Thursday, December 27, 2012

Cafayate – the first two weeks

Cafayate Mountains

View of the Andes from the house

Cruce

Cafayate, as seen from San Ysidro mountain

Our first couple weeks in Cafayate were a blur.  We learned a lot:

- Food:  the first night we arrived, we had no food, so our neighbors, the Kinghorns, lent us a couple frozen burger patties and some bread and condiments.  Additionally, since we have no car, our only mode of transportation to and from town are our bicycles.  We intended to buy two bikes in Salta, but only one was available.  So, we had to borrow a second (inferior) bike from the spa at La Estancia.  Next up was learning how to procure food in Cafayate.  There’s no supermarket where you can just buy whatever you want.  Shelf-stable goods and deli meats/cheeses are sold in small markets, of which there are many, with varying inventories.  Fruit/veggies and meats are sold in small stores at the central market, of which there are many, with varying quality.  And, oh yeah, everything closes down for siesta from 2-6pm.

- Bugs: when we arrived, the weather was gorgeous, so we propped the doors open for an hour or two at dusk.  BAD IDEA.  We spent the first night with tons of mosquitoes buzzing in our ears (I got bites on both eyelids one night, which swelled nearly shut).  For the first week, we had all manner of insects throughout the house – beetles, spiders (including a few massive huntsman specimens), flies, moths, ants, and a bunch of things I can’t even identify.  Needless to say, we were paranoid from then on, and kept all doors and windows shut at all times.

- House stuff: when we arrived, the only pot or pan in the house was a wok.  Additionally, the stove is spec’d for natural gas, but as the pipeline from Salta is still in construction, it currently uses propane, which has far greater energy density.  So, we scorched a lot of food before we got good at using it.  On our third or fourth evening, an extremely strong thunderstorm rolled through, and the house partially flooded.  Since this is a brand new house, there are some kinks to work out, including some improperly graded door and windowsills.  The house also does not yet have window coverings, so we had to buy some blankets to string up over the windows in our bedroom.  And on and on.

- Neighbors: we met lots of people in our first couple weeks – the Kinghorn family, Kent & Jane Russell, Carol & Mike Peters, the Galland family, Roan and Emily Marshall, and many others.  On our first Saturday, Gary Kinghorn and Kent Russell invited us to go on a hike up to the cross on San Ysidro mountain (which was fantastic).  And to top it all off, we got invited to a Christmas party for all the residents, where we got to mix and mingle with even more people!  Everyone has so far been extremely nice and helpful.

- The View: wow, this place is gorgeous!  It feels a little like Jackson Hole, with mountains on all sides.  Except the mountains are far more rugged, and there are red rocks like in the Southwest.  Kristen took the same picture of the same mountains every evening for the first week – it was just too pretty to stop.  And the town is picturesque as well.  There is a nice little square/plaza in the middle of town, with a colonial-style church at one end, and restaurants/bars lining the other sides.  And of course, great mountain views in every direction.

In all, the experience has been a whirlwind.  Since this place is quite new, there are no established systems, and everyone does things differently - where to change money, where to buy the best fruits and veggies, which restaurants are trustworthy, which stores sell X/Y/Z, what type of car is best and where to buy it, how to fix some common house problems, etc.  We solicited opinions from anyone and everyone who would talk to us, and our information changed daily.  It was mind-boggling.  But of course, as pioneers in this development, we expected it and did our best to sift through all the info.  And, as expected, we were rewarded after a week or two, when things started to settle down and we got a handle on living here. 

Friday, December 14, 2012

Buenos Aires + Salta

Recoleta Cemetery

Kristen at Recoleta cemetery

Salta

Jeff in Plaza 9 de Julio in Salta

We landed in Buenos Aires on the morning of December 10 to 90 degree weather – a far cry from the New York winter.  After taking a cab to our hotel, we napped for a while and hit the streets.  The first day in a new country is always weird.  My Spanish was pretty rusty, and we didn’t really understand how things worked.  We were super thirsty, but couldn’t buy water because we had no pesos and there was no ATM at the airport.  So job 1 was to find a working ATM, which was no small feat.  It took 2 hours and tries at 4 different banks before we found one that both took our card, and had money to dispense.  Ugh.  Finally we were able to buy some water and a light lunch.

We spent most of the rest of the afternoon walking around our neighborhood (San Telmo-ish) in the heat.  It wasn’t very nice, to be honest.  There was a significant amount of trash in the streets, and things looked a little run-down.  At night, the place felt a little sketchy.  After dinner, we decided we were not fans of Buenos Aires.

The next day, we spent a solid 8 hours walking to various neighborhoods – Microcentro, Barrio Norte, Recoleta (including a visit to the cemetery), Retiro, and Palermo.  As it turns out, Buenos Aires is gorgeous and nice!  You just have to be in the right neighborhood (far from our hotel).

The next morning we were scheduled to fly to Salta, the capital city of Salta province, where Kristen’s parent’s house is located.  Salta felt WAY different from Buenos Aires.  It’s a colonial city, with and old layout and architecture, and a significant amount of native (ancestral Incan) influence.  It felt more . . . authentic.  It’s certainly not the international metropolis that Buenos Aires is, and the pace was a lot slower – in fact, they keep siesta hours there.  And wow were the people friendly - an old man stopped us on the street, asked us where we were from, and said ‘welcome to Salta!’.  Welcome, indeed.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Journey Across the US

Detroit Wedding

Just after we were legally married in Detroit

Cathy Wedding

Us & friends at Cathy & Jon’s wedding

We took our time heading to Argentina.  After spending a week cleaning, preparing, and packing for the trip, we sadly left Sacramento (and our cats) for Detroit, where we wanted to spend two weeks, including Thanksgiving.

