
On Thursday and Friday, I worked from the St. Julien, Alex had meetings in Longmont and Colorado Springs, and Aidan went to backup care at Bright Horizons. Backup daycare is one of the best benefits that any company can offer. Wee has been to Bright Horizons in several locations, but especially likes the one in Longmont. He was so sad when Alex picked him up after only a half day on Thursday.
After our first Bo Staff class on Thursday afternoon we went up to The Land to see the cabin and just say hi to the Land. It's hard for me to see the destruction that the construction has caused. I can't wait for the digging and the heavy machinery to be done. Even the cabin seems so unnatural and big to me. But we did take a little walk to the Aspens and this summer's campsite which is still as natural and beautiful as ever. The wildflowers are all but gone, but the aspens are their beautiful autumn yellow.

We had dinner with Amy back in Boulder. We lunched with her again on Saturday and will see her on Sunday. So great to have friends to hang out with.
For the weekend, we've moved our base to the Best Western in Nederland. The staff remember us from this summer's Schoenberg family reunion. They asked about my mom and the rest of the family and say hi to everyone.
This morning we hiked the Hessie trail to Lost Lake.
This is one of those trails that is so beautiful that it doesn't seem real as it winds past babbling brooks, through bright yellow aspens, displaying valley vistas, and ending up at an alpine lake.
The horses and dogs that we met on the trail add even more extra credit and then the pièce de résistance was finding wild raspberries!
We really didn't have anything else to do today, so we uncharacteristically took our time and meandered around and just relaxed. In the afternoon we hit the trails again, this time on horseback from Sundance Stables. Another fabulous trek through Aspens and Pine forest with views of the Continental Divide.
The big bonus on this trip was that the stables offered us horses for free next summer if we can set up somewhere for the horses to hang out in a pasture on our land. How cool would that be?!!!In the evening we went to the movies at the Nederland community center. The movie was The Time Traveler's Wife, which was ok, but really we were going to check out the small town scene. Alex was all anxious about getting there right on time. We arrived about 5 minutes late, but still had plenty of time to hang out. The event started with community announcements - Pine Beetle classes available in October, the normal community announcer's hip replacement recovery is going well, adult floor hockey has started up, and Obediah someone will be doing a concert at the church on Sunday. Next was the ticket stub raffle where people won free candy, a local gift certificate, and a t-shirt. Then the announcers shouted back to the projectionist "Do we have any previews?" "Nope" "Damn! Well, let's start the movie then." We just smiled, happy with our sort of residence in this small town.
My brother Ed's 19 year old daughter Hannah like Colorado so much during the Schoenberg family reunion that she jumped at the chance for a trip back. Hannah and Wee have spent the week sleeping in as late as 10, swimming, playing with the neighbors,
feeding ducks at Wonderland Lake, playing on the playground, playing tennis, making cookies, making t-shirts,
and generally just hanging out. Hannah has tried quelling some of Wee's silliness while imparting some of her own bootie-shaking-tootie-ta-singing silliness.
That may sound easy, but paragliders are strong, ornery devices loaded with strings that are not easily tamed by small, people like myself who have only rough motor skills. The other two students were midsized men who seem to have no problem. But I spent several hours taking just a few steps and watching the glider fall to one side. I never really did figure out on the two good attempts what I had done differently to make it actually work, but I had little confidence that trying this game while running off the side of a mountain would make me more comfortable. The instructor assured me that he would bring along a tandem harness in case anyone just couldn't fly. I think he just said that to make me feel better.
Bumping around and moving at about 20 mph I didn't trust this flimsy fabric that had collapsed on me so many times on the ground, but it held its own to land me within just a few feet of my cheering sweetie and Wee One. Yay! So much fun! 
but the real entertainment was the rodeo itself. They started with the display of the sponsor flags ridden around the arena on horseback, then the rodeo princess rode around in their sparkly outfits, then they had a great pre-game show of trick riding. I could see myself doing stuff like riding sideways, or backwards, or maybe even standing up. But the part where they jumped off the galloping horse and then jumped or flipped back is definitely a trick left up to the experts.
The main rodeo had all the standard events - steer wrestling, calf roping, saddle bronc and bareback bronc riding, team roping, barrel racing, and of course bull riding. We had signed Wee up to ride a sheep in the Mutton Busting, but there were too many entrants, so he thankfully just got to watch the rodeo and not paricipate. Of course my favorite thing to watch was just the tall, lean cowboys walking around in Wranglers, boots, and hats.
