Thursday, May 20, 2010

Red Rocks


5/20/2010
Las Vegas, NV

We skipped town last Friday, after a 6 week stretch of subbing and packing in Boise. Right now we are on our way to San Diego, our prospective new home, with a few stops along the way.
The first stop on our road trip was Pocatello, Idaho. We are going to Laina's aunts house, where we will cast our wedding rings. We made the drive in a little over 3 hours, driving across the south of Idaho and following the Snake River for most of the way. We had good weather, made good time and arrived before sunset. It was really nice to see Beany and George again, and we quickly got to business in the studio downstairs, sorting gold and getting the torch ready. Beany had already made us our wax molds of the rings that we saw a week earlier, and then made a plaster cast of those molds, which she had in the kiln the morning before we arrived. With the mold ready, we heated the gold up with a torch until it was liquid, and then set the centrifuge to send the gold into the cast. Once the gold went into the cast, we dropped it into water to cool, and then broke apart the cast to see the rings! They were beautiful!
We left the next morning and headed to Capitol Reef National Park, drove south through Salt Lake City, and continued all the way down to the red rock landscape so typical of southern Utah. Getting into Capitol Reef was amazing, huge red cliffs on both sides of the highway, and as far as you can see on the horizon. Our first night, we set up camp in the Fruita campground, and then took a short hike up the reef and enjoyed some red wine during a spectacular red sunset. We made some friends in the campground, heated up some chili and potatoes on the fire. The next day we drove aound the scenic route, hiked grand wash, some other narrows, and then went to see Capitol Dome. After another cold night camping, we jumped in the car and headed to Bryce Canyon.
Driving to Bryce Canyon, we drove through some fantastic scenery. One part of it, "The Devil's Backbone" had a road on a ridge, with drop-off's on both sides at least 300 feet. We continued over a 10,000 foot summit pass, and then down into Bryce territory. Bryce Canyon National Park is at 8100 feet, and is spectacular. It looks somewhat like a coral reef, thousands of pillars and spires, all with similar striations giving it an eerie blurry look. From the park, you look down into the canyon, from many different vistas, and paths. We only stayed in the park for 2 hours, because we wanted to camp at the lower elevation, hence warmer, Zion National Park.
Arriving into Zion, I couldn't stop saying how incredible the views were. We entered from the west entrance, and from the first 200m my jaw was slack from the sights. The beginning of the park was amazing, you are driving on top of and in the slickrock. Once you drive through this area, you see the checkered slickrock hills, and they are so close you cannot see anything else. Then you go through a mile-long tunnel and when you come out on the other side, the whole canyon opens up in front of you. You can see across, down and far away, the canyon is huge, majestic and red. We got a campground, spent a fantastic night with our fellow campers, Texans and Portlanders, and then toured the park for the whole next day. Our last night in Zion we camped outside the park, at a BLM campsite. I jammed with a mandolin player from Fort Collins, CO, and chatted late into the night with a couple from Steamboat. The next morning we headed Las Vegas way, stopping in a failed attempt to swim in lake mead, and then got stuck in construction for a double failure! We finally did get into Las Vegas and met up with our CS host, Mark. After much needed showers, we headed to the strip for food and fun. After a few 99 cent beers, and Chipotle, we started our tour of the casinos. We saw them all! We were most impressed by the Venetian and Bellagio. I decided the bathroom in the Bellagio was the opposite of the bathroom at the bus terminal in La Paz, Bolivia. After a long night of much walking, we wound up back home for some chatting and much needed sleep.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Waiting for Spring


It's May 2nd, and waking up to 40 degree weather with 70% humidity is not my favorite weather in "Mid-Spring". Every morning I run my little starter trays to the back patio with bare feet stinging on the brisk, and sometimes wet tiles. They have been growing well, the tiny cherry tomatoes definitely doing the best, the long romaine and asian greens also growing well. The basil didn't make it, I don't know why, they sprouted, and didn't grow much past that stage.
Our last few weeks have been something in between pandemonium and productive busyness. Our pre-marriage counseling classes have hit the mid-point and now we are heading towards the last two weeks of classes. The wedding planning have gotten a little ridiculous, we have a four page, double-sided list with approximately 500 things we need to do between now and the wedding. We are also trying to pack up to leave Boise by May 14th, so we can get down to California. All of this while subbing full time in the Boise school system.
Subbing this spring has been sort of a roller coaster of work, some jobs being duck soup, and others leave me practically exhausted. Some jobs: Band teacher, Orchestra are really easy, and sometimes incredibly boring (when the band is out at a concert and you have 2 or more periods without students). On the other hand, most of my jobs are rather difficult, and require lots of classroom management, and some old-fashioned discipline. For example, I had taken the job "detention monitor" Thinking it would be cake. It wasn't. Long story short, the principal got involved and took the student away.
My favorite jobs are the full classroom 1st graders. Reading to them, teaching spelling, cutting and pasting, recess... 1st grade is the best. If you can quiet a whole class by threatening to not give them a shiny star sticker, sign me up. Besides that, 1st grade also offers students that have better behavior then kindergardeners, and are still so small and fun that you don't get burned out like with middle-schoolers.
Laina is having her wedding shower this morning. She is very excited, and has been spending the morning in anticipation. I am not invited.