snapshots | west coast adventure | 08.22-25.14

I spent this past weekend wandering around Vancouver with my best friend and it was so wonderful! As much as I love Alberta, it felt really great to get out of the province and spend some time on the coast. We were blessed with beautiful weather, the perfect amount of time for everything we wanted to do, and Ed Sheeran tickets! I even brought along my little Nikon to document our time in beautiful VanCity. Here are my favourites from the weekend:

The drive to Vancouver is a long, but beautiful one. We made a couple stops along the way to stretch out and breathe in the fresh mountain air. At this particular roadside stop, Adam noticed some pretty interesting rocks and continued to search for “best friend road trip rocks” for the rest of our trip!

We arrived in the city in the late afternoon and decided to go to Stanley Park. It was my first time there and I couldn’t believe how amazing and green and peaceful it was. We spent a couple of hours walking beneath the towering trees, soaking in the grandeur of the park. We even stumbled upon a couple getting their wedding photos taken! (I obviously snagged a creeper shot of the two of them – they looked so beautiful!)

We slept well into the late morning on Saturday and spent the afternoon eating hearty breakfasts, drinking coffee, and going shopping! We watched Ed Sheeran play at Ambleside Park later that evening and it was such an incredible experience! The show started at sunset and the venue was gorgeous – open skies and right by the ocean. Ed played the show on his own, often using loop pedals to make it sound like he was alongside an entire band. There were over 12,000 people in the crowd singing with him, in awe of his talent. Vancouver was one of the very few Canadian destinations on his tour; I am so happy we made the decision to venture out to the coast to see him!

Sunday was our last day in the city and we definitely made the best of it! We started our day in Horseshoe bay, a quaint oceanside community in West Vancouver. We had breakfast at a waterfront restaurant, wandered along the beach, and explored the residential streets before we headed back on the highway.

We spent the rest of the afternoon at the VanDusen Botanical Garden. We wandered around the grounds for hours – it was such a charming place to explore! After the gardens, we headed over to David Lam Park in Yaletown to watch a movie in the park. Hook was playing for the evening in loving tribute to Robin Williams. It was beautiful – hundreds of people gathered under the stars to pay their respects and relive childhood memories.

On Monday, Adam and I made the best of a very long drive back home with driving games and lots of detours. We stopped in Summerland and Peachland for some sightseeing and coffee; Vernon to take a dip in the lake (to Adam’s dismay); Crazy Creek outside of Revelstoke to walk across the suspension bridge; and Golden for some deep-fried deliciousness at a local pub. I really can’t quite express just how amazing this weekend away was. I am so grateful to have spent it in such a beautiful city and with such a beautiful human being alongside me. I am also so grateful that Adam doesn’t mind my camera constantly clicking around him because my favourite photos always end up being the ones that he’s in!

Happy Tuesday, everyone!

| alex

snapshots | moraine lake | 08.10.14

This past Sunday was filled with sunshine, a Kool-Aid blue lake, and the love of my life. Adam and I slept beneath the stars in the mountains, wandered around the woods, climbed a giant rock pile, and went canoeing in Moraine Lake. It was such an amazing way to spend a day.

I’m so lucky to live only hours away from such incredibly beautiful places; I’m so grateful to have somebody so special to explore them with.

| alex

Alberta Adventures: Badlands

Adam and I recently read about two ghost towns near Drumheller, so over the weekend we decided to do some van-camping in the badlands! As we drove toward the ghost towns on Saturday, we noticed signs pointing to several tourist destinations around Drumheller that we had never heard of. We turned off our planned path to walk across a suspension bridge, see the Hoodoos, explore deserted areas, read by a lake. It was one of those wonderful weekends where you feel like you have all the time in the world. So we did everything that we wanted to do, whenever we wanted to do it. It was so much fun adventuring, exploring, and relaxing around Drumheller with my best friend. Here are some of my favourite photos from the weekend:

We made some lovely memories this weekend. I hope you spent yours doing the same!

| alex

Alberta Adventures: Bankhead

This past weekend, Adam and I felt like an adventure so we headed out to the mountains and camped there overnight. We placed a mattress in the back of Adam’s van, found a secluded side road in Canmore, and spent the night surrounded by mountains, trees, and stars. It was perfect.

