The many sights to snail

We have played, camped, danced, and played some more on this two-month-snail-vacation-journey! We are grateful, exhausted, filled up with personal reflections and insights into our futures… (don’t worry, we still like each other!). I’m so grateful for the friends and family who have followed along our road trip so far and been here for support!

This post will be our last one from the US for a while. We are flying to Guatemala tomorrow for three months!!! We will be starting the new year in a Mayan village north of Cobán, Guatemala teaching kids at a multi-cultural middle school. (We’ll be teaching English, but it’s not through a program typical to these situations. We’ve been doing our best to learn about teaching language, but admittedly we’re novices.)

Our intentions are to connect with the indigenous Mayan cultures and learn about community living in a rural, familial, small mountain community. And of course, we have lots of Spanish language skills to practice! We have so much ahead of us to learn, enjoy, and be grateful for.

While I would love to continue sharing photos and stories with our blog and friends, it is likely the village won’t have enough internet connection to do so. However, internet texting should be possible, so we will be using the app WhatsApp. (You just download the app and find our name in your phone contacts, and text us!)

We love you and wish you all a wonderful, happy new year!

California Friends!

Who knew these snails had so many connections in California? Rocky lived in Northern California for most of last year, and I surprisingly had many Celo friends throughout the state, so we patched together a quite fun trip visiting as many as we could! Here’s some photos of the fun things we did with them 🙂

We met up with our friends Ed (from Celo) and Thomas (Rocky’s old coworker) for a wild night of roller skating at the Laytonville, CA community center! We had so much fun 🙂

To celebrate winter solstice, we camped with our friends Yasmine and James on the beach and watched the sun set over the ocean and rise again over the mountains. The full moon and a fire lit our celebration of the longest night of the year!

My friend Yasmine took me and her friend Chloe out for a night in the city… in costume onesie pajamas. They know how to have a good time.

Heather, my dear Celo friend, took me foraging around her beachy hometown Santa Barbara, CA. I learned so many plant names and stories and we found a ton of food! Avocados, mushrooms, guavas, pineapple guavas, limes, cumquats, strawberry trees, and many other exotic finds made it tot the bag and to our tummies.

Heather and her family were so sweet to take me in for Christmas! (My first Christmas ever seeing palm trees and going to the beach, I might add)

Heather’s dad making world famous crepes. Can’t beat that fancy flip!

James, our friend from LA, showed us all the fancy city things like this electric scooter you walk up to with a phone app and rent! They go up to twenty miles and hour and are the BOMB

We stayed a night in Davis with Rockys friends Sarah, Malanyon, Linden and Magnolia. We had so much fun playing with the kids, going to the farmers market, and biking around the town of Davis!

Rocky’s friend Maude hosted us in Willits, in Northern California, while we visited Rocky’s old stomping grounds. He lived out here for nine months last year, and there were lots of things to show me and people to meet! We had a great time enjoying her company and her very quiet property, catching up on rest, communication, and clothes washing 🙂

Sarah and Sage are some of Rocky’s old pals we met up with. They are young farmers too so we had a lot to talk about! We were also lucky enough to get a tour of a community farm, the School of Adaptive Agriculture, where Sarah graduated from last year. Here we are posing with a compost “bioreactor,” which is a fancy word for a simple composting setup that allows for optimal conditions for fungus and bacteria to flourish. The farm also had some fun animals to hang out with!

We loved seeing each and every one of our friends who were so kind to make time to play with us on our trip! ❤️

Camp-ifornia

In addition to visiting awesome friends in their awesome towns, we got to camp a LOT in our snaily camper van! Here’s some photos of the National Parks we went to, and other awesome camping times 🙂

Sequoia National Park

Yosemite National Park

The joke is that it was the cloudiest and rainiest day in California history, so we didn’t get to the the large igneous intrusions that the park is known for. Instead of sights though, we got to take a ranger walk with a Native American park ranger who taught about the human history of Yosemite Valley! We loved learning about the plants they used and are, how they lived, and how the tribe continues to live near the park and interact with the land. Apparently not all National Parks have good working relationships with the native tribes that were displaced during their creation. Yosemite, the ranger said, does pretty well, but it’s always a work in progress.

Sequoia National Forest

We loved camping in the snow! You can keep your beers cold easily and you get to eat really fast so your food stays warm!

Live Power Community Farm

We really enjoyed following up with a connection from the Biodynamic Conference to visit Live Power Community Farm, a 30+ year old horse-powered biodynamic farm in Covelo, CA. We are so grateful we got to tour the beautiful farm and help out a bit. The gifts we received in knowledge, connections, and veggies likely far outweighed our service in return! 

