Who you meet on the trail…..

The full moon was on the 4th of November 2017 and three of us set out for an overnight at Hutches Pools. We rode the tram (kinda cheating) up to the top from the parking area of Sabino Canyon. Off the tram we were with backpacks strapped on and then hiked in the rest of way. Gwen and I had first gone to Hutches Pools two years ago as our “shake-out trip” for the John Muir Trail. We had purchased all our gear for our 210-mile thru-hike, but we had yet to use it so Mother’s Day we hiked in as a gift to ourselves and spent the night. We were familiar with Sabino Canyon. Our favorite tough hike is Blackett’s which is 1.7 miles long situated off Phoneline Trail. In its short 1.7 miles to the end of Blackett’s the elevation gain is 1700’. That trail offers the most bang for the buck of a workout. Phoneline is just a nice, long trail with splendid views of the canyon where you can see folks walking the road, the tram traveling up and down it and the creek flowing in the monsoon season and after rainfall or snow-melt. Sabino Canyon’s most popular water hole trail is Seven Falls that meanders across the creek 7 times before climbing a few switch backs to get to the mid-section of the canyon wall and continue to hike up the canyon to the end where water run-off is spectacular if you time it right and it’s refreshing if nothing else. Until my first trip to Hutches Pools I thought Seven Falls was the greatest in the canyon, but you can’t camp there, and you can at Hutches. So off we went to seek a quiet bright night lit by the full moon.

The some of the trail to Hutches Pool is part of the Arizona Trail that leads north from the Mexican border reaching all the way to the Utah state line. The first time Gwen and I hiked it we ran into an ultra-light hiker who was standing near a ‘y’ in the trail. We asked him where he was going as we were passing by and he replied “Utah”. Wow! We thought he’d say Hutches Pools or back to Sabino Canyon, but nope…. he was in route to Utah. That was cool. I think that might have been our first experience with a thru-hiker on a trail. We were going to be thru-hikers come that July, but we needed to do an overnight first to test our gear so up the trail we continued. Hutches Pools offers a tranquil beauty of a fresh deep pool surrounded by rocks and the opening has a small sandy beach. For our first experience overnight in our new tents, quilts and backpacks at Hutches was perfect so revisiting it was a welcomed reprieve from the city as it is so close and yet so remote. The three of us were excited to spend a Saturday hanging in our hammocks prior to the full moon. A few other friends wanted a day hike, so they hiked in with us, ate their snacks with us and then headed back as we found comfort in our hammocks.

We rested a while and then decided to set up our tents. With fall in full swing dark comes early, around 630. That meant ‘back-packers midnight’. So, all three of same brand orange back packer’s tents were set up in camp that was a bit off the trail and a walk to the actual pools. Gwen and I had found a spot we liked and returned to the same one because we had a huge boulder as wind protection, it sat near a stream (not flowing in November) and we sat back off the trail so if there were to be other hikers at Hutches Pools they wouldn’t be coming through our camp. We had eaten our snacks and our lunch, walked up to the pools and took pictures, set our camp and as the sun was starting to set we made our diners. The feeling of being out in the middle of no-where with everything you need carried in our backs and no noise pollution of civilization set the mood for relaxation and enjoyment. Luckily, our group was the only pool visitors that day, other than the two distance runners who quickly ran to the pool, rested, and returned to the trail to run back to Sabino Canyon. The little paradise was all ours to enjoy.

We all made our dinner and ate with our sporks. We were chatting and listening with gaps of quietness in our conversation. Dinner was cleaned up quick and the sun had fully set. The moon had yet to completely rise so a cast of darkness was coming through the canyon. We settled back in our hammocks to await the moon rise but as time passed and the moon had yet to rise above the canyon walls we all decided we were too tired to wait and we should go to bed. As we were getting ready to bed down we brushed our teeth and situated our belongings I looked up and saw a headlamp come through the trees not where usual traffic would be off the trail. I was startled and realized my bear spray laid in my tent which was now between me and the person in the dark walking straight into our camp. My best response was to say “hello?” only to be answered by a tired and anxious males voice also saying “hello?”.

He stumbled into our camp with what appeared to be exhaustion and asked if he was at Hutches Pools. We said “yes”. I asked, “where did you hike in from?”

He responded, “from the top of the Catalinas up by Summerhaven ski resort.”

“What time did you start?”

