Showing posts with label Rock Climbing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock Climbing. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2015

Belgium, Pt. 1- Australian surfboard upset

A photo posted by Garth Hamilton (@garth_hamilton) on



A second round of Australian surfing just wasn't meant to be.  And to make it worse, Australian Surfboard Upset sounds more like a crowdbreaker game I'd devise for my church youth group than a respectable blog post title.  It can be hard for a youth pastor's brain to switch modes.  


Just prior to this month's Hamilton family European vacation, I had sent my parents to Australia for a few weeks.  My plan was to meet them in Sydney for a couple days, fly home to the U.S., and then bring Kathy and the kids to Europe the very next day.

In Sydney, I would do the tourist thing with my folks, visit some Aussie friends while I'm in town, and finally hit Bondi Beach for some surfing.  Australia boasts the BEST surfing I've had in my life, hands down.


Long story short, I screwed up my visa.  Everything got fixed... But after all that hassle, the flight from L.A. to Sydney was oversold anyway.  Ironically, a solid year of scoring a ton of Business Elite seats for my Delta buddy pass riders had lead to me getting stuck in L.A.

Thankfully, one of my favorite buddies Joseph saved me from an overnight stay in LAX airport by letting me crash in one of his rental houses in Hollywood. After a post-midnight nosh at In-N-Out Burger, Joseph set me up in a room so I could write my most recent blog post (see link to that previous "Salt Lake City- Delta Velvet 360" post) and get some sleep.

I'd make one last attempt to fly out to Australia the next evening.



Open air breakfast of paleo coconut pancakes and coffee in Hollywood, courtesy of Candace


None of my photos with Joseph are really worth sharing here, but my Instagram followers may remember this photo collage of my most recent Hollywood visit:


A photo posted by Garth Hamilton (@garth_hamilton) on



The next evening's L.A. flight to Sydney was also oversold, so I flew home to start our family European vacation a few days early.  Sadly, little Lena was ill when I got back.

Rather than flying to Europe early, we spent those extra few days waiting for Lena to get better.  I even stayed home on Sunday to take care of Lena, so Mommy could watch Levi in the church nursery.

Other than getting out to climb or seeing the occasional friend, most of my remaining week of Delta vacation was spent at home.

Climbing intro lesson for my friend Gwen, just to get her belay certified at Stoneworks Climbing Gym


A few days later, Mommy finally gave Lena a clean bill of health.  We scooped up Lena and Levi, hurried to PDX Airport, and loaded those little Ls on the very next departing plane.


Economy Comfort seats for all of us: That's airlinese for Fancy Coach




Coming next, after leading a NW Wilderness climb to the summit of the South Sister volcano and our thrilling scramble/ rappel down the Mystery Trail...


Belgium, Pt. 2- The story finally begins!




Monday, January 5, 2015

Honorable mentions: Most popular non-travel posts (Unpublished #1)

Happy New Year!!  Family time, ministry, international traveling, hikes, and climbs in December have kept me too busy to compile my annual Top 10 lists of popular posts for 2014.  Apparently, the end of 2013 was no different!

This is a previously unreleased “Best Of” series from January 2014, based on page views for my 2013 postsI’m obviously stalling for time until my new blog content is ready for next month.  The page hits from 2014 will be tallied soon.  The actual Top 10 list is coming in a few weeks... and the all-travel companion post to this list is coming later this month!

Links to each of the original photo-filled posts are below, in this color.


Before we get to the Top 10 non-travel posts in a couple days, here are a few  honorable mentions which were very popular but just barely missed the list:




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For whatever reason, this throwback day-after skydiving post was more popular than the parachuting action photos from Skydiving! A Birthday Throwback, Pt. 1. 

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Part. 2 featured photos from my birthday weekend festivities that didn't involve jumping out of a plane:  hiking, rock wall climbing, laser tag, go kart racing, and a Los Lobos concert.




Munra Point: Losing a climb, gaining a 14k frozen trail run


Ironically, this icy #HikingFail along our renamed Not Munra Point Trail was the result of me relying on trail directions from another hiking blogger.  It wouldn't have hurt for us to consult a map as well.

