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29029Everesting, Bald Mountain, California, hiking, Montana, Oregon, roadtrip, traveling with dogs, western U.S., Wyoming
It was finally time for a more comprehensive tour of the western U.S., especially now that Covid was on the wane and we had a mini-HQ in Colorado from which to depart. We’d seen a decent assortment of places out west over the years; in fact, no state we would see was a stranger to us, but we had never committed consecutive weeks of time to just rambling around the region.

The Itinerary: Our schedule and destinations were predicated on seeing friends and family in a number of cities, and I had the added incentive of spending some active, prolonged time at higher altitudes to prepare for a mountain event I planned to do in Idaho in the middle of the trip. I drove from Houston to the Denver area in late May, spent a week in our little Colorado abode, and trained in the foothills on my own and with a fellow event participant. I loaded up the pup in early June and headed over the Rockies to Salt Lake City and on to Boise, Idaho, where I stopped long enough to pick up my husband at the airport and walk Boise’s mellow, refreshing Greenbelt for an hour or two before setting off once again to make Bend, Oregon by nightfall.
After three days in Bend, we meandered through southern Oregon to Crater Lake National Park and on to Northern California and the Mount Shasta area. San Francisco was next, a city stay that still featured plenty of hiking in Muir Woods and Angel Island, and after the weekend, we pointed the car east to Lake Tahoe. A stunning drive north into Idaho landed us in the Sun Valley/Ketchum area, where we split up – husband and dog to a nice hotel for work and some play, and me to my Bald Mountain hiking challenge and decidedly less cushy lodging (a tent). Four days later, we followed the Salmon River on a jaw-dropping drive through the Sawtooth Mountains to Bozeman, Montana, and a few days after that, we were traversing the Beartooth Highway, northeast and northern Yellowstone National Park, and then western Yellowstone and the Big Sky area. The incredible Tetons were our final stop before returning to Colorado after three glorious weeks.
Friends and Family: A big part of our motivation to stop in the places we did was to see our kids and some old (and new) friends. As a bonus to start my trip, I overlapped for a few days with our daughter and her husband who were visiting Colorado, and I also got to spend some joyous days and evenings watching our one and only granddaughter try to take her first toddling steps with our older son and his wife. In Bend, we reunited with friends with whom we had done volunteer work in Costa Rica and Mexico, and in two minutes, the twelve years since our last get-together disappeared in a rush of old memories and fondness.
A weekend in San Francisco was our first chance to see our younger son’s new life since a job change during Covid took him cross-country with his girlfriend. In the Lake Tahoe area, my fourth-ever blogger meet-up was a big success; Kelly (Compass and Camera) and I had always joked that we must be sisters from other mothers, and I think our dinner together supported that notion! “The Js,” our two husbands, got along great also – always a plus.
My J got together with an old work colleague and friend in Sun Valley, and I must note that in the first two days without me, he managed to fall and skin his arms and legs on both a trail run and a mountain bike ride (and people think I was the crazy one doing the mountain challenge …). In Montana, we had a too-short visit with my dear, best friend from high school, and we arrived back in Colorado just a few days after grandbaby E became a bonafide walker (hiking with Gigi cannot be far behind!). What a fantastic way to add love, friendship, and context to all the new places we went!
Travels with Tashi: We got a new puppy last spring, and I am still not used to the complications he adds to our lives after more than a year, even after being a former dog owner for fifteen years. The two-and-a-half-year gap between dogs must have spoiled me because now I can almost not tolerate having to think about his schedule and all the gear we have to haul around for him, especially in a city hotel where the car is nowhere near the room.
Still, he was a trooper. Like our other pup, Tashi is great in a moving car, on some days chilling in his crate on and off for up to nine hours while we stopped in small towns and pulled off the road for one of my 7 million photos. We introduced him to various cabins, hotel rooms, and strangers’ houses over the weeks on the road, and he was impressively nonplussed. After a few attempts to hike with this energetic little guy, we gave up and left him in our accommodations while we did the longer trails because he is still in the eat-everything stage, and one night of severe illness was enough to dissuade us from trying that again on this trip.
Hikes Galore: Our goal is always to find a hike or two anywhere we go, and this trip produced the goods. In Bend, our friends pointed us to Smith Rock State Park, which exceeded all expectations by a mile (or five). The climbs were a great warm-up for me, afforded stunning views, and wound us through all sorts of rock formations (see “Monkey Face” below) before a steep descent.
