Friday, November 25, 2011

November Catch Up

Well, I am a blogging failure. It has been almost a month since I blogged last. November just snuck by Chase and I and now it is almost Christmas!
To catch up, Chase and I have not been doing any interesting camping or hiking trips since the last blog because it has been raining and snowing every weekend it seems. Because of the rain and snow, Chase was finally able to put back together his motorcycle that broke down in July. He took the engine completely apart, bought a new crankshaft and bearings, and put it back together again. It leaks oil from a bolt that did not get put in correctly, but other than that, it is brand new!
We have also started to build a bedframe for Chase's parents. We built our headboard last fall out of logs taken from the Miller's property and Chase's dad has been jealous ever since. I de-barked and sanded the logs and Chase is putting them together. The footboard is almost completely done and we started on the headboard yesterday. I will post pictures tomorrow.
We did go on an adventure today (Chase was getting antsy). He wanted to take pictures of mountains because he is working on a project to name all of the mountains from certain viewpoints. We went to the granite dome that Chase proposed to me on that looks over Kings Canyon, which is the first picture. Notice Lehi, my in-laws dog that goes with us everywhere.

After the dome, we wanted to go to McKinley Grove to pick up Sequoia cones, but the road was closed, so we stopped at the top of the pass on Dinkey Creek Road because Chase wanted to check out some rocks on the top of a hill. We started walking up the hill and found a trail. The trail led to a viewpoint at the top of Dinkey Creek Ridge. Chase wandered around the boulders for a little while.
He found this one that he really wants to climb. We had to run down the hill because there was a giant wall of fog moving in on us, but once we got down the hill and the fog dissipated.
I was feeling really crafty yesterday and made a wreath from cedar, sequoia and manzanita for the in-laws. It looks really pretty, if a little lopsided (another picture for tomorrow).
Hopefully everyone had a happy Thanksgiving!

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Overview of October

I have been so incredibly busy with school and the hospital, that our blog has been suffering. The good news is that I have As right now and hopefully I will get a 4.0 this semester. Wish me luck!
Anyway, I do not have the videos ready to be viewed, but here are some beautiful pictures for everyone to enjoy. Plus the promised overview of October.

October 1: Camping at Courtright Reservoir and climbing at the Tiger Wall and other walls near it.
October 7 & 8: Camping at Tamarack Ridge and bouldering on the Ridge
October 14 & 15: Kaiser Peak with my dad and my cousin Trent's wedding
October 21 & 22: Chase hiking with the scouts
October 29: Three Sisters

I made a list of what we did because this is not only a blog, it is our journal.

I have two movies to post, one of me climbing on a wall by Tiger Wall and the other is a giant storm that passed over us when we were bouldering on the Ridge. Hopefully I can get those on this week.

My family came up the weekend of the 15th for my cousin Trent's wedding. My dad was on a business trip in San Diego the week before, so he flew up on Thursday night and we decided to climb Kaiser Peak the next day. We picked him up super early from my Grandparents house and drove up to Huntington Lake where the hike started. The hike was long (5 or 6 miles one way) and we gained 3000 feet of elevation. The view from the top was tremendous and totally worth the hike. We could see the coastal mountains, Kings Canyon mountains, west and east side of the Sierra's. Basically we could almost see everything. All three of us made it to the top, but we couldn't find the register. We think it was buried under the fresh snow that fell a week before.

Me on the top

My dad made it to the top! I was so proud of him!

The trail went through a beautiful red fir forest and this is a picture of us going down on it. We were so tired afterwards! The next day, my mom came and saw our little love nest apartment and then we went to my Grandparents to hang out with my family and Jonas, the German exchange student that is staying with my family for the year. We had a great time at the wedding and I had a really hard time saying goodbye to them, but they are coming back for Thanksgiving! I can't wait!
Chase took this picture last weekend on his hike with the scouts. He is now the Deacon's Quorum Advisor and the other leaders are thrilled to have someone who loves the outdoors helping out. The older scouts had to do a twenty mile hike to meet a badge requirement, so they hiked from the Dinkey Lakes trailhead past many lakes on the way to Courtright Reservoir. After eating foot long subway sandwiches that a bishopric member brought up, they headed back the same way. Chase had a great time and was able to show the scout group what a mountain goat he is after hiking a ridge off trail while the rest of everyone took a fifteen minute break.

