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Friday, September 4, 2009
We moved to little Provo...
So we moved 2200 miles away from Provo, Utah to Arlington, Virginia and the first day we arrive our neighbor tells us that we landed in the area known as "little Provo" because of the high proportion of LDS from, specifically, Provo, Utah. There is a great little ward.
check out the Arlington flava' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T1RMuoQnKo
The plethora of Starbucks does nothing to ease the sadness of moving so far from friends and family.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Bryce Canyon Half Marathon
I did it! ....and Dan did it faster, so he took this pic after I crossed the finish line. It was too early to be in pain, so I can't explain my expression (or the position of my arms)...what a hilarious photo. I finished at 2:19 with a 10.37 minute mile, which is the fastest I have ever run and 40 minutes faster than my best practice time! Yeah, that's super slow for all you real runners out there, but I was just happy to finish, and I love that they give you a medal just for finishing!
Monday, July 6, 2009
Emma arrives!
Monday, June 15, 2009
Machu Picchu
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Rio de Janeiro
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Chile
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Lady Mountain, Zion National Park, Utah
The Crew: Becky, Dan, Terry, Heather, Ron, Scott
From Ron: The view of Lady Mountain from Zion Lodge. The blue line marks the route of the Lady Mtn Trail. The yellow circle marks our turnaround point. The term “Trail” is stretching the definition, for you do more climbing than hiking. It ascends the sheer walls of the canyon, from floor to rim, gaining 2,600 feet in elevation. Native Americans, dating back centuries to the Anasazi, used the route as a shortcut in and out of the canyon. In the steeper sections, they carved small footholds in the rock, called Moki steps. Most likely a few Mormon settlers made use of it in the 1800s, and surely there were adventurous souls at the turn of the century that had made ascents. But the route pretty much remained in this primitive state until 1923. That is when the National Park Service installed steel railings and cables at the more dangerous sections. A ladder was even constructed at a vertical cleft called The Chimney. The Lady Mountain Trail became the premier adventure outing in Zion—albeit a daring one—for decades to come. Unfortunately, maintaining it was a royal pain in the butt, and expensive. In addition, tourists frequently became stranded, gripped in terror by their lofty predicament, and had to be rescued. A few of them (at least two, probably more) even fell to their deaths. So by the late 1960s, the Park Service had had enough and shut it down.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, Mexico
Spiny Lobster. We saw about a dozen. Along with some eels.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5r722eg7UrE
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