My Trips and Tips

Life abroad and adventures from my younger days, trips with my new family, travel tips, and other fun. Includes Christmas newsletters because when I was a teacher, that’s when I had time to write about the year’s travels. To see just the posts from when I lived abroad or just the posts for travel with kids, use a cell phone and scroll to the very bottom to access those two sub-categories.

World Refugee Day

To my regular readers: this will not be a normal fun travel-themed post. Feel free to skip it if you are experiencing compassion fatigue or political issues fatigue or any other reason. I don’t want to convince anyone of anything necessarily. For the record, I’m not a member of any political party and don’t care what parties anyone else is in. But I must obey my conscience and write this post. I need to stand up for what I believe is right. And it will feature one woman’s recent journey. Read on to learn about her story.

I’ve been wanting to write about refugees and immigration for a while now, but have not been sure where to start or where to go with it. There is so much happening in the world and even in our country that grieves me. World Refugee Day (established by the United Nations) seems like a good opportunity to write about it. I love this country and think it has much to offer and much potential. But right now, segments of our national government seems to abandoning our values. I will list some examples here, and am using the collective “we” as a way of taking part in a collective lament and repentance.

We recently turned our back on Afghan refugees who were promised they could come here because of the danger they are in from having helped the American military.

We have all but destroyed USAID, which helped stabilize countries so they would be less likely to have refugees (and had programs to deal with things like Ebola before it becomes a disaster like the DRC is dealing with now).

We take law-abiding immigrants who are showing up for their immigration appointments and put them (and their children) in detention centers with horrible conditions and threaten to send them to countries where they don’t even know the language.

And so many more examples I’ve seen in major news publications this year. I would like to share with you a specific situation of a Vietnamese-American family (and maybe an Afghan refugee family too if I get permission from the friend who shared it).

The following two links tell the story of Khanhi Truong & her family. I found out about it from a Facebook post by an old Christian ska band I grew up listening to, Five Iron Frenzy. I think one of their members knew this family. On the Go Fund Me webpage, I recommend scrolling to the bottom and reading the posts and updates in chronological order. A friend of the family set it up for them, but the posts where Khanhi herself writes the updates made me cry every time one was sent out.

https://abc7.com/post/vietnamese-father-husband-fountain-valley-resident-is-held-detention-center-being-detained-ice/16088116/

https://www.gofundme.com/f/bring-evelyns-dada-home

I don’t know what your spiritual beliefs are, but I consider myself a Christian. There are several Bible verses about how to treat foreigners. You can read some of them here: https://sojo.net/22-bible-verses-welcoming-immigrants I understand deporting people who come here illegally or who commit crimes once here. But I do not understand treating people the way that is happening now. Especially if we are claiming to be a “Christian country.” We are ruining our witness by claiming this but then treating people with contempt. I grew up with a worship song whose chorus stated “And they’ll know we are Christians by our love.” I hope we can start treating people with more humanity and love.

If you know ways to help these situations, please tell me. I don’t have much money for sending to organizations to help right now like UNHCR and more local ones like Salem For Refugees (as well as organizations that help children in the countries they’re in like Compassion International and City of Refuge International). I’ve tried writing letters to my local politicians but they already agree with me and are doing what they can. I’ve signed a national petition by the Christian organization World Relief but I don’t know if it did any good. And I still don’t feel like I’m doing enough to help the situation.

If you read this far, thank you. Thank you for caring. Please do what you can and share any ideas you have to help.

Sorry this post is getting out at the tail end of World Refugee Day. We took a bunch of teens and tweens hiking to waterfalls today and I didn’t have time to write it until tonight. I hope you all had as beautiful of a day as we did. I am grateful to live in such a beautiful place that is safe to enjoy.

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Happy Trails to You

Happy National Trails Day! Okay, it’s now after midnight as I write this, so I guess it was yesterday, but I’m still up and counting it as today. If you didn’t know about this event (I think I’d heard of it before, but actually looked it up this time), you can find out more at https://americanhiking.org/national-trails-day/.

My day was filled with chores, shopping, and occasional rain, so I didn’t get onto a trail until late this evening. We ate dinner with my in-laws in the UO Campus area, and since the days are long now, we stopped at Hendricks Park afterward to walk the paths of the rhododendron garden before it got too dark. Chris and the kids played on the grassy lawn at the top while I walked around the garden. Not exactly an epic hike, but well worth the stop after dinner. Bonus: the sunset over the city from back at the parking lot, with a view of the tower at Hayward Field, where track & field world championships and Olympic trials are held!

Hopefully many of you got out onto a longer trail today, wherever you were. I would love to hear about it in the comments below!

Also, what are your favorite trails that you’ve ever hiked? If I could only pick one to do again, I’d probably say the Hidden Lake Trail at Glacier National Park in Montana. The views kept getting more and more beautiful, and ended at an epic overlook where mountain goats hung out with my friends and me. Seriously a dream come true. I may or may not have been holding a mountain goat stuffy while hiking that trail (my friends had just purchased it for me at at gift shop since we hadn’t seen any mountain goats in the park yet, and then the next trail we hiked, there they were!). I regret nothing.