I volunteered to make the turkey, mostly since I’d never done it before and wanted to see what all the fuss was about.  We brined it in buttermilk (don’t tell aunt Meg) and it turned out beautifully.  Mmm!  Cara couldn’t make it to Detroit for the holiday, but we got to spend lots of time with the Cicurels, Sterns, Alperts, and Grandpa and Betty.  Plus, Kristen found a latent passion in home jewelry making, so she spent multiple days and nights making jewelry for our wedding, as well as gifts.

Near the end of our time in Detroit, we got legally married.  Now, the plan is to get properly married with a ceremony involving both our families in Argentina.  But a not insignificant amount of internet research revealed that a wedding is not valid in Argentina unless at least one person is a resident, which neither of us will be.  So, our only choice was to get legally married in the states (that is, sign the documents) before heading to South America.  Luckily, one of my dad’s best friends (Paul Saginaw) is an ordained minister in the Universal Life Church (which isn’t really a church), and he agreed to act as our legal officiant.  After a two-sentence ceremony, in which we exchanged Ring-Pops (our wedding rings hadn’t been delivered yet), and which Paul ended by saying “by the mysterious power vested in me”, we signed the papers and we were technically married!

After Detroit, we flew to Baltimore to attend the wedding of our friends Cathy and Jon, which turned out to be a great reunion with many people we hadn’t seen in ages.  Afterward, we took a taxi to DC to stay with our friends Ben and Trisha for a couple nights, and then on to New York via Amtrak.

In NYC, we stayed with our good friends Rob and Nicole, who we hadn’t seen since we left NYC in June.  And what a great reunion!  We got to hang out with them a ton, and we were also able to see Cara and Keenan, our friends Corey and Sheila (who also just got engaged), our friends Ryan and Liz, and of course CJ.

Whew!  It was a whirlwind few weeks, involving lots of couch-crashing, but it was a blast.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Riverside + Santa Barbara + Lompoc

Riverside

Kristen at the top of the Mt Rubidoux in Riverside, CA

We left Flagstaff and headed immediately for Riverside, CA, to again stay with Julie en route to Sacramento.  The drive was mostly uneventful, besides the previously mentioned detour onto Route 66.

We stayed with Julie for 2 nights, which gave us a full day in Riverside.  We were a little antsy after sitting in the car for 8 hours the previous day, so we decided to do the famous local hike, up Mt Rubidoux.  It was a nice hike, up a paved road, with some cool granite outcroppings to play on at the top.  Later that day, after Julie was done with class, we hung out, cooked dinner, and watched Sherlock Holmes.

After Riverside, we planned to do a day of wine tasting on our way up to Sacramento.  First stop was Santa Barbara.  We left early, and arrived in time for a lunch of pho, and a nice cup of coffee from I.V. Drip, at Steve’s recommendation.  After lunch, we visited 3 wineries in the Santa Maria valley – Zaca Mesa, Fess Parker, and Qupe.  As usual, the wines were so good, we ended up buying more bottles than originally anticipated.

That night, Kristen cashed in some points for a free stay at a Hilton in Lompoc.  Lompoc isn’t a typical travel destination, but it has one distinctive feature – the Lompoc Wine Ghetto.  It’s a square block of industrial buildings, filled with rows and rows of small, independent wineries.  We got there a little late, so we only had time for two – Loring and Taste of Santa Rita Hills (featuring wines from producers so small they don’t even have spots in the wine ghetto).  We need to go back to this place.  What an experience – 20 or 30 wineries all within a few feet of each other, and all so fantastic.

That night, we ate what would be our last Indian packets of the trip.  The next day we would finally drive back to Sacramento, thus ending our North American odyssey.  Next up: South America!

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Route 66

Sno Cap

Jeff standing in front of Delgadillo’s Sno Cap restaurant in Seligman, AZ

In 1979, my parents visited Bruce and April in Chinle, AZ.  On their trip, the stopped at a little diner called Delgadillo’s Sno Cap on Route 66 in Seligman, AZ.  They ordered foot-long hot dogs, and the guy at the counter asked what they wanted on their feet.  “Shoes and socks” they replied.  The guy at the counter said “like these?” and showed them he was wearing two different colored socks, one red and one blue.

About a decade later, my dad was again driving across Arizona on Route 66.  He happened to stop again at Delgadillo’s.  This time he was prepared – the same guy was behind the counter, and my dad insisted that he was wearing two different colored socks.  He was right.

I’ve been hearing this story from my dad since I was old enough to hear stories.  It’s family legend.  So of course, when Kristen and I were driving across Arizona, we had to stop at Delgadillo’s.  It’s now 33 year later, though, and there was a young girl behind the counter.  Still, we told her we knew someone on the premises was wearing two different colored socks.  She was shocked.  It was her – she’s the granddaughter of the original guy behind the counter – and she was wearing two different colored socks.  According to Delgadillo family legend, it’s good luck.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Grand Canyon

KristenColorado

Kristen with a remote view of the Colorado River

Grand Canyon

Us on the edge of the abyss at Shoshone Point

I don’t really know how to put this.  The Grand Canyon was spectacular, yes.  The Grand Canyon was beautiful, yes.  And yes, the layer cake rock formations were fantastic to contemplate.  But given it’s notoriety and reputation, we were a little . . . underwhelmed?

I think we’d been traveling for too long at this point.  Too many spectacular scenes, too many sunsets on empty vista points with 100-mile views.  There was just something about this place, with its massive infrastructure and bus loads of tourists from around the world cramming every view point, that maybe felt a little forced to us.