The above picture is the Three Sisters mountain taken from first Dinkey Lake. This is the mountain that we climbed today. Chase told me when I mentioned that I was going to update our blog that I should "wait until tomorrow to post about the hike today so that you can think of something good to say about it." So I am not going to post about it. I am going to say that it involved a lot of down hiking and not a lot of food or water.



Friday, October 7, 2011

Courtright Reservoir

I have decided to be lazy this beautiful, chilly morning in October and not do the laundry like I am supposed to. Instead, I will try to catch you all up on our weekends.
Two weekends ago we went rock-climbing on Tamarack Ridge, but since I do not have any of the pictures from that trip, I will save that for a later post.

This past weekend, we did our annual Courtright reservoir camping trip. We picked up Sam from the Miller's house (along with all of our camping stuff that we keep stored there) and drove to Courtright, which is about a hour trip from his parent's house. We got there in the dark and managed to get the last good camping spot. Camping is allowed anywhere around the lake, so we pulled off the road and camped in a little ring of trees that looked onto the lake. Last year there was practically no one there, but this year it was full!
The next day, we went rock climbing at the Tiger Wall. Chase and Sam climbed it last year, but Sam did not get all the way up the rock, so he had been thinking about it for a whole year. They decided to warm up on a easier rock face before tackling the Tiger Wall and I actually climbed it! Sam took videos of all of the rock climbing, so I will post my video later. I was pretty proud of myself! After climbing the warm up rock, Chase lead the climb on the Tiger Wall, but he was not able to get past a hard part, so Sam lead the rest of the way up. He climbed the wall in record time. Chase and I couldn't believe it!
After walking back to the car (it was quite the hike with the amount of equipment that we had), we drove to a lookout spot to eat our lunch. We did the exact same thing last year, but last year, there was a really obnoxious man at the lookout with his daughters who kept telling them that he was going to accidentally shoot them instead of the bears they were hunting. I almost called child protective services on him.
After filling up with sandwiches, we drove to McKinley Grove to meet Chase's parents. McKinley Grove has a large stand of huge Sequoia trees. The day before Chase and I took our engagements photos (almost exactly three years ago) I was stung by a bee in the grove on my face.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Genoa

