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

Happy Birthday, 5-year-old!

Posted by julie on Monday, 13 September 2010, 12:47

September 2009, by Cary Lieberman

September 2010, by Christina Howard

Dear Sylvan,

You’re lying here next to me, snug in your sleeping bag, wrapped in layers of fleece, and I can’t get over how much you belong here. From the moment you stepped onto the trail, your surefootedness and powers of observation (“That stump looks like a hand;” “Those trees have smoother bark than these.”) made you seem natural and comfortable. You’ve been like this—so much better outside—since you were born. After you took care of some business with a cat-hole this evening (high five, brother), and I said I needed my headlamp because of the gathering darkness within the towering Doug firs and cedars, you told me that your eyesight is like a cat’s, so you didn’t need a headlamp. (You proceeded to explain that your nosesight and gripsight (traction) are also like those of a cat; I really like that word: ‘gripsight.’.) You were right; you didn’t need a headlamp. You walked the trail without one. Even with only Crocs on, you hopped off rocks like a mountain goat.

We’re out here on our inaugural mother-son backpacking trip with Kari and Cole, and I’m just so proud of our 5-year-olds. You really are so big. You excitedly started to build a shelter with wood you found on the ground among the willows near Linton Lake, our destination when we found out the Mt. Washington Wilderness on the other side of the road is still closed due to fire. We were going to head to Hand Lake, a mere half a mile hike in, but you boys managed the 2 mile hike to the campsites at the east end of Linton Lake. You romped through the grass at the lake’s edge, pretending to be tigers. You also walked upstream in the streambed, looking for trout for dinner, trout you were going to grab with your bare hands so I could cook them up.

At home, you are rarely this independent. You hang around grown-ups, telling stories and asking questions, or you follow Elena around, first playing with her (“Elena, let’s pretend we’re bears!”), then smacking her with a pillow or otherwise seeing how far you can push her until she cries (usually pretty far, it turns out). This antagonistic behavior turns me into a big, mean monster; although I know that, as a big sister, I’m sure I did the same thing to my sister that you do to yours (sorry, Aunt Jenny). Hearing Elena cry from another room often unleashes a stream of under-my-breath obscenities.

Wheelbarrow-wielding Batman, October 2009

Bow-wielding horned creature, November 2009

The happiest wipeout, December 2009

This is who else you are at 5:

  • You tend toward perfectionism. I can’t get you on a bike, and I think it’s because if you don’t think you’re going to ride it down the street as well as you can in your mind’s eye, you’re going to wait until you can.
  • Same with writing. You started writing words about a year ago, with fun creative spelling and everything. But someone told you to hold your pen differently, I think, and you’ve stopped writing altogether.
  • You’re still very capable with words, and you try out new ones all the time. You’ve recently started saying, “In my coordinates,…” for “In my calculations, …” You make up words, too, as with ‘gripsight.’
  • You definitely have rules you like to follow and that you expect others to follow right now: time-outs for Elena, for instance, which you try to enforce yourself, or “I’ll say sorry after he says sorry to me, because he hit me before I threw the stick at him.” Sigh.

January 2010

Flushed with hard work, February 2010

Scary monster, March 2010

Truly intrigued, April 2010

I keep looking over at you, as you rustle in your sleeping bag, and I wonder what you’ll be like—at 11, 14, 23. Will you play sad songs on your guitar at 14? Will you climb Mt. Hood when you’re 17? Will you continue to look just like pictures of me at your age?

  • You love to be active, and your little hard body is testament to that. You whirl through playgrounds. You led Elena and me on a tromp through snowberry and a streambed, complete with stream, last week. Foreshadowing, with the benefit of typing this two days later: Tomorrow morning, you and I will go on an adventure while our friends sleep. You will crawl under downed trees, trees with trunks taller than you when they’re lying on their sides! You will speculate about why all the trees are down (You will think the cedars are taking over the forest, not leaving enough space for the Doug firs. “It’s mostly the ones with the cracked bark that fell down,” you will say.) You will climb over other trees, confidently hopping off them. You will lead the way, at least until the spiderwebs in your face make you crazy, when you’ll politely ask that I go first (the same ploy Grampa Dick used to use to clear the trail ahead…).
  • You live for books, and I definitely use them to focus your energy and calm you down. While you can read words, you prefer not to, which may be because of your “If I’m not going to do it well, I’m not going to do it” mentality. One day, I’ll look up, and you’ll be reading the Harry Potter you plucked from the shelf. You like oral stories, too, and you’re generous in trusting me as a storyteller, especially since I tend to fall asleep and ask you what I was talking about.

