Tuesday, December 15, 2009

midwest road trip (from september '09)

hello loyal blog fans (i'm aware that we will have to alert the four people who actually read this blog that a new one finally has been posted so even they will take a look...)

happy fall! though still six days away, it definitely feels like we're well into winter here in chicago.


we (i) have been very bad bloggers. we've been very bad everything except student/intern for the past several months, in fact. our respective programs have become so grueling that any spare time we have we must use to sleep...even eating has taken a backseat. fortunately, i polished off quarter number two the day before thanksgiving and have been relishing in a much needed vacation since. sadly, i can't say the same for david, who is topping off what he believes is the worst three-week stretch of his whole program.

currently, david is working in the cardiac intensive care unit, and while the concept is interesting, he feels more like a gopher than a doctor. on top of being somewhat useless in terms of medical decision making, he is on call every third night! imagine if you can a schedule that goes 30 hours, 8 hours, 30 hours, 8 hours, over and over again. it's no wonder he falls asleep at 8, wakes up at 2, never knows the day of the week, and actually forgot what city we live in a few days ago. next week he will switch to the pediatric intensive care unit which has a more forgiving schedule (only call every fourth night), and hopefully he will have more responsibility as well, which always makes things more interesting and thus, bearable.

with the end of my second quarter came my swearing in to the profession...while i'm far from being an actual nurse, i now apparently have the skills and knowledge to largely manage patient care, which starts when i return after the first of the year. i'm eager to leave the classroom behind (though i'll still have many hours inside it) and do some heavy lifting on the floors. i'll be consumed with adult/gerontology as well as psychiatric nursing next quarter, with three days on the floors divided between post-surgical adult patients and psych patients. i have requested a position in child psych because frankly, i like child patients more than adult patients (this may reflect my maturity level...i relate better to the kids!), and with my background in nutrition i'd like to have some exposure to eating disorders. apparently they really push us out of a moving vehicle next quarter, which had to happen at some point, so it's very exciting and intimidating!

anyhow, now that you're mostly caught up on our lives (strangely, our lives are very boring despite being so busy), i'll begin on the real purpose of this blog--filling you in on the awesome roadtrip we took this september. as you may recall, despite our best laid plans, david and i were only able to coordinate one common week of vacation between us for the entire year, which is sadly already behind us! but, we really made the most of it. having literally perfect weather the entire time certainly helped. we essentially made a loop around lake michigan, traveling up the michigan side of the lake first to traverse city, then into the UP, and back down the wisconsin side through madison. i have a ton of pictures posted here to help tell the story...

our first stop was in traverse city, a great town in northern michigan. our very good family friends, the sneeds, kindly opened their beautiful home to the vagabonds and let us use it a base for trips to the beach, downtown (we actually rode by tandem bike, how cool is that?), and a mini road trip up the old mission peninsula to check out the amazing scenery and taste some michigan wine.

here we are on a beach in traverse, ironically despite living on lake michigan, this is our first visit to its shores the entire summer, and not even in chicago.


this is the view from chateau chantal winery on old mission peninsula. beautiful!


certainly one of the highlights of traverse city was some exposure to dogs. david was so excited to be in the company of dogs again that he invited them into bed...notice which side of the bed he put them on.


we then left traverse city and crossed the mackinac bridge into the UP. our next stop was at my godparents' farm in engadine, michigan. the farm has been in their family for longer than any of us have been alive, and the house is a really neat combination of old and new...the original structure still remains, and much has been added on. carol is a really amazing cook, and prepared us wild caught salmon, homemade bread, and blueberry crisp from berries she just picked that morning. here is david having a romantic candlelit dinner with my little cousin maria:


the next morning we were off again to the tiny town of munising on the northern shore of the upper peninsula. munising is so far north that it virtually shuts down completely in the winters, and winters start in september. in fact, we were there the last fully functioning weekend. munising is the only town located near miles and miles of pristine lake superior shoreline with tons of hiking and camping. most notably, a portion of this lakeshore entitled "pictured rocks," boasting huge cliffs that look painted due to different mineral deposits leaking out of the cliffs after centuries of rainfall. the pictures hardly do justice, but are pretty spectacular.

our first day on lake superior, we hiked in about three hours to camp on the beach:



when we found this odd structure, we decided it was a cool place to set up camp.

