Aug 15 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Iceland, Paleozoic Trackways, and Spaghetti Monsters
Iām misordering these posts again today to better highlight our Iceland memories. Man, itās been fun looking through all of these photos.
On Aug 15 2021,
ā¦we were campervanning around Iceland, checking out some great waterfalls, geological features, and even an iceberg-filled glacial lake.
On Aug 15 2023,
ā¦we ventured to Dunbar, Scotland to pay homage to John Muir and his hometown, then explored the New Lanark World Heritage Site.
On Aug 15 2020,
ā¦we were camping near Big Lake in Arizona. Funny enough, a friend I met on a group paddling trip down the Green River in Canyonlands National Park at least a decade earlier took up the adjacent campsiteāhe goes by the nickname āWu.ā I jokingly obscured my face a bit and walked up saying that I had gotten a call from our mutual friend Russ saying he owed us a bottle of whiskey. A bit frazzled, it took him a moment to figure out what was happening, and we subsequently spent the evening hanging out around the campfire together.
On Aug 15 2019,
ā¦I made a trip out to Las Cruces, stopping at the Lordsburg playa along the way. In Cruces, I visited the museum to see the Paleozoic Trackways exhibit, then hiked in the (oddly named) Prehistoric Trackways National Monument.
On Aug 15, 2015,
ā¦I attended the 100th birthday party for my great aunt, Delmaāthe inspiration for our ASU Football fandom. She had just been honored as the Arizona Cardinalsā āoldest fan.ā
On Aug 15 2014,
I became an official ordained minister for the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. No, seriously. Unfortunately, I only perform weddings while on vacation at amazing destinations. So, um, keep me in mind.
On Aug 15 2013
ā¦I tried as I might to get a good selfie with my dog, Sipapuābut he would not be denied in making it extra weird. It was my last night before I moved to an apartment and couldnāt easily bring him along. My mom had just lost her dog, so she was going to care for him for a year as a transition, and could provide a better home as I was often traveling for both work and fun. Unfortunately, he suddenly passed away the following St Patricks Day. :(
Jen is starting to narrow in on the finish line of her National Park units quest. She only has ~50 remaining (the white pins on this map), which are strategically grouped into convenient batches. We have trips booked in the next 60 days to tackle the units circled in blue, with group trips in 2026 that hit the units in yellow. Even with the other travel we’re looking at, she’s on track to finish in 2027 if she wants to. There are currently only 8 of us who have visited all 433 park units.

Aug 14 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Iceland, "wild" horses, and a nuclear reactor
Iām excited to get a look back at our Iceland trip, but it was especially fun to look back at our Hanford Reach tour. Itās so crazy to wander through a nuclear reactor and chat with folks about how it works and how they were still sorta figuring things out as they went.
On Aug 14 2021,
ā¦we had our first full day in Iceland. And oh my, it did not disappoint. We saw several amazing waterfalls, hiked to a glacier, hit our first Icelandic craft brewery, and enjoyed yet another sunset at our campervan campsite. We even found a golf course; I FaceTimed my dad so he could see it. These are all iPhone shotsāwish I had my Nikon shots handy!
On Aug 14 2023,
ā¦we were still in Scotland, and met up with my aunt, uncle, and cousin in Glasgow. It was great to reconnect. We also stopped by a Big Lebowski pub for lunch; nothing special, I just like this photo. (And yes, this is out of order, just because I wanted the Iceland photos as the lede).
On Aug 14 2021,
ā¦we camped at Big Lake in the White Mountains, driving home via the scenic Salt River Canyon.
On Aug 14 2017,
ā¦we toured the Hanford Reach B Reactor in central Washington, one of the major sites of the Manhattan Project. This was the last of the three āsub-unitsā of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park, so I got the last third of the 3-part national park stamp.
On Aug 14 2015,
ā¦these āwild horsesā (read: feral horses relocated to the White Mountain Apache Reservation from the Lower Salt River) wandered through my campsite on the Mogollon Rim and interrupted my sunset viewing.
Earlier in the day, I had attended an ASU football practice at Camp Tontozona and stopped by Pinetop Brewing.
Socializing at the bar
Hereās a #JulyReply2025, though a very belated one I never wrapped up and posted. Whoops!
Robert Birming recently blogged about his enjoyment of The International Bar in Sweden, and how itās a bit more friendly than other watering holes in the country. I didnāt realize that ābar cultureā was that much different in parts of Europe.
As an American, bars are one of the increasingly few public places remaining where striking up a conversation with a stranger is not uncommon1. If youāre seated at the bar (as opposed to a table in the bar), itās generally fair game to casually comment to someone nearby. In fact, chatting up the customers is often a big part of the bartenderās job.
