Author Archives: compassrosequeen

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About compassrosequeen

Former teacher, traveler, and now stepmom of 5. Finding adventures in both the epic and the everyday.

Summer Update (and big news! Very big!)

Hello, friends! It’s time for an update. And when you read through this post, you’ll understand why.

First, I need to let you know that I’ve been trying to fix the categories on my blog this month, and for some reason, most of them disappeared. I can still see them in my account, but not on my actual webpage that you see. So bear with me while I figure that out. Currently, all you can see from the tabs at the top are the “Journeys of Women” posts and the “Uncategorized” posts. I think you can see the rest of them (like the teaching overseas ones) if you scroll through all the posts. Also, I’d like to write more travel-article-type posts of short trips, so keep an eye out for those. I’m summarizing our recent ones in this post.

This summer has been so great in so many ways. If you don’t follow me on Facebook, you may be surprised to learn that I left teaching for now and am working in an insurance brokerage office. I miss having students, but am enjoying the change of pace. However, since I’m working all year now and not getting even the three week break between summer school and the new school year that I had at my last school, I’ve been making the most of my weekends this summer. Namely by doing road trips with my fiancé and his five kids.

What fiancé you say? Okay, so I’m pretty private concerning my romantic life on both my blog and on Facebook. Let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up.

Three years ago I met a really nice, nerdy guy named Chris. We became fast friends, and the following year we started dating. It wasn’t the right timing for us to date yet, so we parted ways but stayed friends. The next year we tried dating again, because we realized how much we enjoyed spending time together. But we had some major differences that kept things from working out between us at the time. We stayed friends again, because we just couldn’t not (despite our best efforts to give each other space). This year, we decided that we needed to find a way to be together. We talked and talked, and found common ground to build from and found ways that worked for us both without compromising who we are. I’m so grateful to find a man who loves me fully, and is willing to work on things to make things work! He is sweet, generous, and strong but gentle. A true gentleman. He even wears a top hat (keep reading).

So here we are! Engaged. (More on how that happened later)

But wait, you say. You said something about five kids? Yup, he comes with five adorable sweet goofy kids ages 5-13. Just call me Maria von Trapp (actually, I’d be honored if you called me that; I’ve read her memoirs and the real person was amazing!). They are all so adorable in different ways, from the oldest to the youngest. And great artists like their dad. I’m so excited to have a great husband and kids! I feel so blessed at this second chance in life to have a family.

Speaking of second chances, I got to have a real-time live conversation with my ex-husband last week. It’s been so great to have his friendship again, especially before I remarry. Talk about closure. I’m glad he’s happy in life, too. It’s been 11 years since our divorce, and I’d have liked to be remarried by now, but I’m grateful for the way it worked out.

You’re not getting off that fast by distracting us with your ex, you say. Who is this guy you’re engaged to? Well, his pen name is Professor Popinjay, and his first name is Chris. You can find his humor column in old copies of the recently defunct local newspaper, the Springfield-based Free For All, or join his group page on Facebook if you want some good laughs and deep thoughts.

Professor Popinjay logo used with permission of Professor Popinjay. And yes, he does own a hat and glasses like that.

So how did this “professor of comedy” propose? All right, I’ll tell you. And now I’ll get to those weekend trips this summer that I mentioned earlier. I could write a separate blog about each of them, and maybe I will sometime, but for now I’ll just summarize and show a few fun pictures.

The first big trip we took in July was to the Enchanted Forest. If you haven’t been to Western Oregon, the Enchanted Forest is Oregon’s own adorably podunk version of Disneyland. I grew up going to it with my family and my cousins every summer, and my fiancé went there once as a kid. We were so excited to take his kids there for the first time! And they loved it. Ice Mountain was their favorite ride, and I think the maze-like caves and the Crooked House were their other favorite things to do there. And they were fascinated by the Fantasy Fountains display. But the big finale happened right as the park was closing. Chris pulled me aside in the picturesque European Village (right below the animatronic gossiping English ladies in the 2nd story windows) and asked me to marry him. I was a little distracted because the young kids didn’t know what was happening and were asking to play in Pinocchio’s Playhouse, but I said yes and figured well, that’s probably how our romance will continue to be for the next 10 years or so. Fun and frequently distracted by adorable kids. We left the theme park and ate dinner at my old favorite Méxican restaurant in Salem, La Hacienda Real, and then played for a while at the Riverfront Park. I miss Salem sometimes!

