Saturday, July 9, 2016

July - Happy Birthday Month

31 July: Great hiking weather. 6.5 miles on the Turkey Hill Trail and Catamount Trail; now we need a lot of sorbet. Thanks to Donna P. For sending the news item from the hometown news column of events from 25 years past.

The 25 years ago column of the Northwood Anchor published the above item.

30 July: Pagosa Springs CO: the birthday continues ...

Wolf Creek Pass: The temperature is cooler and rain clouds appeared while hiking the Continental Divide Trail for an hour.

29 July: Pagosa Springs until Wednesday with tired legs. Ron's work on Vol. 7 continues with WordPerfect Files being transformed into Word documents to include footnotes, now making good progress through the baptisms. Cynthia is elated with her research on Linda's family dating back to Merry Olde England and Ireland; and finally the FTDNA Lea research was sent to a geneticist for analysis. It is raining with blue skies above; Ron ran down stairs to watch the bike, but it has already dried. Racing in for a cup of water, he emerged to more rain. Life is sure Fun. We had a light dinner at Riff Raff before a two hour hike On Coyote Hill. Photos below we failed to post from Saturday night in Santa Fe - brilliant colors including a rainbow:

28 July: Pagosa Springs, CO. Our legs are tired, but we walked in 80 plus degrees to an awesome breakfast. Not deterred by the heat, we hiked on to City Market to mail letters and buy food for a hiker with a sign asking for money to purchase food. He was gone by the time we returned. Cynthia is enjoying the food. The heats's too hot, so we worked on DNA and SCS projects until the temperature cooled down for a two hour hike. Deer and a gorgeous sunset.

27 July: We had a delightful morning discussing happiness worthy of a book: "How Two Opposites Can Be So Happy." Many years ago we started a book titled, "The Sensual, Sexual Relationship." Maybe next century we will finish it. Breakfast at 2Chicks and a Hippie Bakery/Restaurant was delicious. Our hike accidentally turned into 7 miles round trip. Our legs are tired. A glance in the mirror told Ron he is very dark despite sunblock.

26 July: Departing for Pagosa Springs, CO, we were packed by 11:00 AM with a box to be shipped to Texas; Ron was misdirected to the post office which was 1/4 mile from the hotel, causing him to drive halfway to Santa Fe before turning around. Box in the mail - bike packed - when someone needed to eat lunch before departure, but we were en route by half past noon thirty. The views were remarkable, especially around Ghost Ranch. The dark thunderheads above appeared ominous at times; three times showers fell briefly, but we arrived at our hotel dry. A favorite restaurant in now Sushi; we don't do Asian. Dinner at Boss Hogg's was fine. The salad bar is good but most entrees are not part of our eating regimen. Nina phoned for a lengthy chat. We located a map of hiking trails for tomorrow and responded to some e-mails. Granddaughter Zoe has the lead role in the musical, "Legally Blonde" at a summer theatre in Houston. (Hi Lupe! It is fun thinking of you reading our news.)

25 July: Hiking at the ski basin: meeting John and Linda at 7:45 AM, Ohmygoodness, that is very early. Ron and John hiked the Windsor Trail while Cynthia and Linda hiked the (far less strenuous) service road. We had lunch atVinaigrette and encountered rain on the way home. Ron returned to Santa Fe to play GO with Stewart who brazenly beat Ron both games.

24 July: Hiking Aspen Vista; a hiker fatality drew ambulances and the fire department, all happening about thirty minutes before we arrived. We had brunch with Janie at Harry's Roadhouse. Something or someone pounded on our exterior wall last night about 11:30 PM. Weird.

23 July: Hiking Aspen Vista with John and Linda

22 July: Lunch at Vinaigrette with Clare and Michael G.; dinner with John and Linda at Geronimo.

21 July: Our friend Marjorie M. sent this photo from Latin America, but I missed seeing the sign/name on top of the building immediately. Linda B. made delicious chicken curry for lunch; we enjoyed a delightful afternoon with Lupe and Bob B. After buying mango sorbet we enjoyed a terrific dinner with Mark V. And two of his neighbors. Here is a Link to the Huffington Post article about Cynthia's son, Paul:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/08/26/artist-interview-_n_8033056.html

20 July: Ron won the points for the first "I love you" of the day by e-mail. Cynthia returns to Santa Fe at one PM. Goody. The shuttle brought Cynthia to join Ron and Janie at Roadside Harry's for lunch where Ron enjoyed three sorbets. Later, Janie gave Ron a terrific haircut even if he didn't need one at all. We drove to Mark's to show off the new bike and got invited to dinner tomorrow night. Albertson's had the protein drinks we like along with more sorbet. Ron is working on Volume 7 of the Gloria Dei Record Project tonight.

19 July: Cynthia has a flight to Denver to visit grandson Brett, returning Wednesday; Ron is spending the day with Tony and June. Cell Phone service at Buffalo Thunder is deplorable. Ron finished the Walraven family group sheets and e-mailed them to John.

18 July: Finally, we have stronger Wi-FI, albeit not speedy, allowing Ron to work on SCS projects and Cynthia on DNA. At one PM the computers were closed while the Smooch family rode to Santa Fe for lunch at Vinaigrette's with Nina and Janie; we talked the afternoon away while tiny apricots fell on our heads from the tree overhead, followed by raindrops. The latter was a call to boogie back to Buffalo Thunder with a quick stop at Chevron for fuel and then Trader Vic's for Mango Sorbet. The Homewood Suites has a happy hour daily from 5-7 with soup and salads. The sorbet is ALL gone.

17 July: Ron and Cynthia at Pecos National Monument with Stuart and Judy remembering their wedding twenty five years ago when Ron was a happy guest.

16 July: Happy Birthday Party at Radish and Rye (formerly Ristra's) with Santa Fe friends: Linda, Jim M., Mike and Maria, Mark V and Veta, Charlie B., Judy and Stuart K., Beautiful Nina, Janie E., Michael and Clare.

I'm
 
15 July: Baptism of 7 year old Pueblo Indian boy Moses at the Lama Foundation. The ecumenical baptism was a spiritual blessing. So was holding a precious papoose.

14 July: Taos, New Mexico - the Lama Foundation at Sunset

13 July: Pagosa Springs, CO: arrival tonight after a stop to see friends (Maria and Mike) who are vacationing in South Fork, CO. After checking in to our lodging, we dined at our favorite restaurant, the Alley House, before soaking in the hot mineral springs.

12 July: Gunnison, CO from Durango through Silverton, Ouray and Ridgway, Montrose (lunch at the Stone House), the Black Canyon. The new bike handles like a dream.

11 July: Durango, CO after riding north from Ouray to Ridgeway, Telluride, Rico, Dolores, Mancos (for lunch) we returned for an overnight in Durango. Cynthia forgot to wear the GoPro. The views were awesome.

10 July: Ouray, CO at the China Clipper B&B. After a hearty breakfast we commenced hiking the Perimeter Trail on the north side of Ouray to the Ice Park which is not as steep and exposed as the south side.

Ice Park Canyon Photo and view from the ridge:

 

9July: The General Palmer Hotel in Durango was very nice, although they could not prepare our diet restriction food. Instead, we enjoyed egg white veggie omelets at Jean Pierre's Cafe before mailing a package to friends. On our ride to Ouray, CO we rejoiced in the views of magnificent San Juan mountains. Our Ouray B&B also has trouble with our dietary restrictions, but Pam, the hostess and cook tomorrow will prepare egg whites. With afocus on vegan, gluten and organic, the cooks miss the problem of fat and sugar. Our walk downtown was great fun meeting some ladies from Iowa and Texas. Dinner at the Bon Ton was mighty delicious. We walked for a bit and had porch time. Ron made a number of phone calls to invite Santa Fe friends to Cynthia's birthday party. Happy birthday to Granddaughter Rachel (pictured below with her dad).

8 July: Leaving the Blue Lake Ranch B&B for Durango to take the train to Silverton with a return to Durango late day. Because of prior bookings, we had moved from the PiƱon cabin (pictured July 3) to the Cottage in the Woods (pictured below). Good-byes said to Jackie, a blessing! The roundtrip train ride was spectacular even though we took the train three years ago. Lots of Texans on board. The 18 year old brakeman was a delight. Tim, the car concierge was quite a joy, too. Lunch at the Grand Hotel in Silverton was a disappointment because the waiter couldn't get the order right in three tries. Dinner tonight was at Jean-Pierre's Cafe Chic where we will have breakfast tomorrow in order to buy some fresh fat free bread.

7 July: Southern Ute Tribal Park tour: Rick, our guide, made it a moving spiritual experience. The ladder in photo one was one of five ladders we used to climb down to explore five cave dwellings. Cynthia climbed four but not the 38' tall ladder. After traveling on gravel, dirt and plain unpaved roads we are thankful to return alive.

6July: Mesa Verde: Knife Edge Trail - 2 miles of awesome views along the trail that once was the road/entrance into Mesa Verde. Colorful wild flowers were dancing in the mountain breezes. Kennebec Restaurant is doing a terrific job of feeding us dinner.

5 July: Mesa Verde: Weatherill Mesa Step House Trail - five miles, not including the mileage to view archaeological Pueblo and cave dwellings. Cynthia will post photos when the wi-FI is working.

 

4 July: Happy Fourth of July: Feel FREE to be thankful!

3 July: Blue Lake Ranch B&B: A late check out in Durango, breakfast with piano entertainment at Jean Pierre's Cafe Chic, and a walk about historic Durango, a ride to Hesperus for lodging at one of our favorite places to stay, dinner at Kennebec's where we were startled by a $93.00 bill... (A mistake) followed by more walking and sitting amidst hummingbirds, a hummingbird moth and gazillions of flowers. Now it is time for sleep. Good night.

2 July: Thanks to the French restaurant "Jean Pierre Cafe Chic" for creating marvelous egg white vegetable omelets without oil. We are sitting in the vintage Palmer House Hotel waiting for the rain to cease after watching the Durango to Silverton train depart without us; with rain forecast we opted to postpone the choo choo ride. The rain ceased and we hiked up to Lewis College meeting three young deer feasting on rain drenched leaves. The Red Snapper lunch at the organic Cyprus Cafe was yummy. Cynthia's highly nutritious carrot cake was a culinary delight.

1 July: Durango, CO, after dinner at Cypres Cafe, sorbet from City Market sounded like a great idea - so did an I love you card for Cynthia. After viewing many interesting and nice cards, voila! The the perfect card, "Someone like you happens once in a lifetime. I'm so glad you happened in mine." Cynthia was very surprised and a very happy girlie.

This morning's Monument Valley jeep tour was amazing; so, too was the fascinating story of Harry and Mike Gouldings who were responsible for all of the western movies filmed there. Cynthia posted photos from the tour; notice the last photo of the sky as we rode to Durango. By the time we reached Cortez we were in warm rain gear when the rain came.

 

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

June already? How did it get to be June already?

30 June: Grand Canyon, El Tovar for breakfast. Espresso in front of world traveler Miss Smoochie. Bike is packed. We missed the early morning thunderstorm as we rode to the canyon, but one is planned to welcome us to Kayenta - Monument Valley Inn: After a wild, windy, wet ride under ominous black clouds we arrived In Kayenta only to discover we were booked into the wrong hotel. Thankfully, the hotel we wanted actually in Monument Valley had space available with a rainbow view from our balcony. We hiked into Box Canyon after dinner. While we were both weary feeling the effects of Bright Angel Trail, only Cynthia went to sleep early. Ron listened to her sleeping sounds and commenced recording receipts and packing. Good night!
29 June: Grand Canyon - Breakfast at the Best Western in Tusayan was perfect. We had forgotten we had stayed at the Red Feather Hotel and dined at the BW during another stay. Ron hiked six miles roundtrip down Bright Angel Trail making 20,000 more best friends until he was whipped by wind, drenched by rain and frozen to the bone - accomplished in a brief 2.5 hours. Cynthia hiked down 40 minutes returning about the same time. We were very hungry by the time of our dinner reservations at El Tovar; Ron wore his rain poncho for warmth. After finishing lemon and then raspberry sorbet he was shaking from the cold. The temperature leaving the canyon was 63 degrees; by the time we reached our hotel it was 76 degrees with a lovely sunset. Tomorrow we depart for Monument Valley for two days. Thanks to Roxanne for lining up reservations. We arrive in Taos the 14th of July.
 
28 June: Grand Canyon - Breakfast at the Grand Hotel is a buffet without a chef to cook to order. They tried to scramble egg whites. Oh, well. We parked at the South Kaibab parking lot and walked to the trailhead. Ron completed a good distance down while Cynthia went back up because sciatica kicked in and rain began in earnest. Oh what fun we had getting lost hiking across the backcountry going back to the parking lot, but Hero Ron walked us into the back side of the parking lot. We spent the wait time for the El Tovar to open by walking the Rim Trail and touring the Kolb Studio. The wait was worth it - not only is the food fabulous but our waiter ago remembered us from three years ago. With our dietary restrictions, who wouldn't? After dinner, tired and sufficiently full, we strolled the Rim Trail waiting for sunset so we could drive back to the Inn alongside another spectacular sunset. Ron spotted a magnificent bull elk with a huge rack of antlers and did a U Turn for another viewing. We saw more elk and a deer. We are both very tired.
27 June: Sedona, AZ to the Grand Canyon: First, the recycling completed, second, box mailed to Texas, Third. The rental car returned and our last breakfast at Red's Sedona Rouge, to the post office to mail Ron's letters, then the DMV in Flagstsaff to get permanent plates. Ooopppssss! We had a two hour wait at DMV AZ. But wooHoo!!! We licensed the bike for five years. And AZ does not require any annual renewals or annual inspections that Texas requires. Ohmygoodness does that feel fabulous. Lunch at Oregano's Bistro was mighty fine. Hot leaving Flagstaff, cooled off when rain started and very cool at 8000 feet needing jackets, rain stopped without getting us wet, sun appeared and we got warm again. Deer. Well! We arrived at our lodging with two days days of Grand Canyon hiking ahead of us including the super meals at El Tovar lodge. We took a ride to the canyon, walked for 45 minutes, ate a delicious Ono Wahoo at the Grand Canyon hotel, returning at peak time for a magnificent red-orange sunset spotting three elk along our route.
 
26 June to Sedona, AZ. Dinner at the Olde Sedona Bar and Grill. Packing completed
 
25 Jun: Las Vegas. Temperature before breakfast was 90 degrees; www.weather.com says it is 105 at 3:42 pm. Re-organization and re-packing our motorcycle saddlebags is proceeding well. We took a break to enjoy a FroYo next door. Ron is hurrying so as to have time to visit the adjacent Hooters with Cynthia's blessings and promise to administer his last rites. Whatever doesn't fit on the motorcycle will go into a box to ship back to Texas. We enjoyed a fun swim and soak in the hot tub tonight. Tomorrow is the final 200-mile leg to Sedona and the end of our trip to Sacramento to visit Aunts Betty & Jo. It has been a great trip with excellent visits and fantastic scenery. The heat vindicated the decision to rent a car in only three places on three days; Hoover Dam was 100 degrees on day 2 & Las Vegas was hot; Sacramento and points north along the coast were comfortable or cool; much of the last two days has been over 95 degrees. Sedona and Flagstaff will provide a welcome return to cool.
 
24 Jun: Here we sit in Beatty, Nevada, temperature of 104 degrees; Ron desires a photo of his Beatty self standing in front of the Beatty senior citizens center, but alas, we could not find it. (We did see signs for the Beatty Brothel and the Beatty Airport, but no senior center.) How startling to see that sign for the brothel on the side of the road, advertising Nevada's oldest legal profession. We did enjoy cold water, a coke and one blueberry pancake at the Denny's restaurant in Beatty; it cohabited with a smoke-filled hole-in-the-wall casino. The ride between Bishop, CA and Beatty, NV was a delightful smorgasbord of desert scenery and exceptional roller-coaster twisties on California 168; that relaxed into 65mph sweepers on Nevada 266. The final leg south to Lost Wages and Henderson on Nevada 95 was straight and hot with substantial traffic. We arrived in HENDERSON at 6:00 PM after driving on I-15 right through the center of Vegas at rush hour. What a fun day!
Ron in front of museum named in his honor.
If I could have jumped the fence, I woulda posed atop the flat-tired tractor.
 
Photo op too good to believe
 
23 Jun: We hiked a few feet on the John Muir Trail and to the Tolumne Grove of Redwoods in Yosemite was quite a joy. The only wildlife we saw was us and we were pretty wild. Ron hiked about two miles further than Cynthia. The giant sequoias are magnificent. Mountain climbers were scaling a wall close to us. The views of snow-covered mountains indescribable. The idiot drivers were also indescribable, but God loves them, too; he must, he made so many of them. We arrived in Bishop, CA in time to buy bread at Erick's Bakery. After dinner we met Pacific Coast Trail hikers in the hot tub. Fun day.
Another lady said it gave her the shivers to watch Ron's pose. (Needs work.)
Beautiful !!
 
We were above snow fields many times in Yosemite
Lookie the two climbers. There was another one just right of the picture.
 
 
 
At one point we were close to 10,000 feet.
22 June: IHOP has the right approach: live chickens and roosters on the lawn! Great views en route (with an interpretive walk) and we discovered a very funny sign by a home made camper in Truckee, CA. Our lunch at Bar of America in Truckee was terrific! Ron found a nicely landscaped neighborhood on the north side of Lake Tahoe seeming to invite us to walkity, so we did. Again, at a pullover viewing spot we walked down to the lake to take a video. Ron was certain the nude swim team was practicing and needed spotters. The view approaching Carson Valley was marvelous; they had a Walmart but they did not carry the right bread or Pretzel's although the stop gave us another opportunity to stretch our legs. We arrived at the big city of Lee Vining with rustic lake lodging for the night: http://www.bwlakeviewlodge.com/index.php. We hiked down to Mono Lake and around the visitors center not quite reaching our Fitbit goal. And a fun time was had by all of the survivors.
 
21 June: Morning has broken: The view from the room is beyond words. Breakfast at the Laurel Deli was a treat - fine food with a train engine in the dining room. The restaurant is in the train museum. Foodified early, we drove north to the end of the coastal highway twisting and turning with amazing views in both directions. We returned the same route to have lunch at Silver's on the Wharf before heading east on CA 20 to Yuba City, CA. The twists and turns were relentless until we entered a magnificent, lush verdant valley with wineries, walnut and fruit trees. Dinner at Sizzler's was a good experience. We haven't tried it before because we don't eat beef or fried food, but we discovered the salad bar is excellent.
Gull giving Cynthia the eye. Cynthia took video for granddaughter Fyn.
20 June: We are off to explore the wonder of our world driving north on the California coastal highway arriving Fort Bragg late afternoon. Napa Valley reminds us of Scotland. The ride on CA 1 was splendid - reminding us of the north coast of Ireland. We walked the beach after a marvelous Salmon dinner at Silvers on the Wharf.
Sunset on the West Coast.
19 Jun, Sunday: Oh what fun visiting 93-year-old Aunt Betty and cousin Margie! The fun continued watching the NBA playoffs. Both teams are so incredibly good they each deserved to win. Ron called Walter to congratulate him. The sunset was magnificent.
Aunt Betty and Margie
Granddaughter Kira sent a picture of her new birthday dress
18 June: Aunt Jo celebrates her 88th birthday in six weeks looking mighty fine. She and cousin Terry had lunch with us at the Pheasant Club in West Sacramento. Fireworks tonight. We are sleepy.
Aunt Jo, Cynthia, and Terry. It was a fun afternoon.
17 June: The temperature in Bishop, California at 8:00 AM was 46 degrees! The forecast of high temperatures was our reason for renting a car instead of taking the motorcycle, but, even Death Valley was only 81 degrees. Bishop, CA would be a great place to live for numerous reasons, including Erick's Bakery with its astounding array of no- fat marvelous breads; the Bishop area is noted for outdoor activities. The scenery driving through the Sierras was astonishing: Mammoth, Yosemite, snow-capped mountain grandeur! The roads were anything but less-traveled; left hand drivers were a pain in the but (But, God loves them, too!). I don't. Our arrival in Old Town Sacramento was without incident.
 
16 June: After an enjoyable sleep we were out of Las Vegas on I-15 North to US 95 North by 10:30 AM en route to Bishop, California, arriving by 4:00 PM, amidst an incredible kaleidoscope of color, compelling contrasts, and curves. Wind stirring sand and dust created a hazy backdrop at times, but the immediacy of Joshua Trees, sage, pastel and blackish volcanic mountains was magnificent. Jaw-dropping. The sign to Beatty, Nevada (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatty,_Nevada) proudly boasts it is the gateway to Death Valley (https://www.nps.gov/deva/index.htm); it even has a Denny's Restaurant and a Subway. A sharp left turn onto NV 266 was a surprise out in the middle of Death Valley taking us for 60 miles of twisties like the motorcycle's "Tale of the Dragon," one tight hairpin curve after the next quickly climbing to 7000' elev. At an old mining pull-off the spectacular snow-capped Eastern Sierras burst into view. The desert became alive with desert blooms and Bristlecone Pines; but the best view was at Big Pine valley with the Sierras soaring on two sides and the Whites on the third side. Our lodging at Clearcreek Inn is quite pleasant; our balcony overlooks the creek. Jack's Restaurant has tasty, grilled Salmon. We walked a most pleasant city park replete with creeks, duckies and sports equipment. Ron enjoyed the hot tub. All moments are key moments: life itself is grace.
15 June: By 10:30 we were Gone With the Wind. The rest of the recycling is hidden in the car where Cynthia won't see it. We had fun trying to figure out how to open the car's fuel tank and discovered it just pushes in on the side. The views at Hoover Dam were spectacular but Ron's pacemaker prohibited taking the tour. Ron took over driving at Kingman, AZ finding our way to the hotel in Las Vegas thinking we had a couple of hours before dinner but it took that long to walk from the hotel garage to the room. It is a huge hotel. Dinner with Cynthia's sister Merrilee, niece Kelly and her husband Steve Plus grand niece Jayden was most enjoyable.

 
 

14 June: The weather is gorgeous with more of the same predicted tomorrow. Packing is almost finished. A box was shipped back to Texas, the fax sent to confirm our room for the October Sweet-Trenbeth wedding, the rental car picked up after getting an upgrade, the house is vacuumed and the piles of stuff are smaller as we load the car. Imagine: we even had time for a last hike! We had an enjoyable dinner tonight with Pastors David and Gwen at Judi's except our split Walleye entree was about 2 ounces apiece. Whoda thunk Walleye was such a little fishy. Granddaughter Lauren is having fun in Cozumel:

13 June: Whaaaat??? For some oddball reason the June blog has reproduced in triplicate. A busy day unfolded with unanticipated changes due to extreme heat in most directions. We rented a car to drive to Sacramento to see Cynthia's elderly aunts when we check out the 15th having found a safe place to leave the bike for a week. We haven't accomplished much here but work on the SCS orders for family group sheets.


12 June: The good news is we woke up. Today is pleasantly cool on the way to Sedona summer warm By noon. Worship at Christ Sedona was a joyful experience. Ron had an epiphany at church when Pastor David forgot a line and everyone laughed: "it helps us laugh at our own foibles." Eating breakfast is a good thing, too. We like eating, especially at Red's. Today's sudoku is a challenge and that's very good. We hiked to the Ridge Trail despite all of the people in the park. Life is good despite the hate that resonates and rocks our world.

11June: Ron researched a genealogy puzzle until two AM discovering the family group sheet for Martinson (with the circle above the a - sounds like o) was filed as Mortinson. Nothing more can be done on the order for Family Group Sheets because of packing tasks at hand. First things first, after breakfast we hiked two hours getting our Fitbit buzz, then Ron joyfully attended to a massage for Smooch.

10 June: A fun day, a fun lunch at Judi's with a fun genealogy cousin Cheryl H. who drove from Sun City West for an afternoon of genealogy gabbing. We headed home at three for hiking fun four miles followed by not so fun bag packing. Frustrating that the TX DMV insists the new bike has to be brought to the county of our residence or to get a temporary registration and licensing in AZ. The closest DMV is in Flagstaff which is conveniently close to our hotel next Wednesday. Tomorrow we get to sleep late. Shhh!

9 June: We will be in Sedona for Cynthia's cure: mani, pedi and hair, the Works! Lunch at Judi's was pleasant and delicious even though it was 3:00 PM. A long day was followed by a brief nap to settle a too much over-filled stomach. A hike was needed. And now we figure out how to pack up and ship our stuff back to Texas with a remnant remaining for six months of touring.

8 June: We managed a nice hike late morning through the woods and met a lovely, lively artist who was also born in Iowa. Ron is preparing the recycling for tomorrow's trip to Sedona in preparation for next Wednesday's departure to Flagstaff, then the Grand Canyon and onto the Colorado mountains to escape the heat.

7 June: Arising very early for usn's, we were able to hike in somewhat pleasant weather making it to the Ridge Trail and a Fitbit buzz by the time we returned at eleven AM. The decision to forego California was sadly passed along to Cynthia's aunts in Sacramento. The heat in Scottsdale, AZ reads in three digits for the next 15 days. Alaska might be cool? Ron's weight increased to 174 deeming it necessary to do a very hearty long hike late afternoon. A second great granddaughter is expected mid July to be named Elenore Elise bringing our total of grandgirls to 9 outnumbering grandguys by 5. Ron never imagined he would inherit such a large family.

6 June: After breakfast we commenced hiking by 9:22 AM; a fun conversation ensued with two sisters - one celebrating her 72nd birthday - and the other from Fargo, ND. A Frenchman, swimming in the creek, got out to visit with us. Walking back through the woods felt almost cool after the heat on the open ascent. We saw a hummingbird and a shiny coat (harmless) snake. A nap was necessary. Son Jon said the TX storage unit was completely dry despite flooding nearby. Our motorcycle registration papers arrived; Jon will get the permanent license plates at the DMV tomorrow.

5 June: Heat warnings prevail through the week. The forecast for the west coast has changed to a fiery furnace making it unlikely we will travel to Sacramento. Where to go to escape the heat? Worship at Christ Sedona was marvelous; thank God. We are thankful and fortunate to be together for 8 years (almost 24-7) without conflict other than making certain the other eats enough protein - conjuring up the possibility we will make it a few more days. We hiked tonight, but even at dusk it was very hot.

4 June: Hot - but we managed a decent morning and evening hike, surprised at how cool we were at 7:00 PM after a high of 105 at 6:00 PM. Cathedral Rock was quite a splendid sight in the sunset. So was the great blue heron on Oak Creek.

3 June: Returning early from breakfast gave us the incentive to hike before being beat by the heat. Ron wounded his left thumb on a sharp stick; it bled profusely because of blood thinners. We had a pleasant quick hike at 7:00 PM. Ron continued hiking on alone to Canyon Road to phone friends returning with the news Dick R. traded in his Corvette for a Lexus RX hybrid SUV. Cynthia misses hers but doesn't plan to buy a car to sit in a rental storage unit.

 

2 June: Heat warning through Sunday with temperatures to reach 108 degrees in Sedona and 115 in PHX. We scorched at 100 degrees today, but we were cool indoors with a delightful visit with Bankston cousin Colleen who shared her lineage of Bankstons Unknown to us. No food left in the refrigerator for munchies so we boogied into Sedona for dinner at the Olde Sedona Bar and Grill - Ron's buffalo burger sans bun was too dry. Ron hiked to Elbow Rock at 6:30 to dark thirty through the park and shade not feeling the heat. Cousin Colleen visiting the Smooches:

1 June: I been good, why am I rushed through 2016?? Slow down time?? Smoke from the fire in Salt River Canyon filled the air this morning. Too bad the deluge in Texas can't reach the canyon. We hiked to the Ridge Trail at ten AM getting our Fitbit fix, then we had a short hike tonight at 6:30. Tonight's sunset on the red rocks was not as spectacular as last evening. The house is clean because we are having a Bankston cousin visit tomorrow.