Arches National Park, Moab, UT
Several years ago, I started a Pinterest board titled “Glamping.” On it, I have pins that link to websites showcasing glamorous camping accommodations all over the globe. Yes, I realize that glamorous camping is an oxymoron. As you can probably guess from the title of my blog, I’m not a roughing-it sort of girl. I like to be comfortable, even pampered, when I travel, so hauling three days’ worth of food in a musty cooler and sleeping on the ground without showering for days on end is not for me. Ew. I shudder just thinking about it.
Park #18 in my ubiquitous pink hat |
Several years ago, I started a Pinterest board titled “Glamping.” On it, I have pins that link to websites showcasing glamorous camping accommodations all over the globe. Yes, I realize that glamorous camping is an oxymoron. As you can probably guess from the title of my blog, I’m not a roughing-it sort of girl. I like to be comfortable, even pampered, when I travel, so hauling three days’ worth of food in a musty cooler and sleeping on the ground without showering for days on end is not for me. Ew. I shudder just thinking about it.
But, oh,
those places on my pin board. Places
under the stars in beautiful, scenic locations, but with comforts usually
associated with luxury hotels. Those
places have called to me from the pages of travel magazines for years. So as we were planning our epic national park
adventure, I scoured the internet for glamping options near our destinations that
could accommodate four people. And up
came Moab Under Canvas.
Before I booked our glamping reservation at Moab Under Canvas in May of 2016, I had spent hours reading reviews onTripAdvisor, and the reviewers either loved it or hated it. There was little middle ground. People praised the views, the safari-style tents perched on wooden platforms, the king-sized beds and luxury linens, the stunning views of Arches National Park, the shocking number of stars visible in the sky, and the nightly campfires with free s’mores. Others complained about the scorching heat, the dust covering every surface, the shared bath trailers for the less-expensive tent accommodations, and the exorbitant cost for a place with no electricity or hot water. But here’s what I found interesting – every single hater had received a comment from the owners saying that they would have been happy to make things right for the guest if the guest had brought the problem to the attention of the management. This impressed me immensely.The company has a two-night minimum, and we were planning to be in Moab for three nights. When we were planning the trip, I thought that staying in one place for all three nights would be the easiest thing for our family, but I feared that the soaring summer temperatures in the desert would make the experience memorable for all the wrong reasons. I decided to call and ask if we could book three nights (paying in full a year in advance as was company policy) but then be released from our third night with a full refund if we ended up being miserable. The manager happily granted my request and even sent us a confirmation email so that we had the promise in writing should we need it.
The reviewers also complained about how close together the cheaper options were and how long the lines were for the restrooms and showers. Since I wanted my glamping experience to be mostly the glamorous part and only a little bit the camping part, we booked the top-of-the-line suite tent. It boasted a king-sized bed, a leather sofa that converted to a queen-sized bed, a private en suite bathroom including a shower, sink, and flushing toilet, a series of misters that provided moisture to cool the hot air inside the tent, a wood stove (which we clearly wouldn’t need in July), and a private deck with the best views the camp had to offer. The pictures on the website were drool-worthy and reminded me of a more upscale version of the tents I had stayed in 25 years earlier while on safari in Africa. (I'll have to blog about that some time.) I was smitten, and the rest of the family gamely went along with me.
Just in case we ended up being miserable, we went ahead and booked a back-up reservation for the third night at a Marriott in Moab, and our year-long wait began. But a year later was suddenly now, and I was faced with the reality of 103 degree temperatures for three nights in the desert. Needless to say, I was worried.
We arrived at the camp at dusk, and a perky employee helped us find a place to park and then brought a golf cart for our luggage. We could see the circus-sized tent that served as a lobby/lounge area as well as the fire ring where several families were already gathered and making s’mores. Beyond that area were several campsites that were very close together, and off to the far right were other larger tents that were spaced much farther apart. We followed the golf cart to tent #2, the second farthest from the lodge, and the employee
gave us a few tips. 1) We might want to zip the bottom flap of our
tent to keep snakes out. 2) Watch where you step because there are
rattlesnakes. 3) Only walk on the trails because the soil here
is alive. Yes, alive. It has a greenish tint because of algae that
forms its crust. Not only does it need
to be protected because it is fragile, but it also can give you a nasty rash. I began to imagine a million rattlesnakes
coiled on living soil waiting to get me.