I just looked through all of the blogs that I follow (there are around 10 of them) and I realized that all of them had been updated, except for one (Katie). They gave me the motivation to update our blog, since it has been a couple of weeks.
Over the Labor Day weekend we went to Genoa Nevada with Chase's family, because his parents have a timeshare at Wally World (really David Wally's resort, but they really like the movie Vacation). Even though it would have been much faster to go north on the 99 then over the mountains, we went through Yosemite and north through the little mountain desert towns.
This first picture is of the famous Jeffrey Pine tree at Olmstead Point in Yosemite. Usually there are crowds of people around it, but it was dark. This is about the tenth picture that Chase took and each of them had an exposure of about 2 minutes. I held the iPad in flashlight mode to the left of Chase for the entire exposure and it turned out really neat!
While waiting for Chase's family to catch up to us at Tuolome Meadows, we had two guys walk up and knock on our car to ask where they could camp that night. Since it was Labor Day and Yosemite, all of the campgrounds were full, especially since it was about 10 at night. Chase told them to drive out to the desert because anyone can camp anywhere, but it sounded like they were going to walk up a trail about a mile and get up before the sun rose. Hopefully they didn't get caught or eaten by a bear. Has anyone heard about two Israeli men eaten by a bear in Yosemite?
That night we camped in a Jeffrey Pine forest in the desert by Mono Lake with Chase's family. The air in Jeffrey forests always smells of butterscotch because of the trees. The next day (Saturday) we started in the general direction of Wally's, but we got sidetracked a lot. We stopped in Bridgeport to watch a team branding competition (they used paint) and then we stopped in Walker Canyon at the boulder that I fell off of exactly three years ago. I have never been in so much pain in my entire life. Needless to say, I didn't even get close to the boulder. Chase's mom, dad, and brother left us there while we waited for our friends the Ellisons. They drove down from Reno to spend the day with us, and we had a great time with them rock climbing and swimming!
Sunday Chase, Sam, and Chuck played frisbee golf on the course in Tahoe while I read a book. At about 6, we decided to climb to the D that was on the hill right across from the resort. It was on the top of a very steep hill and only Micah (Chase's brother in law) made it to the D. I went up but decided to gingerly make my way to a less steep ridge where I could walk down safely. Since I was going so slow, Chase thought that I was stuck so he came down the hill to help me down. He is soo nice.
On Monday, we went to Lake Tahoe and watched Chase swim (I have never seen him swim so much in my entire life) and ate sandwiches. We drove home over a beautiful pass called Monitor pass that went through a alpine meadow and back down to Bridgeport. We went through Yosemite again in the dark and did not get home till 10:30.
At the top of Monitor Pass looking out towards the town of Walker in the middle, left of the hills.
Picture of Bridgeport taken by Sam
The weekend after Labor Day, I stayed home and volunteered to make up for the Monday that I missed while Chase worked on his dirtbike (which is getting close to being in one piece, more on that later) and finding boulders to climb on. This one is his next project.
Sorry about the lack of pictures and wealth of words.
P.S. Who lives in Malaysia? Someone is looking at our blog from there and I don't think either of us know anyone from there.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Hidden Secret


Do you know what is the best kept secret of the Sierras? We do. It is blackberries! For the last two years, Chase and I (with a few members of his family) pick wild blackberries from canes not far from his parents house. This year we went with Chuck and Sam and we picked about five pounds of blackberries (about 50 to 60 dollars worth) from two different sets of canes. It took us around 45 minutes to pick all of them, and the mosquitoes were horrible. Probably because one set of canes were by a pond of murky water. The first set of canes had huge bear scat piles and the canes were squished. The bears must like blackberries as much as we do!
Because most of the blackberries were pretty ripe, I froze all of them except about half a cup worth that we ate with a little sugar. Chase is going to have some pretty good smoothies!

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Seven Gables

This past weekend, we went backpacking again. This time it was above Edison Lake which is on the Fresno side of the Sierras. Chase wanted to climb Seven Gables Mountains, which is really far back in the mountains, so far back that he could see both Western and Eastern Sierra mountains from the top of Seven Gables. The trail consisted of eight miles up a hill so steep in areas that we were walking on steps cut out of the stone, then down to the John Muir Trail for three miles (our second time that we have been on the JMT this year), then up and over another four or five miles to a little unnamed lake in the Seven Gables Lakes chain so that Chase could climb his mountain.
Because it was such a long trip (four days and over 30 miles), I will just mention the highlights of each day including pictures.