He replied with a sigh of relief “8 a.m. this morning. Is there a spot for me to camp around here?”

We all answered at once “Yes”. And then decided it would be best to guide him to the pools in the dark with our headlamps and solar lanterns to make is easier to see and show him a spot near the water a distance from our camp. He was thankful for our attention and we all said good night as we left him taking his back pack off in the dark by himself.

The three of us chatted about him. Brenda was worried about him as he looked like an older gentleman all by himself, but Gwen and I both agreed he had probably been hiking and backpacking since he was a youth.

It was now back-packer’s midnight and we each crawled into our tents into our bedrolls that sat on top of our sleeping pads and we waited for sleep.

Of course, we all were fast asleep before the moon rose but as usual I had to get up to pee in the middle of the night, or I thought it was still night. When I rolled out of my tent and stood up I was amazed as to how bright the dark had become with the moon hanging high in the sky. It looked as bright as day. Wow. That was beautiful. I did my normal squat and crawled back into bed. I had to put my quilt over my eyes to make it dark enough to fall back asleep with the glow of the moon illuminating my tent.

Morning came, and we were breaking camp after our breakfast. The night hiker wondered back into our camp to say thank you for last night’s hospitality showing him a camp site. He was a soft-spoken man with an English accent. We started a conversation with him asking him details of his hike, his hiking history and eventually bid him farewell. As he walked farther from us and out of our sight we continued to discuss him and his story.

“David” had started on the Arizona Trail 5 weeks earlier at the Utah Stateline and needed to finish at the Mexican border within 10 days to catch his flight back home to Canada. He had in fact been hiking and back packing his whole life. He had started when he was about 10 in England, but he had lived in Canada for over 50 years. He was a young 70-year-old who last year had completed the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) in 6 months. He had also trekked the Appalachian Trail. He said he preferred long thru hikes and wasn’t aware of which hike would be his next one. He had been outfitted in an old exterior framed canvas backpack which seemed perfectly sufficient for him. Yikes…. I don’t think they even sell that equipment type anymore. I inquired about what his family thought about his thru hike and time away from home and he said he had no family.  He explained that he found a lot of the thru hikers he had come to meet through his travels also were solo which seemed to allow for their choices of how they spend their time…. on the trails…in the middle of nowhere often alone perfectly ok. We found it all very interesting.

What struck me about meeting him out there was that he was as much of interest as the beauty or the diversity of the landscape we had hiked through. The depth of character and wealth of information he offered I found intriguing. I’m often motivated by ‘wonder’ and I feel at peace in Mother Nature looking at all she offers me to ‘wonder’ about. Yet after speaking to David I reflected on the ‘wonder’ of the souls we meet while out on the trails……and what makes ‘those’ people be the ones you cross paths with? I don’t know … but what I do know is that there seems to be a ‘liked mind-ness’ out on the trails and to be able to share ‘that’ with strangers seems like an additional benefit to hiking.

Looking forward to meeting more hikers on the trails….

-Kat

Holidays hips and giggles

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Cranberry-pistachio biscotti dipped in white chocolate

The holidays seem to be in full throttle after Halloween which makes for an exciting time of the year as it quickly buzzes by to start a new one. I love the holidays. I love everything about the holidays. Especially my holiday baking which starts in October and goes through November. I enjoy making cookies, biscotti and candy for Holiday gifts for friends and family. I’m nearly finished with 9 different cookies, two different biscotti’s and four different chocolates from caramel covered in it to seafoam both dark and milk. Something happens to me during this time of year and my clothes revolt in tightness. 2017 was an interesting year for me weight wise anyways.  I had a fungus that spread like wild fire on my face that was eventually treated with prednisone for 6 weeks prior to and while I was in the jungles of Guatemala eating the native food available which consisted of corn with more corn and the occasional boiled squash or blackberry leaves. It all seemed like a recipe for twenty pounds to find their way into my life and stick to my mid-section. It could cast a dark shadow on the holiday feasts or I can be realistic about it and approach it with wisdom (and caution). But wisdom sounds smarter and a bit more positive.

Since I am not the only one in my tribe with extra pounds showing up on the scale I have support in my efforts and attack plan. We have made a pact to go easy between now and the New Year as our goal is to stay in good condition until then. In January we will start fresh with a new exercise routine. One member of our tribe has already hit her goals of trimming not just weight but inches from her body. She looks and feels fantastic (Congrats Laura). She made a goal and stuck to it prior to the rush of the holidays. Her plan was working out an hour a day, six days a week, doing a different fitness class everyday stirring her body up enough to drop the extra insulation. She is an inspiration. Having workout buddies sure makes the journey to fitness and health a lot more enjoyable plus it helps for accountability. Between now and the New Year my time is going to be split between the mountains (where my boyfriend lives) and Tucson where all my friends live. Being in two places while splitting my time makes a routine difficult to follow but I am not making excuses.

My plan is Laura’s work out plan with two other tribe members who also have crazy travel and work schedules between now and the New Year. We have all agreed to exercise at least five times a week and attempt a calorie deficiency daily to try to get ahead of the game or at least not get behind with more weight gain through New Year’s. Even though I am not in the same town all the time a motivating text between us with words of encouragement can keep me and them on task. My text sent today stated how I missed our workouts together but that I have been trying to hike everyday while in the mountains. The fall weather is far from cold. And I feel like when I’m hiking I’m weight lifting to cus I’m carrying an extra 20 pounds around with me on my belly. I also said I’m looking forward to our January plans. And I received a text reminding me of our 2018 hiking plans. We have booked a 2-night stay at the bottom of the Grand Canyon in February. That’s a great goal to firm up for because hiking in is easy but the hike out can be daunting if your carrying a lot more than your needed gear. We also have plans to hike in March north of the Grand Canyon in southern Utah at the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Keeping ourselves on track and making goals seems to be what maintains motivation among us.

I know that the older we get the easier and faster the weight piles on and then the task of getting it off seems to take almost twice as long. Given that I am going to be “double-nickels” next April; 50 and I have had a few years getting acquainted. I’m understanding the process of aging better and really hope that 2018 and I have a more mutually beneficial relationship when it come to the weight yo-yo. I’m making 55 my year to “get it” and hopefully it sticks. (I also know I will not be taking prednisone anytime soon as that seems to be the ingredient to pack on the extra pounds, but my face rash is resolved-that’s good news)

Maybe this time of year with the holidays hard to ignore and the year ending soon I reflect on what I want to change in the coming year more often. I feel at my age what seems to be of the greatest importance is my overall health and humor. So, I will embrace 2018 with a new exercise routine to shed the extra poundage. And until then I will exercise as consistently as possible given my schedule, reduce my portions and prime myself with my workout buddies for the coming year. Of course, doing all the above laughing all the way. Laughter is life and light to the soul. I just wish sometimes that laughing so hard could count as exercise and I’d lose weight. It’s gotta be good for the ab’s. Without ever taking myself too seriously I look forward to an agreed upon plan for the coming year! I am excited for the hiking trips planned and look forward to even more happening in July for a long through hike in Northern California. All I can think is let’s just do it!

Whose with me?

Kat

cairn noun \ ˈkern \ : a heap of stones piled up as a memorial or as a landmark

I love cairns.
Little cairns, big cairns,  artistic cairns, sloppy cairns. There. I said it: I Love Cairns!  The topic of cairns causes a lot of friction amongst the backcountry loving community who generally are very mellow people. The #1 reason some are apposed to seeing them while hiking is because it goes against LNT (Leave No Trace) which is hands down the most important tenant that responsible backpackers and hikers practice. I myself practice LNT whole heartedly but when it comes to cairns I find them to be comforting. Knowing that those who went before me on the trail thought that the next person behind them may have potential trouble locating exactly where to go, this gesture connects our fellow hikers, a very caring group. Yes of course if you look hard enough, if you bush whack around long enough, if you go in enough circles, the trail always miraculously appears but for the new hiker or the unsure, it truly helps mark where to go. My girlfriend Su is a prime example of a woman who is new to desert hiking and finds cairns to be the signal that she doesn’t need to panic just because the trail isn’t in the obvious spot it should be. Yes, cairns leave proof of human activity, disrupting mother nature as she intended her rocks to sit, but I also feel there is great potential to keep some directionally challenged hikers from getting lost. Maybe I am looking at it too pragmatically but at my age I understand that things can go wrong on the trail and if I had to choose between a person staying on the trail vs. looking at rocks stacked at unnatural attention, I would side with the person. And honestly, I think Mother Nature would too.
~Gwen

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Kat finding the trail thanks to a trusty Cairn left by a previous backpacker.

 

Staying young while we age!