Earlier tonight, you and I spent 15 minutes staring at the star chart, despite our not being able to see stars through the trees. You picked out your favorite constellation based on shape. You chose Monoceros,  the unicorn between Canis Minor and Canis Major. You asked about the different sizes of stars on the chart, and you noticed, when you spun the time and date window, that part of the sky is always visible. Next step: a little astronomy/Earth movement class with models.

Now I’m going to snuggle with you, both to keep you warm and because you’ll let me snuggle.

I love you. Thank you for backpacking with me.

Love,
Mommy

May 2010, by Diana Foster

Mosquito swollen, June 2010

Getting his climb on, July 2010

Whatcha lookin' at? August 2010

Elena is already 2!

Posted by julie on Monday, 23 August 2010, 11:33
Almost two, waiting in a basket.

Almost two, waiting in a basket.

On her first birthday, August 15, 2009.

Dearest Elena,

A week ago Sunday, you turned TWO! While I finished up a course in the Wallowas–eating cinnamon rolls baked over a fire while laughing with college students–your Dad gave you the greatest gift anyone can have on her birthday: freedom to choose! When asked where you’d like to have dinner, you said “beach.” So you, Sylvan, and Daddy packed up the van and headed to Florence to build a boat out of sand and eat fish and chips. Yumm, good choice. You even made it back to have brownie-flavored mini-cupcakes for dessert with Avi and Noah.

Does this really need a caption?

Elena on an E, Spokane, July 2010.

Every day, you are different from the day before. Really. What you do right now:

  • Imitate any word you hear, often with amusing results. Somehow, when you say Sylvan, it sounds like “doh-doh.” Likewise, when you say turtle, it sounds like “doh-doh.” The other day, when I asked you to say “Sylvan’s turtles,” you knew how silly it sounded: “doh-doh-doh-doh.” You couldn’t stop laughing.
  • Speak, knowing that you will be understood by someone. Just after I said to a friend, “My older child translate for my younger? No. I understand her, too,” your vocabulary exploded in early July. I often don’t understand you, but between Sylvan’s knack and your patience, you’re bringing me up to speed.
  • Play with play-dough. You like to cut it up, put it in containers, and smush different colors together.
  • Climb anything.
  • Play independently, often with messy results: sleeping bag piles, drawers full of rubber band/twist-tie nests, book explosions. But, hey, you’re taking care of yourself. I think that, sometime this year, you and your brother can take on breakfast by yourself. You have the will, and he has the skills. You’ll be a cereal-eating team!
  • Say “Yes, please” (“Yes, pease”) when asked if you’d like milk or blueberries or cashews. So polite I just want to squeeze you.
  • Love dolls, and you’re learning to count them; one is for one, two is for anything more than one. This morning, though, you used the word three–for only two dolls, but you know it’s related to those counting words.
  • Joke and laugh. You say “Noooo” with that head tilt that means “I’m not sure if I mean no or not.”
  • Have very definite opinions about things. I’m sorry if you sometimes get squashed in the melee of family life. You can commiserate with Aunt Jenny, another second baby.

A rare moment of sadness. Cute, huh?

Two years ago, one of the best things in my life happened to me. You are a burst of positive energy, and we can use that in a family prone to the grumpies. You are full of joy and wonder and independence. I want so badly to be a great Mommy for you.

You told me you loved me on the phone the other night, when I was in eastern Washington. I love you, too, Elena.

Love,
Mommy

Somebody’s been listening

Posted by jonesey on Friday, 13 August 2010, 21:07

The scene: almost finished eating dinner, at a going-away party for some friends.

Sylvan: “Dad, when can I have a treat?”

Elena: “Doo. Minn-ditz.” (Two minutes.)

Mmm, trampoline popsicles

Nothing says summer like being nearly naked and eating popsicles on a trampoline.