This social tradition is so strong, in fact, that we often include stops at craft breweries and dive bars during our travels as itās one of the best ways to chat with a local (we jokingly call it #LostNeededDirections). Itās a great little hack for learning more about the local area.
I happened across this video about loneliness in the US recently and was reminded of the important role that bars play in todayās Americaāat least when it comes to socializing with others.
And especially for older, single men. Whether for good or bad, the bar is at the heart of many of their social lives. Simply interacting with others, plus the relationships they make with fellow regulars and bar staff, and feeling like part of the āin crowdā all contribute to the sense that theyāre part of a larger community.
When my dad ended up in the hospital with heart failure in 2020, it was his buddies at the Dubliner Pub that came to check on him. They did their own welfare checks when he hadnāt shown up when expected.
āHey, anyone seen Norm recently?ā
āNope, and he didnāt answer my call this morning.ā
āYeah, I got voicemail too.ā
āHmm, letās go check up on him.ā
āSureā¦but not until Iām done with my beer.ā
(How I imagine the conversation at the Dubliner the day after my dad entered the hospital.)
Iām typing this at happy hour, where a longstanding group of 15-20ish regulars congregates. Most of these folks have been frequenting the same bar together for more than two decades now, occasionally switching venues as the local scene shifts or new bar owners take over. They organize a variety of sports betting pools, occasionally dine at each othersā houses, and drive each other to doctor appointments when they need a hand. But mostly, they hang out at the bar together.
After the time I spent here with my dad in his final years, Iāve been partially adopted into this crowd. They ask how my last trip went, rib me for my failed cooking attempts (of which there are far too many), and ask if I rode my bicycle over even in this summer heat (yes, yes I did).
For many of these folks, this is their primary social scene. While plenty of them drink more often than they should, they primarily show up to talk with their buddies, not drink their sorrows away. Itās their social time. A few of them show up and only drink NA beer, or get a soda instead; theyāll get a teasing comment or two from the peanut gallery, but no one actually cares.
Too many of us spend too much of our time on our phones. But here, most are focused on actual conversations, only glancing at their phone to look something up. Sure, they say theyāre here to watch baseball on the bar TVs too, but theyāre mostly here to chat with their bar friends while the game plays in the background. Even with people who are substantially different than themselves. Even with people who donāt share their politics (a bar is one of the last remaining places where thereās some sort of broad political mixing). Even with people they wouldnāt have stopped and said hello to in another context. But here? Yeah, they met at the bar, many of them decades ago, and thatās been enough to maintain these friendships.
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This is a cultural and a personal choice. We could collectively decide tomorrow that we should be more friendly and open to conversing to others in public settings. And by doing so, we could convert far more places and situations into āthird places,ā improving social cohesion and understanding while reducing loneliness and tribal othering, but instead we seem more reluctant to engage others these days. Maybe itās the distracting phones, maybe itās to avoid politics. Iām not sure. ↩︎
Aug 13 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Scotland, Iceland, rivers, and weird border crossings
Apparently, August 13th has been an eventful day for me over the years. Iceland was one of my all-time favorite trips, so itās going to be fun seeing photos for the next week plus. Until Africa, the Angle Inlet border crossing (near the bottom) was the weirdest Iāve been to.
On Aug 13 2023,
ā¦we continued our time in Scotland, just Jen and I at this point.
On Aug 13 2022,
ā¦I did an evening paddle with my friend Brittany.
On Aug 13 2021,
ā¦Jen and I landed in Iceland and picked up a campervan, our home for the next ten or so days. We grabbed some supplies, took a nap, and started exploring Thingvellir National Park.
On Aug 13 2020,
ā¦I brought a couple bartender friends, a regular from the bar, and Jen on a morning paddle down the Salt River.
On Aug 13 2017,
ā¦we spent the day at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument in central Oregon, my 379th national park unit.
On Aug 13 2013,
ā¦I visited what is now New River Gorge National Park, Gauley River National Recreation Area, and Bluestone National Scenic Riverāquite the busy day!
On Aug 13 2012,
ā¦I visited that silly little notch in the northern border of Minnesota. To get there, you have to cross into Canada and then back into the USāusing a videophone booth to clear immigration and customs each time. Itās a trip. Thereās no security, you just stop because thatās what you should do. You enter, pick up the phone handset and press a button to start the one-way video call. YOu answer some basic questions, hold your passport up for viewing (no scanning), and…well, that’s about it.
I also apparently decided to officially adopt my High Points of Otherwise Flat States quest this day (which I just finished in May).
