Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

Austin, TX

Monday, March 29th, 2010

In late February I made a business trip to Austin, TX.  My trip was a few days after Dayna had sent me an IM asking if I had heard about the plane flying into the IRS building there.  At that time I hadn’t, but during the trip I did see the building from the freeway.  It was dark out at the time, but it basically looked like a building that had been on fire to various degrees around it, although I wouldn’t have known it was the building had the people I was with not pointed it out.

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On the first night I was there, I discovered that a block away from the conference hotel was 6th street.  Google was telling me there were lots of eateries there, and since I arrived at about 19:00 local time, I was somewhat hungry.  Turns out almost all the eateries were bars or clubs packed with people and cover charges, especially on a Saturday night.  Of course I discovered the next night that on a Sunday, the street is basically dead.

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On Sunday morning, I had a few hours of dead time, so I took the opportunity to walk to the state capital building, which was a mile or two away.  I didn’t really expect the grounds to be open, let alone the building, but it turns out they were open for anyone to walk in and look around, so I did.  One of the things that really struck me was this statue I saw listing the various states of the Confederacy along with the dates they seceded.  It also had a statement on it proclaiming states rights to do such a thing.  I found it interesting, as I never really think about Texas as having been a part of the Confederacy, so it caught me a bit off guard.

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Inside the capitol were the normal arrays of statues, such as Stephen Austin and Sam Houston.  A youth mock Congress was going on, so both chambers were occupied with high schoolers giving speeches and such.  At least I choose to believe that was the case and that real representatives don’t tend to spin around in their chairs while debating the finer points of legislation during weekend sessions.  Arrayed around the multiple levels of the dome were paintings of past Governors, such as this guy.

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After that morning it was back to the hotel and work for a few days.  I did see my first snow of the year on the Tuesday I was there, which shut the city down.  That would have made a bit more sense if it stayed on the ground for more than a second or two, but I’ve seen how people panic when the weather is not as expected, so I can’t say I was totally surprised.
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Elk and Chinese Food

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Waking up in Livingston we decided we would try to make it to Kellogg at least, if not Moses Lake, which was 500 miles away.  That meant lots of driving for the day either way.  By lunch we made it to this Chinese restaurant attached to a gas station and casino.  When hearing there was a Chinese restaurant Danelle really wanted to eat there. The food was better than we expected, and it was a good thing we ordered Danelle her own lunch special, as she really liked the sweet and sour chicken she had.  Almost as much as she liked the colored palm trees.

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Later on we stopped in Missoula and visited the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation headquarters.  We had tried to stop there on our way to Idaho, but our map had it south of I-90, so we had no chance of finding it.  Was a nice little stop.

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Danelle even got to take some pictures there.  In fact she took the rest of the pictures in this posting.

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It was some point between there and Spokane I managed to break our point and shoot camera.  Seems the lens mechanism is gummed up and not moving in and out correctly.  Hopefully I can take it apart and see what is going on.  So no more pictures from that camera for the trip, and the SLR was packed in the back that day.

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Finally we reached Spokane, stopped at Subway around 5 and decided to go for it.  After a long drive to Ritzville and wondering if there was a hotel there, we got some milkshakes at Zips and persevered through the longest hour of our trip.  Turns out we found Thea’s limit for time in a car.  Luckily after sleeping at Grammie’s house that night, we were able to play with Nicholas a bit in the morning and left for the final leg of the journey back to our house without incident. Returning to an 84 degree house the night before the hottest day ever recorded in the Seattle area.  There sure is no place like home.

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Yellowstone

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Before we even realized we had left Grand Teton, we found ourselves at the entrance to Yellowstone, along with the signs noting that hitting a 2000 pound bison would ruin your car and your day.  We took careful note of that.

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Of course the views were great heading North, but we had one goal, for Danelle to get to see a geyser, and we knew of only one reliable enough to give us good odds of seeing that.  Of course it isn’t really that reliable anymore, but as we neared the area I saw steam in the air and told Dayna it was going off right then.  As we got closer, the steam dropped, and shortly after finding a parking spot we saw streams of people leaving that area, confirming our thoughts.  Finding an eruption sign we saw the next one should be at 6:45, it was 5:30 when we saw that sign.

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Biting the bullet we decided we needed to feed the kids a real meal for the day, and wouldn’t reach a real town for at least a couple more hours.  So we waited out that hour by eating at the cafeteria. Danelle really liked the lasagna, rice, and bison meatloaf.  We’ll leave the food at that.  We also made a quick stop to a gift shop and, remaining calm this time, were able to pick out an activity book.

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This still left us with some time, so we meandered around the area looking at some small geysers and paint pots.  We made it back to the boardwalk around the main attraction in time and were able to see it go off.  I think Danelle was impressed, but it can be hard to say with her.  Right about then, the geyser was starting to be outdone by a thunderstorm coming from the north.  Which we of course had to drive into.