But still, we enjoyed it, and we spent the day walking the rim and riding our bikes to various view points.  Our favorite was Shoshone Point, which requires a trip down 2 miles of unmarked dirt road, and was the only place where we could take pictures without being surrounded by a crowd.

The day before, we had gotten a call from Beth saying she couldn’t go on the hike to Supai.  She had hurt her knee mountain biking in Moab, and was on her way to Gallup to see a doctor.  We had contemplated doing the hike without her, but on the way home from the Grand Canyon, we decided we’d had enough.  No more nights in tents, out in the cold.  No more 10-hour drives.  Our lack of utter awe at the Grand Canyon was the last straw.  We’d compressed the schedule in the Southwest to its breaking point, and it was time to go home.

Flagstaff

LittlePaintedDesert

The Little Painted Desert

MtHumpreys

The saddle between Mt Humphreys and Mt Agassiz

We spent 3 days in Flagstaff:

Day 1

We arrived at our B&B in Flagstaff (my gift to Kristen to celebrate our engagement in a place other than a tent) at dusk.  On the way over, we were lamenting the fact that our detour to Canyon de Chelly made it so we couldn’t see the Painted Desert.  But, as luck would have it, the back road we were on passed right by the “Little Painted Desert State Park”.  Which was honestly sort of a dump, but had nice-looking badlands in what Kristen described as ‘some of the colors you’d see at the real Painted Desert’.

The B&B turned out to be extremely cute as well.  It deserved all 5 stars on TripAdvisor.  The rooms were remodeled, Victorian, and super cozy, breakfasts were delicious and reasonably sized, and the innkeeper, Gordon, laid out fresh cookies, cider, and brandy every afternoon.  After the 3 nights with Bruce and April, and the 3 nights at the B&B, we were in for almost an entire week (!) of sleeping on real beds.

Day 2

We planned to go for a hike on our first full day in Flagstaff, probably in Sedona.  At breakfast, we told Gordon our plan, and he flipped out.  “Don’t go to Sedona!  That place is whacked out with weird hippie crap, and if you’ve already been to Moab, you’ve already seen the red rocks.  You should stay in Flag and go climb Mt. Humphreys.”  We were a little suspicious.  Sedona is supposed to be gorgeous, right?  But after 10 minutes of Googling, we were convinced.  Top hits for Sedona include hikes to ‘power vortex’ areas, and cite the involvement of ‘crystal healers’.  The pictures were quite beautiful, but Gordon was right, we had just spent 3 weeks looking at red rocks.  It was time for an old-fashioned mountain climb.

Mt. Humphreys is odd.  It towers above Flagstaff, topping out at around 12,500ft.  Built into its side is the Arizona Snow Bowl ski area.  I had no idea they had skiing, let alone snow in Arizona.  The hike covered around 4,000ft of vertical, though we turned back at the ~12,000ft saddle, so our vertical on the day was around 3,500.  What a nice hike.  It went through dense forest for the first few miles, then broke above the tree line for great views of the plain below, through scree fields, and finally a scramble up to the saddle.

Altitude is funny.  Kristen and I were feeling great the whole way up.  Then we came to a sign saying we were at 11,600ft.  Almost immediately we started to breathe harder, and each step became more labored.  If there had been no sign, would we have noticed the altitude at all?

Day 3

We drove up to the Grand Canyon, which I’ll cover in a following post.  Afterward, we holed up in our room to watch the election.  It was over a heck of a lot faster than we anticipated.  Since we were in the Mountain time zone, the election had been called by 8:30pm, which was early enough for us to get ice cream afterwards.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Canyon de Chelly

CanyondeChelly

Canyon de Chelly

Cottonwoods

Brilliant fall colors on the cottonwoods in the canyon

Before we arrived in Gallup, we had significantly modified our trip.  When we met up with Beth in Moab, she proposed hiking into the Grand Canyon to Supai village.  We really wanted to do the hike, so we shuffled our plans to create 3 extra days – we canceled our reservations at a campground in Canyon de Chelly and in Monument Valley, and pushed up our B&B reservations in Flagstaff.  But we still really wanted to see Canyon de Chelly, so we squeezed it in as a half-day side-trip on the way from Gallup to Flagstaff.

We arrived at Canyon de Chelly (pronounced de SHAY) in the morning, and immediately hiked down into it.  The canyon wasn’t the deepest we’d seen, or the longest, but it was quite spectacular.  The whole thing was made entirely of swirly Navajo formation sandstone, and there was a set of ruins in the bottom.  Our timing was perfect – the cottonwoods in the bottom of the canyon were turning brilliant yellows and reds, but the air temperature was still quite warm, making for a very nice hike.  Afterwards, we visited a few viewpoints along the canyon, and made our way to the Thunderbird Lodge for a lunch of ‘Navajo tacos’ (as recommended by Bruce and April).  A Navajo taco is a gigantic piece of fry bread with taco stuff on it.  Yep, it was delicious.  But the most interesting part about it was its symbolism of Southwest culture – Native American meets Mexican.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Gallup

Inscription Rock

Inscription Rock at El Morro National Monument

Pyramid Rock

Bruce, April, Kristen, and Jeff at the summit of Pyramid Rock in Gallup, NM

Bruce and April Forman have been some of my dad’s best friends since grade school.  After med school, Bruce took a job with the Indian Health Service on the Navajo Reservation in Chinle, AZ.  They moved back to Michigan for a decade or so, but are now back working for the IHS in Gallup, NM.  Gallup is sort of in the middle of nowhere – 2 hours West of Albuquerque, near the AZ border – so not many people come to visit, despite the fact that the surroundings are quite beautiful.  We stayed with them for 3 days.