I’m working on a new web project that showcases public lands across the US. If you enjoy our public lands and have some photos to share as a contributor, please get in touch. I’m primarily interested in BLM and USFS lands, but might scatter in some national park lands as well.
It was fun to get an email from Sid, who is blogging all month about the websites of other #Blaugust2025 participants, when he featured mine. What a great idea!
Aug 12 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Scotland, Oregon, Marshall, Fern Canyon
Another installment of my āOn This Dayā photos for the month-long #Blaugust2025 blogging challenge.
On Aug 12 2023,
ā¦we wrapped up our time in the Scottish Highlands.
ā¦and toured the Culloden Battlefield, where so many Scots clans were crushed;
ā¦and stopped by the Clava Cairns, too.
On Aug 12 2017
I visited Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, then Fort Vancouver National Historic Site, and ended at a brewery in Bend, Oregonāwhere I finally finally got to meet one of my earliest social media friends, @Calipidder.
On Aug 12 2013
ā¦I was continuing my roadtrip around Ohio, which included a short detour in West Virginia to visit Marshall University. Marshall is famous for the tragic plane crash that claimed its entire football team, who was returning from a game. But I didnāt visit fort that reasonāit was my dadās alma mater and I wanted to FaceTime him the campus so he could see what it looked like these days and hear some new stories that might be triggered by seeing various places on campus.
On Aug 12 2012,
ā¦I stopped by the incomparable Corn Palace in Mitchell, South Dakotaāmy second visit to the famed roadside attraction.
On Aug 12 2010,
ā¦I hiked in Fern Canyon in Redwoods State and National Park. This is the only photo in my Photos library, which is a shame because I loved this hike and back then it wasnāt crazy crowded.
Aug 11 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Isle of Skye, San Juan Islands, North Rim of Grand Canyon
Iām a day late on posting this, mostly because I belatedly decided to add some Facebook memories photos, which featured a North Rim of the Grand Canyon trip that I wanted to include. Iām still heartbroken about those wildfiresāthe Dragon Bravo fire that took the lodge is still only 44% contained!
On Aug 11 2023,
ā¦we spent the day exploring around the Isle of Skye, which was incredibly scenic. Iām glad Jen suggested adding it to our Scotland itinerary.
On Aug 11 2018,
ā¦I caught an evening ASU practice. Looks like I ran into PJ and Adam from the Crafty Devils tailgate and a former player, Antonio Longino.
On Aug 11 2017,
ā¦we did some exploring around the San Juan Islands in Puget Sound, WA.
On Aug 11 2013,
ā¦I was in Ohio on a national park roadtrip I called #RustBeltRoadTrip. Funny enough, Iāll be revisiting many of those stops in a couple weeks with Jen. I also marked off the Indiana high point, which really solidified it as a quest.
On Aug 11 2012,
ā¦I found myself in Iowa and Nebraska, visiting a state high point, two competing Jolly Green Giants, and a national park unit. Iād post photos from the day, but I apparently only posted them on twitter, and Iāve deleted all those posts after Elon took over. Soāmake sure you donāt rely on social media as a life archive!
On Aug 11 2011,
ā¦I visited the North Rim of the Grand Canyon with my then-girlfriend, Laura. We were planning a Rim to Rim hike and wanted to hit a bit of the North Kaibab as a test run.
Man, Iām so bummed that wildfires have devastated this area, including burning the lodge and visitor center. The entire amazing forest shown here burned. What a loss.
I love that @PaulTibbetts summarized both his itinerary and full expenses for his epic hike on the Tour du Mont Blanc. I’ll refer back to this when I start planning my own trip (I’ve punted for the time being, after originally hoping to join some friends in doing it this year).
While it wasnāt focus of our SoCal weekend trip, we did manage to sneak in visits to three new-to-us breweries: everywhere, Bottle Logic, and Monkishāall excellent suggestions from our friend Greg Wellins (better known as @GregVisitsBreweries)āand loved everything we tried. Monkish in particular has been on my list for ages, all due to Greg.
We met Greg at Lochiel Brewing maybe 8yrs ago, back when I was working on a questing app that included some brewing quests and long before he hit brewery #1000. If you like craft beer and use IG, heās a great follow. It’s also fun to show up to a new brewery, tell them that Greg sent you, and immediately get served some special pours, gratis. Thanks for all the great suggestions, Greg! Hope to share a pint with you again soon.
A game at Dodger Stadium
Iām not a baseball fan, but Jen is. So ever since we met our buddy Doc Hubbard a number of years ago and discovered that he was a lifelong Dodgers fan, Jen has been wanting to attend a ballgame with him at Dodger Stadium for her MLB Ballparks quest.
