Archive for the ‘betsy’ tag
Camping at Horseshoe Lake
Click to see my photojournal of our camping trip to Horseshoe Lake
February 14-15, 2009: Mesquite campground at Horseshoe Lake, Verde River.
Highlights of this trip:
- The Brazaletes Pueblo ruin at the summit of St. Clair Mountain was extremely fascinating. One of the most extensive ruin sites I’ve seen (that hasn’t been developed for public interpretation, that is).
- First time camping since Scott made the dinette modification. Compared to the bench seat we had previously, the dinette is SO family friendly. The set up is much roomier and the layout is far more conversational. I liked that there was room for the hubby, a tween and the toddler to sit there while I prepared a meal and served it to them at the table. When we had the bench, there wasn’t a lot of room for other people to sit on it while I was cooking – knees in the way. And, of course, no table, so I was handing the food out. We always had to eat outside. While that is usually something we WANT to be doing, since we’re camping, after all, it was pretty cold on this trip (got below freezing at night) so we were glad to have the dine-inside-where-it-was-warm-and-comfortable option.
- HM fell into the river once while climbing out onto a tree from the beach at our campsite. Completely drenched, from head to toe. Later, after she was dried off and in dry, warm clothes, the dog dragged her into the water’s edge from the muddy beach. Not as wet this time, but much muddier.
I think HM learned her lesson and now understands why I always harp about using the gentle leader!
- It was cold weather for falling into the freezing cold river (like HM did… twice!) or sitting at icy concrete picnic table, but it was the PERFECT temperature and conditions for hiking and exploring, which we managed to do a lot of on this trip!
Baby look-a-like
HM was flipping through an old photo album just now and shouted, Mom, who IS this who looks like Jake?? (It’s me lol)


Nursing in public
I have NEVER been able to discreetly nurse a baby in a sling before, nor have I been good at nursing in a carrier while on the go, so today marked a first.
This afternoon, while we were touring a REAL ghost town, Jake started fussing while I was wearing him (front carry). I loosened the right shoulder strap and pulled up my shirt (hurrah for the bella band that I had the presence of mind to wear – no skin exposed), guided babe to breast and continued on tour while he nursed away. You couldn’t tell he was nursing at all – he just looked crashed out.
And then the combo of nursing and walking and snuggled up all at once made him crash out for real when he was done. I resettled him, pulled my shirt back down and pulled up the hood – and he snoozed for about 30 minutes of the walk. So cool!! It was really nice to just keep on truckin’ without stopping for 10+ minutes to feed the boy. And it’s not like there were really any good spots to stop anyway – it was dusty and dilapidated. Also, I got so many smiles from strangers who thought the “sleeping” baby was really cute.
Nursing in the Ergo while hiking:

A common scenario

Mom to 4 kids and 2 stepkids, I am a writer writing in the heart of chaos. I am the co-founder and former editor of 