27 September 2015

Steve the earthworm and the WA state fair

What is it about the name Steve? There's "Steve was delicious" from the Snickers Squared commercial...probably my favorite commerical EVER...and now I introduce "Steve the earthworm".  Thank you WA State Fair arts show:

We met friends at the WA State fair and it was pretty darn fun.  They have a two-year old daughter, who really just wanted to run around and play with the bark around the trees. But as a diversion from that we did go see the draft horse show, which was really cool. And blurry, apparently. I only had my cell phone for pictures, sorry.

 Even the goats in Washington are Seahawks fans....
And there was also the worlds cutest baby Scottish highland cow, er, calf.  He was born Sept 2, and you can't tell from this photo but he has the most adorable little face. I was very tempted to calfnap him and take him home.

20 September 2015

We did it!

Yesterday Steve and I, three friends from Juneau, and two of my new coworkers (and 5 of their extended family) participated in the Seattle Tough Mudder. It was 10.1 miles, 20 obstacles, and lots of dirty. So, so much dirt, everywhere. It was really fund, and yes, also really tough.

There will be official course photos coming out later, but for now we have one from before the race (the clean pic) and a couple from after. It was the perfect weather for the day - about 70 for a high, 53 at race start, overcast but no rain.

My favorite obstacle (and everyone else's least favorite) was called Arctic Enema. You climb up to a platform then slide down a shoot into ice water (with a slurry of ice cubes in it) where you have to go under to get out of the shoot, then have to wade a couple feet though chest deep ice water, climb over a wall, then wade again to a ladder at the far side. It was incredibly cold. But I mostly felt bad for the lifeguard standing on the side, wet because she'd obviously been in at one point or more, and shivering because she couldn't keep going on the course to warm up. In my opinion, it wasn't as bad as the polar plunge we did in Juneau, and it was a nice chance to get some of the mud rinsed off for a bit and cool down (way down) from being warm from exertion.

At another obstacle we had to first walk, then crawl through a long muddy field. You had to crawl because the mud was too soft and loose to support a full body weight on feet, and there was a guy who'd gotten stuck (scary stuck) to ~mid-thigh when we were there and had a crew of about 6 people around him working to get him out. As we were headed up the hill away from the obstacle we heard the cheer signaling that they'd gotten him free finally.

Will I do it again? Probably, but not for at least another year! I need to recover from my nasty bruises and cuts first.


What the heck? I look like I've been eating dirt then drooling!  Oh, wait....I pretty much was doing just that...

13 September 2015

Olympic Peninsula explorations

This weekend we were camping in Olympic National Park. Steve wanted to go to the Wooden Boat Festival in Port Townsend, so we found a campground nearby (ish - it was about an hour) and camped Friday-Saturday nights.  Saturday morning we drove up the Hurricane Ridge Road before heading into the festival. We did a short hike, and saw three blue grouse (or maybe ptarmigan?) that were completely unafraid of us.
The other day, I asked a coworker when it would there would start to be snow on the Olympic mountains again, because we can see them from our offices...and he said there's usually snow visible year round! Not this year, yikes. They're pretty dry.  We did see a few places with lingering glaciers, but otherwise, it's all gone. I think it would be pretty here when the wildflowers are blooming.  This is near the top of the road:
The wooden boat festival was Steve's dream come true. I had fun too, but not as much as him. There were demos, lots of boats you could tour, classes, vendors, food stalls, and boat rides too. Many of the wood boats were small kayaks and small sailboats. This one (below) was absolutely gorgeous.
 The marina was full of boats though! And Port Townsend is a great town with lots of history.
After the festival we went back to the campsite for dinner and a campfire.  Then Sunday morning we got up and headed home. But we went home the long way, around the rest of the Olympic Peninsula. We stopped an hiked at Hoh rainforest, where there were trees covered with lush mosses and ferns. We want to come back here and go backpacking.


 This one is a maple tree covered in mosses.

When a giant douglas fir dies, it leaves a big hole in the tree canopy and a huge trunk on the ground! This one was more than 190 feet tall!
We also stopped at Ruby beach for a walk. It's early for winter storm season, but the wind was blowing pretty hard today.

These rocks were under a cliff face, and the rusty colored ones were being stained by the water dripping down. 

05 September 2015

Snow already!

There's fresh snow on Mt. Rainier!!  I suspect this is not unusual timing for snow, but we were startled to see it when we drove up to the Sunrise visitor center portion of the park. We've been up to the Paradise section of the park before, but this is our first time to the Sunrise section. It is a beautiful area. We got up this morning and drove to Packwood, a small town just south of Rainier that hosts a HUGE flea market on Memorial day and Labor day weekends. There's a few things we're still looking for for the house (like a nightstand for my side of the bed) and thought it would be a good place to find one...but it wasn't. So after strolling around for a couple of hours we headed up to Rainier.  It was so cloudy on parts of the drive up to the park that sometimes we couldn't see 20 feet in front of the truck, so we were worried we'd get to the top and and see absolutely nothing. But, we popped out of the clouds on the northeast side of the park and the views were spectacular.

On the map, this lake looks like an easy 1.5 mile stroll...but in person, it's a steep hike! We weren't prepared to do it today, but we will next time!  It was super cold and just enough breeze out to make your teeth chatter when walking around, even though we were wearing pants and a couple of layers on top.

 The view at the top - the Sunrise Visitor Center and Day Lodge (Day lodge in the center, visitor center is at our backs).  Brrrr!


03 September 2015

A bit behind

Ok, it's been a while since I've posted. I was at a fisheries conference in Portland the week before last, and I came home sick...probably from lack of sleep and being around 4000 other people for the week. It was a very fun and interesting conference though, and HOT in Portland. It was in the mid-90s most of the week!

The CSA veggies are still coming in, but I haven't gotten pictures of them lately. We have started trading out the zucchini for other things that people don't want, like cucumbers, onions, and chard.  I like wilted swiss chard on pizza!

In other news...we're officially getting old. Steve needs reading glasses now, mostly because his new contact prescription makes seeing close up even harder than it was before.  He looks pretty handsome, if you ask me. : )

Last weekend we went for a drive and did some exploring south of us. Ultimately, we're looking for potential areas where we might like to buy a house someday, and we're also just exploring the new state.  We found this natural area on the map about 10 miles south of our house now. It's Mima Mounds...and there's lots of naturally formed mounds. Weird, right? Scientists are divided on what caused them, but the most likely idea is that they formed when a glacial lake spilled out from retreating glaciers and the wave patterns formed in the cobble rocks the glacier left behind. Now the cobble is covered with dirt and grasses! It was very pretty, but since there's a shooting range very close, it was a bit loud.