Tag Archives: high winds

A sunrise hike up Lille Malene

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Saturday, 04-May-2024


It all started at the Art Museum.

I mentioned that I was the only one in the museum at the time, and that meant that I effectively got a private tour? Well, we exchanged numbers at the end, with the promise to get dinner some evening before I left.

That did end up happening, but before we could even send a “Hello, how are you?” message, I ran into her again out around town. Turns out she had been grocery shopping, but had lost her wallet somewhere along the way… and was freaking out more than a little bit. Since my only plan for the afternoon was to wander around town, I offered my emotional support for the scavenger hunt… support which was readily accepted.

A frantic hunt ended at her house, finding the wallet safely tucked away on top of a dresser. Which then led to my invitation to a dinner party with a whole group of exchange students, and a follow-on invitation to a 4am hike up a nearby mountain to watch the sunrise.

I… realistically should have declined, and made sure to get the standard requisite sleep that a newly-minted long-term traveler really needs. But, equally realistically, this was exactly the type of spontaneous adventure that I had hoped I’d find when I first came up with the idea of this whole trip.

We spent the evening chatting among friends – Primarily English (thank you, everyone!) with a smattering of Danish, German, and French when English couldn’t suffice. I had brought my photo album, which was received with flying accolades (At one point the New Zealander in the group asked if I’d ever hiked any of the places in the photos. He hadn’t realized that it was my book… and I got an incredible ego boost when he realized who’s name was on the cover). We ate, we talked, and we finally got to bed sometime around 2am.

(As a side note – I was very glad to have squirreled a contacts case into my jacket, with a second one in my satchel. Definitely worth it for unexpected adventures like this)

At 4am, we headed out. A fun part of Nuuk is that it’s not huge… so we actually walked from the house to the trailhead. Some of the folks had crashed at the house, while others has camped out near the trailhead – we met them en-route, then headed up into the wind.

Of note – I’d originally had a water taxi tour scheduled for Saturday… but it had been delayed to Sunday due to the high winds. While I didn’t have my windproof layer with me, nor any of my standard mountaineering gear, the group had convinced me that they wouldn’t be necessary… I borrowed a rain-shell from my Art Museum friend, which ended up being quite warm enough to make the ascent.

An ascent which felt like a lifetime. The wind howled, nearly non-stop, and I fully understood why this would have been a horrid day to be on the water. As it was, I had to keep my head down the entire way, and keep myself moving throughout to avoid cooling off too badly… the temperatures in Nuuk were around 6 DegF. with windchill, and were well below zero up on the mountain summit if I had to make a guess.

That summit came, though, with beautiful sunrise views… even if my face had long since gone numb from the wind. We took shelter in the lee of a meteorological station just long enough to appreciate the views and the shelter, before starting back down again. In told, the whole adventure (door to door, including the walk back to my Airbnb) took around five hours. It felt like a lifetime, and I’ll freely admit that I fell into bed immediately upon my arrival back home.

It had been glorious – I couldn’t have asked for a more amazing start to my trip.

A Thanksgiving Adventure – Camping in Vantage, Washington

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A Thanksgiving adventure – Camping in Vantage, Washington

Thanksgiving is going to be different this year. This is my first year being single in half a decade, and thanks to the COVID Pandemic it’s also the first year that I can’t travel, and don’t have any friends still in town. I’m flying solo, have a ton of vacation to burn, and am feeling energetic...

From Sunday, 29-Nov-2020 through Monday, 30-Nov-2020



I am drunk, and I am happy.

It’s been ages since I’ve been camping in the desert, and even longer since I’ve sat out under the stars by a campfire. This one is well-earned too – scrounged firewood from the various other campers, who’d headed home to Portland and Seattle earlier in the day.

The drink was earned too – This was my second-to-last night before heading back to work, and the ending of my first Thanksgiving vacation alone… ever, in fact. I’d driven nearly five hours from my home in Wilsonville to get here, and the views of the stars that I have right now were worth every second on the road.




Sunday, late morning


The day started quietly… just like nearly every other day of this vacation.


