My 2025-2026 Recap:

I’m Exhausted, You’re Jealous, and My Laundry is Never Getting Done

I’d love to tell you I’ve been “reflecting” or “practicing mindfulness” lately, but the truth is I’ve just been a vagabond with a passport and a death wish for my bank account. My 2025 was less of a “calendar year” and more of a high-speed chase across three continents.

I am officially so far behind on my travel blogging that 2025 is practically vintage history at this point. Because my brain is as scrambled as an airport breakfast, I’ll be tackling these posts in reverse chronological order. We’re starting with the fresh 2026 Japan powder-fest and working our way back to the beginning of my 2025 mid-life-crisis-on-wheels.

Here is the “highlight” reel of the chaos I’m currently sorting through:


1. Japan Alps (The 2026 Kick-off)

Three weeks of “Japow.” I’ll be honest: North America has some explaining to do. After experiencing the culinary majesty and the space-age, heated-seat glory of Japanese bathrooms, returning to a standard Western stall felt like moving back into a cave. I’m not sure if I’m here for the skiing or the bidets anymore.

2. The “Chasing Snow” Odyssey

A frantic blur through Revelstoke, Sun Peaks, Cypress, Snoqualmie, Crystal, Mt. Bachelor, Hoodoo, Rossland, Lake Louise, and Banff. I’ll be reviewing both downhill and cross-country options, plus where to eat. Fair warning: After Japan, my “food suggestions” for the PNW and Canada mostly consist of me crying into a $22 lukewarm burger and mourning the lack of quality ramen. USA and Canada have a lot of work to do to meet the Japan Alps standard of “civilized living.”

3. Greece: Ruins and Olive Oil

A full month of touring. I’ll give you the rundown on the best ruins and the most charmingly run-down villages. I’ve realized I am now 85% olive oil by volume. If you need a review of which ancient rock is the best rock, I’ve got you covered.

4. Tour de Mont Blanc (The “Knee-Capper”)

We didn’t bike this one; we hiked it. Or rather, we subjected our patellas to a specialized form of torture. Highlight? Experiencing rain, snow, sleet, and hail all in a single 24-hour window. If you enjoy downhill knee pain and existential dread, this post is for you.

5. European Waterways: The Swiss “Flat” Lie

  • Lake Geneva: You’d think a lake perimeter would be, you know, level. The Swiss disagree. They love taking you off-track and straight up ridges and “mini” mountains just to ensure your legs never stop screaming.
  • Canal du Midi: A lovely ride, provided you can actually find the trail. Stay tuned for the mystery of the “Disappearing Path.”

6. Stateside Scenery: Smoke and Soaked Tents

  • Lake Chelan & The Cascades Bike Club: This club is not for the faint of heart. They take great pleasure in routing you up steep canyons while forest fires actively try to smoke you out like a stubborn ham.
  • Coeur d’Alene Rails to Trails: Our foray into bike camping! It was supposed to be majestic. Instead, we spent our first night huddled in the pouring rain, questioning every life choice that led us to sleeping on the ground in a deluge. Turns out, “adventure” is just a fancy word for “being wet and miserable in a scenic location.”

Why am I back here?

I’ll admit, I got lazy and pivoted to the “instant gratification” of Instagram and Facebook Reels. But then a few of my devoted fans (bless your hearts) pointed out that social media is where good content goes to die—buried by an algorithm or lost in a feed within 24 hours. They said it was a shame that my “unique perspective” (read: snarky complaining) would disappear into the digital void.

So, I’m back to blogging. Because you deserve more than a 15-second clip of me falling in the snow—you deserve the full, long-form story of how I got there.

Stay tuned while I sift through several thousand photos. Or don’t. I’ll probably be halfway to the next trailhead by the time I hit “publish” anyway. You will want to hear all about my food reviews in Japan-so stay tuned….

Exploring Rocky Mountain National Park

I have a new respect for great youtubers and bloggers and I will no longer complain or make fun of a vlogger who did not have the most engaging post.  It is hard work to have an entertaining post!  We have been on the road for nearly 6 months now and my goal when we first started was a video/blog a week.  Being on the road, much of this country has dead zones with zero cell service, which makes editing and posting blogs and vlogs on YouTube and WordPress difficult if you are trying to be consistent!  After traveling 100-150 miles in a Sprinter Van, setting up camp, cooking, cleaning, hiking, biking, and/or paddle boarding, many times I find myself just wanting to enjoy a beer and the view and not jumping on my computer to write or video edit!   I have found myself not posting for several weeks or even getting my computer out, which is not good if you are trying to create a following.  You must have consistency with vlog/blog postings every week.  I also did not realize how much work it is to create a good video and the frustration of right before compressing your video(that you spent 50 hours editing) that your audio for one part was bad and hard to understand and need to decide do I: redo the video, do a voiceover, just add music or say oh-well and post the bad audio (I’ve done all but redo the full video, which is not good if you are trying to create great quality- sorry to those who would like us to redo the Boldt Review Video!).  I have decided I probably won’t get to be the quality level to get great sponsors but hope these will be helpful for your travels, help newbie RVers not to make our same mistakes or be great virtual explorations if you can’t get out to these wonderful places.  This week’s post won’t have a video but just photos.