Spoiler alert Shaun and I did finally ascend past Munra Point proper in late 2014, when I led my “Munra Point morning scramble" hiking event for NW Wilderness.




 
The photos of Lena’s fascination with the animals are wonderful.  But the real highlight is an early video clip of Lena showing off her new walking skills!





A controversial YouTube video inspired this call to the ladies to keep it classy, and for the guys to respect the ladies.






Shaun, Seamus the dog, and I hiked up our favorite steep-y, the one and only Mount Defiance.  Yet again.  Since those skydiving posts were throwbacks to the previous year, this was my official birthday post of 2013. 




And finally...


The final post on this honorable mentions list was a simple plea for typhoon disaster relief, via either Church of God Ministries or Compassion International.  This may be old news to the western world, but the recovery and restoration efforts are still a reality for those living in those areas of the Philippines affected by this natural disaster.

Prayers and financial support for worldwide disaster and poverty relief efforts continue to be appreciated.


Coming later in January...

2014's unpublished post #2-


Top 10: Most popular recent non-travel posts!




Friday, August 1, 2014

Mount Rainier climb- Still to come!

2 weeks ago: Standing on the summit of Mount Adams, with Mount Rainier over my shoulder

Less than two hours from now, the plan was for us to be breaking camp at midnight near the base of Mount Rainier and beginning our two-day ascent.  But as of this morning, our climb has been postponed until a later weekend.


Significant shifts within our climbing party occurred in past 72 hours, calling for a new plan of attack.  The drastic nature of this new plan requires a special permit in addition to the climbing pass.  Unfortunately, I do not yet meet the qualifications for that special permit.  After such overwhelming anticipation, this news was devastating.


On the bright side, Mount Rainier will be a climb worth waiting for!  I don't usually Tweet or blog about specific dates for upcoming events, but I'll drop some hints as the date gets closer for us to regroup and make another attempt at the climb.



Readers, let's all get outside and play this weekend.  As for me, I'll be taking little Lena (and hopefully Kathy and baby Levi!) hiking on some local trails.


And early next week, I'll be sharing an all-new surfing post!

Thanks for reading.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Fear of the Unknown: Hiking Wahkeena Falls to Larch Mountain

Last weekend's Mount Adams climb was the latest in a series of training climbs before we summit Mount Rainier.


Several new blog posts about those climbs, as well as hiking, surfing, traveling, and a student ministry update are all on the way!





Sometimes good hikes go bad. And sometimes bad titles happen to good blog posts.

Both scenarios came into play for Shaun's and my disastrous hike up Larch Mountain via the Wahkeena Falls trail, briefly mentioned in last month's "Best of 2014 all-new hiking photos" post (link).




Here's the whole story of that lingeringly painful (for me) and terrifying (for Shaun) day:






Our hike/trail run up Larch Mountain in late spring didn't need to spiral into an 18+ mile hike/scramble.  But multiple trail closures near Multnomah Falls left us with limited options, especially later when a crucial "Trail Closed" sign had gone missing for our return route.


The approach to Larch via the Wahkeena Falls trail adds miles.  But even with Sheamus the Energizer Bunny/Dog running along with us, we made up plenty of time with a breathless pace.


Wet weather during our hike/run up from the lower elevations...







...Eventually turned to snow, fog, and high winds as we neared the top.








Fingers freezing*, we were in a tremendous hurry to run back down from the top of Larch. Unfortunately, we hurried too tremendously to avoid a couple of missteps on our alternate route down:


Bad idea #1: Blowing through trail intersections at full speed without slowing down to process the signs

Bad idea #2: Taking turns navigating (as opposed to BOTH trail runners paying attention), based on whomever happens to be taking the lead at the time


Loyal Garth's Blog readers may remember that this is the second time in 15 years or so that Shaun and I have missed or overshot a trail junction, as we did last year near Munra Point.

