Archive for the ‘outdoors’ Category

Van Smackdown, Part II

Posted by julie on Friday, 19 February 2010, 10:53

Really? A Volkswagen camper-van is a minivan? Okay, “unibody construction,” “V6 engine,” “I read too much Car and Driver.” I understand data; I am a trained scientist under the façade of diaper bags and dirty dishes, but would you call these vehicles minivans?

2campers

From VW Camper - The Inside Story by David Eccles

There are vans, there are minivans, then there are Volkswagens. I suppose VW vans have always occupied a separate category in my brain’s filing system, whether they have pop-tops or not. I don’t claim to be a car aficionado, and I suppose VW vans, even if their tops pop to reveal sleeping space, might be categorized as minivans (if your world is black and white). But let’s look at another picture, more evidence for you. Would you say this interior is in a minivan? Or would you instead say the vehicle is more like a “mini RV”?

1970_VW_Camper_interior

From aaronx's flickr photos (CC BY 2.0)

All mini-vans have tables and cabinets and curtains, right?

I realized that in making a big deal out of this, I must be somehow admitting that “The Analyst” is right, that this is a minivan. But I sort of have a lot riding on this: I have been known to say that I’ll never drive a minivan. Chris has, more than once, admonished, “Never say never.” And you might know that I don’t like being wrong (but I often am).

For me, this argument comes down to intention. I intended to buy a camper. The main reasons we got this van are:

  1. We live in Oregon, and we like to camp. We had a very soggy experience in the Wallowas last June, while camping in tents out of our diminutive vehicle with a 3-year-old and a baby. It was less than pleasant. That planted the seed.
  2. Chris, the man who never wants anything other than used books for Christmas, said, “I’ve wanted a camper-van since I was seven.”

Additional supporting arguments in favor of a larger vehicle included:

  1. I would like to go for a hike with another parent and his or her kids without having to caravan two hours to get there. Wouldn’t company be nice?
  2. After setting up appointments to buy trees last fall, I canceled because I couldn’t manage to find a time when: I wouldn’t have the kids, the nursery was open, and I had someone else’s pick-up truck that would fit the trees. Now, the kids AND the trees will fit in the van. It will be nice to occasionally have a little cargo space.
  3. When our parents visit, we either have to rent an extra or bigger vehicle or decide not to go anywhere beyond walking distance. I’m glad my parents like the coffee shop around the corner.

I understand that these last three arguments also support buying a minivan, but we didn’t need a minivan – or even a second vehicle, really. We wanted a camper with some nice side benefits. I feel guilty tooling around town in my 40 mpg recycled cooking oil- and canola-powered car. It’s still a car. I don’t intend to pick up the groceries or the kids at soccer practice in the camper-van.

That said, if you see me in the Market of Choice parking lot with the camper, and we’re not on our way to the trailhead, you may hurl the slings and arrows.

Forest Kindergarten Notes

Posted by julie on Friday, 4 December 2009, 10:24

This New York Times article about a Waldorf-based forest kindergarten in Saratoga Springs has lingered in my thoughts for the past couple of days, popping up when I see my son playing outside on his school’s playground or when I get a glimpse of the full moon and long to be camped out in the cold. The slideshow that accompanied the article was particularly affecting, from the leafless November woods to the children sitting around a family-style lunch table in a beautiful old farmhouse. The truth is, this is certainly not the first time I’ve wanted something a little different for my children, a day-to-day existence that involves more exploring, more time spent playing in streams and running around outside until I call them in for dinner (okay, while I realize that Elena’s only one, she’s growing up fast). The formative years that I remember (let’s call them ages 4-11), were spent first on a cul-de-sac and then on a dairy farm. I roamed, I had a fort in a bush in the backyard, I biked, I played cops and robbers, I spent hours engineering the stream, climbing on the hay, and traipsing through the pastures. When I was in fifth grade, I couldn’t believe it when Melissa, in sixth grade, said she had no time to play outside; she was always doing homework. While my jaw may not have literally dropped, I remember that slackjawed feeling, wondering how it was possible to live without playing for hours outside.

Those of you who know me recognize, of course, that I take my kids outside pretty often: we play in the snow, hike, go to the playground. But that’s scheduled by me, and it’s on my terms, really; Sylvan’s not just going outside to splash in the stream (there is no stream, although, if it rains hard enough, the street hosts a stream). These forest kindergarten kids spend three hours outside every morning, just being kids in the outdoors.