I got up, had a bite to eat, and finished packing up my gear into the Mustang. Then I got onto the road – stopping for a latte and a bagel for the road first, of course, but mostly just cruising on the open road, listening to music and enjoying the serenity of having a destination still hours in the future.

That’s something that I discussed with my councilor, during and shortly after my breakup with Sarah, that’s stuck with me – Everyone needs their own form of meditation, and for ages I was missing mine. One of the best ways for me to meditate, it turns out, is long drives… something that I got regularly in Boston driving up into New Hampshire, and something that I got while living in Hood River, and driving out to Portland.

Unsurprisingly, commuting to and from work didn’t quite scratch that itch… and now that I’m aware of it, I can enjoy drives like this even more.

So I drove.

As the sun set down toward the horizon, I got further into Washington, and closer to camp. My plan for the evening was simply to set up camp, have a quick dinner, and then enjoy the quiet of the desert night. Maybe have a fire, if I could scavenge enough firewood that had been left behind by other campers over the weekend.

As you may have guessed from the into to this post, dear reader, I succeeded in all of those goals.


Firewood was found – not a lot, but easily enough to have a quiet little fire that needed minimal tending.

Dinner was cooked, and fairly quickly scarfed down under the open sky.

Relaxation, and whiskey, were both had while sitting by the fire in my fold-out camp chair, staring up at the stars as the moon rose over the cliffs.




Monday morning


It snowed overnight!

I love waking up to snow – really anytime that I don’t have to shovel it, but especially when I’m waking up in a tent, looking out over a snow covered field.

The sun was quickly melting everything it touched though, so I quickly got myself moving and made a lovely quick breakfast and cup of coffee, enjoying the smell of the snow, and the crisp air for as long as I could.


Of course, as the day wore on the air warmed up quite nicely, and soon enough I was hiking around in just a long sleeve shirt, exploring and enjoying the landscape. Normally when I’d drive up to Vantage, it would be to climb… but since I was solo this time I spent the time wandering around places that I hadn’t had reason to go to before – the trails around the clifftops, farther down the ridgeline, all of those neat places that I’d passed by previously.

There’s not too much to say about them, aside from that it was completely beautiful and excellently relaxing. No stress, no timeline, and no pressure. Just enjoying the views and playing photographer until the sun started to set.

As the sun got closer to the horizon, I headed back to camp to pack up and start the drive home.

As we get closer to the solstice, it definitely does stink that the days keep getting shorter and shorter… but as with everything there’s a definite silver lining to be had – I was able to photograph during golden hour, and was still on track to get home before 9pm!

That was, until I got back to camp and ran into a subtle delay in plans… As I walked back, I could see my car from quite a ways away. I noticed, though, that I couldn’t quite see my tent though…

As I got closer, it became very obvious that my tent was, in fact, not standing next to my car. Now, one advantage to camping is that it never even crossed my mind that someone could have stolen it. That’s literally unthinkable, thankfully. Instead, I noticed the gusting wind, blowing sand, and remembered just how windy is can get at Vantage during the day – especially in the campground.

I was starting to formulate search plans to find my wayward camping gear when I arrived back, and was pleasantly surprised at just how amazing people really are – someone had saved my gear! My tent, with sleeping bag and everything still rolled up inside, was packed tightly down under my car, secured with a few rocks from nearby.

I spent a bit of time cleaning it up and packing it fully into the car, before wandering off in search of my mysterious benefactor.

I asked a few folks around if they’d been the ones to help me, or if they’d seen the ones who’d saved my gear, with the goal of gifting them my bottle of scotch as a thank-you gift. Unfortunately no one had seen anything, but on the way back to my car I was able to return the favor when I found someone else’s tent in the same predicament that mine had been – their camp was strewn around, thankfully caught on a few bushes, with their tent maybe 200 yards downhill, in a small gully.

As a return of karma, I was able to pack their gear up, secure it with a few rocks, and hopefully make someone’s day just a little bit brighter than it would have been otherwise.

With that happy, karmically-balanced, ending point… I drove off. Back onto the main highway, through the hills, quickly rolling back the miles to home.