McKenzie as Princess Leah --a beautiful princess!
Whitney as Yoda-I fought a mighty battle to get her in that costume, she is so mad at me in these pictures, and as soon as I finished taking her picture she began ripping it off!!
simplify
This is about two miles in and we had climbed almost 3000 feet, notice how the trail follows the ridge line. Dad wouldn't even look over ledge--he didn't want to 'chicken out' before we arrived at Chicken-Out Ridge.
This is the same stop, but we are looking up at Borah behind me. The air is so light up there that I couldn't keep my arms down. :)
This is our view of Chicken-Out Ridge, see how the trail still follows the ridge line. Where the color changes to yellow is the official starting point of Chicken-Out. We saw our fair share of hikers that stopped and waited for their buddies, or others that stopped and just went right back down the mountain.
This was the worst part. My finger is pointing to the little notch that we scrambled to get thru. What you can't see is the 'imminent death ledge' that looms to the left or the 'less steep but still pucker-worthy ledge' to the right.
This is a picture of Dad showing the 'big gun' he brought to keep the bears away. We are at the top of Borah here. The temperature was in the upper 50's with a mild breeze. As you can tell we felt great making it to the top before sunset.
There was a U.S.A. flag along with an Idaho flag that was hanging upside down(I guess altitude sickness makes you do funny things). We signed the log book, had a sandwich, called the girls with my cellphone. Surprisingly the signal wasn't great--I had to stand on the north part of the peak and face west or I lost the call. Some other hikers brought a few cans of Budweiser--that didn't seem like the smartest thing to do heading down the mountain. Yes, I had to work hard to keep my arms down.
This is one of the tricky parts of Chicken-Out Ridge. You climb about 20 feet straight up and then head down about 80 feet off to the right. Then we scrambled along a 'snow field', which was a side-hill trail that was in the shade and had snow from the past week. Notice the light air lifting Dad's arms up again.
Here is Dad on the way down. This is about 1000 feet down from the peak, and it was steep shale that would make you slide down almost just as much as you would step up. It was a grunt going up, but on the way down it was a 'controlled slide.' You can see the winding stream at the bottom, that is where our car was at.
Here is Dad and I at the top of Mount Borah. 12,662 feet up and the tallest peak in Idaho. Not bad for a 55 year old and his 30 year old son.