Showing posts with label Ian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ian. Show all posts

Friday, May 17, 2013

Hiking Club - Season 2

Ian and I reconvened our hiking club, and this year Miles is joining us.  We started with an easy hike inside of Red Butte Garden, it was just over 2 miles with an easy 387 foot ascent.  Here's the route we took:





The hills are covered with arrowleaf balsamroot (Balsamorhiza sagittata). It was the perfect time to visit, since they are all in bloom.



We saw a lot of this little beauty, wild phlox (Phlox longifolia). 



Here is Ian at the deer gate.


Backside view



View of the valley.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Farewell to Summer


Sunday we hopped in the van and drove up Millcreek Canyon to see the fall leaves.  Melinda and I had gone up the previous week just by ourselves but we wanted the kids to see the colors.
 
 
It's hard to believe summer is over already.  Two weeks ago it was pleasantly cool in the canyon, but last week it was almost freezing; it was only 1 degree Celsius (33 degrees Fahrenheit).  There was ice forming on rocks in the stream already.
 
 
Ian is in the 11 year old scouts this year.  I've really enjoyed going camping with him this year.  We camped in this same canyon just last month.  Earlier in the summer we camped in Big Cottonwood Canyon and in East Canyon.  We also had fun hiking.  We also did 9 hikes together during our weekly father and son hiking club.

 

Saffy braved the cold and although she had a warm coat she somehow came only in flip-flops.  Saffron started going to Liberty Girls club this year.  She really likes doing crafts and activities with the other girls.

 
Miles and Lisette are both doing chemistry this year with some of their friends with Melinda teaching.  Lisette is really enjoying her AP English class and somewhat tolerating her math class.  She has gotten very good at crocheting and she now has a head of natty dreadlocks. 
 
 

Things have been busy and I haven't done any blog posts for a while.  In September I started a new job.  It's hard to adjust, but I'm really glad to be working as part of a team and to be able to work with a lot of new technologies.  Plus the commute is under 10 minutes, so I've been able to come home for lunch most days, which is nice.

 
Melinda is sporting the latest in headwear fashion (it's actually a pair of Nigel's pants).  Melinda is staying busy homeschooling the kids.  She works really hard at their weekly chemistry class and their history and book club groups.  
 
 
What a handsome group! Just this year both Miles and Lisette have grown taller than their Mom.  Miles seems to have grown an inch just this past month.



Speaking of Miles, he just turned fourteen last month.  We had a fun birthday with him.  He planned what he wanted to do.  We went to Bruges Waffles and Frites and had real Belgian waffles and frites.  He wanted cookies instead of cake, so we made rose water cookies, which were very tasty.

 
He's been really busy working on making his own 3-D printer. There is an open source community that has plans, but you have to get all your own parts.  He's been working hard saving his money for well over a year and now he's buying all the parts and putting it together.  He has the frame already done, and he'll have more done soon as soon as the parts arrive by mail.  Here's a picture of a completed printer.
 
 
OK, that's all for now.  Maybe I won't wait as long for my next post, but I wouldn't hold your breath if I were you. 

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Wasatch Wildflower Festival

Warning: this post contains lots of boring flower pictures and their corresponding boring scientific Latin names.  

I took the day off Friday and took Miles and Ian to the Wasatch Wildflower Festival.  We drove up Big Cottonwood Canyon in the morning and parked at the base of Brighton Ski Resort.  The volunteers were all excited when we arrived because we were the first ones of the day.  We had our own private guide take us on a hike and show us all the wildflowers.  It was overcast and we had a few light rain showers, but it was a great respite from the desert valley heat.


In this picture the white flowers are Richardson's geranium (Geranium richardsonii), the black ones are western coneflower (Rudbeckia occidentalis), the red ones are Indian paintbrush (Castilleja spp), the purple ones are monkshood (Aconitum columbianum), the yellow ones are groundsel (Senecio spp) and the big white one is  false hellebore (Veratrum viride).


 This is native Utah bush is twinberry honeysuckle (Lonicera involucrata).


If you look closely at this flower it looks like a bunch of elephant heads on a stick, thus the common name of elephant heads (Pedicularis groenlandica).  It grows in wet marshes and along streams.


We saw lots of these plants last week in Millcreek Canyon, but they weren't in bloom and we couldn't figure out what they were.  Our guide told us these are false hellebore (Veratrum viride).


It was raining earlier in the morning and everything was wet.  All the volunteers had jackets and long pants and we felt a little unprepared in our shorts and t-shirts.  But we only got a few sprinkles and the day turned out really nice.  I liked this arrangement of monkshood or wolf's bane (Acontium columbianum) with paintbrush (Castilleja spp).  There are lots of varieties of paintbrush and they mingle between each other so I'm not sure which ones these are.  Painbrush are interesting because they are semi-parasitic and their colors may change depending upon the host plant.


I was excited to see a white version of Monkshood.  We had never seen one before.


