December 8, 2019

Happy Holidays


The Mojo Holiday letter 2019

Happy Holidays! We hope this finds you well, and that your year has been full of love, peace, and adventure. It’s a lovely time to reflect on the year and be thankful.

Ava turned 6 years old in July. She is now in Grade 1 and enjoys art, reading, music, writing, playing Lego, gymnastics, swimming, gardens, skiing, and anything to do with cats. She was excited to be in the musical “Aristocats” this summer, and has created an art studio in her room, complete with a regular craft club. She is growing very tall and has lost 4 teeth.

Rachel turned 9 years old in October, which means that she no longer needs to use a booster seat in the car! This is a big deal when you turn 9. She is an orange belt in karate, climbing 5.9 routes in the gym, and has opened the Cloverpage Library in her room. She also loves learning, writing, science, reading, drawing, skiing, camping, animals, and exploring. She is turning into quite a remarkable ‘tween’ and we are very proud of the leader she is in Grade 4.

We acquired a new member of the family in May. A kitten we named “Mystery” came to our family, bringing with her endless sweet snuggles and soft purrs.

Meggan continues work as a physiotherapist at an outpatient orthopedic and women’s health clinic. She took several courses this year learning about visceral manipulation and is currently going through a fellowship training on spinal manipulation, which will be a big process for many more months. She has worked this year to find better work / life balance and has enjoyed running, skiing, hiking, playing field hockey and board games, and doing puzzles. In January, she will also add ‘teacher’ to her skill set, teaching a functional anatomy class at a local massage college.

Jason continued at Power To Be as the Community Programs Coordinator. In May, he earned his Master’s in Organizational Leadership from the University of Colorado and has been pushing his workplace to improve employee training, leadership development, and sustainability. Jason was excited to return to longer trail adventures this year, completing a 35-mile run through North Cascades National Park in August with a friend, and the local Finlayson Arm 55km in September. He also enjoys skiing, rock climbing, and networking with other innovative leaders in the city.

We took on many local adventures this year. We spent many winter weekends skiing at our closest ski mountain, and then went to California in March to visit family and nearby amusement parks. In April-July we had a lot of excellent local camping trips in the nearby islands and parks, including a 2-night backpacking trip where Rachel and Jason summitted a larger mountain called Mt. Albert Edward after hiking for 3 hours in dense fog.

Meggan turned 40 in April, and to celebrate she took on an ambitious project in Colorado. The whole family, plus her mom and one brother, helped her complete some missing sections of the Colorado Trail on foot, with the girls assisting and traveling around the state in an RV. It was a successful trip with beautiful scenery, big mountains, wildlife, and crazy weather – just what she had hoped for!
We haven’t had as many trips this fall because we are about to embark on a two-week adventure. All four of us are going to Belize and Guatemala shortly to backpack around and explore Mayan ruins, jungle and beaches for our holiday celebration. Thanks in advance for your kind wishes of good health and fun while on this journey!

We wish you all the best and hope that we get to see you for fun, hugs and games in 2020!

July 19, 2019

Colorado Trip Plans

(Written by Meggan)


I'm writing this post in response to so many people trying to understand our Colorado Trip plans coming up... and it's a complicated story of many logistics...

As many of you know, I've been trying to complete all of the Colorado Trail in sections. I've hiked quite a bit of it here and there. I've run some parts. I've skied a little bit and mountain biked a little bit. Some parts I've gone East to West and less often I've gone West to East. My goal is to eventually complete all the sections, one way or another.  Of course this is not the same thing whatsoever as through-hiking it, which would be a super cool experience. But since I can't see that happening in my life any time soon, doing little bits at a time is what I'm doing.

I turned 40 in April. And the thing I wanted the very most to celebrate my 40th birthday was support for my CO trail project. When we moved from Colorado to Canada in 2018, things happened very quickly and somewhat unexpectedly. The Colorado Trail project was left in a state of disorganization, with some annoying sections of uncompleted trail here and there.

So our upcoming vacation has turned into a crazy logistical scramble that is sure to allow for some amazing adventures. Parts of it are still coming together, and I'm hoping that snow will continue to melt and all things will get organized. I'm hoping to try and get over 125 miles (200km) done in the two weeks that I'm there, and take a physical therapy course so that I can call it a business trip ;)

Of course we hope to see as many people as possible when we visit, but the real focus of this trip is the trail project. At least it is for me. The focus of the trip for my kids is to see friends in Crested Butte. But we would love to see you if we can. If you see a day that you think you could come and join in for a part of the hike, please do!!! We would love the company.

