Monday, July 28, 2008
Jott is a girl
As you can see in the last post, I need to get better at enunciating my words. Jott isn't the only one who has trouble understanding me. So, I'll work on that and all should be cool. It even allows you to spell out a word if you think the software may stumble on it. Like say, the word Twerp .... as it translated Turp.
Sometimes however, Jott may translate your speach in new and improved ways. For example when I said "Instead of cleaning my house...." Jott interpreted it as "He's gonna clean my house". You gotta love that. Jott is totally a chick.
Cellphone blogging....
Powered by Jott
Friday, July 25, 2008
Monday, July 21, 2008
Ride 4 Life
It sounded good at the time, and we figured we'd all train hard and be in killer shape for the grueling first day climb over Turnagain pass.
But life, and in my case laziness, happens and our training didn't quite work out as planned. Only 3 team members were ultimately able to make this ride: Piper, Jeff and myself. Ally and Scout were both out of state and unable to join us (congrats Scout on making Captain!!!), but were in frequent cell phone contact cheering us on. Mama Lama had her hands full with our favorite monkey, and wasn't able to run support this time - but she was in our thoughts the whole way. My loverboy Rocky drove Jeff and Terri's RV - I thought camping would be just fine....but it was SOOOOO nice to have a warm, dry rig to sleep in.
The weather in Anchorage has been lousy this summer. Little to no sun and cold temperatures have become the norm around here, and the forecast for this trip looked pretty bleak. We packed for rain and I for one just assumed we would be cold, wet and miserable the entire weekend, but we'd get through it. Miraculously, a drop never fell while we were cycling, and the second day was downright sunny. Yes, it was hilly (they don't call it a mountain pass for nothing) and yes it was windy (should you really have to pedal going downhill to keep from stopping?), but it was a drop dead gorgeous ride - possibly one of the best I have ever been on.
Jeff at Turnagain pass - smiling hard after cruising up that 6 mile climb.>
Piper stretching out for the next leg from Turnagain Pass to Ingram Creek
Twerp's one handed rolling self portrait - kiddies, don't try this at home
A little Video blogging along the way
This video is proves 4 things: Jeff doesn't really need handlebars, Twerp should keep her day job, Piper's helmet doesn't fit when it is on straight, and Alaska is one beautiful place.
Day 2 - Sunshine!
A quick clip as we pass the turn off for Kenai.
Victory! Bikes raised in celebration on the lawn outside of the SeaLife Center in Seward.
Monday, July 14, 2008
Artistically ADD
New this week:
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Rainbow Fish
David and I took this photo together lying on our backs looking up into the canopy. About two seconds later I dropped the camera on his head. Thank God kids are tough!
Friday, July 11, 2008
Misty Mountain March
I finally convinced Jamie to take me for a walk today. She's really been slacking in this department as of late. I mean, seriously. All she does is lay around all day and wait for us to fill her food bowl. You'd think she could at least take me down to the creek a few times a week. Dogs these days. Lazy I tell you.
Anyway, we headed up to Glen Alps this morning. Walking down to the Campbell would have been much quicker. But I needed the mountains. I needed the open tundra, and the quiet. I needed to flush the concrete, blaring horns and crowds of New York City from my soul. It was a good trip. A surprisingly good trip actually. I never would have guessed that my mom and sister could ever survive under the same roof for seven days. Babies are miracles. Eliy is a particularly special miracle. Still, I was more than ready to return to the mountains.
So we headed to Glen Alps, in spite of the weather. Let it rain. Bring it on.
What I hadn't considered was that those clouds concealing the Chugach range were going to look much different when we immersed ourselves in them. As we drove up Toilsome Road, I suddenly realized that at times I couldn't see more than a few feet in front of us. Visibility came and went with the wind, but overall, the world had vanished. I considered turning back - and had there been any bear warnings at the trail head, I certainly would have. But the lack of signage, and Jamie's sad eyes were enough to push me onward. I'm so glad that we did.