Do bears eat rice?
Note: The following is back-dated, as our campsite didn’t have wifi.
Lessons from the road:
- Eating an entire box of Triscuits (or Wheat Thins) is more effective than caffeine at keeping one alert at the wheel. Substituting sliced bell peppers doesn’t work.
- Windy roads with beautiful ocean views get old when they make the trip twice as long.
- Rob prefers dusty I-5 to the scenic coast because it’s direct.
- Dogs can get carsick.
We rolled into our Mount Shasta campsite after dark, after passing the unlit sign and driving 5 miles too far on the mountain road, without reservations because you need to stay two nights in order to make a weekend reservation. Some places I called last week said they were totally booked, so it was a relief that our off-the-beaten-path site had a few tent spaces left.
The chick was quick to say, “They’re in full sun with no privacy from your neighbors.” The full sun part might have been a problem if we planned to stay past noon, because it’s 100-bajillion degrees, even in the mountains apparently. The big concern about neighbors would have been Isis barking, but as it turned out, we got a pretty private site, close to the restroom. I only noticed this morning as I walked around in my flip-flops with Isis how close the next tents were.
One of my concerns about camping was that nearly every site I looked up in California warned of bears. I’m not usually afraid of such things, but I don’t think Isis is big enough to fend off a bear attack, and actually, neither am I.
Despite the bear crossing signs on the freeway, I wasn’t overly concerned, just cautious. It’s a pretty big campground, bears probably stayed away. Still, we diligently put all the dog food, crackers and sushi containers back in the car before bed. I worried a little about the rice that fell on the ground, though. And maybe it wasn’t such a good idea to stuff one of Isis’ chew toys with meaty snacks for her to work on all night, but how else were we supposed to keep her occupied?
It wasn’t until this morning when I saw the sign on the restroom that said, “Bears have been known to pass through looking for food…”
I don’t think Isis barked once after we got here. Unlike some of the other campground dogs. Such a well-behaved traveler. Oops, spoke too soon. I had her loose in our little area, with her 20-ft lead trailing behind her. She just took off after another dog. When I caught up, I said to the guy on the other end of the leash, “She’s just curious.” And let her sniff for a minute until she lifted her upper lip and snarled. What the hell?
I do wonder what goes through her mind sometimes. She got along quite well with her Aunt Millie and Great-aunt Chancey, but every once in a while, there’d be some growling and/or barking. Chancey, like Cousin Zoe, had the tendency to turn around and bite Isis as she walked by. To assert dominance?
It’s 7:40 and it’s getting warm already.
I saw several shooting stars last night. Rob drank several beers.
Best job ever
But I’m definitely ready for my vacation (officially starting in 2 hours. Or less.).
This is evident in how hysterically funny I find the Simpsons avatars, the fact that I’m laughing out loud about them, alone in my office, listening to 80’s music (thanks Chelsea, it rocks!). And that I thought it was appropriate to e-mail my boss the Simpsons website and tell him that’s what I’ve been working on all day.
The Birds
See? Bald eagles are so ubiquitous (can there be degrees of ubiquity?) that the local paper’s photographer went out the other day and found several. Click to see gallery. I love how you can really tell it’s fish and crab in the eagles’ mouths.
She probably has a better telephoto lens than I do. Mine’s 28-200mm.
However, I just bought myself a 50 mm f/1.8 that will allow me to take gorgeous pictures (of my dog) indoors without flash. Thanks for the advice Pioneer Woman.
Delusions of Groening
You really don’t know how little you know what your own features look like until you try to create a Simpsons character of yourself (and your boyfriend).

The ubiquitous eagle
I moved to this state in January 2003, during the heart of eagle season along the Skagit River. You were supposed to be able to drive upriver and see little white heads all over the place. My mom and I went up there, and I went up there again a few days later, and we hardly saw any.
These days, I tell you, I see them flying over I-5 almost daily. I see them in the trees and overhead during tribal salmon ceremonies. They’re everywhere.
Vision quest
While I was on the mother of all hikes yesterday, I started to feel like I was on a vision quest. That I was supposed to push myself to the point of exhaustion and delirium. Maybe my spirit totem would appear.
For a lot of the journey, I was on my own. I kept falling so far behind that 1) the lyrics to “Time After Time” ran through my head, and 2) I could get hurt or lost and die and it’d take them a while to find me.
I was in a group of four, and as we drove out of the national park, it occurred to me that we were probably the only four people on the mountain.
One thing’s for sure, my totem is not a mountain goat. I only saw them as white specks far far in the distance, even though that was the mission of the excursion. My spirit totem could have been any one of the various buzzing insects that wanted to land in my ears. Hope it wasn’t one I killed.
The most likely candidate is the butterfly that liked me so much it kept landing on my (R.E.I.-brand) pantleg and followed me as I crawled down the rocks to a shady spot under a tree.