Well, that day finally arrived. We found a weekend that would work and made the trek over to LA to hang out with Doc, his wife Lupe, and his daughter Lily, who we finally got the chance to meet (weāve stayed in her bedroom several times while she was away at college).
It was a fun outing, featuring some great weather and a one-sided victory for the home team. Boy do people go nuts for that Ohtani dude. Doc showed us around the stadium a bit, I got to catch with Krista, and was even able to hike my ass up tons of stairs to the upper level to get to our seatsāmy first āexerciseā since my recent cardiac event.
Aug 10 OTD for #Blaugust2025: More Scotland, more Rim, Seattle
Another pre-scheduled post while Iām traveling. Iām back home tomorrow.
Aug 10, 2023,
ā¦we made our north towards Inverness, Scotland.
On Aug 10 2019
ā¦we paddle Blue Ridge Reservoir and camped again on the Rim, enjoying this excellent sunset.
On Aug 10 2017,
ā¦we found ourselves in Seattle. We toured a bunch of the standard tourist spots, adding in a number of stops focused on Pearl Jam, Nirvana, and Soundgarden history.
On Aug 10 2013,
ā¦I found myself in Northern Ohio and Detroit. I wish I had more photos from this day accessible, but theyāre either lost or in a random hard drive somewhere. I made it to Put-In-Bay (look at this view of Cedar Point, which was a real treat when I was a kid), trucked it up to River Raisin Battlefield, and stopped by my old house in Grosse Pointe Park, a suburb of Detroit. It was my first time back since moving away after 3rd grade.
Visited the Nixon Presidential Library (and birthplace home, and gravesite) today for my A Site for Each President quest. While I technically finished that quest today, I have an asterisk for Madisonās Montpelier that I need to revisit so Iām sorta keeping it open for now. #Blaugust2025
Aug 9 OTD for #Blaugust2025: Scottish Highlands, š„„, šļø, š»
Another pre-scheduled post! Iām in LA hanging with some friends.
On Aug 9, 2023,
ā¦we explored some of the Scottish Highlands, with a focus on waterfalls. Look at all these cool places!
We also stopped by Doune Castle š„„š„„ (iykyk).
I should mention that Jenās mom and her close friend along for half of this Britain trip, one of the family trips we planned with each of our parents the last few years.
On Aug 2019,
ā¦it was another camping trip on the Mogollon Rim, this featuring some cool ass clouds.
On Aug 9, 2024,
ā¦my buddy was moving away and we made one last stop together at our old haunt, Paradise Lounge. (Yes, this one is out of order)
Aug 8 OTD for #Blaugust: a castle, Presidential aircraft, and a fire tower
Iām en route to Los Angeles for the weekend, but managed to schedule this post ahead of time. Surprisingly, Iām somehow ahead of schedule on #Blaugust2025, which seems rather remarkable.
On Aug 8 2023,
ā¦we did touristy things in Edinburgh, highlighted by the Castle and Royal Mile. It was the Fringe Festival, so we found a comedy show in an Irish pub in an archway tunnel under the Royal Mile. It was an especially fun way to mark off Scotland on our Irish Pub quest.
On Aug 8 2022,
ā¦I was driving home through metro LA and stopped to mark off the Reagan Presidential Library and gravesite for my A Site for Each President quest, which features retired Air Force One and Marine One aircraft. Funny enough, Iāll be marking off the other LA-area presidential library tomorrowāthe Nixon Library.
I was then able to catch up with a couple #ParkChat friends. (Iāll see Krista again this weekend, too).
On Aug 8 2015,
ā¦I hiked up to the summit of Mount Ord to climb the fire tower.
Aug 7 OTD for #Blaugust: train ride, cool pines, riding corn, finding Waldo
I’ll likely miss the next three days of posts, as I’ll be traveling. But here are some photos from Aug 7 over the years.
On Aug 7 2023,
ā¦we headed to Londonās Kings Cross Station and took a train north to Edinburgh.
On Aug 7 2022,
ā¦we camped in the Coast Range in California, stopped at a brewery to meet an internet parks friend (who was delayed and couldnāt make it in time), then I dropped Jen off at the SFO airport while I continued on to meet another internet parks friend. (Lemme know youāre an internet friend and want to meet up š).
On Aug 7 2019,
ā¦I brought my dad up to Camp Tontozona, the famed ASU fall camp practice facility near the Mogollon Rim, to check out that yearās team. I had planned on heading up there again this week, but my current elevation restriction prevents it. Bummer.
I also dropped off camping gear at our favorite dispersed campsite on the Rim, in preparation for a group trip there the next morning.
On Aug 7 2021,
ā¦no surprise, I was kayaking again.
On Aug 7 2016,
ā¦I lounged around camp at Sunset Crater, enjoying the cool respite from the Phoenix heat.
On Aug 7 2013,
ā¦I apparently rode some corn, as one does. š¤·āāļø
And I finally found Waldo, too.
And danced with some silly rabbits.
We booked a ridiculous trip last night
Some recent health challenges (and the resulting physical restrictions) forced us to cancel our big Canadian Rockies road trip this month.
I would have been traveling and camping for nearly a month, with Jen joining me for the middle two weeks, opting to fly in/out to maximize her vacation time. I was really excited about the trip, and was due to head off early next week. But alas, weāll have to wait until next year to see those gorgeous mountain views.
Thatās left us with some unscheduled vacation days that we need to fill in August or September, as weāre already generally booked for the remainder of the year. There arenāt many good options, given the temps and avoiding elevation (one of those pesky health restrictions). To fill some of the time, we ended up building out an 8-day trip to Ohio and Pennsylvania for Jen to mark off a bunch of national park units. Of course, you may remember that I just did an extended Ohio-Pennsylvania road trip in May, so alas, there will be few new things for me to see. Thatās ok, I always enjoy traveling with Jen no matter what we do or see.
That shorter trip left us with an additional three day weekend to utilize. Weekend camping trips are out, as itās either too hot in the low lands, or Iām restricted from higher elevations.
And so we started checking Google Flights to see if there was a cheap ticket somewhere. Welp, nope, not many options other than LA and SF, which we are already visiting in the next 6 weeks.
Except one destination, that is.
$88 roundtrip, nonstop, with flight times that seem optimized for our schedule.
Whatās that destination? A place improbably named Grand Island. Where is Grand Island? In Nebraska. The middle of Nebraska.
So we booked it.
Whatās there to see in the middle of Nebraska? No fucking clue. Iāve never been there, as my mostly blank counties map shows. But weāre going to go explore and see what we find.
And letās be honest here; weāll be happy enough marking off a bunch of these counties, whether we find anything interesting there or not. After all, the whole point of our quest to visit all 3144 counties in the US is to mark off those blank spots on the map. And right now, Nebraska is the blankest state on my county mapāIāve only been to a paltry 29% of the state, all along the edges.
So, weāre flying to Grand Island, Nebraska for a long weekend to visit some random, cornfield- and/or sandhill-filled counties. A somewhat ridiculous trip by most sane standards, but a trip weāre doing anyway. After all, we always have a blast exploring new places together, so Iām sure weāll have a good time on this trip, too.
And at least Iāll finally make it to Carhenge.
EDIT to add:
One challenge for this trip is that the rental car situation sucks. Not only are the cars generally expensive (about $100/day), but they inexplicably come with a 100-mile per day limit. I havenāt seen mileage limits from major rental car companies in more than a decade, and never for such a rural place where you have to drive long distances to get anywhere of note.
But we found a work around. Because weāre flying in after work, we donāt technically need the car until the following morning, since weāre simply grabbing a late dinner and heading straight to bed. So we searched the local area for an offsite location. Itās half the price and has unlimited miles, which is crucial for a trip like this. Guess which one we booked.
Another minor challenge is that the cheap flight does not include any bagsācarry-on or checkedāeven though it clearly shows that it does when you search in Google Flights. Take note when booking! Weāre okay with that, as itās only a 3.5 day trip and we should be able to fit everything we need into a personal item.
Aug 6 OTD for Blaugust: Henges, Bears, and Blue Balls
Sneaking this post in before bedtime!
On Aug 2023,
ā¦we visited Stonehengeā¦
ā¦then Woodhengeā¦
ā¦found a āfuturisticā payphoneā¦
ā¦and some old graves.
On Aug 6 2022,
ā¦we found some bear cubs climbing a treeā¦.
ā¦and found momma bear chowing down not too far awayā¦
ā¦and Paul Bunyan and Babe, too (not to mention Babeās impressive ballsack).
On Aug 6 2016,
ā¦we made the trek out to Grand Falls of the Little Colorado River, which is often misnamed as Chocolate Falls online. The water wasnāt flowing as much as preferred, but my buddy Matt hadnāt been and we were en route to camp in the area, so we went anyway.
On Aug 6 2011,
ā¦I paddled on the Lower Salt River, a summer hobby I still do today (I still have that Vermilion Cliffs nalgene, too).
I’m having a blast looking back at “On This Day” photos for each day for #Blaugust2025. Here’s the last five: