Thursday, March 31, 2005

Where have you been...the short version.

Firstly apologies, but we've been unable to get to an internet cafe as there seems to be distinct lack, Wifi no problem, but no internet cafe's as we know them. As a result we've been very remiss with the blog. Here's the easy version...

Scenic highway 101 down the west coast of Washington,Oregon and California.
Visited the Oregon sand dunes, Redwood Statepark and the Napa Valley.
Visited Death Valley and hit Las Vegas, won nothing as we bet nothing.
Paid a mechanic $500 to fix Cynthia!
Currently in San Diego waiting for car insurance and general chilling.

About to embark on the 2140m round trip of the Baja peninsular, wish us luck!

Check out the new photos

Where have you been...the long version.

This is for those who are truly interested in what we've been upto....

Washington
So we left Vancouver and spent a few nights in Seattle. We visited a camera shop and spent a lot of money, H now has a spanky new digital SLR, very nice, great quality shots. I got very excited when I visited my first Patagonia store. Oh, all the great stuff! We had a couple of nice meals out and got a little drunk one evening. We saw some good stuff wondering around but it was tuff going on my arms (boy your arms aren't made for walking around on.) and I had the first attack of pudding foot! (This is where my broken ankle gets all fat from being down too long)

Oregon
We went down the coast from there on highway 101 which is a beautiful drive, we we're very lucky with the weather and had beautiful sunny weather for the whole drive. The coast road is notorious for being foggy a lot of the time. We stayed at a beautiful beachside RV resort which has been the best so far. We saw our first ocean sunset, which as you can imagine, was quiet something. We then drove on into Oregon and spent a great hour blasting around on a couple of quads on the incredible Oregon Dunes, sand dunes which stretch for 10's of miles. This was the most fun to be had with a broken ankle. You would get stuck if you weren't careful as you blasted up the gradually steepening slopes of a huge dune. A lot of hopping and sweating took us back to Cynthia. We stayed at a super ghetto campsite in the middle of nowhere for a mere $10 that evening. We visited the giant Redwoods which was quite something, taller but slimmer than the Sequioa's. A couple of nights in the Redwood National Park was very pleasant. We had a fire by the van and it seemed to soak up our worries of being on the road.

California
We hit the Napa valley after the Redwood N.P. and spent a night in a nice motel and had a mudbath at the Spa. I know, I probably should have said, (Frank from Eastenders voice) 'That's awright luv, I'll be in the pub.' But I said why not and we had a very relaxing time. Not the extreme kind of event I had in mind when I planned the trip, Big walling in Yosemite, surfing in Baja and mudbath in Napa! We went on a very interesting wine tour of the 'Sterling winery' and had a tasting session, very nice! We moved on to the Mumm Napa vineyard after Sterling and tasted a number of very nice champagne's for a very sensible price. We stopped short of buying any of their product, however. We drove over to the Sequioa N.P. and on the way stopped at a beautiful lakeside campsite where we chilled and had another nice fire which sucked out the worries of being on the road for a long day. Part of the drive had been through some of Californias orchard areas where orange trees, grapefruit and grapes are grown in rows as far as the eye can see and the roads are strighter and longer than you can see. Whilst driving down a stright road with no turnings we managed to get lost and then found! We went up to the park the next day but discovered there'd been too much snow and we couldn't get to the trees, so we turned round and headed for Nevada and Las Vegas!