Do you know what I did under that tree? I peed! On a rock! On a mountain! And thought nothing of it.
Cotton Kills
A couple of jobs ago, I met some coworkers in the office parking lot on a Saturday morning for a hike at Mount St. Helens. It was summertime, so I wore a pair of camouflage shorts (in protest of the war, and cus they make me look like Avril Lavigne) and a white T-shirt. Some of my colleagues were wearing jeans.
Our boss, who is something of an outdoorswoman, strolled by (on a Saturday!) and laughed at us for being inappropriately dressed for hiking. “Cotton kills!” she said.
Her words echoed through my panicked little head on Monday, when I got the call that I was going to hike up a mountain. I went straight from the dog park (where I was when I got the call) to R.E.I. and dropped $150 on appropriate outdoorwear.
I already knew I need a backpack, and had sort of fretted about what pants to wear. I grew more afraid when I learned there would be snow.
“Do you have boots?” my contact asked.
How come people keep asking me that? And how come they never mean quite the same thing? I’m fairly certain that the ladybug boots weren’t what he had in mind.
The thing is, too, when I first started thinking about this excursion months ago, my thoughts turned to shoes. I needed comfortable hiking shoes for summer weather. Didn’t know I should have gotten comfortable hiking boots for snow! And really, it was too late. I couldn’t go out and buy a new pair of boots and expect to hike in them the next day without breaking them in. My Payless city girl snowboots would have to do…and they did just fine.
So that’s one thing I didn’t get at R.E.I. Their boots are too expensive anyway. The pants, the short- and long-sleeved synthetic shirts and the backpack? Worth every penny. But what is the deal with synthetics and body odor? My lord, I started wondering if I’d forgotten to put on deodorant when I got dressed at 4 a.m.
Yes, 4 a.m. Not only did I have wardrobe to fret about, but I had to worry about getting to the meet-up at 6 a.m., which is a good hour-forty-five from my home.
All that’s smokescreen, however, because I realized about 20 minutes into the hike what I was really afraid of. It was the bat caves all over again. Someone had seriously overestimated my hiking chops.
When my contact said 2 hours, 2.5 miles, 2,000 feet — it sounded leisurely. I failed to do the geometry to discover that is equivalent to walking up a mountain at a 90-degree incline.
I’m only slightly exaggerating. It was uphill, mostly steeper than 45 degrees, and not on a maintained path. So I’m climbing over rocks, tree roots, shrubs, creeks of the small and wide variety, snow and finally, up the face of a giant rock formation atop the mountain.
Note angle of incline of snow on which I was standing (bottom left) when taking this picture. It is nearly as difficult to walk across as it is to walk up it.
The hike was the most strenuous thing I have ever done in my entire life. And I wasn’t even with people I knew well enough to squat down close to the earth and sob in front of. I had to keep a smile on my face, even if I couldn’t keep up with the pace.
I took a zen-like stance and decided not to feel embarrassed that I had fallen so far behind. It was a beautiful day. Look at those fantastic mountains. Boy, this exercise is good for me. One foot in front of the other. Enjoy the moment. Don’t waste the experience by getting distraught.
See? Still smiling. (Again, note angle of rock formation in bottom left corner.)
As I sat at the top for several hours, getting sunburned after apparently sweating off my sunblock, I got to know a couple of technicians who make this and similar hikes two, three times a week.
“They don’t tell you what it’s going to be like,” one of them said. “They say, 5 miles, and you’re thinking, no problem! The first time I came out, I wanted to turn around and go back to the truck.”
Me too. It sure made me feel better to hear that.
I’m glad I didn’t know what it would be like. I wouldn’t have gone. And I’m glad I did it, even though I wouldn’t do that particular hike again. But bring on the bat caves!
This is my 1,000th post
5th Bloggiversary
This is a big day. I’m taking the day off to celebrate. Not because I worked Monday-Saturday last week, but because my little blog is 5 years old!
Five years ago, plus a day or so, I returned to Prague from a trip home to learn that Chelsea had started a blog. I believe her exact words were, “So I have a blog.” I very technosavvily said, “A what?”
Then I started one a few days later.
Things were very uncertain then. I didn’t know whether I should try to stay in Prague longer or return to the U.S. and further my reporting career and find a husband and have babies.
Things are much clearer now, I am no longer a reporter, and have decided not to get married or have kids. I feel like a single mother already, raising the dog and the boyfriend. (Shoot! I forgot to feed the iguana again.) But with the dog, the boyfriend and our house, I feel very settled and very happy. I have a job that I hope to still have when this blog turns 10. A gamble, because I have had SIX jobs since it was born, including the one I had at the time.
So happy 5th birthday, Rhymes With Safari. Here’s to five more!

