Saturday, December 12, 2020

Day Hike a Cedar Butte

Hiking is one of my favorite COVID safe activities. Last weekend I set my alarm on Saturday AM to get to Iron Horse state park before 10am. The trail for the day was Cedar Butte and it was spectacular!

Parking was no problem, the state park lot had lots of spaces on this December morning. There is also a non state park lot that I drove past, not sure what if any permits are needed to park there.

The weather was incredibly nice, mid 50's, Sunny and the occasional gusty breeze.

The Cedar Butte trail has add on options, I added an extra mile at the very start on a very wide/ flat trail to warm up and did an additional 1/2 mile add on the way down, bringing my total miles to 5.

I was able to keep a good distance from others on the warm-up and way up the Butte. Heading down the trail did start to become more crowded. I was glad to see the majority of people were wearing masks and it was easy enough to step off the trail to let people pass.


Pictures from my hike:








The park is only a 45min drive from our house, allows dogs, and has miles and miles of railroad grade trails for walking or biking. I am sure I'll be back to explore more.


See the full hike description here: https://www.wta.org/go-hiking/hikes/cedar-butte   


Monday, December 7, 2020

Virtual Family Scavenger Hunt

Our family, like many, have tried several Family Zoom calls to help create connections during our physical distancing due to COVID.


They have been ok, I personally, am glad we keep trying but have found them less than I would hope. The three things I have noticed are:

1. Its a lot of people (11, including 2 kids under 5). 

2. The conversations don't flow super well (A side effect of the group call).

3. It is hard for everyone to be engaged.


One of my brothers and I started to brainstorm on something fun or different to try. The result was a virtual family scavenger hunt.

I built a quick PowerPoint deck to lay out the idea & then shared the slides with everyone. We allowed for 15 days from launch to zoom call, that way each household could do the hunting on their own time.


Giving back is something that is incredibly important to me, so added in that those who did not complete the hunt would donate to the Seattle Homeless Outreach.

I created a scavenger hunt list that had a COVID life flair & combined riddle clues and some that were just things to find.



Over the next few weeks, everyone e-mailed the pictures to me and I created a PowerPoint slide deck with the submissions


The Sunday after we wrapped up the scavenger hunt we had a family zoom call where I shared the PowerPoint slides.

Albeit with some minor technical difficulties, it was a fun way to guide the conversation, kept people engaged, and gave a logical chance for everyone to be part of the conversation.

It was a success and has opened up the possibilities of trying more things other than just chatting via Zoom as we continue to navigate staying home and staying safe.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

A COVID Day Trip to Renton WA

This weekend, as we have several other weekends, in one of our more frequent COVID activities we headed to a community we had not visited yet, Renton WA.  Renton is a bit of a drive from Seattle, perhaps 25 min south on I5.

What brought us down this weekend was to visit the gravesite and memorial of Jimi Hendrix. An interesting spot to walk around on this rainy weekend afternoon.



The cemetery where Jimi is buried has some elements that we have not seen before, including a large section that is heavily Asian design influenced. This made sense when we learned that Renton has over 25% of the population who identify as Asian/ Pacific Islander. 



Taking advantage of the cultural influence we had Sushi Rolls for lunch (Take out that we ate in our car parked in a slightly wooded parking area).



We drove around the commercial areas for a bit, spotted a sonic, and stoped in for some happy hour drinks before heading home.




In terms of COVID safety, the adventure was a success, We had only brief (less than 3 min) encounters with people while getting our food & sonic.

It was good to get out of our apartment and neighborhood and enjoyed the chance to see some Washington history & learn a bit more about our neighboring city of Renton.

Sunday, October 4, 2020

Wonder filled Washington walk in West Seattle

 With COVID continuing to be part of our lives and looking to discover new parts of the new home we ventured to West Seattle to wander, walk and discover.

While we have heard about the beach town vibe and fun by Aliki beach we opted for something that we hoped would give us more social distancing.

The first stop was a Mexican food truck to get to-go for lunch. Taquito Feliz was excellent. Good outdoor ordering, with social distancing, ample hand sanitizer, and the staff was all wearing masks. The food was on point, I had a quesadilla and my partner had a combination taco plate.


We found parking just a block away from the taco truck (co-located with the 76 gas station) and were quickly able to jump on the Lincoln Park trail system heading down a large number of earthen stairs to arrive at the waterfront.

The waterfront has a good number of benches and picnic tables, we were easily able to secure a bench overlooking the beach to enjoy our lunch. The bonus was that the park has many trash cans that we could put our trash in when we were done!