Though we didn’t get to see the (huge) draught horses in action, we got to meet them, hear about all their individual personalities, and see the broad selection of restored equipment they pull.

While a field of rusty equipment is a familiar sight to us, we’d never actually seen tools this old in working condition. We were impressed to know these mowers, ploughs, grain drills and more have been restored and are used to their full working potential every season!

a restored manure/compost spreader

We got to help Darcy, a new addition to the farming team, harvest and grade apples for people and piggies.

I’m a sucker for Pig TV

Livestock are an important part of any biodynamic farm. It was neat to see how Live Power integrated cows and small ruminants into their crop/pasture rotation, and especially cool to see how they grew, harvested and stored enough hay for everyone using horse and human powered machinery!

We even smooth talked Dylan, one of the farm managers, into showing off his new sheep shears and demonstrating “crutching,” cleaning up the hind end of the sheep for healthiest hiney hygiene.

A view of the veggie garden and mountains surrounding the lovely Covelo valley

Thanks again to Dylan and the other folks at Live Power who made our farm visit so informative and fun! Till next time!

A Creative Sanctuary

We were so inspired by our visit to our friend Tayloranne at The Sanctuary, an artist residency community house in Arcata, CA. Tayloranne of course is a bright beaming light of creativity and joy, and the artists’ house is totally groovy and inspiring as an art space. Housed in a huge building in downtown Arcata, the Sanctuary is a space for artists to have live performances, gallery space, record music, or deepen their practice in a residency. Everyone we met was so kind. We spent a lovely few days exploring the cute town, hiking in the community redwood forest and community marsh/wetland/wastewater treatment plant (SO radical!), gardening, and pot-lucking. Thanks for the hospitality y’all 🙂

The Arcata Marsh is an environmental wastewater treatment facility that creates habitat for hundreds of plants and animals, adds beauty and public space to the town, sequesters carbon, and uses less energy than a traditional wastewater treatment plant. This marsh was one of the coolest environmental projects we’ve seen in our travels!

We love the redwoods!

Maybe I would feel this way about all trees if I really listened, but something about the redwoods makes me absolutely connected to the forest. It’s probably their size–you feel like an ant in their presence, and your little human world just shrinks when you feel the power that comes from living 1,500 years or more on this planet. Of course, many other trees we’ve encountered on our journey may have been this old (for example the cedars and junipers of Utah), but their environmental conditions keep them dwarfed and growing extremely slowly. 

Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park, CA

So yes, perhaps it’s the size of the redwoods that’s so captivating. But what I experience in the forest amounts to something greater than the sum of the individual elements of girth, height, or the deep green colors– the old forests really have a voice of their own. You feel them speak, if you could say that.  Maybe it’s more like a song, with the strong rhythm held by the massive trees, the melody of light dancing through the fog, or verses of understory plants switching and repeating from grove to grove.  On the edges of the forest come competing choruses of invasive species and a growing crescendo of cars whirring by.  It’s very discordant to experience the human noises when you want to drop into the forest symphony, but I think it’s reflective of the reality we’ve created. I’m glad that interruption exists.

As excited and poetic as I can get about the old growth forests, my experience recreating in them is not all joyful. The fact is that these forests are deeply hurting. Less than 6% of old growth redwood forests remain, and only around 7% of all our original forests in the US are still standing.
In a few generations of white settlement, logging and development erased entire swaths of forests. What patches remain are not necessarily functioning as resilient ecosystems; when woods are fragmented, they become more vulnerable to droughts, windstorms, fires, insect outbreaks, and disease. Perhaps most disappointingly, logging removes the biggest, oldest, most genetically fit trees from a forest. This means the genetics that remain are less robust and perhaps less able to survive the myriad of problems we are throwing at them.

Let me give you a glimpse of the problems humans and climate change pose to the western forests: warmer winters mean increased insect populations; longer summers afford insects more time to multiply their populations; as the climate gets warmer and drier, plants like redwoods that evolved with the reliable cool wet weather get weaker and are more susceptible to these insects and diseases they bring; human fire suppression leads to hotter fires that climb to kill the large trees; climate-change-caused droughts dry out the plants and make them easier to burn as well. These are of course just a few examples, and like most impacts of climate change, they are interrelated and compound on themselves. It’s not pretty a pretty picture. (If you’d like to read more about this, I’d recommend my latest read “The Man Who Planted Trees,” by Jim Robbins, my source for much of this data.)

