Monday, August 15, 2011

The Grand Canyon and imposter condors

Dear Mike,

Currently we are in your old haunt of Minneapolis. Luckily it hasn't snowed yet today, and we are enjoying some sunny weather.

So, it's high time that we talked about the Grand Canyon. Is it grand? The short answer is "yes", but it goes deeper than that.



We stayed at the north rim of the canyon, which from what we've heard is much more relaxed than the south rim (the south rim has it's own airport!). If we had to do it all over again, we would have tried to secure some reservations, but everything worked out in the end. A very nice park ranger by the name of Susan Mason took it upon herself to find us a campsite. Luckily someone cancelled and we locked ourselves into 3 nights of canyon glory.



One thing that surprised us was how much foliage is in and around the north rim. Tall ponderosa pines, big meadows of grass and wildflowers, and aspens everywhere. For some reason, I thought we would be in some vast desert that eventually would just end in a giant crevasse. Possibly hollywood movies like "The Mummy" and "Stargate" have done this to me. Yet when we arrived there was no sign of pyramids, aliens, or Brenden Fraiser.



Our first day there, we walked out to Bright Angel Point and then Royal Point, which is an overlook trail on the east side of the north rim. There, flying above us, were two of the largest birds that I've ever seen. I was certain that they were condors, since the wingspan was so huge. After getting back, we actually went to ranger talk on condors. It was there that I learned my folly; clearly these were not condors that we had seen. Instead they were most likely turkey vultures. The big differences, when comparing the two, is that a condor never looks wobbly or "drunk" looking like a vulture does in flight, and condors are even bigger (like 7 foot wingspan), and the white on the underside of the wing is more fore than aft. Furthermore, virtually all condors in the wild have a number tagged on their wing with a gps beacon. This is because at one point there were no condors in the wild and a program at the San Diego zoo had to breed and rerelease them into the wild.


The next day, we hiked a 10 mile hike around the rim on Widforss trail. The trail was named after the WPA artist that had done so many paintings of grand canyon park. I'm not going to lie, we are out of shape. Though the traill wasn't particularly difficult, it wasn't easy either. But it was worth the trek to see the largest ponderosa pines in the park, the lushous groves of aspens and the great views of the canyon along the route as well as Widforss point.


Some other highlights from the stay included the water gun parade on the Fourth of July. Since it is too dry to allow fireworks, they have a huge water-fight parade around the loop at the lodge. All the staff comes out, cooks, cabin maids, rangers, tram operators, and even the mule wranglers. They all have water guns, and every visitor can take a watergun if they want. The parade loops around 3 times and each pass is a dogfight of water. Then, on the last lap, the mules and riders gallop up the steps to the saloon and the riders all drink a beer.

Later that night on the Fourth of July, we attended the "Grand Canyon BBQ". We arrived at a giant tent near the campground via a mock train/tram thingy, and had all-you-can-eat BBQ beef brisket, and many other yummy foods. All the while, we watched the musical and comedic stylings of "Woody and Cleda Jane". It was probably one of the most entertaining Fourth of Julys that I have experienced, and certainly the most delicious.


So what's more to say? We enjoyed our stay at the north rim so much that we would like to go back sooner than later. Next time, we'll actually hike down into the rim. We thought about doing a rim-to-rim hike this time, but apparently you need to get backcountry permits 6 months in advance to do so.



From the Grand Canyon, we drove on to Phoenix Arizona and experienced an enormous dust storm. This time, it actually did look like something out of The Mummy and we did meet Brenden Fraiser. But that's a whole other post...

~Mario



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Location:Hiawatha Ln,Minneapolis,United States

Monday, August 8, 2011

We didn't know about the secret menu until after we ate there...

diptic

We finally made it to In-N-Out Burger in Los Angeles. Pretty delicious. My dad would approve of the french fries. Mario reeked of onions days after he ate the Double Cheeseburger. He really wants to go back so he can order from the secret menu...http://www.in-n-out.com/secretmenu.asp

p.s. We changing it up and doing photos with brief descriptions in order to actually keep up with the blog. We're lazy. ;)

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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Santa Cruz

Dear Mike,

We suck at blogging. But it's not completely our fault. AT&T sucks on the west coast. Even as I type this in Berkeley CA, my phone is alternating between 3G and Edge service.

Since leaving Austin, we've been to a lot of amazing destinations: the Grand Canyon, Roswell, Santa Fe, L.A., Guadalupe national park, Carlsbad Caverns, Sequoia national park, Yosemite national park, Mono Lake, Lake Tahoe, Phoenix, and San Diego. We have seen flooding rivers, giant dust storms and snow, 105 degree days and 38 degree nights, trees taller than any building in Greensboro, tornados, wild forest fires, and hail. We've seen bats, black bears, elephant seals, armadillos, rattlesnakes, kaibob squirrels, peacocks, sheep, ravens and cattalo.

We're so far behind in blogging our adventures that we've decided to cut our losses. Yes, that's right, we are going to resume blogging our regularly scheduled lives. So, when we feel like it, we'll do some sort of magical flashback and recreate our exploits from weeks ago (though it feels like months).

Currently we are staying with a friend in Berkeley (BTW, Gabe, you're awesome). We're spending the week here to see San Francisco, and the surrounding area.

Two days ago we went to Santa Cruz. You may know it for it's famous boardwalk. Or, you may remember it (as I do) from the card sized hologram stickers that you would get in those quarter machines at Pizza Hut (while you were redeeming your free personal pan pizza from the "Book-It" program.)


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In every way, Santa Cruz stands up to the sticker. The boardwalk is a year-round perpetual carnival complete with rides, carnie games, arcades, and dipping dots. Now, I'm not a rollercoaster kinda guy, but even I was convinced to ride their oldest ride "The Giant Dipper". It's right there on the beach, so you get a beautiful view of the ocean right before getting thrown around on a rickety stomach churning decent. We also enjoyed the bumper cars and the skyway. Monday and Tuesday nights are "1905 nights", where all hotdogs, sodas and cotton candy are just a dollar each.


Overall we had a great time, and it was a nice contrast to all the camping we had been doing for the last 2 weeks. We'll be giving more updates on a regular basis.

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Location:Lincoln St,Berkeley,United States

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Creepy LBJ


YouTube Video

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Austin City Limits (part II)

Dear Mike,

For our second day in Austin, Peter and Mai took us to the LBJ Presidential Library. Along our route we came across the UT Law Library, home of creepy, baby Lincoln carved from a single piece of (short) wood. I also noticed several law students studying and thought of you.

The LBJ Library is quite the museum; full of displays, memorabilia, educational videos, and an animatronic LBJ. Yes, that's right, a life-size LBJ dressed in cowboy gear sharing funny anecdotes with the museum patrons. Animatronic LBJ is quite the charmer. (video to follow this post)

The library was really pretty great. We learned a lot about LBJ's life and presidency while keeping cool in the free air-conditioned building. I highly recommend visiting if you ever make it to Austin. Also, I highly recommend air-conditioning.

Then we headed over to Brave New Books, a subversive literature store found right next to the Libertarian headquarters of Austin. In the store, you can find information on anything from the illuminati, to republican election conspiracies, to how the democrats are actually socialists. Pretty wild stuff. Mario loved it.



We spent the evening at County Line BBQ. We feasted on beef brisket, beans, slaw, potato salad, baked potato, and fresh baked bread (Mai's favorite). The lean brisket was delicious, but the regular (fatty) brisket melted in your mouth...similar to the chopped BBQ at Alston Bridges in Shelby.

Austin to be continued....




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