We easily sat and enjoyed the sounds of the waves, birds, and people walking their dogs for over an hour before we continued our journey, walking along the waterfront and taking a more gradual path back up the hill to our car.




Self wellness has been a focus of mine since May 2020. Over the past few months, I have been trying to determine if we could get a massage and still mind COVID safety. After a few google searches, I was able to find a spa that was offering patio (outdoor), masks on, chair massages. I booked those for our weekend west Seattle day. After we left Lincoln park we drove about 10min over to the Seaview neighborhood.

The 30min chair massage was relaxing, I felt COVID safe being outdoors and enjoyed the unique experience of relaxing while hearing the sounds of the city, with a combination of essential oils and that light drizzle Seattle smell rounding out my senses. 


After my 30min chair massage, it was my partner's turn. I explored the neighborhood around the spa, starting with a chai latte from the coffee shop down the street, window shopped the local bookseller, and did a few blocks of neighborhood walking, bringing me back to the patio of the spa to round out my 30min.





Verdict: West Seattle is a great place to explore while keeping COVID safety in mind. I fully expect that we will venture back to check out other communities across this large portion of the city.

Monday, September 14, 2020

On the cusp of change.



Reflections are written and delayed posting not a reflection of current status, but a window into a past moment.

Five months ago I began exploring my next step. Three weeks ago we decided to prioritize our health, lifestyle, and location.  I decided I would give my notice. This weekend I wrote it.


I am taking a huge leap, one I have not done in over a decade. I am jumping into the world not sure what I will find.

I am not sure what I will do.

I am not sure I know how I will fill my time.

I am not sure the person I am outside of my work self.

I am roller-coaster through emotions, at least 3-4 times a day.

I know that this is the right choice.

I know the journey is.

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Exploring Seattle Neighborhoods - Ballard

While COVID continues to redefine my world I took an opportunity to explore the Ballard neighborhood of Seattle.

Ballard has a nice downtown area with restaurants, shops, and bars. None of those met my vision of a COVID safe exploration. 

Looking at the health streets map, I discovered that 17th street is closed starting just a few blocks north of Marke Street.


Walking north on 17th I made my way up to 70th where I took a right and went 3 blocks (West) to Salmon Bay Park.





You could easily spend a few hours in this park playing on the playground, picnicking on blankets, or enjoying some outdoor Yoga.




From the park I headed down 21st street back towards Market street, winding my way over to the health street to finish my loop.




It was an effervescent afternoon exploring a new part of  Seattle, safely outdoors, masked and distant from others.





Friday, July 24, 2020

9 days at a National Park during COVID19

Due to a once in a lifetime opportunity, Ian and I had a 9-day window before either of us start our new jobs and when we had no appointments or obligations. After much discussion, we decided to take this opportunity to go on a much dreamed about trip to Yellowstone National Park. The challenge was how to do this during COVID 19.

We had significant conversations on if this was the right thing to do with the rapid spreading of COVID.  One of the questions we have started to ask ourselves as we are navigating is what is the opportunity/ benefit to doing this and is there an alternate option available? We determined that a 9-day window to go to Yellowstone in the Summer might not present itself to us for another decade and that we would work to make choices that were COVID thoughtful during our trip.

We were far from perfect, overall our trip score was 6.2, on a 1 - 10 scale where 10 is the most COVID safe you can be.

How we decided to score:



Some of the scorings are our best estimate. We did not give ourselves any additional points for repeating places that we visited, times that we selected to have only one of us go into a place, or provide any scoring based on the length of time two things that studies are showing can impact the risks with COVID.

Not fully captured here is how often we selected not to do things because there were just too many people. Many of the iconic Yellowstone places we skipped and many of the fun tourist shops and activities we drove past knowing they would be a higher risk level than we wanted to take.



Here is the day by day, activity by activity break down.

















We ended up being more COVID safe than I think we expected, but still under a level that I would recommend or suggest. If you're considering a trip similar to this a few areas that I think would have increased the score.
  • Groceries, snacks, and ice - more thoughtful meal planning could have prevented us from going into stores as often as we did.
  • Skip activities that have a busy parking area - these brought our scores down on many otherwise fairly safe activities.
  • Skip anything where you have to go inside. Without a statewide mask mandate we were often around many people without masks and inside this really increased our risk.

The real question is did we get sick from this trip? We have been home for 8 days now and neither of us has developed any symptoms. This does not show that we did not get it and are nonsymptomatic carriers or that we won't still develop symptoms over the next week. We have opted to not go out with friends this weekend as a mild self-quarantine after our trip.