My mom, my brother Jeff, my kids and my husband Jason have all come on board to assist with this summer's adventure. Many of the remaining sections are annoying logistically... so my mom offered to be my driver and shuttle me from one trailhead to another. The girls will have to come along and hang out with my mom while I hike/run. Jason can only get one week off, so my brother will join me on the hiking/running parts of the trail for week one, and then Jason will join me for week two.  

It turns out it's not easy to find a campervan with 5 seat belts. There were three options, and it's not too much additional cost to go with a real 25' RV that has an on-board bathroom and shower!  So we are renting this really awesome souped up fancy RV that my mom and I are quite excited about.
https://www.cruiseamerica.com/rv-rentals/our-vehicles/standard-rv
We hope to succeed in driving it in/out Denver and from place to place!

So below is the plan. I've marked difficult logistics with * that are still coming together.

Another interesting question is how fit we are and how our bodies will cope. I feel like I'm in pretty good shape. I can run 20km poorly and easily run 12km of hard trails with climbs and descents. I haven't put in as much mileage in July as I had hoped. Jeff is a good runner, and is putting in a good July. Jason is ... well, super human even despite his badly broken leg 2 years ago. But we all live at sea level with very little opportunity to get to any altitude to practice...


Part 1: The Meggan/Jeff stage race, Front Range to Gunnison (approx 85 miles)

Day 1
Meggan, Jeff, Rachel, Ava, and Nana all fly into Denver and land late at night.
Stay with friends.


Day 2
Morning zoo, nature museum or rec center visit. Anyone want to join us for this?
After lunch get campervan, drive to Twin Lakes, CO via Summit County for supplies.

Day 3
Meet with friend and hike 11.6 miles of Collegiate West 1 section, up an over Hope Pass.
Nana and campervan offer shuttle.
Drive to St. Elmo area for the night.

Day 4
Hike from St Elmo to Hancock (CW 4) approx 14 miles
*No idea what the road is like to run from St. Elmo to the CO trail start on Tincup Pass road.


Day 5
Hancock trailhead to Monarch Pass (CW 4/5) 18.3 miles
Nana and girls shuttle around possibly via Mt. Princeton Hot Springs and then via Salida to stock up on groceries and meet us at Monarch Pass. Sleep near Sargeants somewhere.

Day 6
28 miles of trail to be covered from the Tank 7 trailhead near Sargeants to CO-114 intersection
*A huge day. Hopefully Jeff and I are fit enough and can get used to the altitude to do this day. Plan B is that we do part of the 28 miles today and the next part on Aug 7, staying in campervan in between parts.

Day 7
Hopefully tag off an extra 13 miles in the agricultural no-mans land near CO-114/Saguache Park Road, unless Plan B is needed from Aug 6.
If Plan B, then Jason and I will do it as we come back this way going East.
Drive to Gunnison for the night.

Part Two: Crested Butte down time

Day 8
Uncle Jeff takes the bus from Gunnison, flies out of Denver, and goes home to recover.
Meggan, Nana and girls head to Crested Butte. 
*Stay somewhere with campervan??

Day 9
Girls have an art camp for the day in Crested Butte
Laundry day.
Jason arrives in Gunnison at 5pm.
Whole campervan and Jason drive through Lake City to Spring Creek Pass. 

Part 3: Meggan and Jason backpack Spring Creek Pass to CO-114 area (approx 44 trail miles) going East

Day 10
Jason and Meggan leave campervan early and start their hike (20 miles to San Luis saddle)
Nana and girls back to Crested Butte - stay at hotel.
*Nana has to entertain girls alone all day long. Anyone want to hang with the kids that afternoon?

Day 11
Meggan and Jason hike San Luis Peak + to mile 7.0 segment 19 (peak+ 14.3 miles)
Nana stays in Crested Butte with girls at Elevation hotel.
*Nana has to entertain girls alone all day long. Anyone want to help my mom out with the kids that day?

Day 12
Meggan and Jason hike (possibly as short as 7 miles or 20.8 miles if Plan B ahead).
Ava has plans to play with friends. Hoping Rachel will also be able to play with friends.
Nana to drive girls and campervan out of CB this day.
Nana and girls come pick up Meggan and Jason near CO-114 area.
Possibly drive toward Breckenridge... plans for the evening to be confirmed.