Crater Lake offered a series of snowy walks, which we had to let Tashi enjoy with us. Being from Houston, he found the cold, wet stuff to be a captivating novelty, and we were happy to give up some longer walks to see him scampering around the rim of this enormous, deep-blue lake. (Hard to ferret out cigarette butts in the snow anyway.)
Our SF son knows we are not content to just sit around and eat at fun restaurants (which we did both nights), so he took us to Muir Woods to reprise the Dipsea Trail hike we did a few summers ago, and he tacked on a nice, steep descent and climb back up out of a woodsy ravine to end our morning. The next day, he and his girlfriend booked us all a ferry ride to Angel Island, where we biked and hiked the entire island on a crisp, sunny Sunday.

Kelly pointed us to many, many hikes and other sights in the Lake Tahoe area, and we ditched Tashi again to marvel at the scenic east coast of the lake on the Tunnel Creek-Sand Harbor walkway, hike down into the Emerald Bay area, poke around Sugar Pine Point State Park, and take an easy amble through more historic lodges at Tallac Historic Site at the end of one day.


In Sun Valley, I hiked Bald Mountain more times than I ever need to again (fifteen, to be exact), and J got in some solid elevation on Proctor Mountain and then Bald Mountain himself when my event was over. Like a normal person, he summited once, but he did have to get down on his own, which is a knee-buster of a descent.


Bozeman was my cool-down, but we had to get a few little hikes in, trekking up Drinking Horse Mountain trail for a grand view of the Bridger range in the morning and capping the day with a sunset stroll up Peet’s Hill, a local mound that was surprisingly satisfying and enjoyable … and we even let Tashi do this one with us, lucky little guy.

In the big national parks – Yellowstone and Grand Teton – we mostly took abbreviated strolls with the dog, snapping photos at turn-outs and walking short distances from there. We did sneak away for an easy four-miler at Taggart Lake one morning at GTNP, and it was a beauty.



Lakes Galore: I knew we had Crater Lake and its deep cobalt waters on the agenda, but I hadn’t stopped to think about all the magnificent lakes we’d ogle on this trip. Lake Tahoe – Big Blue itself – was a worthy rival for the Oregon national park site, and many smaller lakes on the trip caught our eye as well. From serene and still to deep and powerful, the lakes all reflected and magnified the splendor around them and quickly became a highlight of the trip.






Big Skies and Wide-Open Spaces: The West is dominated by its skies, and we couldn’t get enough of the clouds – from pale, wispy strands to pregnant white poofs to looming gray masses – adrift on the overhead sea. Entire days passed with us seemingly inside an Old Master or impressionistic painting – the vast fields lime and lemon hued, the pines adding a punch of dark green, the peaks a bit of stony punctuation, and the waters a mirror of that gigantic canopy of sky. The expansiveness got under our skin, and we both commented on how hard it would be to go back to city life and its confined spaces.





Geothermal features: Hot springs and geysers have never attracted me much, but the spectrum of colors and ethereal mists at Yellowstone were a worthy addition to my “geo-art” series of photos over the years. I might have snapped more pictures here than anywhere else on the trip, and that’s saying a lot with Crater Lake and Lake Tahoe’s over-the-top photogenic appeal.




The “road” in roadtrips: I love a good non-interstate, and we naturally hit a lot of “blue highways” on this trip and went out of our way to drive others. Highway 75 from Sun Valley to Redfish Lake, Idaho, a twisting ascent up through the Sawtooths and over Galena Pass, was one such treat (secondarily because we had absolutely no cell service for hours, so there was no temptation to be distracted), and it was followed by an equally-isolated drive that followed the Salmon River for many miles and hours. We drove two hours out of our way from Bozeman, Montana, one morning in order to start our Yellowstone trip from its northeast entrance. After that eastern swing landed us in Red Lodge, we hooked back west to drive the entire length of the Beartooth Highway (US Route 12) from there to Cooke City/Silver Gate and into the national park.



