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By Leah LaRocco

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Travel

Rocky Mountain National Park: Day 2 Of The Alpine Adventures, Mind Blown Even More

July 24, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

Yesterday, Ashley and I took the Trail Ridge Road up the Rocky Mountains, and if we were astounded hiking the lake trails, it barely scratched the surface of what we felt yesterday being surrounded by the majesty of these mountains.  I’ve never seen anything like this.  We were on a bus trip through a Alps several years ago, and that was massively impressive, but my goodness, the Rockies are just as awe-inspiring.

We spent a lot of time in the tundra, which was surprisingly teeming with life.  I’ve always thought of the tundra as a barren desert-like expanse of land covered in rock and snow, which most of the year it is, but what we saw was a vast green landscape overrun haphazardly with wildflowers.  Here is some of what we saw.

At the first overlook we were able to see the Alluvial Fan where we’d hiked yesterday.  The higher perspective showed where the flood happened, something we weren’t able to see on the ground.

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A pika!!!!  The cutest creature ever!  Kind of a cross between a bunny and a hamster and so utterly adorable.  They run over the rocks collecting greens for winter “haystacks.”  Can you spot the pika in this pic?

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As we headed up to the tundra the views were so dynamic.  I’m going to do a separate blog with the wildflowers we saw.

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Another marmot!!!  These little guys actually are relatives of the groundhog and seem to hang out more at the higher altitudes so they were running across the trails.  This guy was tanning and posing for pictures.

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Nothing makes a rodent look more majestic than an awesome backdrop.

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We took a hike up the Tundra Communities Trail and saw birds, flowers, and incredible panoramic views of the Trail Ridge Road.  We could even see the Alpine Visitors Center from here.  The trail is dotted with plaques that reminded us how fragile the ecosystem is here.  We read one plaque that said it takes a tree up to one hundred years in this climate to add an inch to its diameter.  100 years!  The thing that was troubling to me was the callous attitude some people seemed to have toward the nature in this area, letting their kids run into the tundra grasses or on the dangerous snow piles, smoking and tossing cigarettes, throwing candy at the animals.  It blew my mind.  You imbeciles!  You’re in a protected area that has been sheltered so these creatures and this environment isn’t trampled.  I don’t care if there are millions of acres and it seems like a giant trash bin, everything we do affects it in some way.

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We headed up to the Alpine Visitors Center and on the way we saw some bighorn sheep and some elk.

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At the visitors center I took the Alpine Ridge Trail which nearly made me have a heart attack.  The view at the top was stunning in every way.  360 degrees of mountains!

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We continued on Trail Ridge Road to the Continental Divide where half the water drains into the Atlantic and the other half drains into the Pacific.

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As we headed back, evening started to fall and the creatures emerged.  We passed 6 elk in a field, just hanging out, letting people take pictures, chewing on some grass…no big deal.

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We passed the bighorn sheep again and this time we stopped the car and trekked the road to go see them.  A ranger was talking about the sheep saying they only come out two or three times per month and that at this point the males were sparring, trying to hook up with some hot female sheep from up the mountain.  I couldn’t help but be in awe while watching them.  They are the quintessential picture of life surviving in adversity.  Everything in this environment is a miracle, the plants that grow, the little marmots and pikas scurrying, the birds, the bugs flying around, and these sheep and elk who traverse these rocky hills…all of them speak to a way of life that struggles to survive under harsh circumstances, making them all the more beautiful.

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As we headed down the mountain, the light shifted and the shadows changed.  We said little to each other as we tried to take in everything we saw.  I must return here someday.

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Filed Under: Hiking, Travel Tagged With: hiking, RMNP, Rocky Mountains, Travel

Rocky Mountain National Park: Day 1 Of The Alpine Adventures, Mind Officially Blown

July 23, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

I’m in Heaven.  I mean, I might as well be because I’m so freaking high in the air.  Altitude sickness is awful.  When Ashley and I got to Estes Park, CO yesterday we felt sort of drunk and queasy and dizzy and headache-y…ick.  But we woke up this morning and felt awesome, so awesome that we ate a giant breakfast at Notchtop Bakery and Cafe.  I had a French toast sandwich, which is every bit as amazing as it sounds.  French toast with ham, eggs, and cheese squished between it, accompanied by a pile of potatoes.  Perfect hiking meal.

I have to tell you, this place is magical.  It’s doing a number on my brain.  The landscape is so incredibly vast that I simply can’t take it all in.  We headed to Rocky Mountain National Park after breakfast to do some hiking and we started with the basic trails.  As we were driving into the park it dawned on us that there are not enough words in the English language to adequately describe in sheer beauty of a place like this.  So I will tell you what we did and let these two dimensional pictures sort of speak for themselves.  Please come here.  If you have legs and eyes you need to come here to experience this place.

