Saturday, May 16, 2026

Three Seasons in Three Months

We’ve been in Salida now for about three months! Here’s a short update. I've gone on many small adventures, and I will summarize a few. 

This round in Colorado feels a little different. Partly because I’m older and wiser, but also because the climate has shifted. When we first arrived in February, the Sawatch Range had very little snow, and the temperatures were very warm, frequently in the 70s. The La NiƱa conditions that had kept the snow away petered out and a couple storms moved through in early March. Still, Monarch Mountain didn’t have the base to sustain the rest of the season (due to persistently above-freezing temperatures during December–February, when the snow usually accumulates) and the resort closed at the end of March. I was bummed, but grateful to get in three stellar ski days! The first was a true powder day (actively snowing), the second was a classic bluebird day (sun came out after the storm), and the third was a slushy spring day. The last one was my favorite – when the snow is a little soft and slushy, you can really set your edge, lean in, and rip down the mountain.

Sometime in late March, a heat wave moved through and melted just about all the snow on Mt. Shavano and Tabeguache Peak, and I decided to go for a spring 14-er adventure (usually only possible June–September). I woke up around 3:30am, drove up the 4WD road to the trailhead and started hiking by about 5am. I had just ascended above treeline as the sun rose over the Mosquito Range to the east. Photos below.

Most of my adventures fall somewhere on the spectrum between casual weekday workout and epic alpine traverse. I don’t always know when an adventure might make the jump, given the ever-present allure of turning an out-and-back into a loop. For example, a couple weeks ago, a short lap at Methodist Mountain turned into a massive loop up to the Rainbow Trail and then down a mountain bike trail called “Gutz” that was more something to be survived than to be enjoyed. Last Saturday’s adventure was similar: I had picked out a little trail to some alpine lakes, but I knew that a route up to the crest of the Sangre de Cristos might be possible.

After a tense drive along the steep and rutted Kerr Gulch Road that leads from Highway 50 near Howard up to the base of the Sangre de Cristos, I arrive at a pleasant alpine meadow trailhead / dispersed camping area. Almost immediately after I start ascending the trail, I see a fat lion track on a patch of snow. It’s clear from the lack of human prints that I am the first person to stroll into the Stouts Creek basin since the last snowfall a few days ago. The thin aspen and lodgepole forest takes on a spookier vibe as I get the sense that a big cat is following just beyond my peripheral vision.

This primal fear and alertness is an integral part of the wilderness experience. While it would be comforting to see another set of human tracks, the sense of being the lone visitor in a predator’s territory brings its own peace, humility, and reverence. 

I cross Stouts Creek and then ascend a trail along the south-facing slope of the drainage. The snow patches become more frequent with increasing elevation, so eventually I diverge from the trail higher up onto the dry talus above. Coming over a rise to the first of the two Stout Lakes, I am startled by a wolf! Or at least I think it’s a wolf, based on the size and shaggy gray hair. Surprise gives way to relief as I process that this creature is not a lion, and is very afraid of me. After reviewing many photos of wolves at home, I decided that this guy was maybe not that fierce, and must have been a coyote. We all know there are severe consequences for mistaken wolf identification. But for the remainder of my walk, I believe I’ve just seen a wolf.

Standing at the cirque lake, I scan the surrounding ridgelines for routes upward – mainly I am looking for gentle slopes and dry rocks that are large enough that they will hold. To the north of the upper lake is a bench, above which several gentle slopes lead up to the ridge above. I set my sights on a good route and continue on. After a short uphill jaunt, I make it to the snow-free ridge that I follow north to the summit of North Twin Sister. I look southwest out over the vast San Luis Valley, north to Salida and the Upper Arkansas Valley, south to the snow-draped cliffs above Stout Lakes. 13,012 feet, with 4750 feet of gain. An epic adventure indeed.

For those readers who might be concerned about such off-trail adventures, I will offer you a counterexample. The week following the North Twin Sister adventure, I go back to the Sangres – this time heading to Hunts Lake. Sitting above Hunts Lake is another 13-er, Hunts Peak. When I get to the lake, I go through my usual route-searching exercise, both visually and by analyzing the contours on my Gaia app. But this round, I decide that the slopes are too steep and the rocks are too loose – it’s a no go. The world above treeline is a fantastic place to choose your own adventure, but some peaks just don’t have good access. I am very risk-averse and enjoy solid ground.

Spending all this time in the Sangre de Cristos, I am noticing the devastation wrought by the bark beetles. Past climates limited them to a single reproductive cycle each year, but warmer weather has allowed them to complete two or three, leading to a massive population explosion. They bore through the bark and lay their eggs in the phloem, eventually starving the tree and leading to mass spruce, fir, and ponderosa pine mortality. In the Sangre de Cristos, where the slopes are steep and the winds are fierce, these trees eventually fall over en masse. As a result, many of the forests are essentially impassable, trails are littered with fallen logs, and aspens have taken their place. Once the beetles destroy all their hosts, their population will eventually decline, and the spruces, firs, and ponderosas might return once again.

The casual weekday adventures are pretty good too. I ride my mountain bike at S. Mountain and Methodist Mountain trail systems once or twice a week. The S. Mountain trails were initially very intimidating, with lots of rocks and roots and tight curves along cliffs. But over time, I have developed the muscles to charge up and down these rocky stretches, and learned how to make hairpin turns. It’s good to be on a learning curve again. 

Some other adventures that are pictured below:

  • Bike ride up Marshall Pass road to the Continental Divide 
  • Backcountry skiing in Waterdog Lakes Basin (hefty hike in)
  • Hike up Midland Hill near Buena Vista with Raf 
P.S. There are lots of other interesting things to talk about, like the three kittens we fostered and Raf's many jobs, but I will save those for next time! 


South Twin Sister and Bushnell Peak from the summit of North Twin Sister

The vast San Luis Valley

Sangre de Cristo ridgeline from the summit of North Twin Sister

Unnamed peak and Red Mountain in the foreground;
Mt. Ouray and Chipeta Peak in the upper left 

The lower of Stout Creek Lakes

Hunts Lake and Hunts Peak

Backcountry skiing in Waterdog Lakes Basin (not much left)

Powder day!

Looking west towards Gunnison from Monarch Mountain

Soft moguls

Sweet Dreams trail at S Mountain

Lil Rattler trail at S Mountain

Chicken Dinner trail at S Mountain

Little Rainbow trail at Methodist Mountain

Spartan trail at Methodist Mountain

Bluebird Day!

Soft moguls

Sunny morning on the skin track

North Backbone trail at S Mountain

Tenderfoot Mountain, Salida, and the Sangre de Cristos

Weathered mesas of the Dry Union formation

Bighorn sheep!

Slushy groomer day

Sunrise on Mt. Shavano

Sunrise on Mt. Shavano

Summit of Mt. Shavano, looking northeast towards Mt. Antero

Summit of Mt. Shavano, looking south towards Mt. Ouray

Summit of Mt. Shavano, looking southeast towards Salida

Summit of Tabeguache Peak, looking northwest towards the heart of the Sawatch Range

Summit of Tabeguache Peak, looking southwest towards Monarch and the San Juans

Summit of Tabeguache Peak, looking northwest towards Crested Butte and Aspen

Summit of Tabeguache Peak, looking southwest towards the San Juans

Midland Hill, looking south at Raf and the Upper Arkansas Valley

Midland Hill, looking west towards Buena Vista, Mt. Princeton and Collegiate Peaks

Moody Mt. Ouray from Marshall Pass

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

I Will Miss the Manzanitas


I will miss the manzanitas and the oaks. The fog and the golden light. The spicy Szechuan Chinese noodles of San Francisco and the Tijuana tacos of San Diego. 

Raf and I are leaving California! 

Where to? 

Read on! 

Let’s rewind five years to February, 2020, when I was living in Fraser, CO and skiing most days of the week at Winter Park. I remember wondering whether the Coronavirus would pass (figuratively) over Corona Pass from the Front Range. I’m sure the virus eventually did, but the lockdown came first. The lifts were shut down by the end of the month, and my roommates who had become friends over the past few months all left to go weather the pandemic elsewhere. After a couple weeks of uphill access at Winter Park (“skinning” upslope), Governor Polis closed the national forest land to public access. This was frustrating – social distancing felt like a half-baked strategy that only made sense for urban settings, yet was being applied ad-hoc to rural areas with no need for such a policy. Anyway, I lingered on for a few months riding my bike, skiing low-angle backcountry routes, working on my thesis, and applying for jobs. But by May, I was ready for the next step. 

With no leads on Colorado jobs, I defended my thesis, moved out of the house in Fraser and headed back to Minnesota for the first pandemic summer, which I spent towing food by bicycle with Twin Cities Food Justice and applying for jobs. Although my new position with the USGS in San Diego didn’t officially require me to report to the office, by September I was ready to live on my own again, so I shoved off back into the great unknown, made my way there, and met Raf a few weeks later. Even before I got the USGS job, I had envisioned a California chapter, a phase of trail running and mountain biking on trails that are snow-free year round. I wanted to see what surfing was all about, get to know the Pacific ocean up close, explore coastal climates that are favorable for year round farming and gardening, and experience the world of West Coast America. 

I loved living next to the ocean in Ocean Beach, rollerblading and surfing in Pacific Beach, and exploring the shrub mountains of eastern San Diego county on foot and by bike. I also developed a taste for the Tijuana-style Mexican food of San Diego, especially the cheap tacos and delicious salsa bar of Mi Rancho Market in Escondido, and Humbertos burritos in Golden Hill. I came to enjoy the ease of a snow-free winter.

But I also missed living next to tall mountains and vast mountain wilderness areas. I began making a summer pilgrimage to these spirits of stone, savoring every moment in the high country and trying to etch the details of rock faces into memory. I walked the John Muir Trail one year, stitched together three backpacking trips on the Olympic Peninsula the next, returned to the Eastern Sierra many times after, and then backpacked for an extended period in the San Juans last summer. 

Soon after we moved to San Gregorio in fall 2023, I realized that we had landed in a paradise of sorts. We lived in a beautiful and affordable home among the oaks, across the highway from an open space preserve with a large network of dirt roads and foot paths leading up and down and around the steep hillsides. We were situated at the transition zone between two great landscapes: redwood forests and mountains to the east, coastal hills and sage scrub to the west. We were just a few miles away from wild beaches where the high cliffs block out everything but the sky and sea, and an expansive network of mountain bike trails along the crest of the Santa Cruz Mountain ridgeline. An hour north was SFO and the Sunset District, where Raf and I spent many weekend days on the hunt for delicious food. 

At the time, I wrote “I am at the center of the Earth. Everything has fallen neatly into place. There is no place I’d rather be.” I knew that our life in San Gregorio was the peak of my coastal California chapter, and there was no way any other situation could top it. With Silicon Valley just over the hill, there was also no way we could ever afford to stay in coastal San Mateo County without the staff housing provided by Raf’s job. Like a handful of other life phases – e.g., living in a hut on a mountainside in Patagonia, living in a tent on Meesa’s land in Left Hand Canyon – life in San Gregorio felt uniquely stimulating and satisfying, constantly renewing and refreshing and offering new perspectives. During all those phases, I loved my simple home environment, I had access to a nearby trail network leading up to the mist or snow above, and the rent was cheap. 