Regardless of where you are in life we all want to be able to do as much as we can while looking and being as healthy as possible. So of course, I read all the trending ideas of how to have healthy this or that. Some I try and some I’d rather not. Some ideas make more sense than others. At my last visit to my OB/GYN she went into why having probiotics was so essential and gave me a recipe for homemade Kiefer. I tried it for a while, but warm dairy products sitting on my kitchen counter started to turn my stomach at sight…. let alone knowing I had to drink a half of cup a day. That was my motivation to move on to the next idea for natural probiotics. I began my search.

After a lot of “googling”, which sometimes I wonder if ‘that’ much information is good or bad. I kept seeing the benefits of fermented drinks, particularly kombucha. Kombucha can help maintain cholesterol levels, strengthen immune system, helps with arthritis and aids in maintaining cellular health. The cellular health part resonated with me because I have heard that some cultures that eat a lot of fermented foods maintain their youthful looks longer which appealed to my 54-year-old face. It also helps to detoxify the body, aids in digestion, boosts energy and helps fight inflammation. Those are all great reasons to at least try it, so I did!

I love kombucha but not the price of commercially sold kombucha. Pre-bottled, commercially sold kombucha’s even at Costco or Sam’s Club are pricey if you want to drink a bottle a day. The breakdown for an 8 bottle case is $2.00 a bottle. That is not bad, but it can be home-made a whole lot cheaper and I think even tastier. Flavors of homemade kombucha are endless and fun to experiment in making. So far, I have mastered pineapple with ground fresh ginger and turmeric root (I keep them in the freezer to keep them fresh & they are easier to shred on the cheese grater when frozen). Yummy and my newest addition is chai seeds for an added benefit of proteins and other important nutrients, antioxidants, fiber (which can make you feel full and help you lose weight) and they contain Omega-3 fatty acids.

To start making kombucha at home you need to start with a SCOBY which is an acronym for ‘symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast’. A starter SCOBY can be purchased on-line or ask around: your friends might be secretly making kombucha and might have a ‘baby’ from their mother SCOBY. Get a hold of one and start today. It takes a couple of weeks to ferment depending on the temperature in your house, the warmer it is the faster it ferments. You will need a large container that holds at least a gallon, cheese cloth and bottles to harvest your batch. Gather the ingredients listed below and you are on your way to saving money and feeling better while looking great too!

Ingredients:

1 kombucha SCOBY

1 gallon purified water*

4 green tea* *bags

4 black tea* *bags

1 cup turbinado (raw) sugar

*have extra water on hand when harvesting to dilute the flavor if needed after adding juices.

**must be caffeinated tea

Instructions:

Heat 4 cups of water to seep tea bags for at least ten minutes and add sugar to dissolve. After tea has seeped, remove tea bags and stir water to ensure all sugar is dissolved. Add the rest of the gallon of water to mixture and place in container.

Once the mixture has reached room temperature add the SCOBY (just like in making bread the SCOBY is yeast and can NOT get too hot). Place cheese cloth over the container and secure with a rubber band. Do not let it in direct sun light. I lightly spray the cheese cloth with vinegar daily to stop bacterial growth on the cloth.

The process takes anywhere from 10 to 21 days depending on temperature. After 7 to 10 days you may want to stick a straw down the side of the container and taste the mixture. If you like it than it is done, if you want more fermentation let it continue to sit and taste test every couple of days. Helpful hint: mark on your calander when you start your batch.

When it is just right take out the SCOBY and a cup of the mixture. Put it in a tightly sealed jar for your next batch and store in the refrigerator. The cold temperatures stop the fermenting process but keeps your SCOBY  fresh. If you want to flavor your kombucha this would be the time to do it. Add fresh juice to taste. Then bottle the contents and refrigerate if you like the taste. OR you want to ferment longer keep it on the counter in the continer with cheese cloth secured with rubber band. Taste it as the days go by to see if you like it.

Rumor has it that you can grow your own mother SCOBY on your kitchen counter in a glass jar containing plain kombucha. The jar needs to be covered with cheesecloth and let it sit for a week or so. Eventually a skin will form on the top of the mixture and that is SCOBY!!!

NOTE: I did not grow my own SCOBY  because I had a friend secretly making her own kombucha and when I told her I wanted to make it as well she gave me her SCOBY baby. SCOBY gets thicker and can be peeled off in layers…. those layers are babies to share (or toss).

