Friday, October 19, 2012

Oops! I forgot about this...

Back in April/May, my friend Ruth and I took a short trip to Washington state, for my friend Amber's wedding.  We drove, because this country's beautiful! And, I hate flying. And we drove a round-a-bout way to and from WA, so that we could see more people and places. We had been living in Chattanooga, TN all winter, so by the time we left in late April, we expected 80s the whole trip. But we were wrong. Luckily, we realized our mistake just before we left, and were able to pack enough warm clothes for the trip.

Our first stop was Chicago! I have family there (Grandma, aunts, uncles, cousins), so we stopped to see them on the way, and it broke up the beginning of our trip perfectly. We arrived early, so we had some time to explore the city first. Here's as trite as you can get! The bean. Oh, and we brought a sock monkey, like I do on all my trips. Susie Sockmonkey is her name, and she's tiny and pink. In the first photo, she's sitting on my head. Keep your eye out for her in other photos!
 
My aunt Martha helps run the city ferret rescue. Here's one! 

As soon as we entered South Dakota, we saw signs for "The Corn Palace" so we decided to check it out. Sure enough, the building in the background's facade is completely made out of corn.

Badlands were next. Beautiful!

Timon and his friends! I didn't know we had prairie dogs in the U.S.

Badlands still.

And we saw our first bison! He was getting rid of his winter coat.

We were sure they were going to fight, but they didn't. Just started at each other then went back to grazing. But isn't this the epitome of the northwest prairies?

Mount Rushmore!
...was too expensive to see, so here we are pulled off the highway

Devil's Tower, WY. It's a climbing destination (and sacred site), and we happened to drive by. We explored, but didn't climb.

Yellowstone. It was in the 30s. And it was smelly.

But totally worth it.

This was a surprise. I actually said "holy shit!!" out loud. There was an older couple next to us. They just smiled.

And, finally, after more beautiful driving, Amber's farm in WA. She scheduled her wedding for the perfect time of year in eastern Washington. The hills around her town were green, instead of their usual brown, and the apple trees were in bloom! It smelled heavenly, all day, everyday that we were there. She lives on this apple orchard, but works on a garlic farm. Some parts of the garlic farm are on the same plot as the orchards, but sometimes they have to drive to off-site garlic fields. It's 2 separate businesses that work (and live) harmoniously together.

..plus some goats on the side. I felt like I was starting to get the hang of it, but Amber is WAY better at it than I am...

And the wedding itself! Kiss the bride! Our mutual friend Addy was the pastor. She got ordained when she was in high school. For no reason at all. But she's using it now!!

They set up a slackline for entertainment. I was entertained. Ruth and I had "battles" to see who could stay on the longest. If we had walked to the middle we could have tried pushing each other off, but we never made it. I put this particular photo up because, as you can see, I won.

Then we said goodbye to Amber and moved on. But we headed west, toward Olympic National Park. Here were are a Hurricane Ridge. The snow was 12' deep. We trudged around on top of it for a bit, took some scenery photos, and moved on to other, lower, wetter parts of the park.

the Hoh Rain Forest.


And the beach! Hello Pacific!

The Oregon Sand Dunes. Near the beach, but not actually the beach. This was pretty fun, except for the fierce wind that was blowing constantly. Wind + sand = pain. Especially in the eyeballs.

Pacific, probably in Oregon somewhere. Just a picnic area off the 101

And onto California! Everything was bigger there. The trees, the ferns, the gas prices..

Redwood National Park! This was Ruth and my favorite part of the trip

we wanted to go to a famous beach bouldering spot, but the hike was straight down a tick-infested hill, covered in tall grass. No thanks. And the ocean was crashing against the base of the hill. Guess it was high tide? So we made some phone calls and heard about this beach. Step out of the car, and onto the beach. My kind of approach. 

On the way back toward the east coast, we stopped off at the Tetons. We tried to visit them right after Yellowstone, but the pass between the two parks was still closed, and when we tried to go around, we encountered snow. Just say no to snow. We enjoyed a picture perfect day in the Tetons.


Here's some shots from the summer: I was proud that I led this climb, so here's a photo!

that same day, a snake fell from the top of the cliff right beside us!! It was an eastern hognose snake. I'd never heard of them before

Here's another climb I did.


I was really excited that I didn't fall!

A mystery route. 


Friday, March 2, 2012

alright! Here we go! Let's start with my current sock monkey (from Waterstone), Sophie Sockmonkey! Here she is with a bowl of my homegrown popcorn. We were supposed to take a photo of her with the popped popcorn too, but I guess we forgot. Ruth loved the popcorn!
Sophie Sockmokney had a brief break dancing phase. She got pretty good.
Sophie and I chillin'
One of our first weekends in Chattanooga, we went to Rocktown, in Georgia. Our friends Dan and Zak were there, working on their guidebook to the rock climbing there. Here, Ruth and Julia (who I met once before in Joshua Tree last winter, but she lives in Charleston, WV) decided to start a band. And everyone knows the most important thing to do first (when starting a band) is take a photoshoot for your album cover. We haven't gotten any further with our band, like who will play what insturments..., but we have some good album cover photos to choose from.
Dan was taking photos for the guidebook, so Ruth and I had photoshoots. Yeah, we're kind of a big deal. :) Here's me! On 'Ripple'. You can find me in the Rocktown Guidebook too! Coming out this spring.
A different day at Rocktown. Ruth and I were watching our other roommate (we have even ANOTHER roommate too, but I don't think I have any photos of him in this post..), Ryan climb, but the photo came out so well!
Ruth had her birthday at the end of January, here's a climb she did that day.
Here's one of my proudest climbs I've ever done. It's called Helicopter, because your feet swing around a lot.
this is my favorite problem at Rocktown! No one else liked it.

Here's a new area! This place is called Mountain Brook, named after the apartment complex it is owned by. This is Donald trying a tall, scary problem called Melon Slab.

Now we've moved onto LRC. This is the place we climb most often.LRC is owned by Montlake Golf Club. It's in the woods paralleling the golf course, so every once in a while, when there's an awful golfer, you have to watch out for stray golf balls being shot into the woods. Being owned by a golf club, it naturally costs money to go there. I bought a year pass. To make it worth it, I had to go 40 times from Dec. 5th to April 5th. Yesterday was visit 43! Easy. Here's a photo from when Joe visited over winter break

Joe on Incredarete!
This was another of my really hard climbs. Harder than I've ever done before! It's a V7 called Red House.



This is Jill (a girl I met while here) doing a problem on a day so cold, they closed the golf course. The boulders actually ON the golf course are off limits, unless the golf course is closed, so sometimes people go at night, and there were some others on the fairway this day, but really the only good time to climb on the golf course is on the bouldering competition day they have once a year.

In February (or maybe late January?) Joe went with a Cincinnati school group to Horse Pens 40 in AL. Only 2 hours away for me, so I met up with him. Here he is on my favorite problem there, Spook Eye. He did better than me that trip!


I put lots of photos of me in this post, since everyone got bored with my climbing pictures of other people.

Here's the latest hard problem I did. Jerry's Kids, V7. It's the tallest hard thing I've done, so it took me a really long time to get brave and do it.
last but not least! My friend Cecylia and I took an intro to aerials class! We tried the aerial fabrics, and learned a bunch of beginner moves on the trapeze. It was so fun, that now I'm starting to think I need my OWN trapeze. But they cost upwards of $270, and to make one you need to be able to weld, and "splice rope". Sounds like too much work.
-Stella