The night we arrived, Bruce had to work late, so April took us for dinner at a great local Mexican restaurant for chile rellenos.  Navajo children were walking through the room throughout dinner, selling jewelry and other homemade crafts.  Kristen bought a pretty opal ring, whose setting and band the woman claimed was gold, but promptly turned Kristen’s finger green.  Oh well!  The opal is still very pretty.

The next day, Bruce and April went to work, but gave us several suggestions for an ambitious day of sightseeing.  (April should really be a tour guide of the area).  We first went to El Morro National Monument to see Inscription Rock, a place frequently visited by people traveling across the Southwest (first Native, then Spanish, then American).  The broad, soft side of the mesa at El Morro is perfect for chiseling, and it became a custom for famous travelers to stop and sign the rock.  Afterwards, we headed back to Gallup and made a stop at Richardson’s, the largest local Navajo trading post.  We didn’t intend to buy anything, but somehow left with $1,000 worth of Navajo rugs for our future apartment.  Which seems pricey, but as my dad points out, “$1,000 in a trading post doesn’t get you a lot of rug.”  That night, Bruce and April took us for pizza, continuing a family tradition of Friday-night pizza stretching back to the 1960s.

On Saturday, the four of us went for a 3-hour hike up Pyramid Rock.  The summit had commanding views of the surrounding mesas, the Southern end of the Navajo Reservation, and nearby Gallup.  Afterward, we had brunch at the old train station at their friends’ diner, went back to the Forman house, and hung out until dinner.  That night, April cooked us some delicious vegetarian fare: stuffed squash and a fresh green salad.  Mmm.

The Formans could not have been better hosts, and we’d really like to go see them again ASAP.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Santa Fe + Albuquerque

Rio Grande

View of the Rio Grande from the Nature Center State Park

From Mesa Verde, we headed through Southwestern Colorado (via Durango) to Santa Fe.  We had found a campground just outside Santa Fe where we were able to stay for the night, October 30th.  The campground closed for the year on the 31st.  So . . . we were the only people staying there.  On so-called “Devil’s Night.”  Which was a little creepy.

This schedule gave us one full day to explore Santa Fe after packing up in the morning.  Most of our time was spent walking around the old town plaza, checking out shops (for engagement ring designs!), listening to buskers, and drinking coffee.  We then drove over to St. John’s College, where Kristen had once spent a week for Go Congress.  We walked around the campus, and felt compelled to do a short hike up a local trail into the woods.  That afternoon, we drove to Albuquerque to crash with our friends Josh and Dan Forman (Beth’s brothers).  Josh is an acrobatic yoga instructor and schoolteacher, and Dan is attending UNM.  We didn’t know much about Albuquerque, other than what we’d seen on Breaking Bad.  So we didn’t know what to expect.  But the Formans live right near UNM in a cool college-town feeling area of town.  That night they took us to a crazy (and very good) Indian-ish restaurant that had ‘Ayurvedic’ food, and we hung out at their place chatting for hours afterwards.

The next day, we popped by a local coffee shop recommended by Josh (again fantastic) and went up to the Rio Grande Nature Center State Park.  The park was a recommendation from April Forman, Josh and Dan’s mom.  (Bruce Forman, their dad, is one of my dad’s very good friends).  We walked along the Rio Grande, did some birdwatching, and ate lunch at the park.

Afterward, we drove to Pueblo Acoma, where the Acoma people live on top of a mesa.  We were very excited to see the Pueblo and possibly do a hike down the mesa, since Kristen had fond memories of visiting the place a decade before.  But, sadly, it turned out the Pueblo was closed for the day due to a local holiday.  So we watched a brief movie regarding the history of the Pueblo at the visitor’s center, and headed over to Gallup to stay with Bruce and April.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Mesa Verde NP

Mesa Verde

Cliff Palace dwelling at Mesa Verde

Our plans to visit Mesa Verde were a little fuzzy.  The one campground in the park seemed to be open, but all services (including water and bathrooms) closed past October 1, so it was unclear where we would stay.  When we arrived, we also found out that the park had switched over to its shorter Fall hours and would close at 5pm.  So, naturally, we stayed at the Best Western.  Which was just as well, since Hurricane Sandy was hitting NYC that night, and we got to watch The Weather Channel for 5 straight hours.

The next morning, we packed up and headed to Mesa Verde.  The park is exactly as it sounds – a large green mesa, based around several archaeological sites – the cliff dwellings of the ancestral Puebloan people.  Only the main attractions were open – the massive Cliff Palace (and the accompanying ranger tour), and the smaller Spruce Tree House.  We spent the better part of the morning checking out the two sites, which were both stunning.  It was really amazing to see these places and to think about how these people had lived.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Moab

Portal

View of Moab from the top of Portal

Slickrock

Jeff riding the Slickrock practice trail

Gemini Bridges

Jeff, Kristen, and our friend Beth on the Mag 7 trail system

JeffKristenSunset2

Sunset on the Island in the Sky mesa

The morning after we got engaged, the phone calls and emails started pouring in.  We spent the first 3 or 4 hours of the day on the computer and on the phone.  After that, we needed a break, so we decided to hike up the infamous Portal Trail (where there is no cell service).  Portal is an experts-only mountain bike descent whose first few hundred meters rides along a 2-3ft wide cliff, with a 1000ft drop.  People die there every year or two.  Which is we decided to hike up it rather than ride down it.  But boy was it gorgeous up there.  The top of the hike featured a wide view of Moab below, as well as the surrounding mesas and Arches NP.  We also got to watch a few people do the descent (and one ride across the cliff!).  Afterward, we were drained from the day, so we soaked in the hot tub and ate some Indian packets.

Our energy restored and the congratulatory emails tapering off, we woke up the next day feeling pretty good.  We made an ambitious plan to get a good feel for the local MTB scene, headed to Denny’s for breakfast, and hit the trail.  We started at the Monitor & Merrimac trail system, which was a dud.  It was supposed to offer some of the famous Moab ‘slickrock’ riding, but it turned out not to be the good kind of slickrock.  It was bouncy, pock-marked Entrada formation sandstone, which chatters your teeth, shakes loose the bolts on your bike, and most likely would cause Kristen’s herniated disc to flare up.  We bailed on the ride half way through.

We had next planned to ride up Klondike Bluffs, but found out it also featured Entrada sandstone, so we decided to go back to the Moab Brands trails and ride the stuff we hadn’t yet been to (primarily the Bar B trail).  Afterward, Kristen could tell I was antsy.  I had read earlier that the famous Slickrock Trail (featuring swoopy and smooth Navajo formation sandstone) had a 2-mile practice loop.  We had already decided we were not going to ride the Slickrock Trail since it was supposed to be very difficult, but this offered us a low-risk way to check it out!  So she humored me and we went, and rode until the daylight failed.  I have to say, Slickrock is really not that hard.  It has insanely steep sections that burn the legs, but in all it’s not super ‘technical’ – far different that we had expected.  I rode the entire practice loop and put my foot down only once!

We planned to leave Moab the night of the 27th.  But our friend Beth called to say she was coming in on the 28th, and would be bringing her mountain bike.  Naturally, we extended our campground reservation.

We met up with Beth and her two friends Carlos and Eunice.  Carlos suggested we ride the Gemini Bridges trails, which was a fantastic idea.  Gemini Bridges is an old Jeep road with a network of singletrack running through it.  Anyone who didn’t want to ride the singletrack (namely Carlos and Eunice) could just drop down the road.  Beth, Kristen, and I all took the singletrack.  It was pretty technical and very fun.  Beth had only been riding a few times before, and we were worried it was beyond her ability.  Nope.  She’s so athletic and such a daredevil, her early spills only encouraged her, and by the end of the ride she was popping her bike over logs and rocks like a pro.

The ride was long (20+ miles), and we finished around sunset.  The temperature started to drop, and Carlos/Eunice were not yet at the car.  We thought we might have to stage a rescue, so we went back to the top to get our Expedition (which was the only car we had that could handle the jeep road).  Turns out it was unnecessary – by the time we got back down the hill, Carlos/Eunice were already finished.  We all ate some sandwiches, had a celebratory beer, and headed back to the campsite to pass out.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Canyonlands + Engagement!

GreenRiver

The surreal Green River Overlook

Grandview

Us at Grandview Point

Engaged!

Engaged!

Ring

The ring!

After Arches, we spent a day mountain biking the great Moab Brand trails (until it started raining, at which point we headed to a coffee shop to hang out), had our standard Moab dinner, and planned our next day at Canyonlands NP.

Canyonlands had some of the most spectacular landscapes we have ever seen.  The Northern part of the park is situated on the Island in the Sky Mesa, which looks exactly as it sounds.  It’s a high plateau, with hundred mile views into mazes of canyons, cut by the Colorado and Green rivers and their tributaries.  It’s also remote enough (~30 miles outside Moab) that it’s empty most of the time.

Kristen knew something was up.  I was demanding to go to Dead Horse Point State Park for Sunset.  She asked, “why not the Green River Overlook for Sunset?”.  Nope, I wanted it to be Dead Horse – relatively unknown, more remote, and even lower chance of seeing another person.  The perfect spot!

We went for a quick mountain bike ride in the State Park, and then headed over to the Point to watch the Sunset.  I was nervous.  I had the ring in my pocket.  Storm clouds were brewing on the horizon and it was cold.  But the sun was hitting the clouds just so, the canyon lit up in the afternoon glow, and Kristen traced the path of the Colorado river left to right.  I took out the ring and put it in the path of her hand, just out of her vision, until she turned far enough to see it.  And she said yes!

As far as I can figure, it was a quintessential Jeff & Kristen moment.  We got engaged wearing cycling tights, matching wool beanies, and rain coats.

We spent a few seconds debating the merits of eating Indian packets and greens for dinner, but we thought better of it and went out for a nice meal.  What a day!

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Arches NP

ArchesDelicate

Us with the Delicate Arch

ArchesJeff

Jeff lounging in a natural window

ArchesKristen

Kristen on the rim of a sandstone bowl

Our first stop in Moab was Arches National Park.  After we got in and set up camp, we were dying to see the park, so we drove in for sunset.  It did not disappoint.

The next day, we got the full Arches experience, mostly on foot.  We drove to the back of the park to hike out to Devil’s Tower, and saw the famous Landscape Arch plus numerous other arches and windows along the way.  We then made our way over to Delicate Arch, the structure so famous it’s on the Utah license plate.  The Delicate Arch hike was fun, and we spent some time playing around in a sandstone bowl on the way up.  Tired from the previous two hikes, we warily saw the remainder of the attractions at Arches, and ate what would be our standard Moab dinner – a Trader Joe’s pre-made Indian packet poured over bagged mixed greens.  Mmm.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Bryce > Moab

Route 12

View of some badlands from Route 12

Kiva Kottage

View of the Escalante Canyons from Kiva Koffehouse in Grand Staircase/Escalante

Route 24

The desolation on Route 24

Google wants you to take the highway to get from Bryce to Moab, but the guidebook suggests Scenic Routes 12 and 24.  The guidebook is right.

