August 16, 2011

July 27th -July 31st: White River 50 miler

July 27th we left our house (for good!) and made our way across the border.  Meggan and Rachel had to enter the USA as visitors, so they went with our friends Stacey and Kristen.  Imagine 3 women, a dog, a baby, and all sorts of gear crammed into the car to get us all down to Washington State.  Jason followed later in the Subaru Outback and successfully crossed the border and declared himself a US Citizen moving home.  Thankfully, these border crossings were very simple and we all had a great sleep at Stacey's cabin in Twisp, WA.  The best part of the day was having Rachel play with Dora the dog.  Rachel LOVES dogs!


July 28th - Meggan, Jason and Rachel continue on in the Outback to Seattle to pick up Susan Oliver who arrived from Sterling, VA to come cheer Jason on at his race.  We enjoyed the scenery along the way and had a happy reunion of Rachel with Grandma.

Check out the video of Rachel 'trail running'


Grandma!!








July 29th - The Olivers rent a Mazda 5 and drive this and the Outback to Crystal Mountain to get settled in and organized for the big day.  Rachel eats pickle for the first time and decides it's great to chomp on.

last ride in the Outback
view from top of 2nd climb

At the pre-race pasta dinner, athletes scare Susan with how much pasta they can devour.



Jason, Stacey, Kristen, Susan, Meggan, Rachel


pre-race pasta













July 30th - Jason starts his race very early in the morning.





We reconnect with Kristen, Stacey and Dora the dog as Stacey is also running in the White River 50 miler.  We spend the day trying to cheer on these two amazing runners as much as we can throughout the day, while playing with Rachel in between.













Stacey has an excellent day and finishes her first 50 miler in under 9 hours as the 4th female.  Jason has a tough time on the second climb and comes in at 10:44 - delighted to finish.

Click here for more pictures


One tired little gal waiting for Daddy


















July 31st - After a slow start, Kristen takes her Outback and says goodbye.  Dora and Stacey return to Penticton.  Susan, Jason, Rachel and Meggan move on to sight seeing in the Mazda 5.  We spend the day exploring Mt Rainier National Park's beautiful waterfalls.

Rachel loved this bear skin



Mt Rainier shows itself for a few minutes

Goodbye Penticton...

Things are happening in the little Oliver family.  Jason accepted a job teaching high school business/marketing at Centaurus High School in Boulder, Colorado.  He accepted the job at the very end of June and then things sped ahead: selling the house and both cars, packing up, emptying the house, preparing paperwork, planning for school, quitting jobs, renting a place in Boulder, saying goodbye to friends.

Rachel is growing up fast.  In the last month, she has learned to crawl, explore, pull up to stand, and cruise.  She can quickly get herself from one area of a room to another and explore what is around it.  She is particularly motivated to move rapidly toward food, electric cords, or boxes of interesting looking objects.  She loves to unpack boxes and throw the contents around the area.  She wasn't a huge help in the 'packing' department, but we're expecting great things when it comes to unpacking.
We're doing WHAT?!?!


Enjoying all the food left in the pantry



Last day at the beach

Jeff's family came to visit and say goodbye


July was quite hectic, to say the least.  Jason was home with Rachel full time while Meggan worked some extra hours covering for summer locums.  Jason had a lot to organize with getting ready for school and moving into a new home in Boulder.  His first day of work was August 8th!

We had so many great friends and family help us out during this hectic time.  Meggan's parents helped us clean the house to show and sell it.  Our friends Tricia and Chris bought our house.  Our friends Rachel and Kristen bought our cars.  Tamsyn, Jehanne, Kristen, Amber, Penny, and Caithy and Sean all helped us pack up and/or watched Rachel.  Meggan's brother Jeff and his family came to stay with us and watched Rachel during most of their visit.  We are so lucky to have such amazing friends!

Check out videos from the beach:


Things we're really going to miss about Penticton: the running/hashing community, the lakes, Skaha park, having friends visit us and the wineries, Nickel Plate cross country skiing, and, most of all, the great friends we made there.
Bye Bye House!
Moving truck arrives in front of sold house

This truck held about 8 families' belongings
So the actual move has been a little complicated.  Ok, a LOT complicated.  But in the end we managed to fit all of our things somewhere in the big orange truck and we all made it safely across the border... on to new adventures!

August 1, 2011

Cathedral Lakes Trip July 8/9/10

We're a little behind in the writing, but we can't update you on our lives until we tell the story of our trip to Cathedral Lakes.  Our family joined forces with Tamsyn, Kory, and Keiran Hendricks (5+ months old at the time of the trip) to go into the high alpine above Keremeos, BC. 

