Archive for the ‘Oregon’ Category

Volcanoes 2 1/2 and 3

Posted by julie on Monday, 11 October 2010, 23:34

Mt. Scott from across Crater Lake

Mission: accomplished! Summer might already be over, but I finally climbed three volcanoes this climbing season: Mt. Bailey, Diamond Peak, and Mt. Scott.

Volcano 2 1/2: Leslie and I attempted Mt. St. Helens on a rainy weekend in September. We chatted, I ate nearly all of her homemade cookies spiked with coffee, and we read for hours as the rain pattered the roof of the van the night before the climb. The mountain remained socked in. After reaching about 6000 feet and having a difficult time seeing from one trail-marking post to the next, we decided to go down, get dry, and go to Powells. Good choice.

If it's not obvious, yes, that is a stream running down the trail. Wet, wet, wet.

Volcano 3: I decided I needed to find a sure thing before the snows come. Mt. Scott, on the edge of Crater Lake, seemed like my sure thing: 5 miles round-trip, 1300 feet of elevation gain, great views if the weather gods smiled, and an easy walk-up I could do alone. At 8926, it’s the highest point in Crater Lake National Park, and it’s higher than I’ve climbed in a while.

I drove into the park last night at 7 p.m., 2 hours and 20 minutes after leaving Eugene. The sign at the entrance read “Lost Creek Campground will close on October 11, 2010 at 2 p.m.” I still had 19 hours! As much as I’ve avoided this reality, autumn has truly set in; my drive through the park was dark and foggy, and I feared driving off the edge of Rim Drive. An hour later, I reached the campground, precisely on the opposite side of the lake from where I’d entered the park.

If you’re a parent, a writer, a lover of the outdoors, or a soul with simply too little time, you’ll understand how I relished the hour and a half I then spent journaling while the winds pushed the treetops around. Then I read. As the clouds blew off and the stars gave the sky its depth, I slept. I found out later that the temperature dipped down to 27° F.

I awoke at 6:30, and I was on the trail at 7:05, after driving 6 miles to the trailhead. It was fully light, although the sun hadn’t yet risen over the shoulder of Mt. Scott. I set off alone over the gravelly cinders, through a forest of whitebark pine, mountain hemlock, and Shasta red fir (which may have been subalpine fir; I’m not a fir girl, a connoisseur of Abies). After some photos, wind, switchbacks, and talking to myself, I was at the top in an hour. From the ridge near the summit, one can peer west to Crater Lake or east to Klamath Marsh, irrigated and channeled into straight lines. At the top of this ancient “satellite volcano” that sits on the flank of of the much larger and younger Mt. Mazama—the beast that erupted to form Crater Lake over 7000 years ago—a solar-powered fire tower is perched.

I walked along the ridge, seeking a sunny breakfast nook. I found it, and I also met a friend, a marten who was not really afraid of me but who was eager to move past my verbal greetings. This marten was about 12 feet from me when I snapped the photo.

Marten atop Mt. Scott

After 30 minutes on the summit ridge, I’d finished my hard-boiled eggs and self portraits, so I donned my gloves and walked back down.

In another 45 minutes, I’d reached the van. I stopped a couple of times to enjoy the view, then I headed back to Eugene, where I picked up the kids at 3 p.m. and brought them to my rehearsal at 4. Thanks, family, for indulging my mountain madness.

Phantom Ship in Crater Lake

Diamond Peak – My second volcano of the season

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 3 August 2010, 23:14

Diamond Peak, briefly.

Leslie, Wendy, and I on the summit of Diamond Peak

Leslie, Wendy, and I on the summit of Diamond Peak

In case you were curious about the location, date, or elevation...

If you’ve been following along, you may remember that this is part of a set (not currently as pregnant as the first belly shot [and will never be again, thank goodness] and nowhere near as chiseled as the second). And, yes, those are thunderheads behind me. About 12 minutes after this photo was taken, I mumbled something like, “F&*#!” as I skittered down a snowfield, on the way off the ridge.

Ground squirrel asking for peanuts, in vain

Isn’t Leslie’s gaiter nicely in focus? This little guy liked her gaiter straps. He stood up for us, wondering how much chocolate he’d find in our packs if he gave all three of us patellar puncture wounds.