In Summary: The trip brought home our desire to live at least part of the year amid mountains, streams, woods, and open skies. We have taken a baby step in that direction with a small apartment in Colorado, and only time will tell if that is enough … or too much? … with our kids spread from coast to coast, and ongoing jobs and life changes for family members in all four of our time zones. Meanwhile, we have the memories of this brilliant road trip, which I would have been happy to continue for at least a few more weeks. Responsibilities lured us back to our humid home, but we’ve already agreed a western journey will be a permanent fixture on our summer docket.

There’s just too much beauty here to comment on the photos individually. Suffice it to say I’m dying of envy, and I’m happy beyond words that you managed such a wonderful trip. If I had the resources, this is exactly the sort of thing I’d love to do — but with luck I may finally manage a trip to Kerrville this month!
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Any road trip is a good road trip! You could do worse than Texas’s Hill Country. We had been dying to just zig-zag around out West, and having two kids and a few friends that direction made this a perfect way and place to venture into a real trip again after the last year+.
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Ooo, Lexi is back! Thank you for showing us your world and all these beauties. You do wild so well. I hope you can continue your wanderings soon. Greetings to you and Tashi from Tuscany so hot that we cannot do anything at all.
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Ooo, for at least a “minute!” Maybe the resumption of travel, finally breaking the spell of posting again, and finishing my novel (yay) will result in more posts going forward. I have heard about your heat (and the drastic heat right where we just were) these last few weeks; hope it starts to drop soon!
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Noooveelll!!! Can’t wait!!
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You are so sweet! Still needs plenty of editing (just heard back from one beta reader), but it’s feeling like a real thing now!
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So fun to read this and be a part of your journey! You pictures are fabulous! Your hikes incredible. I,however, would be Tashi in human form! Thought of you many times with your Bald Mountain challenge. Congratulations 🎊🎈 you are a warrior!
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First of all, you and the fam and your incredible hospitality were the perfect start to our trip! I think the hike you recommended might have been the fave of the whole three weeks. Now, as for your Tashi comment … I am trying to imagine you eating wood chips and cigarette butts off the ground, annoying me with your load of equipment, or making us stop so you could do your business on the side of the road … nahhh, you are MUCH easier than Tashi!
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What a wonderful, action-packed three weeks with such incredible beauty. Congrats on your Bald Mountain achievement. You are a machine! Is this the same event that I recall from a few years back?
I have only “skimmed” parts of this region and your post is making me want to see more. Smith Rock State Park looks like it’s out of a fantasy movie. Before I even got to your section on the skies, I was drooling over your photos of the big skies and gorgeous cloud formations. Never been to Lake Tahoe—colour is stunning.
How were the crowds in Yellowstone? Has the decrease in international visitors slowed things down or is domestic travel way up? (it sure is here…our parks are packed)
Nice that you have a little abode in Colorado to get into the mountains and that you got to visit with friends and family. I can’t believe your granddaughter is walking…sure goes by quickly.
Good to “see” you again Lexie!
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Thanks for your wonderful comment, Caroline! We had mostly skimmed this whole region before, too, and even though it seems like only slightly deeper skimming this time, we really did settle into most places for at least a few days and felt we gave at least the big parks their due. The only part of Yellowstone that was super crowded was the western part with Old Faithful and some of the geothermal stuff. Old Faithful was unpleasant as a result, and I am ashamed to say that we waited for only about half the time necessary to witness the spouting and ditched the parking lot in time to avoid the mass exodus that occurs after each eruption. Otherwise, Yellowstone and Grand Teton felt very open and accessible, and we had very few waits at any gates or viewpoints. (Maybe June was still kind of early?)
Next summer we want to range even farther north into your neck of the woods and east into the Canadian Rockies. Yes, this was the same mountain hiking event, but it was killer hard this year (much steeper and full of loose rocks – ugh), and I think I will have no need to repeat it again!
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Hopefully you can have another blogger meet-up when you’re in my neck of the woods next summer!
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That will be a goal! 🙂
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The title says it all: the glory of being on the road again 💖 I’m commenting from a 4-day trip we took to a beach 3h from home, and the beach is nice but of course after several weeks of sun, we got here just in time for thunderstorms and dark skies 🙄 The talk of the day ia bugs, they are bugging everyone, and the forests in your photos get me wondering if they are a nuisance there too? Mainly talking about flying insects but ticks too, and I got stung several times by a tiny and unrecognizable caterpillar…
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We did not find any of the forests particularly buggy this year. Sometimes they are horrible (especially the piney woods here in Texas), but we enjoyed almost all crisp, warm but not hot, sunny days on this trip. We were very lucky; a week or so after our return, the Pacific NW became an oven. We actually saw an unusually large amount of snow at Crater Lake, and Oregon overall was quite chilly. For once, my vacation weather was pretty darn good for most of the trip!
