Dave and Nancy’s 50th, at the Gunflint lodge

We had a pro photographer come take group pictures.  These are my outtakes. Dave and Nancy, Paula and Jeremy, Tim, Eileen, and Madeline in attendance.

Madeline was about six months old.  We schlept 100 pounds of baby gear through the Minneapolis airport on a 99F day to our rental car, then drove north for 4-5 hours to the Gunflint lodge.

I remember that Pops had paid for the Platinum meal plan at the lodge’s 4 star restaurant.  Giant breakfasts, “a little lunch” in our cabin, a five course meal every night.  There was little to be done towards burning away the 7,000 calories we were packing in every day.   I gained 10 pounds.  Great time all the way around tho.

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We stopped in at Silver Bay on the way home to visit Uncle Ed.  Here’s a few random shots.

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Truck Camping in the Mt. Princeton Hot Springs Area

Located just south of Buena Vista west of Hwy 285, and one of our favorite places to camp.   There was a forest service camp ground nearby, but as was our habit, we jameed our 4WD truck back into some obscure but flat spot and camped for free.  Plus in this case we had a much better view.

The name of the creek running through the area was “Chalk Creek”, and I have a memory of these white cliffs being called the Chalk Cliffs.

The exact month of this trip is unknown.

(click to view)

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Vancouver – Whistler

The big picture:  Seattle – Vancouver – Whistler – Vancouver Island – Seattle

This was a big vacation for us, one not done justice by these photos.  Eileen had a business conference in Whistler, so I tagged along.  She went up alone, I flew through Seattle into Vancouver, and took a scenic bus ride to Whistler.  I had a short layover in Vancouver and the bus station was near Chinatown, so I was able to snap just a few pictures there.

The weather was good for the bus ride to Whistler.  I sat on the port side looking out the window at the Sea to Sky.  Amazing.   We killed no more than a day in Whistler, rented a mountain bike, got up in the woods, took a few pictures.  We were near the longest day of the year, and further north than I’d ever been.  I remember coming out of an indoor function with Eileen at around midnight.  It looked like 8pm dusk on a normal summer day.  We hit the hay, later I remember looking out the window at 4am, and it was already quite light out.

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The conference wrapped up, we drove back to Vancouver in our rental car, and hopped a ferry to Vancouver Island, coming in at Sidney.  The size and complexity of the ferry scene up there was impressive.  This very organized and extensive network of these giant car carrying ferries between the dozens of San Juan Islands. We had great weather and a scenic boat ride.

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Eileen had found us a “Bed and Breakfast” (advertised in Sunset Magazine!), along the southern edge of the island, past Sooke.  As the pictures show, our lodging was a micro cabin set apart from the owner’s house.  It was barely big enough for both of us to sit down, but it was tall.  The bed was up a ladder in a loft.

There was a 30 mile “rails to trails” path that ran right through this property, and all the way into Victoria.  We wished we had bikes, but had to contend with some hiking.

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Old Victoria was charming. Our weather was warm and dry, but we could tell by the way the locals had their bikes set up that they were used to rain.  Every single one had fenders front and rear.

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One interesting thing we did was pay a local guide to take us kayaking out to an island is one of the bays.  He built his own boats, accompanied us, and fed us on the island.

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Our entry back into the USA was via Ferry, coming into Port Angeles.  We drove around Puget Sound to get back to Sea-Tac, killed half a day in downtown Seattle near the water.

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Puppy Love

We had a short stint volunteering for the Boulder Humane Society.  Our duties mostly encompassed walking the dogs.  One day a very young litter was dropped at the Society’s doorstep and they needed a volunteer to house them until they were old enough to adopt.  We stepped up.

We did not know what we were in for.

These critters were cute, but lordy, were they a handful.  At first they just crapped all over our kitchen floor, then ran thru it, leaving paw prints behind. At least they were small enough that we could wash them under the kitchen tap with one hand.

We had to learn how to feed them.  We tried putting all their food in one bowl.  They politely waited for each other (as my Dad would say) “like one hog waits for another”.  It was a frenzied scrum that left the weak for dead.   By leaving the food out in a long line on the floor, it was impossible for the big ones to block out the small ones.

Our own dog Emma lacked any faint trace of motherly love.  She hated them, probably would have killed them all if given half a chance.  They thought she was their mother.  Some of the probably needed therapy later.

We hawked these dogs to all our friends and unloaded the lot of them, keeping the gold colored one and naming her Tori, after Tori Amos.

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