I'll never tell which of us happened to be "navigating" this time when we ran off course.  But when I finally realized where we were, I was admittedly responsible for THIS doozy:


Bad idea #3: Turning onto a familiar trail which, we discovered later, was missing its well deserved "Trail Closed" warning sign

*If a certain hiking buddy is reading this, Shaun is gonna need those gloves back that I left in your car after our recent Dog Mountain hike.  Pretty please?




The Fear of the Unknown


This once-popular trail (name withheld, to prevent copycat hikers from getting fined by the US Forest Service) didn't start out so bad.   But soon, we were pushing, climbing, ducking, and hopping our way through the increasingly overgrown segments.  We began to question whether or not the path was still legit.



And then the trail completely dropped out.   We rounded a corner to encounter a cliff where the trail used to be.  Shaun, normally as brave and occasionally reckless on the trails as I am, froze up.

"All I can see is death," Shaun replied to my optimistic suggestion that there MUST be a way to cross the chasm in front of us.

Shaun continued to object, "There's just a giant broken staircase, crashed over on its side. Who knows what is beyond that?   Another drop-off?  A bigger cliff?"

For once in our long history of crazy adventuring together, my favorite hiking buddy was paralyzed by the fear of the unknown.   And we were both especially concerned about the safety of his dog, Sheamus.



The drop-off didn't seem as severe in my eyes, though.  I volunteered to scramble down solo for a recon mission, to convince everyone that the route was doable.


I captured and Tweeted this pic of Shaun and Sheamus, standing on top of the cliff, as I climbed down.


The terrain below wasn't anywhere near as treacherous as imagined.  As I hollered my findings back up to Shaun, his facial expression morphed from fear into skepticism, and finally into relief.

I whispered a prayer as Sheamus bounded over the edge and down the various levels of slope, with Shaun sliding down after him.  No problems, as predicted.



Maneuvering a surreal section of the washed out trail


But not all of us walked away unscathed.  Sheamus accidentally set off a rock fall from the broken trail above me.  I dodged as many of those rocks as possible.  Some of the stones bounced off of me harmlessly, though the biggest rock landed directly on top of my left foot.

I didn't realize how badly my foot was injured (making a huge dent in this summer's hikes, climbs, and surfing) until my first step onto hard pavement at the end of the day. Incidentally, this was also the moment where we finally encountered the only remaining "Trail Closed" sign... as we exited onto the return trail towards my Jeep Wrangler.



My overly dramatic pole vault back onto the main trail (with that useless "Trail Closed" exit sign posted on the right)

**********


On our drive home from the Gorge, Shaun thanked me for talking him down from that ledge, literally.  It was a rare moment of paralyzing fear, and he was relieved that someone was there to snap him out of it.  Had we turned back at that late hour, we all would've been stuck on that trail until well after dark. Not to mention, his plan to use the closed (also due to damage) Benson Bridge as an escape route could have incurred a steep fine.


Sometimes the scariest things in life are the things we can't see.  Our imaginations can either create reasons for us to be afraid, or illuminate new ways to move us forward.   And on this eventful day in April, there was no reason to fear.


Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Post-Skydiving! A birthday throwback, Pt 2

From Tuesday:

Happy birthday, Lena!  Our baby girl is two years old today!  We'll have a special birthday post for Lena this weekend.  But first... Here is Part 2 of last year's skydiving birthday weekend!


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One of last year's post-skydiving birthday hikes with Kathy and an 11 month old Lena



Jumping out of a plane was just the beginning!  The skydiving action may have taken place the day before my actual birthday last year (Check out the insane skydiving stories and pics from Pt. 1 here!), but we kept the party going all weekend. We managed to work in rock wall climbing, hiking in the Columbia Gorge, go carts, laser tag, worshipping with our church family, a party, multiple coffee/lunch/dinner get togethers with friends, a Los Lobos concert, and taking a leap out of an airplane flying above 12,000 feet!

My throwback birthday post was so long that I had to split it into two parts.  Enjoy the rest of last year’s birthday weekend below:


Saturday: Post-Skydiving

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Chilling for a spell:  My high from skydiving would take all weekend to come down from.