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What a success, I’m happy the weather gods were with you 😌
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I will try to send them your direction!
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Please do!
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Oh my goodness, what an amazing trip! I can’t believe how much beauty you saw. And yay for visiting Bozeman, that’s where I grew up 😊 Truly stunning photos, I enjoyed them all but I think Crater Lake with snow might be my favorites.
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Crater Lake with that snow against the deep, deep blue water was incredible and very unexpected. We loved it! How lucky you are to have grown up in charming Bozeman! If your family is still there (or even if not), I’d be curious to know what they and you think of all the changes, with the LA and other folks buying up real estate and the town becoming more crowded with visitors? It seems to be the classic conundrum of being very appealing and therefore drawing outsiders who then proceed to alter the original vibe. To me, it was still amazing, but even our Colorado-based son who loves Bozeman has been lamenting some of the changes.
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Oh we feel the same. My mom still lives there but is planning to move away in a few years when she retires. I go back to visit about once a year and every time it’s just so different. It’s growing so fast and as you said, so many people are moving there because they love the small town charm but they’re bringing their big city attitudes with them and ruining it. Not to mention all the rich out-of-staters moving in have caused home prices to skyrocket to the point that it’s comparable to big city prices. I couldn’t afford to move back if I wanted to. It’s my hometown and it will always be my hometown but it’s just never again going to be like it was.
(And of course I know all the Colorado natives say the same thing about people like me who move to Denver and contribute to the rapidly growing population here as well)
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Whoa!! What an awesome trip! Great photos and memories for sure. Can’t wait to hear more about it in person. Your map looks like a crazy 8 – lol. Glad to hear Tashi is maturing and also giggling a little bit about J’s skinned knees. Hope you got him some fun band-aids. lol. Also happy you finished your event – you worked your tail off for that!
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Can’t wait to tell you more about it! It was so great! I did take a pic of your house in Bend, but it wasn’t a stellar shot. Every stop on the trip was perfect in its own way, and we got super lucky with weather overall (even though Bend was gray and chilly) and all of our accommodations. I seriously could have kept rambling for another month, but J gets antsy (and of course we actually have a “real” life – haha)!
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As long at there didn’t look like a methlab inside, that is good! Thanks for trying! Who actually wants to live in the ‘real world’ anyway? lol
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P.S the photos are fantastic. especially the Crater Lake shots. oh my!!
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Maybe the kids’ shoes on the front porch were a decoy?
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Dead giveaway 😂
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What an epic adventure. Thanks for sharing it.
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Thanks for reading, Peggy. Happy to finally have something fun to share!
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Actually last night when I was looking up some old posts from my favorite bloggers I realized that your last one was from nine months ago. I was wondering when we’d hear again from you. That’s why I was really excited when I found out this morning that you did post a new story! I don’t know where to begin, but I just want to say that those are some seriously beautiful shots you took (I can’t pick a favorite — there are too many of them!). I love how gorgeous the weather was most of the time when you were exploring this western part of the U.S. And you got to meet Kelly! When she and J were still living in Singapore, I was hoping that our paths would cross somewhere in the region. I still keep that hope, though, even though now they live halfway across the globe from Jakarta. I hope you and your loved ones remain healthy and safe. Take care!
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I know I’ve been so pitiful on the blogging front! It’s nice to know that you noticed my absence and were happy to see a new post. During much of the Covid period, I spent most of my writing energy on a novel I had been struggling to finish for some time. I’m happy to say that I did finish it right before our road trip, and my beta readers have been reading and are assembling feedback for me right now!
It was fantastic to meet Kelly and J, and we hope to connect with them again sometime! You would love them, and they you, and I know I would be thrilled to meet you (and James) in Indonesia one of these days also! Sending the same hopes back for your health and safety!
