Hasta Luego, Not Goodbye.

It was three years ago that Matt and I landed in Bogota with two bikes and 8 panniers, a longing for discomfort and a life less ordinary. So began our Colombian bicycle tour which morphed into a South American living situation punctuated by trekking adventures amidst crumbling ruins, pristine glaciers, and sacred mountains; living in…

I AM

In case you were wondering just how big my ego has gotten these days, this poem is not about me. It describes God through ideas put forth in the Bible. As a child raised in a Christian family I was exposed to many concepts that in retrospect I didn’t understand, and some of which, in all honesty, I still don’t. God is a great example of a concept likely incapable of being understood. In fact, if someone says they know what God is, they are likely confusing what it is to actually know something. Within our limited frame of reference it is quite nearly impossible to fathom a subject that is at once omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent, irreproachable, and eternal. Just take the latter and attempt to grasp its implications beyond a figure eight. – Eternal is not before and after time, it is outside of time. It is timeless; nonlinear, which implies a frame of reference within everything has already happened, all things are happening at once, or there are innumerable and known quantum potentials unfolding concurrently, etc.

Mi Familia

This year is a time of true joy and abundance for my family. Both of my nephews were married within two days of each other, one of them had a beautiful baby girl, my oldest sister and niece both moved into a new home, my middle sister is about to pop out another kid, and…

Rainbow Mountain

We woke to a landscape covered in snow, the frozen ground and all signs of life hidden beneath a layer of white powder. Due to the acute change in weather, we would delay our start on what was planned to be the final morning of our journey to the colorful Vinicunca. We packed the tent around…

Gotta Get Up To Get Down

Like the low rumbling of thunder after a sustained lightning strike, we woke to the sound of ice separating from Ausungate’s shelf, dispersing like shattered glass into a glacial depression filled with milky turquoise which fed into the hidden depths of the great lake before us. We quickly took to packing the site and refilling…

WWJD

At five a.m. the older of the two caballeros turned on his lamp and began knocking around in the cabin. It was only thirty minutes before we had planed to get up, but out of principle I had to insist he quiet down and extinguish the light. After some convincing he did, but it was…

Hail to Upis

Just before dawn we tromped drowsily down to Plazoleta San Blas which was all but deserted at this early hour and hailed a cab to an obscure station where we would board a public bus for the Oncongate region of Peru. It was 5:55 am when we broke away from the terminal, our transport virtually…

The Constructs

Cradled at the intersection of two jagged peaks blanketed by dense forest and fog, and almost encircled by the formidable Rio Urabamba, Machu Picchu remained hidden from the Spanish during their conquest of the area, and from modern civilization until around the turn of the 20th century. Despite attempts to paint a pretty picture of its construction as entirely credited to the Inca some 500 years earlier, the comprehensive story of the city’s origins remains veiled in mystery; a phenomena afflicting much of the ancient world.

Machu Picchu

Today we would finally step foot within the walls of Machu Picchu, and while this would be the first time, it would not be the last. Soon after the trip with Kristi we returned with friends and family from the States, Rachel (Melissa’s sister) and Ahren. In order to access the ruins on both occasions we had to go…

The Road to Ruins

We woke a little early and a little groggy after day 1 to begin our exploration of an already bustling Ollantaytambo. Taking in the manicured main square for a moment after breakfast led us to believe Ollay was no different than any number of small villages in the Sacred Valley; heavily propped up by tourism…

Olé Ollay

During our bike tour and on various treks we’ve noticed more and more women adventuring alone. Honestly, I think we’ve seen a preponderance of solo girls compared to guys along the way. In either case, it’s awesome that people are making adventure happen no matter the circumstances. On that note, after a tour of Banff, Canada our friend Kristi made a…

The Dream

Sometime during the seventh night of our trek through the Andes after Mel and I drifted to sleep a dream from earlier in the journey returned to my awareness.

Homeward Bound

Wake up, eat up, pack up – all part of the routine – every step of which became increasingly difficult to accomplish after our attention was taken. Crawling out of our nylon nest now dripping with dew, we lifted dreary eyes across the valley as a rolling fog unveiled the fabled City in the Clouds,…

Hike to High Town

We woke to a morning marking one week in the Andes cradled by a dense cushion of grass that rivaled the most luxurious pillow-top, and treated ourselves to showers before heading through the streets of La Playa. The rumors which painted the town a drab and dusty brown had not unfairly exaggerated its condition. We…

The Rarest Thing

“To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people just exist.” -Oscar Wilde Day 6, 11/26/16 And on this day, we lived, if only for a moment. Today began as an ordinary day on the trail, but would unfold to reveal hidden weaknesses, unexpected triumphs, and heights previously unimagined. I don’t speak of…

Giving Gracias

  After the best sleep we had thus far we woke to the sound of small streams flanking our camp feeding into a river that rushed white through the center of the Great Valley. For any doubters, Mel could be seen carrying out the cooking AND cleaning duties this Thanksgiving morning giving me reason to be…

Abras and Abrigos

The ground spilled out far before me a deepening blue. Over the horizon hung a pale and hallowed moon casting a shimmering luminescence onto edges of objects within view. Slender blades curling softly into spirals grew before me, surrounding me. The night sky was black, and there was only silence. I was alone, and I did not…

The Take At The Lake

As expected, the morning of day three was a cold one. We sluggishly woke to a frost covered ground and started to prepare breakfast, eventually noticing that two of the three trekking poles we had stored in our vestibule were missing. We immediately set out to blame the large squirrel-like rodents seen romping around the…

Lago Humantay

Mel and I commenced dia dos later than expected after shaking off the long hike which had swiftly settled into our joints and muscles. The once plush landing where we made our camp the previous night had hardened to frozen tundra as we tossed and turned, punctuating the importance of the missing mats. We woke,…

The Way to Salkantay

The beginning: Cusco to Marco Casa In search of an adventure to highlight our Thanksgiving holiday, Mel and I stumbled upon some information regarding a trek interlacing the glacier-laden Andes of Peru and the low lying jungles near the foot of Machu Picchu. Due to it’s proximity to our home base, and the fact that…

Year One

A lot has happened in the last 12 months and it all started with a trekking tour of the Grand Canyon in March of last year made possible by our friend Sarah (Thank you Sarah!). The trip spurred on our adventurous spirits and dreams of a life lived a little differently. The vast scale and awe-inspiring presence of the canyon practically forced our decision to take a leap of faith toward filling our days with such beauty and experience.

A Place to Call Home

  The trip from Nasca to Cusco was set to unfold over 12 darkened hours on an ever ascending mountain pass through the Andes. In the name of adventure we took our chances, but because even the most steadfast mountain sometimes crumbles and even the most well planned journey cannot fully be controlled, a series…

A Line in the Sand

After a little over two weeks living it up in Lima we made our way south along the coast through townships and territories flanked by dry desert and balmy beaches, to Nasca, a small city known for giant geoglyphs of ancient origin. You may be familiar with the Nasca Lines for their depiction of insects…

Próxima Lima

While Mel was in DC Felipe and I checked out some corners of Bogota we had yet to see, one of which was an industrial section filled with literally hundreds of small manufacturing shops. Wood and metal workers, offset printers, upholstery and textile producers; all able to fulfill small to large production runs, even one-off…