Monday, July 2, 2012

Home Sweet Home !??>

Can you believe we followed a MASSIVE thunder and WIND storm from Kentucky and the peak of destruction appears to have been our neighborhood, more specifically, our house!

We arrived home at 2am on June 30, after a harrowing drive weaving through downed trees and power lines -- Brandt drove through it ALL  and was a champ!  He even managed to find the ONLY gas station with power for 150 miles when we had only 11 DTE (distance to EMPTY) on our gas gauge -- we were prepared to sleep in the car…

Naturally, the house was dark.  Thirty minutes later, Frank pronounced it safe for us to enter (7 BIG trees down, but none hit the house!)

We will likely not have power for the rest of the week at least, but we don't mind another week of "camping" in our basement to stay cool.

It has been a blessed adventure!




Courtney's pick: Gateway to the… East?


Courtney's pick - Gateway Arch


 Day 22 & 23
16 hours driving (most of it in Kansas) led us to our last stop – St. Louis.  While this city is known as the Gateway to the West, commemorated by the famed Arch, it served as our Gateway to the East.  We were grateful that we had a minivan and air-conditioned RV to tour the West, and not a keelboat or covered wagon like Lewis & Clark and their followers. 
View from the top: Busch Stadium




We rode in a slightly-claustrophobic pod to the top for a great view of the city and Mississippi River.   An experience Nancy missed on her previous visit to the Arch in 1987 with college-roommate, Roslyn (who knew you could go IN it?!).

Next stop: 2629 Kimbrough Circle. J

Fly Fishing, Moose & Pie in the Eye (wow!)

Pie in the Eye for Frank!

Day 21

Frank's first catch & release
Frank and Casey went fly-fishing this morning and Frank is officially “hooked.”  After a lifetime of preferring sit-ups to fishing, he finally experienced the thrill and serenity of casting into a mountain stream, finding that perfect ripple in the water, and the catch/release of a Rocky Mountain Rainbow Trout.

Pickles hiking
In the afternoon, we all went on a hike at Grand Lake in search of the elusive bull moose.  We didn’t see one, but it was a fanstastic hike, complete with waterfall and open meadow (Frank was wishing he had his fishing gear!). 

At 6:30pm, we made our way over to Young Life’s Crooked Creek Camp where we were guests for the evening.  Wow!  It is 9 years old and absolutely gorgeous.  We had a delicious dinner (Carter & Brandt ate 9 bowls of banana pudding!) and got to participate in the “county fair” night – complete with a “pie in the eye” treatment for Frank and a water soaking for Casey compliments of our kids.

We stuck around for the “opera” evening entertainment.  Duke and Luke saved the camp from the gravel baron, J.R. “The Big Rig” Riggins. The highlight was the lip-sync number “Money, Money, Money.” Mr. Steve, the camp speaker, was Steve Chesney, who had been the speaker at Windy Gap in 1983 when Nancy was a Honda wrangler on the work crew.  Somehow, I seem to have caught up to him in age – how is that?!




We LOVE Young Life!  

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Winter Park, CO or is it SUMMER Park?!


Day 20 

Finally we got to sleep in! A heaven-sent 10 hours of sleep was loosely discussed as the highlight of the trip up to this point, and after a very tasty breakfast of pancakes and bacon the Higgins and Berrys headed over to the ski village for some Rocky Mountain fun. We knew that Winter Park offered alpine sledding and mountain biking, and were therefore surprised when we saw bungee trampoline-ing, putt-putt, giant human mazes, rock climbing, and even panning for gemstones. The alpine slide was first and everyone headed up the lift except Pickles, who was the designated photographer for the afternoon. The alpine slide was out of control fun, twisting and turning at near supersonic speeds. I’m fairly sure Dad even broke the sound barrier at one point. 

Courtney on the Alpine Slide

Berrys & Higgins families

Even though we had breakfast a mere five hours ago, we all agreed it was time for lunch and stopped at the picnic tables to chow on salami and ham sandwiches. We also used the lunch break to play with the many giant games and musical instruments scattered around the Village Center.
The guys (Brandt on one wheel)



Frank
Carter & Brandt

 After lunch, we went our separate directions as the men (Me, Dad, Carter, Mr. Higgins, and Nate) geared up for downhill mountain biking while the ladies (Courtney, Mom, Katie, Mrs. Higgins, and Elizabeth) bought half-day passes to try out all Winter Park had to offer in the Village Center. Downhill mountain biking was, to use biker language, “totally rad”. Even though we all are sore in places we didn’t even know we could become sore, it was insanely awesome and one of my favorite parts of the trip. We traversed and weaved our way down the ski slopes and woods of Winter Park Resort. Astoundingly, we all caught air and only wrecked 5 times total. 

While the men were biking, Courtney and Elizabeth managed to alpine slide 5 more times, do the human maze, putt-putt, and rock climb twice. Pickles, Mrs. Higgins, and Katie hiked some of the trails around the mountain and took some stunning pictures. It was a fantastic day on the mountain and praise the Lord that no one got hurt, seriously. 

Submitted by Brandt

Adios to the RV


Day 19 Goodbye to the RV 

into the sunset
After 13 days and 2700 miles, we traded our roving RV home for a mountain chalet in Winter Park, CO.  

Good medicine at the chalet











Both were fantastic, but the relaxing time at the chalet with our good friends, the Higgins, is good medicine for the fingers.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Pickles

Our friend Casey Higgins has given Nancy a new nickname: "Pickles"Due to the green medical wrap the hospital provided for her fingers.

Pickle fingers

Route 66, 4 corners, Mesa Verde & finger update

Day 17 & 18
We enjoyed Flagstaff, AZ in spite of the circumstances – definitely a place for a return visit.  

We drove out Historic Route 66 through the desert, past Monument Valley, and made our pilgrimage to Four Corners, AZ, UT, NM, CO – the hottest and most desolate place on earth.  

In four states at the same time!














Pit stop for the night was Mesa Verde National Park with plenty of smoke from the nearby wildfire.  In the morning, we headed across the Mesa to see the 800 year old Pueblo cliff dwellings and a guided tour of Cliff Palace – pretty cool.



Cliff Palace



See the flames, even...
Now that's a plate of FOOD!
Yelp provided a fantastic brunch at the Durango Diner – huevos rancheros and freshly shredded hash browns.  Frank was reaching for the tums about 2 hours later. 





















Finger Update:  Our friend Sandy Higgins did the first bandage change before bed.  Index finger looks great and the middle finger looks “frankensteinish” with a ways to go for healing and feeling, but happy to have all five left hand digits in place.  Thanks for your prayers.


Beautiful Wolf Creek Pass, CO