We do have a relatively new preschool in town, Dancing Sol, which has gotten rave reviews from the parents whose kids have gone there. I’ve been tempted to send Sylvan there. But that would involve lots of extra driving, and lots of retooling our schedules. Now, we drop off and pick up Elena and Sylvan in a double jogger; we can walk to their school from home, Chris’s work, or my rehearsal. It fits our needs and our values, and Sylvan and Elena know and enjoy their friends and teachers. And, honestly, I would feel like a parent over-engineering my son’s time if I made the switch.

I’ve also been influenced lately by Lenore Skenazy’s blog, Free-Range Kids. She’s been called “the worst mom in the world” for letting her son, who was nine at the time, find his way home on the subway by himself from Bloomingdale’s. This might seem like a scary thing if you don’t live in Manhattan, but this kid grew up there; he been riding the subway for nine years, reading subway maps for three. Her blog is dedicated to encouraging independence in your children by giving them independence (and also pointing out the absurdities of hovering parents and panic-inducing media).

My problem derives largely from our choice to live in the city in order to be able to walk to the grocery store, work, and school. That’s inherently different, of course, from living on a farm or in the forest. But that doesn’t stop me from wanting it all.

So I’m looking for ways to let out the leash, to give my son and my daughter real freedom, real opportunities to get outside and explore and construct without me. And without being turned in to the Department of Human Services.

A quick preview of our trip to Klamath Falls

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 24 November 2009, 7:40

We took the train to Klamath Falls this weekend.  We saw lots of cool stuff.  I think Julie is working on a post.  In the meantime, here’s a preview.

Door ->

Door ->

I love me some proper apostrophization.  You can always count on a gun den to read Strunk and White. Charles’s tonsils would be proud.

Chris's Gun Den. Klamath Falls, Oregon.

Chris's Gun Den. Klamath Falls, Oregon.

A picture of a rainbow

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 3 November 2009, 16:28

This post is mainly to test the new, wider format of the Eugenious weblog.  I’m hoping that we can post bigger pictures right in the posts, instead of having to use the tiny little thumbnails we’ve been using.

OK, here goes nothing:

Julie and Sylvan walk in front of a rainbow and the Kienzle barn at Mt. Pisgah, 3 Oct 2009

Julie and Sylvan walk in front of a rainbow and the Kienzle barn at Mt. Pisgah, 3 Oct 2009

Yep, that works.  Nice.

Clear Lake 2009

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 13 October 2009, 23:16
Sylvan as train on the boat ramp. Note the neon green kayak. What a gorgeous place to be in a boat on a fall day.

Sylvan as train on the boat ramp. Note the neon green kayak in the background. What a gorgeous place to be in a boat on a fall day.

Thanks to Chandra, we found our favorite fall destination three years ago. We ventured back to Clear Lake this year with two other families, both with 4-year-old sons and 1-year-old daughters (well, one’s 11 months).

The girls

The girls

The boys

The boys

We last visited two years ago, when Sylvan was half as old as he is now. He was a good hiker then, insisting on walking so much that we nearly ended our hike by headlamp. This time, he wasn’t nearly as gung ho, but he did walk four of the five and a half miles, really hitting his stride with about two miles to go. And the other two little guys walked even more than that. Even Elena walked a bit; we were so far behind the other two families due to our little boy dawdler (it wasn’t exploring, Grammas; it was dawdling) that I just let Elena walk for a while. She appreciated not being in the backpack; her brother, on the other hand, still likes being in the backpack.

kidsintree

For your viewing pleasure, a re-enactment:

Are you kidding? That water's 38 degrees.

Are you kidding? That water's 38 degrees. 2007.

I might hold a grudge this time. 2009.

I might hold a grudge this time. 2009.

Someone's not afraid of a little cold water. So unafraid that I had to pull her away kicking and screaming. Literally (and I know what that means).

Someone's not afraid of a little cold water. So unafraid that I had to pull her away kicking and screaming. Literally (and I know what that means).

"Mommy, I'm a big-horned cow."

"Mommy, I'm a big-horned cow."

Some natural history notes:

  • When you walk around the lake, it’s difficult not to notice that the vine maple leaves appear to be dependent on the amount of sunlight they receive for their autumn color. The leaves in the full sun are red, those in the dappled forest are peachy, and there are pockets of orange and yellow.
This samara left a yellow "shadow" on the leaf behind.

This samara left a yellow "shadow" on the leaf behind.