On Saturday evening, after another post-skydiving lunch with friends, we invited some buddies to hit up a local music festival with us.

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Pepe and the Bottle Blondes played a crowd pleasing opener, and the always versatile Los Lobos turned the Tualatin Valley Parks Center field into a giant dance floor.



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Basking in the music and sunshine

We eventually broke free from the crowd's bilingual grooving to mellow out on the lawn with our adorable Lena.


Sunday: My real birthday

Worshiping with our church family at Aloha Church of God was the perfect way to start out my birthday morning.  I thank Jesus for every wonderful year that He has given me so far, and especially for the past year with Kathy and Lena.  Life just keeps getting better and better.  What better place to give thanks than at the church where God has called us into student ministry since 2001?  We love those people.


Bullwinkles Fun Center in Wilsonville was the place to be that afternoon.  Admission to all activities was covered by the Portland Clinic for any of us who checked in for Kathy's company picnic.  We took full advantage of our all access passes!

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Several rounds of laser tag ("No running!"), carnie type games, and tummy stuffers later, we left Bullwinkles and drove out to the Columbia River Gorge for some late afternoon hiking.


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Hiking a couple of Gorge trails near Bridal Veil Falls




As daylight began to run out...

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...we headed to McMenamins Edgefield for my birthday dinner.  The timing was right for enjoying a private outdoor concert afterwards, on the sly.  If only we had been on the guest list!


Before returning home for the night, we walked away from the lights for a better view of the starry nighttime sky above.  The faint sounds of live music still hung in the air.  Peace.

**********


A birthday weekend like this could easily rank among my best ever.  My birthday itself, perfect as it was, was predictably overshadowed by our high altitude stunt (link) from the day before.  But that's not a slam on my amazing birthday in the slightest, especially considering how my family and friends made my entire weekend so special.

After all, I had just jumped out of a FREAKING airplane!  Cheers to making my first skydiving jump the first of many.


Bonus Pic:

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A Chevy's birthday dinner with the fam, later that week:  I think we found a new look for baby Lena.


Coming next weekend on Garth's Blog...

A celebration of Lena's 2nd birthday!

No pics? Blame the F word.

Hi friends!  Garth's Blog is having technical difficulties.  Thanks for your patience.  The narrative and photos from my "Pt. 2" conclusion to last week's skydiving weekend post has been completed and ready to publish here for quite a while now.  However, Flickr continues to hold my unreleased "private" photos hostage.  For shame!


Lame tech-y details:  Many, but not even close to all, of the older photos you saw on Garth's Blog in the past were actually hosted on my Flickr page.  In order for any of the Flickr photos to appear here, I needed to change their individual privacy settings to "public."  Recently, a bug on the Flickr website (no, not the updated, infamously slow-loading Flickr redesign that launched in May) has stopped allowing me to do that.  The problem has already been noted on the Flickr help forums.  Your move, Flickr.

[2:50 p.m. update: Problem fixed!  But not before being unexpectedly (incident removed- I regret not using better judgment when I hastily posted this update.  Although I stand behind my original comments that the angry Flickr forum user who attacked me could use a hug)).    Gotta love the strange, intimidating world of internet forums!]


In the meantime, join me by releasing a frustrated scream of solidarity... and enjoy the stories from my previous post:  Skydiving!  A birthday throwback, Pt. 1.  I'll probably switch back to uploading my photos to BlogSpot directly for future posts, cutting Flickr out of the loop again.  Still love that site, but lesson learned.



Coming YESTERDAY on Garth’s Blog…


Our skydiving birthday throwback continues--


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--with rock wall climbing, hiking, go carting, laser tag, worshiping, dancing, partying, and more!


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Skydiving! A birthday throwback, Pt. 1

This is my unpublished skydiving blog post from August 2012, originally to be titled “Freefalling: A 13,000 Foot Birthday Plunge.”   Now that we’re home from our Mexico mission trip (link- photos to come later!) and Banks Lake camping/boating weekend, I just couldn’t wait any longer to upload this.

