A to Z Challenge

Showing posts with label Sierra Nevada's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sierra Nevada's. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2013

When feeling ill is a good thing...

This weekend, I was going to go out of town and visit my in-laws and also get to visit with my sister. However, after dinner on Valentine's Day, I started to feel funky. Not a full on flu bug, not even the nastiest of colds...but I just felt all hurdy gurdy inside.

I rested all day Friday hoping it'd go away. Saturday morning I woke up thinking, yeah, I'm gonna be able to go. We're going to be able to go! Then a wave of nausea washed over me and I felt like crying. I absolutely didn't want to bring germs to my family and decided to stay home, so hubby and the sweet Sierra headed off over the river and through the woods...

I'm bummed I missed being with my family, but at the same time, I have been receiving lots of pictures and texts from Ron and Sierra about their weekend. We've had a face-time every evening, where a very excited nine-year recounts the details of the day with much gusto! I'm seeing a beautiful memory being made for my daughter with her dad and now I'm actually kinda glad I didn't go. Grammie spoiled them with steak and lobster for dinner. Sierra said, "Grammie is the best cook!"

The next day they got to play a very intense game of hide and seek. My sister has a dog that she's training for Search and Rescue. So, they got to go lay tracks and find a place to hide out and wait. Hiding together, playing games on the iphone while they waited, just the two of them! Watching the dogs follow their scent and Gini getting all excited when she makes the "I found you" pounce! So fun.

Today, they are doing something that wouldn't have happened had I gone on the trip. Not because I don't like this type of thing, but we just would've headed back home to get ready for the rest of the week. But today, Ron is taking Sierra on a glider ride.



How cool is that? They will be soaring like two happy little birds, riding the thermals, gliding over the fields and viewing some of the most spectacular mountains in the United States, The Sierra Nevada's.



So, normally I don't like feeling funky. But, in this instance...I'm glad it gave the two of them a daddy-daughter weekend. It's something special that they have all their own.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Wildest Moment

Oh, how exciting to participate in the Wildest Moment Bloghop.

I think of thinks that set my blood pulsing, wild adrenaline junky that I am. I love a variety of outdoor activities that involve speed, or heights, or a sense of danger. Dirtbiking, snowboarding, scuba diving, wakeboarding, backpacking out in the middle of nowhere. Of all these sports though, one sets my spirits soaring with more intensity than the others. Rock Climbing.


Years ago, when I first fell in love with scaling great heights, I went on an adventure I will likely never match. Four of us set out to Phantom Spires, huge pillars of granite jutting up into the bright blue skies in the Sierra Nevada's. Climbing late in the season, late-November, the adventure started with the drive up a road thick with snow. The Suburban in 4WD, kept the sliding to a minimum, but each time the car drifted my shoulders tensed and I gripped the dash.

Eventually, we parked and started hiking out across the snow to reach the Spires. My boots punched down through the top layer of ice, and I sank knee deep into the powder below. Snow clumped on my pants and the chill seeped into my skin. Each step required gargantuan effort, but we wouldn't be averted from the Spires, our prize. What seemed an eternity had passed before we finally found ourselves standing in the shadow of the Spire.

Up the first of our group went, anchoring in every 8-10 feet, setting a solid safe track for us to follow. He reached a ledge and anchored in, clearing himself of the rope to allow me to proceed.

I'd spent most of my time climbing indoors at the gym, though I'd top-roped outside before. There's nothing so fine to me as the rough edges of granite against my skin as I cling to the rock defying gravity. I began my ascent, hauling myself up over knobby projections, wedging my toes into little cracks. I could feel the pressure of the granite cramping my toes, augh it hurt! But, the feeling is good, I know I'm secure. My eyes scanned the cliff face above me, searching for the next hold. Reaching, stretching, pushing my limits. My bare hands are moving, I see them grasp an edge. I see my fingers curl, the tendons straining as I pull my body higher and higher, but I don't feel them. Numbness has stripped me of my sense of touch. I see my partner perched under an outcropping above me, like a hobbit peering out of his door. Not much further and I can put my gloves on.

"Tension," I shout down to my belayer below. My husband holds my life in his hands. I feel the rope grow taught. The next move is the crux, I swing my leg out to the side and hook my heel over a nub in the rock. I press down on my leg and lever myself higher, the next handhold is now within my grasp. The delicate dance up the icy rock is near an end. I tie in to the anchor, before releasing myself from the climbing rope.

Sitting on a ledge ninety feet in the chill mountain air, legs dangling over the side fills me with wild delight. I shiver as the wind races past, the afternoon sun cannot compete with the chill, but its worth it.

Two more ascend and the ledge gets cramped. At times, you can top a climb and then walk down the hill along a safe trail. Not on this spire. The exhilaration of the climb has a thrilling counterpart, a rapelling descent.

Taking a step backwards off a cliff face sends my heart racing. I stand on the edge, leaning backwards away from the safety of the stone. I jump backwards, pushing with my feet, the rope slides through my hands, and I drop like a lead balloon. The weight swings me forward back into the wall and I kick off once again, I hear the z-z-z-ing of friction as I grip the rope with just enough pressure to control my descent. Cold hands and rapelling make my nerves flutter, and I land with an ungracious thump on the hard winter ground. Up safe, down safe!

Someday, my grandchildren will sit on my lap, and wonder if the book writing grandma has ever done anything as exciting as the characters in her fantasy adventures. I'll smile a knowing smile, for wildness lives here.

If you enjoyed this tale, take the time to peruse other blog's for wild tales. Stop by here to check out the founder Krystal Wade.