Summit Lake (mosquito heaven) and the ridge to the south, our exit route

We walked up on the snow, and you can see our tracks. This is my third time on the mountain in July, and the first time I’ve ever encountered snow on the walk in. We brought ice axes to glissade down the eastern side, but it’s steep, so we ridgewalked back down. I couldn’t have asked for a better pair of hiking buddies (tough, good conversationalists, not whiney, appreciative, good chocolate), but maybe next time Chris will join us to offer just enough testosterone to push me off the eastern slopes.

Boot-skiing down the southern snowfields

Still, we boot-skied down hundreds of feet of the southern side of Diamond Peak. Fun!

I don’t know what it is about this mountain, but I can’t think of a better way to spend my four-year Stroke-iversary.

Firsts, Agains

Posted by julie on Monday, 22 March 2010, 23:50

Overheard this weekend:

S: That was my first newt.

S: That was my first milkshake.

And it rolls around again:

Sylvan in the sand, May 2007

Sylvan in the sand, May 2007

Elena in the sand, March 2010

Train Trip to Klamath Falls

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 2 December 2009, 12:29

Because 4-year-old boys think that trains rule (which they do, of course), we looked into an Amtrak trip, one that would take us somewhere new but that we could accomplish in a weekend. I was particularly excited to take the train south, since the tracks first head east, through the snows of Willamette Pass, before turning south to Klamath Falls. So, Klamath Falls it was, a town just north of California on the high side of the Cascades. K Falls grew up as a timber town, a train town; increasingly, it’s becoming a jumping-off point for recreation like bird-watching, hunting, and snow fun. And, as we squinted into the morning sun glinting off the light dusting of snow two Saturdays ago, we also found that Klamath Falls has some pretty good views of Mt. Shasta, already shouldering her own load of snow.

Shasta in the morning

Shasta in the morning

Chris left work a little early on Friday so we could walk out the front door at 3:30 and hop on a city bus. Chris carried a large pack containing his and my clothes, the kids’ warm clothes, and our train food. Sylvan carried a little pack with his clothes, books, notebook, and water bottle. I had a pack in which I could carry Elena which also had room for her clothes and diaper bag. And we had a jogger (Our four-year-old is a bit inconsistent with how far he can walk – two miles today, 20 meters tomorrow.).

Elena and I, after all of us narrowly found some seats on the crowded train (note to self: don’t travel by train the weekend before Thanksgiving), proceeded to walk up and down the aisles for the next hour and a half. After some food, she finally fell asleep on Chris. Sylvan and shared a pair of seats; I tried to doze while Sylvan drove cars around and drew.

I found our hotel, the Cimarron, after looking through some reviews on-line. The Best Western Olympic Inn gets great reviews, but it’s twice as expensive. The Cimarron had earned its respectable reviews: it was clean, with cushy duvets, 518 pillows, continental breakfast with cook-your-own waffles, and a very nice staff. I’d stay there again. The kids fell into bed on Friday night and slept hard, since it was 11 p.m. (after a few tears from Sylvan, who told us that he wants to live at the Cimarron).

After breakfast, where Chris finally turned the volume way down on the TV after all the other guests had gone (Do we wonder why ADD is prevalent? Focus!), we bundled up and stepped into the cold, sunny morning, tracking through less than an inch of fresh snow. Just behind the motel, we found the OC&E Woods Line State Trail, a walking and biking trail on an old rail bed that’s paved for its first seven miles, then gravel as it heads 88 miles to the town of Bly and north to the Nature Conservancy’s Sycan Marsh (cross-country ski trip, anyone?). We took it west, where we found a newly-paved section heading toward downtown – and from which we looked south and saw Shasta. We eventually had to cross a field, which many others had done, to get back on the road network to find the Children’s Museum of Klamath Falls.

caboose_clouds

I don't know what this building really was. It's right on the edge of town.

I don't know what this building really was. It's right on the edge of town.

I don't wanna ride! I don't wanna walk! No!

I don't wanna ride! I don't wanna walk! No!