The first stop we made was at a meadow called Sheep Lakes where we looked out on a few ponds with grasses and wildflowers swaying in the breeze.  We also met a fabulous volunteer named Darrell who was very knowledgeable and told us where to head.  We then headed to the Alluvial Fan which was a waterfall that had broken through a dam in the 80s and flooded the valley.

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Onward and upward to Bear Lake, probably the most popular easy trail in the park.  We parked at the park & ride on Bear Lake Road, which just reopened on Saturday, and took a shuttle bus up to Bear Lake.  Crazy ton of people…and a terribly easy walk to this pretty lake with epic views from all angles.
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July is peak wildflower season and they were everywhere.  Reds, yellows, purples, whites, pinks peaking out of rocks, showing up in the most challenging of places during this short season of blooming.  Dining needles were also having a heyday and their blue bodies looked gorgeous against the deep greens of the landscape.
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The Bear Lake trail continues to several other lakes and I wanted to see them all, so we headed next to Nymph Lake, a small body of water with wild yellow water lilies dotting the surface.
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The trail continues onto Dream Lake.  Each lake had about .6 miles in between but, my Lord, we were huffing and puffing all the way up.  There were these little old ladies pacing us and were like, dang, if they can do it so can we!  With the air being so thin it was tough at times to get a full breath of air, so we stopped often and drank lots of water.  The views up to Dream Lake were the most magnificent we saw all day.   I could have just parked myself on that trail and sat all day looking out into the vastness.
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Dream Lake was lovely, so tranquil and blue.  There were trout swimming near the surface, hanging out, chipmunks scampered up right next to Ashley, and the trees framed the lake perfectly.
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I continued onto Emerald Lake by myself and the incline was ridiculous.  I had to stop a few times just to catch my breath, but the view kept getting better and better.  Emerald Lake was pretty deep and the trail basically dead-ended at the lake so there was no walking along the edge.
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Across the lake was a giant waterfall that sounded like it was crashing to earth.  It looked so small from where I stood, but there was no mistaking its actual size based on the sound.
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My legs didn’t give out and I didn’t die, so I had some soccer dad take a pic.

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A marmot!!!!!  I was so excited to see this little guy!  He looks like the mountain version of a groundhog.  He ambled around for a bit and then scurried off.
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As we headed back down we realized why everyone heading down earlier had looked so refreshed.  It was a total piece of cake!  We took some longing last gazes at our favorite spot and headed into town for dinner.  Tomorrow we head up Trail Ridge Road for more crazy alpine adventures!!
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Filed Under: Hiking, Travel Tagged With: hiking, RMNP, Rocky Mountains, Travel

A Season Of Plenty: Harvest And Home

July 20, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

I’ve been eating insane amounts of tomatoes.  I think eating tomatoes makes a person happier.  I’ve been eating so many tomatoes I fear I might start to look like one.  The Sun Sugar little yellow cherries are ridiculously delicious.  It’s wrong.  A vegetable shouldn’t taste this good.

A plate of homemade pasta with Sun Sugar tomatoes, zucchini, fresh basil, garlic, and capers.

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I’ve also been eating tons of cucumbers and zucchini.  The beans are finished.  I ate those.  The peppers are doing well.  I am also consuming those at an alarming rate.  The downside to all this produce consumption is that I can picture my body going into some kind of jittery withdrawal when the growing season ends and I am forced to haul myself to the grocery store to buy food again.

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It is almost the end of zucchini season here, but I was distressed to find that my plants have succumbed to the squash bug.  I was hoping my plants were stronger than that, but no.  They cheated on me…with a bug.  At this point, all I can do is tear the eggs off the plant, squash them on the patio and spray with insecticidal soap, a mixture of diluted Murphy’s Oil and water.

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I’ve hardly had to do any spraying.  I’ve sprayed the soap on some aphids, but for the most part, mother nature is helping me out.  I have two garden spider webs with small spiders in them that are taking care of some bugs.  And I’ve also noticed the birds hanging out on the tomatoes every now and then.  So far, I’ve seen two dead tomato hornworms, but no damage and no more worms, so thank you, birdies!!!

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The watermelon are slowly getting bigger.  Excitement!!!  These are the Doll Baby variety.

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I went to Long Island for a week at the beginning of the month.  It was wonderful.  I wrote a piece about home for Women You Should Know that posted while I was up there.  Being near the beach made everything better for a while.  I mean, tell me, how could anyone be in the presence of such beauty and not be changed in some way for the better?

Bridgehampton beach on a summer day.

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Ye olde mighty Atlantic.

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A potato field down the street from mom and dad’s house in Mattituck on a walk to Bailie Beach.

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Bailie Beach on a clear summer day.

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My spot on Bailie Beach after braving the icy Long Island Sound water up to my calves.