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Lex, it’s so good to see you “back”! I’m totally amazed by your shots and descriptions of the American West. It is the complete opposite of my current experience living in a hot and humid (and Covid-wracked) city of 10 million people. What struck me most were the photos of Lake Tahoe – with the dazzling color of the water, the pines and wildflowers, and those beautiful rocky shorelines, the scene looks practically Mediterranean! And I was really not expecting Crater Lake to be still so snowy in June.
This sounds like such a perfect post-Covid trip. And the weather was on your side! I think the omission of detail from Bald Mountain tells us just how difficult it was – but you clearly had your fill of glorious hikes and jaw-dropping scenery elsewhere, and precious time with family and friends. I’m thrilled you finally got to meet Kelly; it is so nice to actually connect with like-minded bloggers in person. Spending a few days with Madhu from The Urge to Wander and her husband R was the ultimate highlight of our month in India.
And Tashi is adorable by the way. He might be a handful now, but he sure sounds a lot more manageable than Tasha, my family’s excitable black lab. She’s already six but still acts like a puppy! My dad occasionally takes her on long walks in Hong Kong’s country parks (or by the seaside) and she has this habit of slurping up water meant for other dogs.
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Thank you, James! It’s nice to be back and hearing from all my blogging friends today! Believe me, the difference between the western U.S. and Houston is almost as stark as what you note between our West and Jakarta. We have returned home to daily rain, outrageous levels of humidity and mosquitoes, and the noise and closeness of a big city. Take me back!
We felt the same about Lake Tahoe; we thought we could be in coastal Italy with all the clear, mixed-blue water and the vegetation! And Crater Lake adorned in that late-season snow was a huge surprise and a treasure to behold. My mountain hiking event was so difficult this year, but I am terribly stubborn and tenacious, so I did finish it … barely. I ended up removing my other post a while ago about the first time I did it because it just didn’t fit my blog’s purpose, which is relating my travels, and it sounded cocky to me somehow. You are kind to ask, though, and I am very pleased with what I did … and will never do again! 🙂
Kelly and J were great! My few meetings with other bloggers have all been very positive, and I look forward to more … like you and Bama! I loved hearing about Tasha (such similar names!) and her mischievousness. Our Tashi is already so much better than he was, but I think I will find him a nice place to stay next time we take a long-ish trip!
Finally, I’m sorry to hear your city is still Covid-wracked. What is the news on vaccinations there? Close to happening, I hope. It has made a huge difference here, obviously.
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Thankfully vaccinations are accelerating here in Jakarta – everyone aged 12 and above can finally get their shots. Bama had his first dose last week and I had my second on Tuesday.
Sadly, the Covid situation here is the worst it’s ever been; the Delta variant is running rampant and all indications are pointing to a repeat of what happened in India a few months ago. Every day we hear about more and more people we know (both in Jakarta and Bama’s hometown) getting hospitalized. What I find most worrying of all is that people in their 20s and 30s are falling severely ill and dying too.
We’re doing all we can to limit social interactions and hunker down at home – this wave might not peak until early August so the weeks ahead are going to be quite difficult. We’d originally planned to take a few days off to go hiking in the mountains but that will have to wait till sometime in October. In hindsight, we were so, so lucky to have visited Bama’s mom a month ago before everything went pear-shaped.
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Such a perfect combination, to see family, and friends, while enjoying the nature. Congrats on your achievement, a wonderful post-Covid (hopefully) treat for yourself😊
I love all your photos, but the mountains are fantastic!
xx
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So right, Christie – the joy was in all those things combined to make the perfect, long post-Covid trip a very special one. I’m a huge mountain fan myself, and the Tetons in particular were awe-inspiring!
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America’s west really has so much to offer! You are so lucky to have seen so much of it! Just glorious!
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Thanks, Anna – it almost seems impossible to have the vast range of geographies we have here in the U.S.! Lucky for us to be able to see very different scenery without leaving the country, especially these days.
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That is an epic road trip. And collection of hikes! I’ve become a hiking addict, too, but no mountains in my area. I miss the elevation and that distinct aroma. One good thing about the events of the past year or so is that it brought our backyard to our attention. There really are endless places to discover here. Congratulations on finishing your novel! Are you going to post about your hiking event?
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I was so eager to really hit the road for an extended period of time. (Ideally, even more extended but that will have to wait!) Like you, we have zero elevation here, and it was great to feel the thinner, crisper air in our noses for a change.
I mentioned to another reader that I took away public access to my first hiking event post and am unlikely to further describe the new one here; it just felt kind of self-congratulatory to me and antithetical to the point of my blog. It was extremely tough on me this time, and the fact that I finished did make me feel good, but ultimately, it was to prove something to myself and not to anyone else and definitely not for any kind of adulation. (Not that I would get that or even necessarily seem to be seeking it, but … I don’t know! … I just wanted to acknowledge for my own future reading and reminiscing that it was part of the trip but not integral to the public story. Probably overthinking things, as usual!)
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Your photos are stunning and bring back memories of my own adventures in these places. It was especially thrilling to see your captures of Crater Lake since I’d been there in the summer a bit ago. How the snow must have enhanced that always superb blue for you!
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The snow was such an awesome surprise, and now I can’t imagine Crater Lake without all that white to set off the blue.
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Beautiful photos, stunning scenery, so glad you have managed such a trip as we head out of Covid restrictions. We also have a post covid trip planned, fingers crossed nothing happens to stop us 🤞
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I will keep my fingers crossed for you! It was so great to be out and about again, and we felt very “normal” doing it. We are also happy we chose a driving trip with the added ease of packing and getting from place to place. Hope you have a great trip also!
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Absolutely magnificent photos that I’ve been giggling over and seeing how much we missed on our trip out West ha!! I am marveling at how complex it must have been to plan all of this with all the different friends, family, lodgings etc etc. Bravo! You sure covered s lot of ground. Great post and clearly wonderful trip. The lady two weeks of ours we were in chicago and much as I love being there with my kids, it was hard being in the city after being outdoors in places like Mt Shasta and Southern Oregon.
Peta
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Hi Peta! It did take a lot of time to plan this trip! It was so worth it, though, and everything worked out really well. We even had the weather on our side after Oregon – not too hot like it is now, and not too cold or rainy. We were worried about finding crowds at some of the more popular places, but we hit most of them (Tahoe, Yellowstone, and Tetons) mid-week and, amazingly, never saw massive hordes of people (except at Old Faithful in Yellowstone, which we ditched after about an hour anyway). I’m glad you could get to Chicago even tough it’s not the wild outdoors – always great to see the kids! (And your son’s urban farm gives the illusion of being somewhere more natural!)
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wow! Amazing shots and what a great trip! So great that you can enjoy some freedom!
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Hey, Andy – thanks for reading! We are very lucky to be able to move around a bit more now, and I hope your time is coming soon.
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This sounds absolutely amazing Lexie. I am jealous! Gorgeous photos of gorgeous scenery – I understand why you’d want to spend time in this part of your country. I also understand your chafing a little at the responsibilities and logistics of travelling with Tashi, but he sure is cute. How fabulous that you finally got to meet Kelly and J. Again jealous, even though we had a few dates with them over the years in Van. One day you and I will meet to complete the circle! Even better all 3 of us at once!
Alison xo
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Tashi’s cuteness has saved him many a time! 🙂
It would be so awesome to meet up with Kelly and you in tandem – two of the most intrepid and adventuresome bloggers I know – and exchange all sorts of stories! We two couples talked so much at the beginning that we kept delaying our dinner order and finally had to muzzle ourselves in order to eat.
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What a trip, Lex! I am in awe of the different mountain scenes – not to mention those glorious big skies and clouds. I would not be able to stop taking pictures. A good writer friend of mine, who I’ve interestingly enough never met in person, lives in Bend. How lovely that Tashi is a great traveller and could accompany you on the trip. It must have felt so good to be on the road again.
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I was not able to stop taking pictures either … which makes it harder to cull once I get home! Digital photography is great, but it does encourage excessive snapping, and when the scenery is as beautiful as it was out west, it’s hard to restrain oneself!
Bend was a very interesting place, and I’d like to go back and spend more time. I have a friend who is moving there in about a year, so that will be my excuse to revisit.
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I once did a 10 day hike, where I decided not to carry a camera. The experience was so different from being distracted by trying to capture the perfect shot, and although some of my companions shared their photographs and I have visual reference of the hike, I never look at them. That was before my blogging days, which is now my excuse. I’m not sure I will be able to do that again, as I now have this weird urge to document everything, YET I do not regret the choice I made at the time.