And then I remembered a quote from that bastion of American filmmaking, Anaconda. “This river can kill you a thousand ways.” Except I decided the real threat was the
desert.
Thank goodness she led us into the tent then. All fear melted away, and we oohed and aahed as we entered the dreamy suite. Two camp lanterns cast a glow over the cream-colored canvas, and the misters and open tent flaps made the temperature bearable. As soon as we walked in, the leather sofa was directly to the left situated on a cowhide rug with two chairs nearby. Our “loo with a view” was directly opposite the entrance and had a curtain tied back in case we needed more privacy. Our bed was to the right with a small bedside table on each side and an antique dresser at the end. A basket containing fluffy white robes, thirsty towels, and luxury soaps and shampoos was on top of the dresser. A coat rack stood to the dresser’s right. Opposite the dresser was the little wood stove and a stack of firewood which we certainly wouldn't be using. Near the loo was another curtain that could be tied back or released to give more privacy for the shower which was right beside the sink and mirror.
This desert can kill you a thousand ways. |
Thank goodness she led us into the tent then. All fear melted away, and we oohed and aahed as we entered the dreamy suite. Two camp lanterns cast a glow over the cream-colored canvas, and the misters and open tent flaps made the temperature bearable. As soon as we walked in, the leather sofa was directly to the left situated on a cowhide rug with two chairs nearby. Our “loo with a view” was directly opposite the entrance and had a curtain tied back in case we needed more privacy. Our bed was to the right with a small bedside table on each side and an antique dresser at the end. A basket containing fluffy white robes, thirsty towels, and luxury soaps and shampoos was on top of the dresser. A coat rack stood to the dresser’s right. Opposite the dresser was the little wood stove and a stack of firewood which we certainly wouldn't be using. Near the loo was another curtain that could be tied back or released to give more privacy for the shower which was right beside the sink and mirror.
We had plenty of space for the four of us and all of our stuff. |
Our loo with a view |
And what a view it was! |
Kinley and Josh enjoy a few moments on our front porch. |
The heat didn't keep us from roasting marshmallows. |
When we woke
the next morning, we realized the folly of our breakfast plan. Our porch faced the rising sun in the east,
and it was already a jillion degrees out there at 6:30 AM! There was no way we’d be able to stand the
heat out there while we ate, and, in fact, the tent itself was already
beginning to heat up. And we couldn’t
even turn on the misters because they aren’t available until 9:00 AM each
day.
We woke the
kids, dressed quickly, and ate some stale Cheerios and the pie we’d bought at
Capitol Reef the day before. Moab Under
Canvas doesn’t have any food service options on site, but they will arrange for
you to pre-order food from a local place called Peace Tree Juice Cafe that
delivers to the lodge for breakfast and lunch.
We didn’t use this option because a $14 yogurt parfait is just
nuts. Especially when you can drive into
town and get that same yogurt parfait at the actual Peace Tree Juice Café for
$8. Which is still too much for yogurt,
granola, and a handful of berries, but I digress.
After our
meager repast, we drove to the park which had special opening and closing hours
while we were there due to road construction that was taking place overnight,
so the gates didn’t open until 7:00 AM.
We wanted to beat the crowds to the Delicate Arch trail, so we went
straight there to join the March to the Arch, the nickname for the notoriously
crowded hike to Utah’s most famous arch.
It’s the one on their state quarter and on the license plate, so it’s no
wonder that there are throngs of people making the trip each day. Plus experts are always saying that it’s
going to fall over one day soon, so everyone wants to see it before it does.
When we
arrived at the parking area for the trailhead, there was actually a ranger in the
lot directing cars to make the parking process more efficient. I felt kind of sorry for him. I can just imagine what he thought being a park ranger was going to
look like, and I’m guessing that wearing an orange vest in 96 degree weather to
wave mini-vans and RVs into designated parking spaces was not what he signed up
for.
We were able
to snag a spot, but I would guess that about 20 minutes after we parked, the
lot was full. If you want to do this
hike, get there early. Like, pretend
you’re rope-dropping a Disney park. And
not just because of the parking, but also because it’s just going to get hotter
as the day goes on. We had read warnings
about this trail, especially the heat and the “slick rock” section, so I was a
little worried that we wouldn’t have enough water or stamina to do it. I asked the ranger if the trail was really
that difficult, and he assured me that we could do it. Or maybe he just wanted me to leave him alone
so he could direct traffic in peace.
Either way, I walked away relieved.
We struck out and joined the already-forming line of hikers.
This was the sign in the toilet at the trailhead. Who knew you needed to tell people not to use the floor? |
The climb
wasn’t easy, but with frequent stops for water (where I had to FORCE my older
child to actually drink) and to catch our breath (where I had to repeatedly
remind myself that family time is a good thing), we made it. When we got to the viewing area for Delicate
Arch, I was stunned at the view. I had
been looking at student-made dioramas of this scene for years and years, and
never had I realized A) how huge the arch was and B) that it was perched on a
cliff. The scene looked nothing like
what my students had been creating out of clay and papier-mache all these
years!
Joining the March to the Arch. |
This was the "slick rock" portion of the trail. I can see how it could be treacherous in icy conditions. |
A much-needed rest and water break on the way up |
Our first view of Delicate Arch. |
At first, we were content to get a family picture from this vantage point. We soon changed our minds. |
Then we
noticed that there was an actual queue for pictures under the arch. And I’m not talking about 5 or 6 people
waiting their turn. I’m talking an
actual line of 30 people. And it wasn’t
moving quickly. After seeing that, we
almost decided to just settle for taking pictures from a distance. But then we figured that we’d come all this
way, and that from our current vantage point, you couldn’t really tell in a
photograph how big the arch actually was.
We would need to stand under the arch to get a better perspective in our
pictures. So we caved.
We gingerly
climbed over more rock formations to get to the area where the queue had formed. It was perched on the bowl-like slope leading
to the arch, and, of course, there was no shade, so we just had to stand in the
baking sun for 25 minutes while we waited our turn. Yes, you read that right. We waited 25 minutes for a picture at a
national park. And let me just tell you
some things we learned while waiting.
- The photographer for your group has to be pretty far away in order to get the whole arch in the picture. The photographer also has to pick his/her way farther down into the bowl-like area near the arch in order to get a good perspective. Don’t send your most balance-challenged family member to be the photographer.
- Walking on this sloped, bowl-like area in flip-flops is ill-advised. We had on our hiking boots, but the group in front of us was completely unprepared for this hike and all wore flip-flops.
- Make friends with the people in line with you (even if deep inside you’re judging them about the stupidity of their footwear and lack of water) so that you can trade off taking pictures of each other. Why? Because the other people in line get really annoyed with you if while you are taking your group pictures, your group members keep switching spots and taking turns being photographer and running back and forth to switch out.
- Don’t confuse the hike to Delicate Arch with the hike to the lower viewing area for Delicate Arch. The former is strenuous, 3 miles round trip, and takes about 45 minutes each way, not counting your time waiting for people to take eighty bajillion pictures of their group while you wait in the stupid picture queue. The latter is an easy 10 minute walk from a parking lot beyond the lot for the Delicate Arch Trail. Confusing these two trails might result in your entire family hiking a strenuous trail in flip-flops with no water.
- Do not get your whole group to try to make a human pyramid under the arch for a picture. It’s really annoying to the people in line in the burning desert heat.
- There is, in fact, a line. So get in it and quit trying to pretend you didn’t notice until you wandered up to the front. Feigning surprise at this point is still going to get you sent to the back anyway.
- Do not take ten shots with every possible group configuration – couples only, kids only, grandchildren only, grandparents only, everyone, everyone linking arms, everyone with their hands up in victory, everyone in a human pyramid, or whatever other pose you can think of. Because did I mention the 96 degree temperatures? At 8:30 in the morning? Yeah. That. Get your shot and get out of the way.
The queue is on the left. The three people you can see getting their pictures taken did not wait in the line. The people in yellow in the background under the arch did. |
Was it worth the wait? |
After getting our shot, we headed back down, stopping off near the parking lot to view some petroglyphs from the 1700s. Back at the car, we refilled our water bottles from a jug we had brought along, and all tried to rehydrate. We then drove 10 minutes to the parking lot for the Delicate Arch viewing area where we went to both the lower and upper viewing areas. Kinley was feeling really hot and icky on the upper viewing area trail (possibly because she stubbornly refused to drink water earlier???!!!), so she rested in the shade of a scrubby pine while the rest of us went on up. The perspective from this viewing area made Delicate Arch look tiny, and we were glad we’d gotten a closer look. The parking lot here was filled with tour buses whose occupants, based on their clothing and footwear choices, clearly were only getting this view of the iconic formation, and I felt kind of sorry for them.
