• Tag Archives vacation
  • Vacation Reading

    Posted on by Don

    Congratulations to my niece Olivia, who graduates high school today!

    Some books…

    I brought both The Dazzle of Day and Deacon King Kong along on this trip, and finished them both. Both had long ago become chores to get through (especially Dazzle), and both turned out OK by the time they ended (especially DeaconDazzle of Day was just unrelentingly depressing almost to the very end).

    Being on vacation meant that we had to visit a few bookstores, and that meant more new books:

    Thin Air, by Richard K. Morgan: I burned through this one in a few days, and finished it on the flight home. This was another in my long series of “bubblegum for the mind” sci-fi books, and it was classic Richard K. Morgan: a genetically modified super-warrior, washed up and gone vaguely rogue on Mars, gets himself involved in some serious interplanetary spy-soldier drama. Lots of hyper-violence, high tech, and cheesy sex… I already can’t remember the hero’s name, but it was a fun read while it lasted.

    Piranesi, by Susannah Clarke: I’d been planning to read this for a while, but put it off to read her first book (Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, which took me forever to finish) then other things intervened… But I picked it up in Colorado Springs, and am now about a quarter of the way through. I’m not sure what it’s really about yet, but so far it’s the journal of an earnest, somewhat naive (amnesiac?) young man named Piranesi, who lives in the ruins of a giant house, which seems to be the only thing in his universe. It feels like something sinister is coming down the pike, but so far the vibe is a lot like The Slow Regard of Silent Things, and the world-building — the part I like best anyway — is really good.


  • Denver, And Departure

    Posted on by Don

    Well, we’re home. We flew to Philly yesterday and rented a car to get the rest of the way — hard to believe, but that’s probably the easiest way to get between PHL and here. We were home in time to vote, but there’s no food here, the grass was ( was! ) a foot tall when we drove up, and the car had trouble after sitting for two weeks — it sounds like something is broken and clanking inside one of the wheels, no idea how that could have happened just sitting there. But now the car’s been towed to the shop, the lawn has been tamed, my first load of laundry is done and I’m gearing up for a bike ride, my first ride in two weeks…

    Our time back in Denver after Colorado Springs was not too crazy, we just stayed in a nice hotel downtown and did some exploring: we saw the Denver Art Museum, and visited the REI “flagship store,” and watched the lunar eclipse from the fancy rooftop bar we could see from our hotel window. We’d returned the rental, so we did everything on foot, except for one time, when we rented those electric scooters we saw everywhere. (Sorry, no photos!) We did see Emmi & Kyle for dinner a few more times, and also managed to get together for an afternoon with my nephew Chris.

    For completeness, here the are photos from the final phase of our trip:

    And that was our trip!


  • Florissant Fossil Beds

    Posted on by Don

    Our trip today was up into the mountains, out near Cripple Creek to the Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument. This was a place where, 34 million years ago, a lake/creek area was buried by volcanic activity — all these giant redwoods were buried to about 15 feet or so, and what was buried got fossilized while what was above rotted away. (All sorts of other plants, as well as fish, insects, and small mammals, were fossilized as well.) Fast forward to about 50 years ago, and this area was saved from development and the national monument was born…

    This was a really fun and spectacularly beautiful way to spend the day, and afterward we stopped for a late lunch on the way home.

    This is our last night in Colorado Springs; tomorrow we head back up to Denver for the final leg of our trip.


  • Downtown Colorado Springs

    Posted on by Don

    It was a bit warm yesterday so we decided to do some indoor exploration: we went downtown to the arts/historic district (Old Colorado City), got some lunch, and then visited the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center at Colorado College. They had several exhibits going on, including one reexamining John James Audobon and his prints, and one room filled with Chihuly works.

    We finished our day with a visit to a coffee-shop/bookstore, where we all ended up getting several books.


  • Garden of the Gods

    Posted on by Don

    Greetings from Colorado Springs!

    We got here Sunday, and did a little bit of walking around Monday, but things got real yesterday when we got up early and explored The Garden of the Gods. This is a spectacular park (and National Natural Landmark) on the edge of town, which features the same kind of up-tilted sandstone formations we saw near Red Rock. There really isn’t much of a narrative here, we just walked around, admiring the views and and taking pictures:

    Right about that last photo is where I somehow managed to change my camera settings to a sort of “focus” effect, which made these last few a bit odd but hey, these are the photos I got:

    And finally, one last shot of Pike’s Peak, from our table at the pub where we had lunch:

    Pike’s Peak From Our Lunch Table

  • Denver Days

    Posted on by Don

    Here are a bunch of photos from our first days in Colorado…

    Our first day in town we had some time to kill, but not a whole lot so we just went for a walk around the lake at Belmar Park. There were plenty of flowers and trees starting to bloom, and an enormous number of birds.

    That was Tuesday. Wednesday was a bit rainy, so we did some shopping, grabbed some lunch and did the museum thing at the Kirkland Museum of Fine and Decorative Arts.

