(Glenn) This morning we checked out of the hotel and returned to Willie's Cafe again for a final breakfast in Victoria. We loaded the motorcycle on the ferry and traveled back to the U.S. via Port Angeles, Washington. I included a photo of Cathy enjoying the beautiful scenery of the ferry ride face down in her padded bench ("bed"). We met some other motorcyclists on the ferry who suggested we visit Hurricane Ridge in Olympic National Park. We rode up to a very scenic overlook of the Olympic Mountain chain and the second photo is one of us at the summit of the mountain. A park ranger suggested we see Ruby Beach on the Pacific coast of the park. We took the long way around Olympic Park and found our hotel in Aberdeen, Washington on the south side of the park. I have to say I am glad we saw the Olympic Park but I can't say it is my favorite. It had fewer scenic areas and it is not in the same league as Glacier National Park. We plan on leaving in the morning and travel to visit Seattle, WA. We plan to stay just north of the city in Everett.
(Glenn) We had a great breakfast today at Willie's Cafe (so good we know where breakfast will be tomorrow). We later just strolled around the downtown shops and enjoyed the views near the inner harbor. I found a place to get me a much needed haircut. Cathy squeezed in a small nap before we rode the city bus to Butchart Gardens. This garden is actually the reason we made Victoria one of our destinations. Mr. Eddie Aldridge ,who created and donated Aldrige Gardens to the city of Hoover, said this was one of two of the prettiest gardens he had ever seen in the world. It is hard to believe so many colorful plants of different types could be maintained so well. The best dining atmosphere of our trip so far has been tonights dinner on the Butchart residence's back porch overlooking the Italian Garden (Surf and Turf and Cathy actually tasted a tiny portion of one of the scallops-way to go Cathy!). We will be sad to leave Victoria but we have agreed to return in the future. In the morning after breakfast we will load the bike on a ferry to travel to Olympic National Park in Washington. (Cathy) Glenn did need a hair cut although it pained him to pay that much but he was looking shaggy. Me, I'm like and old car that just got a tune up. Hair yesterday and today Glenn saw a place for me to get a much needed mani and pedi. And the dinner was delicious, filet and scallops with a califlower puree and some roasted cauliflower in some kind of dark rich sauce. Glenn got my 3 scallops but I ate the rest of the plate. We talked about licking the plate but thought better of it. Also a strawberry rhubarb compote on a corn cake. YUM! (Glenn) Today we left the busy city of Vancouver and rode about one hour to a ferry that would take us and our motorcycle to Vancouver Island where we could ride to the city of Victoria. We arrived about noon and have fell in love with this city. It is much less stressful than downtown Vancouver. It is filled with many shops, restaurants, a museum, and a waterfront filled with yachts, sailboats, and seaplanes. Before we checked into our hotel, we visited Craigdarroch Castle built by a coal and railroad tycoon in the late 1800's. It was worth a couple of hours to visit but did not compare in scale to the Biltmore House in Asheville, North Carolina. The harbour area and the government buildings lighted at night were beautiful. We plan to spend three nights here and explore this fantastic place even more. (Cathy)We have had a full day. I am having a hard time absorbing all that I have seen..And yes, Kim Shaw, the Parliment building lit at night is just beautiful as you had described. We plan to have coffee and muffin the room tomorrow morning and then up and at'um. (Glenn) Today we decided to take a narrated city bus tour. It is usually a great way to see the area and get some good information and with such nice weather the open roof on a double decker bus was a fun way to travel. We saw the major points like the Empress Hotel, China Town (the second oldest in North America), the sceinic (and expensive) coastline of Oak Bay, and the colorful Fisherman's Wharf where we had some great fish and chips. Walking down the streets going back to our hotel we found the street blocked where they were filming a movie. It was called something like "just in time for Christmas" or something like that with William Shatner. We saw some of the takes of the filming but never saw Captain Kirk. We thought about going out this evening again but have decided to stay in the room and rest. We are tired and enjoing reading their local newspaper and watching some television. (Cathy) We had fish and chips at Barb's at the Wharf, also clam strips and a big cup of seafood chowder. We were so hungry after the long walk there. But good exercise. One of the parliament police officers suggested we go by Irish Times Public House. The same architect designed both Parliament House and the Irish Times pub in the 1800's. I was asked if I was in the Red Hat Club by the waitress at the pub when she noticed my new red/purple hat. "No", Glenn just liked the red hat with purple flowers that I bought from a street vender at the harbour. So I will just keep wearing it. Also, I went by the Aveda Salon next door to our hotel and they colored my gray roots!! Yay!! They did a good job and the best price I have paid in years. Now, in 3 weeks Glenn can bring me back to Victoria for another "touch up". (Glenn) Today we left our bed and breakfast and headed toward Vancouver. It was about a five hour ride and we had great weather to travel. Very scenic winding uncrowded roads until we reached Vancouver. I know this city has a reputation for "one of the most beautiful cities in the world" but with the exception of the world class park (Stanley Park) I have no reason to return to this overcrowded place. Parking for our hotel was in an underground parking deck over two blocks away and we had to carry our luggage through the streets to our hotel. Too many one way streets, too many people walking and crossing the road at every intersection, and people blowing their horns at this frustrated southern boy. This was some of the worst driving conditions (especially on a motorcycle pulling a trailer) that I have ever seen. Much worse than Atlanta. We really enjoyed the Stanley Park once we found it but honestly, I have no reason to ever return to this city. We plan to leave in the morning to board a ferry to carry us and the motorcycle to Victoria tomorrow. Off to bed, I surely need the rest after what I went through to get to our hotel. (Cathy) The drive to Vancouver was pretty BUT if you go up the mountain, you know you have to come down the mountain. Up and down.. and it was round and round, hair pin turns everywhere! My back seat brake does not work. But I have found that the shoulder pinch or the love handle squeeze works well. We hit happy hour when we finally got to our hotel and we were off to bed. We parked on the street while Glenn went into hotel to see where to park and of course the meter maid came by. I explained why I was there and she was sooo nice. "Don't worry about the parking and "Victora will be a much smaller town", thank goodness. Leila and Kevin Tate suggested the poutine and we did have that tonight and was really good. Not a bite left. We had a 7:30 breakfast and next meal was not until 4:00. We were starved. We ate the poutine, curry wurst, sweet potato fries and BLT sandwich with avocado. It was all good. (Glenn) This morning we got up and off early from Cranbrook, British Columbia. We put on four layers of clothing which included a heated vest and rode through sporadic rain and temperatures in the 40's for about five hours. I have to say this was the most miserable portion of our trip so far. My GPS navigation system on the motorcycle is not pinpointing our location very well and we wound up lost a few times in the rain. I guess we are far enough north that the satellites are not triangulating our location very well. There is so much wildlife in this area. We saw many deer and turkeys on the side of the road and had to stop the motorcycle four times on the backroads to avoid hitting animals crossing the road ( a group of 31 geese walking slowly across the road, a deer and its small fawn, a very large slow moving moose, and later four small spotted fawns that I thought were dogs until I got closer). At one stop to put on more clothes, a groundhog ran up to us and stood on his hind legs at my feet- I assume he wanted me to feed him. When we crossed our final mountain range and entered the Okanagan Valley, the view was incredible. There was a fairly large (for Canada) city around a large lake. As we got closer to the city the temperatures were in the upper 70's and everyone was wearing shorts and swimsuits. This area is covered with so many vineyards. We are staying at the Countryside Bed and Breakfast which has its own vineyard. The photo today is of Cathy in the gazebo by the vineyard reading her book. We like this town so well we are considering returning here for a few days after we leave Seattle. We are not making a reservation but we will see what happens in a week or so. We have to leave in the morning for Victoria, British Columbia but will always want to return again to Osoyoos. (Cathy) 44 degrees and rain.. I told Glenn my next USA land trip might me in my new convertible.lol But always a bright spot at the end of the rainbow.Glenn has done such a good job of planning when needed and or not planning too much which is unusual for him. Loved all the wid life. Also passed by a sheep and llama farm. And while sitting in the gazebo a deer walked behind me while I was reading. Amazing and so funny. The "dogs" in the road that turned out to be fawns were so funny. One of them stopped in the road and looked at us like we were the crazy ones. Our journey is just starting. Who knows what will be next.. Don't look for us until you see the whites of our eyes!! (Glenn) Today we our tiny little cabin and headed out for a ride I have heard so much about...the "Going To The Sun Road". As I feared the entrance on the West side of the park where we were located was still closed due to fires. We rode to the East entrance about 50 miles away and entered the