Delicate Arch fit between my fingers when viewed from the Lower Overlook. |
My boys on the Upper Overlook Trail |
Delicate Arch from the Upper Overlook. Can you see all the tiny people? |
Our next
stop was Sand Dune Arch, an area that was also hot and crowded but had the
additional obstacle of being surrounded by a thick base of dry sand meaning
that you have to trudge your way to the arch.
It’s amazing how difficult it is to walk through dry sand. At the beach, I tend to walk on the wet,
packed sand, but at a sand dune, you don’t have any choice. I would be a very bad desert nomad.
We took the
requisite pictures at that arch (once again having to wait in line for our turn
but this time only behind a couple of people), and then hiked to Broken Arch
which Josh had read about in advance. A
sign at the trail head led everyone else to believe that the entire trail was
closed, but thanks to Josh’s research, we knew that it was actually open all
the way to Broken Arch. Only the trail
to the campground was closed. But
because this sign was at the beginning (and, I guess, people don’t read signs
carefully?), the trail to this arch was completely
deserted! We saw not one other soul
for the better part of an hour, and this was after waiting in line for pictures
at the last two arches! On top of that,
Broken Arch has shade!!!! We sat in the
cool comfort of that arch for a long time, just enjoying the view, the
solitude, and the lack of scorching heat.
We wished we had brought a picnic, though we all agreed we wouldn’t have
wanted to haul it. It would have been
the perfect spot, though.
Read the sign, people! You can go all the way to the campground! |
The trail less traveled |
This arch may not be as famous as Delicate Arch, but we enjoyed it just as much if not more. |
Kinley still
wasn’t feeling 100%, so she stayed in the shade of the arch while Knox, Josh,
and I hiked on to Tapestry Arch. The
trail was much less distinct here since it traversed several large rocks, and
we had to rely on the cairns, little piles of intentionally stacked rocks, left
by rangers and previous hikers to find our way.
I was in front of our little band, and I picked my way carefully,
watching for rattlesnakes as I went.
While they had been a threat in many of the parks we’d visited, this
trail was so devoid of visitors that it seemed a perfect place for a snake to
be napping. And knowing that Kinley was
expecting us back somehow made me all the more worried that a rattler would
delay our return to her.
The back side of Broken Arch is behind Knox and me. This was after we left Kinley in the shade of the arch. |
Not a rattlesnake |
This was as close as we got to Tapestry Arch. |
My
(irrational) worry about leaving her alone combined with the intense heat and
our lack of water meant that we turned back once we were in view of Tapestry
Arch rather than hiking all the way up to it.
We hurried back to her and found her happily drawing floral designs and
Disney Princess signatures in the sand.
Clearly I shouldn’t have worried.
We sat together in the glorious shady coolness of the arch for a few
minutes more before heading back to our car.
We didn’t encounter another soul until we got back to the warning
sign. Once there, we tried to convince a
couple of other hikers that the trail was, indeed, open as far as Tapestry
Arch, but I don’t think any of them believed us.
Back in the
Volvo, we made a lunch out of odds and ends from the food basket and leftovers
from our fabulous Italian dinner at Pasta Jay’s in Moab the night before. Since our tent had only had some
battery-operated lights and cell phone chargers, we had been keeping the
leftovers cool-ish in ice in our little cooler.
None of us got sick, so it must have worked out OK.
Our next
stop was the Visitors’ Center where the kids worked on their Junior Ranger
booklets while I A) found an AWESOME floor air-conditioning vent in the gift
shop that was positioned directly under a wooden bench, B) camped out on said
bench hogging the A/C while pretending to read a book from the gift shop for a
good 15 minutes, C) eventually gave up my spot to go outside to fill my water
bottle from the spigot, and D) volunteered to take a group picture for a
Japanese family who was STUNNED when I counted to three in Japanese before
snapping the pic. I am a woman of many
talents. (I was grateful that they
pretended not to notice when I said, “Si,” instead of, “Hai,” for yes. Or maybe they really didn’t notice.)
Once the
kids finished and got sworn in, we had a quandary. One of the drawbacks of our glamping setup
was that we had nowhere to escape the heat during the hottest part of the
day. Had we been staying in a
traditional hotel, we could have gotten out early to see the park before the
day really heated up, returning to air conditioned comfort during the afternoon
to nap and avoid the scorching temps, and then go back out to do a late-evening
trail after things cooled down in the evening.
But even our top-of-the-line tent didn’t offer any reprieve from the
blazing sun, and the park was closing at 7:00 PM every day for construction, so
we weren’t sure how to spend our afternoons.
What we did know was that we needed to decide
whether we were going to stay at Moab Under Canvas or move to the Marriott the
next day. Our Marriott reservation was
fully refundable until 5:00, so today was the day we had to make our
choice. I have to give props to my
family here. They all knew that glamping
had been my dream for this trip, and so they all left the choice up to me. This wasn’t all good news to me, though. It was a hard choice! We weren’t miserable in the tent, and it was really cool to feel like we were
on safari in the US. But not being able
to use our (super expensive) room during the day was a definite drawback. Since it was only lunch time at this point, I
decided to put off making a choice for a few more hours.
Now for the
problem at hand: what to do to avoid the heat.
Since we knew that our en suite shower was only cold water, we thought
that it might feel refreshing after hiking.
So we went back, turned on the misters to cool off the tent a bit, and
took turns cleaning up. Once we were
clean, we all agreed that it was too hot to stay put so we struck out to find a
rafting outfitter that had space for us the next day. After visiting and calling several places
that were already booked up, we found Adrift Adventures and made a reservation
for a half day rafting trip including lunch the next day.
Then we had
a brilliant idea. What’s a great place
to kill a couple of hours in air-conditioned comfort? The movies!
We went to a showing of Spider-Man:
Homecoming, and happily munched popcorn in the dark, cool theater. But by the time we came out, it was decision
time for me. Should we stay put, avoiding
an extra move and the awkwardness both of asking for a refund and admitting
that we are not, in fact, the least bit outdoorsy? Or should we move to the Marriott where a hot
shower and a full breakfast would be less than ¼ of the cost of our tent?
What
ultimately made the decision for me was cost.
Once I started thinking about how much we would be spending on our third
night and the lack of conveniences we got for the price, the choice was
easy. Plus, a nice, hot shower after
coming off of our river adventure the next day was going to feel really
good. And, of course, we would have free
wifi at the Marriott, too, and I’ve already complained regularly on this blog
about how maddening it was to try to blog and podcast with spotty wifi. It was settled. We were going to bail on our third night at
Moab Under Canvas and head to the Marriott.
When we
returned to camp, I walked over to tell the manager of our decision, dreading
the conversation the whole way, but the guy in charge was incredibly kind and
understanding. We got a full refund for
out third night, and he didn’t even seem to think we were wimps. The relief I felt after that encounter
confirmed to me that I’d made the right choice.
While I was going to enjoy this last night in our tent, I was excited to
move back to the comfort of a hotel the next day. My family was equally excited, but they
kindly kept reminding me that they were happy to stay if I wanted to change my
mind. I didn’t.
When I went
to get into my bed that night, I noticed that the white, downy duvet was
covered in grit and dust. In fact, my
pillow, the sheets beneath the duvet, and pretty much every other surface were
also covered in grit and dust. But I
didn’t let it bother me. I knew this was my last night to sleep in style under
the stars, so I just dusted it off as best I could and climbed in, telling
myself that it was all part of the experience while simultaneously patting
myself on the back for choosing to bail on our third night.
The next
morning, we slept until the heat woke us, and then we made breakfast out of
whatever was unnoticed by the ants that were now marching in and out of the
Cheerios box in the food basket. They
had found the mother lode and must have called for reinforcements. I took a moment to daydream about the free
breakfast I’d be eating the next morning at the Marriott and then started
packing up. I went to the manager’s tent
to ask for a golf cart for our luggage since schlepping it down the rocky path
was probably not going to be good for the little wheels (or the living soil),
and we loaded up. We took one last look
out over the desert from the chairs on our front porch, turned off our misters
to save water, and made our way to our car.
We arrived
at Adrift Adventures by 11:20 to get checked in, get our life jackets, and pack
our keys and camera into a dry box before boarding a bus that took us 45
minutes up the Colorado River to the put-in spot. When we arrived, we had enough time to use
the bathrooms (which were really just glorified permanent porta potties) before
our safety talk. A few minutes later,
the rafts and guides that would be taking us down the river arrived carrying
both full-day clients and those who had bought the morning-only option. After some shuffling, we climbed into a raft
helmed by Rizzie, a tanned, tattooed twenty-something whose full beard seemed
at odds with the scorching temperatures and whose underwear I could see all
afternoon as he row, row, rowed our boat mostly-gently down the stream. The heat and sun were intense, so there was
plenty of water on board for all of us. I was seated next to the cooler in the
front of the raft most of the time, so I kept busy passing out and refilling little
cups to keep us all hydrated and cool.