But even during this ideal time on the coast, the call of the high country never quite faded. Despite having constant access to rainy hilltop meadows, I still missed being close to tall mountains for skiing in the winter and backpacking / trail running / mountain biking in the summer. While the nearby trails were excellent for weekday jollies, they weren’t quite enough for an extended weekend adventure. Despite opportunities to practice farming skills in an ideal climate for growing food and keeping livestock, I realized that mountain recreation was still a priority. While I thrive in the lushness of rainy northern California winter, a snowy winter offers several advantages for recreation. I love running in the rain for a couple hours and then drying off inside, but not quite as much as spending a day skiing in the snow. 

When Raf decided she was ready to move on from the job that had provided us staff housing in San Gregorio, we temporarily moved south to Ben Lomond in the San Lorenzo Valley. In exchange for taking care of two dogs and a cat and paying a little rent, we live in a nice 1980’s home on a 0.4-acre lot with good views in a suburban area of the Santa Cruz mountains, about 25 minutes from downtown Santa Cruz. Our home in Ben Lomond has been quiet, affordable, and comfortable, and allowed me the opportunity to tend backyard chickens. We love the pets, and there are a handful of good open spaces nearby for short weekday runs (Quail Hollow Ranch and Olympia Watershed) as well as a network of mountain bike trails behind the U.C. campus and at Wilder Ranch State Park. 

But after the perfect situation in San Gregorio, the move to Ben Lomond was inevitably a bit of a downgrade – I was spoiled. Santa Cruz County doesn’t have as many open space preserves as San Mateo County. Instead of 5 minutes, the ocean was now 35 minutes away and separated from the San Lorenzo Valley by a high ridge that keeps out the coastal air. Unlike the San Mateo coast that is vegetated by the meadow, shrub, and oak landscapes that I love so much, the San Lorenzo Valley is mostly dense and enclosed redwood forest. 

Life here is comfortable and affordable, and there are decent trails nearby for short weekday runs or mountain bike rides. Recognizing that San Gregorio set the bar unrealistically high, I have reset my expectations, counted my blessings, and enjoyed life while considering and casually preparing for the next move. 

After five years living away from the high country, I know that I am ready to be back, both for skiing in the winter and high alpine walks in the summer. While I am very grateful for this current phase alongside all the others in California, I miss being 30-90 minutes from all sorts of mountain wilderness and ski areas, particularly during the late summer (July – October) and winter (January – March). 

At first, I gamed out possibilities that involved staying in California. The Sierra Nevada offers incredible summer routes, but the 4-5 hour drive is a major barrier – I generally get much more out of frequent day trips or single overnights than occasional extended trips. Similarly, the slushy snow, crowds, and long drive make the Tahoe area an undesirable ski destination. The southern Sierra has better snow, but Mammoth is pretty remote (especially in the winter when Tioga Pass is closed) and unaffordable. 

Next, I gamed out possibilities that involved splitting the year between Colorado and California:

  • Mountain Cabin in Colorado: January – March, July – October
  • Coastal Farm in California: April – June, November – December

This still may be a possibility in the long run, but it wouldn’t work well with Raf’s potential teaching job. The Pacific Northwest could offer some elements of this combination, except that the snow is pretty wet / bad for skiing compared to the Colorado cold smoke. And I also don’t want to go too far north – I love the strong winter sun at latitudes of 35–40 degrees. The Southwest is the place to be. Back to Colorado it is! 

Raf and I have been discussing our priorities and preferences for where we want to live for a while now, and I decided to evaluate 14 different Colorado towns against these priorities in a structured way using a spreadsheet. I ranked each town on factors like affordability, crowdedness, access to public transit, social / cultural /community opportunities, and proximity to skiing, rafting, grocery stores, airports, hot springs, and a variety of day trips. I then came up with a set of weights that reflect the importance of each factor, leading to a weighted score for each town. 

