Flirting With Vertigo at Pike’s Peak

“Are you good to drive to the top?”

That’s what the attendant at the entrance asked me.

“Yes,” I replied.

In truth, I didn’t know what I was saying. I had already driven portions of Going to the Sun Road in Glacier National Park. Seeing Pike’s Peak from a distance — it barely seemed GTSR’s rival.

It wasn’t until the bus lot mid-way up that my doubts began to emerge. Everything until then had been relatively boring. I even said to my wife once, “Is this it? This ain’t nuthin’.”

But, mid-way up, every car in front of us turned to park. But, I said I was going up. So, up I went.

My Honda Pilot was in 2nd the whole way, and I took my time. As we crept above the clouds, I could feel my hands involuntarily clinching the steering wheel.

My eyes watched the temperature gauge on my dash.

My wife laughed at me, because I avoided looking toward the drop. It felt to me as if looking outward would somehow compel me to drive over the edge, like I had seen one of the creatures in Bird Box.

We reached the top with the Pilot huffing and puffing. After I parked, the fan in the engine continued to run, like a dog on a hot day. (Thankfully, she recovered while we looked around.)

Despite the anxiety on the drive up, I was amazed by what we saw. 14,000+ feet above sea level, we could see far and wide in every direction.

I am not a fan of heights. But, I have often found that the places that feel most heavenly are in the mountains. If given the choice between beaches, plains, and mountains, I would take mountains every time.

After a bit at the Peak, we finally decided to venture below the clouds. That too was an experience, with the temperature station part way down to force you to pull over if your breaks run hot.

Perhaps the most fascinating thing we learned from our visit was that they use to race semi’s down Pike’s Peak. They also have a Pike’s Peak motorcycle race.

Those people be trippin’.

If you haven’t been to Pike’s Peak, you must go. If you do it to race trucks or motorcycles, let me know.

The day of camping that I wish I could relive (Groundhog Day Reflections)

Groundhog Day is here. And with it, I found myself thinking, “If I could relive one day of camping, what would it be?”

My first thoughts were of those moments in the mountains in Glacier National Park—the day that went from 60s and sunny to sleet balls in a matter of hours. It was the place where a family of bears wandered directly through our campsite. But, that story can wait for another day.

Instead, my heart travels back to a trip that still makes my heart ache—the last trip with our dear puppy, Gidget.

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Oreo Cows and Milk

We were in Washoe Lake, Nevada, at a little campground. At the entrance was a dairy farm with “happy little white and black cows,” as I imagine Bob Ross would say.

But, these were no ordinary dairy cows. They weren’t dappled white and black. Their patterns were different. They looked like… Oreos. Oreos with built in milk dispensers.

Our girls thought it was hilarious. And it was one more little reminder of the little memories that can be formed while camping.

Get out there and find your own weird things. Appreciate the silly things. Share your stories.

The birds gathered eerily overhead.

It was a warm day when we arrived in City of Rocks State Park in New Mexico. It stood like a natural Stonehenge—in a field—in the middle of nowhere.

We chose a site carefully and nestled among the towering rocks. We were blissfully separate from our neighbors.

Overhead, we could hear a cah-caw. First gently, then it grew. Crows gathered 3 stories overhead and danced anxiously, like vultures in a classic cartoon.

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You never forget your first…

The first time someone suggested we get a camper, I scoffed. In all fairness, it was my in-laws. They suggested we get a camper and join them each summer in Fun Valley, Colorado. Not that I have any problem with fun or valleys—but that place wasn’t the idyllic picture of camping I saw in my head.

Ever since my first child was born, we had been tent campers. We found it mesmerizing to awaken under the canvas with birds chirping, or even hearing those pesky raccoon bandits make off with food in the middle of the night. (We shined a flashlight on their bums through the open tent flap as they gimped into the woods, a full package of lunch meat in their grubby paws.)Read More »