In the morning, we drove into town, ate brunch at Harvest Cafe (it was delicious), and browsed around a little vintage shop across the street. Afterwards, we headed to a ghost town called Bankhead just outside of Banff! We’d been planning on exploring  ghost towns nearly every summer but never really got around to it; I’m so glad we finally did! It was so interesting and fun to explore! Bankhead is well-travelled; there’s a pathway that guides you through it and plaques placed around the town briefing you with historical information. There aren’t any buildings left standing (the closest is shown in the photo above), but there are a lot of concrete foundations and even an old mining cart to see! Here are some of my favourite photos from Bankhead:

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We headed home shortly after exploring Bankhead, but decided to stop after noticing an abandoned building just off the highway. I’ve actually noticed it in passing before, but had never really thought about it. I guess given the theme of our day so far, this was the perfect time to stop and take a look around! I’m not sure what the building was used for before, but all that’s left now is broken windows, graffiti, and a roof that’s caving in. There were also a lot of beer bottles and used couches. It made for a fun detour and great photos though!

I love going on adventures with Adam and I can’t wait for a summer filled entirely with weekends as amazing as this one! Happy Wednesday, everyone!

| alex

Wandering Around Ireland: Day One

photo1Saturday was a long day of snacking in airports, watching lots of movies, and trying to fall asleep in small, uncomfortable spaces. Irina, Kelsey, and I left Calgary at 10 a.m. on Saturday and arrived in Dublin at 6 a.m. on Sunday. It was an absolute wonder as we descended into the country; We arrived as the sun was rising and the clouds parted to reveal nothing but lush green and distant mountains. Despite the grogginess and jet lag, the moment we stepped out of the airport we immediately felt a rush of energy from the cool breeze and smell of rain. We had barely stepped foot into the country and were already so full of wonder and love and awe.

Since our arrival, we have rented a car (with relative ease, given our uncertainty with being able to do in the first place), driven for the first time on the other side of the road, slummed around the hostel while we waited to check-in, napped, and wandered around the city. We haven’t done much, but today has been littered with small, beautiful blessings. We’ve now been here for almost a full day and can honestly say that we have adored every single person we’ve come into contact with: The men who helped us with renting a car, the hostel employees, our taxi-driver, our server at the bar. They have all been so incredibly welcoming, friendly, funny, and helpful. And on our aimless wanderings today, we have encountered the most beautiful sights.

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There was a point today while we were all half asleep on the couches and benches of the hostel common room: we had several hours to go until we could check-in, were all incredibly tired, and all we wanted to do was sleep in a real bed. I thought about how much of a blessing it is to be travelling with two people you love so dearly. I’ve travelled alone before and, while I appreciated the experience, there is something so uniquely loving and comforting about those moments of sleep-deprived waiting with people you love; about those groggy conversations of interesting facts about Pharrell Williams, boyfriend’s sweaters, and parents who don’t know how to use Facebook; about knowing you’re right on the edge of an exciting and beautiful adventure (that you’ll be ready for as soon as you nap for several hours on a real bed).

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It has been a day beautifully spent with two incredibly beautiful people. I hope yours was the same.

| alex

Drop Everything & Travel: In Defense of Young Recklessness

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My first real experience with travel was after I had graduated from high school. I hadn’t decided what my direction in life was going to be; I thought 17 was far too young an age to decide what I was going to do for the rest of my life. I decided to take some time off to figure out who I was, learn more about the world around me. So while my friends were picking out which university courses to enroll in, I was picking out which countries I was going to go to. I ended up spending three months backpacking through South East Asia with two of my friends. We spent time in Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Laos, and Brunei. Since then, I have spent a month in Costa Rica by myself, a couple of weeks in London with a friend, two weeks road-tripping to California, and a month in Vietnam with my boyfriend. All of these trips have been beautiful, fun, revealing, enriching. They have all been amazing in completely different ways.

