Mt. Rainier Summit in the Bag

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Sweet victory! On August 12, I summited Mt. Rainier, reaching 14,410 feet. I'm still in a bit of disbelief that the whole thing went down.

Before I turned 30, I planned to own a home, have a master's degree and have a good job. I hoped to be married (and lucked out there.) I didn't have Mt. Rainier in the game plan mostly because I didn't think I would ever have time to prepare myself for such an adventure. Finding a steady men's soccer team seemed like enough of a challenge.

Of course, my job is in the mountaineering business, so that was the catalyst. Whereas a Mt. Rainier summit climb is deservedly a bucket list for many people -- especially for people who live out of state -- I work with people who summit the mountain weekly for their job or for their love of the mountains and the convenience of Paradise being 45 minutes from the office. The opportunity presented itself through coworkers a few weeks back and I went for it. My Mt. Adams summit the previous week was a good training exercise.

My friend and Whittaker Mountaineering store manager Brian led the group. We hiked four miles and 4,000 feet to Camp Muir on a Friday and camped in the snow there and stayed at Muir all day on Saturday. We took the extra day to acclimatize, rest and wait for a second group that our rentals manager Katie was bringing up the hill. We "woke up" at 11:30 p.m. on Saturday to get dressed for the summit climb, another 4,000 feet of climbing. We took the classic Disappointment Cleaver route, which involved several crevasse crossings at Ingraham Flats, a scramble up the Cleaver and a hell of a lot of switchbacks and more crevasse crossings up to Rainier's crater and 14,410. Here are the photos, and there's a video below as well. Thanks for loaning the GoPro, Scott!

Hiking the Muir snowfield. Mt Rainier summit climb

Andy with Rick Flair sunglasses and Mt. Adams in the background. Mt Rainier summit climb

Camp Muir from our camping spot in the snow. Mt Rainier summit climb

The back side of Camp Muir. Mt Rainier summit climb

Our base camp. Mt Rainier summit climb

Camp Muir at rush hour (when guided climbs are coming or going). Mt Rainier summit climb

We climbed in the dark, so I only got a couple photos on the ascent after sunrise. Through the night, the view was spectacular with clear skies and bright stars. Mt Rainier summit climb

Mt Rainier summit climb

We summited at 7:15 a.m., after six hours of climbing. Here's a view walking into Rainier's crater. Mt Rainier summit climb

Brian at the summit. Mt Rainier summit climb

Walking down on the descent. Mt Rainier summit climb

Mt Rainier summit climb

Mt. Adams Summit in the Bag

Mt Adams Summit View Check Mt. Adams off the list. Now I know what it's like sucking wind at 12,280 feet!

Mt. Adams is the second tallest mountain in Washington, behind Rainier. We took the non-technical South Spur route, gaining 7,000 feet of elevation in a 12-mile, single-day roundtrip. It was a natural stair-climber!

Our start wasn't ideal. Traffic south on I-5 just plain sucked and we didn't get to the campground north of While Salmon, WA, until 11 p.m., a few hours later than we would have liked. We "slept" for a short time through the windy night and woke up for an alpine start at 3:30 a.m., hitting the trail at 4 a.m.

Barely awake: Mt Adams climb

We took breaks every hour for 15 minutes to let our legs rest and eat. You can really blow through calories climbing. I ate four Snickers bars, four Clif Bars, a half-pound of beef jerky and a half-pound of dried mangos and drank three liters of water over the course of the day.

Scott at a break: Mt Adams climb

We shed some layers and put on more suntan lotion at sunrise during our third break of the day. Yes, I wore plenty of suntan lotion!

My shadow at sunrise: Mt Adams climb

Mt. St. Helens in the distance with Mt. Adams' shadow at left: Mt Adams climb

Looking up at the challenge ahead, about one-third of the way up: Mt Adams climb

Break time, again: Mt Adams climb

The hardest part of the climb was between the lunch counter, where many climbers camp, and the false summit. We had been climbing for a few hours and those steps just burned, even with crampons. It was also a bit defeating. Once we got to the false summit, we saw we had another 1,000 feet or so to go.

The view looking up from the false summit: Mt Adams climb

Mt. Hood from the false summit: Mt Adams climb

I got a second-wind on the way up to the true summit, and we reached the top in about seven hours. The sky was clear and there was no wind. You really couldn't ask for better conditions.

The summit: Mt Adams climb

Mike was happy to be at the top: Mt Adams climb

So was I, with Rainier in the background: Mt Adams climb

The guys peeing at the top, Rainier at left: Mt Adams climb

Mt. St. Helens from the summit: Mt Adams climb

Mt. Hood from the summit: Mt Adams climb

Of course, the ascent is only half the climb. Walking back down is usually no fun, but Adams had some insane snow slides -- hundreds of feet long -- that made the descent fast and fun...

...but not without injury. Scott destroyed his pinky finger on the first glissade. Mt Adams climb

Me with the GoPro before a glissade. Mt Adams climb

Scott's GoPro footage edit, as posted at Cascade Gravity Research:

We made good time on the way down, taking half the time. We had a better commute heading north, and I crashed hard when I got home. I had a couple small blisters on my feet, but no sunburn and little soreness. Overall, it was a successful climb!

House Painted, Mission Accomplished

home side by side In this summer of ongoing home improvements, I'm glad to say that the biggest, most expensive project is complete... We got our house painted!

You may have caught on Facebook that I discovered a French-Canadian named Henry Choiniere first owned our house via the Tacoma Public Library Northwest Room. His permit request to build a "cottage" at our address was published in the Tacoma Daily Ledger on Jan. 11, 1903. The house was completed in 1904.

Because his last name is so unique, Amanda also figured out that Mr. Choiniere is her boss's great-grandfather. Cool, huh? Through that family we received the above photo, which I'm guessing someone took between world wars. What a difference time and new paint makes.

I like this photo because it helps tell the story of the house and gives us some design ideas. We oddly don't have a fireplace (which sucks) but I can see where it was and know that it was removed where a closet in our room was added. We're already planning to build a front porch in the next couple years, and the fact that the house once had a porch just reinforces the plan and how we'd set the pillars. We've talked about removing our chain-link fence eventually (not all that classy) and it'd be neat to replicate the old wire fence.

Now on to more before-and-afters of the new paint color compared to what we inherited.

Here's Daisha and Amanda in front of the house in March 2009 when we were closing on it. That front door was awful (and not very energy efficient)! IMG_5388

Here's the "Before" with the new front door installed: cress green house color

After: cress green house color

As I wrote previously, the color choice was a soul-searching endeavor, but we're happy we landed with Cress Green. I was in shock and had some buyer's remorse when I first saw the color because it was SO different. After a day, I got used to it and was really happy with the outcome. The trim color made a huge difference, too.

We outsourced the job because I wanted it done right, and our nearby neighbor, school teacher and two-decade painting veteran John was able and willing to take on the work for us. I felt good enough building the fence while the house was getting prepped and painted.

Corner view before painting: cress green house color

After: cress green house color

The garage before, with some broken trim: cress green house color

After: cress green house color

One final note on house color: You can't please everyone. We asked for the of at least a dozen people about color and received a dozen different recommendations. That helped us narrow colors down but didn't make the final decision easier.

House color is like cake. Everyone likes cake but has different opinions about which flavor, frosting and combinations of the two are best. Amanda and I decided it was our party and we wanted our cake Cress Green. I like to think Mr. Choiniere would have approved of the color or been polite enough to just take ice cream without further comment.

The Epic Fence-Building Weekend

When we bought our house, the fence was an issue. It was incomplete, poorly built and took winds like a sail, bending and flapping with every storm. In short, it was an ugly liability. That was three years ago. Last weekend, while the house was getting painted (I'll detail that in a later blog post!), we finally tackled the fence. Here are the results...

Before: Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0001

After: New House Paint20120719_0013.jpg

Before: Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0005

After: New House Paint20120719_0018.jpg

I started the demolition of the old fence on Thursday night after work, which only took a few hours. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0014

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Amanda jumped in to help when she came home from Seattle. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0029

Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0038

Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120711_0041

We dumped the old fencing and picked up new wood on Friday morning before work. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120713_0047.jpg

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I set the new posts on Friday night so that we'd be ready to build on Saturday morning. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120713_0080.jpg

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Scott was my partner in crime for the construction on Saturday. Sun's out, guns out! Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120715_0148.jpg

The Tacoma shirt and Home Depot utility belt is a fashion statement. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120715_0160.jpg

Scott cut the 2x4s while I set the brackets on the posts. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120715_0163.jpg

After the 2x4s were set, we put the 1x5s on in a "shadowbox" design and completed the bulk of the work in five hours. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120715_0224.jpg

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You can pay most friends in beer for manual labor. Scott required an ice cream sandwich. Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120715_0232.jpg

Here's another view of the result! Fence Building _House Painting_Art on the Ave20120716_0238.jpg

I built the back gate on Monday night and now (before Fall)  just need to cut off the top of the posts to call this job done. The fence has made a huge difference in the look of our backyard, and I'm glad it's finally done!

Bastille Day 2012 in Ballard

Bastille Day 2012 Ballard Amanda and I caught up with Katrine last weekend for Bastille Day 2012 in Ballard. We started off walking the Seafood Fair, which had more vendors than seafood, and then headed to a community space on Old Ballard Ave. to play a game of Pรฉtanque (French version of Bocce), sponsored by a local restaurant appropriately named Bastille. (Amanda took the photos that I'm in.)

Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

The community space. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

Look at that form! Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

The (illegal, foot-lifting) form of our foe/Katrine's boss. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

Talking trash. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

Katrine throwing like a lady. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

More trash talking. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

This guy was the judge. He was a serious dude. Bastille Day 2012 Ballard

We beat our opponents, who had held the court for the first three hours and claimed to have been undefeated for the last two years (not so sure about that). Katrine and I decided to retire after our win and drink. I think that's what the French would do, too.