Final stop, Washington

After nearly three weeks on the road from Juneau to Seattle, we are back in the states and with full access to the cyber world. We did our best to document the incredible Canadian landscape we crossed over, the people we met, and the places we stopped at along the way in order to share our experience with friends, family, and whoever else cares to look into our road lives or is interested in the sort of trip we took. We traveled a diverse landscape and found some of the most incredible places we’d ever seen. We don’t have enough hands to count the number of times I said “I like it here.” In a short time, I’ll be starting work in Seattle and Lara will be off to wherever her wanderlust takes her, probably crewing some ship somewhere awesome or paddling rivers wherever. Click on the links below to read about our trip and see some pictures!

Part One: The Klondike

Part Two: Stewart-Cassiar

Border Crossings

Part Three: The National Parks of the Canadian Rockies

Part Four: Stoked on BC

Part Five: Close to Home Now in the Sea to Sky Corridor

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Sea and Sky

As we headed south from Whistler area, the landscape already started to feel like home. Now, the places I’d be driving through until Seattle would be a part of my extended backyard. When I caught first glimpse of the Chief, I had to hang up the phone with my mother just so I could focus on it. As a climber, it was exciting to finally see it. The Chief is a great granite fortress that overlooks the town of Squamish. It is the crown jewel of big wall climbing in the region. In fact, it is probably the most well know climbing destination in Canada–and for good reason.

Highlights: Looking at the Chief and knowing one day I will be on it. SQUAMISH. Climbing in Cheakamus Canyon. Visiting Whistler. Bypassing Vancouver. Easy Border Crossing! The entire Sea to Sky Corridor.

The Best Part of Going is Coming Back

One adventure ends, another begins. Leaving the comfortable home base that Hampshire had provided me the past few years wasn’t easy–the thought of being thousands of miles away from the familiarity of home and the security of friends, family, and a community of people available whenever I needed to get away from studies to climb, run, and explore wasn’t easy. On the eve of my departure Northwest to Alaska, my friend Nick asked me the simple question–“why?” That day and night friends from Hampshire, friends from home, and my family got together to celebrate my graduation and my post collegiate going away travels. I was unsure what the outcome would be in gathering the different groups together. It went better than I could have hoped for which made ‘going’ the next morning an even tougher reality. But despite how great everything was, I told him that I just needed to go. I couldn’t come up with any better response than that… and that “the best part of going to new places is coming back to old places.” I told him that I needed time away from home, from friends, family, and everything else I became used to and comfortable with so that I could better appreciate it all.

And that is how it has been–every summer for the past 6 years I have found somewhere new to go to and everytime I miss everyone and everything from back home more and more as the summers progress. Now though, my concept of home is changing as I create memories and make friendships all over. Going back to those places become equally important and meaningful. Without Hampshire on the fall horizon, I will have the freedom to go farther and for a longer period of time than previously. I’m unsure how the freedom will affect my idea of home, permanence, relationships, but I sure will embrace it. And like usual, I will seek out the familiarities of home wherever I go.