He just keeps on giving

Posted by jonesey on Wednesday, 11 August 2010, 20:29

What would we do without Tyson in our lives?

No, the *other* Gay.

Needs more metadata

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.

Fire Hydrant Aliens

Posted by julie on Monday, 26 July 2010, 23:38

I mentioned that Sylvan and I started to paint a fire hydrant a few weeks ago. After a mere 20 hours of painting or so, I’m finally done (well, pretty much…). Here are some pics:

The comet (sculpture) side. Note the small supports holding the comet (sculpture) above the Earth. It's not a real comet, Sylvan will tell you, but a sculpture of a comet that one day came to Earth (I think that's less scary). This is Sylvan's side of Earth at the bottom of the hydrant. The Nile River is the uppermost blue path.

The moon and ringed planet side.

Happy alien wave.

The idea for the hydrant was Sylvan’s. It came from a pair of his pajamas that have UFOs with happy aliens (that look pretty much like the guy above; I hope I haven’t committed some sort of copyright infringement), rockets, and stars on them. Chris fleshed out the idea, saying that the bottom should be Earth and requesting a comet. I just painted.

Note: This project, the painting of the South University Neighborhood Association’s hydrants, was done with permission from the city. I can’t promise you won’t get in trouble if you just decide to paint yours.

Mt. Bailey – My first volcano of the season

Posted by julie on Friday, 16 July 2010, 23:15

My friend Chandra, with whom I spend far too little time, asked me to join her for a reconnaissance climb of Mt. Bailey, an old volcano north of Crater Lake. She’s leading a hike up Bailey in a few weeks, and I need to climb volcanoes – perfect fit!

We saw one great horned owl; one sign warning of a blue-green algae bloom in Diamond Lake; maybe one hairy woodpecker, just glanced through the trees; countless mountains in our 360 degree view from the summit, including the Three Sisters, Jefferson, Washington, Diamond Peak, Mount Scott, the remains of Mount Mazama, and also Mount McLoughlin, Mount Shasta, and probably Mount Ashland; lupine, paintbrush, pasqueflower, bleeding heart, blooming manzanita, mountain dandelion, tiny yellow mountain violets, their blooms the size of my thumbnail, and grouse whortleberry.

Chandra was bitten by 207 mosquitoes (okay, that’s a guess), and we were both driven nearly mad by many thousands of other bloodsuckers. She taught me about roadless areas and the poisoning of Diamond Lake. Last night, we saw oodles of stars from our tent’s skylight. We were awoken by many fishermen at 5 a.m., after they’d finally gone to bed at 11 p.m., following quite a bit of discussion about “franks.” I only threw one snowball at Chandra; I missed on purpose.

Here are a few photos from our trip:

Our first peek at Bailey from the trail. The summit is the bare area in the middle along the horizon.

Chandra not swatting at mosquitoes for a moment, with Diamond Lake and Mt. Thielsen beyond.

Looking through the summit ridge's window to Thielsen.

Cinder saddle, rock wall, talus slopes, then easy walk to summit.

Mount Bailey across Diamond Lake. I found this photo at a thrift store. It looks like it might have been taken a little earlier in the season than now - maybe May or June.

De Nile

Posted by julie on Monday, 12 July 2010, 0:08

While we were painting our fire hydrant (legally), Sylvan and I had this conversation:

S: I’m painting the longest river in the world. It’s in Africa.

J: The Nile?

S: Yes.

J: How’d you learn about the Nile?

S: I read it in a book (with a grandparent).

Note: I’ll post photos of our hydrant when we’re done. Baby steps.

4th of July

Posted by julie on Monday, 5 July 2010, 22:47

We went to America for the 4th! Who knew there was a place other than Columbus, Ohio that really knows how to DO the 4th? St. Paul, Oregon, 30 miles outside of Portland, has held a rodeo every 4th since 1935, which is a long time by west coast standards. We skipped the rodeo, but we saw a great, horse-heavy parade, rode carnival rides, and ate funnel cake.

A lovely member of one of many equestrian courts - Queen Kelsey, Princess Ashley, etc.

Politely posed just seconds after his brakeless John Deere almost rolled off the front of the trailer. This purty machine's for you, Dad.

Overcoming friction

Dive bomber!

Dive bomber!

Moments before she shoved away my protective hand.