They were in competition creating a meal of chicken fried steak, mashed potatoes, beans, biscuits, and blueberry cobbler all using old west cooking techniques such as pit fires, hanging cauldrons of soup, and dutch ovens. The wagons and the people were also done up in old west style and must have been judged as well. A few of the participants explained to us about the various specialized woods they used for different cooking techniques - hardwood for the slow burning coals used for biscuits and cobblers vs. pine for the intense heat under the oil frying the chicken fried steak. Next to the Chuckwagon section was the little old town including lots of leather and fur sales, paintings, clothes, hats, iron work art, and some fake establishments like a jail, undertaker, and bank.
Then there was the American Indian section with a few teepees, dancing, and shops with beadwork, various other jewelry, more leather and fur, and some musical instruments. We got Wee a tiny beaded cowboy and bought our famous drummer neighbor an Indian drum. < img src = "https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjePEOC4OQnDvGGX5_BkLdbnQOtBY8eyI-mCu1zHcBxNduijYC1MwHRjPWQDsIT4CJ5ABjqN_U3yVzNWben_EJtETLAGkwErPwWga6epx2ehDt1-tNmg-S0dzkfWelhOXhHU_aHTfDrLz-B/s576/IMG_2315.jpg" /> The rodeo event started with Navy paratroopers landing in the middle of the arena and then went on to regular rodeo events.

But a good hike with good views through meadow, through woods, across a few scree fields,
and finally up to the slanted rocks that give the area its Flatiron moniker.
This is one of my favorite hikes, not just for the speed of getting up fast and its proximity to downtown Boulder, but also because of the variety of people on the trail. The mixture that I enjoy the most is the level of equipment that people have - hippies and college kids with no shoes, climbers in full gear, and classic hikers in the latest fashion. We're clearly not true Boulder people yet because we're mixes of our own wearing cotton shorts, but Gortex hiking sneakers. But having our dog with us gave us a little local mountain cred.
Rory held her own even over some of the steeper, almost stairs like sections up on the top. She doesn't yet have her Boulder off-leash tag, so she had to stay on leash rather than chasing the chipmunks and big mule deer we saw on the way. Obliviously she didn't even notice a snake she sat on. Luckily the rain mostly held out just providing a nice light sprinkle on our way back down. The thunder boomed ominously in the distance as we first did the math and physics to determine the proper formula for lightning to thunder timing to distance. Then we debated which of us was more likely to get struck by lightning while hiking across the meadow.
Alex is taller, but he presumed that I was waterier (based on absolutely no evidence, but turns out that muscle has more water than fat, so I'll take that as a compliment), so who knows.
The sounds of something like Under the Sea from the Little Mermaid let us know that the band was already playing when we walked up. I was surprised at the variety and size of the different instruments. The bass had keys that were maybe 6 inches or more in width, the next smallest was the baritone that Amy was playing for that first song, then tenor and I assume an alto and soprano. The owners of the house were also the craftsmen who had made the instruments. In addition to marimbas, the room contained mountain dulcimers and hammer dulcimers all around that had also been made in house.
The music blended simple tone combinations and rhythms from each individual instrument into a really complex symphony with a great beat when all put together. As soon as we walked into the room, Wee sidled right up to Amy and started dancing. The beat was contagious and we all had to move a little at one point or another. And this is what the mountain people do all the time.
Wee and Amy were particularly captivated. Wee has always loved break dancing and wouldn't surprise me if he was one of those kids in a few years. Amy was just comparing these kids and their head spinning passion to her own snow/skateboarding kids. A block or so past this stage was where we encountered a bell and suspender clad group of people who were clearly getting ready to do some kind of traditional dance (who else wears suspenders?). But they were also carrying sticks.
What? But then they started their Cotswald England based dancing and showed us that sticks are not just for martial arts anymore. Accordian, drum, and fife supplied the music as they danced clacking and waving their sticks in synchronicity. More mountain fun I guess.
Fabulous. Alex had lamb t-bone with a mustard sauce and cannelini beans - none of which I like. But I didn't care. I was happy with my own plate. Although Boulder has more restaurants than we could possibly try it was nice to find something good in a new place as well.
We continued down the trail in a gorgeous, lush valley. We were surrounded by Aspens with the creek rushing along side. The walls of the canyon were pretty deep, but the floor was fairly even and soft. 
Alex, Aidan, and I took the tree, but Rory thought swimming seemed like more fun. Mmmm. Wet dog. In any case we all made it across and continued down til we found a nice rock in the sun that was perfect for sitting on and having a snack. The fact that the rock was really big and we couldn't figure out how to get Wee and Rory down past it also made it a good turn around spot.
So we headed back up the trail planting cherries along the way. Good father's day...





