Only his family rebelled. My leg was achy, and all the boys could envision was another death trap similar to day one.
I offered to let him hike by himself, the kind selfless woman that I am. Perhaps he noticed my fingers were crossed when I offered or that the children were already running circles around me at 7am, but he had mercy on my soul and cut a deal with me.
We compromised with an "easy" hike for everyone. ("Easy" will no longer be a word that I take lightly when describing hikes. A hike will no longer be categorized as "easy" without apostrophes until I've hiked it myself.)
(And let me further clarify that I am not a hiking wimp! I'm certainly not a burly mountain woman either. I fall somewhere between. There is a happy medium there.)
Rick chose the Continental Divide Trail for us.

"Mommy, this hoodie cost $30! Now, I only have $20 left!" Welcome to reality, son.
The hike was pretty, and we stayed on an "easy" trail. (It was truly easy.)



And we found a patch of dirty snow.

Later in the day, Rick asked Jack to clean up our shoes at the cabin, and this is what we found.

Lovin' the stories of your trip! Love the shoes! What goes thru that child's mind...not hard to slip into the shoes when you get ready to walk out the door!
ReplyDeleteSee! It wasn't so bad. I forgot about the shoe lineup. LOL.
ReplyDelete