Hidden Lake Overlook, Summer 2017; Photo by Jesie MacDonald

Yesterday (Friday) my school had our version of Field Day, and this upcoming week we’ll have our version of Outdoor School. My coworker and I will be leading a rotation of Arts & Crafts & Maps. Thursday will be our awards ceremony and graduation, and then summer begins! I stayed up late every night last week grading last-minute math worksheets and tests that kids turned in. I am ready for summer! I just need to finalize grades and have fun with kids this week. And tear down / pack up my classroom because a few of us teachers are swapping rooms. And then… hiking and day trips and our family camping trip to the coast! And… taking in professional development to renew my license. Fun, fun. But I’m excited for all of it. And excited for next school year. After enjoying summer, of course.

Well, I’m trailing off now (thanks to hubs for the joke), so I will say goodbye and goodnight. Happy trails to you!

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Welcome Spring Part II: Happy May Day! (Summer?)

Soon after I published my last post, I found myself wishing I’d waited. I found even more great wildflower hikes in the Eugene/Springfield area!

That next week, my coworkers and I took our 11th & 12th grade students to Mt. Pisgah. Not the Arboretum side or even Swing Hill, but we hiked over 6 miles up to the summit and down from the other side (East/Pleasant Hill trailhead; I’d never done that side) and then another couple miles out and back to the river. Some of the students had never really hiked, but they made it! And both hikes were covered in camas lilies, wild irises, and a small pink flower I didn’t recognize. (Oh, and poison oak). At the end of the week, I hiked a bit in the upper trails of the Arboretum there and saw more camas and irises. Then my friend Jas and I hiked the South Eugene Meadows trail of the Ridgeline trail system after donating blood since it’s one of the easier hikes in the area, and we weren’t supposed to do strenuous stuff after donating. I had to go back to South Eugene later that day, so I walked the camas-filled path at Wayne Morse park for the first time in a good while (I used to live near it). And another day, I stopped at Willamette Heights again, and saw some full-on tall irises along the trail! Spring is beautiful!

Or should I call it summer? I looked up May Day to explain it to my students on Friday, and remembered that in older times in Europe, it was considered to be the beginning of summer. That’s why the tradition of “Midsummer” is at the summer solstice, which is usually when we kick off summer here. Tomorrow is supposed to be 84 degrees here in the Willamette Valley, so summer makes sense! But I don’t count summer until I wrap up the last term’s grades and go on vacation. I’m excited to have one this year! It’s been 6 years since I’ve had a full teacher summer off, since I worked in the insurance industry the last few years and taught at a school that had summer school for the 3 years before that.

Anyway, I wanted to post some more wildflower photos from the last couple weeks because they are gorgeous. And one non-wildflower pic: our cat Arwen enjoying her new Hobbit-themed kitty door that my husband installed last weekend. I showed that photo to my students and two classes requested a “Take your pet to work day” so they could meet her. They might like that, but she wouldn’t! She survived visiting my students on Zoom during the pandemic, and that’s enough for her.

Happy spring, again! Or summer!

No admittance except on kitty business.

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Welcome Spring!

Happy spring! At least to the mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. This will be a quick post. I’m working on a couple of longer articles that I’m excited about. But with my teaching schedule, I’m not sure when I’ll get them done, and I’d like to take a moment to celebrate spring with you. Welcome, sunshine and flowers! (Okay, you’re welcome, too, dear rain that keeps things green)

Willamette Heights Park, April 2026

I hope you all had lovely spring holidays! St. Patrick’s Day, Passover, Easter, Nowruz (which is my favorite of the world’s new years; it makes more sense to me for a new year to start at the beginning of spring than in the middle of winter), Eid-al-Fitr, and Rama Navami are celebrations we’ve had so far. And we have some secular celebrations coming up, too, like Earth Day and Memorial Day.

Spring is a beautiful time of year, with the symbol of new life prevalent in the natural world and spiritual disciplines. I hope you all enjoy it.

Here in the Eugene/Springfield area, the camas lilies are in full bloom right now, sometimes in full fields. The best place to see them in Eugene is Wayne Morse Family Farm (aka Morse Ranch) in South Eugene. The trail through the lower (north) end of the park goes through a whole patch of them. The best place to see them in Springfield is Willamette Heights Park, up the little trail from the grassy area to the summit. Here are a couple photos of them from past years. (My photos from the same spot in Willamette Heights park last week were a bit too high of contrast with the sun and shade, so the only pic from this year is the one in the sun up above). Enjoy!

Oh, and yes, I did get a spring break this year, now that I’m back to teaching. We took our family to Central Oregon to visit my cousins in their new home in Bend. It was beautiful! Mountains and rock formations galore! I’ll hopefully post some pictures from it soon, or at least incorporate them into future posts. Happy spring, everyone!

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The Alps of Everywhere

In a previous post, I compiled a list of “Grand Canyons” around the country and world. Most of these were canyons with other official names but nicknamed the “Grand Canyon of ……” or the “Little Grand Canyon of …” That got me thinking, what about the Alps? This time of year, at least for me here in the winter of the Northern Hemisphere, I love thinking about snowy mountains and cozy alpine lodges and towns. So I set about to discover all the “Alps” I could find.