Aside from the Icefields Parkway between Banff and Jasper, Route 12/24 was the most scenic drive we did the whole trip.  Route 12 descends from Bryce Canyon into the Grand Staircase/Escalante National Monument.  The road started as a wide, green plain surrounded by mountains, but soon snaked its way up and down red rock canyons and on to ridges with great views.  We woke up early to do the drive at dawn, and decided to forego breakfast so we could eat our morning meal at a place we had heard about in Boulder, UT.  On the way, we passed a coffee shop we couldn’t refuse – the Kiva Koffehouse.  We couldn’t even see it from the road, but we knew we had to go based on its location.  It’s a tiny, kiva-style hut built into the side of one of the Escalante Canyons, windows on all sides, featuring commanding views of the lush surrounding area.  Wow.  We decided it would be a great place for someone to have a small wedding ceremony (wink, wink).  We continued from Kiva a few miles down the road to our original breakfast destination – the Hell’s Backbone Grill.  The food was great, but the setting simply did not compare to Kiva.

From Boulder we ascended Boulder Mountain (peaking around 9,000 feet).  There was a storm brewing, and it seemed like every 5 minutes we stopped to take pictures of the incredible surrounding landscape.  The entire experience was enhanced by the music we were playing.  Kristen’s dad Steve had given us a couple dozen CDs to listen to on this leg of the trip, and we randomly selected Eberhard Weber’s ‘The Colours of Chloe’ for our drive up Boulder Mountain.  It’s a free-flowing chamber jazz album, and for some reason, the build-ups and peaks in the music seemed to correspond to our view out of the window.  For lack of a better description, the experience was ‘transcendent’.

From there we hit Route 24, which was far more desolate, and looked more like the high desert landscape we were expecting.  At one point we came to a junction indicating we were within 20 miles of Lake Powell.  We stopped for gas and drinks there, and realized we had entered a very special part of Utah.  All locals had NRA hats on, and the cashier was cleaning a gigantic rifle behind the counter.  I was pretty glad at that point that we had not put a Sierra Club decal on our car.

The rest of the drive to Moab was fairly uneventful, though beautiful – the desert got drier and redder, and the road stretched out forever.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Bryce Canyon NP

Bryce

Bryce Canyon as seen from Sunset Point

Descending

Descending into the canyon on the Navajo Loop trail

K and J

Us on the Peek-a-Boo trail

Bryce Canyon NP is just a couple hours down the road from Zion NP.  But the landscape is totally different.  Bryce doesn’t look real, or natural.  And it’s not even really a canyon, at least not an identifiable one.  It’s more like a giant bowl filled with red-and-white banded hoodoos (rock spires) and rock fins.  Some rare combination of odd geological structure and weather created the place, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that we were seeing something temporary.  The spires and fins are so delicate, it seems like we happen right now to be in the right place at the right geological time.  How long until it’s all eaten away?  It made us feel incredibly lucky to see it.

And, as we found out, you can hike down into the “canyon.”  We chose to descend the famous Navajo trail, which switchbacks through a narrow crease in the rock wall, and then catch the less-traveled Peek-a-Boo trail to get a good feel for the place.  The weather started to turn when we were more or less at the halfway point of the hike – about 3 or 4 miles from our car.  We watched the sky and hurried along, praying that the rain would hold off and we would not get caught in a flash flood in one of the endless narrow canyons we were walking through.  We got lucky.  It drizzled but the heavy stuff never came down.

Exhausted that night, we collapsed in our tent on what would prove to be the first of many frigid nights on the Colorado Plateau.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Zion NP

Zion River

View of the Virgin River from Scout Lookout

Fall Colors

Fall colors on the West Rim Trail

KJ Canyon

Spectacular view from the Canyon Overlook trail

We left Joshua Tree NP early in the morning and hit the road.  Again, more Mojave Desert.  Desolate as it is, it’s beautiful in its own way.  Especially after you stare at it for 5 hours straight.

Our next destination was Zion NP, for our first taste of the Colorado Plateau.  I had never been to the plateau before, so I was extremely excited.  Zion did not disappoint.

The park is fairly simple – one road, going up and down Zion canyon.  Red rocks surround, with multi-colored spires and rock formations everywhere.  The canyon walls rise 1-2,000 feet from the valley floor.  But this is true all over the plateau.  What makes Zion unique is how incredibly lush the area is.

We only had one full day in the park, so we decided to do a long-ish hike up the West Rim trail.  The trail was quite busy on the climb up to Scout Lookout, as many park visitors seemed to want to try their luck on Angels Landing – a very narrow rock outcropping with a precarious trail leading up to it.  Not for us.  We continued on the trail past Scout Lookout, and immediately we were alone.  The trail wound its way up spurs and down valleys, with incredible (and incredibly surprising) fall colors.  It was amazing to see so many leafy trees in an area we thought was the desert!  The valley bottoms were wet, and we could feel the humidity in the air.  After about 5-6 miles of hiking, we came to a natural viewpoint of the surrounding canyons and decided to turn around.  In all, I think we got a great feel for Zion that day.

The next morning, we packed up early and drove East out of the park.  However, our guidebook told us we had to hike up to one last spot, the Canyon Overlook.  The hike was short – only about an hour round trip – but the view was spectacular.  The colors of the rocks were incredibly deep in the morning sun.  What a place.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Joshua Tree

Joshua Trees

The ubiquitous Joshua trees

Sunset

Beautiful sunset from our campsite

Tarantula

The tarantula

Our first stop on our way to the Southwest was Joshua Tree NP.

On the drive in, we stopped for coffee and lunch in Palm Springs, where it was incredibly hot and dry.  The town is pretty cute, but more remote than I had expected given its iconic status as a retirement location.