The following Monday was Independence Day, which saw a great time at a church barbeque out in the country at the home of one of our pastors. My mom and stepdad came, too. We’ll be having the wedding there, so Mom was excited to see the epic treehouse we’ll get married in front of! Later we watched fireworks at the driveway of my future in-laws.

Next month we’ll get married here!

The next weekend we took a break from day trips so I could spend time with my cousins. One of the twins was hosting a birthday party for his twin 4-year-olds on Saturday, and on Sunday I went wine tasting at Walnut Ridge vineyard with his twin. I don’t spend nearly enough time with either of them considering how close we live. I’m hoping the change of pace with me working more normal hours now will help that.

The next weekend was back to big day trips. Chris and I took the kids hiking to Iron Mountain at Tombstone Pass, making a clockwise loop by heading up Marcola Road to Sweet Home and then east on Hwy 20 (stopping at the Shortbridge Ghost Town along the way, of course). The Iron Mountain/Cone Peak trails are the best kept secret from Oregonians. Everyone else knows about the area because it was on the cover of an Oregon tour guide book. Two summers ago, my friend Natasha and I did the whole loop hike. It was spectacular, with full meadows of every color of wildflowers all mixed together. This summer with the kids, we just did the Iron Mountain section. We hit the beginning of the wildflower season (all the plants in Western Oregon are two weeks late this summer because of the cold rains late this spring), so the trails had some wildflowers along them but not as many as when I went before. Still beautiful, though. At the top the old fire lookout has been converted to an observation deck, where you can see almost all the big volcanoes of Oregon and even one in Washington. My fiancé’s little boy struggled a bit to make it to the top, saying “This mountain is too big for me.” But he made it, and we ate a picnic lunch. Heading back on our loop road trip, we stopped for ice cream at Clear Lake and ended up renting a rowboat. That was a hard lesson in teamwork, but everyone loved looking down through the crystal clear water. We stopped at Sahalie and Koosah Falls, ate supper at the outdoor Obsidian Grill in McKenzie Bridge with live music (at which the youngest daughter wanted me to dance with her), and got an impromptu free private tour of River Run Gallery in Leaburg. What a magical day! The sad part is the next day I found out my best friend’s mom was dying of cancer. The last time I went to Iron Mountain, I found out my friend Meranda died of cancer. I’m a bit nervous to go again, but I don’t believe in superstition, and it is a beautiful place. Next time I go, I will honor both of their memories.

The next weekend, we did more than a day trip. We went camping! With friends I used to work with at the military school. And their friends. And all 5 of our kids plus their kids. We had campsites on the other side of the river at Belknap Springs, so we lugged our gear out there in wheelbarrows and set up camp. The kids loved swimming in the hot pools and running around the Secret Garden (Little Man did laps around it to burn off excess 5-year-old boy energy), and I loved eating s’mores by the campfire. My friends took Chris and his oldest daughter whitewater rafting on the McKenzie River while I took the rest of the kids hiking to Proxy Falls. We all met up at… guess where… the Obsidian Grill with outdoor live music again! This time the youngest girl danced with her daddy and her little brother and their new little friend that we camped with. I love the McKenzie area. And I’m happy to report that wildflowers and underbrush are popping up below the burnt trees from the wildfires there two years ago, and homes are being rebuilt.

Not to be outdone, the last weekend of July had a beach trip. We drove out to where Chris’ parents were camping, and then headed to North Jetty for some sand and waves. It was nearly 100 degrees in the Valley, but only in the 60s at the coast. The kids had a blast running up dunes and rolling down them, drawing in the wet sand, letting the cold Pacific waves tickle their feet, and playing in a driftwood fort someone had built. Then we ate supper and s’mores at his parents’ campsite with them and his brother.

But with all this summer fun (I haven’t even mentioned weeknight activities like my company party for my office at a baseball game this week) and planning a very quick-turnaround wedding (it’s in September because we’re too old for long engagements), we’re exhausted. So I canceled our plans to go to a family reunion in Washington this weekend so we can stay home to work on things. And clean house. And relax.

What fun, adventurous, or relaxing things are you doing this summer to beat the heat (or embrace it)? Or for my Southern Hemisphere friends, how is winter going? I’d love to hear you all! Please comment below if you are willing. Happy August!

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 2 Comments

Double Holidays to Honor Displaced Peoples, Past & Present

Today is World Refugee Day! And it’s also the observed day for Juneteenth, USA’s newest national holiday (officially yesterday but not observed then since it was Sunday). I didn’t know much about either of these days until recent years, which is surprising given my education and career. But I’m glad to honor them now.

I’m sure you’ve heard about Juneteenth by now, and the event that it commemorates. What I didn’t know was that it started out as church-based celebrations in Texas only a year after freedom for enslaved black people there was proclaimed, and has been going in some form ever since. It spread to other parts of the country thanks to the Great Migration, and Texas officially started recognizing it in 1938. And now it is officially celebrated throughout the country.

Today is also World Refugee Day. I was hoping to go up to Salem tonight for an event hosted by Salem For Refugees at the Riverfront Park, but I got sick. So I’m just writing about it. Obviously we don’t celebrate the fact that there are refugees. This is tragic. But we take the time to honor the experience of refugees and reflect on how we can help them. You can read about the official holiday here: https://www.un.org/en/observances/refugee-day

In the news today is an amazing example of how someone reflected on what he could do for displaced people. Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov is auctioning off his Nobel Peace Prize and donating the money to Unicef to help Ukrainian children displaced by the war. I love hearing stories of Russians doing what they can! You can read more about it here: https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-dmitry-muratov-journalists-9a6bb6e61350e1bb8221924c1bfe30a3

Giving money isn’t of course the only thing we can do to help refugees and other displaced peoples, but it is one of the easiest ways to help. Here are some links to places you can donate to:

Based in Oregon: https://www.salemforrefugees.org/ and https://www.mercycorps.org/

United Nations High Commission on Refugees: https://www.unhcr.org/

UNICEF (focuses on children): https://www.unicefusa.org/

And there are many more great organizations out there! Feel free to comment with ones you know about, or with ideas of ways to raise awareness or help in practical ways. Thank you for reading!

Categories: Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

A Journey of Survival & Soccer

I’m not going to write much on this one. Instead, I’ll let this great article by the BBC tell the story of these brave women. The Afghan women’s soccer team endured danger and hardship to escape their homeland last August, and now are surviving in a foreign country. But they’re not just surviving. They’re thriving, as they try to figure out how they will continue their soccer careers. Read this to find out more, and be inspired! https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/61744830

Categories: Journeys of Women | Leave a comment

Happy 100th Birthday, Oregon State Parks! (Part 2)

And welcome to the 100th post of the Compass Rose Queen!

Whether you’re fairly new to this blog or have been one of my faithful readers for many years (I think there are two of you, and bless you both!), I want to start this post by thanking you for taking the time to read it any time that you have done so. This project started many years ago when the conventional wisdom for aspiring authors was to host a blog so they could have a “platform.” I settled on a theme of writing about the journeys of women. At first, I focused on women (both historical and fictional) who went on some sort of journey. Sometimes I commandeered it to write about my own journeys and sojourns, such as trips I took or living abroad as an international teacher. Other times I’ve used it as a space to write about the female protagonists of my writer friends’ novels. And occasionally I’ve strayed altogether from the theme of the journeys of women. But thank you for travelling this journey with me over the years.

But back to the 2-part series I’m on. (Quick! If you haven’t read yesterday’s post, find it now so you know what I’m talking about). I tried to line up my 100th post with this weekend’s centennial celebration of Oregon State Parks, celebrated yesterday at Sarah Helmick State Recreation Site. Every state park offers the opportunity for a mini-journey to somewhere beautiful or historical, whether you stop to stretch your legs at a state scenic viewpoint or camp at a full state park for a weekend. Some parks are a simple green space, while others offer beautiful beach views, wonderful waterfalls, or other spectacular scenery.

So now I will pay my homage to my favorite state parks in Oregon. I found a list of them, and discovered that I’ve been to at least 34 of them. I’ll just list my top 5 and why I like them, as well as best parks for camping and honorable mentions for waterfalls. Please, in the comments below, tell me about your favorite state parks! Or provincial parks, or county parks, or whatever you have where you live (besides national parks).

Type of park key: SP= State Park, SSV = State Scenic Viewpoint, SRS= State Recreation Site, SRA= State Recreation Area, SNA= State Natural Area, MSP= Memorial State Park, SSC= State Scenic Corridor, SHA= State Heritage Area, SHS= State Heritage Site

Jessie’s Top 10 Favorite State Parks

  1. Silver Falls SP: It’s the crown jewel of Oregon State Parks for a reason. With miles of hiking through lush forest in the foothills of the Cascade range, more than 10 substantially-sized waterfalls, including three very tall ones (and some that you can walk behind), it is fantastic. When I lived in Salem, I hiked there at least a few times a year. Also nearby is the Shellburg Falls area, with three beautiful waterfalls to hike to. Other great places to visit nearby are the Oregon Gardens and the German-style village of Mt. Angel.
  2. Smith Rock SP and Peter Skene Ogden SSV: Spectacular rock formations in the high desert of Central Oregon rising into the sky above the steep canyon of the Crooked River make Smith Rock my second favorite SP. It has world-class rock climbing routes and both easy and hard hiking trails. Misery Ridge is painfully steep but rewards those at the top with views of nearly every snow-capped volcano in the state. Hike down the other side a little to watch climbers tackle Monkey Face rock. Last time I went there (2021), the nearby Juniper Junction store was closed. It used to have climbing gear and delicious huckleberry ice cream. Fortunately, some neighbor kids down the street sold lemonade in their front yard. And hopefully that was only a temporary closure. Mostly I go hiking there, but once right after college I went rock climbing there with the youth group I volunteered for. The nearby Peter Skene Odgen SSV, accessible from right off the highway, also has great views of the Crooked River Gorge.
  3. Heceta Head Lighthouse SSV and Carl G Washburne MSP: These two parks are connected by hiking trails, and make up my favorite stretch of the Oregon Coast. In between them is Hobbit Beach, which I believe is actually on the property of Washburne park, but you get to it from an unmarked pulloff on Hwy 101. In the old days, there were two trails leading down from the parking area, and you could choose between the one that had hobbit-like tunnels made by vegetation or the easier but longer path. Officials have blocked the more adventurous one to reduce the risk of erosion, but the beach is fantastic no matter how you get there. Tidepools, sandstone cliffs to carve your name into, and beach that no one can drive up to are a view of its draws. A newer trail from the same trailhead takes you up onto a cliff and over into the Heceta Head Lighthouse area. You can also get there from the main parking lot (it used to be called Devil’s Elbow State Park. It has a great mini-beach protected by cliffs as well as tours of the lighthouse and the lighthouse-keeper’s house (which is supposedly haunted).
  4. Crown Point Vista House SSC and Guy V Talbot SP/Latourell Falls Trailhead: Heading up to the Columbia Gorge, these two parks are close enough to each other to make another double-header. Together, they demonstrate what the Gorge has to offer: breathtaking views of the gorge itself from up high and crazy-tall waterfalls. But they both have more, too. The Vista House is an architectural wonder, a castle-like structure perched on a cliff. Inside offers an espresso stand and gift shop, as well as historical artifacts about the Gorge. Latourell Falls has two waterfalls if you’re willing to hike, but the big one that you can see from the parking lot is surrounded by geometric basalt columns.
  5. Fort Rock SNA: This one is newer to me, having only gone there a few years ago. But it quickly became one of my favorites. Every view of it is different and awesome, depending on where you’re standing. From farther back, you can see how it’s a ring left by an ancient volcano. It has more than geologic history, though. The oldest sandals in the world were found near here at Fort Rock Cave. I went with old college roommate and her kids, and we had a blast climbing all over it. It’s in Oregon’s “Outback” area, and has many other epic things to see nearby. I especially loved hiking through Crack-in-the-Ground, a slot canyon formed by volcanic fissure. Seeing the petroglyphs on the rock at Picture Rock Pass was also amazing!

Honorable Mentions:

Wonderful Waterfalls: White River Falls SP in Central Oregon looks like something straight out of a travel magazine. You have to hike a steep and treacherous trail to get the best view, but you can see the gushing semi-circle top tier right from the parking lot. Munson Creek Falls SNS at the coast is tall but difficult to photograph. Bridal Veil Falls SSV in the Columbia Gorge area is beautiful and an easy hike, and the same goes for nearby Shepperd’s Dell SNA.

Beautiful Beaches: Face Rock SSV in Bandon has giant rocks jutting out of the ocean. D River SRS in Lincoln City has endless beach going out from either side of the world’s shortest river. Fort Stevens SP near Astoria has history galore. Seal Rock SRS has fantastic rock formations on the beach that you can climb on. Agate Beach SRS has… you guessed it, agates to collect. Devil’s Punchbowl SP has a giant rock bowl that fills up with ocean water depending on the tide.

State History: State Capitol SP of course has our state capitol building, which is neat to tour or just walk around inside or the grounds. Wolf Creek Inn SHS is an old historic inn which has had guests including Clark Gable (while filming nearby) and Jack London (while writing a book). They preserved Jack London’s little room for people to see. The writer in me was big time nerding out when I saw that! Willamette Mission SP has filbert/hazelnut orchards, the nation’s largest black cottonwood tree, and the site of the 1834 Willamette Mission. Champoeg SHA is where Oregon’s first provisional government was formed in 1843, and is probably the most recent state park that I visited for the first time, when visiting my stepsister who lives nearby.

Great Campsites: Cascadia State Park has small campsites for RVs and tents as well as two group sites with a big field to play in. Families and youth groups also love playing in the river, hiking to Soda Creek Falls, and walking around the historic site of an old resort based on the healing powers of the spring. Cove Palisades SP has epic cliffs all through the reservoir. You can drive to the top of one of them from the city of Madras, and a park host there told me you can rent the clifftop meadow overlooking the dam for weddings for $50! Jessie M. Honeyman MSP, aka Honeyman SP, is also great for families with a pond to paddleboat in, sand dunes to explore and surf, and nearby dunebuggying. LaPine SP has small wood cabins and the nearby Deschutes River for rafting.

I didn’t realize until making the lists above just how many great state parks I’ve experienced here in Oregon. I’ve also enjoyed some in other states. Kudos to Nevada for putting together a Nevada State Parks passport, complete with color photos, that you can fill up with stamps to get a free annual parks pass. What are your favorite state parks?

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 2 Comments

Happy 100th Birthday, Oregon State Parks! (Part 1)

Hello readers! I hope you had as fun of a day as I did. This post will need to be split in two for a couple reasons.

Today I was hoping to publish my 100th blog post, but was not able to write last night, so tonight’s is only #99. Which means I need to write about Oregon State Parks again tomorrow to line up my 100th post with their 100 year anniversary celebration that was today. Plus, it works out well to split up this theme to two parts. Today I’ll talk about the party we attended, and tomorrow I’ll talk about some of my favorite state parks.

I may be a big national park nerd, but state parks are also near and dear to my heart. The biggest and most impressive of them are like miniature national parks that are often easier and cheaper to get to.

Today Oregon State Parks held a big “birthday” party at Sarah Helmick State Park near Monmouth. 100 years ago, a real pioneer woman named Sarah Helmick donated land to the state, which became our very first state park. She had come to Oregon in the late 1840s, and evidently loved it enough to donate her land to it. (Hey, I managed to tie this to my blog’s theme of the journeys of women! But I couldn’t find much online about her actual journey.)

It’s not a big park. A small forest and grassy meadow is about it. But it’s nice, and I have old memories of it. I attended Western Oregon University in Monmouth in the late ’90s. My field geography class went there once to practice using handheld GPSs (long before we had them installed in our phones) to navigate by foot.

I had a couple young kids with me, and despite the rain, they had a blast. The event, titled “2022 Centennial Birthday Event” had activity stations including a classic car expo, “recreational sports through time” such as croquet and disc golf, ODOT history, volunteers, natural resources, and others. The kids loaded up on freebies like stickers, mini-frisbees, activity books, and more. I was given a cool blanket for outdoor use (like picnics, sitting in sports bleachers, etc.). And we got free lunch and cupcakes. It was great! Many thanks to the people who volunteered for this event, and did it cheerfully in the rain. The state parks mascot beaver (maybe the cousin of OSU’s beaver?) also made an appearance giving hugs and high-fives to kids. We did not stay for the presentations and dedications because my nephew’s high school baseball state championship game was at the same time at the Keizer Volcanoes stadium. We made it there late in the game but in time to watch my nephew hit and pitch awesomely, and his team won!

To reward the kids for being great sports going to both of these events in the rain (we loaded up on coats, rain ponchos, rainboots, and umbrellas, but still…), I took them to the Gilbert House children’s museum in Salem so they could play indoors and a little outdoors on the giant vertical Erector Set. They loved it. We also walked through nearby Riverfront Park to see the giant Eco-Earth and the riverboat, the Willamette Queen. A great end to a day of celebrating our great state.

Stay tuned tomorrow for my top favorite Oregon State Parks, and be ready to share yours with me! (And if you’re outside of Oregon, feel free to share your state or province’s best parks!)

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 1 Comment

Botanical Journeys

For tonight’s post highlighting a woman’s journeys, I bring you Ynés Mexía. Born in Washington D.C. in 1870, she discovered her passion for botany late in life after being widowed and divorced. She came to northern California for medical treatment and ended up on excursions into the mountains with the Sierra Club, and became interested in the region’s ecology. After attending the University of California at Berkeley, she went on expeditions to collect specimens of flora. She travelled alone and with others all over the Americas for the next 13 years, going as far as northern Alaska and the Tierra del Fuego.

In her travels, Mexía often surprised people who weren’t used to seeing a woman do things back then like travel alone, wear pants, ride horseback, and sleep outside. She rejected stereotypes and fears in order to do what she set out to do, even when other explorers told her it wasn’t safe for her because she was a woman.

She travelled to México and South America again in her sixties before learning she had lung cancer. By then, she had discovered over 500 new species, with some being named after her. You can read more about her fascinating life (there are a lot of great stories in there!) online.

Ynés Mexía inspires me by showing that it’s never too late in life to make a difference in the world and to follow your calling. And by challenging the society of her time by doing what people said she couldn’t do. She did it.

Thinking about this and my previous post, what is something that you have always wanted to do, but haven’t done because of fear, society expectations, or anything else? What is holding you back (besides money, of course!)? What dreams have you done by overcoming obstacles? Please share in the comments if you’re willing.

Sources: Wikipedia article about Ynés Mexía, and a card about her in the Women Explorers Knowledge Cards, copyright Sharon M. Hannon, published by Pomegranate Communications, Inc.

Categories: Journeys of Women | 2 Comments

Following in the Footsteps of Pele

Hello readers! If you’ve read my last two posts, you know that I’m trying to do a post every night this week to reach my 100th post on Saturday. I’ve been teasing you with what other anniversary I’ll be celebrating that day. Unfortunately, we’re close to the 100th day of the invasion of Ukraine, which is devastating. So to not have my celebration confused with that, I’ll go ahead and tell you what I’ll be attending on Saturday, at the end of this post.

Also unfortunately, today saw yet another mass shooting in the USA. This one hit me really hard for personal reasons. But all of these events are tragic. Please join me in prayer for hospital staff across Tulsa, especially those at the hospital that was attacked.

In the wake of that news, I hesitate to even write anything today. But I have made a commitment, and I’d like to keep it. So tonight I’ll introduce you to a current woman explorer that I discovered recently in a National Geographic newsletter, and then let their article about her tell you more.

Lehua Kamalu is one of the few women captains and navigators with the Polynesian Voyaging Society, and is her ship’s first. The PVS sails the oceans without modern navigation technologies in order to replicate the journeys of the ancient Polynesians, and preserve their story, traditions, and seafaring knowledge. Instead of maps and compasses, they use the sun, stars, waves, and wind. Kamalu is inspired by Pele, the Hawaiian goddess of fire. As the legends tell it, Pele travelled from Tahiti to Hawaii after being banished. Kamalu recently did the same in reverse, after many other long-distance travels over sea in the ancient-styled ships.

I’ll let you find out more about this amazing woman and her journey using this link. It should let you read it unless you’ve already read three Nat Geo articles this month.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/woman-navigated-3000-mile-pacific-voyage-without-maps-technology?rid=5F6A9B5F2F373BD7C157FC3C1EEC46F7&cmpid=org=ngp::mc=crm-email::src=ngp::cmp=editorial::add=Photography_20220521

And now to announce what I’ll be honoring with my 100th post this weekend: the 100th anniversary of Oregon State Parks! They’re celebrating at parks around the state all year, but this weekend is the official party, held at Oregon’s first state park. I’ll let you figure out where that is for now.

Until tomorrow!

Categories: Journeys of Women | Leave a comment

Another Great Harriet

Hello readers! As I wrote yesterday, this week I’ll be posting every night so I can reach my 100th post on Saturday to celebrate the 100th year anniversary of something I like. See yesterday’s post for a clue as to what that is. Tonight’s post will be short and sweet because I’ve spent the majority of the evening defrosting my freezer in hopes that it and the refrigerator will work better after discovering everything a little too warm this morning. Many thanks to my workplace for letting me stuff food into the lunchroom fridge and freezer this morning!

I’ve written a little before about one of my favorite heroes, Harriet Tubman. Her journeys changed history as well as saved lives. Tonight’s post celebrates another traveling Harriet, the renowned explorer Harriet Chalmers Adams. She was born in Stockton, California in 1875 and died in France in 1937.