fortunately, david is an eagle scout. perhaps more fortunately, he had some friendly advice on how to set up tents created within the past 20 years...tent technology has come a long way...


after setting up camp, we went to explore the beach below the trail.

we discovered the rock structure is actually even cooler from the front! it looks like a skull with a tree growing out of it.

we spent a few hours reading on the beach, and went to sleep at night fall to rest up for a long day of kayaking the lakeshore the following morning. we awoke to find we had only one hour to hike out what had taken us three the previous day...this resulted in many, many, many blisters on wet, sandaled feet, but we managed somehow to sprint out with time to spare.

we began our kayaking adventure with some on-shore instruction. i did not enjoy this part of the experience.


however, it really was worth it. the control you have over a tiny kayak allows you to explore all the nooks and crannies of the shoreline in a way you never could on a larger boat. not to mention the lake was glass without a cloud in the sky or a single gust of wind...our instructor said he had never had more perfect conditions in 20 years.



this picture is particularly interesting...you'll notice a dead tree washed up and got wedged in the rocks...over time it has earned its stripes so to speak and become a part of the landscape.



david celebrated a job well done with his first pasty, a meat and potato hand pie traditional in the michigan UP. he's pictured here at falling rocks cafe, the sounding board of the entire town of munising. this is where we ate all our meals, brushed our teeth, got advice on our travels, and were welcomed into the community (literally, the owners knew us by name and embraced us when we left town again).

here is our campsite on our last night in michigan, actually taken at daybreak.

we departed michigan for our last stop in madison, wisconsin. david had traveled there for an interview last winter on possibly the coldest day of the year. apparently, despite walking around a barren landscape with buggars frozen all over his face, he absolutely loved it and has since been talking about making it back sometime when temperatures are above freezing.

about a month before our trip, we learned we'd be traveling to madison on a very popular weekend; a home football game and the ironman triathlon fell on the same dates. consequently, the only hotel we could find with a room stank like a bowling alley and wasn't exactly located in madison proper. however, after living in the woods the previous few days, a bed and running water were quite a treat. we put on our sunday best our first night and dined al fresco at madison's premier farm to table restaurant in the heart of downtown. delicious!


the next morning, i agreed to bar-hop with david all day to view numerous football games under the condition that we first visit madison's famous farmer's market. allegedly, it's one of the nation's ten best and i've been dying to go (i plan to check them all off the list before i die...only six left!).

en route to the farmers market which spans a full city block surrounding the capitol building, we stumbled upon a crepe place where we decided to have breakfast. these were the absolute most delectable, incredible crepes i'm sure we'll ever eat. i actually took a picture of the menu (which changes daily, based on what fresh ingredients have arrived by way of local purveyors) because it was so creative and delightful.


the farmer's market, like the town itself, truly lived up to the hype. it even puts lincoln park's green market to shame. it was HUGE, bustling, and so diverse we didn't even buy anything because we didn't know where to start. but it was a blast to walk around!
'
this was certainly a highlight:

david was kind enough to sacrifice some time midday to take a walking tour of madison. what a great town! it is absolutely beautiful with the lakeshore and the capitol building, and the streets are full of cozy coffee shops, boutiques, restaurants, bars...it was so reminiscent of ann arbor i felt homesick for the first time since moving. given it's such a short drive from chicago, i'm sure we'll be back.

on our last morning, we took a wonderful jog through the arb. chicago is a great city, but has far too few trees for my liking, so i spent a large part of this trip soaking in deciduous goodness as much as possible. i will always remember this run, not just for its beauty, but because i became so oddly exhausted at the end of it i almost collapsed. i thought i might have been dehydrated, but as it turns out, there was a tiny zygote already stealing all of my nutrients and spare energy. little did i know how much she would make her presence known in the following months...


after some more delicious crepes, we stopped on our way out of town to cheer on some people who can run more than 30 minutes without falling over and needing iv fluids...below is one of the very first triathletes arriving at the third and final leg of his race--the full marathon. these people truly were inspirational, though definitely not normal!


and that about sums it all up! it was all in all a fantastic trip...a perfect combination of relaxation and exertion, family and alone time, enough stops to keep it interesting, but not too many to wear us out. we really nailed this one. hopefully next year we'll be able to plan more than one vacation together!

we hope you are all doing well and staying warm this winter (unless you live in southern california, in which case, we hate you). have a wonderful holiday!

ash&david