome in a total of 3 days!

The valley overall was pretty crowded. "Yosemite Village" was essentially a tourist town built in the heart of the most famous part of Yosemite National Park. ALL of the accomodations (hotels AND camping) were completely reserved and booked up. *However,* for those with wilderness permits to hike in the backcountry, there was a camp called the "Backpacker's Camp." It was right in the valley, and we were allowed to stay there the night before our hike! It was cheap and amazingly peaceful... there were no signs pointing to the place, so we never would have known about it otherwise! There we met some awesome people, Robert and Michael, who we camped with later on in our trip. They were planning to hike the John Muir Trail, a 200-some mile trail that ends at Mt. Whitney in Sequoia National Park!

So Monday we packed our bags, ate at the Curry Village breakfast buffet, and started up the JMT towards the "Little Yosemite" camp, our base camp for Half Dome. It was hot as hell that whole week... In the low 100s in the valley! We guzzled quarts of water as I huffed and puffed my way up some very long, steep switchbacks.

Crap! Apparently I only have 5 minutes to finish writing. I guess I'll finish quick.

We made it to Little Yosemite, camped for the night, got up the next morning and made it to the top of Half Dome by 1pm! The cables were way steeper than I even imagined. Luckily we got some good grippy gloves. They really helped.

The most exciting part of the hike happened as we were just getting to the top. There is a sign at the bottom of the cables that said "do not climb if there is any sign of inclement weather." Well, at the bottom of the hill, there wasn't! However, about 20 feet from the top, we heard thunder rumbles... turned around, and there was a lightning storm heading our way!!!!

Now we were holding on to METAL CABLES that are bolted to one of the highest points in the park, watching lightning strike on the other side of the valley. I was fearing for my life!!

There was a long line of people trying to get down the cables, and we knew it would take some time to get down there. So we climbed the last few feet, took a handful of pictures, and descended that mountain as fast as we could!! Talk about an adrenaline rush. Once we hit the tree line, the storm hit, dropping torrential rain and pea-sized hail on us during the 3-mile hike back to camp. I was exhausted, but that was the fastest we moved the entire trip! We survived with nothing more than wet clothes and chilled bodies. We got back to camp, warmed up, and could not believe what had just happened.

The day we descended the mountain, we drove across the park to Tuolomne Meadows to camp, with some AMAZING scenery along the way. I couldn't believe we stayed in the valley the whole time! That was the best part of the park. Yosemite overall was breathtaking, the most beautiful part of the trip so far, and certainly worth another visit someday.

Anyway, yesterday we drove through Nevada to Lake Tahoe, where we decided to have an "off day." So we are relaxing in Lake Tahoe until tomorrow, when we will start driving up to Lassen and Shasta... both volcanoes! I will try to keep everyone informed.

Love you all!

Friday, July 6, 2007

My will.....

Well, we are now leaving for Yosemite and will be hiking Half Dome in the next few days. This is a hike that I have *always* wanted to do, but it is so big that I think that Sarah may kill me afterwards. So............ here is my will if Sarah kills me :)

  • Matty can have all of my hiking gear
  • Greeny can have my MSR snowshoes with Heel-Assists
  • Seneca can have my road bike
  • Kilomanjaro Dave can have my rock-climbing shoes
  • Amy can have my yoga mat
  • Justin can have my electronics
  • Harris can have any leftover beer in the fridge
And finally............
  • Luke can have the bowling ball and drafting table in the basement!

Moving on...

This will be a pretty short post, but we managed to get our pictures burned to CDs, so I wanted to give a quick update before we leave the San Francisco area for the last time!

We just spent 2 *beautiful* days in Big Sur, camping at Andrew Molera State Park, checking out little beaches and forests all the way down Route 1. We arrived back here late last night, slept quite soundly, and this morning we showered, ate lunch, and did laundry before leaving. Today we are bidding Sean farewell, after a fantastic week, and heading to San Jose and the Winchester Mansion. After that, we'll be driving towards Yosemite, which I KNOW Jeremy is looking forward to. Right now I have no idea where we will be sleeping, but we'll figure that out when we get there!

So here are a few summary photographs. Enjoy! Love you all. :)









Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Muir Woods, Finishing San Fran, off to Big Sur...

*Whew* So much has happened since the last post! I don't really have time to write about ALL of it, but the long and the short of it is:

Jeremy and I had a great time in the Haight-Ashbury area on Sunday. We wandered around the panhandle of GG Park, saw Jerry Garcia's old house, and stopped into a random little bar on the corner that had some live Brazilian Jazz playing. Monday, we went to the Castro (the gayborhood basically) and the Mission districts. Both were quite colorful and interesting, and public displays of homosexual affection were far more commonplace than I have ever experienced! Sean took us to a taqueria for lunch in the Latin American section of the Mission, which had *amazing* burritos and "agua fresca," or water with fresh fruit and a little sugar mixed in. Delicious! Sean said that it was the best taqueria in San Francisco, and I believe it. Then we hung out for an afternoon in Delores park with some huge bottles of water and some Red Stripe, people-watching the hipsters and dogs running around the park.

Then Tuesday (yesterday), Jeremy and I had some really good chinese food with Sean, picked up our rental car (a Chrysler Sebring, not quite as small and fuel-efficient as we had hoped, they didn't even have the smaller ones in their fleet), and went across the Golden Gate Bridge. Beautiful! We stopped briefly at the pullover to take pictures, and had a mishap with wind, a car door, and a german woman's rental car in the parking lot (don't ask, but it's ok). Then we headed over to Muir woods, which was the most amazing thing we have seen so far. The pictures say it all, so we'll show those off as soon as we can. The trees were huge, the timing was perfect, it was nearing the end of the day and we almost had the park to ourselves. Then afterwards, we went to Muir Beach, watched an amazing sunset from some gorgeous rocky hills and cliffs, and almost got a ticket for being 5 minutes late coming out of the park! But all went well. Then Jeremy and I got some of the most awesome, DIRT CHEAP sushi we have ever had, and came back to crash.

Today we are about to head to Big Sur, south of San Francisco. I think Sean and Amanda will be joining us, and we're going to get breakfast, then drive down the coast and try to find a place to camp... which may not be easy on July 4th! But we're going to try. I can't wait.

We have to get packed up and go, so the rest will have to wait. We'll write more soon!

Monday, July 2, 2007

710 Ashbury!!!!!

Sarah just kissed me at Jerry Garcia's old house!!!!!! Dream come true :)

Sunday, July 1, 2007

We made it!

Hello everyone! Sorry to keep you waiting, but this is really the first chance I've had to update since we got here. Jeremy and Sean are out buying Russian pastries for breakfast, and
Amanda is doing the dishes, so I'm using her laptop to give everyone the lowdown on our travels.

Well, the bus trip to NYC went well, and I am REALLY glad we left as much time as we did to get to the airport. Our bus left at 8:40am (after getting some omelets at Chris's Diner), we arrived in NYC around 12:30, went for a walk and got Indian food for lunch, then took a shuttle to the airport which actually took a really long time! But we made it to the airport and through security by 6pm. We hung around for a while in the airport. Jeremy called JetBlue while we were there, and they are going to reimburse our plane fare from Syracuse! That will pay for the bus trip. Yay.

Our plane was a little late taking off, and a little late arriving, but after a pleasant flight, we got to San Francisco at 1:30am SF time, 4:30am Eastern. We took a cab back to Sean's (our ride fell through), but we made it, and by the time we got settled, we had been traveling for 24 hours!

But it is *wonderful* to see Sean and Amanda, two of our friends from Binghamton. They have a nice little apartment with another girl named Lara which is near Golden Gate Park and Lincoln Park. First thing we did yesterday was walk to Point Lobos and check out the view. Amazing!!

Yesterday was a great first day in the city. Sean was a fantastic tour guide! We took a bus down Geary Blvd to Union Square, where we started walking around. We walked through the Tenderloin, and passed some colorful, shady characters on the way. Then we walked through Chinatown, with its bustling noisy markets and trinket shops, to Little Italy, where we went to the City Lights Bookstore and the original Cafe Trieste, both "beat" hangouts back in the day. We spent a couple of hours sitting at an outdoor cafe, having drinks and pizza, visiting with a friend of Sean's who was working there, before heading down to Fisherman's Wharf. We shared some crab & shrimp cocktail, saw some huge sea lions sunning on the docks, and avoided the tourists as much as possible! We got a little startled by that guy who hides behind a bush and jumps out at tourists... quite funny. Then we walked over to the old Giardhelli factory, now a chocolate and ice cream shop, and got a huge espresso fudge sundae to share. Then, around sunset, we took the Hyde cable car ride up Russian Hill, and got a fantastic view of the bay. The cable car took us back to Union Square, where we took the bus back to the apartment. It got pretty cool after the sun went down, and we were not dressed appropriately for the brisk breezes.

Jeremy and I went for a run through Golden Gate Park this morning, which was beautiful, and we're about to have breakfast. I'm not sure exactly what we'll be doing today, but we'd like to see the GG Bridge a little more clearly, check out this truffle shop Sean was telling us about, figure out when to do the Alcatraz tour, and see the Haight, the Castro, and the Mission districts. One of these nights we'll probably head down to the beach, where there are fire circles where people tend to congregate in the evenings. We shall see!

Well, I should get going now, and eat some breakfast before we head out. Thanks for the messages! We'll post more soon.