Butter Fingers and a Broken Leg


So, for the past four weeks I have been laid up with a broken leg and have not been able to go exploring in the great outdoors.  It has been very depressing and the thought that there is still a long road ahead of me before I am walking again, and able to participate in the outdoor activities that I love, is also depressing.

What happened was I found this horse of unknown history and offered to ride him.  He was very gentle the first time I rode him, too gentle in fact, so gentle that the second time I rode him, I wore spurs to get a little more action out of him.  I had a great ride!  Until the end, when I was cooling him out, and just walking him alongside the mare he lives with, when he started bucking and I was not prepared for it at all.  I am not sure what I was doing with my hands, but I did not have a grip on anything and was losing my balance, kind of halfway off the saddle, and I decided to just roll with it and come on off.  Except something bad happened on the way down – got caught up in the strirrups or something.  When I landed, my ankle was at a funny angle, and when I pulled my boot off to look, my bone was poking out of my leg.

So a surgery, a metal plate, five days in the hospital, and one poorly healing wound later, here I am, facing another couple of months without walking, driving, or playing around outside.

This should have given me lots of time to catch up on this blog, but I have been working from home, and wallowing in lots of television and book reading.

At any rate, we haven’t had any exciting outdoor adventures over the fall worth taking pictures of.  The kids kept us busy with sports and scouts.  We went geocaching, of course, but not really in locations that yielded themselves to interesting stories or posts.

Plus, I really did want to share the stories of our road trip this summer still. There were classic moments I wanted to preserve before the memories fade.  So, continuing on in that vein, here is a story about where we went when we left Seattle, and how my butter fingers tainted a wonderful memory.

I had made reservations for this awesome cabin in Greenwater, WA.  This is a tiny little hamlet a few miles from the Sunrise area of Mt Ranier National Park – the northeastern edge of the park.  The cabin was totally gorgeous, a really great place to stay.

When we got there, we had been driving all day. This was still the day that we had left a cabin in Olympic National Park, gone to several locations within that park for photo ops and exploring, barely made the ferry to Seattle, visited Groundspeak Headquarters, went caching at parks in Seattle, explored Pike Market, and then drove for another few hours to find this cabin, so I was pretty worn out and probably should NOT have handled the SupraKey device that our cabin key was stored in. But, I did, and when I entered the code, the lock box cover fell off the box and landed on the ground…breaking one of the keys with it. And then it didn’t work after that.
For some reason I was too tired to understand that J was telling me it no longer worked, so when we were leaving, I couldn’t figure out why I couldn’t close it back up.
We ended up having to call the cabin owners to explain the situation, and even then there was some weirdness with this local girl they sent over to assess the situation and give them a report on what happened, it was all very awkward and the anxiety over the whole incident cast a dark cloud on the two nights we spent at this cabin.
We’ll probably be laughing about it years from now, but for now the other little moments of our stay there slip from my mind like the key pad slipping from my hand, one of those shameful little moments brought to you by butterfingers.
We did enjoy a great salad made of ingredients we bought at the Pike Market, so there is that. We also had a great experience hiking in Hyak the next day, followed by the best hamburgers of the whole trip at nearby Naches Tavern. Our experiences driving through Mt Rainier Park afterwards will always be that to cling to, I guess.
We laughingly referred to this next section of the trip, or least several of the stops, as the “Million Faces of Mt Rainier”, so I should mention that the face in the top picture is the view from the Black Diamond area, between Enumclaw and Greenwater, on our way to the cabin. We had to stop at a side road to capture this view. More on these faces to come…but the fact that I have this memory, at least, these moments from the trip this summer to think about gives me comfort as I lie here in my convalescence.

Inside the Beehive

Inside Groundspeak Headquarters, Seattle Washington.  

There’s a really big cache in there to claim a smiley on, and earn the special icon.  The amount of trackables this thing held was amazing.  These pictures are from back in June 2012.  As of this writing in November, this cache has had 18, 391 trackables pass through it in the eight years it has been active.  There is 241 logged into it right now. This was one of the main stops in the journey for us.  We now had completed the GeoTriad -finding the Original Stash, this, and the APE cache in Washington (both had found the latter years back), so we purchased special GeoTriad coins from the front desk to commemorate.

Jason felt like after this whole journey we had completed to get here, the actual destination was a little anti-climatic.  But…isn’t that how it works?

I am not sure what he was expecting, maybe a little bit more like a tour of the offices – but we didn’t arrive on a Friday, the day they cater to guests a little bit more.   We only had this one day – I think it was a Monday.

While we were in the area, we also could not pass up the chance to find some of the top rates caches nearby – Totally Tubular II and III.  Then we went to visit Pike’s Market – pictures forthcoming.

You and Me Together, Yeah (Seattle version)

“You and Me”
Dave Matthews Band

Want to pack your bags something small
Take what you need and we disappear
Without a trace we’ll be gone, gone
Moon and the stars will follow the car
And then when we get to the ocean
Gonna take a boat to the end of the world
All the way to the end of the world

Oh and when the kids are old enough, we’re gonna teach them to fly

You and me together
We could do anything baby
You and me together yes, yes
You and me together
We could do anything baby
You and me together yes yes

You and I were not tied to the ground
Not falling but rising like rolling around
Eyes closed above the rooftops
Eyes closed we’re gonna spin through the stars
Our arms wide as the sky, we’re gonna ride the blue
All the way to the end of the world
To the end of the world

Oh and when the kids are old enough, we’re gonna teach them to fly

CHORUS

We can always look back at what we did
Always remembering how you and me did
Right now it’s you and me forever girl
And you know, we could do better than
Anything that we did
You know that you and me
We could do anything

You and me together
We could do anything, baby
You and me together yeah, yeah
Two of us together, we could do anything baby
You and me together yeah, yeah
Two of us together yeah, yeah
Two of us together, we could do anything baby

It’s so small
Till we reach the end of the world

(or at least Seattle)

This is the song that was in my head during our ferry ride from the Port Angeles area to downtown Seattle.  It wasn’t the end of the world, but it sure felt like it.  Surreal, romantic, dreary and yet dreamy.  We sat at benches and looked at the wet and heavy sky and sampled clam chowder and chili with crackers and warmed our feet before our journey continued, leaving behind the wonders of the mountains and beaches for the cosmopolitan journey that preceded yet another mountain adventure.  Oh, Washington, how lovely your coastlines appear just before they slip away for the prospect of your other bountiful offerings.

Crescent Lake


In between the Salmon Cascades near Sul Doc and the Hurricane Ridge viewpoint, we stopped here to complete the requirement for a virtual geocache.
This place reminded me of Bear Lake, in Rocky Mountain National Park. I think it was the way the mountains cupped the lake between them. I have a picture from my younger days of a day at Bear Lake and it looks almost just like this photo.
There are a number of trails surrounding this lake, with one of them leading to “The Devil’s Punch Bowl”, a popular swimming and diving hole. Lake Crescent Lodge nearby offers accommodations to overnight guests that are an ideal base of operations for exploring nearby areas, including Mount Storm King.
What is interesting about this lake, I think, is that its depth has proved hard to measure. I think to this day, no one really knows how deep it is. Originally, it’s depth was recorded as 624 feet by the National Park Service, because that is how far equipment could measure in 1964. However, later in this century, as they tried laying power cable in the lake, the depth was recorded as 1000 feet…because again, that is how far the equipment of the time could measure. It is officially the second deepest lake in Washington, even though the actual depth still remains a mystery.

Hiking link for Mount Storm King:
http://www.wta.org/go-hiking/hikes/mount-storm-king