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Dad’s daylily garden.  Every single one of these plants was hybridized by dad so they are each unique in their own special way.  This is where the magic happens.

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The docks in Greenport have finally been repaired following Sandy.  I never get tired of this familiar sight.

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A lavender farm in East Marion in full bloom.  The color was almost as intoxicating as the smell.  Perfumed rows.

A pretty sunset on Bailie Beach after a steamy summer afternoon.

Then I came back to my garden.  And next week I head to Denver to be in my best friend’s wedding.  Before the wedding, another BFF and I are hitting Estes Park to become one with nature in the Rocky Mountain National Park.  We plan on hiking till we’re sore, drinking ungodly amounts of tea, and hopefully still being able to fit into our bridesmaid dresses at the end of the week.  This is a big moment, when a bestie gets married.  She will be my third bestie tying the knot.  I have 5 who I consider BFFs because we’ve been friends so long it’s hard to imagine not knowing them.  They have made my life better in so many ways.  So I’ll stand beside my girl and try not to cry and thank God that she found a good man.  That’s a really good prayer for a girl to have for her girlfriends…that they find good men who will love them like crazy.

I hope to post pictures of the trip next week if a bear doesn’t attack us in the park.

Filed Under: Gardening, Long Island, Travel Tagged With: gardening, Hamptons, Long Island, Mattituck, North Fork, Travel, yard work

From June Gloom To June Bloom

June 17, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

In June, as many as a dozen species may burst their buds on a single day.
No man can heed all of these anniversaries; no man can ignore all of them.  ~Aldo Leopold
I had to go to Los Angeles the first week of June for work, which meant an entire week of no gardening.  This is the weird time of year the Californians refer to as “June Gloom” thanks to hazy mornings that take hours to transition into sunshine.  I was able to see some friends and take a hike with my cousin up to the Griffith Observatory which is total nerd heaven.

The observatory houses a science museum with a Tesla Coil, a pendulum that moves with the earth’s rotation (eerily similar to the one in LOST), and lots of scales that show you how much you weigh on other planets (great for the self esteem).

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I am still recovering from the measly two hour time difference that has completely messed with my inner clock, and I have yet to get my hands dirty.  This weekend, the plan was to get some dirt under the fingernails.  One week can make a tremendous difference in the life of a spring garden.  When I returned, the tomatoes were stretching well outside their cages, the giant squash leaves were already peeking over the fence, the cucumbers had a couple of little cukes on the vines, the peppers were blooming, and the beans formed a carpet of leaves and tiny white blooms in the center of the plot.  I grabbed some Velcro ties and got the tomatoes secured to the bamboo tripods and dumped some 10-10-10 fertilizer in there before crashing on my couch in total exhaustion.
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I am hoping I get a ton of tomatoes this year.  I am skeptical due to past years of rotten luck with them, but there are a few on the vine that look like they might pull through.

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The color of the squash blossom is a deep tangerine.  I keep debating whether or not to cut some of these blossoms off to try frying them in a batter.  I will never forget the first time I ate a squash blossom.  It was like a piece of Heaven melted in my mouth.  Perhaps after some zucchini have come in, I’ll see if there’s any extra for some culinary experimenting!

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The cucumbers are really trailing all over the place and trying to climb the fence, so I decided to do something I’ve never done before, make some sort of trellis for them.  Since the tomatoes seem to be doing ok on the tripods, I made some quadpods for the cukes, and secured them with ties.  Now there is so much more room on the ground and the watermelon plants will have room to roam.  I had no idea I’d run out of space so quickly!

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The flower beds are also coming along.  My roses look like absolute crap thanks to tons of ugly caterpillars having a chompfest on the leaves before the flowers faded.  The swiss-cheesed hosta are recovering from a slug brigade.  I made a trap with a container full of beer and they drowned happy deaths.  I’m not sorry to see their nasty sticky trails disappear.

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I bought a shabby looking plant at Lowe’s earlier in the season called Rock Purslane (Calandrinia) because I was so taken with the color of the flowers.  It’s finally starting to settle into its new home and has begun blooming again.  This is a tender perennial, so I’m hoping it can survive the winter and come back next year.

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Every morning just before I leave for work, I do a quick walk around to look at all the new buds, new blooms, and new fruit showing up around the yard.  It’s so exciting and so gratifying to see all the hard work of spring pay off with a colorful show in summer.  There is still much to do: dig a space along the fence for more daylilies, figure out a better way to water the side garden, fight off the squirrels who are mangling my sweet pea planter.

I can feel myself slowing down as the days get hotter, but hopefully in the next couple of weeks I can manage to finish everything I need to before worrying about harvesting all the veggies.
 

Filed Under: Gardening Tagged With: gardening, Travel, yard work

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