I figured y'all would probably like some baby updates so just wanted to let you know that today I'm officially 17 weeks along. That means the baby is about the size of a turnip (5 inches long and weighs around 5 ounces). Yesterday, I felt the baby move for the first time which was pretty amazing! It was so slight I felt like I could've imagined it, it felt like a little bubble in my stomach. But then the bubble moved around a bit in the same place a few times so I figured that was the baby :) Today I took my first prenatal yoga class and it was a lot of fun! A little tough (because I'm not that flexible anymore, just due to lack of stretching) but definitely fun. The class ended with a breathing exercise that calms your body down and I think the baby really liked yoga because it started moving around a little bit during the calming time. I couldn't help but smile while I was supposed to be concentrating on my breathing. I feel extremely blessed to have a sweet baby growing inside of me, it is truly a miracle. We should be finding out if Baby Kelly is a boy or girl within the next week, yay! Fingers crossed that it will cooperate and not roll up in a little ball and hide from us. Here's a quick picture of me after my yoga class tonight. I swear there's a bump there, no matter how slight! :)
Monday, November 18, 2013
Sunday, November 17, 2013
day 28: Pasadena, CA
Kyle and Colleen were so sweet and made us a huge breakfast of
pancakes, bacon and eggs. We ate so much! It seems that large
appetites follow the trail.
Since Kyle and Colleen had larger mirrors in their bathrooms I was able to notice the changes in my body. It looks like I've slimmed down all over (I would later find out I lost about 15 pounds while on the trail). My legs have more muscle tone and my waist and hips seemed to have slimmed down.
After breakfast we took our time getting ready, Kyle and Colleen took us to a French bakery where I got my first latte in over a month and we ordered tasty macaroons! Yum! John and I shared salted caramel, blackberry and raspberry, so tasty! They they drove us around Pasadena and eventually all the way to Rodeo Drive. It was a lot of fun to see all the different places, California is so beautiful! Oh and we stopped by Target so I could get some toiletries and a dress since all I had were trail clothes. After that we returned to their home and they went to church. We watched an Arrested Development episode on Netflix and hung out. When they returned we went out for Mexican because I had been craving it on the trail. They they took us on a tour of Cal Tech, where Kyle is a post doc. What a beautiful campus. The buildings are really cool and all of the landscaping was so gorgeous. We returned to their house and were all exhausted so we headed to bed.
(Since we've been off the trail my feet have been extremely sore and have swollen up so that even my flip flops are tight. It is really difficult to walk, I have to go at an extremely slow pace.)
Since Kyle and Colleen had larger mirrors in their bathrooms I was able to notice the changes in my body. It looks like I've slimmed down all over (I would later find out I lost about 15 pounds while on the trail). My legs have more muscle tone and my waist and hips seemed to have slimmed down.
After breakfast we took our time getting ready, Kyle and Colleen took us to a French bakery where I got my first latte in over a month and we ordered tasty macaroons! Yum! John and I shared salted caramel, blackberry and raspberry, so tasty! They they drove us around Pasadena and eventually all the way to Rodeo Drive. It was a lot of fun to see all the different places, California is so beautiful! Oh and we stopped by Target so I could get some toiletries and a dress since all I had were trail clothes. After that we returned to their home and they went to church. We watched an Arrested Development episode on Netflix and hung out. When they returned we went out for Mexican because I had been craving it on the trail. They they took us on a tour of Cal Tech, where Kyle is a post doc. What a beautiful campus. The buildings are really cool and all of the landscaping was so gorgeous. We returned to their house and were all exhausted so we headed to bed.
(Since we've been off the trail my feet have been extremely sore and have swollen up so that even my flip flops are tight. It is really difficult to walk, I have to go at an extremely slow pace.)
Sunday, November 10, 2013
the adventures aren't over, I promise!
So, I have posted about half (maybe a little more) of our trip. It doesn't end with us finishing the John Muir Trail. We still have many more miles of driving and hiking that I need to blog about. I have been awful at posting regularly mostly due to house renovations, fatigue (although that is fading as I continue to blaze into the 2nd trimester, yay) and working two part time jobs. I promise to post more about our trip and eventually before and after pictures of our new home. I want the "afters" to look as good as possible and that's a little difficult with tools and random light fixtures still hanging around. But I promise there is more to come! Thanks for bearing with me and continuing to check in, I have not forgotten you! :)
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
our next big adventure
Introducing our next big adventure...Baby Kelly is due in April 2014! We could not be more excited!
I've had two doctor's appointments and that baby's heart is beating strong and fast! That is truly one of the sweetest sounds I've ever heard, the heartbeat. The pregnancy has been going well, I had some morning sickness and extreme fatigue during the first trimester but those symptoms are starting to fade. I PROMISE to give y'all updates on the baby and baby bump pictures (once my belly starts growing). Please join us and pray for this sweet baby as it continues to grow and develop, thank you!
Thursday, October 17, 2013
day 27: 18th day on the JMT, descending Mt. Whitney and on to Lone Pine, CA
Viewing the sunrise on top of Mt. Whitney
John standing on Mt. Whitney at sunrise
Geological marker on top of Whitney
If you climb Mt. Whitney you have to get a picture at the top together
I'm wearing every piece of clothing I had with me in this picture
Looking over 2 vertical miles down towards Lone Pine in Owens Valley |
The hut on top of Mt. Whitney
After the sunrise, we hung out in the stone hut that's on top of Mt. Whitney in order to shield ourselves from the wind for awhile. We packed up our stuff, ate breakfast and got ready for the 10.5 mile descent. John bandaged up my toes for the last time, we signed the log at the hut (for people who had summited Whitney) and off we were! Not even two minutes into our descent did we start running into dayhikers summiting Whitney. We saw a ton of them! It was worse than Half Dome. And everyone was asking us how much farther. But it was hard to not be in a fantastic mood because we had already summited Whitney! And we were on our (long) way down! I was so happy, so happy for all I had accomplished and so happy to almost be done. We had to descend 10.5 miles and over 6000 feet elevation. Since I was so happy I also got a little naive and forgot how long it takes to hike 10.5 miles, even if you are descending. We probably started around 7:00 a.m. and didn't reach Whitney Portal until 2:00 p.m. That was the longest 10.5 miles of my life. I thought they would never end. And the last 3-4 miles my head started feeling really weird, maybe elevation change, maybe because I hadn't eaten a lot (I wasn't hungry mostly due to high elevation), I'm not sure. But nothing was coming between me and a bacon cheeseburger from Whitney Portal. And so I focused and hiked as fast as I could down never-ending switchbacks.
Inside the hut on Whitney
John before we began the descent
Me before the descent
Down we go...
The spires on the way back down
Me coming down
Long way to go
One of the many switchbacks
Scenery on the way down
Heading into Whitney Portal, we liked to think of this tunnel as our finish line
Delicious bacon cheeseburgers and fries
Us after 18 days on the trail and not showering for the last 9
John's mugshot
My greasy hair
After we both showered we gathered all of our dirty clothes and walked across the street to the conveniently located laundromat. Hobbled is more like it since I couldn't really walk. We cleaned all of our clothes and went to look in a few shops. After awhile John got a call from Kyle saying they were ending their hiking trip early and coming into Lone Pine. They met us at the store and we all walked to the pizza place where John and I ate all of our pizza and half of Kyle and Colleen's (after they assured us they were done). I also gulped down two large cups of Coke Zero. Oh my goodness! So delicious! We were so hungry, it was hilarious.
Looking up at Mt. Whitney from the town of Lone Pine, CA. It was pretty cool to know that we came all the way down from that in one day.
After that we decided to drive the 3 hours back to Pasadena because it would be difficult for Kyle and Colleen to find a room where their dog was also allowed. We arrived at their place in Pasadena after 1:00 a.m. and we promptly collapsed on their sofa bed and slept really well into the morning.
Labels:
american road trip,
california,
hiking,
john muir trail,
trips
Thursday, October 3, 2013
day 26: 17th day on the JMT, Forester Pass to the summit of Mt. Whitney
Morning sights around the campsite
Hitting the trail early
We woke up early on this day because we wanted to hit Forester Pass early on, then keep hiking and go on to Whitney. We woke up, John bandaged my poor feet, we got ready, broke camp and hit the trail at 6:40 a.m. It was really cold this morning--probably around 30 degrees or so. So we were bundled up when we started. The terrain was rolling at first then just uphill. Up, up, up we went. This pass wasn't difficult, thank goodness, as far as finding the trail goes. There was little to no snow. We camped pretty high up so we only had to ascend a little over 1000 feet elevation over the course of a couple of miles. I, of course, counted my steps 1-20 over and over again so I could make it up the pass. After awhile we made it, all 13,200 feet that is Forester Pass! It was beautiful up there. It's so cool to stand at the top of a pass and look down and see everything you just climbed up. All that you just conquered. Very empowering. Then you remember you have to go a very long way down and your feet hurt the worst going down. But nonetheless, an accomplishment and our last pass!!
Heading up to Forester Pass
Panoramic at the top of Forester
Looking back down
The sign at the top of the pass
Beautiful, looking back down
John at the top
7 mountain ranges, many (if not all) that we surely hiked over
Us at the top (I'm just a little excited)
After resting for a bit we started the descent. We descended all the way down to 10,500 feet. Lots of walking along barren plateaus. This wasn't my favorite scenery that we'd encountered. Anyway, hike hike hike. Vegas hiked with us again on this day but was a bit ahead of us since I'm super slow on descents. We saw him around lunch, eating with some guys he'd just met. We told him we were planning on eating at Crabtree Meadows (4.4 miles later and the last place you can go #2 before summiting Whitney) and we would just see him there or at Guitar Lake (the last water source before summiting Whitney). Those 4.4 miles seemed to go on forever; we were both ready for a break. We finally arrived and trucked it over to the "toilet". It was a toilet lid on top of a latrine with two walls partially covering. Two walls, not four...so awkward since it's in the middle of a meadow but whatever, it worked.
Some of the trail on the way down
Me hiking through a plateau
Before all of this we hiked through Big Horn Plateau (which was pretty but felt like it went on forever) and that's where we got our first look at Mt. Whitney! It seemed so close but we knew we still had a long ways to go. Anyway, Crabtree Meadows, we ate lunch, filled up on water and got going shortly after because we didn't have time to waste if we were going to try and summit Whitney that night.
About to enter Big Horn
Panoramic of Big Horn
First Mt. Whitney sighting! (to the left)
Me hiking through Big Horn
A better look at Mt. Whitney
We started hiking to the base of Whitney and a few couples we passed asked if we were hiking with another guy and said he was looking for us. We thought Vegas was behind us since we hadn't seen him at Crabtree but now he was ahead of us so we had to catch up with him so that we all had our game plan straight. We continued to hike up the moderate ascent and every person who passed us asked if we were hiking with Vegas and said he was looking for us. We know, we know! We're trying to catch up with him! But my energy was fading because we had been hiking for about 11 hours at this point. Finally a man told us that Vegas was waiting for us at Guitar Lake. Ok good, now we knew where he was and that we would catch up to him. The same man also told us he didn't think we could make it to the top of Whitney tonight and that we should camp before we got there. Haha! John was already on a mission, now he was even more so!
Starting to head up Mt. Whitney
So, shortly after we met up with Vegas at Guitar Lake (last place to fill your water for the rest of the summit to Whitney and most of the way back down). John filled up both nalgenes and our 64 oz. water filter bag. While he finished that I started hiking because I was the slowest; I knew they would catch up with me. And they did, eventually. Hike up, up, up. The uphills switched from moderate to super steep to moderate. Until the hellacious switchbacks. They were so steep and seemed to go on forever! I thought I wasn't going to make it. I was fading fast (13 hours of hiking at this point) but this was it! This was Mt. Whitney, the very last thing I had to climb! The official end of the JMT (even though you have to descend 10 miles down the other side to actually get to civilization). I had to keep going. So we did.
Guitar Lake
One of the views heading up Whitney
The trail going up Whitney
Beautiful view and more trail
The last junction before the last ascent (let me tell you, that last 1.9 miles is no joke)
Up, up, up. The scariest part was right after the last junction, the sun was setting and the trail was getting extremely steep, jagged and rocky. I kept thinking that I was tough and strong and darn-it if anything was going to keep me from summiting Mt. Whitney tonight! And so the sun set, the full moon came out and so did our head lamps. I am extremely thankful for the Lord's protection and John's guidance up to the very top of the summit. I looked at my watch, 9:30 p.m., we made it!! Fifteen hours of hiking, 23 miles of trekking through terrain and we were on the top of the highest point in the US outside Alaska!!! And we had reached the official ending point of the JMT! We did it! Two hundred and ten miles we hiked and persevered through and conquered! I was amazed that I had completed this. I felt like I could do anything because I had just finished hiking 210 miles of uphills, downhills, creek crossings, snow covered mountains and trails, steep switchbacks, past rattlesnakes and up mountains whose elevations made my head swim! We did it!
Famous spires leading to Whitney (trail in lower right corner)
John at the last junction
No shortage of beautiful scenery
More trail heading up Whitney and the moon
Amazing
Trail
Looking down (which I tried really hard not to do)
And now time for bed because it was late and the elevation made me feel funny. Mt. Whitney stands at 14,500 feet tall. The reason we wanted to summit on this night was because we had heard the sunrise was amazing and we didn't want to battle the crowd on the way up in the morning. So we slept at the top of a 14,500 foot mountain, higher than anyone in the lower 48 states that night. But I didn't sleep long or well for whatever reason--my feet being in extreme pain, the elevation, the wind.
Incredible colors
The sun setting while we continue to hike to the top
Still going up...
John posing with the official marker at the top
Getting ready to set up camp for the night
Total JMT miles: 210
Labels:
american road trip,
california,
hiking,
john muir trail,
trips
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