I've
received a few emails wondering where we have been. Have no fear, we
are alive and well. We just lost our internet access during the past
few days. After we were talked into staying in Jasper through the
weekend, we celebrated Canada Day with the locals. 
Blending in with the locals

We attended the
flag-raising ceremony, complete with bagpipes and Mounties, then
enjoyed the parade in the afternoon. Later, we went to our new favorite
pub, the De'd Dog and had Long Islands. We met a young couple with whom
we chatted for a while.
They worked as medics on the oil rigs in
Alberta and were sharing their stories about jumping off 60 foot
cliffs into the Horseshoe Lake for recreation. After dark, which was
around 11:20pm, we watched the fireworks.
Sunday
morning we left Jasper and drove through British Columbia. The morning
started out cold as we drove through past Mt. Robson where we tried to
stop for breakfast, but the only cafe in the area was inundated with
Korean tourists and the cafe wouldn't cook for anyone who wasn't on the
tour bus. So, we motored on into a town called Valmount where we
stumbled into the Canadian Inn, a somewhat rundown hotel with a
restaurant. How badly can they screw up breakfast? The manager had to
wait on us because he sent his only waitress home to take care of her
child because her husband was too drunk from the Canada Day
celebration. After breakfast, we continued on and it got warmer and
warmer. By afternoon, it was 100 degrees. The wind on your face isn't
cool at that point; it's just an annoying blast of hot air. We pulled
into a town called Vernon and Monica pointed out a casino. "They
usually have cheap rooms," she said. I was hot, miserable and beat
after 375 miles and didn't care. Normally, the rooms were $99 a piece,
but they had 2 unadvertised rooms for $60 because they overlooked the
pool. I didn't care. Oh, and by the way, there was a baseball team
staying at the hotel, but if they bothered us we were to just let the
front desk know and the security would quiet them down. At midnight,
the partying was pretty loud. There's always one guy who is the most
drunk and the loudest who has to be right outside your door. Monica
called the front desk. All I heard her say was, "No, I am not moving to a new room. It's 1am. You've got
to be kidding!" More raucous. Earplugs are now in place. The phone
rings. There is no security guard. Muffled conversation. Click. Phone
rings again. The security guard is on his way. Meanwhile, I'm pretty
much asleep with my earplugs in. The phone rings again. "Sir, please do
not call here anymore,"
The
next morning it was already hot when we left Vernon. We crossed the
border back into the U.S. into Washington. The first thing we saw was a
taco wagon. South of the border has a new meaning. It was sweltering
hot. We stopped to cool off and have a drink. We saturated our t-shirts
with cold water and put them back on and wore wet bandanas around our
necks. They were bone dry within the hour. We had a nice, but heated,
ride down SR 97 and visited the town of Chelan, where Monica once took
a backpack trip and met her friend, John. We cooled off there with a
mango chai and stared longingly at the lake. We continued on and
settled in a town called Leavenworth that Monica discovered before we
left home. It's a quaint town set up like a Bavarian village. We scored
a nice hotel room at the Der Ritterhoff. We walked into town and the
first thing we saw were what we thought were big horn sheep on the side
of the road. We started taking pictures and were stunned to see them so
close to town, after seeing them out in the mountains. "Wait a minute,"
Monica said, suspiciously. "These are pet goats! They're in a fenced
area!" We felt like total morons photographing someone's goats. We
moved on as if nothing happened and walked into the Baron Haus where we
shared a pork schnitzel and a beer. The town was relatively quiet for
being a holiday, but, we thought, that most of the activity must have
happened over the weekend. During the night, we were awakened by a
wicked thunderstorm and an absolute deluge of rain.
We
decided to spend the 4th of July in Leavenworth and arranged a short
kayak trip down the Icicle river. We rented inflatable kayaks and spent
a nice afternoon paddling. The river was only a Class I and we both
thought we could have had more of a challenge. Near the end of the
trip, the sky grew dark and it started thundering. We made it back to
the room before it started really raining.
Posted at 10:05 pm by Tami