  • Chris has some animal notes to share. If life bogs him down and he hasn’t posted these within a few days, I’ll attempt to fill in.
  • Mount Washington sported some large, new patches of snow. I climbed it two weeks ago (trip report to come), and my partners and I only found some of last spring’s snow. But this autumn’s snow is nothing compared to that of two years ago. I just pulled up this photo of the Sisters from 2007, and they’re covered. Not so a few days ago. But it’s raining now. Not so much hard as convincingly.

Fire in the Sky

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 23 September 2009, 10:54

The green double jogger, parked in the backyard last night, has a coating of ash on it this morning, fine particles that crumble when I touch them. The air smells like fire, albeit relatively far-away fire, just a hint of smoke, like campfires on the next campground loop. While the western sky is nearly clear, the eastern sky hazes to white near the horizon. I looked up Oregon’s current forest fires when I noticed the flat orange sky yesterday afternoon. It looks like the Tumblebug is the nearest, so it’s probably the one coloring our skies; it’s burning southeast of Oakridge. (click on the northernmost fire icon, then on the fire’s name, the Tumblebug complex, to find information, updated daily, about the fire).

When I walked out and sniffed the air this morning, it quickly brought me back to my former life, when I was only responsible for ten screaming college students. In 2003, I instructed a course that crossed from the west side of northern Washington’s North Cascades east across the Pasayten Wilderness, on the dry side of the mountains. This was my favorite course in five years of on-and-off working for the National Outdoor Leadership School: great co-instructor, fun student group, and, boy, what a beautiful and varied route. In late June, we launched into the cold, camping on thick, wet snow the first night. As we headed east, we crossed through many different bioregions, from west-side rainforests to mountain hemlock krummholz and passes above treeline, then into the grass and gravel of the Pasayten.

Our first views of the Pasayten fire, 2003

Our first views of the Pasayten fire, 2003

We hiked through much evidence of forest fire, both recent (within the last two years) and from the late 80s. At our second re-ration, the horsepacker gave us maps from our program supervisor for British Columbia’s Cathedral Park, our escape(!) if we couldn’t hike around or through the fire burning east of us, toward which we were walking. We supervised our students closely, making sure we knew where they were as they traveled without us during the last four days. A single ridge separated us from the conflagration in the end, as we awaited our pick-up at the trailhead. If the fire had come over the mountain, we were set to start walking, quickly, down along the gravel road out of the mountains. The nearest water was a mile back along the trail, a trickle.

The last night

The last night in the Pasayten

Wind

Posted by julie on Monday, 24 August 2009, 0:36

I listened to the wind in the conifers on three consecutive days last week. And I noticed it. Hooray for small miracles of mindfulness.

Last Saturday, I had a good run on the Ridgeline Trail, enjoying how strong my out-of-shape body actually felt (hefting 22-pound babies counts for more than I give it credit for) but not enjoying the sharp, 2-3-inch crushed gravel on the new section of trail (no rock plates in my otherwise fantastic shoes equals sore feet). Wind in the Douglas firs.

Last Sunday, I climbed Diamond Peak, a solo hike that felt really tough for the first four miles. My body has always reacted strongly to a little altitude. I remember showing up at the Noble Hotel in Lander, Wyoming (elevation ca. 5350 ft.) for NOLS courses and sucking wind as I climbed the stairs, thinking, “How am I going to go out and heft a 60-pound pack around at 8000 feet?” Then, of course, there was the stroke, after I’d been up to 11,000 feet. Dehydration and my body’s goal of making more red blood cells to compensate for the difficulty in acquiring oxygen couldn’t have helped.

My body turned it around last Sunday, though, and the objectively difficult part of the climb, a steep, well-worn and heavily-cairned climbers’ trail with lots of scree and gravelly footing that gained the last 2300 feet to the summit, seemed much easier than the first four trail miles. After snapping a few pictures on the windy top, I had a late lunch back down at the false summit, all the while convincing a cheeky ground squirrel that I don’t share chocolate with rodents. There was no one else on the mountain on that sunny Sunday in mid-August. I saw two Pacific Crest Trail through-hikers that evening, back on the trail as I headed to the trailhead. I also surprised a long-tailed weasel, who skittered away up a log, looking back, then finding cover. Wind in the mountain hemlocks up high, then Douglas firs toward the trailhead. And, whew, the mosquitoes down near Summit Lake, on the Forest Service road I was walking on back to the car. I put on my raingear and RAN.

On the summit. Nice gaiters, NOLSie.

On the summit. Nice gaiters, NOLSie.

On Monday, Sylvan, Elena, and I hiked up the Amazon Headwaters Trail. Elena fell asleep, as planned. Sylvan, on his first apprentice-hike, preparing to climb Diamond Peak with me (when he’s 10? 11? I think he’s thinking this reward will be a little more immediate, but I’m happy to have him excited about hiking again.), powered uphill with nary a whine. The ripe blackberries helped. Wind in the Douglas firs.

Natural History Notes: 30 April 2009

Posted by julie on Friday, 1 May 2009, 0:44

Each night, just before I slip into bed, I listen through the closed window in our bedroom to a western screech owl’s call, sometimes likened to a ball bouncing and coming to a stop, since the hoots at the end of the call are in closer succession than those at the beginning. A western screech owl got me my job at the Museum of Natural History when I was a graduate student.

We’ve also had a visiting red-breasted sapsucker. Well, he might be a resident, but, if he is, he’s only recently taken to hammering on stop signs. We’ve caught him tapping on nearby signs two or three days this week. I haven’t yet managed to get his picture, since I often have a rather loud three-foot-tall human with me.

Today, as Sylvan, Elena, and I ate lunch at Mt. Pisgah, a hummingbird thought Sylvan might be a nice, bright yellow flower. It motored over and hovered two feet in front of Sylvan before realizing its mistake.

Following are some photos Sylvan took at Mt. Pisgah. I hadn’t noticed the lacy shadow pattern, but Sylvan caught it with the camera.

path_shadows1

shadows2

Meadowrue

Meadowrue

We had a great time at Pisgah, staying for longer than we intended. Sylvan threw rocks into the river for a while (fun for anyone, but physically impossible to resist for those with both an X and a Y chromosome). He also handed some to me, requesting that I throw them in.

“Here, Mom, throw in this one that looks like a piece of pizza.” Splash.

S: “Here’s one for you. It’s an aklak.”
J: “A what?”
S: “An aklak. All of them can be shaped like aklaks.” (This word evolved over the course of our rock-tossing time.)
Ker-plunk.

S: “Here, Mom, throw in this one that looks like poop.”
Laughter, first from me, then from Sylvan. Cylindrical, tapered at the ends. Yup.

Sylvan with an aklak

Sylvan with an aklak

Powder

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 10 March 2009, 0:25

There’s good snow in the mountains, and I know that from personal experience, not just the pass cams.

sylvan_throws_snow

elena_bunny1

Kari with the 6-month-olds, Elena and Sage

Kari with the 6-month-olds, Elena and Sage

Happy Birthday, Elena: 4 Months

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 16 December 2008, 0:02

Dear Elena,

Sylvan shovels the sidewalkSNOW DAY! And it was a real one, with temperatures that only rose into the mid-30s and snow that’s still on the ground this evening. Okay, so it’s only four inches, but it’s beautiful. You and I were supposed to go to work, Elena, but I didn’t want to chance it with a bus running far off-schedule, and I certainly wasn’t going to drive. So we pulled Sylvan into our snow day, at least for the morning, and went to the park, where the snow was too light and fluffy to sled on; we just sank.

After dropping off Sylvan to play with his friends at school (he was certainly too involved with the touch table to notice his girls had gone), we walked to the bakery and then to the Masonic Cemetery. The high school student behind us at the bakery said to his friend, “Isn’t it neat how when it snows you want to see what every place looks like? I woke up and thought, ‘I wonder what the cemetery will look like in the snow.'” We passed no fewer than three sets of cross-country ski tracks and dozens of folks, ranging in age from one to fifty, sledding (many bodies had iced down some tracks by then), skiing, and walking on our way to the cemetery.

Elena sucks on her new quilt

One of my favorite things about Eugene snow days is that nearly everyone takes a snow day.

Today I saw Spencer Butte from my office window; despite its size, smaller than some closets I’ve seen, I dig my office. You were asleep in the bassinet near the woodstove, and I was working on Christmas gifts in my office. And I could see the snowy mountain and some goldfinches in the treetops outside.

Elena in her green-striped pajamas

You started squealing on Saturday, the day after Daddy brought you to your 4-month appointment and checked “no” on the questionnaire that asked whether you squeal. Each morning, when you wake up, you don’t seem to remember that you can make such high-pitched noises, but, as the day progresses and you find your voice, the squealing begins. Your voice charmed your grandfather yesterday. You were quiet until I showed you the phone, then you just chatted away.

I love you,

Mommy