Tag Archives: Sandy

Roadtrippin’

As you may or may not have guessed after reading this post, we’ve moved! In fact, we moved quite a bit. Last Friday I drove the car packed full of all of our schmoo and Linus to pick himself up at Yestermorrow in Warren, VT. From there we journeyed over to the Lake George, NY area and spent a delightful night with friends. We had a nice, leisurely breakfast and popped back on the road and spent the night at Allegany State Park in New York. From there we spent the next night at Johnson Sauk Trail State Park in Illinois at a very empty campground… then on to the Badlands that next night. The next morning we camped at the Wapiti campground outside of Yellowstone, went through the park the next morning before camping at  Three Islands State Park in Glenns Ferry, ID and finally home! Phew!

We camped the whole way (well… besides that first night) and loved avoiding stuffy hotel rooms. We used the uscampgrounds.info website to find camping sites along the way. It was so helpful and easy to use! Plus they have a companion swimming holes site (if you’re of a mind to go a-swimmin’).

The very first stop at Yestermorrow to pick up the final travel companion. Everything is all packed and ready to go, including Linus!

We had a really late night getting into Lake George, so no photos. But that’s ok! I took some the next day…

Linus, stretching his buns at a rest stop along the way. He made many new friends, mostly women over 50 who were intrigued that a.) he was not, in fact, a dog and b.) that he had a lovely pink harness on.

We set up camp in Allegany, NY the second night and cooked some Annie’s macaroni and cheese with some tomatoes for dinner.

We worked it out so that Linus camped inside his cage in one of the tent’s vestibules over night with a tarp wrapped around the sides of his cage to keep the extra wind and any driving rain out. He seemed pretty content and happy to be out of the car.

We went for a little stroll together while we waited for the noodles to cook. Muddy paws are a sure sign that everything is right in the world with Linus. We had an uneventful night and left the park at 6 the next morning. We drove across Ohio, Indiana and most of Illinois and camped at Johnson Sauk Trail State Park.

We drove in as the sun was setting and camped in the middle of a rather large, human planted forest with very straight rows of trees. It was so muggy that we didn’t use our sleeping bags at all. There were three only three other groups camping in the park that night so Linus was able to roam around sans leash! Oh how risque!

We broke camp at 5:30 the next morning and made our way across the rest of Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and most of South Dakota and camped in the Badlands! We were caught in a crazy storm complete with driving rain, wind and lightening in South Dakota so it was dark by the time we made it into the Badlands park that night. The lightening lit up the rocks and made everything feel very eerie as we rolled down the deserty roads. We woke up at 5 am the next morning and finished packing the car as the sun came up over the hills…

We rolled through the park as the sun came up and Joe took a little walk out over one of the ridges…

We found an enormous colony of prairie dogs along the road and got out of the car to watch them dance and squeak at each other from their burrows. But then we noticed this sign and decided to keep on moving before plaguey things started happening.

We went to the infamous (or at least incredibly well advertised) Wall Drug which was fun in an embarrassing touristy sort of way. Then we puttered up to Mt. Rushmore… I don’t know that I’d make that stop again. But it was a nice, scenic-ish drive. We made it across the rest of South Dakota and most of the way across Wyoming before camping at the Wapiti Campgrounds outside of Yellowstone. That was by far my favorite place to camp over the entire trip.   

We rigged up a nice little kitchen roof to cook under because it threatened to rain all over everything.

I had a genius idea: let’s make pizza bread! A whole minute later, I realized that there’s no way to turn the stove down AND we didn’t have a lid for the pan. That most certainly equals burned bottoms. I gave up pretty quickly and made a squishy bready soupy thing instead! Nice. It was a bit chilly so a warm dinner was most appreciated.

I curled up in my sleeping bag pretty early that night but in the morning….

I spent some time cuddling with Linus! It’s so nice to be able to zip open the flap and have a whole ‘nother bunny room right there! A very large fox cruised right through our camp that morning (about 16 inches tall) and would have come right into the tent if I hadn’t shushed it away!

We motored right into Yellowstone from there.

Before Old Faithful did it’s thing…

And after. There was another fellow standing next to us who kept complaining that it was only a “wussy squirt”. The sentence still makes my mouth feel yucky. I was duly impressed.

As I’m uploading these photos I’m noticing how epically clouded that day was! So pretty…

We spent the next night in Idaho at the most pristine, park-like camp site I have ever seen. They had some beautiful bathrooms. It was also the most expensive.

Draining some more Annie’s for dinner!   

This tree has eyes! It sees all…

The next morning we drove through Boise (a very neat city!), on through Oregon and ended up in Sandy at 4 pm! Not too shabby!

Too Much Fun

For the past two days we’ve been planting and digging and moving dirt all over the place. We’re trying to take advantage of all this good weather because we hear it’s not going to stay (I’m secretly thinking it’s all a big trick to get us to work as hard as possible). I dug holes for the Auto Lukens yesterday before I went downtown. Today I decided to take my bike out for a spinny-spin up to Sandy to mail the lion someone ordered from etsy and pick up some books at the library. It’s about 25 minutes of peddling to get there and a little less to get back. After that I dug some holes for the lavender in the front yard and then I had to shovel out 7o cubic feet of clay dirt from the planter box (that was just ONE) and then dad brought in 70 cubic feet of nice poopie-sand dirt for the veggies to live in. I got that all smoothed out and then I figured that was enough for one day. It doesn’t sound like much but between biking to Sandy and shoveling I was busy for about six hours. YIKES!

This is a picture of all the plants we’ve planted (between the three of us) in the last two days. It’s alot, lemme tell you.

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This all looks like too much fun.

Maybe I should get around to doing some homework or something….. naaaahhhh, it’ll wait.