Day one: Hiking the long way up and then down again to the JMT. We followed the Bear River for the first four or five miles and every so often, there would be pools in the river that had sand at the bottom of them and were so clear that we could see everything, including fish in them. The water was freezing, but I was tempted to swim in them on the last day. We camped about 1.7 miles from the trail that left the JMT and went up to the small canyon that was our ultimate goal. The mosquitoes were absolutely horrendous on the JMT. The snow had just barely melted and there were thousands of them. They would all swarm around me (thanks dad) and I ended up with more than a hundred bites.
Day Two: Within the very first hour of us hiking on Friday, we had to do a stream crossing, which is not this picture, but one of the pictures lower down. We had to take off our shoes and wade across because the bridge went out. There was not a distinct trail to our little unnamed lake, so we had to boulder hop through boulder fields and cross many streams like this one. Chase jumped across with our backpacks and then caught us on the other side (did I mention that Chase's mom Judy was with us for this trip?)
That night we camped next to the little unnamed lake looking up at Seven Gables (it is on the far right of the picture above. The sunset that night was absolutely incredible. I stayed in the tent because of the mosquitoes, but Chase got some breathtaking pictures of the red and orange night sky.
Day Three: Chase woke up at 5:50 to climb his mountain. The boulder in the middle of the picture is the very top of the mountain, Chase did not get on it. The lake to the left of the picture is Vee Lake, where Chase originally wanted to go. Once we got to the unnamed lake, Chase realized that Vee Lake is actually up a hill opposite of Seven Gables, so we did not go there. He got to the top at 8:10 and reached camp again at 10:10 after spending twenty minutes on top taking pictures and eating breakfast.
The clouds were incredible on day three. The picture above is Seven Gables. Chase went up the snow shoot in between the two really pointy mountains. the mountain on left is the top.
Also on Day three: After Chase rested for an hour or so at base camp, we packed everything up to start down the trail again. We did four separate creek crossings including one that I threw my shoe and Chase had to rescue it. The one above is the creek crossing on the JMT. Chase didn't roll up his pants because they dried so fast. That night we camped by the Bear river before going up the hill that took almost the entire first day to go up. Chase took a dip in the Bear River, and I took a video of it, but I cannot figure out how to turn the video. oh well
Day Four: Judy and I were both exhausted and I was one big mosquito bite. We met tons of people going up the hill to the JMT. Judy and I kept asking Chase, "are we close to the car yet?". After reaching the car, Judy wanted to go for a dip in Edison Lake. While she was swimming, I tried to use the outhouse, but it smelled really bad. Since there was no one around, I did my business behind a log that was up a little hill. I was hidden from sight, but right when I was done, a car pulled up. I popped out from behind the log (they could see me at this point) and wandered down the lake side nonchalantly trying to act like nothing was happening. I was so embarrassed. I told Chase about it and he laughed for ten minutes.

Hopefully you enjoyed my little discourse. By the way, does anyone else hate the way blogger uploads pictures?

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Birthday Boy

Happy Birthday Chase on the 29th of July!

This post is all about Chase's birthday weekend!

Two Saturdays ago, we went to Shaver Lake with Chase's family to try the rope swing that Sam (Chase's brother) had found. Because we had Chase's niece and nephews with us, we also found a little beach to swim at because the rope swing went off a cliff. I didn't do the swing because it was really scary. Sam did double back flips off of it. The jump started five feet up a tree and at the apex, it was about thirty feet off the water. Scary!

Sam had his ever present GoPro and both the videos were made with it. Sam wouldn't jump with it attached to his head because it falls off and smacks his nose, so the top video was filmed by someone in the water. The video below it was filmed on land.

After the lake, Chase wanted to go rock climbing on some large pinnacles that we found a couple of months ago. Chase, Sam, and Micah (Chase's brother-in-law who is married to his sister Natalie) hiked up a ridge to the rocks while Natalie and I stayed with the kids and read. A giant group of trailer campers moved in and set up all around us (we were parked on a pull out in an area where free camping is allowed). We were not impressed, especially since one of them almost hit Natalie's car when trying to get around them. Eventually, the men came back down the hill and we were able to leave. At least the lake was fun!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Some More Bouldering


Chase wanted me to post this video of him climbing the Buttermilk like boulder that he ascended a week and a half ago. Sam is on top of a boulder right next to Chase's boulder with a GoPro. I would have posted it earlier, but Chase had to cut the short clip out of an hour long video. Who else has a GoPro? Sam loves his, it goes everywhere with him.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Big News


As the title says, this blog has some big news in it. Does anyone knows what is in the picture? I bet Katie knows! This is the GIANT pile of scrubs in my closet that was in a space bag for two years and has sat in my closet untouched since we moved here seven months ago, hoping to be worn. Well, tomorrow I start as a volunteer in the telemetry unit in St. Agnes hospital. The telemetry unit is the cardiac unit that includes patients with all sorts of heart related problems. Because I am hopefully going to be attending a physician's assisting school in a couple of years, the telemetry manager is going to let me work very closely with the nurses and interact more with patients then regular volunteers. I am so excited!
The manager I will be working with is very nice and is willing to work with my school schedule, so I will let you all know who it goes!

Highlights from the Last Two Weeks

My mother mentioned yesterday while I was on the phone with her that it makes her sad when there is not a new post of my blog (this was after me telling her that my sister's old blog posts makes me sad). Touché mama, here is your post. Two weeks ago Thursday we went to the most recent Kiss Country five dollar concert, except for it is really six dollars. We sat at almost the top of the ampitheater in Woodward Park surrounded by people in country clothes and a large group in Metal Mulisha clothing (don't ask me why they wore these clothes to a country concert). It was a really good concert and we enjoyed the music.
The weekend before last, we went camping with Chase's mom and brother, his dad joined us the next day. We camped on a rocky hill looking over a roaring waterfall and Dinkey Dome, which Chase wanted to climb, but it ended up being really far away. Instead, Chase, Sam, and their father climbed on the numerous boulders. Chase was trying to make sure that Sam would not fall on the sharp tree stump right below him in this picture.

Here is a view of the waterfall below our camp.

This rock looks a lot like the boulders in the Buttermilks by Bishop. Chase tried to climb it two weeks ago and even though his father offered a hundred dollars as a reward if he could climb it, he couldn't do it. We went back this past Saturday and he made it all the way to the top! I was very proud.
After Chase was done climbing boulders on our camping trip two weekends ago, his family went home while he and I went to Huntington Lake to see the sailing regatta. We got out of the truck and I asked Chase if he had the keys and then slammed the door shut. Yes, I locked the keys in the truck. We struggled for twenty minutes with some of the rock climbing equipment, and then two huge Mexican guys walked up. They asked us if we had locked the keys in the truck, and then they told us they had an "extra key". It turns out that one of them had a wedge, a blow up wedge, and a long hooked rod. They asked us if Lehi bites (we had the in-laws very friendly Australin Shephard with us who does not bite anyone), then set about opening the truck. After about five minutes of struggling, they decided to grab the keys with the hook and fished them right out. We were very grateful.
Until next time (which will be very soon because I have some other news to share)

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Eastern Sierras

As promised, here is the ridiculously long post about our Independence Day trip. Chase really wanted to go backpacking and he wanted to go to Mammoth Lakes (which is on the east side of the Sierras hence the name of the post), so we combined the activities. To get to Mammoth Lakes, we have to drive through Yosemite, which was packed with people and Chase had really bad road rage from all the slow people. After getting our wilderness permit from the forest service and packing our backpacks, we got on the bus to get to Agnew Meadows where our trail to Thousand Island Lake started. This is a picture of me at the Mammoth ski resort, notice the snowshoes on my pack (this is where we got on the bus).
There were three trails the led to Thousand Island Lake, the Pacific Coast Trail which went straight up a hill and down to the lake, the river trail which was a gradual uphill trail to the lake, and the Shadow Lake trail that went up to Shadow Lake then up and down to Garnet Lake, and then up and down to Ruby lake, and then up then down to Thousand Island Lake. Guess which one we had to take, of course we had to do the Shadow Lake trail. It was the only one that wasn't full of people. The trail up to Shadow Lake was cut out of a rock face right next to the waterfall coming out of the lake.
After eating a snack next to Shadow Lake (it was about 4:30 when we got there and I was starving), we got on the John Muir Trail that would take us all the way to our final destination. We wanted to get all the way to Garnet Lake before we stopped for the night and so we started up another hill. Because of the large amount of snow melting in the mountains, there were tons of creeks and streams that we had to cross. One of them right above Shadow Lake was too large for us to cross on the trail, so we hiked about 300 feet above the trail to cross it. We did not want to walk down to the trail and lose elevation, so we walked up the hill and used the iPad that Chase carried to guide us to where we could meet up with the trail. Around 7 we had not found the trail yet, but we happened on a nice flat area to camp, so we stopped. Chase took this picture from our campsite at sunset. The Minarets are in the middle. After we set up camp, we realized that the trail was about 100 meters away.
The next morning we packed up and continued up the big hill. We met up with four guys who were snowshoeing, and they told us that we would need the four pound snowshoes that we had lugged up two hills. I was relieved, because I was really regretting bringing them. We lost the trail about half a mile from the top of the pass we had to go over, but we followed the snowshoers path. We put on our snowshoes and used them for about twenty minutes while going up the last part of the pass, before taking them off again when we reached a rock band at the top of the pass. The other side of the pass going down to Garnet Lake was very steep, and as you can see, there really wasn't a trail. The snowshoe guys went up a not so steep area, but our snowshoes turn into skis when they are going downhill. Instead of haphazardly skiing down the hill, we turned around and went down the hill backwards, using the snowshoes to anchor us. We only used the snowshoes for about an hour in total and totally regretted hauling them eighteen miles.
After eating a snack, taking a nap (Chase), and talking to Bob the entertainment lawyer who works for SNL, The Office, and 30 Rock by Garnet Lake (which was frozen by the way) we started up another steep hill without a trail. The real trail went up a cliff of snow that emptied into the lake, so we went off trail again and used the iPad to guide us. After going up a rocky, grassy slope we hit a talus slope that took us to the top of yet another pass. At the other side we walked down a snow slope to Ruby Lake and stopped to talk to a couple guys hiking the entire John Muir Trail.
We walked by Emerald Lake after Ruby Lake, then we finally reached Thousand Island Lake. I stopped in the shade while Chase went to look for a campsite for us. While I was by myself, a man hiking the entire Pacific Coast Trail (which goes from Mexico to Canada) stopped to talk to me. He asked me if I was by myself, and I told him that Chase was off wandering around. He was planning on doing another four or five miles that night (it was 5:30 by the time we reached the lake). We had to walk another quarter mile or so to find a campsite. It was up on another hill side and I almost did not make it. Chase came down and got my pack for me. He is such a man. We had really great views of Banner Peak from our campsite. It was only nine miles to Thousand Island Lake, but it was the longest nine miles of my life!
The next morning, we started back down the trail, but we went down the river trail so that we didn't have to go up and down numerous times, just down and then up. Yes I said up. The last mile before Agnew Meadows went up a hillside. It was two in the afternoon and I was very hot and very tired from the creek jumping with a 40 pound pack for eight miles. The trail had a large freezing cold waterfall on it, so we stopped to get wet. We dropped our packs after this picture to they would not get wet and basically took a freezing cold shower. It was lovely.
After taking the bus back to our car, turning in our bear canister, and relaxing by Convict Lake, we went to one of the natural spas that are in the cow pastures outside of Mammoth Lakes. Our favorite one is the largest one. There were sixteen people in it, but it did not feel crowded. After twenty minutes, ten people left so there were only six of us in it, and it felt huge. We watched the sunset from the spa and took pictures of White Mountain. After the spa, we went and watched fireworks in downtown Mammoth Lakes. There were so many people watching them that we had to stand. They stopped abruptly in the middle of the last song, so somebody messed up. They showed Megamind for free right after the fireworks and we stayed for it. It was awesome! All the campsites were full, so we random camped near the Inyo crates. There were at least five other groups random camping near us, so it did not feel very random. We didn't get in our sleeping bags until midnight.
The next day, we drove to Bishop to get gas (where it is at least fifty cents cheaper a gallon) and drove to Tioga Pass by the Benton road. It was really hot, so we swam in the Owen's River right outside of Bishop for about thirty minutes until the deerflies found me. I HATE deerflies. The Benton road has some awesome bumps that Chase's dad gets the car off the ground on. We did not go fast enough to do that, but we did get the funny stomach feeling on them. We passed rock formations that looked like the rock monster from Galaxy Quest was going to pop out of them, and stopped at Mono Lake to dip our feet in the salty water. After Mono Lake, we decided that it was time to go home. We did stop at Bridalveil Falls in Yosemite to do the hike, where we got soaked. We also stopped at the tunnel view to take pictures. Bridalveil in the waterfall in the picture. If you have not gone to Yosemite lately, go! The waterfalls are incredible and there was one waterfall to the left of El Capitan that I have never seen before (you can't see it in the picture).
After a large amount of road rage, and a Taco Bell stop in Oakhurst, we made it home. Hopefully you did not get too bored with this long post!

P.S. one thing that made me sad on this trip was my orange flip flops. I have had them since my mom bought them for our Yellowstone trip when I was fourteen or fifteen (seven or eight years ago). The trip where it snowed the entire time and we went home a day early. These flip flops broke in Mono Lake. It made me very sad, they have gone on three backpacking trips, countless car camping trips, and a Germany trip. Oh well, I packed my new pair of purple flip flops so I was not too sad.

All About Chase


So, I have a giant blog to write about the big trip that we went on over Independence Day weekend, but I wanted to do a fun entry first.
Not many of you know this, but Chase is very funny. During situations that might not be the best situations, he says really funny things. Three examples:
1. Last night I accidentally swallowed some listerine. He walked in on me gagging in the bathroom because it was so strong. When I told him that I had swallowed the mouthwash, he asked me "Are you drunk?"
2. Two nights ago, our toilets had an identity crisis and decided that it was a waterfall. After he had shut off the water and we were cleaning up the pond in the bathroom, he said "At least the floor is getting mopped."
3. This one is my absolute favorite and I bring it up a lot. Chase's truck does not have automatic locks on it. He either has to unlock the passenger door with a key and I reach over the unlock his door, or he unlocks his doors and reaches over to unlock the passenger door. A couple of years ago during our first winter in Canada, it was snowing really hard and we ran to get in his truck to go home from somewhere. He unlocked his door and got in and then unlocked my door, leaving me in the snow. I asked him why he didn't unlock my door first he told me, "but it is snowing."

Friday, June 24, 2011

Weekend in the Bay Area

Hey everyone!
This past weekend we were lucky enough to be invited to Chase's cousin Adeline's wedding at the Oakland temple. We stayed with his Oma and Opa (grandparents) on Friday night. We took his Opa to Adeline and Matt's sealing at the temple on Saturday. We took a lot of pictures, but we didn't get a lot of pictures taken of us, so here is a beautiful picture of the Oakland temple that Chase took. After the sealing, we went to good old In-N-Out for some yummy cheeseburgers with Chase's mom, dad, Sam, and Opa. That night there was a huge party at Chase's aunt Karen's house. We tried to help out with the madness and it turned out beautiful!
The next day we went to Santa Cruz to look at the tide pools along the beach. We went to the Natural Bridge State Park and peeked into the tide pools that we found in the rocks. We found crabs, clams, mussels, small fish, and two starfish. It was very pretty that day, but we went to the tide pools just before the tide came in, so we could not spend a lot of time by them because of the tide coming in.
This was one of my favorite pictures from the beach, it is of Judy, Chase's mom. Chase and I both wore flip-flops the entire time at the beach and forgot to put on sunscreen. Poor Chase had bright red feet and blisters, but I only ended up with a burn.
On the way back to Fresno, we went through Mount Madonna pass, which is just above Watsonville (where they grow raspberries, blackberries, and strawberries). We were supposed to meet Chase's mom and Natalie with her family at the top of Mount Madonna in the little state park at the top, but they took the wrong road, so it was Chase, Sam, Chuck, and I at the top. We stopped at the little state park where we were surprised by the dense redwood and eucalyptus forest. The men played frisbee golf while I took pictures. These are clover leaves that are almost as big as my hand.
There were tons of four foot high foxglove all around the road.
The men were trying to not throw their frisbees too far into the forest because of this plant. Poison Oak. Chase swears that when he walks by this plant his skin starts to tingle because he got it all over his body a couple of years ago. Notice the shiny leaves of three!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Chase's Graduation

I forgot to put in my favorite picture from Chase's graduation!