Part 4: Denver / Front Range area and Meggan takes a PT course

Day 13
Campervan group drives from CO-114 to Front Range.
This whole day and where we will be, where we will stay to be confirmed.
Anyone in Front Range willing to have us park our camper at their house for the night?

Day 14
To Denver area. Return camper van.
Hope to see friends in the Front Range but not sure who/how/when.
Stay with friends in Denver and take over their house for the night.

Day 15
Nana, girls, Jason fly out of Denver airport after lunch.
Meggan has a PT course in Centennial.

Day 16
Jason returns to work, kids go to camp in Victoria, Nana sleeps in her own bed :)
Meggan has a PT course in Centennial.

Day 17
Meggan has a PT course in Centennial.

Day 18
Meggan has a PT course in Centennial, then flies home in the evening, arriving home really late.


So... after all of this is said and done, will I be done the trail?
No.

I will have two bigger chunks left to complete:

1) Kenosha Pass to Leadville Fish Hatchery (Section 6-10) with plans to do this in 2020 early summer with friends who are through-hiking

2) The last 74 miles of trail when heading West (Sections 24-28). This will be my last section and I plan to fly into Durango, catch the train toward Silverton, and then start from the train stop near Molas Pass and hike back to Durango.  

Who's with me ?!?!

July 2, 2019

Family Backpacking in Strathcona Park's Forbidden Plateau for Canada Day


Hello!
We haven’t written consistently for a while, but we have been adventuring. We have decided to reawaken this blog to continue sharing our exploits with family, friends, and other fun families who may be inspired to attempt similar adventures.

June 27-July 1 Backpacking

This weekend we extended the Canada Day long weekend to four days and traveled up-Island to visit the Forbidden Plateau portion of Strathcona Park, the largest Provincial Park on Vancouver Island. We had loose plans of what the trip would entail, however, preparing and packing turned out to be a big job.

Preparation
Rachel is 8.5 years old and Ava is almost 6 years old.  Long ago, we had heard that standard advice was that kids should be able to hike 1 mile for each year that they are old.  Ava did backpack about 5 miles (8km) once last summer with a light backpack with some good climbs, but we still weren’t quite sure what we were going to get out of our kids this weekend. We were particularly concerned about food, as packing for 4 days/3 nights of food for 4 people seemed a bit daunting, when our kids have some specific preferences.  We are a family that likes to eat, and we are all prone to being ‘hangry’ when we haven’t eaten enough… but we can only carry so much!

We decided to do 3 nights of backpacker meals, oatmeal for everyone for every breakfast, but then lunches and snacks and guessing quantities were the subjects of much discussion. 

Another gear update: last summer the four of us were able to squeeze into one 3-person backpacking tent, but it was tight. This year we had to make an important decision: do we move up to a 4-person backpacking tent, or go with 2 smaller 2-person tents?  There are pros and cons of each: 4 people in one tent is a fun family special time, but a big tent to carry no matter how you do it. 2 tents means finding a place to pitch 2 tents, and then deciding who sleeps in what tent, and if the kids can safely and reliably sleep in one tent by themselves?  We already own a 2-person backpacking tent that we like (a 14-year old Sierra Designs Lightning), and we also own a very large family car-camping tent (an REI Kingdom 6)… so we went ahead and bought a very light Nemo 2-person Hornet.  This incredibly light tent gives us options for backpacking just as adults, but by pairing it with our previous 2-person backpacking tent we can get our whole family out backpacking.  We tried a backyard camping trial of the kids in their own tent, and they loved it, so we went for it.

Packing: 4 sleeping bags, 4 sleeping pads, 2 tents, stove, fuel, cooking pot, food, clothes for 2 adults and 2 children including all-weather layering, more food, first aid kit, SteriPEN for water purification, water bottles, rope, headlamps, etc. Rachel actually carried the main part of the light tent, some of her own clothes, snacks, a book, and fuel.  Ava carried some food and her own jacket, headlamp, book and hat. The forecast was for mixed weather on Friday and nicer weather for Sat, Sun and Mon… but we were going into the mountains - so we had layers for all.

Getting started Friday
The girls’ last day of school was Thursday, and then they attended a friend’s birthday party while we finished packing up. We then drove 3+ hours to stay at a cheap motel in Courtenay for the night.

Starting with a 4 leaf clover
Friday morning we got an early start on the short drive up to the Raven Lodge, observing the last-minute preparations in place (sign placement, parking lot grading) as the mountain community of Mount Washington Alpine Resort prepares for its summer tourism season. We had prepaid online for 3 nights of backcountry camping, but the campsites themselves are first come, first serve. Last summer we witnessed a very busy campground at Baby Bedwell Lake forcing some creative camping sites that we weren’t interested in, so we wanted to get there before the long-weekend rush. We weren’t sure how our strategy of starting on Friday morning would work, so we hustled out of the car and onto the trail as quickly as we could. Pro tip: we packed our backpacks at home and lived out of one small bag for the motel night in Courtenay. Thankfully, there were only a few other cars in the parking lot, so we felt confident in our chances of getting a site.
 BC Parks Forbidden Plateau Map

Our plan was to hike all the way into Circlet Lake on Friday, counting on our early start to keep us ahead of faster hikers, and those who worked on Friday. The map distance said it was 10.4km from the parking lot to Circlet Lake, with some climbing. The bugs, mud, cool conditions with fog and low cloud weren’t particularly inspiring.  The first part of the trail is easy boardwalk through Paradise Meadows, but then we started climbing up more technical trail toward Lake Helen Mackenzie day use area, where we stopped for morning snack.  We got pretty cold when we stopped, so off we went again with spirits high.  




We made it to the Ranger Station for lunch. We used the side of the building as shelter from some cold breeze and occasional rain shower.  We had wraps with PB&J, cheese slices, pepperoni sticks, portable rice balls (from the FeedZone Portables cookbook), and homemade energy balls.




From there we continued onward through more roots and slippery, muddy conditions. It was slower going than expected due to all the mud. Rachel lost a shoe to the mud at one point, and shortly after that we encountered patches of snow.




Ava had a hard time keeping her shoes and socks dry with all the snow melt on the trail, and her energy started dwindling as we progressed. But we made it to camp in the afternoon, and our GPS watches told us we had hiked 7.55 miles (12km) and gained 1270 feet of elevation for a total of 4193 feet. That’s a big hike with a little pack in yucky conditions when you aren’t even quite 6 years old, so we were really proud of Ava.  After we set up the tent, she promptly went right inside and had a nap.






Rachel’s description of the day: “…a long hike to Circlet Lake. My shoulders were sore afterwards from carrying a big pack.”
Squeezing into one of the tents to play a game before bed.

We were the second or third group to arrive at the campground, and got two tent platforms close to each other with lovely lake views. The outhouse and food cache were just up the hill. It wasn’t too busy that night, but it was quite wet with a lot of rain.  We weren’t totally sure how our new lightweight tent would do in the rain, and were initially skeptical of the small rain fly that didn’t cover the whole tent.  But it worked out ok.
Parents in their own tent.

Also, we weren’t totally sure about the kids sleeping in their own tent. We made them promise to come wake us right away for any visits to the outhouse, since we were in bear and mountain lion territory… it took the girls a little while to settle down to sleep – much like a sleepover with friends might. Ava woke us up twice to go to the bathroom during the night. Both times she got her own puffy coat, warm hat and headlamp on, opened and closed her tent, walked the 15 paces over to our tent, waited for one of us to put on layers and get out, and then hike up the hill to use the outhouse.  Pretty impressive stuff.

Saturday
Circlet Lake is a beautiful destination on its own, but it also serves as a ‘base camp’ for a lovely peak near by called Mt. Albert Edward.  This is the 6th highest peak on Vancouver Island at 2093 meters, or 6867 feet, but not particularly technical.  I (Meggan) had hiked it as a school trip in grade 8 or 9, and was curious if Rachel would be interested in trying it.  It was clear that Ava would not have the energy to give it a try, so Rachel and Jason decided to go for it Saturday.

We all woke up late to wet, mud, fog and clouds. The forecast was for better weather, but we were really keen to have things dry out and also to show us awesome views.

Rachel and Jason didn’t get out of camp until 10:30am or so, and they started with a wet and steep climb. Jason and I had discussed emergency options and gear sharing before they left. Things like “don’t worry unless it’s after 7pm and we aren’t back yet – it’s light until at least 9pm these days.” … and that they would take our InReach device to call for help if needed, they would take the first aid kit, and the water purifier. Nobody had any cell phone service to stay in contact with each other, and Ava and I planned to lay low for the day, and could boil water if we needed.