Good luck and have fun! You are off to a healthier, younger looking YOU

-Kat

Hiking Angels Landing 

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Behind me is a view of part of the trail along THE “fin” that you must hike to get to the top EEEK!

Angels Landing
Zion National Park, Utah

I’m a thrill seeker. But if I had to categorize my thrill seeking, I would put it in the “thrill seeking chicken” category. I don’t do scary hikes confidently but rather with a fair amount of anxiety. Accomplishing something uncomfortable has its own reward and that reward is an epic reminder to myself that I am still strong both physically and mentally. And that I am still alive. And that’s why I push myself out of my comfort zone.

Last week I hiked Angels Landing in Zion National Park. The last time I hiked this trail, I was in my 40s with 3 other girlfriends plus 6 others in our group cheering us on from Scouts Landing. When we started up the trail, we had zero idea what we were hiking. We hadn’t  read  any blogs or watched any terrifying YouTube videos reliving someone elses experience . The only thing we had was 4 adventurous friends willing to egg each other on. We got to the top, crouched low to avoid being swept off the mountain by the horrific gale force winds that sometimes happen up there, snapped a picture, then beat it down in record time. It was scary and the winds doubled the scare.

This year I hiked it as a 54-year-old and I knew exactly what I was getting into. Angels Landing is a thin mountain ridge or “fin” that runs down the main canyon in Zion with an approximate elevation gain of 1500′. The trail starts easy, crossing the meandering Virgin River and then slowly starts to wind its way up the mountain ultimately reaching Walters Wiggles a super fun…said no one ever…set of 21 short but straight up switchbacks which leads you to a flat spot named Scouts Landing. The landing is beautiful and flat and perfect for a quick  rest and refuel before the last segment.  It’s also the spot to observe those brave souls on the ridge or to watch those hikers who understandably just can’t muster the courage and ultimately turn around. My hubby was my hiking partner this year and once we got to Scouts Lookout we both decided we wanted to get it over with, so we didn’t stop to do any refueling or any observing for fear we’d come to our senses and change our minds . Defeat was not an option because we came to Zion with the specific goal for my husband  to conquer his fear of heights.

Scouts Lookout to the top of Angels Landing is a gain of 500′ and about a half mile to the end of the trail following the fin. The trail has intermittent chains to both pull yourself up and keep yourself steady which I found to be very comforting knowing there was a 1500′ sheer on both sides of some areas where a 3′ wide rocky, slippery sandstone trail is all you have under your feet. There is a little scrambling but nothing major. Its slow and steady hiking with a good amount of “positive self talk” going on in your brain  but when you  reach the top, the thrill of conquering that mountain is unexplainably exhilarating and the views are absolutely mind-blowing!  At the top of Angels Landing you are literally looking down the middle of the entire canyon from above. The Virgin River is now just a thin shimmering ribbon winding its way thru the canyon floor 1500′ below, and the multiple layers of  minerals creating the colorful mountains of Zion are now at eye level which is such a different perspective  than looking up at a canyon!
Climbing Angels Landing again as a 50+ was an exhilarating, adrenaline fueled hike that will stay with me for many years to come. The thrill of that trail should be a definite bucket list goal…even if you are a thrill seeking chicken!

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And oh Yes! my husband did make it to the top, conquering his fear of heights!

~Gwen

 

Find your tribe or create it!

We belong to a great group…or tribe….many of the members have been friends since their babies were infants and now few have kids left in the family nest. Whether we are all together on a day hike or just some of us can meet up, having someone to hold you accountable on the day you’d rather sleep-in but instead planned a crack-of-dawn hike early to beat he Arizona heat always keeps you moving.

Given that the great outdoors offers adventures near and far our tribe does regular day hikes on trails we know like the back of our hands. (We can do the whole trail or go for just the amount of time we have available that day). Or plan a weekend getaway to a place we have only seen in pictures and go to explore! Some of the group has even done international travel together on a journey to far away places in Europe.

A tribe of women can be tricky because we are not all made out of the same mold but a common like of the outdoors and the enjoyment of our spirits naturally being lifted usually makes for lots of laughter and easy flow conversation. Our common love of hiking is simple but the distance we like to go can sometimes be uncommon among us. We try to maintain flexibility with a buddy system so whereever we go if someone doesn’t want to go the whole way then we can break into groups. Everyone stays happy by doing the distance that is best for them.