We were a little early arriving at the Museum, so we enjoyed the hand-painted planets on the outside walls; Sylvan decided he would just keep circling the building until it opened (early, for us, it turned out). The parking lot on the building’s north side was a skating rink; Sylvan only went down once, amid laughter, luckily. This Museum is a gem, a little building that houses: a beautiful train set; the cockpit of a real plane, whose windshield opens to the outside; a wooden train set; a firetruck with a siren, radio, and lights; a shopping area, complete with plastic fruit and cash registers; a bike that one could pedal to light a traffic light or keep a ball afloat atop a stream of air; a hairdressing salon, dress-up area, and play post office; a recording studio, with (loud) instruments; a discovery area with a ball run, explorations of color and shadow, electric circuit board, and I don’t even remember what else; many more hands-on puzzles and building toys; and, my personal favorite, a phosphorescent wall inside a dark room that captures your shadow with a flash of light. I had fun timing my leaps with the flash while my patient daughter looked on. We had to drag Sylvan and Elena out after over two hours of non-stop fun.

Clifford and I save the day.

Clifford and I save the day.

We walked a mile to downtown Klamath Falls, stopping immediately over the train tracks to check out the outside displays at the Klamath County Museum, including a brick-making machine, old columns from a courthouse that was never used, and a wooden building that served as a milk shed, a fort, and, finally, a house. Then we started our search for lunch in earnest, since it was after 1 o’clock and the troops were restless, despite our plying them with bagels. But, then, suddenly, Sylvan’s 40 pounds in the jogger felt like 80. I looked down and saw that we had a flat. After some coaxing, Sylvan (whine) walked the remaining two blocks to lunch. Chris, with his iPhone (yay!) found that there was a Hutch’s bicycle shop two blocks from lunch; we’d stop in after lunch.

We went to A Leap of Taste, 907 Main Street, for lunch, which I’d found when I typed in “coffee shop Klamath Falls” into Google maps. And technology really paid off. Our sandwich – provolone, muffaletta (olive salad, for all you Italians who didn’t know, like me), and Eugene’s own Yumm! sauce – was superb, so good that the kids weren’t really interested in the PB&J we conservatively ordered for them. Sylvan’s steamer and my mocha were tasty, and the coconut cream cupcake? Mmmmm. Sylvan beat Daddy at a card game of War while Elena sat on the potty in the bathroom, which housed a 7-year-old’s beautiful crayon drawing on linoleum.

elena_cupcake

Off to fix the tire. The mechanic pulled from the tire a dozen or so seeds of the dreaded goat head plant (also called puncturevine) (remember that jaunt across the field?) before replacing the tube. While we waited, Elena rang all the bike bells and squeezed the bike horns shaped like cows. Sylvan donned a helmet and zoomed around the store on a little 13-incher with training wheels; he was sad when he heard that the repairs were complete.

Why am I not petting the dog in this picture?

Why am I not petting the dog in this picture?

But it was time to head to the Linkville Cemetery to do some research. I took some photos and notes before the cold closed in. Then we quickly headed home, two miles to the motel. And poor Elena cried nearly the whole way. She was cold, it turned out, and, when we sat her in a warm bath, she didn’t move, just contentedly waited for her circulation to return. Bad parents.
bath_finallywarm

We ordered pizza for dinner. The free cinnamon sticks were the best part.

Awoke to wind, which turned to 30 minutes of snow. The motel shuttle brought us and the Amtrak employees to the train station, where we were scheduled to leave at 8:25. The trip back over the mountains was the highlight of my trip. The snow deepened as the train headed north to Chemult. We saw snowmobile tracks and occasional animal tracks. The ride along the south side of Odell Lake offered glimpses of steely water. The pass itself was clouded in and snowy, which only solidified our desire to play in the snow after Thanksgiving (which we did; more photos to follow). The ride west after the pass was punctuated by numerous tunnels and dropoffs to the north. Exciting. Elena enjoyed watching the cows and horses as we pulled closer to Eugene.

Sylvan tried to avoid the camera, but he's so curious.

Sylvan tried to avoid the camera, but he's so curious.

Well, our jogger decided to stay on until Salem, but Amtrak covered their mistake by offering us another stroller, someone else’s, to borrow so we could walk home. Which we did.

Elena has fun at the sink.

Elena has fun at the sink.

sylvan_bedjump

chris_bedjump

julie_bedjump