Last year’s birthday skydiving weekend was so full of thrills that I decided to edit this post down AND split it into two parts!  Part two should be finished soon, stuffed with photos, and uploaded here by next weekend.  Just for kicks, click here for this year’s low key birthday week.  Admittedly, it’s hard to outdo yourself after you jump out of a plane!


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Skydive Oregon:  Bro and sis walk away triumphantly from the drop zone


Skydiving topped my list of birthday weekend adventures this year… and we squeezed in A LOT last weekend:  rock wall climbing, hiking in the Columbia Gorge, go carts, laser tag, worshipping with our church family, a party, multiple coffee/lunch/dinner get togethers with friends, a Los Lobos concert, and taking a leap out of an airplane flying above 12,000 feet!  By my math, this all added up to one adrenaline pumping time!


A few months ago, I had assembled a skydiving posse just large enough to score a group discount: my sister Summer and me, Andrew and Melissa, and Austin and Emily.  Strangers to each other, they at least knew me and shared my thirst for thrills (but not necessarily my fear of heights).


Getting Psyched

The day before Austin’s and my birthday, the crew assembled at Skydive Oregon in Molalla for the big plunge.  Kathy, Lena, and some other friends and family were ready to cheer for us near the drop zone.

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Andrew, Melissa, Summer, Garth, Emily, and Austin prepare to take the big plunge at Skydive Oregon

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On the ground, our instructor Terry led us through the motions and answered our questions.  Dang it, flipping out of the plane wouldn’t be allowed.  We had already signed a few novella-length liability waivers which suggested countless ways to usher in an untimely death/paralysis/dismemberment while skydiving, so what more did we have to lose?


Anticipation

An eternity seemed to pass as we waited for our plane to swing around to pick us up.


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As our group marched across the taxiway to board the plane, a Skydive Oregon rep intercepted me by the fuselage to break the disappointing news:  my video/camera guy wouldn’t be jumping with me to grab that sweet mid-air footage of my free fall.

A fleeting tinge of disappointment was almost immediately flushed away as I embraced the bigger picture:  This was about to happen!  This was happening!!




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Words cannot express the paralyzing fear that gripped me as our plane slowly climbed to jumping altitude, between 12,000-13,000 feet.   The boarding door was left wide open for a few minutes, revealing the grassy fields below us as they got smaller and smaller.  Shutting the door subdued the outside noise but did nothing to erase that terrifying imagery from my mind.  The agonizing anticipation, even dread, of facing my fear of heights would turn out to be the scariest part.  Little did I know that the worst was almost behind us.



The moment of truth

Just below 13,000 feet, the boarding door slid open again.  The camera person sitting in front of me disappeared into the light, followed by his seat mate.  With Terry and our parachute strapped to my back, I was next.

We scooted up to the airplane door.  I dangled my feet outside, curled my legs under the plane, and anticipated Terry’s final instructions.

Shockingly, there were none.  No countdown, no dramatic pause, no moment of soul searching.  Only our predetermined “go” signal… a quick pat on the shoulder.   Without a second of hesitation, we fell away from the plane.


The initial drop was so intense that I forgot I was supposed to be scared.  My stomach leaped into my throat as gravity yanked us downward.  The cold air pummeled our faces and sucked the air out of my lungs.  The sound was deafening.

That early sensation of free falling quickly faded into weightlessness.  The most surprising part was how not scary it was.  At all.  Any fear I would’ve felt was overcome by exhilaration. 

Granted, we were still plummeting to Earth at terminal velocity.  Those tiny, grassy fields were getting bigger and bigger again at an alarmingly quick clip.  But it was peaceful, almost euphoric.  I never wanted it to end.



 Parachutes Away!

Terry deployed our parachute after a couple minutes, bringing our free fall to a screeching stop.  It almost felt like we were being sucked back up into the sky.  We could finally communicate without screaming, but there was no need for words.  Looking around at the mountains, forests, and fields below left me speechless.  And the view from above was magnificent.