FRIDAY
We dropped Jason off at the bottom of the trail so he could run up the hill to the lodge, while the rest of us put our packs and bodies into an old Suburban shuttle and caught a ride.  While Jason saved himself $80, he missed the thrill of the narrow, bumpy road near cliffs.  The driver we had was not the regular driver, which became obvious when he drove off a bridge and nearly sent us into the river below.  The wheel of the truck was stuck, and he told us we were nearly there and could walk the rest.  He told us the lodge was about 500 meters away.  So we grabbed a water bottle each and set off, confident that we could have the kids in the cabin before lunch and that the lodge staff would bring us our luggage shortly.  Tamsyn and I each had our baby bjorns (since we didn't have car seats on this ride, we opted to attach the babies to our own bodies as we bumped along the potholes in the truck) but I didn't grab any food, drink, or clean diapers for Rachel.  After 10 minutes and no lodge in site, I was skeptical about our location and wished I had at least grabbed a diaper.  The dodgy road climbed straight up and we were sweating and angry at the lying driver.  Our kids became less thrilled with this plan as we marched in frustration for another 80 minutes before making it to the lodge area.

Once there, we saw that Jason had successfully finished his run and was waiting for us amongst the remaining patches of snow.  The weather was sunny but cool as we were at altitude and snow was still visible on many of the surrounding peaks.  We had rented a 'rustic cabin' for the weekend, and set to work making a fire in the wood stove.  Poor Rachel had no diapers but we fed her what we could and waited for our luggage to appear from the rescued truck (this took a couple of hours).

We spent the afternoon walking around the flatter trails.  Kory had come off night shift (as a police officer) so he slept while the rest of us hiked around.  The alpine was beautiful!  After hiking around Pyramid lake, we ventured around the larger lake that the lodge sits next to, in search of a waterfall.  No problem... until we hit the other side of the lake which remained covered in snowy patches.  Tamsyn proved herself to be a 'SuperMommy' by taking a fall on the snow, sliding a bit, and protecting Keiran the entire time so he remained completely safe.  Still, after that we took it a little easier.

After dinner we put the babies to bed and Tamsyn drew the short straw to stay on duty while the others went into the main lodge to enjoy the hot tub.  Jason relieved Tamsyn after a few minutes in the scalding water and after that we went back to bed.  Rachel and Keiran took turns crying here and there, but Keiran settled well and had a decent night.  Rachel did not have a very good night, and Meggan froze herself trying to snuggle as still as possible with Rachel for most of the night.

SATURDAY
The big plan for Sat was to hike the Cathedral Rim trail.  This is the same trail Meggan dragged Steph/Kim/Dana on years ago but at that time we were tenting and there was only a dusting of snow.  We knew it would be a long and challenging day for our families and we weren't sure how it would go.
Glacier Lake (Pyramid Mtn in background)

Glacier lake - Rachel's pink toque just visible
We set out to Glacier Lake and quickly found snow and beautiful scenery.  The kids took turns sleeping in their carriers.  Rachel was happy in her backpack (thanks to Tony and Adri for the awesome pack) and Keiran alternated between his pack and the Bjorn.
Above Glacier lake, we climbed into scree but part of the trail was obscured with snow.  We negotiated a route we felt safer than the marked route, but there were sections that were steep, slippery and a little scary.  We were all relieved to hit the rim trail and have lunch, and even saw a mountain goat mum and kid above the ridge.
Hiking along the ridge was amazing - views of the Cascade peaks to the south were endless.  We hiked along through the Devil's Woodpile and Stone City.
Jason hikes into Stone City with Cascades in background

Keiran's patience was tested as we searched for our trail to descend, hoping for no major snow.  The moms took a break with the kids while the Dads explored the rock formation 'Smokey the Bear'. 




We then headed down, heading for a partially frozen lake, enjoying the fact that the trail was safe and snow-free... until we came to the snow.  It started out really fun, and the kids loved their first glissading experiences.

Rachel and Jason still smiling after hours out hiking in the snow
After a while of this, the snow became monotonous and our progress was very slow.  Melting snow meant post-holing with many steps and trying many routes to stay on a safe trail.  Bad words were said and moods faltered, but all in all the kids fared well.  We made it to the frozen lake and rejoiced in the idea that the cabin wasn't much further.  Alas, it took us much longer from this point than we had hoped and we were tired, hungry, and cranky by the time we made it home.  Another dinner, bedtime, hot tub routine preceded a good night for us all before we woke up laughing about it all Sunday morning.


SUNDAY
Rachel naps during shorter hike and picnic
Sunday we packed and then tried to go for a row on the lake.  Unfortunately, Rachel screamed for most of the life-jacket experience.  Instead we enjoyed a short hike and a picnic by a lake.  Rachel slept here while we snacked and watched the snow melt into the lake below.

We returned to our cabin, put our stuff into the jeep, and relaxed for an uneventful ride down.

Jason ran down the mountain and back to the car, and we enjoyed the comforts of home when we returned to Penticton.
Jason, Kory, Tamsyn and kids in front of our cabin.