Vacation is in full swing now. I made a vow that we were NOT going to do all
house stuff on our vacation like we did the last two years. Last year we painted our shed! (You can
check that here.) Last year we at least did a few hikes during
the week of work. The year before, we
tore down the lean to on the shed and rebuilt it. We worked from sun up to sun down each day
of that vacation from work! It was so intensive that I didn’t write a post or even
take pictures! So this year when we
decided to do a stay-cation, I vowed that we were not going to spend the whole
time doing work around the house, we were going to spend the bulk of the days
doing fun things! Ohhh, how best laid
plans fail!
The Waterfall
I had off those two days that I spent with my nephew (you can
read about that here)
before Jason’s vacation started. On
Saturday the first official day of OUR vacation (when Jason was also off) we did
have some things to do around the house.
We had just come off about 2 weeks of constant rain and drizzle. The grass was up to my neck. (That could be a
slight exaggeration but only slightly.) We
knew this going into the vacation and it was planned. (Just like another day of yardwork and mowing
will probably happen at the end of the vacation week). All was going smashingly well. I had been doing a few things in the kitchen while
Jason started outside. I finished
cleaning the kitchen and decided to run down to the basement to flip some
laundry before joining the work party outside.
I walked down the steps and I knew something was wrong. I could hear water dripping. I looked over and one of our drain lines/sewer
lines was dripping. Luckily, it was
dripping into the unfinished (but plumbed) shower that we have in the basement,
so the water was going down the drain!
I called Jason and he reached up to inspect the leak and when he touched
the pipe, his finger went through the pipe.
WE now had not just a leak but a gaping hole in our sewer line. The other lucky thing? It was the kitchen sink and NOT a
toilet! We now had a repair to contend
with, on vacation. We placed the sink
out of commission (a bag over the faucet kept us from using it) and we ignored the
issue the rest of the day and all day Sunday.
Well, we didn’t quite ignore it. We researched how to repair a cast iron sewer
line. Yes, most of our house plumbing was
upgraded. But of course not that pipe! On
Monday we started the morning at Lowes, to buy the stuff to patch the
pipe for a quick fix. WE came home and
did the patch. But it didn’t work! We took the afternoon off from sewer pipes
as we had a vet appointment for Zoey. But, that evening we headed back to Lowes
to buy supplies to replace the bad part!
We got home, and realized we forgot the blade that we needed that would
cut through cast iron! So Tuesday
morning it was back to Lowes for a blade! Luckily by Tuesday afternoon I had a working sink! Best laid plains…..I vowed limited chores
around the house and life conspired against us and forced us to spend the time.
The Harper Cemetery
On Sunday we wanted to do something fun to kick off our
vacation. We threw a few ideas around
and finally settled on a familiar place to visit. We decided to go to Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. We drove the hour there and drove around
looking for a parking spot. It was
literally wall to wall people! People
were everywhere! Finally, we gave up and
said “not for us, not today”. We
instead went up into the town above the tourist area, and parked at the Harpers
Cemetery. Now you can walk down into
Harpers Ferry from the cemetery and we toyed with doing so. However, parking is limited to 30 minutes at
the cemetery. Should we risk it and
assume that they won’t notice our car parked there for an extended time? We
decided to not risk it. I know from first-hand
experience that the park police DO patrol and WILL give tickets and the whole
nine yards. So we decided to explore the
graveyard. We saw the Grave of the Founder
of Harpers Ferry. WE saw some neat gravestones. I had fun with my camera and Jason had fun
with his drone. We took the scenic route home and stopped at
a few neat little places and had an enjoyable day!
The pictures? The old
US Armory Paymasters mansion is adjacent to the graveyard. I was having fun taking pictures. When I got home, I had two out of my
multiple shots that had orbs in them. I
don’t normally see that many orbs and honestly, I usually attribute them to sun,
dust and whatever. But this was crazy!
Cowan's Gap State Park
After two days of sewer pipes and vet appointments and other
non-fun things, we wanted to do something fun on Wednesday. We went over the options and quickly decided
to go hiking. Where was the
question. We went back to our old
standby, Cowan's Gap. It is relatively
close and it is very pretty! A lot of
the time we go to Cowan's Gap and do the lakeside trail, which is about a mile
and a half. We sometimes do it multiple
times to ante up the miles. But today, I
wanted something different. SO, I
planned a hike around the park boundaries.
The first trail was 2.5 miles and labelled ‘more difficult’….the middle
of difficulty levels. I felt confident that I
could handle that trail. At the end of
the 2.5 miles though we had a choice. We
could take the horseshoe trail which was a hair less than a mile but was listed
as ‘most difficult’ and the description read ‘very steep and very rugged. Or we could turn ourselves around and make
our hike and out and back. I was undecided
when we arrived at the park. I decided
to stop by the park office and ask. The
lady there was like ‘Ohhhh they just put switchbacks on the horseshoe trail it’s
so much easier now.’ With that
recommendation, we decided to go for it!

The first trail was actually a portion of the Standing Stone
Trail, which is an 80 mile trail within Pennsylvania. The first mile and a half were uphill but it
was graded and fantastic. This was good
because the first ¼ to ½ mile was TERRIBLE for me. My heart rate was under 100 but my breathing
was chopping and erratic. I kept
stopping to try to get it regulated. I started
to count my breaths in and then count the breaths out. I was gearing up for a horrible hike! Luckily, my body remembered this thing called
breathing and it got MUCH better. (When I first started running, this was a
problem and it took me a LONG time to get my breathing down, I even had issue
with it during a 5K run which you can read about here.) We got to the top and checked out the
overlook and we hiked on. Standing
Stone Trail turns into a really rocky path, but it was gorgeous and while I was
going a bit slower, I still wasn’t concerned about the hike. We finally reached the Horseshoe trail turn
off. Our first words were “wow, it’s steep” .
But the park visitor lady had
said it wasn’t bad so down we went. We
went SLOW. The leaves on the ground made
it slick and hid the loose rocks on the trail.
It was not fun, but I was doing it. We were seeing no signs of switchbacks but I
was fine, slow but fine. And then we
hit the first switchback. The switchback
was not any easier! But we made it
through and got back onto the main trail and all I could see was the trail sweeping
down dramatically in front of me. And I
had an immediate panic attack! I was stuck
on the side of a mountain in a panic! I
didn’t really have a choice, I had to get myself off the mountain. I kept going down. Slowly, inch by inch, foot by foot, tear by
tear. I made it to the bottom. I was sore and tired but I made it! We finished up our hike with a stroll around
the lake. It
was difficult. I am sore. But it was worth it!

We have had two fun adventures thus far. Who knows what the rest of the week will
bring!