Of course, the Alps in Europe are, well, The Alps. You know, the big mountain range that spans several countries in continental Europe and has the iconic Matterhorn in it. (The real one in Switzerland, not the Disneyland ride.) I started writing this in the early winter, but now the winter Olympics just took place in the Alps! There are several subdivisions of that parent range, like the Bavarian Alps, and even sub-ranges of the sub-ranges, like the Dolomites in Italy. But there are some other mountain ranges in the world with the word “Alps” in their official names, and of course others that are nicknamed “The Alps of _______” (fill in country, region, province, state, etc.) Are they true Alps? What makes a mountain range or alpine town have Alps-like-qualities? Similarly, some towns or regions have “Switzerland” in their nickname, such as “Little Switzerland,” implying an alps-like feeling to the place.

Let’s see if we can figure out what makes a place seem like the Alps (or Switzerland). Here’s a rundown on Alps that I found online, and I’ll include photos of any that I’ve taken if I can find them in my old files. Also, keep an eye out below for information about a really cool woman writer/traveler that I met recently!

Mountain Ranges and Regions with Alps in the Name: (all but the last entry were found in a Wikipedia disambiguation page or elsewhere in Wikipedia)

  • The Alps proper (with subdivisions/sub-ranges being the Bavarian Alps, Eastern Alps, Julian Alps, Northern Limestone Alps, Southern Limestone Alps, Southern Alps, and Western Alps) – Monaco, France, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Italy, Slovenia, Lichtenstein – I’ve only seen the northern edge of the Bavarian Alps, when I went to Neuschwanstein Castle in Germany.
  • Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians)- mostly Romania
  • Arrocher Alps – Scotland (part of the Grampian Mountains range)
  • Dinaric Alps – Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, and Albania
  • Lyngen Alps – mostly Norway
  • Apuan Alps – Italy
  • Sunnmore Alps – Norway
  • Norlund Alps, Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps, Princess Elizabeth Alps, Schweizerland Alps, and Slauning Alps – Greenland (All right Greenland, we get it, you’ve got lots of awesome mountains!)
  • Southern Alps – New Zealand
  • Australian Alps – you guessed it – Australia! They’re part of the Great Dividing Range.
  • Japanese Alps – several mountain ranges in Japan
  • Pontic Alps – Turkiye (called the Parhar Mountains in the local languages)
  • Yeongnam Alps – Korea
  • Danakil Alps – Ethiopia and Eritrea – a highland region along the southern Red Sea – this one didn’t show up on the Alps disambiguation page, but it does have its own page in Wikipedia
  • Bohemian Alps – Nebraska, USA – evidently this is a region of gentle hills settled by Czech immigrants, and it reminded them of their homeland
  • Trinity Alps – California, USA – a sub-range of the Klamath Mountains in Northern CA and Southern Oregon
  • Mexican Alps – Puebla, México – I only found one reference to this supposed mountain range, and it looks like a university research paper. The mountain it mentions, however, is verified on Wikipedia as the 3rd highest peak in North America as well as the tallest volcano. Awesome!
The only picture file I could find of the Bavarian Alps was a photo I took of a page in my first Germany trip scrapbook. It snowed while we were in the area. Beautiful!

Mountains, Ranges, and Hills Nicknamed Alps of Their Area:

  • North Cascades National Park, Washington, USA – “The American Alps” – I only found out about this park several years ago, after visiting other parks that I thought would get that title, like Glacier NP in Montana and Rocky Mountain NP in Colorado. Now I’ve got to go!
  • Glacier National Park, Montana, USA – “The Alps of America” – my search for “alps of america” gave me website after website for North Cascades NP. However, I’ve been to Glacier, and thought there’s no way that someone hasn’t claimed the title for it. So I specifically googled Glacier NP and Alps, and sure enough, someone (understandably) says Glacier is as beautiful as the Alps! I’m happy for these two parks to vie for the title. Photo below.
  • Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho, USA – the “Alps of America” – Another website I found considers the Sawtooth Mountains of Idaho to claim this title for the country. Sure, why not? I haven’t seen them, and they do look beautiful in the photos.
  • Wallowa Mountains, Oregon, USA – “The Alps of Oregon” – Unlike the Cascade Mountains that I’m used to over here in Western Oregon, the Wallowas aren’t volcanoes. They have a mountain named Matterhorn and several glacial valleys. I’ve only seen the northern edge of them while on a road trip, but they are beautiful! Photo below. Also below in the references is a link to the Wallowas page of the website of an Oregon author/hiker extraordinaire that I discovered recently. I’d been following the Facebook profile “Hike Oregon” for a good while when I realized that it’s a person, not an organization like “Travel Oregon”. She held a booksigning event in Eugene recently, so I went to meet her. Franziska came from Germany, lives in Oregon, and writes hiking books with directions, descriptions, great photos, and helpful info. She also has videos on YouTube. And of course I bought one of her books!
  • Ruby Mountains, Nevada, USA – “the Swiss Alps of Nevada” – I’ve been to the Lamoille Canyon portion of them, which I’ve heard called the “Yosemite of Nevada.” It is spectacular! I went in winter so we couldn’t hike much, but just walking up the snow-covered road held vista after vista. Photo below.
  • Issaquah Alps” – Washington, USA – the unofficial name of some highlands near Seattle
  • Davis Mountains – “The Alps of Texas” – a mountain range in West Texas
  • Hill Country Drive – “The Swiss Alps of Texas” – 2400 foot peaks on this scenic road trip
  • Borscht Belt, New York, USA – aka “Yiddish Alps” – An area of the Catskill Mountains that used to be an area where a lot of Jewish Americans would vacation; the Yiddish Alps name was given by Larry King.
  • East Durham area, New York, USA – aka “Irish Alps of New York” – Also in the Catskills, a region settled by people from Ireland in the early 1900s.
  • Canadian Rocky Mountains, British Columbia & Alberta, Canada – “Canadian Alps” – I only found one reference to Alps in Canada, and of course it’s the Rockies. With epic national parks like Banff, Jasper, and several others, the Rockies are the strongest contender for the title. I was surprised not to find any other websites referring to them as Alps. But maybe Canada tries to differentiate their mountains from the European ones.
  • Lake District, Chile – “Chile’s Alps” – offers a “milder Andes Mountain experience than Patagonia” and the town inside the Vicente Pérez Rosales National Park “has a Swiss Alps feel to it” according to the article below. From what I’ve seen in photos, the Patagonia region of Chile and Argentina resembles the Dolomites in Italy’s Alps, so I say both regions qualify for an Alps designation.
  • Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic – “Dominican Alps” – This tropical playground has the Caribbean’s highest mountain, Pico Duarte, at over 10,000 feet.
  • Rwenzori Mountains, border of Uganda & the DRC – “Africa’s Own Alps” as well as “Mountains of the Moon” – these mountains look amazing on the websites and Wikipedia page. I did see small mountains in the DRC as I looked across Lake Abert from the Uganda side, but was not far south enough to see these beauties.
  • Gamburtsev subglacial mountains, Antarctica – “Antarctica’s Hidden Alps” – the NBC article below has some great graphics to show the Alps-sized/shaped mountain range sitting below a giant ice sheet.
  • Saxon-Bohemian Switzerland, Germany and Czech Republic – this region straddles the border of Southeast Germany and Northwest Czech Republic and was so named by artists Adrian Zingg and Anton Graff, because it reminded them of their homeland, the Swiss Jura. I’ve been to the Saxon Switzerland National Park and hiked (in the snow) to the Bastei Bridge. Seems funny to me to have a place so close to Switzerland be nicknamed that, but it’s beautiful no matter what!
  • The Himalayas: Just kidding! They’re the highest mountains in the world, and don’t need to be the Alps of anything. They are the epic Himalayas. We should have “Little Himalayas” around the world! I don’t know of any specific parts of them or nearby ranges that have been compared to the Alps, but I would say that the city of Bamiyan, Afghanistan, nestled high in the Hindu Kush range, reminded me of Colorado with its golden-leafed aspens and rocky cliffs (complete with ancient caves that used to house Buddha statues from hundreds of years ago).

Cities, Towns, and Resort Villages With “Alps” (or “Switzerland”) in the Name or Nickname:

  • Alps, Georgia, USA – An unincorporated community in the U.S. state of Georgia, elevation 850 feet. Not sure why this tiny town was named Alps. See the town of Helen for a more alpine-sounding destination.
  • Swiss Alp, Texas, USA – Another unincorporated community, but this one was settled by German Lutherans around 1865.
  • Alpine, Texas, USA – A high desert city at over 4,000 feet elevation and surrounded by mile-high mountain peaks
  • Alpine, Wyoming, USA – The town of Alpine, aka Alpine Junction, sits at elevation 5,663 feet and at the junction of rivers, mountain ranges, and U.S. routes 26 and 89.
  • Alpine, Arizona, USA – A much smaller Alpine “census-designated place” with a population 145. Not sure how it got its name.
  • Alpine, Oregon, USA – A tiny town in farm country with two vineyards along Alpine Road, which leads up into the Coast Mountains to the Alsea Falls Recreation Area, which has a great picnic area and hiking trail and two waterfalls. I’ve driven through the town of Alpine but would like to explore it more.
  • Helen, Georgia, USA – aka “Georgia’s Alpine Village” – The town of Helen seems to have a similar history as Leavenworth, Washington – a dying lumber town reborn as a German-style tourist destination near the mountains, this time the Blue Ridge Mountains of the Appalachians.
  • Leavenworth, Washington, USA – “An Alpine Village in Washington State” – Same story as above, but this one on the rain shadow side of the Cascade Mountains. I went there with a friend several years ago so I’ll have a photo below, and yes, it’s feels a lot like Germany! Plus, they now have an alpine coaster on the side of a hill that I want to take my family on if we ever make it up there.
  • Helvetia, West Virginia, USA – A “Little Switzerland” – this town in the highlands of West Virginia was settled by Swiss immigrants and kept its culture in many ways
  • Heber Valley and town of Midway, Utah, USA – “Utah’s Little Switzerland” – named for its mountain location in the Wasatch Back range and Germanic heritage
  • Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania, USA – “America’s Little Switzerland” – This mountain town was named for a Native American Olympic gold medalist and boasts scenic railroads and hiking trails.
  • Afton Alps Resort, Minnesota, USA – A ski resort surrounded by Afton State Park
  • Mazamitla, Jalisco, México – the “Mexican Alps” or “Little Switzerland of México” – I found multiple articles about this quaint resort town sitting at an elevation of 2200 meters in the mountainous southwest of the country, where residents of Guadalajara go to get away from the heat. It is considered a “Pueblo Mágico,” which according to Wikipedia is a town designated by the Secretariat of Tourism that offers visitors “cultural richness, historical relevance, cuisin, art, crafts, and great hospitality.”
  • Arteaga, Coahuila, México – the “Switzerland of México” or “the Mexican Switzerland” – Another of México’s official “Pueblo Mágico” towns, this one is in the northeast corner of the country, next to the Sierra Madre Oriental range, and has wooden cottages and skiing. Not sure which town is more alps-like, but Mazamitla and Arteaga both sound beautiful!
  • Ouray, Colorado, USA – the “Switzerland of America” town in the San Juan Mountains of the Rocky Mountain range.
  • Jackson, Wyoming, USA – this town “reflects the Swiss Alps” according to The Travel magazine; and with nearby ski resort villages and Grand Teton National Park, I’m inclined to agree. I think my friend and I drove through it on our way back to her house in Montana after visiting Yellowstone and Grand Teton parks, but I don’t think I got any photos of it. So I’ll include one of my favorite pics of the Tetons.
  • Stowe, Vermont, USA – the “Ski Capital of the East” at the bottom of the highest mountain in Vermont
  • Telluride, Colorado, USA – another San Juan Mountains town, in a box canyon with a 365-foot waterfall overlooking the town
  • Winthrop, Washington, USA – the “Swiss Alps of Washington” (thus rivaling Leavenworth), with North Cascades National Park as a backdrop
  • Lake Placid, New York, USA – Olympians used to ski in this town in the Adirondacks
  • Mt. Angel, Oregon, USA: This little town has an interesting immigrant history, with Swiss monks building a monastery in the late 1800s and Bavarian settlers following. The downtown is decked out German-style, and they host the state’s largest Oktoberfest in fall. It’s in a mostly flat part of the Willamette Valley, so not exactly alpine, but the monastery is built on a small hill that has great views of the Cascade Range.