Adams travelled over an estimated 100,000 miles or more over the course of her life, exploring nearly every continent. She stayed and studied many of the cultures in these places, as well as the linguistic branches of Native American tribes in the USA. National Geographic first published articles and photos of hers in 1907, and she became the first lecturer to use color slides of her trips. During World War I, she was the only female war correspondent allowed to visit the front lines in France. She became the first woman president of the Society of Woman Geographers while recovering from an injury that would presumably keep her from ever walking again. Two years later, she travelled to North Africa. (Information in this paragraph from Wikipedia and from “Women Explorer Knowledge Cards”, copyright Sharon M. Hannon, Published by Pomegranate Communications, Inc.).

She once wrote, “I’ve wondered why men have so absolutely monopolized the field of exploration. Why did women never go to the Arctic, try for one pole or the other, or invade Africa, Thibet, or unknown wildernesses? I’ve never found my sex a hinderment; never faced a difficulty which a woman, as well as a man, could not surmount; never felt a fear of danger; never lacked courage to protect myself. I’ve been in tight places and have seen harrowing things.” (“Woman Explorer’s Hazardous Trip in South America”, The New York Times, August 18, 2012).

Adams seems to me an amazing force to be reckoned with. A person who does not let anything keep her from going where she wants to go. She did these things in an era when women weren’t allowed to do much because society didn’t think they could do much. Wow, did she ever prove them wrong! I need to remember her the next time I doubt if I can do what I need or want to do. And now I need to find out how to be in the Society of Woman Geographers, if it still exists. Thank you for your inspiration, Harriet Chalmers Adams.

And I’m finally off to bed, just in time for this post to count for today. Stay tuned for tomorrow’s post, which is TBD.

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Weekend of Waterfalls

Hello friends and followers! I hope you all had a good Memorial Day weekend, whatever it means to you. For many here in the USA it is a time of outdoor fun and food, for many a time of reflection and honoring fallen loved ones, and for others a mix of the two. I’d like to give a quick update and share some fun I had this weekend. I’m trying to get better at sharing about my travels more often in travel article styled posts. This week I also plan to write about some amazing women’s journeys. If I keep on schedule, this Saturday will be my 100th post, just in time to celebrate the 100th year of something awesome! Stay tuned!

Before I share about some fun I had this weekend, I want to pause and honor the innocent lives lost in the two recent mass shootings, one at a grocery store that appears to be racially motivated, and the other at an elementary school where the motive is as yet unknown. Please join me in sending a prayer for comfort for the loved ones of those lost. I’m sure that this Memorial Day was extra difficult for them.

And a quick update: my new “civilian” job is going well. I’m working in an office to support account managers for employee benefits for clients including nonprofits, governmental and educational agencies, and businesses. My coworkers are all great, and my favorite part so far is helping the account managers put together publications for clients to send to their employees.

This Memorial Day weekend, I was supposed to go camping and rafting on the Deschutes River with my Central Oregon friends. But Oregon weather hijacked those plans. So instead I got to revisit some favorite places with people I love.

On Saturday, we went to Silver Falls State Park. Yes, it was raining, but that’s actually a great time to go there. Evidently we weren’t the only ones to think that, because there were a fair number of brave souls there, most of whom were wearing plastic ponchos. But it was still way quieter than sunny summer days that draw crowds. We decided not to hike the whole loop trail but just see the highlights and warm up in-between them. It was my boyfriend’s first time there, and he was awed by the scale of South Falls. We ate lunch, played cards, and warmed up by a fire in the lodge. Then we drove to North Falls and hiked the epic stone stairs down to the viewpoint. We took in the view of the falling water and rain from a bench in the giant cavern behind the falls.

After that, we drove to the picturesque town of Mt. Angel. It has been structured and decorated to look like a German town. We attended the Vespers service at the Abbey church where we sang along with monks. Then we ate dinner at the newly reopened Glockenspiel restaurant. The chicken schnitzel was delicious! We wandered around downtown a bit, and then headed south to come home. But we stopped in Salem to top off our German-themed evening with cake and coffee at the Konditerei. They’ve revamped a bit, and I swear it tasted better than it ever did when I lived in Salem!

Yesterday (Sunday) I stayed mostly home and got some things done that I needed to. My church service is in the evening, and after it everyone went to an ice cream shop, despite the cold outside. Worth it!