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Luckily we got through it quickly and both kids were out pretty quickly.  Since it was late-ish we didn’t make any stops at the paintpots, but did get to see a few buffalo near the road. And of course, tons of elk as we got to some more fields.

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Eventually we got to our room, and everyone crashed for the night. But not before passing what Dayna assumed was a glacier and almost pulled over to let the kids play on the “ice” that was steaming. Then she had me take a picture of “Dayna’s Iceberg” so I could blog that.

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Jenny Lake

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

The day after the wedding we had breakfast with my family and some of my aunts and uncles that made it to the house we were staying at. Afterwards we were thinking about going to Jenny Lake in Teton National Park rather than staying to watch presents being opened. Nothing personal, that was hard enough for me to sit through with my own wedding presents.  Somewhere along the way, we decided we’d go ahead and go all the way through the park and Yellowstone to get to Livingston, Montana that night. That would cut a few hours off our trip for the next two days when compared with driving all the way back from Driggs to Kirkland.

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Over the pass into Wyoming, we were wondering a bit if our car could make it up the hill, but eventually we dipped down into Jackson Hole. After working through town we headed north and were able to see the Tetons from their other side.  Nearing the park we made a brief stop at the visitor center, in which I realized that having a 3 year old that is well behaved in public 99% of the time ill-equips you for that other 1%.  Enough said about that.  We entered the park without further incident and headed to Jenny Lake.  After several minutes of looking for parking we made our way to the lake and caught a ride to the West dock.  This was the first boat ride Danelle remembers, which she seems to have enjoyed.  Thea thought it was o.k. as well.

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On the far side we embarked on the half mile hike to Hidden Falls.

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I was a bit worried that after the attempt at Targhee, it would be a long hike up the hill.  Luckily Danelle really enjoyed it today, trucking along by herself the whole way.  We decided she likes narrow hiking trails more than ones that can double as an access road.

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The falls were worth the hike, with us eventually making our way back down the hill and back across the lake.  By then it was about 3 in the afternoon, and we had 3 hours of driving minimum to go, if all the roads were in good shape with traffic moving.

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Which made road construction a bit hard to deal with, so just like us, you’ll have to settle with seeing a bear before making it to Yellowstone itself.

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The Small Erickson Wedding

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

It was a dark and stormy night.  Not the first line you hope to write
when talking about an evening outdoor wedding, and terribly cliched to
top it all off, but sometimes it just fits.  We arrived at Trout Lake
Ranch a bit early since Amy had to setup something for programs.  Amy
made the programs, and I hear they looked great, but I’m not sure I
saw one in person.  The picture of one I saw was great though.  I also
had to be there early as I was supposed to take pictures of all the
guests for a photo guest book.  Let’s back up a bit though.

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Shortly before the wedding the decision was made that the programs
were needed early and a bunch of nice rocks had been found and would be
used to place the programs on each chair ahead of time, with a rock
holding them down from the wind.  It was a great plan, other than it
started to drizzle a bit before the service.  All the programs were
picked up.  And I was left to wonder why my seat had a couple of rocks
on it.  The start of a new wedding trend, like unity sand most likely.
Something to do with the solid bedrock of a new life together I’d
imagine.

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A neat thing that the couple also did was have small gift bags for
each of the young kids that were at the wedding.  Inside were crayons,
coloring book, and some small toys.  At the end of each row of chairs
was also a small kid sized chair.  Danelle thought that was neat, so
Thea of course also had to have her own and decided to sit a row ahead
of us.

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Then she decided she could rock the chair forward.

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Eventually we moved that chair back next to Danelle, who herself moved
up several rows to sit near an aunt so she could see the ceremony
better.  Thea also decided to start getting noisy right as the
ceremony started.  That’s our kid!

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During the wedding itself the rain started to pick up a bit, leading
the pastor to also predict he would keep his message short.  At one
point the clouds behind the couple got quite ominous and a few
umbrellas popped up in the crowd.  Then we got a few minutes of
radiant sunshine, followed by loud rolling thunderclaps during the
vows.

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After wrapping up the ceremony it was time for me to take lots of
pictures of people I didn’t know for the most part.  Some managed to
have glaring sun in their eyes, others rain.  The weather was
inconsistent to say the least.  At least some of the pictures actually
looked decent.  Including this group.  Unbelievable right?

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During the reception, Dayna and I had 5-10 blissful minutes where
Uncle Chad was taking Danelle through the food line and Thea was with
Grandma and then Aunt Amy.  Kind of nice not worrying about the kids
at a social function.  Of course during the meal the water dumped for
real.  Some people were under tents, others not so lucky, leaving many
empty, wet tables.

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Luckily it dried up again for toasts and the dances.  About then we
had at least one child turning back into a pumpkin as Dayna says, so
we left a bit earlier than most, but at least got to see some of our
family the next morning at breakfast back at the house.

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