Unexpectedly, Salida, CO rose to the surface! It is near Monarch Mountain (independently owned and operated ski resort), the Sawatch Range and the Collegiate Peaks, several hot springs, and lots of rafting opportunities on the Upper Arkansas River. It is affordable, has a couple decent grocery stores, offers plenty of music, art, food, and events, and is accessible via public transit. It is relatively far from airports (3 hours from DIA, 1 hour from regional airport in Gunnison), but this helps keep the crowds away. I spent a week in Salida back in the summer of 2016, and really enjoyed walking around the neighborhoods, historic downtown, and river area. 

Once we started digging more into Salida, we realized we were both excited about moving there, and decided to make it happen! At first, we thought about waiting a few months, taking it slow etc. but after a little research, I figured it would be much easier to get a place in February or March than in April or May when the rafting season was kicking off. So I reached out to a couple of places on Craigslist and we immediately hit it off with Jean and Lane, who eventually decided to rent us their 2-bedroom house in town, starting February 15! It’s all happening fast, but not so fast, given how long we have discussed all the underlying factors. We leaned into what became the easiest housing search process of all time. We did sign a 12-month lease sight unseen, which is pretty crazy. But after seeing the place via photos and video, meeting Jean and Lane via Facetime, and doing some background research to make sure we weren’t getting scammed, we decided to take the leap! 

We are looking forward to skiing, rafting, soaking in hot springs, and enjoying summer trails in the high country and year round trails in the foothills. And we are super excited to live in a small town within walking distance of events, restaurants, and bars. Raf doesn’t have a job yet, but she has a ton of skills and is open to classroom teaching, outdoor education, raft guiding, or barista work. I’m very excited to be back in Colorado – to climb all the 14-ers I didn’t get to last round, get back into skiing, and continue to explore the desert mesa country of the Four Corners area. I’m looking forward to getting an uphill pass at Monarch for the remainder of the spring ski season (February – April), maybe dabbling in some rafting during the spring runoff (May and June), and then using as much of my PTO as possible for high elevation day trips from July to October. I’m thrilled that Raf is excited about the move too. 

While we are both super excited, this move will inevitably be bittersweet for several reasons. First, our current arrangement hasn’t yet come to its logical end. It’s easy to move on from a chapter when life shoos you out the door, but leaving a comfortable and affordable home requires much more motivation, especially in the midst of a housing crisis with no end in sight. Similarly, it is hard to leave coastal California’s overwhelmingly pleasant Mediterranean climate, which is so intensely mild, it’s almost as if the air has taken on the most subtle temperature and humidity in an attempt to go unnoticed. We’re both excited for a snowy winter, but this has downsides like limited mobility during April and May, when giant spring snowstorms shut down Front Range airports and travel. Raf has never lived in a snowy winter, but her enthusiasm for exploring the Twin Cities via public transit in below-zero temperatures makes me optimistic that she will love it! 

Similarly, the transition in food systems, from a state that is directly connected to international markets via several deepwater ports and contains some of the most productive agricultural land in the world, to a state that ships in most food from elsewhere, will be a little painful. Over the past few years, I’ve enjoyed affordable and high quality food access: I order all of our bulk organic grains, legumes, spices, and fruit from an Oregon-based bulk supplier (Azure Standard) and buy grass fed beef, free range eggs, and organic produce, butter, coffee, peanut butter etc. at rock bottom prices from a discount grocery store (Grocery Outlet) that seems to be immune to inflation. Sadly, there are no Grocery Outlets in Colorado and Azure charges an 8% fee for delivering to non-West Coast states. Gotta leave the comfort zone sometimes! Maybe this is an opportunity to join or create a southwest Colorado food co-op. 

It’s also a bummer to be paying market-rate rents, after so many years of hacking housing through jobs, caretaking arrangements, co-ops, or the rare landlord charging 2000s rents well into the 2020s. But on average, Salida and surrounding areas are much more affordable than the Bay Area, both to rent and buy. I’m looking forward to scoping out a potential ski cabin, small town mountain co-op, or country homestead as a long-term home base. 

It’s not forever and I’m sure the pull of the soggy coastline might draw us back to the West Coast someday. For now, to the high country.