Posts in Outdoors
Snow Trip To Jackson

Every year we fly out west somewhere to go snowboarding. The last two winters the annual trips didn’t happen because we were rebuilding the Toaster. But this year we made it happen. It’s Andrew second winter in Jackson and we decided to meet there.

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Mountain Biking In Tucson

After Borrego Springs we were really itching to get some mountain biking in. We still had about 2 weeks before we had to be in Jackson, WY so we decided to detour east over to Tucson, AZ to ride. While neither of us had ridden in Tucson, we heard it had pretty good trails.

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A Month At Lake Mead National Recreation Area

My initial thought after seeing Government Wash, our boondock site at Lake Mead, was that it looked like the place had blown up. There were rocks everywhere.

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Cruisin' California's Coastline

Our trip through California was a quick one for many reasons. But we still got to see a lot.

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Traveling Down Oregon’s Coast

We left Washington and headed straight into Portland. Here is where our travel "plans" ended (by plans I mean very vague plans that sounded like this, “Yes, we’re going to keep heading south.”). While I had a lot of places I wanted to go in Oregon it would have meant crisscrossing the state a dozen times.

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Fall In Olympic Peninsula

Our summer plans for Washington got turned upside down when our original truck brakes failed. By the time we actually left the Seattle area it was October 18 and summer was long gone. A lot of the places we wanted to go visit were off the table because of the weather. But we decided that Olympic peninsula was our must-do before we headed out of Washington.

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Misadventures: Our First Time Packrafting

Going through my photos to pull some together for a post I was going to work on, I came across pictures from the first trip we took the Alpacka Raft on. I realized that I never wrote a post about it. From the title of this post you can guess how it went, but I encourage you to keep reading because you may learn a thing or two from our mistakes. If not, no worries, we’ll read this and be reminded to not make the same mistakes again!

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Mountain Biking With The Ancients

Riding in the Canyons of the Ancients was definitely a lot more fun than hiking it. It was also a treat because we didn’t expect to be able to bike there since it’s a national monument. But that, along with the views inside the canyon and the trail itself pleasantly surprised us.  What caught us off guard was the beginning part of that trail from the north trailhead.

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Glacier National Park: Highline Trail

There are so many hiking options in Glacier National Park that it was really hard for us to decide where to go the day after we got back from our backpacking trip. Since we didn’t have the dogs with us, we wanted to make sure we took full advantage of it and chose a day hike that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to do. 

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Glacier National Park: Gunsight Pass Trail

Trying to go backpacking at a national park while living on the road with two dogs is hard to do. Restricting dogs to just paved roads and parking lots in national parks limits where we can go inside parks and for how long. We aren’t comfortable leaving Tybee and Tyki with a Craigslist dog-sitter or even at a kennel. So when our friend Barbara, who also lives in an RV full-time with her partner Mary, offered to watch the dogs for us so we could visit Glacier National Park, we took her up on it.

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Garnet Ghost Town

We’re staying outside Missoula, MT at Niff’s place (Barbara’s friend), parked on her 24 acres of land at the top of a mountain. Turns out that Garnet Ghost Town is pretty close by, only 19 miles from Niff’s (one way). Jerud and I decided that it would be a great way to spend the day on our bikes.

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Giving Back By Getting Dirty

Our previous involvement with non-profit organizations that do trail work has shown us first-hand how important and invaluable volunteers are.  As we all know, trails don’t build themselves, and forest services have very limited funding and manpower to be able to maintain all the existing trails within their management realm. Volunteers are not only vital to trails being maintained and built, but they also add credibility and value to the non-profit organizations.

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