Our Beautiful Calgary

I have to warn you, this is a long post. It is all about our recent trip to Calgary for Chase's graduation from University of Calgary. It is basically our trip through photos (and captions).

Our very first day (we landed at 3 in Calgary), we went to the school to see all of Chase's friends, and then we went to the Market mall to buy me a brand new Lulu Lemon jacket. Many of you in the US don't know what a Lulu Lemon is, but it is an incredibly soft jacket that I love (it is really expensive though so I used birthday money to get it). We then went for a walk next to the Bow river and watched some trains. The sun didn't set until 10:00 and this picture was taken around 9 at night.

On Thursday, or our second day in Canada, we headed up to the mountains! We wanted to see new things, but we ended up hiking in an area in the Spray Lakes Wilderness that we had gone to before. We tried to hike to the Haig glacier, but the snow was still waist deep and it started to rain, so we turned back. This is a picture of Mt. Sir Douglas, one of the Rockies eleven thousanders. We managed to see three bald eagles on this day around a small lake and in a marsh. We also saw an osprey.

That night we stayed in Canmore in a hotel that felt like the rooms were individual cabins. It was kind of small and had a giant spider behind the toilet, but Chase liked the cabin theme.

On Friday, we decided to see Moraine Lake and Lake Louise again. They are large lakes that are usually tourist traps, but since it was the beginning of June, cold, and the Lakes were still half frozen, there were not a lot of people at them. As we walked around Moraine Lake, Chase noticed an avalanche coming off of Faye Glacier on the other side of the lake. Mount Faye is one of ten peaks that surround Moraine Lake.

This is a picture of Moraine Lake from the top of the Rockpile that stands at the foot of the lake.Next we went to Lake Louise, where we walked around the lake around because none of the trails that are near the lake were dry enough for us to hike. This is a picture of the ice on the lake pushing onto the rocks on the shore. The ice looked like glass straws fanned out on the rocks. Some of the tourists picked up a straw and ate it. It made me sick because there was clearly algae in the lake and even some on the ice next to the ice straws. I think they all ended up with Montezuma's revenge.

Our last day in the mountains was Saturday. We met our friend Aden Hirtle in Banff (where we had stayed for the night) and went to Kootenay National Park, which is actually in British Colombia. It is about an hour away from Banff. We took Aden to Marble Canyon, which is a thin limestone canyon that is 150 meters deep and cut by water. At the end of the hike around the canyon, there is a roaring waterfall, which Aden loved. After the Canyon, we hiked to Stanley glacier, which is seen at the top of the mountains in the picture above. The trail was dry until about a kilometer and a half to this point where it turned muddy and eventually snowy. We had to find the trail through an avalanche path, and stopped next to a big boulder, which was not anywhere close to the end of the trail. Seen in the picture above was our friend Aden coming back to where we are sitting on a boulder after he climbed the gigantic boulder in the background. It was at least four times as tall as he is and he shimmied right up it. We saw two avalanches on the cliffs, and followed the hard snow pack out of the glacial cirque. This was one of my favorite hikes of the trip.

Sunday we went to church with our friends and relaxed. Chase's graduation was on Monday. We picked up our previous landlady and went to lunch with her. The graduation was next and 650 people graduated in the engineering department. Trudy (our landlady) and I sat on the wrong side of the gym and poor Chase could not find us until the end of the ceremony. After our farewell barbeque at a friends house on Monday night, and two stops at 7-11 for penny candy we cannot find in the states on Tuesday morning, we flew home to good old Fresno.