So, what do you think? What makes a place “Alps-like” or like a “little Switzerland”? I think it’s anywhere with beautiful mountains and/or cozy villages. What is the nearest “Alps” to you? Or other places that I missed? I did read a fun article recently about Scandinavian towns here in the USA, but that leads to a whole new list.

References: (aside from Wikipedia, and in no particular order; some are official travel sites for an area or magazines, and others are blogs by fun travel writers)

All photos were taken by me (unless my friend Jas took the selfie of us in Leavenworth).

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Love + Oregon

Happy 167th birthday, Oregon! And yes, my 8th & 9th grade math students did the 6-7 hand gestures when they saw that message on my digital white board yesterday. Because despite the news articles declaring that adults killed the fad, 6-7 is still here. They love it.

Fortunately, my students also love Oregon. The warm-up question I assigned for the day wasn’t a math problem but “What is your favorite place in Oregon?” And they answered with gusto. Possibly to postpone doing math work.

Now I wish I’d kept a tally on the places they listed, but I’ll try to recount the best I can remember. I’m pretty sure the most mentioned locale was Crater Lake. Next was definitely the coast, with Coos Bay being the most mentioned coastal city. After that was the local rivers, especially the McKenzie. Several of the kids are really into fishing. A few kids mentioned vacation spots like Sunriver in Central Oregon and the Wallowa Mountains in Eastern Oregon. I was pleased that so many of my students love the outdoors!

Not many of them mentioned human-made places, but I know one of the 12th graders in my homeroom (who recently graduated early, congrats to her!) loves the Enchanted Forest theme park. My husband and I heard the news yesterday that Roger Tofte, who built it, passed away at age 96. May he rest in peace and his legacy live on.

I know I ask this nearly every year, but what are your favorite places in Oregon? I don’t know if I can narrow down mine very well (I love all of Oregon too much), but this last summer I finally made it down to the water’s edge in Crater Lake. My 17yo stepdaughter came with me while Chris hung out with the rest of the kids up at the rim. The trail down will be closed for the next couple years while they revamp the boat ramp, so I was grateful to get there before that! The water was beautiful, but our family’s favorite sight that day was the rainbow-cloud above one of the peaks on the rim.

A new favorite for me is the similarly-named Carter Lake in the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. It’s a low-key rustic campground along a small lake, complete with a little sandy beach to play on. It also has a trail over the dunes to the ocean beach, but be forewarned that it is a hefty workout. The 17yo was the only one to join me on that one, too, while everyone else played by the lake. We caught the sunset and saw one of the protected Snowy Plover birds.

As for my favorite human-made place, of course it is the Enchanted Forest. We took my mom there on Mother’s Day for her 70th birthday that week. She loved it as much as when she went there for her 40th birthday. My brother came, too, and had a blast playing there with our kids. Oregon is magical!

Photos from 2025, taken by me aside from the one I’m in. Please tell me your favorites in the comments below! And stay tuned for future posts. I’m still working on a fun article as well as a more serious one. Wishing you a happy Valentine’s Day and Oregon Statehood Day.

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Wolf-Themed Trips and Back to School

My husband and I celebrated our 3-year wedding anniversary last month, with our first kid-free overnight trip! We stayed a night at the Wolf Creek Inn, an historic site in the Oregon State Parks system. More about that later, as well as the White Wolf Sanctuary trip that we and the kids took in August. But first, a big announcement.