I went for coffee with Alana, one of the girls I went to Asia with, a couple of days ago and we started reminiscing about our trip. It’s been four years since we went; naturally, a lot has changed. We talked about the time we had no plans on Halloween so we decided to get tattoos; how our only plan was to walk around and find the cleanest looking studio for us to get them done in; how we went swimming again only a couple of days afterward. We talked about how often we partied, how we were drunk for the majority of our trip. We talked about all the strangers we met, stayed with, kissed. We talked about the night we completely blacked out and got separated and spent the next two days sick and exhausted. We talked about how completely absurd all of that sounds to us now.

We’re both still in our very early twenties; we haven’t become boring (well, she hasn’t at least) but we have grown up a little bit. We’ve both travelled since then and our experiences have been different every time. My month in Costa Rica was solitary and a time of personal exploration; while I did meet a couple of people in different towns, I spent most of my time on my own. I read, wrote, fell asleep on beaches almost everyday. Alana and I went to London together as well; we spent a lot of time walking around the city, sightseeing, visiting all of the historical landmarks (and Harry Potter filming locations, obviously). We made friends in our hostel, met up with old ones. We stayed in the same hostel the entire time, walked down the same street to get to the tube every morning, bought coffee at the same cafe. By the end of the trip, we felt like we had a new home there and we loved feeling that way. Adam and I spent our month in Vietnam wandering around different towns, trying to find the best used bookstore in each one. We ended up loving one of the towns so much that we stayed there for half of our trip. And for the first time since I’ve started travelling, food was an important aspect of our trip; we loved trying new dishes, looking for different restaurants to try every night.

My point is, travelling often changes as you get older. At the least, it changes depending on which stage of your life you’re currently in, what you’re going through, who you’re with. You’re going to have a different experience with every new adventure. Alana and I talked about how there are so many people who disapprove of taking time off school to travel, how there were so many people who looked down on us for doing so, and how they doubted our ability to live (what they thought was) a productive and successful life afterward. Almost every single one of those people have told me that their plan is (and my plan should be) to travel after they’ve graduated from university, that it’s more mature, reasonable, smart. It’s difficult to argue against that; it does seem more logical. And while I obviously haven’t experienced waiting until completing a degree to travel, I do have the experience of deciding to go beforehand. And it’s been an incredible one. So as a 20-something who’s been traveling steadily for the past four years, allow me to argue in favour of travelling before you go back to school or taking time off from school to travel. Allow me to defend young recklessness and wandering.

I can’t provide you with percentages and surveys and I can’t tell you with absolute certainty what is statistically accurate. But I can tell you what has been true of my experience. I can tell you this: I know of too many adults in my life who waited to travel the world and never have. I can tell you that I speak to more people on a daily basis who are envious of my travels than people who can relate to them, that I hear far too often of how fast life progresses after university toward real responsibilities, a career, a family. I can tell you that I have never once spoken to anybody who has decided to cast off responsibilities, step out of their comfort zone, go against what was expected of them to travel and regretted it.

I can tell you that stepping onto a plane going to the other side of the world when you’re 17-years-old is an incredibly unique experience; that it is both terrifying and thrilling; that you will feel so brave, so invincible; that you will never forget the texture of that moment. I can tell you that there are fears and inhibitions that you have not yet developed at seventeen and that you should take advantage of that; sometimes the best memories come from not thinking twice, from not looking before you leap. I can tell you that sunrises on a beach in Thailand, while not any less marvelous, will feel vastly different when you’re young and naive and immature; when you and your friends are still a little drunk on a boat back to the island your hostel is on; when you have paint on your face and glowsticks around every appendage; when you’re exchanging foggy memories of loud music, dancing in bare feet, and kissing someone in the ocean. I can tell you that travelling at a young age forces you into independence, challenges you, changes you, and I can tell you that that is important and invaluable. I can tell you that there are things you learn about the world and about yourself that are better lived in perpetual movement than in stagnation, that I have learned more in months of travelling than I have in two years of post-secondary education.