Our group size waxes and wanes with regulars and guests here and there. Having a tribe provides comfort in knowing that we will always have a hiking buddy and a sounding board for whatever we might need to discuss “with the girls” to get clarity.  Given that not everyone is available everyday having as many as ten women in our group has made availability pretty good for a few of us to consistently match up our schedules.

A couple of us have cabins in the high country in the White Mountains of Arizona. It makes for a cool retreat with a variety of hiking trails when wanting to get out of the Sonoran Desert HOT summer temperatures sounds like a cool idea. This October, eight of us will be seeking aspen-Fall-leaf color while hiking the beautiful mountain trails together. I’m looking forward to exploring trails I’ve yet to see and to share the adventure with the tribe. I’m sure that there will be laughter and humming chatter bouncing off the trees as we walk about them.

Find your tribe….join a hiking club…enjoy what you love with others who feel the same!

Kat

PS. Pics of tribal toe tattoos! and some of the TRIBE .

 

Gwens Introduction 

I’m Gwen and I am the other half of wildsideof50. I once was a 20-something with a terrific husband and 2 sweet babies whom I was blessed to stay home with. But as the saying goes, “The days are long but the years are short”…here I am a 50-something with the same terrific guy and 2 incredible young adult children. These 3 offer me non-stop support for all my whacky adventures and projects. I am grateful for this. 

My interests are broad; I hike and I backpack. I am a frustrated painter. I can knit a scarf but crocheting is a complete mystery that I will conquer before I take my last breath. I sew. I dabble in jewelry. Im always up for Ceramics. and I “do” interiors. I am neither great, nor tragic at any of my interests, but I enjoy it all and it keeps me coming back and it keeps me trying new things. Kat and I both hope our blog about women our age trying and doing will both inspire and challenge. 

~Gwen

Kats’ introduction

Hello I’m Kathleen (called Kat). I am a 54-year-old wondering where the years have gone. I feel like I just turned 50 and thinking it’s not as old as I thought it was when I was 12! The clock is ticking and I want to live as much as possible doing the things I love to do and to do the things I’ve always dreamt about. Fortunately I have a few adventurous friends willing to go for it with me!

I have grown children with my youngest who just graduated from college in May ’17 and is establishing himself in Northern California not far from where I grew up in Napa. (California’s Sierra Nevada’s were my first true love affair with nature.) My children seem to have flown successfully from the family nest into their own and are thriving in the lives they wish to create which makes for a very happy momma.

At 49 I suddenly become a widow and have had to do some re-establishing and adjusting in an attempt to find myself again. Blessings come in many ways; my kids, my family and my friends have more than once provided the missing link to help me find my way to today!!! Regardless of life experiences life after 50 looks a lot different to most of us seeing the golden years creep a little closer. So I’ve tried to keep my big girl pants on and pull up my boots while embracing life’s ups and downs including it’s wild adventures.

I want to share all that’s coming and revisit some of the past with you. I’m hanging on with a warm heart, a big smile and a huge welcome to the ride…..lets go!

~Kat

So happy to be here…

Our first blog entry is exciting……living on the other side of 50, the ‘new’ 30 (at least that is what we think) lets us use what wisdom we have gained through the years and follow through on our desires for the remaining ones we have left. We are wanting to inspire and support adventure seekers who love the outdoors, travel, and the creative spirits looking to express yourselves in DIY projects, be it in the arts, crafts or food, and to share our own ideas, adventures and thoughts about all of it with you! Life is worth living to the fullest potential and that can mean many different things to all of us but hopefully with the like minded “Wild side of 50” followers we can explore and uncover the likeness between all of us looking to be all we can be after 50!

We are here to share our experiences and insights while doing our hikes, from a day hike to a 20-day back-pack trip, including photographs of the beautiful places we visit. Our world travel experiences and why we keep going back to favorite places and continue to explore new ones. We will show you our creative side and sometimes the silly to extravagant DIY projects we undertake. We will include the artistic side of us and the projects we complete. We all have to eat; while sharing some baking or cooking ideas maybe you will try what we think is yummy! Being 50 and embracing what everyday brings with its own aches and pains we will share some of our secrets of will power to just keep on going and live life with passion.

The writers, explorers, artists and creators behind Wild Side of 50 will post their  personel introductions next…

Until then …

~Kat & Gwen