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I totally understand. Sometimes it’s great to just let your eyes see and remember!
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Yoohoo! Absolutely great trip, Lexi, through so many places where Peggy and I have spent time and consider home! Crater Lake almost is, being two hours away… And you got to meet Kelly, another favorite blogging friend of mine. Fun photos. And lots of fun memories. –Curt
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What a gorgeous area, Curt! (I knew you were from Oregon, but I didn’t know where.) I had really only ever been in the Portland area before this, and now I want to go back and see even more of the state. It was awesome to meet Kelly!
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Well, if you come back this way, let me know, Lexi. It would be fun to meet you. 🙂 The mountains to the west of Lake Tahoe, BTW, were where I started my life of backpacking ever so long ago. –Curt
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Lexie I have been enjoying following your trip on Instagram. 15 times up and down? Seriously girl you are either a superhero or completely mad. I’ll get you a cape. congrats on making the move to get the apartment in Colorado. I can imagine it is challenging with your kids spread across the country. How fabulous that you got to see your grandbaby’s first steps. So precious.
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Sue, that mountain climb was a BEAR! I had done a similar event two summers ago and a flatland equivalent during Covid, but this one nearly did me in. I am certainly no superhero; with proper training, it is doable by anyone who is stubborn as hell! (Hence, …)
The trip was such a beautiful escape on both sides of that event, and starting and ending it in our new temporary home was a huge plus, especially with our sweet little toddler there!
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Incredible photos as always, Lexie. What an amazing road trip! You sum up so well why we adore the west. Spending part of the year in Colorado and its surroundings sounds like bliss. I’d say that apartment is more than a baby step to reach those big skies, rushing rivers, and gorgeous mountains more often.
I’m glad to finally “meet” Tashi! I don’t think you ever introduced your pup properly – with photos and descriptions – before on the blog. Or, I must have missed it. Travels with dogs are much more challenging than without. We had a nine-year break between our last dog, Darwin, and Maya. The extra freedom spoiled us and it was difficult to adjust to a 24/7 life with a separation anxiety-prone dog!
How did the Bald Mountain hiking challenge go? Or will you write a separate post about that?
I’m definitely thrilled for you to have been able to hit the road again and get in a lot of hiking. That scene of Crater Lake with snow is so very different from our summer view there.
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Thanks, Liesbet! I actually thought about you when I decided to post a photo of Tashi because I knew you wanted to “meet” him! I can’t imagine going nine years between dogs for various reasons, but the main one might be getting used to running your own life and then suddenly going back to having to think about another creature. (Especially a clingy one like Maya!)
The hiking challenge was extremely tough, much worse than before, due to a steeper slope, a devilish section with loose rocks that I feared on every lap, no shade and high temperatures during the day, and cold during the night. I have had more than one nightmare about it! I don’t think I will detail the difficulties or my fight to overcome them here on the blog. I am pleased to have finished it but feel it was such a personal battle of will that trying to share it is both futile and unnecessary. Thanks for asking about it, though!
Can you believe those views of Crater Lake are actually in the summer?! As we were driving up on a snowy road, I thought my usual (terrible) weather luck had come to bite me, but once at the lake, I felt so lucky to see all that blue contrasted with the white!
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Wow, Lex. What a road trip and quite a number of places you visited this summer. Thank you for taking us along for the ride. It felt like I was traveling right there with you through your photos and words. So agree that friends and family is always a good reason to stop in a place. It’s always good catching up and feeling together again, and they can always suggest things to do in the area if you run out of ideas.
Tashi looks adorable! So lovely he adapted along to the trip though he got a bit sick that night. Maybe on future trips he will be a bit older and more conditioned for longer hikes. Crater Lake looks absolutely stunning – that deep cobalt water looks out of this world and in the summer too. I’d have thought there would be less white around. Wonderful postcard picture capture.
I’ve always wanted to visit Yellowstone to see the hot springs, and lovely to see it through your lens. That is great you have decided to take scenic and quiet road trips in the summer. Hopefully settling down out there pans out well in the future. Life is so uncertain right now, but trips like these remind us what is possible. Hope you are doing well, Lex 🙂
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Hello, Mabel! Hope you are doing OK; I know your lockdown rules there have been so difficult. I seem to have hit a sweet spot with our road trip earlier this summer. Now, many states are experiencing bad upticks in the Delta variant of Covid, and much of the easy spontaneity of this road trip might not be as possible today. Not to mention the terrible wildfires we have raging in the west right now. We humans sure know how to mess things up!
