Cow #82 made her way into downtown Winthrop on a rainy
Monday morning. She had been thinking about buying some real estate or getting her
skis tuned or maybe just ordering a double tall latte when she changed her mind and headed
back up East Chewuch Road under the gentle guidance of Deputy Marshal Rory
Williams.
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Boundary Trail - Part Two
At Cathedral Lake |
But don't forget: the way back is never exactly the same, Grashopper . . . .
A view of Cathedral |
Remmel Mountain peaking up behind the high meadows |
Remmel Lake and mountain at dawn |
Two hikers ready for the return trip |
Frank navigates a tricky stretch below upper Cathedral Lake |
Our much-welcomed tarn at Sheelite Pass |
Perfect campsite on granite at Sheelite Pass |
Hiking out the final morning we encountered Frank's internist, Dr. Chris Hogness, accompanied by seven pack goats. Family still asleep in tent on other side of Sunny Pass. |
Pastel dawn in Horseshoe Basin |
A trek along the Boundary Trail - Part One
You belong among the wildflowers . . . in Horseshoe Basin. |
The weather was hot and sunny the whole trip; the bugs were horrendous - tent-screen-covering mosquitoes in camp, biting flies on the trail in the afternoon; the views were outstanding.
I still appear fresh on Day 2. |
Sunny Pass - looking back the way we came. |
Lowden Lake early morning. |
Bug netting was all the fashion in camp. |
After-lunch snooze. |
BIG trail junction at Tungsten Mine. |
Ancient rails lead out to the tailings pile. Apex Mountain. |
Mine artifacts. Frank on tailings pile. |
Apex Peak from Apex Pass. I stayed below and applauded wildly while Frank bagged the peak. |
First view of Cathedral Peak; the pass is in the left saddle. |
Frank on switchback approach to Cathedral Pass. |
The view west from Cathedral Pass. |
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
A quick trip to Stehekin
Whoa. Where did August and September go? Whoa.
Frank and I have been busy, I guess. I'm going to "catch up" by posting some stories and photos of our activities in no particular order. I might not even put dates on the events. So there.
First off: A quick trip to Stehekin.
Frank has hiked many pieces of the Pacific Crest Trail over the years, and he's semi-serious about completing sections as he goes along. Last summer he hiked from the Canadian border to Rainy Pass with his friend, Rob Langsdorf from San Diego, who is seriously section hiking the PCT. Anyway, Frank wanted to walk from Rainy Pass to Stehekin, so he took the opportunity a few weekends ago.
I decided I wanted a few extra hours at home, so I dropped him off at the Bridge Creek trailhead on Saturday after lunch and said, "I'll meet you in Stehekin tomorrow."
Early Sunday morning I boarded the Lady Express in Chelan and began a two-and-a-half hour boat ride up Lake Chelan.
So I had around 4 hours to myself in Stehekin to wander around, find and set up our campsite, eat lunch and nap atop a picnic table along the shore. It was rough. The weather was glorious (if a little hazy from distant forest fires), and the surroundings couldn't have been more serene.
Frank arrived on the 3:15 shuttle bus Sunday afternoon as planned. He was very hot, tired and dusty but we cleaned up with a dreamy swim in the crystal-clear waters of Lake Chelan. SO GREAT!
Frank and I had a lovely dinner at the only restaurant in Stehekin. The food was delicious. Now think about this people: It's the only food vendor in town. The food could stink and they'd still be serving it. But no, they do better than they have to. How refreshing.
We didn't have to get on the boat back to Chelan until noon on Monday, so we rented bikes in the morning and rode a couple miles to the excellent bakery for breakfast.
The scenery along the Stehekin Valley Road was outstanding, we basically had the place to ourselves, and there was something so sweet about just pedaling along on our poopy old rental bikes.
Frank and I have been busy, I guess. I'm going to "catch up" by posting some stories and photos of our activities in no particular order. I might not even put dates on the events. So there.
First off: A quick trip to Stehekin.
The Lady Express on Lake Chelan |
I decided I wanted a few extra hours at home, so I dropped him off at the Bridge Creek trailhead on Saturday after lunch and said, "I'll meet you in Stehekin tomorrow."
Early Sunday morning I boarded the Lady Express in Chelan and began a two-and-a-half hour boat ride up Lake Chelan.
You wouldn't believe the boring scenery on the way up lake . . . . |
The boat arrived at Stehekin Landing around 11 a.m. |
Major activity at the landing - that's the national park bus. |
Frank arrived on the 3:15 shuttle bus Sunday afternoon as planned. He was very hot, tired and dusty but we cleaned up with a dreamy swim in the crystal-clear waters of Lake Chelan. SO GREAT!
Sunset looking into the North Cascades from the tiny marina. |
We didn't have to get on the boat back to Chelan until noon on Monday, so we rented bikes in the morning and rode a couple miles to the excellent bakery for breakfast.
Frank and cinnamon roll. Yum. |
The Harlequin Bridge - our turn around point. |
Kokanee salmon (land-locked sockeye) in the Stehekin River. |
Wetlands where the Stehekin River enters Lake Chelan. |
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Last weekend up Twisp Pass
Day hiking for us around here usually means driving 30 minutes to one hour to get to the trailhead (not forgetting the appropriate parking pass - state or national?) and then heaving our bodies uphill for several hours, having lunch, and then lurching our way downhill to the car. Gosh. It doesn't sound that great when I put it that way. Must be my painful joints talking . . . .
Anyway, we hiked up Twisp Pass on Saturday. It is SUCH a beautiful trail.
I told Frank we pretty much saw the whole wildflower book along the 2600 feet of elevation gain.
We traveled on snow for a while. It's almost August for goodness sakes! Some trails may not be snow free before snow flies again.
We had lunch slightly above the pass. Yeah. I'm always thrilled to keep going UP, but certainly the views were worth it.
Anyway, we hiked up Twisp Pass on Saturday. It is SUCH a beautiful trail.
I told Frank we pretty much saw the whole wildflower book along the 2600 feet of elevation gain.
That's Hock Mountain there with the headwaters of the South Fork of the Twisp River in the valley below. |
Beware the pink snow monster. |
A good 4 to 6 foot base of snow here still. |
That's Dagger Lake below and nothing but national park in the picture. |
I really like wooden signage in the wilderness.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
This week in the garden
Hi.
I just thought I'd share some images from Laurelle's garden. I wish I could share a recording of the crazy bird talk that's going on out there this morning. You probably don't want to know about the mosquitos.
I just thought I'd share some images from Laurelle's garden. I wish I could share a recording of the crazy bird talk that's going on out there this morning. You probably don't want to know about the mosquitos.
"Midnight Snow" purple-podded pea |
Salvia and Dianthus |
Fairywing poppy |
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