    This museum was based on Colorado artist Vance Kirkland and his work, but had a whole collection of furniture and other decorative arts objects in various styles (Arts & Crafts, Bauhaus, Art Deco etc). The place was awesome.

    Thursday was nice, so we went to Boulder and hiked the trails near the Flatirons. We started at Chautauqua Park, and hiked over to the NCAR Mesa Laboratory (where we’d hiked on our last visit). Dinner was at a brewpub in Golden, a place called Cannonball Creek. They had some really good beer, and were in the process of winning an international beer competition while we were there — it was on the TV, some guy droning out the winners of all the various styles like the most boring Academy Awards ever, but the bar was going nuts like it was the Superbowl, cheering and groaning for local favorites or rivals, and they went absolutely crazy whenever Cannonball Creek won. We sat outside, away from the noise, and got nachos from the food truck.

    We got to see Emmi and Kyle on Friday, which was awesome — we hadn’t seen them in person for more than two years. The first thing we did together was go to the plant sale at the Denver Botanical Gardens.

    Yesterday Anne and I did a little exploring between meeting Emmi & Kyle for brunch and meeting them for dinner. We wanted to get a hike in, someplace that wouldn’t be too crowded even on a Saturday, so Emmi suggested Red Rock Amphitheater and away we went.

    And finally, here are a few photos of a robin eating berries at Belmar Lake this morning:


  • Greetings From Colorado!

    Posted on by Don

    And Happy Mother’s Day!

    We’ve been in Denver since Tuesday, but a COVID exposure scare — someone who’d been in physical proximity to us texted to say they’d got it — well, that kept us laying low until we tested negative.

    Since then our days have followed a pattern: we occupy ourselves with hikes and coffee shops in the morning, then meet Emmi & Kyle for the afternoon and for dinner. Today we all leave together for a long weekend in Colorado Springs.

    Stay tuned for more, especially pictures.


  • Anabasis 2021

    So this weekend was our annual bike camping trip up the D&L to Jim Thorpe. A total of seven of us rode up, and our friend Predo, who was on “injured reserve,” drove to the campsite with our extra gear. It took us about six hours, with plenty of photo ops and snack breaks, and a few snafu’s…


    We (Bill M, Jared, Sara, Anna Z, Ed, and Anne and I) started at CAT, and took the roads until we got to Northampton, where we crossed the Lehigh and picked up the trail. Lunch was the “Diggity Dogs” food truck at the Slatington Trailhead, and then it was another fifteen miles to downtown Jim Thorpe. A trip to the supermarket, then the long climb from the river to our campsite, and we were done for the day. Predo met us at the campground, and Rick & Shari arrived not long after.

    Saturday we rode into town — which was a madhouse, the Fall Festival was in full swing — met Shari and Rick (they are NOT into camping) and continued north along the trail, picking up Matt & Diet at the Glen Onoko trailhead. We were now eleven strong…


    The trail was fairly quiet at the start, but it was a beautiful fall day if a bit drizzly, and things became pretty crowded after a while. We got to Rockport, which was another madhouse, with bicycle outfitters dropping off cyclists by the busload, and that’s where we ate lunch and did some very entertaining people-watching… Our goal and turn-around was Buttermilk Falls, just a half mile past lunch and always a good photo-op.

    On the way back we met up with Ben and Candace, which brought our group up to our full strength — 13 riders! One more photo session at the usual spot, and our excursion began winding down; we said goodbye to Matt & Diet at Glen Onoko, and rode back up to camp. Dinner was basically a pizza party, and we had one final addition: Gary L who was joining us for the Sunday return ride.

    Sunday was the return. Ben and Candace took off for Philly, and Rick and Shari had gone home the night before, so we were now down to eight. The ride was pretty uneventful, but we did switch things up by taking the Nor-Bath Trail from Northampton over to Bicentennial Park, before finishing on the road.


    …AND I finally got a photo of that spooky “house on the hill” at Lehigh Gap.

    And that was our trip up-country!


  • This Old Video

    Here’s the video I did of our memorial ride for Brian. I made this about eleven years ago and put it on Facebook, where it sort of languished ever since — FB “memories” just brought up some of that trip’s photos, and so I went rummaging for it. I just added it to my Youtube channel, where it will have a home — maybe a more accessible/discoverable one — with my other videos, if I ever actually make any.

    So anyway, there it is. I can’t say “enjoy;” it was a pretty somber moment but I sometimes like to look back at that day. I would love to know what happened to some of Brian’s own ride and vacation videos, he was a master at that sort of thing, and his videos were almost as much fun as the trips themselves.


  • Photos: The Flatirons

    We stopped in Boulder on the way home from Estes Park, to visit the National Center for Atmospheric Research Mesa Laboratory. This is a lab and museum partway up a mountain outside of town, designed by I.M. Pei, and with a bunch of hiking trails out back that continue up into the Flatiron Mountains. We hiked about, then visited the museum before continuing home. Here are some pictures from our hike: