The rest of July 2023 in Portland

We arrived back in Portland (from our Italian Dolomites hiking trip), on July 13th after about 23 hours of travel. The next few days were a mush of early bedtimes and wee hours wakefulness.

Our front garden bed was bursting with blooming zinnias and snap dragons when we returned.

On July 16th, we visited with family in Eugene, and had an al fresco lunch in one of my favorite gardens:

One of my sisters returned with us for a long delayed visit. We enjoyed walks in my neighborhood and other neighborhoods in Portland, as well as a visit to Powells City of Books.

Hikes

We hiked to two areas east of Mt Hood with blooming wildflower meadows:

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Location of trails hiked in July east of Mt Hood

Cook Meadows, July 18th – We wanted to take my sister for an easy, beautiful wildflower/forest hike, so we tried to go to Lookout Mountain, just east of Mt Hood. Unfortunately, it was closed due to recent fire activity, but some Forest Service workers pointed us to the nearby Cook Meadows Trail. While we didn’t reach a high point, we walked along the shoulder of the ridge, through both shady forest and sunny wildflower meadows, with views to Mt Hood. The meadows were red, with more scarlet gilia in bloom than I have ever seen before.  I also saw catchfly and horkelia, two new-to-me flowers, though I have known they were out there for the spotting.

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Scarlet gilia and Mount Hood

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Red meadows of scarlet gilia

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Scarlet gilia

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Dusky horkelia

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Oregon catchfly

The trail passed through patches of meadow and forest, with so many wildflowers!

Zoomed in views of Mt Hood:

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Close up of the giant boulder on Cooper Spur, and the Eliot Glacier beyond

Elk Meadows, July 25th – Later in the month we returned to Elk Meadows on the east side of Mt Hood, a few weeks earlier than last summer, so saw an earlier suite of wildflowers.

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Approaching the trailhead – though cloudy from the Portland side, the mountain was out to the east!

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The switchback hanging gardens were mostly past bloom, with sparse sections of flowers, including these lovely Cascade lilies.

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Columbine, groundsel and bugbane on the switchbacks

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The famous crosshatch tree

Once in the meadows, there were plenty of flowers, especially compared to last year.

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7/25/2023 Bog orchids and Gray’s lovage, Elk Meadows

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8/30/2022 Purple gentians in the mostly dry meadows

Some of the flowers we saw this year:

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Bog orchid

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Swales of bog orchids, also some yellow orchids

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Lovage and lupine

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Rosy spiraea

Comparison photos from last year, looking toward Mt Hood from near the Elk Meadows Shelter

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7/25/2023 Lots of lovage

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8/30/2022 Goldenrod

Looking back toward the shelter and burned Bluegrass Ridge:

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7/25/23

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8/30/2022

Today’s close up of Mt Hood, and the Cooper Spur boulder, also seen on our Cook Meadow hike:

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The cloud stayed near the top of the mountain most of the day,

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but we could see Cooper Spur and the boulder…

Returning down the trail…the Newton Creek crossing can be difficult, but this year, two logs over the deepest part made the crossing easy.

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Looking back upstream at Mt Hood after crossing Newton Creek

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Downsteam view of Newton Creek

Crafting – I did not get much knitting done on our travels, but continued working on my ongoing knitting and quilting projects at home.

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The Meadowlands blanket

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The first set of blocks for the Modern Quilt Studio Summer Camp Mystery Quilt

On to August, and to more posts about our hiking trip to the Dolomite Mountains of Italy.

Austria and Italy, 2023, part 1

June 23 to July 14th….We went on a covid-postponed hiking tour of the Dolomite Mountains of Italy, preceded by a few acclimatization days in Innsbruck, Austria. The destination was a goal trip for my husband. This was my first trip to continental Europe. I was trepidatious about the amount of hiking (would my knees hold out?), language barriers, transport, covid, all of it. But it all turned out fairly well. We saw amazing scenery and wildflowers, ate delicious food, made some new friends, and despite a few transit delays and confusion, returned safely. Now I am home in the Pacific Northwest that I love, and recovered from the jet lag that I find so disorienting. I am thinking about our adventures, and adding my experiences of a new place into my world view. As I have found before, I wish I had more international experience at a younger age – it would be easier on the body. But I am glad we went, and I will enjoy many memories from this trip for a long time.

Part 1: Austria-

We flew from Portland, Oregon, to Newark, New Jersey, to Frankfort, Germany. There were unexplained delays in Newark, so we missed our connecting flight flight to Innsbruck. After sleepwalking back and forth for two miles on the concourses between airport terminals, we eventually were rescheduled onto a flight for the next day, and given room and meal vouchers for an airport hotel. The next day (June 25th), we flew into Innsbruck, admiring the mountains on either side of the city as the plane descended into the valley.

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Descending into Innsbruck.

We were staying on the 12th floor of a hotel on the south end of town, with excellent views.

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View of Innsbruck, and the mountains to the north, from our room.

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Closer view

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Window inspiration for a modern quilt?

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View to the south, including the mountain we would ride a gondola up, then hike up, later in the week.

We spent the next few days walking around Innsbruck, and hiking in the adjacent mountains.

Tuesday, June 26th – We rode the Hungerburg Funicular to its upper station, on the slopes of the  Karwendel Mountains. We could have continued up higher into the mountains on the Nordkette Gondola, but the weather was not amenable that day. Instead, we took a short hike to the Arzler Alm, a farm with  a restaurant, then made our way back down to the funicular station before riding back to town. I was still fairly jet lagged, but enjoyed seeing the landscape and stretching my hiking legs a bit.

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Looking up toward Hungerburg

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Lower Hungerburg station

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Hungerburg Funicular at the top station

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View back toward Innsbruck from the upper Hungerburg station

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Looking up into the mountains along the Nordkette Gondola route

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Hiking path above Hungerburg

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Arzler Alm

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Arzler Alm cows

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Riding the funicular back to Innsbruck

Wednesday, June 27th – Another partly rainy day. We wandered some of the streets in the old town and visited the Golden Roof Museum.

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The Triumphal Arch from the south

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Triumphal Arch from the north

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Open streets/pedestrian zone in the old town

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Building detail in the old town

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Golden Roof Museum

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Close up of the golden roof and building ornamentation

The Golden Roof Museum was built in 1494, and was a residence of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian I. The museum highlights the life and accomplishments of Maximillian.

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Looking out onto the town from the balcony under the Golden Roof

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Tile detail

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A 400+ year old painting of Innsbruck

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Virtual image of us looking out onto Innsbruck

We also walked along the Inn River, and at some point, I walked past a yarn shop and bought some souvenir yarn.

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The Inn River

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Thursday, June 28th – A beautiful sunny day! We rode the gondola up the Patscherkofel, then hiked about 2 miles/1000 feet, to its top. Although it is capped with communication towers, there are stunning views back toward Innsbruck and the Alps to the north. And we got a taste of the abundant wildflower displays we would see during the rest of our trip.

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Gondola up the Patscherkofel

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Fields of yellow wildflowers

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Looking back toward Innsbruk

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Blooming alpenrose all the way up the mountain

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Some of the giant communication towers at the top

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Looking down from the top to the west,

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And to the east

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Hiking down

A selection of wildflowers:

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gentian

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daisies

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avens

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cinquefoil

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orchid

Friday, June 29th – We took the train south from Innsbruck to Bressanone, Italy, to begin our hiking tour – to be described in future posts.

June 2023 – so far…

Hikes

June 1st- Tom Dick and Harry Mountain on Mt Hood – I hadn’t been up here in a while – there was still a bit of snow, mostly on the lower trail through the forest, and around the far side of the lake.

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Skunk cabbage and snow on the lower trail

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Camp Creek

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Mirror Lake

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Trillium just blooming

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Mt Jefferson from the upper trail

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Mt Hood and Mt Adams from the summit

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Mirror Lake and Mt Hood on view during lunch, which I did not share with this persistent ground squirrel

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Last view of Mt Hood as we descend.

June 6th – Hardy Ridge, WA – We started this 2000 foot hike in the cool of the morning, and there is a lot of shade along the way, but it got up to 90 degrees by the time we finished. Too hot to go all the way to Phlox Point. We had lunch in the one shady spot near the first viewpoint above the ridge crest.

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Anemones were among the many flowers blooming in the shady forest.

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Mariposa lilies and paintbrush on the sunny ridgecrest

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Mt Adams on view just beyond our lunch stop/turnaround point

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Splendid view from the ridge crest: Mt Adams, Table Mountain, Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River, Hamilton Mountain (which we climbed last week) on the near right, and Mt Hood on the far right between the two trees.

June 12th – Wahkeena – Multnomah Loop, Oregon – Another trail I hadn’t been on for a while. Plenty of water in the falls, abundant greenery and wildflowers blooming, and lots of people near Multnomah Falls .

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Entering the Multnomah Falls viewing zone. We turned right, and started walking the loop counterclockwise.

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First stop – Wahkeena Falls.

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Up to Lemmons Viewpoint, with a panoramic view across the Columbia River to Washington.

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Continuing up Wahkeena Creek – lots of monkey flowers.

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Fairy Falls in the bright sun.

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Foot of Fairy Falls.

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Salmon berries near the trail junction/lunch stop.

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Cool waters near Wahkeena Spring

The next section of trail  follows a nearly level contour through the forest high above the river. I have always experienced a great sense of peace walking through here.

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Eastward between the two creeks

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Columbine

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Tiger lilies and peas

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Iris

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Even with burned trees I find this trail section so peaceful.

Next, the trail leads down Multnomah Creek, passing three other waterfalls before Multnomah Falls…

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Top of Ecola Falls

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Wiesendanger Falls, with a few people enjoying the beach

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Dutchman Falls

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Almost to Multnomah Falls – mock orange and a view to to the Columbia River

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Lower Multnomah Falls and Benson Bridge – the top destination for many visitors.

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Upper Multnomah Falls, in bright sun, from Benson Bridge.

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Bottom of the Upper Falls

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Multnomah Falls from the viewing plaza.

I always enjoy this hike – not too hard, and lots of peaceful forest above the waterfalls.

In town…

Summery things – roses blooming, farmer’s market salads, shadows and quirky neighborhood adornments…

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Our roses all bloomed at once!

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First summer tomato salad

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Summer sky

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Summer shadows

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Whimsical garden post

June 4th – Peninsula Park Rose Garden, NE Portland – I have wanted to see this garden in full bloom, and since our roses had burst out, it seemed a good time…

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Plenty of people enjoying the sunshine and roses!

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Knitting

Starting things – A new pair of traveling socks, a new donation blanket, and a new shawl…

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Socks

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Meadowland blanket

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Shawl

Quilting

Not starting things…I was planning to start the next Modern Quilt Studio Mystery Quilt, but life got busy. I have fabric, and hope to start in July.

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Batik fat quarters for my next quilt…

June 7th – Portland Modern Quilt Guild Rainbow Quilt Show at Powell’s Books – I just happened to come across this colorful and inspirational show on my first visit to Powell’s in a very long time.

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A few of the quilts on show…

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And since it is Pride month, I will end with this heartbreakingly aspirational meme.

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The rest of my June adventures will be in the next post.

May 2023 – Flowers along sidewalks and trails; knitting and quilting

Flowers blooming in the neighborhood:

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Pink petals from the cherry trees

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Dogwood

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Iris and a neighborhood chicken

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Cactus

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Rhododendron

We planted our garden:

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Tomatoes and basil

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Zinnias and snapdragons

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First local strawberries (Hoods!) from the Farmer’s Market

Hiking during prime wildflower season:

5/2 Camas at Camassia –  Camas blooms in rocky meadows. We visited this preserve at the height of bloom!

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Rocky meadows of camas flowers

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Camas and rosy plectritis

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Camas

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Buttercup and rosy plectritis

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Saxifrage and rosy plectritis

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Blooming madrone tree – a first for me!

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Pacific trillium

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Wake robin trillium

5/3 Full Balsamroot at Memaloose/Tom McCall –  Back to the Memaloose Hills for the second time this spring, this time with our daughter, and with the balsam root on Chatfield Hill in full flower mode.

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Many more flowers blooming in the lower oak woodlands

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Chocolate lilies

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Starting up Chatfield Hill in a sea of yellow

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Lupine and balsamroot

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Balsamroot

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Mt Hood and oak tree

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Paintbrush

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Looking west from the top of Chatfield Hill

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Looking east toward Mt Adams

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Same view through Emily’s purple sunglasses

After this hike we went to Rowena Crest to see the flowers and views from the lower Tom McCall Point Trail.

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Looking back toward Rowena Crest

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Balsamroot along the trail to ‘Parsley Alley’

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My favorite, fern leaf parsley!

5/9 Bitterroot at Catherine Creek –  Bitterroot is one of my all time favorites, and the bloom window is short. We heard they were out at Catherine Creek, so off we went, hiking the loop up the Bitterroot Trail, then back down Rowland Wall.

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Bitterroot blooms scattered all over the basalt outcrops; looking east up the Columbia River

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Bitterroot

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Meadows full of cluster lilies, looking toward Mt Hood

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Balsamroot, paintbrush and lupine at the edge of Rowland Wall

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Cliff penstemon on Rowland Wall

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Cliff penstemon

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And of course, oily red leaves of poison oak lurking…

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Bitterroot and monkey flowers

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Bitterroot looking toward Mosier

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Bitterroot!

5/17 White River – no flowers, just snow –  This area is usually melted out by May, but not this year. On a hot day we decided to check it out.

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Mt Hood from the trail head.

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White River and Mt Hood

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We were able to walk about a mile up river, until snow conditions became unsafe – deep postholes and tree wells melting out, so we turned around.

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Mt Hood

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Close up of Illumination Rock, and a potential avalanche bergschrund on the near slope…

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Mt Hood summit

5/17 Corydalis along the Old Salmon River – Same hot day, since it was too hot to do anything too strenuous, we decided to walk along the lower stretch of the Old Salmon River trail, which we hadn’t visited before.

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Down into the shady, mossy, ferny forest…

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We walked along the river for about a mile and a half.

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Blooming Corydalis was abundant, in large clumps along the sunnier banks of the river

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Scouler’s corydalis

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Also, fading trillium and pioneer violets

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Hooker’s fairy bells

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River running fast and cold from the melting snow

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Sandy beach

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Sparkly reflections

5/23 Late season flowers at Mosier Plateau  – It was too windy farther east, at Rowena Plateau, so we took this shorter hike, which starts in a more protected side canyon before emerging onto a plateau above the Columbia River.

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Mosier Creek Falls

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Looking down at the top of Mosier Creek Falls, Washington skyline in the distance.

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Bachelor buttons turning the grassy slopes purple,

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And beautiful California poppies, reminding me of the “golden rolling hills of California’

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A few winecup clarkia (pink) along the path

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Panorama across the Columbia River to Washington from the plateau, looking directly at the reverse ‘S’ curve of Coyote Wall. Buckwheat is in full bloom; balsam root have faded.

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More buckwheat meadows, looking west on our return hike.

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Ookow

5/30 Rocky gardens at Hamilton Mountain – Now that the lower elevation flowers are fading, it is time to look higher…

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A few honeysuckles in the foreground; view of the top from the power line corridor

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Tiger lily in the power line corridor

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Rodney Falls and Pool of the Winds

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Stonecrop on the lower cliffs

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Penstemon and rosy plectritis on the lower cliffs

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Mt Hood beyond the desert parsley and death camas on the lower cliffs

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Columbian lewisia on the upper rocky switchbacks, with a view to Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River

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Panorama from the top, Table Mountain and Mt Adams

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Looking across the gorge to Oregon – Mt Hood behind clouds now, beyond the brown fringe of burned forest from the 2017 fire.

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Down river, westward view from near the summit

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And looking back on the summit from the northern saddle, as we circle round on the 8 mile, 2200 feet loop.

Knitting – I finished two blankets and a pair of socks.

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Malabrigo Slip Stitch Blanket – for me, still needs to be blocked, but I won’t need it until next winter

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Sliding is Fun – for the Guild Service Project

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Striped socks

Quilting and sewing – I finished the back for the Modern Mystery Quilt –

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Modern Mystery Quilt 2023, Front

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Back – Using stash fabric and scraps from the front …I like to think of it as Mt Hood and the Northern Lights.

And I sewed a little book bag for my one year old great niece –

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Meanwhile…Emily walked a labyrinth near the Pacific Ocean…

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April 2023

In April, there were neighborhood walks, wildflower hikes, knitting, and quilting – both before and after our trip to Pennsylvania and Connecticut, described in the previous post.

Neighborhood walks –

Spring blooming trees and flowers…

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Crabapple

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Cherry

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Cherry

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Forget me not

Sidewalk cracks and shadows…

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Birthdays…

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A friend’s tea party

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A stranger’s brass band in the park

Knitting –

I made progress on these two blankets – I keep one downstairs and one upstairs, as they are both getting big!

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Slip Stitch Blanket

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Sliding is Fun blanket

Quilting –

I finished piecing the top for the Modern Quilt Studio 2023 Mystery Quilt, and started piecing together the scraps plus other fabric from my stash into the backing.

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Modern Mystery Quilt 2023 Top

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Piecing the back with scraps.

Hiking –

We found lots of wildflowers in April, from the earliest trillium in the forests to the beginnings of spring balsamroot fields in the eastern Columbia River Gorge – all the wildflowers are late this year.

April 3 – Tryon Creek, Portland – A rainy day with intervals of hail. We hiked for a couple of miles, and found the earliest trillium blooming along the Cedar Trail:

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Indian plum

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Hailstones on the bridge

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Salmonberry

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Trillium

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Moss

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Trillium

April 20 – Memaloose Hills and Rowena Plateau, Oregon – Checking the wildflower bloom in the eastern gorge – we saw the beginnings of the balsamroot bloom, and some of the last of the early flowers.

Memaloose Hills:

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Lower Trail – buttercups in the oak woodland

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Blue eyed Mary

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Glacier lilies and buttercups

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Pacific waterleaf and buttercups

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A few balsamroot blooming on Chatfield Hill

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View to Tom McCall Point from the top of Chatfield Hill, with desert parsleys, balsam root and paintbrush

Rowena Crest:

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Desert parsley on the plateau

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Columbia desert parsley on the cliffs, view toward Lyle Chery Orchard trails

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Vultures on the cliff

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Vultures

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One of the last grass widows of spring…

April 25 – Upper Cape Horn Trail, Washington – We walked over the top of Cape Horn to the Nancy Russell Overlook, and back. Lots of trillium in the forest, and snow on the mountains to the north…

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View north across the Columbia River from Pioneer Point

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Looking south toward Cape Horn

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Silverstar Mountain

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Trillium in the forest

April 27 – Crawford Oaks, Columbia Hills, Washington – We hiked the Lower Vista Loop, with friends. Balsamroot beginning to bloom out here at the lower elevations – beautiful!

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Horsethief Butte and Mt Hood

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Eightmile Creek Falls with balsam root and desert parsley

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Fleabane and biscuit root

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Balsamroot, Dalles Mountain Ranch

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Reflections in the Columbia River

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Large head clover

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Lupine

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Showy phlox

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The panoramic view across the Columbia River

March 2023 – Back in PDX

We returned to Portland from New Zealand on the 18th of March. Our daffodil and crocus bulbs that had just started to bloom in February were still blooming because Portland was unusually cold while were gone. Spring flowering trees and bulbs continued to emerge, sprinkling the neighborhood with color.

We took one hike, on March 22nd, at one of our favorite winter season hiking trails, Catherine Creek, WA, and it was the same story out there. I had predicted tons of grass widows while we were gone, but instead, the area had been covered in snow again. By late March, the grass widows were re- or just blooming, and other early spring flowers were out – gold stars, Columbia and pungent desert parsleys, and yellow bells…

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Grass widows and gold stars, Columbia River, and the orchards of Mosier

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Catherine Creek Falls

We made a short visit to the Oregon Historical Society on a rainy morning. I focused on some of the textiles on display.

Knitting: I made just a little progress on a sock while traveling, but then immediately cast on a toddler sweater for the knitting Guild service project when we returned. This is my first ever knit raglan sweater. I used the same Caron Cotton Cake yarn I am using for the Sliding is Fun Blanket, also for the Guild challenge. The blanket will take much longer, and I realized I had way too much yarn, so repurposed some of it into this little sweater.

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Flax (Tin Can Knits) toddler sweater

Quilting: I attended an online ColorMixer quilt seminar on the Creative Spark platform this week, and got lots of ideas for future quilts. Next month, I plan to sew the blocks together for my Modern Mystery Quilt that I had made before our New Zealand trip.

Poetic ode to sunlight from a neighborhood Poetry Post:

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New Zealand 2023 (or there and back, again)

When we left New Zealand in February of 2020, we had a list of places to visit next time, but then the Covid pandemic shut the world down. Three years later we finally made our return trip. It took us two days to leave Portland – we were on the runway waiting to take off when an unusual 10 inches of snow caused the airport to be shut down. We made it out the next day, and thus began our New Zealand, part two, expedition. Last time we had a guided trip for two of the weeks, but this time we were comfortable with independent travel. This post is an abbreviated summary of our trip (February 23 to March 18, 2023) – more detailed accounts will follow.

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View from seat 17A, Portland International Airport, February 23, 2023

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Remarkable Mountains from the Queenstown Airport, February 25, 2023

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Locations visited and hikes (stars) on the South Island, New Zealand, February and March, 2023

We stayed one night in Queenstown, stocked up on groceries, then headed to Glenorchy, at the head of Lake Wakatipu.

Glenorchy: As we drove along Lake Wakatipu, the low clouds lifted, and the peaks of the surrounding mountains came into view.

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Lake Wakatipu and Southern Alps from Bennet’s Bluff viewpoint, 3/26/2023

After checking into our lodgings, we spent the afternoon walking the Glenorchy Walkway, where the Dart River flows in to Lake Wakatipu.

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Mt Earnslaw from the Glenorchy Walkway

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Black swan, Glenorchy Walkway

The next day was one of our more challenging hikes, on the Routeburn Track to the valley above Routeburn Falls (13 miles, 2000 feet).

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Quiet lunch spot in the Routeburn Flats along the river. Our destination waterfalls are in the cliffs beyond.

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Routeburn Falls

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Higher waterfalls on the Routeburn River

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Our high point, looking west, on the Routeburn Track

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Routeburn Flats, on our return hike.

The road to this trail crosses the Dart River, tagged on Google Maps as the location for Isengard, a Lord of the Rings movie location.

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Isengard? on the Dart River

Lake Alta: The next day, we drove back through Queenstown to Te Anau. We made a side trip to the Ski Hill at the top of The Remarkables for a short hike to Lake Alta, which sits just behind Double Cone.

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Lake Alta, a cirque lake nestled behind Double Cone at the top of the Remarkables.

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Up close, the water is a beautiful green blue!

In Te Anau, we hiked a part of the Kepler Track to Lake Manapouri. By incredible coincidence, we bumped into our guide from three years ago at the trailhead.

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Waiau River (Anduin River) from the Kepler Track.

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Spirit Lake. The surrounding marshes were dry this late in the summer.

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Lake Manapouri, with sandflies.

We also made a quick stop in the Te Anau Birdpark to see the Takahe.

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Takahe, Te Anau Birdpark, 3/1/2023

Milford Sound: The Key Summit Track, which is also the other end of the Routeburn Track, is along the road to Milford Sound. We missed this entire segment of our trip three years ago, due to flooding, so this was one of our main destinations this trip. We had the good luck of seeing the clouds lift as we reached the top, revealing views of the surrounding peaks, with Lake Marian nestled between them.

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Mts Christina and Lyttle, and Lake Marian, from Key Summit

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Key Summit tarn and reflections

After the hike, we drove on through the Homer Tunnel to Milford Sound, where we spent two lovely nights at a lodge on the Cleddau River, surrounded by incredible views of the mountains.

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Homer Tunnel entrance, westbound

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Milford Sound Lodge, Cleddau River

The next day we took our long awaited cruise through Milford Sound to the Tasman Sea and visited the underwater observatory. It was a cloudy day, but didn’t rain. We saw many waterfalls, dolphins, seals, and birds.

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Morning view of Mitre Peak, Milford Sound, 3/3/2023

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Bird flocks near the Tasman Sea

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Black coral in the underwater observatory

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One of the many waterfalls.

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Afternoon reflections

The next day, we drove back through the Homer Tunnel, and this time stopped in the Hollyford Valley to walk up to Lake Marian, which we had seen from Key Summit. The trail is not long, but it is very rough (5 miles, 1500 feet). There is much climbing over rocks and roots, and lots of stairs. The lake was very peaceful, and once again, that beautiful aqua blue color.

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Rainforest in the Milford Sound area

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Homer Tunnel entrance, eastbound

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Lake Marian

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Climbing down one of the steeper trail segments

To Wanaka: We stayed one more night in Te Anau, then had a long day’s drive to Wanaka. On our way back through Queenstown, we took a break at Kewarau River Gorge, with its famous bungy jumping platform. It is a beautiful setting, with an antique suspension bridge over aqua blue waters. We saw rafters and kayakers in the gorge below, and also saw several people take the bungy leap.

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Kawarau Gorge

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Wanaka: We had been hoping to go to Rob Roy Glacier, but couldn’t find a 4wd vehicle to get to the trail. Instead, we repeated our Rocky Mountain hike of three years ago, this time on a windless day. We were able to admire the 360 degree view from the top for a good long time.

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View from the top of Rocky Mountain

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View from the top of Rocky Mountain

Back in town, we visited ‘That Wanaka Tree’ on the lakeshore, and I also found some souvenir knitting wool.

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That Wanaka Tree, Lake Wanaka, 3/6/2023

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Souvenir sock yarn

Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park: This was one of our favorite spots three years ago, so we planned to stay three nights. We were bargaining with the weather spirits, as there was a lot of rain in the forecast. Given the state of my knees, we were not planning to rehike the 2000 steps up to the Sealy Tarns, but we were able to find decent weather windows to take four easier hikes in the area. While waiting out rainstorms, we monitored the view of the beautiful Aoraki/Mt Cook through our hotel room window.

We walked the longest hike (7.3 miles, 650 feet), up the Hooker Valley to Lake Hooker, on out first afternoon, while the mountain was still out, and before the rain set in. We could see the toe of the glacier across the lake, and get quite close to the icebergs that were floating near shore.

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Hooker Valley Track. The first of three swing bridges, near Lake Mueller.

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Aoraki/Mt Cook from the trail

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Closer view of the summit

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Aoraki Mt Cook, Hooker Lake, Hooker Glacier at the far end of the lake.

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Closer view of the ice bergs

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Late afternoon view of Aoraki/Mt Cook from our hotel room

The next day we slept in while the rain poured down.  We took a short hike to Kea Point, on Lake Mueller, during a dry spell.

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Lake Mueller, and glaciers on Mt Sefton, from Kea Point

The next day was also quite rainy until late afternoon, when we hiked up to a view point at the Red Tarns. This was another of those “mostly stairs” hikes that my knees regretted later.

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Some of the 1000 stairs up to the Red Tarns

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Red Tarns, with cloudy view of the mountains

Our last day was fairly clear, except for a bit of cloud sitting just on the summit of Aoraki/Mt Cook. On our way out of the park, we took a short hike up to Tasman Lake, for another view of a milky blue glacier lake with ice bergs and a giant glacier at the far end.

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Tasman Lake and Glacier (3/10/2023)

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Icebergs in Tasman Lake

Then we drove back along Lake Pukaki, and eventually to Christchurch, before our flight to the North Island the next day.

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Lake Pukaki

North Island…

We did not do any North Island sight seeing on our previous trip, so these were all new locations for us.

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North Island locations and hikes (stars), March, 2023

Hobbiton: Our first stop was Matamata, where we took the Hobbiton Movie Set tour. Having reread Tolkien’s books many times since I was about 12 years old,  I had a little trepidation about this, but was completely charmed by the tour. Fog was just lifting off the green, sheep speckled hills when we arrived in the Shire. We walked paths past colorful hobbit holes and gardens, then around the lake and the Party Tree to The Green Dragon Pub. It was like being in the fictional Shire for a little while, with a clever and funny tour guide. I found it a little magical and very satisfying.

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Hobbiton

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Bilbo’s home

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View across the lake

Turangi: We drove on to our lodging in Turangi, stopping at a couple of spots along the way.

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Mudpots and fumaroles at the Craters of the Moon Geothermal Area

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Huka Falls on the Tongariro River

Our main goal on the North Island was the Tongariro Crossing, a challenging 13 mile hike across the shoulders of two volcanoes in Tongariro National Park, and also the location for Mt Doom/Mordor in the Tolkien movies. This very popular trail has a shuttle bus system that takes hikers to the trailhead. The track ascends 3000 feet, and then descends 4000 feet, back to the car park. We had budgeted a few days in the area, hoping for a good weather day. On our first day in the area, we could not even see the volcanoes due to clouds and rain. We took a short, slightly rainy walk along the Tongariro River, near our lodging.

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Tongariro River Trail near Turangi; this area is famous for fly fishing. 3/13/2023

Tongariro Crossing: The next day, March 14, was perfect! Sunny and clear, but not hot. Hundreds of people, including several classes of 12 year old students, were also making the Tongariro Crossing this day. I think they all passed me, but that’s okay – I wasn’t in a hurry, I was just glad to be able to complete the crossing, though it took over nine hours. Of course everyone joked about walking into and out of Mordor. The trail leads through a variety of volcanic landscapes – lava fields, craters, ashy slopes, fumaroles, crater lakes of various sizes, and then back into the forest.

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Lower trail, approaching the lava flows up ‘Devil’s Staircase’ toward Mt Ngauruhoe (2290 m)

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Looking back at South Crater and Mt Ngauruhoe, from the shoulder of Red Crater

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Looking into Red Crater on Mt Tongariro

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Summit of Red Crater 

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View from the summit back to Mt Ngauruhoe

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Heading down the other side, on a very steep scree trail, toward the Emerald Lakes; Blue Lake is a little further on the left.

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Emerald Lakes

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Lunch stop at Emerald Lakes

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Looking back from the rim of Blue Lake toward Red Crater and a giant lava flow in Central Crater. The highest volcano in the park, Mt Raupehu (2797 m) can be seen just to the left of Mt Ngauruhoe.

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Blue Lake and Central Crater

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Heading down from Blue Lake, now just 3000 more feet of descent between us and the trail’s end (pink circle). Lake Rotoaira, and the enormous Lake Taupo beyond.

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Looking back up at fumaroles and a waterfall

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Eventually, we descended into the forest

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By this time, so many people had passed me that I enjoyed walking alone for a while through the lush green forest, listening to the birds and the nearby river.

Mt Raupehu: The next day, March 15, we returned to Tongariro National Park and met up with some friends who also happened to be in the area and had made the crossing the previous day. We took the Sky Waka Gondola up the Whakapapa Ski Field on the shoulder of Mt Raupehu, admiring the views, and mostly taking it easy. I needed a rest day!

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Sky Waka Gondola on Mt Raupehu

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Tawhai Falls/Gollum’s Pool in Tongariro National Park

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Black swans on Lake Rotoaira, Mt Tongariro in the distance

To Auckland: On Thursday, March 16th, we drove north to Auckland. We stopped for views of Lake Taupo, and visited the Waimangu Volcano Valley.

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Lake Taupo, an enormous crater lake, is 21 miles wide and 29 miles long

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Inferno Crater in Waimangu Valley

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Birds Nest Geyser in Waimangu Valley

Auckland: We stayed in Auckland for two days before flying home. The first day, we walked all around the city center, and took the elevator up the Sky Tower.

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Auckland Harbor and Sky Tower

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View toward Mt Eden from the Sky Tower

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Auckland Harbor Bridge to the North Shore communities, including Takapuna

While we were viewing the city from the Sky Tower windows, adventurous people were jumping off the ledge above, attached to a vertical zip line. The first time one fell past us was quite jarring!

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Sky Tower jumper…

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going down to a fixed landing pad at the bottom.

We continued our walk around the city, and walked through the Albert Park to the Art Museum.

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Albert Park

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Maori portrait in the Auckland Art Gallery

The next day, we drove over the Auckland Harbor Bridge to Takapuna Beach, and took  a lovely beach walk. We also visited an art exhibit in the local library.

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Takapuna Beach

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Rangitoto Island beyond the beach

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Coquina beach sand

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Paintings of Iceland and New Zealand in the Takapuna Library by artist Hafdis Bennet

We hiked up Mt Eden on our way to the airport, for a last look around.

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Downtown Auckland from Mt Eden

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Mt Hood and Mt Adams from the airplane window, as we return home to Portland.

In all, I loved our return visit to New Zealand. We got to almost all of the hikes and sites on our list. It is an easy place to travel if you can adjust to left side drive. I recommend it to anyone who hasn’t been, and who loves beautiful scenery and outdoor adventures.

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Early February 2023, hiking, quilting, knitting…

This post updates my activities for the first part of February…

Knitting: I’ve made progress on two blankets – one for me, and one for the Puddletown Knitters Guild Service Project:

I had planned to crochet the guild blanket, and tried my hand at a sample, but I’m not quite ready to commit to such a big crochet project yet. Maybe the next one.

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Practice crochet swatch

Quilting: I’ve worked through all the clues on the Modern Mystery Quilt, and pieced the blocks. We were asked not to share the finished look until March 3rd.

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Modern Mystery Quilt 2023 tentative layout…

In bloom: Our first crocus emerged from the mostly dormant garden beds on February 9th. Just about the same time as the first grass widows were blooming in the eastern Gorge.

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Our first crocus

Hiking: Both hikes were in the eastern Columbia River Gorge, Washington:

Eagles again!  Bitterroot-Rowland Trail at Catherine Creek, WA – February 8th:

Lots of water here today – in vernal pools, and oozing out of the grassy slopes. No actual flowers, but plenty of emerging foliage – just waiting for a bit more warmth and sun.

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Catherine Creek/Sunflower Hill

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Fairy pools

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Up the Bitterroot Trail,

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The Arch

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Mt Hood with fresh snow

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Mt Hood close up

Meanwhile, as I was admiring these plants at the edge of Rowland Wall, a juvenile eagle swooped by at eye level.

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View west from Rowland Wall

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Bald eagle…

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circling back,

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and around again.

Then the entire eagle family circled its way up Rowland Wall, juveniles and mature adults – perhaps the same flock we saw a couple of weeks ago over Lyle.

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Adult bald eagle

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The whole family is here.

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We continued down the wall, and back to the trailhead, imagining the flowers that will be blooming soon.

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Looking back up Rowland Wall.

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Another vernal pool. The frogs were really loud, but became instantly silent as we approached.

Crawford Oaks-Vista Trail, Columbia Hills, WA – February 14th

A cold, slightly windy day – fresh snow on the Cascade Peaks. We walked the five mile lower loop and were rewarded with seeing the first grass widows – next week there will be a purple bloom here.

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View west from near the trailhead – Mt Hood and Horsethief Butte

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Mt Hood

Eightmile Creek Falls was fairly full…

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Eightmile Creek Falls

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Rainbow and plunge pool

The view from the waterfall to the east across the Columbia River:

We continued up the road, across the creek, then south on the Vista Loop, to our usual stop near the power pylons, where we often see the first flowers blooming, and the first grass widows were just beginning to open in the cold breeze…

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grass widow

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A few purple buds opening in the grassy slopes

We continued around the loop, to the high point, then back around to the view of Dalles Mountain Ranch. A good walk on a brisk day.

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West from the high point

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East from the high point

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Dalles Mountain Ranch

There will be more hikes in February – in the next post.

Hiking, January 2023

January 3rd – Eagle watch near Lyle, WA; Catherine Creek Arch Loop

We drove through the snow-frosted Columbia River Gorge, with a stop at Cascade Locks.

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View down river from The Bridge of the Gods.

At the Balfour-Klickitat Natural Area near Lyle, WA, we spotted just a few bald eagles where we sometimes have seen many in early January.

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One adult and two juvenile bald eagles

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Bald eagle

We followed with a hike around the nearby Catherine Creek Arch, foliage mostly dormant.

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View south toward Mosier, OR

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Catherine Creek Arch

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Eastward, up the Columbia River

January 17 – More eagles; Lyle Cherry Orchard, WA

After two weeks of inclement, unhikeable (for me) weather, we returned to the eastern Gorge. We began with another attempt to see the eagles at the Balfour-Klickitat Natural Area near Lyle. This time, we saw only one bald eagle near the lagoon, and also a great blue heron.

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Lagoon near the Klickitat River; bald eagle and heron circled in blue

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Bald eagle and heron again

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Bald eagle

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Great blue heron

Also seen near the mouth of this lagoon and the Klickitat River:

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Salmon swimming in from the Klickitat River

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Ducks and geese in the Klickitat River

From the southern bluff, we could see that most of the eagles were down on the delta/sand bar where the Klickitat River meets the Columbia River. I took a few fuzzy zoom photos – we counted about a dozen eagles fishing down there.

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Bald eagles on the Klickitat River sand bar

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Lyle Cherry Orchard Town Loop: Then we drove through Lyle and the railroad tunnels to the trailhead for Lyle Cherry Orchard. We climbed up the first tier, admiring the reflections in the river.

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Eastward view from the Convict Road

As we hiked westward on the town loop, we spotted our eagles circling overhead – it was quite thrilling to watch them for a while as they made their way up the Klickitat River Canyon.

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Bald eagles circling above Lyle, WA

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We also got a glimpse of Mt Adams from the trail:

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Mt Adams

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And another look at the town of Lyle as we finished our loop. No eagles on the river bar, but one overhead.

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January 26 – Tracy Hill, WA

Another gloomy day in Portland. Cold and dry in the Eastern Gorge. We started at Catherine Creek Trailhead, and opted for the eastern loop to the top of Tracy Hill.

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Looking up the slope near the trailhead. Bitterroot and grass widow foliage emerging in the foreground.

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Vernal pools along the way.

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We stopped for lunch with a view up Major Creek.

Continuing upward after lunch, I noticed a ghost tree with an awestruck look on their face:

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A face in the trees…

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Ghost tree with an amazing view:

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The view is of Mt Hood from this point on the trail.

Continuing on to the top of the hill:

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To the top of Tracy Hill

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A makeshift bench for a short rest

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Just beyond the top, a peek at Mt Adams through the bare trees

And another view of Mt Hood on the return hike.

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Underexposed, but I can see the glaciers shining in the low winter light on the slopes of Mt Hood.

January 31 – Steigerwald Wildlife Refuge, WA

Our last hike of the month was another visit to Steigerwald Wildlife Refuge in Washington. There was more water in the reconstructed lakes than during our most recent visit in December, and we saw a variety of wildlife.

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Tree reflections in the slightly frozen lake, as seen in from the dike.

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Geese gathered near the lakeshore.

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Deer near the long bridge

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Water under the bridge this visit, swan (and Mt Hood) in the distance.

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Tundra swan

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Two bald eagles out in the lake.

A great blue heron on our path on the return hike.

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Great blue heron on the trail

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And I zoomed in to this view of Mt Hood from the dike on our return.

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Notice Vista House in the right foreground.

January 2023

Quiet and cold in Portland this month. I went on four hikes (see next post), met a few times with my knitting group at the local coffee spot, and walked in the neighborhood when it was dry.

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Alameda stairs

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Moon, January 1, 2023

Knitting:

I thought I was done with knitting gnomes for a while, but then a request came in for a long time friend, so I made one more. I knit myself a new travel mug cosy, and finished my holiday socks. And made progress on my slip stitch blanket.

Quilting:

I am actually quilting again! I joined the Modern Quilt Studio – Mystery Quilt, as I have learned so much from Weeks Ringle and Bill Kerr over the years. I’ve finished the first four clues. I have no idea what the final quilt will look like, but I had fun picking two contrasting palettes of fabric from my existing stash. There will be two more sets of instructions before the big reveal.

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Blocks for the first four clues.

Family archeology:

While relearning crochet, I was looking through a collection of my mother’s knitting and sewing books for useful material. These are very outdated craft books that I keep for sentimental reasons. As I was leafing through one of them, a piece of thin note paper covered in my mother’s beautiful cursive handwriting fell out. It is just a notation of a crochet pattern, but my heart filled, and I felt her here with me, advising me in her future, playing the role of a ‘time being’. (Credit to Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the Time Being, which I read recently, and which gave me a whole new definition of the expression ‘time being’.)

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Sad news: In January, more racist violence shocked us all…as a mother, daughter, sister, friend, member of the human race, my heart is pierced each time.

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With reference to Tyre Nichols, Memphis, TN (photo from the internet)

Meanwhile, an anonymous someone in my neighborhood is trying to spread good wishes…