MOXIE MOM on Life & Kids
Good-bye
Today is the last day of Neighborhood Kids, and I had every intention of posting several times in the last two weeks. But somehow parenting took over. Both my kids are moving up a level, one to middle school and one to high school, and the sports commitment is already wearing me out (at the high school level). School hasn’t even started yet, and suddenly I have new respect for all the overwhelmed and distracted high school parents in my life. Parenting babies and toddlers is time consuming, but I’m learning that you stay busy, really busy, the whole way along the parent journey.
Meanwhile, I am sorry I will no longer be blogging for Neighborhood Kids. Over the time I’ve been doing it, I have enjoyed passing along recommendations, reflecting on the parenting life, and passing on travel tips that I can’t help being excited about. I have no idea what my readership is, but thank you to all of you who have read my posts over the years.
Good luck and good times with your own families.
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Stehekin
Every summer, my husband has been saying for years now we need to work in a trip to Stehekin. I always associated the tiny community with hiking over Cascade Pass. A little place at the north end of Lake Chelan that is the ends of the Earth, whether approached by hiking over a pass or taking a 4-hour boat ride.
Well, it’s true, you have to hike or take a long boat ride (or the Express boat, a two and a half hour ride, or you can fly in on a float plane in 25 minutes, I learned). Whichever way you get there, and I do recommend the longer boat ride at least one way, it’s worth it. I’m in love with Stehekin.
Kind of funny to me because I grew up on Lummi Island, remote enough when you’re 12 and you can’t drive, and you’re surrounded by water, and the only entertainment is the fun you cook up yourself. I fled as soon as I could (and then rebounded back to the Northwest as so many of us do).
But maybe that’s why Stehekin felt kind of like home.
Stehekin is a not a town, per se, but a valley with one road about a dozen miles long and few spurs and a population of 85. It’s also one of the gateways to the North Cascades National Park. The only cars there are those brought in by barge. Visitors
can bring bikes, rent bikes, walk, or take the shuttle bus up and down the valley for a small fee. The pedestrian-only access forces you to slow down. Your cell phone doesn’t have coverage so you might as well turn it off, and you won’t be able to check email. As cliche as it sounds, you do feel like you’re taking a step back in time.
Instead of checking email, you’ll visit the most excellent North Cascades Visitor Center at Stehekin Landing, where the boats come in, which feels like town central but in reality is only a small part of Stehekin. You’ll ride your bike to the Stehekin Pastry Company for breakfast, lunch, or snacks in between, just a couple miles up from the Landing. You might even run into one of your neighbors from home — we did.
You’ll stop by the old Stehekin school and marvel that it was closed as recently as 1988 (to make way for the new, larger school just down the road) because it feels so 1910-ish.You’ll hike the short trail to Rainbow Falls and be as impressed as you are with Snoqualmie Falls, if you’ve been there.
You’ll ride your bike up-valley and notice the blue quality of the Stehekin River, and you’ll be charmed by Stehekin Valley Ranch, where you can rent cabins. You might make reservations to have dinner even if you’re not staying there. We did, and it was excellent — a family-style dinner served in a dining room with a sawdust floor, broad beams, and a fireplace that holds tall coffeepots of cowboy coffee.
You might buy veggies from the organic garden near the bakery because the general store carries only soda pop, a few cans of soup, and lots of T-shirts (and hauling food for several days from Chelan is kind of a pain).
If you stay at the lodge at Stehekin Landing, you’ll notice that every day brings a flurry of daytrippers between 11am and 2pm, when the boats arrive and then take off. The visitors hit the Landing, rent bikes, ride around, and then are gone as quickly as they arrived. It’s the main action of the day and kind of fun. And then Stehekin is suddenly quiet, and you’ll remember you came to get away from it all.
Stehekin is a fascinating blend of national park service employees, backpackers hiking in from the other side, tourists from down-lake, and locals eking out a living in a remote location that cuts them off from just about everything and suits them just fine.
Summer is beautiful — we hit the sunny weather just right — but you can visit year-round, albeit on a more limited boat schedule. I’m guessing the fall colors are spectacular.
Note: the park offers camping, but if you’re looking for a family of four or more, I would talk to rangers in advance. We camped and found the sites to be abysmally small for a family-sized tent.
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Farewell news
Last night our family arrived home from Stehekin, a small community at the north end of Lake Chelan, and after being unplugged for a few days, I turned on my computer to learn that Neighborhood Kids will be going offline. It was sudden news to me as much as to all of you who use the website.
On the one hand, I am very sorry to see the site go. I love being able to recommend it to new families (and old families) as a resource for what’s going on in town. I also love blogging for it (although, yes, I have been a flaky blogger this summer).
On the other hand, I also know the amount of work it takes to sustain a site for nothing, and the energy drain it can be, both in time and money. A Seattle friend of mine maintains a family travel website for Pacific Northwest families, and she went through this exact angst a couple months ago. I think enough of us talked her into keeping it going that she’s giving it a second whirl, but it might not last.
So, while I am sad to see Neighborhood Kids go, I can understand why it’s going.
Sigh.
In the meantime, we have until August 31. Stay tuned. I can’t wait to tell you about Stehekin. It’s such a cool place.
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