Friday, September 3, 2010

Stupid Chairs, Bone-dry Lake, & the Best Cabin Ever: Yosemite National Park, Wowona




Our final adventure of the summer
was the creme de la creme!

First off,
Yosemite is gorgeous,
and having just hiked there with Samuel,
we were both dying to take the kids too!

Second,
Samuel's former boss, Bill,
graciously offered us the use of his family's cabin in Wowona
for however long we wanted to stay!

It was incredibly generous and
we were so thankful for the opportunity!

Thank you!

As I said before,
it was the last trip of the summer,
which is always, always bittersweet.

So in addition to being fabulous in and of itself,
everything was just a touch more everything:

Beautiful...Wonderful...Sad...Exhausting...Hilarious...

You name it!

And it was "it"!

So here we go...


"Stupid Chairs!"

This phrase comes from Grandpa Gary himself,
who in a fit of frustration while packing the van up for camp,
had a bit of trouble with-
you got it,
the chairs!

In our case,
Samuel was wrestling with the bike trailer
which I just had to have!






He he


Alright!

Dad finally did it! 

We are officially on the road!


First stop,
Yosemite Valley for a tour of the gift shop,
a walk through the village,
and of course...


Pizza at Deghan's!


Yummy!

Ice cream in Curry Village.


Our first day was exhausting...

and we hadn't even started hiking yet!


Our first night in the cabin was so much fun!

It's terribly exciting to stay somewhere other
than your own home.

And staying in a cabin
-when normally you'd be sleeping in a tent!-
is downright luxurious!


Barbie time!


Our first day out we visited Bridalveil Falls (.5 mi. round trip)!


Clamoring up the rocks was definitely a high point!




And then, of course,
there's the view!




The easy way down and out:

Slide!





 


More impressive than Half Dome:

The Shuttle Buses!


My boulderers!


Mirror Lake
(5 mi. round-trip)

Yes, you may wonder what is lake-ish about this lake?

Well, in my exhaustive research for
family-friendly day hikes,
this gem popped up on the radar.

Unfortunately,
I didn't read the entire description of the trail,
which means I missed out on this juicy tid-bit...


Thus,
the lake never was a lake.

And being early September,
it certainly wasn't a "shallow pool" either!

It did make a great spot for a family pic,
plus we ate lunch in the bottom of the lake!

Er, pool...




What it lacked in being a watery oasis,
it more than made up for in the stunning views of Half Dome!

At least I thought so.

There was still a fair amount of grumbling from the kids,
who were totally looking forward to making some
major cannonballs!


Owen,
The Great

Taller than even a grove of redwoods!


Gabriel,
waiting for the Jr. Ranger Program to begin.

He's on pins and needles.


We were told the programs were great,
and with President Theodore Roosevelt leading the charge,
we learned alot!

Over one hundred years ago,
President Theodore Roosevelt looked out
at the view from Glacier Point and exclaimed,

"I wouldn't miss this for anything...this is bully!"


Guided into the Yosemite wilderness by naturalist John Muir,
the president went on a three-day wilderness trip
that started at the Mariposa Grove,
and included Sentinel Dome, Glacier Point, and Yosemite Valley
among other points of interest in Yosemite National Park.

Muir seized the opportunity
"to do some forest good in talking freely around the campfire,"
and the President, referring to John Muir,
is quoted as saying,

"Of course of all the people in the world,
he was the one with whom it was best worth while
thus to see the Yosemite."

Roosevelt and Muir camped the first night, May 15,
at the Mariposa Grove under the Grizzly Giant,
with the President bedding down in a pile of about 40 wool blankets,
and the second night was spent in the vicinity of
Sentinel Dome during a snow storm that left five inches of new snow
on top of the existing five feet of snow.
The third night of camping was at the edge of
Bridalveil Meadow in Yosemite Valley,
where President Roosevelt was Muir's captive audience
to hear a convincing plea for Yosemite wilderness
and for setting aside other areas in the United States for park purposes.
 
 
After the show we learned two incredibly important things.

One, Curry Village haS a pool.

And two, that pool was FREE!

Nice!

Take that Mirror Lake!

 We jumped in the pool with ten minutes to spare!

It was the fastest strip down ever,
and I'm sure the lifeguards absolutely LOVED us!

To our credit,
we were out on-time and
the kids were super-happy to finally, finally
jump in some water!


Dinner

BBQ Chicken
Baked Beans, Coleslaw, & Corn on the Cob


This picture,
in a nutshell,
is why staying in a cabin is AWESOME!


Dessert

Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream
Brownies & Whipped Cream


The Wawona Stables


Bella's heart melted here.

Really,
a part of her heart is probably still there!


At $60.00 a pop for a two-hour ride,
we all had to be content with with petting from the fence!

 



After we lolly-gagged around the horses,
we explored the Pioneer Yosemite History Center,
and took a quick juant up to the Wawona Hotel.

Then it was time to hit the trail again.

This time to Sentinel Dome (2.2 mi. round trip)!


I love this shot of the family ascending when...

the camera batteries die!

{rats}

Long story short,
they don't carry Lithium batteries in the park-
we even tried the fancy-smancy Ansel Adams Gallery-no luck!

We still took loads of photos using our camera phones,
unfortunately,
we don't have the USB cables to download them!

...

So for now,
the saga continues minus visuals....

We couldn't leave Yosemite without
taking the kids to see Vernal Fall. 

So that was next up on our itinerary.
We hiked up to the footbridge (1.6 mi. roundtrip),
and both Samuel and I got the best leg workout of our lives!

Picture two boys sitting comfortably in the bike trailer,
while you push that puppy UP!
Boy,
they are little,
but they are HEAVY!

We spent the rest of our trip visiting the
museums and historic sites in the valley.

First stop,
The Ahwahnee.

The kids were floored by the age of the building,
and the native colors and patterns throughout.
I think the detail that impressed them most of all was
the ancient bathrooms though!

Outside the hotel,
we found a deer nibbling on the grass of the courtyard!
It was so fun to see Owen & Gabriel openingly gaping!

Once we got over the whole live-animal-up-close thing,
we did what anyone does after you do anything:

Eat chocolate!

The Ahwahnee has a great Sweet Shop and
everyone picked out one to share.

Our favorites...

Chocolate truffles, of course!

After the sugar rush we opted to mellow out in the
Yosemite Valley Visitor Center where we saw
the film,
"Spirit of Yosemite".

It's a beautiful movie,
and we were all grateful to sink into some soft chairs
and just relax for bit.

Then we made a quick stop at the Yosemite Museum
which has a neat reconstruction of the Indian Village of the Ahwahnee.

For our last stop,
we hit the Yosemite Gift & Grocery Store
for some necessities before we hit the road:

1) A rubber spatula and,

2) A top-secret Christmas gift for Samuel.
 
He's since opened his 1,000 pc. puzzle
of the Yosemite Mountain Range,
and seriously,
he loved every minute of putting it together.

Don't ask this non-puzzle-person why!

...

We loved our visit and created so many wonderful memories.

Next time we come,
we'll try our hand at camping in the valley,
and later,
as the kids grow older,
we definitely see many family backpacking trips
on the horizon!

Jr. Half Dome
training begins now!

{smile}




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