The rest of the drive was pretty much just Mojave Desert, which is a wasteland of scrub brush and nothingness.  We arrived at Joshua Tree in the early afternoon, which gave us enough time to drive the main park road and take some pictures of the ubiquitous trees and the beautiful surrounding hills.  While very pretty, we definitely did not need more than just a couple hours there – the landscape and trees are the only thing to see.

We set up camp in the park that evening and went for a walk after watching the sunset.  Kristen had read that tarantulas are known to run across the road at night, so we were hoping to see our first desert wildlife.  We were having a nice time looking at the stars and spotting constellations, when all of the sudden Kristen spotted a tarantula on the road.  Neither of us had ever seen one in the wild before, so we were pretty thrilled.  The things are pretty gross looking, though, so we snapped a quick picture and got the hell out of there.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Riverside

We chose to access the Southwest via the South – driving through California’s Central Valley and heading East out of LA.  Our first stop was in Riverside, CA, where Kristen’s sister Julie goes to college.  Julie put us up for the night in her apartment, and we had a great time hanging out with her and her friends/roommates.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Sacramento, Detroit, San Francisco

MTBing

Jeff, Corey, CJ, and Kristen riding MTB at Camp Tamarancho, CA

Golden Gate

Us at the Marin Headlands overlooking the Golden Gate

After our long trip through the Northern US and Canada, we planned to rest for a couple weeks in Sacramento.  Our ‘break’ consisted of 3 parts:

A week in Elk Grove:

We did a ton of cooking, sleeping, organizing, and hanging out with Steve and Barbara.  Steve’s friend John also came to town, which gave us an occasion to visit Apple Hill and the fantastic wineries of Shenandoah and Amador counties.

A week in Detroit:

Visiting my family, the excuse being that we had come in for Yom Kippur.  We also set up a couple road bikes we keep there and did a lot of great riding at Kensington Metropark.

A bit more time in Elk Grove, followed by a long weekend in San Francisco:

We were thrilled that two sets of our NYC friends were going to be in SF on the same weekend – CJ and Joanne (in town because Joanne was running the Nike Women’s Marathon), and Corey (in town for fun).  We rented a room in a guy’s apartment from AirBnB in the Bernal Heights neighborhood (which happened to be in the same house CJ/Joanne were staying in).  We had a great time walking around the city and watching Joanne race.  And to top it all off, we went for a 3 hour MTB ride in Marin County on Monday with CJ and Corey.

We were sad to be done with our few weeks of ‘rest’, but excited to start the next leg of our travels – the Southwest.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Lorane, OR

LoraneFood

Some salad materials picked from Rich and Denise’s garden (+ balsamic)

NancyDonkeys

Nancy with her two pet donkeys

When we were with my sister in Yellowstone, she told us that if we ever passed through Southern Oregon, we should stop at Rich & Denise’s farm (called Hey! Bales).  Rich and Denise are Keenan’s (Cara’s boyfriend’s) aunt and uncle.  They live on a farm in Lorane, OR, about 30-45 minutes West of Eugene, OR.  Keenan spent some Summers there, and Cara has stayed there a couple times as well.  She said “you just have to see how they live out there on the farm.”

Now, I’ve been interested in farming and farm life ever since I read ‘The Omnivore’s Dilemma’ years ago.  That book made me think about where my food came from, industrial vs. small-scale organic agriculture, introduced me to the concept of vegetables as a meal, and eventually led to my signing up for a CSA (a weekly delivery of vegetables from a local organic farm).  So when we heard there might be an opportunity to spend a couple days on an organic farm, we had to go.

Only one issue – we had never met Rich and Denise before (Keenan’s dad Bill would also be in town), so we were counting on their extreme willingness to let total strangers stay with them.  Cara told us they’d be happy to have us by, but you never really know with this sort of situation.  As it turns out, Cara was right – they are fabulous hosts.  And apparently they are used to visitors coming around.  Within 5 minutes of our arrival, a neighbor wandered in and asked if she could bake some potatoes in Rich and Denise’s oven.  “Of course!” Rich replied.  “Just make sure to remember and come get them in an hour, because we’ll be out.”  The sense of community and trust in that area is staggering.

The first night, Rich and Denise took us to a dinner party at their friends Joey and Nancy’s farm.  Joey and Nancy don’t have many animals anymore (save for a couple donkeys they keep as pets), but have a great garden, and cook a fabulous dinner.  What a night – we got to hear all sorts of stories about rural life (which were especially animated when Joey, who grew up in the Bronx, did impressions of his New Yorker friends’ horrified reactions to his lifestyle in the middle of nowhere).

The next day, we went for a quick hike on the hilly farm property with Denise and her friend Stephanie (who dropped by unexpectedly), and then drove briefly into Eugene to try the famous Full City Coffee Roasters.  Denise and Rich were out when we returned, so Kristen and I cooked dinner with Bill (I embarrassingly ruined a piece of fish by trying to make a pan sauce out of beer instead of wine).  We talked late into the night with the whole family.

On our final morning, we were due to leave early for Sacramento (an 8-10 hour drive).  But Rich offered to take us mountain biking, so of course we couldn’t resist.  Beforehand, though, he wanted to tour us around the farm.  We helped harvest some lettuce.  It was a blast.

We were sad to leave.  What a lifestyle – living on a large piece of land in the mountains, eating delicious food that you grow yourself, living among a community of neighbors you trust.  It’s pretty idyllic.  We want to go back.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Portland

KristenCathedral Park

Kristen framed by the St John’s bridge in Cathedral Park

Randy

Randy standing on a sculpture at the Portland Water Pollution Control Lab

VoodooDoughnuts

Our Voodoo Doughnuts haul – old fashioned glazed, Mexican hot chocolate, maple bacon, and Portland Cream

After the wedding in Seattle, we planned to begin heading South to Sacramento to take a break from traveling.  But on the way, we were excited to make a couple of stops.  The first was in Portland to visit Kristen’s cousin Randy, his girlfriend Jessica, and their two parrots, Soda Pop and Pickle.

