Guests

We’ve been here what seems a pretty long time now.  I don’t think we are tired of it yet, though, and I have been doing a lot of skiing even if there has not been a ton of snow.  However, its always nice to have guests.  This past weekend Mal arrived with his 4-year old daughter, Alexa, to teach her to ski.

Mal and Alexa ready to go skiing.

Mal and Alexa ready to go skiing.

We had a few great days of skiing.  Alexa was very interested in the kids’ terrain park and special runs through the trees.  Her instructor said she was a great skier who only had to work on her parallel turns.

On the Town Lift

On the Town Lift

Next weekend we get the Economous, Scholz, the Princes and Chad back together again.  Its a reprisal of our yearly Snowbird weekend, except this year we are doing it at Park City.  Lets hope its as fun as it always is.  Here’s a little video Mary cut of the 2012 trip:

Powder at PCMR

Finally got some powder on the mountain at Park City.  And I was able to try out the new Armada JJ’s that Christy was so nice to bring out from San Francisco.

IMG_3874

Christy

After very little snow, we got a fresh 10″ or so overnight and I was out the door as soon as the lifts were running.

IMAG0706

That pole is pushed straight down into the snow

Got a bunch of fresh tracks and finally found the courage to explore Jupiter Bowl alone.  I know, sounds wussy-ish, but as it was slick and fast I did not want to take the chance of slipping off of something without anyone with me.  Now with tons of soft powder it seemed tame.  I spent some time in the trees and jumping down the steeps.  I have to say these powder skis make all the difference in the world.  They just float on top and carve nice and easy.  It’s night and day compared to my other skis, which are not skinny by any stretch.  Any way, good day.

I have asked Mary to write a blog post, but since we’ve signed a contract to sell our house, she is busy with packing, moving, storing, selling, changing addresses and a host of other things.  She is the busy ant to my grasshopper.

Ten Days Into Our Park City Sojourn

Sundance 2013

Movie time

So we’ve been here about ten days so far, and are in the thick of the Sundance Film Festival.  I spend about 90% of my time skiing and 10% film-going.  Mary is 100% films.  PCMR got about a foot of snow a few days before we got here and so I got busy skiing as soon as possible.  However, the weather settled and a temperature inversion set in which drove temps on the mountain into the 40s.  Over the last week the snow has steadily withdrawn from the slopes.  It has gone from powder, to hardpack, to manmade and now to rocks and dirt anywhere other than the few groomed runs where they make snow.  As I write this, we have had rain today and the temps have remained above freezing.  Needless to say, the snow SUCKS right now!

IMG_3941This is a fun mountain to ski, especially during the film festival when the hotels are filled with Hollywood-types who generally don’t ski.  It doesn’t quite have the terrain of Snowbird or Alta, but is plenty challenging for me.  It has a lot of terrain that is just past the intermediate range, perfect for trying to push yourself to the next level.  There was a lot of mining activity on this mountain in the 19th and early 20th century.  The many abandoned old mining structures provide a nice visual change of pace.

IMAG0699

A tower for an old cable bucket ore carrier used to bring ore down from the mountain via cable and bucket.

Park City Mining JunkI had hoped to improve my skiing considerably while here, but so far its been pretty much a washout due to lack of the slippery white stuff.  Snow due in the next few days, so let’s keep fingers crossed.

SF – Park City

So, the holidays are over and all our guests have departed and it was time to start our odyssey.  You may recall from a prior post (if I mentioned it) that we are first going to spend a little more than a month in Utah to ski and partake of the Sundance Film Festival.  Well, we thought it would be a good idea to drive our decrepit 22-year old Land Cruiser out there packed with a cat and a dog and enough stuff to live for a month.

Waiting for his driving shift

Waiting for his driving shift

Given the tender condition of our truck and our pets, we decided to cut the trip into two days of about 6 hours travel each.  It took a little longer because on the inclines our old truck could only do about 50mph.  Its pretty embarrassing when big rigs pass you going up a hill, but we eventually made our first stop.

photo

I don’t know if you can see that but we woke to -19F and fog in Winnemucca Nevada.  Apologies to anyone who hails from this shangri la, but this place is a good approximation of hell – depressing gambling town with topography that looks like, and weather worse than, Mars.  We got out the next day as soon as we could get the truck started.  After another long day of driving, we pulled into Park City and unloaded into our little rental and Mary set about planning her film adventure and I broke out the Park City trail map.  Let the games begin.

Anxiety!

That’s the word of the day for this couple who gave up their careers in their prime to travel, see the world and live a little more robustly while still relatively young.  Now, don’t get me wrong:  this is not fear or worry or doubt.  We have been working toward this for years and are confident in our plan.  But quitting your job and planning to live off earnings and savings for an indefinite period is a bit like jumping out of an airplane with an untested parachute.