Nevada
To get to Vegas we had to drive over the Sierra Nevada, the weather had deteriorated in Napa and had been overcast and raining ever since. We stopped on the way to Vegas at a wet and wind swept lake called Isabella at the top of the Sierra's. It rained really heavily all night and whilst we didn't get a great nights sleep we did much better than another group who where there. Their fire was put out by the severity of the rain and their tents collapsed in the wind. They looked like they'd had a miserable night. We spent a continuous 36hrs in the van without getting out, enough said. I think we may begetting addicted to the van.
The drive over the Sierra Nevadas was good, topping out at the pass just 100m below the snow line. We looked back the way we'd come and there were ominous black storm clouds, as we looked ahead towards Death Valley we were confronted by beautiful blue skies not suprisingly we decided to head to Death Valley. The scenery changed as we drove down the Sierra's and we benefitted from the rain shadow. The temps soared and the skies were blue. The wind though was blasting and the driving characteristics of a 23ft box with wheels leaves a lot to be desired!
We drove in to Death Valley and it was hot, we visited the lowest place in the USA -284ft and it was still hot. we went to bed and it was hot, we got up super early to go and take pictures of the sunrise and it was still hot. We were very lucky to be visiting in spring as we caught the wild flowers in the desert. Carpets of beautiful yellow, white and purple flowers were all over the dry rocky ground. The colours were incredible as was the sunset ont he mountains. The best scenic drives were all closed for some reason so we visited a crater (volcanic) and a Castle in the middle of Death Valley. Very odd. We decided to head to Vegas and managed to get there in one day.
Vegas was oddly depressing, we stayed at an RV park attached to a casino off the strip, it was full of old people who didn't look like they could afford to throw money away. Going in the casino was just the same, there's no reason to leave as they had restaurants, cinemas, bowling alleys, hair dressing salons, spas, ice cream palour, pools oh and the gambling! There are no windows and no clocks. You felt as if you were being sucked into the bowls of some great monster that wouldn't let you leave until it'd sucked all your cash! In a way Vegas was the same, we had to pay $500 to get Cynthia fixed, essential repairs but not overly welcome. We stayed at Lake Mead which was hot but we managed to do some running repairs of our own with the minimal of tools! The same day we lost Hannah's purse, not so good. On our last day in Vegas we hit the Hoover Dam and had a tour which was cool, well I thought so! Stood astride the Nevada Arizona desert, oh how much fun we had! We drove to San Diego from Vegas in a day, long drive but we found a good campsite where we'll stay for the next two nights. We are insuring the van for Mexico and getting on the net to say hello and good by as we won't be back for a month. Telephones only I suspect. Oh and we're getting hair cuts as we're getting a touch ferrral!

Mexico

Chocolate and Alcohol...

...is now the main form of entertainment. As we can't get our fix of adrenalin on a regular basis (other than accidental driving situations!) we've resorted to the very traditional enjoyment of good beer and wine and a good bar of chocolate! When we stop to go shopping it's at the top of the list.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Seattle or bust...

...well we're gonna be broke by the end of all this so why not. The exciting news of the day is that afte a follow up with the doctor who cut m open we have decied to move on an get on withour trip.

The follow up with Doctor Bagoo, my surgeon, went well although it didn't go in quite the direction we'd hoped for. Doc Bagoo cut off the cast which was a relief to say the least although seeing my foot again was something of a shock. The foot was much less swollen although there's still lots of bruising under the foot and around the toes. The scars are much larger than expected. No small keyhole incisins but instead a 1 inch scar on the front left with metal staples insitu. A 1/2inch scar on the right outside and a small hole in the front. The staples we're removed and the stitches taken out which felt a little odd but was fascinating to watch. The result is I'm free to wiggle my foot around, hurrah! The bad bit is 6 weeks non weight bearing followed by a week of 25% weight bearing, a week at 50%, a week at 75%, well you get th picture. Then it's exercise crazy in an effort to get the ankle back up to scratch.

So after freaking out that the trip was ruined due to ankle idiot here, we've planned a more normal trip down through America and then into the sun in Baja. However the first leg of the trip starts here, we've packed the van and are heading to Seattle. First the Canadian-America border!

Sunday, March 06, 2005

Wood screws, anterior tibifibular ligaments and sitting on my arse.

Well folks it's not all doom and gloom you'll be please to know. Although braking my ankle has been so far off the script it's not funny we're evolving a new plan. Bending in the wind like a sapling, mmm maybe I've spent too much time going through those New Age web-sites. That's one problem associate with sitting on your arse and having free internet access. On the upside we've been able to plan our route down the west coast of the US. This involves driving the coast highway (Highway 101) down the Washington and Oregon coastline. There are plenty of nice places to stop and things to see. We'll be doing some sight seeing and general tourist stuff and avoiding any extreme sports.

Life in a cast is fun, I'm sure most of you reading this have broken something at some point so have a good perspective on what it's like. For me this is all new, until now i've managed to avoid breaking anything. It's the small things that really get to you. A good example is making tea. No problem getting the cup out and geting the kettle boiling but once you've made your tea you then have to transport the blighter back to your seat. Suddenly the distance from the kitchen to your seat grows, what should be a few steps seems to transform into a journey of marathon like proportions.

The foot is much less painful now, i've been pill free for the last three days and although it hurts some when I'm up and around it's geting better everyday. I have a follow up with the surgeon on Moday 7th March so we are hoping to get a clean bill of health and get on our way. Fingers crossed. Here's to being on the road again.