If you’re friends with me in the real world or Facebook, you may know this already, but I thought I’d make it official on here, too. I went back to teaching! In my “Quick Update” post this spring, I talked about getting promoted to an account manager position at the insurance brokerage firm USI. There were some aspects of that position that I really liked, but it hit me all of a sudden that I really missed teaching after three years away from it, and I’d better get back into it before it was too late.

Fortunately, one of the schools I taught at before had a position come open for this school year. Now I’m teaching two classes each of 8th & 9th grade math, one high school math support class, and a credit-recovery World Geography class for 12th graders. I’m exhausted already from trying to get back into teaching and find my groove after three years out of it (and six years out of teaching regular ed classes). But also energized by getting to work with kids again! They are so fun! I’ve already gotten a drawing from one kid, and another kid and her mom donated a neat map-themed trunk to my classroom. There are tough days, but I feel more like myself now that I’m back in the career I trained for. Chris says I come home with more interesting stories. Certainly it’s more fun (and easier on my ADHD than sitting in a cubicle). I’m very grateful.

I’m also thankful to my husband for supporting my move back to teaching. It won’t be easy for me to balance work with family, but he will help. He is so great! We enjoyed taking time out of our busy lives for our little anniversary overnight trip to Southern Oregon a few weeks ago.

Wolf Creek Inn started out as a stagecoach stop on the Applegate Trail in the 1800s. Over the years, famous visitors have included Clark Gable and Jack London. The latter wrote a short story here, and they preserved his little room as a museum piece as well as named a the peak just south of town after him. We hiked it and enjoyed the views, although it looked like the Smoky Mountains due to the Moon Fire complex. The next day, we visited the nearby ghost town of Golden (also a State Heritage park in the Oregon State Parks system) on our way out. Speaking of ghosts, Wolf Creek Inn has embraced their alleged haunted status, so they have gone all out on Halloween decor. We even found Jack London, or at least a skeleton on the bed in his museum room! It was a little overwhelming. But the place kept its charm. The ballroom upstairs wasn’t decorated as Halloween-ish, and had big tables to spread out on, so we hung out up there to work on our writing and art.

Wolf Creek Inn is also an interpretive site along the Applegate Trail, complete with covered wagon and informational signs and a picnic table. A great spot to stop for a break on a road trip. We also visited a different Applegate Trail site in Myrtle Creek on the way down that was really neat. When I lived in Myrtle Creek many years ago, I didn’t know there was a hike you could do along the ruts of the trail! It goes up a bluff with great views of the valley and South Umpqua River below. In that area, we also stopped at Pizza Palace in Tri-City so Chris could see why his pizza restaurant reminds me of it, and ate lunch at Ken’s Sidewalk Café in Canyonville. I’ve shown Chris and the kids some of my old haunts in this area before, but it was fun to show him around a bit more without the kids. Wolf Creek Inn makes a great weekend getaway!

Speaking of wolves, on my birthday in August, we got to go to the White Wolf Sanctuary in Tidewater, Oregon. It’s up in the mountains near Waldport. The trip was thanks to the Summit Award I earned at USI. We made a loop of the trip, stopping to eat at a fisherman’s market in Newport and see the giant rock formations in the ocean at Seal Rock. We arrived at the meeting spot to get to the wolf sanctuary a little late, but fortunately they waited for us. It was a very educational and neat place. One of the wolves, Nukka , was the most friendly, letting us see her up close in her giant pen. She was beautiful. And she knew it. She would strut around and pose for us to admire her, reminding us of my cat Arwen. So cute! Thanks to USI for this experience!

This new (school!) year will be busy, so I may not get to write as much for a while. I’ve got a couple articles drafted and will get one of them out very soon (see below for preview). If you’re wanting some fall scenery ideas in the Eugene/Springfield area, be sure to check out my post of autumn photos from this past winter, a few posts ago.

Recently I’ve discovered a couple blogs that I think you’d enjoy. I’ll list them here along with websites and blogs from two very interesting local friends of mine.

http://www.walk-with-me.com – my friend Tyler’s website (with link to her blog on it). My next post is complete, and it’s about her fascinating life! She is an author and artist and led walking tours around the world for years. Stay tuned in a day or two for more about her, but if you can’t wait, check out her website.

jeromycilley.com – my former coworker at USI has had a very interesting life, too. He has some unique hobbies that he shares on his website/blog, including making music and hunting for animal skulls.

http://www.adventurouskate.com – Kate teaches women how to travel on their own.

http://www.thewanderingqueen.com – Michelle teaches women how to hike and backpack.

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Admiring Autumn from Afar

Okay, so I know this isn’t the time of year everyone is thinking of autumn. It’s January. If we’re daydreaming about a different season, it’s probably spring or summer. But I found some neat places nearby in the last year or two for viewing fall colors that I haven’t gotten to share yet. Besides, it’s January. The bleakest time of the year in many parts of the country and the Northern Hemisphere. My nation has a new president who is making sweeping changes, many of which are impacting people I know and populations I care about, like Afghan refugees that were promised to settle here and now can’t. I think we could all use some vibrant color right now; a bit of hope for the future. Read on for some photos and local destinations, and check back here in October or November for ideas of places to visit!

Eugene and Springfield have some beautiful places to see fall foliage, often mixed with evergreens. The sunny summit of the Mt. Baldy trail (one of the Ridgeline Trails in South Eugene) has epic views and great trees, doable for all ages with its 1/2 mile trails to the top. Willamalane Park in Springfield has a great playground, but my kids love to play below the giant sequoias and deciduous trees near the runner’s track just as much. Oakmont Park in Eugene has flowers and foliage to spare.

How many Eugenians have heard of Linslaw Park? I’d driven by it a million times on my way to the coast, but never stopped. Last fall, my Central Oregon friend Tracey treated me to an overnight trip to Florence while she was in Western Oregon for a conference. We stopped on the way for a picnic lunch at this Siuslaw River wayside in the Lane County Parks system. It had a pit toilet, a small boat ramp, a couple picnic tables, and a sign with only the last letter of the park name still on it. But I loved it! Subtle fall foliage stood under evergreens and along the river. I’d been to the coast enough that month to not have an agenda of my own this trip. After that wayside stop, I decided I’d be along for the ride to any other places Tracey suggested. It was so much fun to see places I’d never thought to stop at! This included a coffeeshop in Mapleton that had kittens on the back patio and a Mexican restaurant on the bayfront in Old Town Florence.

The next place I found with great fall colors was up the McKenzie River. The drive along the way was devastated by the 2020 fire, but fall foliage is growing underneath the burned evergreens for a stark contrast and a visual of new hope. My friend Jas and my mom came with me for that day trip. We saw some blue sky (and slackliners) over Sahalie Falls, which was beautiful. But the visual highlight of the trip was the Secret Garden at Belknap Springs, which we walked to after soaking in the pools. The autumn splendor was all around the garden, and so gorgeous! I’d never been there that time of year. It was perfect. We finished off that trip with a stop for dinner at my family’s new favorite road trip restaurant, Takoda’s in the town of Rainbow.

The last new bit of fall foliage I discovered last year was at the Eugene Japanese-American Art Memorial. This is a tiny park tucked behind the Hult Center (performance hall). I’d been there before, but not in autumn. The Japanese maple tree was in full color, and the fallen leaves of other trees blanketed the ground with gold. The memorial honors the American people who were sent to internment camps during WWII just for being Japanese immigrants or American-born of Japanese descent. I hope and pray that we are not entering that dark of a time now.

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Happy Oregon Statehood Day! (And Sno-Park Season!)

Oregon is 165 years old on Valentine’s Day this year! In case you haven’t noticed, I love my home state. I wasn’t born here (or any of the states in the USA, for that matter), but it’s the only U.S. state I’ve lived in, and I love it.

My husband and 5 kids and I recently moved across town, so it’s been a busy winter. This last Sunday, we finally took a break from unpacking and organizing to do one of my favorite Oregon activities: driving to the high passes of the Cascade Mountains to play in the snow. We needed it! The fresh mountain air, the pine trees, the snow… it was invigorating. Last year, we met friends at Santiam Sno-Park in the Santiam Pass. This year, we went to Salt Creek Falls Sno-Park near Willamette Pass. Both are great, but there are some differences. Stay tuned for a few travel tips, and comment below to share your favorite places to go in Oregon in the winter! (Or if you’re not living in Oregon, where would you want to go?)

If you’re not familiar with the Sno-Park system here in the Northwest, it’s pretty cool (pun intended). For one $4 parking pass, your whole family can play all day at any of the designated Sno-Parks in the national forests. Other than that, you do have to pay for (or borrow) the gear: sleds or inner tubes, snow pants, winter gloves, snow boots, hats, scarves, and anything else you need to keep warm. But you’d need all of those but the sleds/tubes if you went to one of the more expensive places anyway, like the pay-per-person tubing runs that pull you up the hill at the ski resorts. And those usually cost at least $10 per person. So I think the sno-park passes are the best bang for your buck, at least if you have as many kids as we do. But be aware that Sno-Parks usually only have a pit toilet for facilities. We used the bathrooms at a gas station in Oakridge on our way there.

Salt Creek Falls Sno-Park has sledding runs that are longer and a shallower grade than Santiam Sno-Park. For that reason, we felt that it’s a little safer than Santiam. But do beware of a ditch off to one side that our kids kept sliding into because they were trying to avoid the snow ramps people had built into the runs on the other side. There is a lot more flat space at the bottom for building snowmen and other typical snow activities, too. Our kids built snow-bears after getting bored of sledding and played in a fort that someone had previously built. But for most of them, the highlight was careening down the hills on an inner tube with one or two of their siblings. Okay, for our 13-year-old, her highlight was filming Chris and me ride down together and flip over at the bottom. My face planted deep in the snow, and she laughed for about 10 minutes.

Salt Creek Falls is also less crowded than the busier Santiam area. We found out last year that Hoodoo Ski Lodge at Santiam Pass is huge! It even has an arcade! In contrast, after playing in the snow this year, we visited the much smaller and quieter Willamette Pass ski lodge. If our kids were overwhelmed at Hoodoo last year, they were underwhelmed at Willamette Pass. But it was nice. Be aware that Willamette Pass Lodge doesn’t allow you to bring in your own food anymore. We may or may not have eaten our packed lunch at a cafeteria table as discreetly as we could because we didn’t know till we got in there and saw the gazillions of signs posted about it (they even wrote it on a white board). We ordered nachos to ease our conscience a bit, ate quickly and played some board games, and gratefully used the real bathrooms before heading home.