So here we are walking through these stunning forests, breathing the sweet mossy air, really feeling the magic and spirit of this place, thinking about this sad reality. It’s like a celebration and mourning at the same time. 

Redwoods State Park, CA

But there is good news! I would be remiss to leave you all depressed! These forests hold many more solutions than problems. Trees, as you may know, are incredible filters for the environment around them, cleaning up water, air, and soil. They sequester literal tons of carbon from the air and store it for us (400 tons of carbon per sequoia and redwood)! They change the weather around them, cooling the soil and air, and transpiration from their leaves creates regional weather like clouds and rain. Rainforests those in the Pacific NW and in Appalachia take part in creating the weather they rely on! How cool is that? For those of you who like numbers, it’s estimated over a 50 year lifespan that trees provide $162,000 in ecosystem services such as controlling air pollution and soil erosion. This calculation doesn’t even include the value of food crops trees produce!

Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, CA

What does this all add up to you may ask? David Milarch, a tree farmer, says it more eloquently than I could, in the book I referenced earlier: “Because of the way we’ve treated the forests, trees–or the lack of them–are the headwaters of all our problems. Protecting what we have isn’t nearly enough. We need to restore the forests, big time, and help the planet heal itself. It’s about restoring the filter system. Instead of spending so much tax money for war it would be wise to use the army and equipment to reforest the planet as soon as possible. As crazy as that sounds, that’s the big fix solution. Reforesting and healing the earth is the only answer, and it does a lot more than the science can tell us. That’s how we deal with the future– by taking action. Human beings and our machines will not save us. Our government will not save us. And science will not save us. If we wait for their solutions, we will run out of time. But if we harness some of the nearly boundless energy of the planet and universe by planting trees, it starts into motion the healing and cleansing of the oceans and the atmosphere. And that’s what trees do. They benefit every living thing, and it’s a gift to our children and grandchildren.” 

I hope you find this information as inspiring as I do! 

I am so grateful to these trees for inspiring me to share all this with you, to the humans who work hard to conserve them, the park system that allows us to access them, and of course, you, dear friends and readers, who just might appreciate the wisdom and value of trees a little more. 

“In the end we will conserve only what we love; we will love only what we understand; and we will understand only what we are taught.” Baba Dioum, Senegalese forest engineer, 1968

Thanksgiving with the fam

We have so much to be thankful for! Rocky and I had a lovely, long stop at my brother’s house in Portland and a nice Thanksgiving with my family. Ever since Ben and Lizz moved out to the West, I’ve been dreaming of this sort of visit to spend quality time together, and I am so grateful this trip allowed the space for it to happen.

Also, I am grateful for my incredible talents of my brother and sister-in-law! They somehow kindly hosted us for a couple weeks (ie, letting our sauerkraut bubble on the counter, teaching us how to use their sewing machine to mend all our clothes, mailing us the things we left there afterward), hosted my parents for the holiday week, cooked an amazing Thanksgiving meal, took us to all their favorite places in the city, all while working and going to grad school! THEY ARE AMAZING!

Here’s some photos of our sweet family time!

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My family going into the big ol’ city

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My brother works at the Nike world headquarters in Portland, so we got a special chance to tour the corporate campus and the special employees-only store. There are some crazy shoes in there. This is a size 18.

Fancy Nike World Headquarters campus
We took a scenic drive down the Columbia River gorge, which has the highest density of waterfalls in America due to its geology. This photo was taken at the Crown Point Vista House, one of the first scenic rest areas for auto-tourism in the country at 103 years old.
It’s hard to pose for a lot of pictures and get them all right.
Sunset on the Columbia River
We toured the Tillamook cheese factory and there was an UNATTENDED cheese sample buffet!!! Say CHEESE!!!
One day we went to the coast

We had just as much fun staying at home!

Lizz is a great quilter and seamstress, so we had some good late nights playing around!
Lizz teaching Rocky how to mend his clothes. I’m going to be out of a job soon.
Rocky always wanted to make a criss cross pie, and Lizz taught him how!
I lent a helping tongue
Everyone was very pleased with how it turned out!
Harley and Zoe really like me, can’t you tell?

Another big shoutout to Ben and Lizz for showing us such a good time in Portland! Thank you! We love you!

North American Biodynamic Conference

A few months ago, my farming mentor asked me what my next step in farm training was. I told her I’d love to learn more about biodynamic farming, but I had more immediate plans to go on a road trip and learn Spanish. Unbelievably, she told me that the North American Biodynamic farming Conference (that only happens every two years and switches locations around the country) was right on the path of our snail journey, and she even connected me with a scholarship to help Rocky and I attend! So here we are on the other side, and I still can’t believe how lucky this is. I am always amazed when things work out this well and feel so grateful to Nicole for telling us about this, Organic Growers School for providing funding for us to attend, and the Biodynamic Association for additional funding support and hosting such a wonderful conference!

We wrote the following essay as an official re-cap of our experience at the conference to share with our scholarship donors, and we wanted to share it with you, our inner circle of family and friends, to give you a deeper look into our hippie farming stuff we’re so excited about. Thanks for reading!

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We are so grateful to have shared a magical five days at the Biodynamic Conference in Portland, Oregon with over 800 other biodynamic farmers, activists and advocates just three weeks ago. The weekend was buzzing with courageous, heart-opening conversations and deep questioning of society, consciousness, and agriculture. The conference theme was “Transforming the Heart of Agriculture; Soil, Justice, Regeneration,” and those themes wove themselves beautifully into conversations throughout the gathering. As aspiring biodynamic farmers ourselves, we were excited to dive into the weekend with open minds and hearts, ready for transformations of our own.

We learned an incredible amount from this gathering and would like to share as many highlights as we can while being concise; If you have questions or would like to know more about what we share, we welcome readers to reach out to us by email and continue the conversation!

We’ve organized our conference take-aways into main sections based loosely on the workshops we attended, diving more deeply into the complex ones.  More information about the speakers mentioned is available here.

“Human attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity.” Simone Weil, as shared by keynote Alisa Gravitz

Thank you all for reading.

BIODYNAMICS BASICS (Distilled from all presenters)

“The four parts of a biodynamic attitude are: Honesty, Openness, Solidarity, Initiative.” Ueli Hurter, BDA keynote speaker

Biodynamic agriculture was founded by Rudolf Steiner in the 1920s as an alternative to the popularizing chemical agriculture practices that were (and still are) degrading human and ecosystem health. Steiner wanted to teach an alternative to those practices and promote health among humans and the land. Steiner was never a farmer, but was rather a mystic philosopher known for creating the field of spiritual science bringing spiritual realities into practical life. Biodynamic agriculture has these spiritual foundations, though it is not attached to any specific religion or culture.

The biodynamic approach encourages practitioners to see themselves as connected to the whole universe and all of its life, and to work with the natural world on an equal basis. For example, farmers are not ecosystem “managers,” but rather equal co-creators. In the same way, biodynamic agriculture advocates following lunar and astral cycles to tap into the greater cosmic forces at play on your farm.

To understand the wholeness of reality requires activating higher forms of thought and sensing; for this reason, the biodynamic approach values farmers working on inner development as much as they do outer development. Many folks throughout the conference characterized this spiritual aspect of biodynamic farming as “farming with heart,” “farming with empathy,” and “conscious farming.”

We learned that people and cultures have been farming in traditional ways similar to biodynamics for all agricultural human history, and many still do. We heard this repeated from several indigenous speakers from different Native American traditions. Biodynamics is one modern path back to those old traditions and can perhaps be a healing pathway for people who feel disconnected from their indigeneity.

“Put love into every task that we do. Without love, wisdom can be misused.” Lisa Ramiro, anthroposophist

HIGHLIGHTS FROM KEYNOTE SPEAKERS; themes and trends of biodynamic transformation (Ueli Hurter, Narendra Varma, Nadine Basile, Anna Jones-Crabtree, Wali Via, Orland Bishop, Jim Embry, Claudia Ford, M. Karlos Baca, Bruno Follador, Alisa Gravitz)

“The hardest part will be to convince yourself of the possibilities.” Wali Via, BDA keynote speaker

The theme of transformation set the overall tone of many of the conference’s discussions. Transformation, we posited, takes courage, humility, and openness. How can we be more courageous in our land management? How can the biodynamic and organic movements take lead on cultural transformations and do so with empathy, justice, and courage?

(The Biodynamic Association moderated these discussions in a way they described as “living the question.” They asked the conference collective to discuss these questions in ways that deepened our own inner inquiry rather than come to conclusive answers, leaving folks open minded and listening.)

The keynote speakers also encouraged us to examine “de-growth,” scaling down our needs and our impact, while also imagining expansion and scaling up our movement of regenerative agriculture. What is unnecessary in our lives that we could scale down and minimize? How can we make room for the spaciousness required to radically change our minds and lives? At the same time, there is a global need for us to massively scale up regenerative farming methods to sequester carbon and build resilience in our agriculture. How can we scale up our efforts without losing the potency of biodynamic ethics?

Many of the keynote speeches revolved around social justice, especially focusing on land justice for indigenous peoples. Some specific tactics mentioned were decolonizing our knowledge by educating ourselves on indigenous history in our region, radical sharing (sharing more than you think you can give, hence the radical part), and making our food accessible to all people in our community. How can we, as spiritual beings and farmers, decolonize ourselves, our businesses, our communities?

IMPROVING ANNUAL AGRICULTURE (Combined notes from presenters Wali Via, Jean-Paul Cortens, M. Karlos Baca, Mark Shepard, Frank Holzman)

Annual agriculture was often knocked on for its environmental impacts: it creates an environment of excessive disturbance, preventing some soil biology like mycorrhizae from establishing and functioning; tillage releases carbon to the atmosphere; it exports many nutrients off of your farm which can be problematic in nutrient cycling and fertility maintenance. Here are some tips presenters had for improving some of these impacts.

  • Emulate nature by using natural systems as the model/ archetype (ie forest, prairie). What plant communities thrive there? How much disturbance naturally occurs?
  • One farmer had evidence that 3 years in hay for every one year of vegetables allows the soil to recover from exportation of nutrients. 
  • Utilize edge areas to connect soil microbiomes. Edge species like hazel or alder can help fungal networks of surrounding land reach your plants. One method mentioned often was alley cropping.
  • Everyone at market is growing same thing. Find out what your native foodscape held before you got there. What are in your woods and fields? Perhaps educate yourself on indigenous models of land management and food cultivation.

PERENNIAL AGRICULTURE (Mark Shepard)

Mark Shepard runs a 100+ acre perennial polyculture farm that utilizes principles from agroforestry, permaculture, and keyline water design. He shared his thoughts on how to “succeed” your annual farm into a perennial system that mimics nature and provides maximum ecosystem services. 

  • Find out what your native ecosystem was. What plant communities lived there?
  • Install earthworks (swales, berms, ponds) to manage water flow, emphasizing slowing water down and storing it on your landscape.
  • Plant perennial polycultures to mimic some of the natural relations using agroforestry techniques
  • Place fences and roads, utilities, pipelines, buildings etc following the water management plan.
  • Manage for eternity by closely mimicking the historic disturbance regime of your plant community (for example mowing to mimic fire disturbance).

AGRICULTURE IN A CHANGING CLIMATE (Stewart Lundy)

Biodynamic agriculture embraces the idea of an individual farm being a self-contained “organism.” Usually this idea is cited to describe self-sufficient resource or fertility management, but this speaker emphasized its potential to have a self-contained climate. While organisms are not separate from the overall climate or weather, they maintain their own internal climate and have skin that keeps them self-contained. Stewart proposed maintaining your farm against the greater environment by having a “skin” of perennials, stacking layers of trees and shrubs along all your edges and buildings to protect them from the greater climate.

Other proposals he shared were as follows:

  • Deep ripping/subsoiling on contour to open up spaces in your land to receive water in massive rainfall events. This is done with a Yeoman’s plow as often as annually.
  • Integrate biodiversity on your farm in the form of regionally adapted plants and animals, focusing on heritage breeds that are hardy in extreme environments.
  • Save seeds from plants that survive on your catastrophic failure years– these seeds can withstand it all.
  • Soil with biochar can sequester 4x as much carbon as soil without it. Consider adding biochar to your soil amendments, but make sure it’s “activated.”
  • Soil with mycorrhizal networks can sequester 15x as much carbon as soil without those networks. Consider inoculating your soil with mycorrhizae.
  • Consider adding a bit of biochar, biodynamic preparations, or mycorrhizal inoculant to your animal feed to have pre-inoculated manure.

BIODYNAMICS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE (Mashup between Don Bustos, Jose Luis Ortiz, Thomas Spaulding and Ueli Hurter)

“Be driven by passion. Take risks and don’t be afraid.” Don Bustos, Latino farmer

Biodynamic agriculture holds social justice and social health as foundational values. Farms cannot be healthy if society is not healthy, and vice versa. Key principles of the biodynamic perspective on social transformation are:

  • Economy with SOLIDARITY
  • Politics with EQUALITY
  • Culture with FREEDOM

One discussion primarily focused on Latinx farmers, and healing the pathway from being farm workers to farm owners. Multiple Latinx farmers shared their experiences in this context of biodynamic farming and social justice.

  • Panelists were asked what some obstacles they saw in the way of Latinx farm ownership:
    • Obviously, racism. It’s hard to get trust in a town/culture you’re not accustomed to
    • Access to land and capital
    • Our culture’s emphasis on material success often distracts young people and immigrants to the remember the benefits of working with land.
    • Lack of education & resources
    • Fear
    • Immigration status
  • This prompted the group to create a list of opportunities for white allies and Latinos to work together to work through these obstacles:
    • Welcome immigrants! Build relationships with your Latinx neighbors!
    • Consider learning Spanish!
    • Share your resources & knowledge
    • Bring people in! “Inclusion” means more than just inviting someone along. Provide any assistance they need to get there.
    • Make your food accessible to all people! Do whatever it takes!

“Justice is being faithful to relationships.” Rudolf Steiner

Thank you for reading our re-cap of the 2018 Biodynamic Conference! Overall, the conference was hopeful, encouraging, and heart opening. It definitely inspired us to dream bigger and more radical in our farm dreams. We’d like to give a BIG thank you to the Organic Growers School and the Biodynamic Association for making it possible for us to attend this conference!

 

Contact us with questions or conversations!

Olivia Sanders and Rocky Ramos

sandersog3@gmail.com , rnramos@gmail.com

 

It snowed on the moon

We thought we’d be really clever and stop for a hike at the geological wonder Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho, which was on our driving route from Utah to Portland. Halfway through our lovely hike, a snowstorm began!

Craters of the Moon is a neat park because a series of volcanoes erupted there from 2,000-15,000 years ago, and the volcanic cones and lava flows still remain. Since the eruptions were so recent, little soil has formed and few plants are established, so the landscape looks like the moon.

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Notice the clouds building in the sky? We didn’t. We were looking at rocks.

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Perhaps this is what it would look like if it snowed on the moon.

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Turns out this isn’t the time of year to visit Idaho.

So we got back on the road and high tailed it to Portland, where we landed safely last night at Olivia’s brother’s house. We’ll be here till Thanksgiving and are grateful for a home and family!!!!!

Later this week we’ll be attending the international Biodynamic Conference here in Portland. Stay tuned, at the end of the week I’m sure we’ll have a lot of new knowledge and connections to share about!

With love and gratitude,

Olivia and Rocky

UTAH!

We have had a great time hanging and hiking in southern Utah! There are so many beautiful geologic features, and so many parks and protected land, that we had a hard time choosing how to spend our 5 days.

The first two days we went to Arches National Park, went on several hikes and saw some breathtaking scenery.

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It seems like approximately 69% of people around here are traveling, adventuring, and living out of their vehicle. Some more elaborate than others!

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Making sauerkraut and standing on top of your car are some of the many free activities offered by the BLM (Bureau of Land Management) to better enjoy your public land.

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Here are some pictures from a 18 mike hike we took over 2 days in an area called Cedar Mesa in the southeast corner of Utah.

Starting the hike… Notice how happy and clean we are…

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The trail descended 1,800 feet down into a canyon along boulders, gravel and slickrock. Much of the steep initial descent into the canyon was borderline rock climbing, route finding, and overall pretty harrowing. (Predictably, Rocky enjoyed it a lot more than Olivia.) We followed the path of the creek as it cut down through geologic time, revealing hundreds of feet of different rock layers, about 15 miles and climbed back out of the canyon on the other side the next day.

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These are ancient ruins from Anasazi Indians who lived in this area about 1,500 years ago. Granary, storage, and a ceremony space.

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We camped on the canyon floor among glowing cottonwoods and soft sand.

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The exit out of the canyon was a steep and straight wall, and we rock climbed up a 15 foot crack to get out. Boy were we (mostly Olivia) happy to get out of there!

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Next we spent a lazy day back in Moab doing laundry, getting our first showers in a week, and enjoying breakfast buffets.

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Friday was our last day in Utah before heading north to Portland.  We stopped in Provo on the way to visit Olivia’s high school friend Kristine and to meet her new baby who was a-stinking-dorable!

To end our week in Utah, we stayed with some of Rocky’s friends John and Corinne in Salt Lake City and observed a unique subculture of the skateboarding scene there. John brought us to a premiere showing of his original video of a Salt Lake City skater, which was both a great video and a fascinating cultural experience. Thanks John and Corinne!

And that, folks, is a long but complete story of our week in Utah!!!!!!!! Thanks for reading 🙂