IMG_4785 The design says it will work, but you just don’t know before you leap. Of course, if we are wrong, we just go back to work and not splat on the ground, but you get the point.  So as this odyssey gets started, we are surprisingly feeling a bit of trepidation about whether we are doing the right thing, or doing this thing right.  I think its just because we are in between ending work and starting our travels that allows the mind to play its tricks.

SF – LA Trip

We kept this boat in Mexico for a year, and would fly down when we could to use it.  But that was less than ideal for two busy San Franciscans.  So Mike Priest brought it up for us in 2011.  We used it a lot more in SF.  As the outlines of our plan began to emerge, we decided we would participate in the 2013 Baja HaHa (more on that in a subsequent post) to get to Mexico.  With me retiring at year end, we decided the first step would be to put the house on the market and relocate (us and the boat) to LA.  This would give us a new city to explore, Mary the opportunity to work a bit before we go and put us in striking distance of San Diego, where the Baja HaHa starts in October.  We had a very foggy and cold summer in San Francisco, with little of the usual beautiful Indian summer in Sep/Oct, so we decided to get the boat to LA sooner rather than later.

Perfect foggy send off from SF

Perfect foggy send off from SF

IMG_3327

Please, nobody jump.

We left with our friends Judy and Torben,

Torben and Judy were a BIG help

Torben and Judy were a BIG help

experienced cruisers from S/V Tivoli, on September 23, planning to do day hops down the coast and arriving in LA in about a week.  However, we got to our first stop – Half Moon Bay – in cold, dripping-wet fog and decided to speed things up a bit.  We left at 4 am the next morning for a 60+ hour leg to get below the reach of the marine layer.  We were hoping to make Santa Barbara but after tacking back in about 80 miles out, we made Cojo Anchorage and settled for a rest there.  This is a small indentation in the coast loaded with kelp and sea lions.   There were two old sailboats washed up on the rocky beach.  Although it was a comfortable anchorage, I will never get used to the west coast habit of anchoring in the slightest dent in the coast.  Back east we usually opt for much better protected harbors.  But I guess there are fewer unpredicted storm systems here and conditions in an anchorage are pretty predictable.   The only other boats there were a coast guard boat on its mooring and a large sportfisher, whose crew paddled in later to surf the shore break.

IMG_3368

Happy to have the anchor down

We left the next morning and had an easy sail to Santa Barbara where we took a slip in the compact local marina.  We partied a bit in the Santa Barbara Yacht Club where Mary was given the royal treatment for representing a yacht club 3000 miles away.  Little did they know that the Orient Yacht Club is an old potato loading shack at the end of a wharf.  Then a little 14th anniversary celebration for us (what more could a gal ask for?) and off to bed.  Definitely want to return to this picturesque little harbor.  We have visited several times via land but there is something different about visiting a place by boat.

14th Anniversary in Santa Barbara!! Yay

14th Anniversary in Santa Barbara!! Yay

After Santa Barbara, one night at the beautiful and secluded (yet so close) Santa Cruz island and our first battle with the kelp monster.

IMG_2057

Kelp Monster

IMG_2063

Santa Cruz Island

IMG_2062

Same spot

And then it was on to Catalina island.  This is a fun little throw-back kind of place that we will visit again while stationed in LA.  It was fun to think that it was so rustic yet so close to the bustling metropolis of LA.

IMG_2108

Torben and Judy cutting a rug

Hey, buddy watch those hands!

Hey, buddy watch those hands!

IMG_3373

Cat Harbor, Catalina

The 4 Amigo's (1024x768)

The 4 Amigos

Next morning brought a lazy and easy sail up to our new home in Marina del Rey.

IMG_3376

Sunny snoooooooooze

And we were there.  Now that the boat is in LA, we’ll have to work on getting ourselves down there.  First we’ve got to sell this house.  Then its off to Park City for Mary to do here Sundance Film Festival thing (little known fact – few movie people ski and the slopes are EMPTY during Sundance).  Then in March, we’ll relocate to the boat.

A First Post

This blog is and will remain a work-in-progress – partly because we have no idea how to do it and expect it to evolve over time as we figure it out.  So you may see posts come and go, be edited, have pictures added or deleted (if someone thinks they don’t look good), etc.  Bear with us.  It is primarily intended to provide family and friends an easy way to know what we are up to.  There may be technical or sailing-related items, but take them with a grain of salt since we don’t know what we are doing.  There are three authors on this account:  Pete, Mary and Neko – which should be considered both of us.

IMG_1983

Escaping Alcatraz

We also hope to interact with people so please feel free to leave comments in the comments section and we’ll try to respond.  There may be a way to private message us on WordPress.com and if you figure it out and send us one, I am sure it will notify us.  Otherwise, for private emails, see how to email us in the About Us section.