My view for most of the day included Rizzie's undies. |
The best way
we found to stay cool, though, was by jumping into the relatively calm river
and floating feet-first downstream, leaving Rizzie alone to pilot the raft and
shout instructions to us as we drifted through riffles and around bends. But, of course, if one gets out of the boat,
one must get back into the boat. I
accomplished this feat with all the grace of a wounded manatee attempting an
Olympic vault. It wasn’t pretty. Rizzie
grabbed the shoulders of my life vest, performed a mighty heave, and into the
bottom of the raft I flopped with nothing wounded but my pride, only slightly
more embarrassed than the rest of my family at the way my appendages sprawled
and splayed with lives of their own.
An hour and
a half into the relatively-calm trip (the water level at this time of year made
for gentle ripples but nothing close to the whitewater I had experienced on
other rafting trips), we stopped on a sandy beach where the seven or eight
guides hauled out tables and lunch with impressive speed and efficiency. Coolers held deli meats, breads, cheeses,
condiments, potato salad, chips, cookies, and lemonade which the guides set up
with well-practiced ease. Knox and I
staked out a spot, dumped our life jackets, and wrote our name in the sand so
that we could distinguish our pile of stuff from the other identical piles
littering the beach. Then we went to get
in line for lunch.
At Disney,
we learned years ago from a cast member that when you are faced with a choice
in line to go to the left or to the right, you should always chose left. That line is almost always shorter because
most people tend to go to the right.
Well, Knox and I didn’t follow the Disney directive. We joined the lunch line on the right, and as
a result, we got our food a good 15 minutes before Josh and Kinley. In fact, some people were going back for
seconds before Josh and Kinley (and the guides, for that matter) had even been
able to get their first serving! The
left hand line moved so slowly, in fact, that Josh said to Kinley, “These
people have clearly never been to a church potluck.” I have never seen a buffet line move more
slowly and for no apparent reason.
Eventually,
though, they got their sandwiches and joined us on the sand. Knox and I were finished by the time they sat
down, and ten minutes later, the guides had reloaded the tables and coolers
into the boats and were ready to set off.
The rest of the trip was pleasant, and Knox even got to take a turn
rowing the boat! Rizzie gave him
detailed instructions and coached him through the process with skill. He had
the ability to break down the task into small, achievable steps so that a
first-timer could understand what to do and experience success relatively
easily. I was so impressed with his
ability to instruct that I suggested he look into teaching as a career.
Rizzie patiently teaches Knox how to row the raft. |
Knox tries it on his own. |
At the
take-out point, we were allowed to swim while the guides loaded the rafts and
gear onto the trailers and buses. Knox
swam while the rest of us talked to other families on the trip. This process took far longer than I would
have liked, and had I known that the pack-up process would take the guides so
long to complete, I would have stayed in the cool water with Knox. We waited for a good 45 minutes before we
could load the bus to return to Moab. I
was hot, soggy, tired, and ready for a shower, and I was certainly grateful
that we would be heading to our new hotel soon instead of to a tent with no air
conditioning.
Finally, we
loaded the bus and returned to Moab. I
gave Rizzie one last push toward education, and then we drove to the
Marriott. And, oh boy. Did that shower feel good! The kids swam in the pool, and Josh and I
luxuriated in the ability to catch up on pods, blogs, and emails. For us, moving to the hotel was the right
decision. I am so glad that we tried
glamping, and I have every intention of continuing to add to my Glamping board on Pinterest. At a lower price point
with cooler weather we might even try glamping again at one of the other places
I’ve pinned! But I’m also glad we had
the sense to know what was best for our family.
And if we learned anything on this trip, it’s that what’s right for our
family of travelers isn’t always what’s right for other families. And that’s ok. We’ll just do our thing our way and let you
read about it. Or listen to it. You can shake your head and think, “Those
Boyds are nuts.” Because you’re probably
right.
LOVED your description of getting back in the raft. Probably because that's the way I'd have done it. Great post!
ReplyDeleteHa! Thanks! I had fun writing that part.
Delete