Ava and I went for a small (4.5km) wet and muddy hike to look over Moat Lake and check out Diana’s Pool, but everything was cloudy and wet without much view and all things underfoot soggy. We played games at our campsite and enjoyed our 1:1 time together until about 4pm, when we started looking up every few minutes wondering when Rachel and Jason might appear back from their climb. The sun never came out, so we were sending energy to our family members who were surely up high in the cold and wet, unable to enjoy any view.

Jason and Rachel came back to a warm supper at about 5:30pm, tired from a long day, but proud to have made it to the top. The map says it’s 6km each way with almost 3000 feet of climbing. Rachel did really well staying positive all day and Jason was a good guide to navigate, even with poor visibility. An initial steep climb and then crossing over much snow without any view, Rachel nearly stepped on to the summit cairn without even realizing they had made it to the top. She signed the summit register and then they returned with a long descent.







Too bad no views today!



Rachel’s summary: “It was a long tiring journey, but we made it to the summit eventually. Sadly, there was not much of a view as it was quite foggy out.”

For the record, Jason was quite sore and tired himself at the end of the day. Most of you know that Jason badly fractured his left tibia in March 2016 and he returned to the tent to elevate and take some medicine to ease some mild swelling and pain in the knee.

Camp became much busier on this night and most every possible overflow campsite spot was taken. Lineups for the outhouses, dogs and various personalities were all around. Our second night was drier and pleasant, and Ava only woke once to use the outhouse.

However, food was becoming a bit of a concern for me. Ava hadn’t loved either of the first two dinners of backpacking meals so she had eaten some but not much. I hadn’t packed any specific bedtime snack food (at home we almost always have a bowl of cereal or similar before bed, and this was a habit started when Rachel was a hungry toddler who couldn’t sleep through the night from genuine hunger). I also hadn’t packed enough breakfast food. Rachel and Ava could have had twice the serving size I packed of oatmeal/cream of wheat. So we were going through our snack rations pretty fast, and I knew we wouldn’t have many extra options left for Sunday night or Monday.

Sunday
We woke up to glorious sun and beautiful views on Sunday. All of us were tired and slightly irritable, and packing up to leave our campsite seemed to take a long time. Many items were wet and muddy, and our packs felt quite heavy when we got going.

We had three options for Sunday’s hike after packing up and starting the journey down from Circlet Lake:
1. Hike to Kwai Lake and camp there Sunday night, leaving the remainder for Monday. It didn’t really seem like we had the food set up to do this, and we were pretty sure that Kwai Lake would be a very busy place.
2. Hike to Lake Helen Mackenzie and camp there Sunday night, leaving a small part for Monday morning. This was the option we chose.
3. Try to hike the whole way out with a really big day, and then a long drive home.  Ava was pushing for this as she was really missing our pet cat at home, and was generally tired and wanting her own home, bed, food, etc.

For some reason, the dynamics of our family were a bit challenging on this hike out. One child wanted to play games, and the other wanted to hike along in silence. Bickering was frequent and tears and tantrums were had, not just by the kids. Perhaps we had pushed everyone a bit too far? But it was gorgeous outside!



Croteau Lake group site yurt



We hiked 9.5 km total, with more ups and downs than we expected and still ongoing technical roots and mud and water. Kwai Lake was beautiful and most of the campsites seemed to be taken. We saw a large group camping at Croteau Lake and helped lost hikers find their way at Lake Lake. We were hot and tired when we arrived at the campground at Lake Helen Mackenzie. To refresh ourselves after the long walk there, we jumped in the lake! It was so cold, but so worth it!

We again found two tent pads fairly close to each other, not too far from the outhouse. The other groups camping there were calm and welcoming to kids, and we enjoyed  beautiful views, birds, playing bocce in the campground, and our third backpacking meal. Ava chose to eat plain tuna out of the can instead of our risotto and chicken, and then we had other odd variations in all of our remaining snacks.

Monday July 1 (Canada Day)
Monday, July 1, 2019 we hiked to the parking lot and ended our amazing journey. This whole 4.4km section was easy walking with some wheelchair accessible, frequent boardwalks, and a gradual descent the whole way.  Many people were out for day hikes on this part. The parking lot was BUSY when we came back to the car. Rachel finally got to see a lovely view of Mt. Albert Edward and understand that she made it to the top of that peak!
Watching birds at breakfast



Peak of Mt Albert Edward in the background, from parking lot.

On our drive home we stopped at a diner for a full brunch, and despite some traffic on the Malahat, we arrived home by about 3pm in time to unpack, do laundry, get groceries, and ready for another work week (and the start of summer for the girls).