We didn’t have too much planned for our time in Portland – we mostly wanted to hang out with Randy and Jessica, see a bit of Portland, and maybe go for a bike ride or two.  Luckily, we came at the right time – Randy is currently studying for his master’s at Portland State, and school was not yet in full swing for the semester, so we got to spend almost all our time with him.  He was a great host – Randy took us to see the PSU campus and showed us some of his work, toured us around the city, and took us to a few hidden gems (most notably Cathedral Park, which is a greenspace framed by the arch-shaped pylons of the St John’s bridge on the North side of town).  We also visited a few Portland landmarks: Powell’s books, Voodoo Doughnuts (the originator of the gourmet doughnut trend), a couple square blocks of food carts (home of the $5 delicious lunch), and the fabulous urban wilderness park (designed by Olmsted, but far more raw than Central or Prospect parks).

All in all, Portland was shockingly . . . normal.  Not at all like the caricature portrayed in Portlandia.  There were fewer and less aggressive fixed-gear bike messengers than in NYC, the food was eclectic and understated, and the hipsters we saw didn’t even look like homeless people (like they do in Seattle).  In retrospect I guess I’m not sure what I expected – people living in trees?  Hipsters occupying credit unions?  Guys with waxed mustaches riding their fixies around with free-range chicken coops strapped to the back?  Maybe I didn’t imagine it to that degree, but what we got was quite the opposite – Portland is really, really nice.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Seattle – Brian & Cathy’s Wedding

Our travels found us in Seattle, for the wedding of our friends Brian and Cathy.  Brian was Jeff’s roommate both in college and in New York.  The wedding was beautiful, the food was great, and above all, many of our friends were together in once place.  It’s easy to forget how much fun we have when we’re all together.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Olympic National Park

Hoh Rainforest

The Hoh Rainforest – where everything is covered in moss

First Beach

First Beach at Sunset

We left Victoria early in the morning and took the ferry to Port Angeles, Washington, on the Northern end of the Olympic peninsula.  We stopped for a quick lunch and a coffee, and then headed West to Olympic National Park.

The West side of the park is pretty remote – there is barely a gas station to speak of, and it’s a good 4-5 hour drive from Seattle, making it inaccessible for a day trip.  There is one small town, though.  Forks, WA.  Which, we learned, is the setting for the Twilight series.  When we drove through, they had a big banner that read “Welcome to Stephanie Meyer Appreciation Day!”.  We didn’t see a parade or anything, though.

We made our way down to our planned oceanside campsite, but when we arrived, there were warnings posted about a black bear that had been coming into the campsite.  Nope, not for us.  So we instead drove North to the Hoh Rainforest park entrance, and up the 12 mile park road to the Hoh Campground.

Once we arrived, we realized we’d forgotten to get groceries.  All we really had left was soup and cheese quesadilla materials.  And we were probably an hour from the nearest store.  So we had cheese quesadillas for dinner, cheese quesadillas for breakfast, peanut butter and jelly quesadillas for lunch, and then we couldn’t take it anymore and drove to Forks to get some salad mix for dinner the next night.

We spent 2 nights in all at the Hoh Campground.  Our first day in the park, we did a nice 5 mile hike in the Hoh Rainforest.  The Hoh Rainforest is a pretty interesting place.  It’s one of the largest temperate rainforests on the continent, and EVERYTHING is covered in moss.  It hangs from the trees and lies on the ground, and pushes up near the banks of the Hoh River.  It’s very beautiful.  We also got extremely lucky with the weather – sunny skies and temperatures in the 70s.

After our hike in the woods, we decided we wanted to see a sunset on the coast.  A park ranger pointed us toward First Beach, which was about an hour drive and a 1 mile hike away.  It was totally worth it – the beach was fairly remote, framed by bluffs, with a natural arch and sea stacks all around.  We took our salad mix with us for a picnic dinner on the beach.

The next morning, we got up very early in order to do a big hike on the East side of the park, with views of the Puget Sound and the Cascade volcanoes.  We drove back the way we came – through Forks and Port Angeles.  Forks still had that “Stephanie Meyer Appreciation Day” banner up – apparently every day in Forks is Stephanie Meyer Appreciation Day.  Eventually we came to a series of winding, one lane dirt roads leading directly up the side of a mountain to the trailhead.

When we arrived at the trailhead, two things happened.  First, the air was so thick with smoke we could smell it.  Apparently there was a large forest fire on the Eastern side of the Cascades, and the smoke was being sucked into the Puget Sound area.  It killed any views we might get from the top, and we weren’t too keen on breathing lungfulls of smoke for 4 hours, either.

But none of that mattered, because of the second thing that happened.  The trail was closed due to ‘aggressive mountain goat activity’.  There were ranger postings from early June saying that the deep winter snowpack had reduced the local mountain goat habitat, and they had been hanging out on the trail.  They were apparently approaching hikers aggressively to defend their food supply.  But it had been a month and a half since the trail closure, and all the snow was gone!  Why was it still closed?  We got out of the car to read the full ranger report, wandered around the trailhead area, and discussed whether or not we should just go ahead and do the hike.  And then, all of the sudden, we heard hoofbeats scrambling up the mountainside.  Aggressive mountain goats!  We both sprinted for the car and immediately drove out of there.  Screw that hike.

We drove to Tacoma and did a mountain bike ride in a local park instead.