Someday, my husband and I hope to book a room and stay a couple days at Timberline Lodge at Mt. Hood. We plan to sit by the giant fireplaces, look at the views of the mountain, and read and write and play card games to our hearts’ content. But until then, my favorite winter activity in Oregon is probably playing at the sno-parks. What is your favorite winter activity or place to go in Oregon? Or somewhere else if you don’t live here? Comment below; I’d love to hear it!

P.S. Happy Valentine’s Day! And Ash Wednesday to some of you. I hope that wherever in the world you are, you feel loved by the people around you. You are definitely loved by God. I’m praying for peace in the world on this day dedicated to love.

2/14/2024 Note: Evidently I’m not the only one who celebrates Oregon’s birthday! Check out That Oregon Life’s post here: https://thatoregonlife.com/2024/02/love-letter-to-oregon/?utm_source=brevo&utm_campaign=Daily%20Newsletter%2021424&utm_medium=email

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Historical Fun Nearby and a New Favorite Artist

This Christmas vacation, we had hoped to go sledding up in the mountains. I even found snow pants for the kids at Costco and snow boots at BiMart. But El Niño is making us wait till later in the winter. For that and some other personal reasons, we decided to make our last family trip of the year be a low-key local one.

Where to go locally that wouldn’t involve a lot of walking, being outside in the cold rain, or a long drive, that we hadn’t already been to? Brownsville! Today we went to the Living Rock Studios and Kirk’s Ferry restaurant in the small town about a half hour away from the Eugene/Springfield area. We all enjoyed them, even our teens and our littles!

I’m actually surprised I’d never been to Living Rock Studios. If you know me well, you know I love rocks! I think I assumed it was a cheesy tourist trap, but I’m not sure why I thought that. It is very Christian-owned and oriented. There are Biblical scenes made out of rocks, backlit for spectacular effect, and there are Bible verses everywhere. But they are all very focused on love, and it had a positive vibe, so it did not feel dogmatic or pushy in any way. Howard Taylor, the man who built it, was a conservationist, and lobbied on behalf of one of the birds on the tapestries hanging on the wall, according to his daughter-docent. The family didn’t seem concerned with how old the Earth is, but just wanted to acknowledge what a beautiful world God created.

The building itself is fantastic. The stone structure is round, with a wheelchair-accessible ramp going up around the edge of it to the upper floor. There are all kind of rocks to see along the way and at the top, including many from various parts of Oregon as well as from around the world. Some you can light up with your phone flashlight to great effect. Others you just admire. There are historical items, too, including the pump organ that the docent’s ancestors played on when they were homesteaders in an old community that is now at the bottom of Cottage Grove Reservoir. Despite being a history teacher, I can get a little bored in museums of local history sometimes. But this place was very interesting, and our tour guide/docent was as much fun as the docent at the Municipal Elevator in Oregon City! Chris plied her with questions about historical events and practices, and happily soaked up her stories.

The admission price is donations only. We put some in the jar, and the kids loved buying beautiful rocks in the gift shop. Everything was very reasonably priced. We got there before noon, thinking we’d only spend a half hour there, but I think we spent an hour and a half! The kids got restless toward the end, but Chris and I could have looked at things and listened to her stories for much longer. She took a family photo of us, and with the Christmas decorations in the background, it’s now our official Christmas family photo! With no kids kicking each other! Here’s the website if you would like to check it out.

http://www.livingrockstudios.org

After exploring the rock studio, we were famished. We headed to Kirks Ferry Trading Post to eat. The restaurant was built around Alexander Kirk’s cabin from the 1800s. He operated a ferry across the river nearby. The restaurant’s website says it is the “oldest standing building in the state of Oregon,” but I can’t verify that elsewhere on the internet. Regardless, it is really cool! The cabin has been preserved (without the roof) and houses antiques, some of them for sale. The tables of the restaurant surround it. Our table was right next to one of the cabin windows. The food was reasonably priced (a perk for our family of 7) and delicious. I recommend the Broken Top Bourbon Burger, and dipping the sweet potato fries into their bleu cheese dressing. (For those of you not from Oregon, Broken Top is one of our picturesque volcanoes making up the Central Oregon skyline) Here is their website if you want to visit:

https://kirksferry1846.com/

The last thing I’ll leave you with in the year 2023 is an artist I enjoy and purchased things from this year. I discovered her art a few years ago from an article I’d seen online. But this year I went to her website to see the rest of her art, and happily bought a calendar and a puzzle gift for fellow National Park nerd friends the Sheldons. If I’ve written about artist Amber Share before, I apologize for the repeat. But I love her art! She had the brilliant idea of taking one-star reviews of national parks from TripAdvisor or wherever, and making vintage-style art posters based on them. I love the look of the old WPA travel posters, and I love Amber’s sense of humor! She picked the most ridiculous one-liners from people who obviously missed the point of the park they were at. Her art shows how beautiful and pristine the park is despite the review. Check them out here:

With that, I say good-bye to 2023 and look forward to new adventures in 2024. I may write some reflections on Monday, but until then, have a happy new year’s eve!

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