Wednesday 28 July 2010

Blogging in America


It's hard work. It's going to take me longer to write about this holiday than it is to live it - we've been here for four and a half weeks and I've only managed to blog about the first two days. I think from now all I will be abandoning all attempts at chronology (Tony is doing that on his website - see this link)
http://tonyswash.com/Tony/

The hurdles in the way of putting a relevant photo with text are way too high - take photo, download to the computer, add label and wait for Tony to do something technical which will make it easy for me to import it to my blog page and for yous lot to actually see it. He keeps offering to teach me to do the technical bit by myself, but as we are already jostling for keyboard time on the laptop, the threat keeps going away, so from now on photo may or may not have anything to do with the content of the entry.

The gods of communication have not been working in harmony - who knew there were so many things that had synchronise? Wifi, ambient lighting (as in I need something more than a 40 watt bulb), something to lean on, available computer time when brain still functioning...

Also I swear I have designed and changed and SAVED!!! the settings about four times on this blog thing, and it just keeps defaulting to to its basic ugly stuff. I will get to grips with this when I get home and have access to computer set-up which is not going to ruin what is left of my eyesight, posture and good humour.

I'm going to put a photo in now. It will no doubt appear at the top of the page, even though I would like it to be here, at the bottom....



Saturday 17 July 2010

Rocky Mountains 2


Emerald Lake. This is one of Tony's photos....

Photos from the Rocky Mountains 1


Tony taking a photo of Alberta Falls

America....

Estes Park, Colorado.
30 June - 2 July

... is a pretty town, a short drive from the Rocky Mountain National Park. It has a lake, views of the mountains, lots of shops (including a really nice bookshop) and a lovely river walk which goes all the way through town. We drove (well Tony drove and I navigated) our monster car (a Jeep SUV) from Denver and we got here early afternoon to the Econolodge. There must be about 40 motels in Estes Park, and we chose the Econolodge. It sounded good on the website, especially since it had views of the lake. It was clean enough, but had this odd smell... We could see the lake if we stood on tiptoe and peeked out of a small slot window in the back wall. There was nothing econo about it, either - I think they charged us a lot more than the online quote. We were so whacked from the journey that we didn't have the energy to do anything about it, like ask for our money back and look for somewhere else.

We were here for three nights, and we did some walking in the park. I'm going to put the photos on another entry because I can't work out how to put a photo anywhere other than at the beginning of a post and this wifi connection is so slow....

Beautiful and wondrous as the park is, with waterfalls and lakes and so on, the main impression of the three days we spent here is extreme discomfort. Jetlag plus high altitude plus encroaching age-related decrepitude equals misery. There's the disrupted sleep, for a start - waking up at 4 am etc. Everything I've read about mountain sickness says that any existing ailments are likely to be exacerbated. OK. What this means in real life is that the vaguely troublesome (at sea level) sinus condition becomes a from of torture, and just about the only think you can think about. How can your nose be producing gallons of snot per hour and simultaneously be completely clogged up so it's impossible to breathe with your mouth shut. Where does it all come from? And how can it keep on coming, for days and days and days. It didn't stop till we got to Utah...

A short walk in the evening to Alberta Falls (about a mile - but up a very steep hill) takes an hour and a half, stopping every few yards, gasping for breath. Knees creaking. Lungs heaving. Head thumping. And it wasn't dehydration because it would not have been possible to drink any more water than I did. I feel so old and decrepit.

Tony keeps saying, it's the altitude, but that doesn't help much. Next day we walk to Emerald Lake via Nymph Lake and Dream Lake. Tony is feeling quite chipper, and I feel like my bones are made of lead. It's about two and a half miles, 900 feet elevation gain - it took TWO HOURS, and we only did little stops at the lakes (they were really crowded - lots of people and not a lot of space). I'm in despair. I feel ancient. Is this how it's going to be from now on? Get me the power scooter and the oxygen tank NOW. Instal the Stanalift before I get home. The only place I'll ever be able to walk again is Holland.

The scenery is beautiful: soaring snow-capped mountains, clear blue lakes, pine trees, shrubs and flowers that all smell wonderful. Some amazing birds - an especially startling bright blue one called Stellar's Jay. (We know this because Tony happens to be standing next to birdwatching lady expert, and she told him).

It took us an hour to get back down. I took some paracetamol which at least did for the headache for a few hours, but didn't improve the sinus situation. Shiatsu point pressing on the head helped temporarily (I put this bit in for Helen....).

The other thing is that it is very expensive here, and not just because the pound is so week. Also there is lots of mental arithmetic to do to work out how much stuff costs. You take the price - say $27.99, and you add tax (which can be anything from 9% to 12% depending where you are) and then you have to multiply by 7 to get the cost in £s.

Day three and I'm feeling better but it's Tony's turn to feel like crap. I learn to drive the SUV by going round and round the car park at the motel and driving into town, doing left and right hand turns and manoeuvres in traffic and reversing into parking spaces. At least they give you lots of room to park.

I'm actually writing this on Saturday 17th July, in Moab. This is taking ages. I'm not sure I'm going to ever catch up with myself. I will post this and then put some photos on, hopefully....









London View 2

28 June, again

But the garden is looking lovely. We've had so much rain that everything is looking very lush. But I can't put the photo in yet because it's too big and Tony has to convert it to something that doesn't take two hours to load onto the blog...


London Views

28th June
I took some views out of the back bedroom window. If you look straight ahead, this is what you see. Won't be missing that one much.