Still, it was a wonderful time for those three weeks. I’m glad I could share some of Yellowstone with you as well as post some out-of-the-ordinary photos of Crater Lake all white and snowy in early summer! We are now back in Colorado again to escape the Houston heat, and Tashi is enjoying the sunny days and cool nights (even when we have a string of days with smoky skies and can’t take him out much). Take care, and I hope you can get an escape of your own pretty soon!
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We are dong okay here in lockdown, Lex. Very thankful for what we’ve got and hopefully we will be able to roam out and about in the summer. Hopefully things get better over there and you can get on the road again. In the meantime you can look back on your photos and memories from your recent adventures – which really sounded so fun and relaxing. Take care too 🙂
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How the heck did I miss this? I’ve popped back here a couple of times but didn’t look further than the Header. Duh!!! What a sensational trip, Lexie! I was goggling at all those peaks and lakes. Just stunning! The freedom is indescribable. And you got to see the kids. Whooppee doop!
Makes my latest offering a bit limp, hon, but I’m still smiling at you. England was much less blue but the hugs were special. I’ll leave a link as I don’t know if you’ll find me on the new site.
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Thank you, Jo! I’m looking at the date of this post and realizing I have gone back to my lazy ways, allowing any travel I have done to just rest in my own heart and mind as I finished up my book (which has since sat unattended) and spent nearly every waking hour planning our daughter’s wedding! As a result, I have missed many friends’ posts, and yours is one. I will check it out!
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Sounds to me like an excellent excuse, Lexie! When is the happy day? 🤗💕
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October 2!
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Wow! Excitement 🤗💕 Our son is planning to get married out here but first they need to buy a house and that’s not going well.
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Tough time to be looking for a house (or a car! or anything, it seems …!)
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🙄💕
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Sounds like the mother of all road-trips Lex…ten Ladakhs rolled into one minus the monasteries and a whole lot bluer! Your photos do the magnificent scenery full justice. The striking blue of Lake Tahoe and the icy hues of Crater Lake are standouts for me. That you even managed to participate in the mountain event, let alone finish it, is an inspiration. I can imagine the amount of planning that went into getting all the logistics right. And catching up with family and friends seems like icing on the cake. Fabulous, fabulous post. Thank you for the virtual ride Lex.
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It might have been up there with the longest road trips I have done in one fell swoop! It was so magnificent in every way, and I’m glad you enjoyed the photographic results. In my opinion, it’s still no Ladakh (haha), but having such varied splendor right here at home has been a real consolation during all the cancelled overseas trips of these Covid times. I am eyeing next summer for an Asian or Central Asian hike … we shall see!
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I popped in to see if there might be a wedding photo or two, and was entranced all over again by your fabulous scenery. Good times!
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I have toyed with the idea of posting something about the wedding as it was a huge part of our last few months (the planning, the emotional impact, etc.), but as you know, I am usually reluctant to make public any photos of my family. If I were ever going to do it, it might have to be my beautiful daughter as a bride!
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I don’t know how I missed this post. What amazing pictures. You certainly covered a lot of ground with this post! Maggie
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I’m kind of laughing at how I crammed all of that into one post, as opposed to your thoughtful and detailed coverage of your own long road trip across Canada! Speaking of which, I am enjoying ALL of your posts in that series although my general life busyness lately has prevented me from commenting on every one.
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Good to see you’re back on the road Lexie. Your itinerary looks like great fun, and I’m envious of wandering through all those wonderful western landscapes. We’ve kitted out a tiny camper van. and have also been roaming around the past year of so.
We really miss international travel, but have decided that nowhere is really worth the hassles and uncertainties until things get a bit more stable. Who knows when that will be, but in the meantime, like you, we’re re-visiting some old favorites and digging deeper into new unexplored places. Take care and all the best for a happy, healthy, and travel-filled 2022. ~James
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I’d love to see that little camper van! (Maybe you have posted about it … I have been pretty much away from the blogging world for months.) Happy New Year to you two!
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Lexie, as soon as we get our act together it will probably so up on the blog. Watch this space.
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