park from that location. The road was open until the Logan Pass where we would have to turn around and leave from the same place we entered. It actually worked out great because we saw all but about 12 miles of this fabulous road and "had to" see the road a second time on the way out. I have to honestly say this is some of the best scenery I have ever seen. It will be hard to beat as we continue our trip. The waters were so clear and blue, we heard a guide tell someone it was because the waters are from the melting glaciers which have a great blue color that is hard to describe unless you have seen it for yourself. The park was filled with lakes, waterfalls, and a scenic drive that could make you dizzy when you look over the edge (not good when you are on a motorcycle). I may have to return to this park in the future and spend a few days. Reflections of the mountains on the lakes looked like a painting (too perfect). We entered Canada in a light rain and gusting winds where found a place to stay in Cranbrook. Tomorrow we will leave here on our way to a wine vineyard bed and breakfast where we plan to stay one night. (Cathy) I kept telling Glenn "don't look, don't look". I had him pull over so he could get a really good look at the beautiful scenery. Just unbelieveably pretty. Better than Yellowstone! We didn't get much sleep last night. The little place was soo cute but that tiny bed was not. It said was a regular sized bed but it felt like it was a twin.lol (Glenn) Today Cathy and I rode farther North into Montana to Glacier National Park. The ride was great with cooler temperatures but the wind was very strong. I would rather ride in rain than the constant gusting winds. We saw beautiful ranch lands of horses and cattle in rolling hills framed by large mountains in the distance. We saw very few vehicles on many of the roads and felt like we were in the middle of nowhere but we liked that feeling. We found a very reasonably priced place to stay in East Glacier. It is a set of tiny cabins (about 15' by 20' each) that was originally built for park rangers. We feel like we are camping so we just put our chairs out in a shady spot and read some more on our books. We were sitting at an outdoor table across the road from our cabin and we met a family that traveled from their home in Cahaba Heights (10 minutes from our house in Hoover, Alabama) to hike in Glacier National Park. What a small world. We heard the west entrance to the "Going To The Sun" road was still closed due to the recent fires, so I plan to ride around the park to the road's East entrance tomorrow to ride it as far as is allowed. We will then turn North to cross the Canadian border to spend 5 or 6 nights. So far we have had no issues with the motorcycle and hope our good fortune continues. (Cathy) I have so much fun with all the unique little places we have stayed. The little cabin today is so cute. The Holiday Inn Express last night was very nice, like a 5 star to us on this trip (lol), but not very unique. Also, in Montana I have never seen so many cowboy hats, boots, big belt buckles all in one place in my whole life. Glenn and I take care of each other in different ways. I handed him his allergy pill this morning and he says " so am I supposed to chew it up" The water was about 3 feet from him but the "water girl" and the "towel girl" still came on this trip. I was falling down on my job. Today I have had huckleberry bread, huckleberry pie, and 2 days ago huckleberry ice cream. I have found blueberry nut energy bar, peanut butter chocolate cracker jacks!! Oh my!! (Glenn) This morning Cathy had her breakfast in bed as she requested. Later in the morning we seem to have the entire hotel to ourself. I hit the hot tub and swimming pool and then Cathy and I headed for the lobby area to read our books. She is reading "Grey" by E.L. James and I am reading "Ghost Writer" by Neil Peart. The book was recommended to me by a friend (Shane Ellison) because it is the story of Neil Peart who was the drummer for the band Rush. He took a long motorcycle journey after the loss of his wife and daughter to deal with the emotional trauma. It is a great book and he describes in detail many areas we a riding our motorcycle. Today I read of his journey across the Going To The Sun Road in Glacier National Park which we hope to ride across in two days as we cross into Canada. I say "hope" because the entry on the west side is now closed due to a large forest fire and we are unsure if it will open before we arrive. We went to our second rodeo tonight and it was alot of fun. This was a professional rodeo and had much more experienced riders and larger animals than the previous rodeo. Tomorrow we are riding north to locate ourselves near the west entrance of Glacier National Park hoping that we will be able to enter the following morning. (Cathy) I have enjoyed my breakfast in bed and my lazy day. Glenn takes such good care of me. So glad we weren't riding early this morning..it rained pretty hard for over an hour. (Glenn) Not much to say about today. We rode from Cody, Wyoming to Helena, Montana through some corn fields and potato fields. We arrived early enough to have a late lunch and relax in the pool and hot tub at the hotel. We spent the evening in the room while Cathy rested and I planned the stops and reservations for the next week. We stayed in Helena, MT to see a professional rodeo tomorrow night. That will make each of our first rodeos in a few days span. Cathy is asleep and is passing on posting anything tonight because there are no great events or photos happening today. She said the few photos she made today of the scenery on the ride did not work out because she had the camera pointed at herself and not the scenery, Alot of photos of herself made by accident and she did not notice until we had reached the hotel. She has requested breakfast in bed which will be easy for me this time because we are on the first floor. (Glenn) This was our final day in Cody, Wyoming. We spent another seven hours in the Buffalo Bill Historical Center. It is a great museum and if anyone is in the area it is the main attraction here and it should not be missed. Five different museums are contained in the center. The Smithsonian Firearms collection is in one wing of the center. If a gun or prototype was ever made, it is probably here to see. Cathy and I enjoyed the natural history museum the most but the Buffalo Bill Western History section of the museum was excellent. We both educated and entertained ourselves at the same time. The weather is a little warmer (upper 70's) but we are comfortable. After we left the museum we stopped somewhere for dinner. Cathy is trying to teach me to order less and share portions with her. I tried and just ordered an appetizer to share.....the appetizer was a medium buffalo chicken pizza. There is a gunfight each night on the street in Cody so we watched it before we headed back to the room. Cathy is washing some clothes and I am planning our next couple of stops. My friend Jim Garrard told me the first thing I needed to do when I retired was to stop wearing a watch. Well Jim, you would be happy to know I did not wear or bring a watch on this trip.Everything is going well and we are having a great time. (Cathy) We had originally planned to bypass Cody but all the western stuff is fantastic. They have original guns from all my favorite old westerns. My brother Lee would have loved this section. Paladin, Matt Dillon, All the Bonanza guys..just facinating. Hard to believe tomorrow will be just 2 weeks since we left home.. I'm liking this retired business. But I don't usually know what time it is, what day of the week it is, nor the date. Sometimes I have to ask which state I'm in. Oh well.. (Glenn) Today we rode again through the Grand Teton and Yellowstone parks as we rode to Cody, Wyoming. We stopped and visited the Buffalo Bill Dam as we passed by it. Another beautiful ride but by the time we reached Cody we were both ready to get off the bike. We found a place downtown to eat lunch and then Cathy was ready for a nap. I dropped her off at the hotel and I visited the Buffalo Bill Center of the West. The staff at the visitor center at the Wyoming state line said it was a world class museum associated with the Smithsonian museums and that solidified our decision to even visit Cody. I bought a two day pass and just "breezed through" for about three hours. It is a great museum and Cathy and I plan to spend most of tomorrow there. I bought us a couple of tickets to the Cody Night Rodeo tonight and it was alot of fun. We are planning to see another rodeo in Montana later this week. On the way home we found a WalMart and bought me some gloves, I must say I never thought I would be buying gloves in July. (Cathy)For lunch I had the best corn beef,cabbage,cheese egg roll (Irish eggroll) I have ever eaten. Also, it was so cold last night I nearly pushed Glenn off the bed trying to get warm. But during the day it gets up to about 80. But the wind is horrible. Having a great time. (Glenn) Today Cathy and I needed to recover from the long day before in Yellowstone Park. We slept later and then went downtown to shop in all of the stores, sounds more like a restful day for Cathy but more tiring to me (just joking, I had a good time). We had lunch at the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar where you sat at the bar on saddle stools. Very interesting place and I am glad we went to see it but the food was just OK. The pictures downtown are of Cathy and me in the park and Cathy on her saddle stool. We returned to the hotel and sat by the pool for a couple of hours reading our books. It made it up to about 75 degrees today (heatwave). For dinner we went to the Bar J Chuckwagon show. We met a lady from Georgia in town that worked at the show and suggested we stop by. It was so much fun and the Bar J Wranglers were very talented and put on a great show of music and comedy. Hitting the bed tonight and headed for Cody, Wyoming tomorrow to stay for a few days. (Cathy)/the Bar J Wranglers go all over to perform. If you ever get a chance to see them I don't think you will be disappointed. They are really talented and put on a great show!! (Glenn) What a day! We went to bed early last night because we knew today would be long and tiring. Cathy agreed to get up at 6:00 AM and we were rolling by 6:30 on our way to Yellowstone National Park. It was so cold (low 40's) and Cathy threatened to stay in Jackson to shop but she hung in and made it fine. We heard temperatures in Alabama were over 100 degrees so we try not to complain we are having to layer our clothes to stay warm (it never got over 62 degrees in the park). I did not bring any gloves because it was hard to anticipate weather like this when you are leaving the hot and humid Alabama weather.. I may have to go shopping for a few clothes because we plan to ride into Canada and later in the Rocky Mountains so we may see more cold weather. We arrived to see the "Old Faithful" geyser blow and we showed a picture of the event that happens about every hour. It was nice but we really enjoyed the scenery of the mountains, rivers, and valleys more than any of the geysers. Jim Neal, you are right, very little wildlife to be seen, about six buffalo and a dozen elk were all we saw the entire day. Traffic was stopped and someone said there were bear cubs on the side of the road but we never saw them. The falls were spectcular but required some hiking to get the best view. It was a great day but we returned twelve hours later totally exhausted. We plan to recover by not riding the bike more than a mile or two tomorrow to eat and shop downtown. (Cathy)For those who have traveled with the Energizer Bunny before...Yellowstone in a day..enough said. Seriously, you just can't describe all we have seen and pictures do not do them justice. Everything is just BIG and beautiful.We could all go in together and buy a ranch here for about 6 million.lol I just could not live here, it is way too cold and everything is so spread out. There's not a Wal Mart for some people for a hundred miles! Seriously. And just going to a movie would be an overnight trip. Great scenery though!! (Glenn) Today we left the solitude of Thermopolis, Wyoming and continued our trek westward. We rode through some nice backroads through some smaller mountain ranges until we reached the Grand Teton National Park. We rode through the park and along the Jackson Lake and Jenny Lake areas. We got closer to the mountains than seen on the photo but we thought the lake in front of the mountains looked to nice to pass up the chance at a photo. After touring the park, we rode to the Jackson Hole area where we will stay for three nights. Rooms are much more expensive here but understandable because it is so close to everything and it is vacation season. Tomorrow we plan to get up early and ride to Yellowstone National Park to spend the entire day. We stopped by a local grocery store tonight and bought some things for a picnic in the park (Bears will not be invited). (Glenn) Today Cathy and I did as we planned...Nothing. We slept later, ate a great breakfast, and headed for the mineral hot springs. We went to the springs at our hotel and also visited the state pools at the park next door and and walked to the downtown area of Thermopolis (not much happening in this town except for an excellent taco truck we found for lunch). We just enjoyed reading our books and relaxing in the pools. Tonight we went next door and had a nice steak dinner. Tomorrow we plan to ride through the Grand Teton National Forests and stay a few days in the Jackson Hole area. We have ridden about 2,500 miles the past week but have enjoyed not feeling rushed to be anywhere. (Glenn) Today we left Rapid City, South Dakota and headed west. Great weather (upper 70's and low 80's). We routed through the Bighorn National Forest to Thermopolis, Wyoming. I had no idea we were about to pass through some of the best scenery yet. I guess leaving cornfields and grassy plains for the past week and coming into the mountains would get me excited. Winding roads through mountain ranges covered with pines, rocky cliffs, streams, and various colored grasses was not expected. We hit a small rain shower and temperatures dropped into the upper 50's for a short time. We found our hotel in Thermopolis, Wyoming and it is so nice. The courtyard has a swimming pool and the hot tub is continuously fed from the natural hot springs. They check the temperature each hour and it was 103 degrees when we were in it today. The springs smell like sulfer and are supposed to have many minerals believed to be healthy for the body. The springs were gifted to the US governmet by the native americans in the late 1800's. This is supposed to be the largest natural hot springs in the world. We came here for two days to just relax, read, and soak as much in the hot springs as possible for the next two days. We may smell like sulfer but we feel so good. (Cathy) I have soaked quite a bit. My toe feels better and so does my butt. Also, Glenn says I look at least a year or two younger already...I may stay in that hot springs 24-7.lol He will say anything to stay on my good side. When Cathy and I got up this morning we planned to relax, read, wash clothes, and wash the bike. Well, we could not stand it and after lunch we had to hit the road again on the motorcycle