I know that this is not the path that everyone will travel on, or even needs to. I know that there are incredible experiences and unforgettable memories that people gain from travelling on other paths, like going to university or trade school or working right out of high school. But if you are on the edge, if your heartstrings are even only slightly pulling you toward an adventure into a great unknown, just book your flight and don’t look back. There are many things that people regret at the end of their lifetime, but I have never once met someone who regretted exploration and adventure. I’m not saying that this isn’t something you can’t achieve as you get older, but I am saying that there is something uniquely beautiful and transformative about travelling when you’re young. I wish upon every young person coming into their own the hazy memories of stumbling hand-in-hand with people you love through streets littered with illuminated lanterns, the memory of watching the sunset on a beach by yourself and letting go of everything in your life you didn’t need in order to be happy.

I can’t say it any better than how Jason Mraz once wrote it on his own blog: “You were not born here to work and pay taxes. You were put here to be part of a vast organism to explore and create. Stop putting it off.” So quit your job, take a couple of years off from school. Contrary to what you are constantly hearing, you really are so young and you really do have so much time. Don’t feel rushed into anything you aren’t ready for and don’t put yourself in a position where one day you’ll wonder what might have been. Don’t settle for anything less than what will you make you extraordinarily happy.

Drop everything. Go on an adventure.

| alex

A Peek Inside Our Adventure Books

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I’ve always had a deep fear of forgetting. It’s never been about leaving my keys in the car or getting to the grocery store and not knowing why I went in the first place. It’s not even about studying for weeks for an exam and then having everything fall out of my head as I sit down at my desk. It’s about those 4 a.m. heart-to-hearts with my best friend, when I get home as the sun is rising and I crawl into bed feeling like my life is finally changing for the better. It’s about those early mornings with the love of my life, when the sunlight is kissing his face and I feel like the luckiest girl in the world because I’m the one who gets to trace my fingers along his cheek and look at him one last time before I drift back to sleep. It’s about those warm summer nights with my closest friends, when we set off fireworks and sit around campfires and I look around at the people I’ve chosen to surround myself with and my heart swells with gratitude. I can’t bear the thought of forgetting moments, people, places that once meant the world to me. It’s why I used to write in my journal so often and why I’m trying to do so again. And it’s why I’ve always loved taking pictures.

Adam and I have been together for two years (as of this Saturday, actually!) and it has been a complete whirlwind of an experience. I have never been happier alongside another human being, never had someone who understood me so completely and cared for me so deeply. At a time in my life when I’m uncertain of so many different aspects of my future, I feel an incredible amount of comfort knowing that I can count on him being a part of it. I never want to forget a moment of our time together; everything from backyard camping to nights we did nothing but play our Nintendo DS’s mean the world to me. When we first started dating, we decided we would always go on adventures together and that we would keep books to document them (à la Up). I envision our future home with numerous bookshelves, at least a shelf or two dedicated to keeping our adventure books tucked inside them. We have two completed ones so far, containing things like photos, ticket stubs, and notes written to one another. There are so many opportunities to be creative and try new things: we used a sketchbook for our first adventure book, Adam made our Vietnam one, and we’re using a binder and inserts for our third. Although we occasionally fall behind on keeping them updated, they’ve been wonderful to have and to look back on. I thought I would share them in an effort to inspire those of you who have a similar appetite for memory-keeping!

I love that we’ll always have our adventure books to remind us of all the things that, no matter how small, brought us together and made us who we are. I hope this sparks a little bit of creative memory-keeping in some of you today! Happy Wednesday, everyone!

| alex