So how far could I push this?  At my request, Terry indulged me in some light tomfoolery as we drifted toward the ground.  He knew the physical limits of our parachute, and I had absolute trust in his 20+ years of skydive instructor experience.  We stayed within the rules, but I jumped at the chance to get a little more bang for my birthday buck.


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Jumping out of a perfectly good plane: Summer (in the pink parachute) passes up her big brother (I’m just above her, in the yellow) because I just couldn’t resist some mid-air messing around.



As the ground drew closer, Terry advised me to prepare for a hard landing.  It wasn’t so bad.  In fact, our touchdown was much lighter than the brutal impact I absorbed in Jamaica years ago, while landing my parasail onto a private boat in Montego Bay.


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I pose ridiculously and brace for impact!



**********

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My sister Summer, my friends, and I all walked away from the drop zone that morning with a new appreciation for being alive.  I had tackled my fear of heights like never before, head on.


The other Garth scheduled to jump that day—yes, we met a random tall guy at Skydive Oregon who only made the cut for this blog because his name is Garth--had no idea what he was about to get into!



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11 month old Lena and the two Garths



The after-party begins

Kathy, Lena, and the gang headed back into town for a “what in the name of Middle Earth did we just do?!” lunch at Jasper’s Café to decompress, followed by Austin’s and my obligatory free birthday coffees at Dutch Bros.

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Dutch Bros birthday freebies for Austin and me… with some free pizza (?) inexplicably thrown in for good measure

Amusingly enough, the barista asked if Austin and I were non-identical twin brothers.  Not so much.  Failing to notice how haggard I must have looked from my extreme lack of sleep, she then earnestly asked which one of us was older.  Flattered, I was speechless.  Austin is still in his early-20s.

The smile on my face only got bigger as I drove Austin and Emily home in the Jeep.  The rush of skydiving was even more intense than I could’ve imagined.  And my birthday weekend was just getting started!


Coming this Tuesday on Garth’s Blog…

Our birthday throwback continues--


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--with rock wall climbing, hiking, go carting, laser tag, worshipping, dancing, partying, and more!



Sunday, July 7, 2013

Olympic Mountains, Day 1: Lena's first camping trip

Hiking the Big Creek Campground Loop trail

Our 20 1/2 month old Lena has camping, hiking, and climbing in her blood!  Her other genetically inherited skills like surfing, skiing, wakeboarding, rafting, bicycling kayaking, rapelling, skydiving, and all that other fun stuff should develop in time.

Given my own outdoor tendencies, it's hard to believe that Lena had never been camping before last month.  It took Mommy and Daddy this long to agree on the right timing. However, we both knew it was only a matter of time before Lena would get her first taste of sleeping outside in the wilderness. And the time was right!


Since I was hoping to climb Mount Washington (traversing across from Mt. Ellinor) this summer anyway, Big Creek Campground in the Olympic Mountains would make a perfect base camp/ playground for Lena and Mommy.  The campground is near Lake Cushman and the Staircase entrance to the Olympic National Park.



Other than two other climbing parties, the campground was a ghost town for our entire stay.


Putting up a tent takes a bit longer when distracted by a lovable little thing like Lena!



After setting up camp, the three of us started hiking the short Big Creek Campground loop trail.





It was getting late.  After a while, Mommy and Lena bailed to head back to camp.



Solo, I upped my pace to a brisk trail run and continued on to the 4 mile Upper Big Creek Loop toward the Mount Ellinor trail.


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By the time I met up with Mommy and Lena back at the campsite, it was time to start preparing Lena's first campfire meal!  Kathy prepared the fixings for chili dogs while I built up the campfire.

Mommy prepares the fixings, and Lena helps Daddy blow on the campfire


Daddy teaches Lena the fine culinary art of cooking chili dogs over a campfire





As our once raging campfire died down, we laid Lena down in the tent.  Unsurprisingly, she slept like a baby!



Coming this next week on Garth's Blog...



Olympic Mountains, Day 2: Back on the trails!