to explore the area. I did get the bike washed before we left but we rode back tonight in some rain so it looks like I never cleaned it. We rode to Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming . It is an unusual tower of rock that was considered to be sacred by the native americans. We are glad to have seen it but have no plans to return ever again. It was a long ride but the roads were nice. On the way back to the hotel in Grand Rapids, we went to Sturgis, South Dakota. It is home to the biggest motorcycle rally in the country but it doesn't start for a few more weeks, We have mixed feelings about missing the rally but I will not miss looking for rooms and a place to eat with 500,000 other bikers in town. The most interesting thing we saw was the atmosphere at the Full Throttle Saloon. You can not explain the place. Let's just say the roaming donkey sums it up pretty well. It tried to get Cathy's purse, ate someones food off their plate, and the photo with me was just after it chewed on a souvenier shirt it had pulled from one of the racks. We saw a huge full rainbow on our way home and Cathy said it was the prettiest thing she had ever seen. Cathy is washing our clothes before we go to bed and tomorrow we plan to go to Thermopolis, Wyoming for a couple of days to soak in their famous mineral hot springs. Cathy is not blogging tonight but she wants everyone to know we love the responses and look forward to reading all of them. We do not respond but we read them all. We are having a great time. (Glenn) Today we only rode about 150 miles but we covered alot of ground. On our way to Mount Rushmore we drove through Bear Land. It was like a mini safara with wolves, bears, deer, elk, and so much more.We had to use their courtesy vehicle for safety from the animals (no motorcycles allowed). It was a hidden gem and we were glad we found it. One section we parked our vehicle and visited the several baby bear cubs, TOO CUTE. Mount Rushmore was impressive but it was getting more crowded and hotter. Like other national treasures, pictures do not do it justice. Most of our riding was on some of the best motorcycle roads I have ever ridden. Needles Highway and Iron Mountain Road on each side of Custer State Park had a lot of curves and winding roads and full of beautiful scenery. We saw a couple hundred buffalo and had to stop once and allow one to get out of the road. Wind Cave National Park was also full of wildlife (more than Custer State Park Wilderness Loop) and we took a tour of the cave. Although we rode fewer miles, I am very tired because much of it was winding and took more attention as I was riding. Hot dogs for lunch and splitting an Arby's sandwich for dinner made Cathy a cheap date once again. I have to admit she is a great riding companion and never complains....almost never. (Cathy) Yes I was going to pass on going thru Wind Cave. Would have to wait over to hours for this tour. Glenn got out little blanket and put me in the shade with a snack. Glad he did. It was such a unique cave.I saw pheasant mama and her babies. Bison & their little calves.Deer and of course those cute little prarie dogs popping their little heads up while Glenn was tooting his horn.Bunches of them probably thinking what is going on around here? Too much noise.haha (Glenn) We had a perfect day. Cathy was up before me (which is very unusual) and ready to hit the road. We left while the roads were not crowded and the air was cool. About an hour down the road we entered the Badlands National Park and Cathy paid $10 for her lifetime national parks pass-this will get both of us into the 15-20 national parks we have planned for this trip free. The Badlands are hard to describe. Look behind us in the photo and you will see jagged mountain-like formations. It was beautiful and very unusual. The road wound 30 miles through the park and ended in Wall, South Dakota. That is where the famous Wall Drug store is located. It is HUGE and very entertaining. They have everything you can imagine and we spent about two hours there. There were signs on the side of the road for this drug store for hundreds of miles before we got there so we were anxious to see it. It was getting hot so we checked into our hotel in Rapid City, South Dakota early and showered and hit the pool to relax. Later we road through Sturgis to an old western town called Deadwood famous for being where Wild Bill Hicock was killed. It was a nice western themed town but we did not enjoy all of the tourist shops and casinos. The steak dinner at Maverick's was excellent. Not sure if we will return to Deadwood but we have not explored Sturgis yet so we will be back in the area in a couple of days. Riding back to the hotel this evening it was a cool 65 degrees. We are riding south tomorrow to see many things including Mount Rushmore. (Cathy)Just when I think I am so tired late in the day, hot and sweaty, I may be coming home....I wake up refreshed and /READY TO GO.. Having a great time. Seeing so many things I never thought about seeing. |
AuthorGlenn and Cathy Stephens Archives
October 2015
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