Today I got to take my boyfriend’s family to Sweet Creek Falls trail (Homestead Trailhead) for their first time there. Like the Silver Falls State Park’s “Trail of 10 Falls,” this trail also has 10+ waterfalls. They are much smaller in stature than at Silver Falls, but so is the trail, making it a family friendly treat. The creek itself is beautiful even between the waterfalls, and fort-like stumps, rocky shallows to splash in, and cliff-hugging catwalks provide lots of fun for kids. The biggest waterfall is the official Sweet Creek Falls at the farthest point on the trail. You can’t see the whole thing at once but can hike a steep trail to the upper viewpoint. It rained on us as we hiked back to the trailhead, so we ate our picnic lunch in the car and headed back. We stopped at the Gingerbread Village restaurant to buy baked treats (gingerbread cookie people, gingerbread cake, and carrot cake with like an inch of cream cheese frosting) and use the bathrooms. There were some fun photo ops set up outside, and we visited the giant pig out back as well. The restaurant was overwhelmed with guests who stopped to eat on their way home from a weekend at the coast, so I’m glad we didn’t get a table and eat there.

All in all, it was a lovely weekend. I may add some photos eventually, but as I said earlier, I’m trying to get better at writing more often, so I’m not going to wait until I download pictures from my phone to my laptop. I’m going to try to write a post a day this week, as part of my countdown to 100 posts and 100 years of something I love. Hint: one of the places I went this weekend is part of that celebration. Can you figure out what it is?

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 2 Comments

2021 Memories Near and Far Part III

And now for the rest of the story, or at least the rest of 2021’s adventures. If you haven’t read Parts I and II yet, go back and read/skim those first, so you know what this one is about. I know I usually don’t make my end-of-year-review posts this long and drawn out, but for some reason I want to post about last year’s highlights in more depth than usual. Maybe it’s because many people considered 2020 and 2021 to be “throwaway years”, and I just don’t want to remember them like that. Because yes, there were hard times. But there were also good times. So anyway, here’s the rest of the year after my big Texas road trip, at least what I can remember from seeing photos.

Fall fun! My church was doing hikes on Wednesday evenings, and we enjoyed the sunset from Swing Hill on Mt. Pisgah. My friends Chelsey and Rachel and I went to Johnson Farm for the pumpkin patch, and enjoyed hot cider and homemade doughnuts. And I went to the Oregon Ducks vs. OSU Beavers women’s soccer game on Halloween with friend Brit and her kiddos. Also in the fall, I attended friend Mollie’s beautiful outdoor wedding, hiked with friend Paola, played at a park with my cousin Josh and his family, went to backyard firepit evenings at friends’ houses, took Chris’s kids to parks, and lots of other things that I might post pics of on Facebook. And around Halloween, I hosted my first ever “Black Forest Party” with Black Forest foods and drinks. Friends and family came, and we watched Into the Woods. Very fun!

Fall foliage! I hiked up Angels Rest on the Columbia Gorge with friend Alex and her husband and pooch. And got this surprise sight on the back side of the Hult Center in Eugene when I was there to get weekly Covid tests for work. It’s a Japanese Garden dedicated to the Japanese-Americans who were sent to internment camps during WWII.

Then for Fall Break over Thanksgiving week, I flew to Arizona to spend it with friend Jas and her roommate and family. Can you tell that I really needed out of Oregon in 2021 after 2020 being stuck close to home? Jas and I hiked to the vortex at the top of Cathedral Rocks, to an old mine and petroglyphs on the Dixie Mine trail, and with her family and friends we hiked around Watson Lake in Prescott. On Thanksgiving Day, we took a walk near her and her roommate’s house through saguaro and lots of other cactus and interesting plants. Arizona is beautiful in autumn!

Last, we come to Christmas. I did all the normal things with family, of course. My coworker Tammy and her kids and I got drenched getting Christmas trees from a local farm. Jas came to Oregon to visit, and we went to see White Christmas at the Elsinore Theater in Salem. And Chris and his kids spoiled my cat Arwen with her own Christmas tree.

That pretty much wraps up 2021! I’m sure I missed some important things, but hopefully I got most of the highlights. There were hard times, too, of course. And hard work at the school. We got to go back to school in person in summer and full time in fall, and it was great to see my students and colleagues in the flesh. I’ll try to do a better job of posting more often this year instead of waiting till the end of the year (or four months after it!). With that, spring is in swing and summer is coming, so let’s enjoy 2022!

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 2 Comments

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