We saw these beautiful pink Lewis monkey flowers (Mimulus lewisii) growing out of a rivulet. 


There is a lot of variety of buckwheat or sulphur flowers (Eriogonum spp.) growing up there.  



Ian and Miles were great hiking buddies.  Miles took most of the photos (at least the ones that turned out).


We enjoyed this patch of fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) growing near the top of the trail.  After the big Yellowstone fires in 1988 fireweed was the first plant to appear and start to stabilize the soil. 

We saw this American pika scurrying back and forth between boulders, he was carrying little branches of leaves and grass onto a pile on a boulder.  


Pearly everlasting (Anaphalis margaritacea) has nice little white flowers which last for a long time (thus the name).  This is a flower I've enjoyed growing in my own garden.


I was really excited to find this flower, Monardella odoratissima, which is also known as mountain coyote mint, mountain beebalm, and mountain pennyroyal.  When you touch the leaves, your fingers are left with a wonderful mint smell.


Here is a closeup of the blooms.


The sky mostly cleared up when we got up to Lake Mary.  It was so nice to be outdoors and the lake is just stunning.


 We took a break on a boulder and enjoyed the view.  We had trail mix for a snack and soon we were accosted by a scurry of cheeky chubby chipmunks.  They ran all over trying to get our food.  They were hilarious to watch.


 On our way back down we saw some yellow monkey flower (Mimulus guttatus).

This is the approximate site of the fateful ski accident of 2009.  I don't think I've been up here since then.


 There were a few patches of Rocky Mountain penstemons (Penstemon strictus) near the base of the mountain.


We were driving down the mountain when on a whim we decided to take Guardsman Pass over the mountain.  The road was very steep and very rough in places, but we were rewarded by some awesome views of the mountains and valleys below.  We were glad we took it.  It felt like we were on a mini vacation in a remote forest.  


We ended up in Midway and we went and saw the crater.  Miles and Ian's have great-great grandparents who immigrated to Midway from Switerland which makes them 1/8 Swiss.  They have a little grocery store there called "The Store" that has a built in deli and pizza place.  We ordered a delicious pesto mushroom and spinach pie.  It was an excellent finish to a very fun outing.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Hair Jealousy


Lisette and Miles just got back from their Super Summer trip to Flaming Gorge.  Even though it was more peaceful around the house without them, I missed them. Here is Lisette in front of some roses.  Isn't her hair cute?  Melinda, Lisette and Saffron now have pink stripes in their hair.  Our friend with breast cancer had a pink hair party because she didn't want anyone to shave their head for her.


Miles doesn't plan on getting his hair cut until after The Hobbit comes out in December because he wants to be an elf.  Does anyone have a spare set of prosthetic pointy ears?


Here Miles is teaching Nigel how to mop.  Either he's trying to teach him life skills or he's pulling a Tom Sawyer and trying to get him to do his jobs for him.  


Ian is in the eleven year old scouts right now and he and I are going on some camping trips this summer. Ian's excuse for not cutting his hair is that he is a Nazarite -  and we all know what happened to Samson when he cut his hair. (Also, like a good Nazarite, Ian won't touch dead animals either).  


Here is Saffron with the first vegetables from the garden.  She doesn't want to cut her hair either.


Nigel's hair was getting just a little crazy, so yesterday he got it cut.


Can this be the same little boy?


Nigel and I are the only ones committed to having short and naturally colored hair.  

Why haven't I posted the pink stripe hair pictures yet?  It's too late and it's too much work.  Maybe later.  Stay tuned.

Friday, June 29, 2012

The Living Room Part Two

Ian and I went hiking last week to The Living Room, but we ran out of steam before the summit.  Yesterday we went back to try it again and this time we were victorious!

We saw lots of these lovely flowers.  I'm still trying to figure out what they are. I've been consulting my native plant books, but I haven't found them yet.


It was somewhat overcast so it wasn't too hot.  This is the view facing the U of U campus.



This is facing the south of the valley.  We could see all the way from the point of the mountain to the Great Salt Lake.


We were encouraged on how much better we did this week.  We went much further before we had to take a break and it seemed easier.


The view was beautiful; very stunning.  We could faintly hear music from Red Butte Garden below where someone had a wedding reception.  The sounds of traffic were very distant and it was peaceful up there.


It is called the Living Room because someone built all these great armchairs and couches out of slabs of sandstone.  We were very happy to have made it this time, and we lounged and enjoyed the sunset with the other hikers.


Ian likes to wear my favorite hat so I took my gardening hat.  It's great to keep the sun off me, but Melinda thinks I looks silly in it (she's probably right, like always).


I think that this flower is a thread-leafed daisy.  It's hard to be sure, but I think it's probably Erigeron filifolius. There were many of these growing in the cracks of the rocks.



We felt great after a little rest and we had a very pleasant walk down the mountain.  The valley was very pretty with the sun low in the sky.


We're trying to decide about next weeks hike.  I'm thinking we should check out Millcreek Canyon.