This week I’ll be sharing our adventures at the Rocky Mountain National Park.  We were considering skipping this park since it is so close to Denver and we have been trying to avoid huge crowds but I am so glad Greg pushed us to change our minds.  Currently, with COVID19 Rocky Mountain requires you to have a timed entry permit or a campground reservation or arrive before the park opens at 6am.  This is fabulous and made this one of our favorite places to visit, as there are about 60% less people in the park right now!  The only two campgrounds are open (Moraine Park and Glacier Basin) and only half of the campground is open for social distancing requirements.  Even if you go on reservation.gov and see no campsites available, I suggest calling the toll-free number (877-833-6777) and sitting on hold for 45 minutes as several people cancel last minute and this is how we got our two-day campsite reservation.  We stayed at Glacier Basin in Loop B, if you can get Loop C that is the loop with the amazing views and a chance to see Elk and Moose in the meadow if your neighbors can be quiet and not run their generators. 

We entered from the westside, which I recommend as only 20% of park attendees come from this entrance, most come from the eastside-Denver Area.  We camped the night before at Lake Granby at Stillwater Campground, which is a fun paddle boarding lake.  We decided to stay here instead of boondock since a big thunder and windstorm was expected for the late afternoon and we didn’t want to get our van stuck in sand.  There were a lot of fisherman and plenty first come first serve campsites next to the lake.  We left early the next morning 5am to hit the park to see wildlife.  We were able to see moose, elk, prairie falcon, peregrine falcon, marmot, ground squirrels and golden eagles.  There was plenty of room to stop at every pullout and interpretive trails and hiking trails.  All morning we only saw 3 cars until we got to Deer Ridge Junction when you get to the intersection of 34 and 36 the eastside and westside.  We stopped at the EndoValley Picnic Area which is the end of 2 way.  We were going to bike the Old Fall River Road which is one way the road is a gravel dirt road and pretty narrow, not something you want to attempt in your camper van unless you are a great backroad 4X4 higher clearance driver.  It was already 90 and when seeing how close cars/trucks come by you on the trail we decided to turn back on our bike ride.  After stopping at Sheep Lake, looking for our Bighorn Sheep (none were out) we headed to our campground before the big thunderstorm hit again in the late afternoon.  This campground also had an RV dump and water fill area, which was great! 

The next morning, we headed out early again at 5:45am as I wanted to hike to Dream Lake to watch the sunrise.  Note RVs greater than 21 feet need to park before you get to the Glacier Gorge Trailhead there is a parking lot RVs could fit under 25 feet and a couple pull outs after Bierstadt Lake Trailhead right before Glacier Gorge. Note: There is a sign that says RVs greater than 23 feet should not go beyond the Park and Ride across from Glacier Basin.  We did not notice this so when we got to Bear Lake we were asked to leave that our rig was too big (we are 23 feet). Greg went back to the campground and I did the hike by myself and I would take the shuttle back to the campground.  There is a free shuttle but it doesn’t start running till 730am.  I highly recommend taking the shuttle, remember to bring your mask it is required to get on the bus. I got there just in time to take the trail to see Bear Lake, Nymph Lake, Dream Lake and Emerald Lake and watch the sunrise over Dream Lake.  It was beautiful but a lot of traffic!  The parking lot was almost full at 6:15am and the Glacier Gorge Trailhead parking lot was already full.   As I returned to Bear Lake Parking Lot, I decided to take the Alberta Falls Trail and then return to the Glacier Gorge Trailhead and take the shuttle back to the campground.  The campground has water and an RV dump.  We then took Highway 7 out of the park and the backroads to North Glenn as we head to Florissant Fossil Bed National Monument.  We decided to stay at Cracker Barrel for the night but there were several great boondocking spots along the river on highway 7. 

Advice if you go to the park:

  1. Enter through the Westside, only 20% of visitors come this route
  2. If camping at Glacier Basin campground stay in Loop C
  3. Do sunrise hike to Dream Lake
  4. Use the free shuttle, make sure to bring a mask or you can’t get on!
  5. Bring your bike/e-bike to travel through the park makes it much mroe enjoyable