When Joel picked me up at the Fort Lauderdale International Airport yesterday I had been awake since 4:30 am PDT on the 20th of May. I got into Fort Lauderdale around 10:51 EDT on the 21st of May, so that means I had been awake for approximately 16 hours. I was a zombie. I also had a backache from sitting on the plane for 7 hours of flight – even though they were first class seats with a little more leg room.
Joel dropped me off and I immediately found my A/C didn’t work. The thermostat apparently has batteries and they died while on the trip. I had to search through my file of manuals to find the thermostat manual to see which type of batteries and how to replace them. Then I had to reprogram the thermostat to finally get the A/C working.
After that it was grocery shopping, unpacking, storing the suitcase (ladder work), washing clothes, folding clothes, and cooking dinner. I was about to drop. I went to bed at 6 pm (fortified by two stiff bourbons) and promptly conked out. I got up twice to pee but immediately went back to sleep. I got out of bed at 8 am and realized I had slept soundly for 14 hours. I feel much better today!
First up was a phone call from Holy Cross oncology wanting to schedule a chemotherapy consultation. Darla had tried to contact me before my vacation and I had tried to reach her to respond but that didn’t happen. Today we agreed on the same date as my echocardiogram, just earlier than the echocardiogram (this Wednesday). I assume they will tell me what nastiness to expect. Without my knowledge, they had already prescribed two drugs: prochlorperazine (anti sickness – think sea sickness type of drug) and ondansetron (nausea and vomiting). Actually, both work similarly. I had CVS mail me the drugs. I hate going to CVS and the $4 shipping charge is worth not having to deal with the store.
Next was making entries into my check book app. It’s hard to keep checking accounts in order when on vacation and it takes time to go through credit cards and make entries from the trip. Invariably, something is forgotten and I have to do a “reconcile” entry after all is said and done.
I’ve been on the computer ever since I got breakfast put away. First, some insurance work for the flood insurance. They asked for a photo of my drivers license. I didn’t want to send the photo email so I asked about other forms of identification that showed my home address. No, that wouldn’t work. I had to have a photo that I could black out everything but the address. I scanned my license and did block out everything other than the address and my name. I sent it off. No, wait, you also have to send the photo with the issue date. That meant another scan, re-blocking, and re-sending with the caveat that Florida licenses do not have an issue date but they do have an expiration date. My mistake, they do have an issue date and I resent that photo. I’m waiting now for the same request with a different set of blocking parameters. God bless insurance companies because I certainly will not.
Next up were surveys from Amazon and the Salish Lodge. I normally don’t do surveys but I wanted to input my opinion on these, more so the Salish Lodge. I gave the staff and valet excellent reviews but panned the food. My final recommendation for the lodge was “Get a new chef.”
The appointments person at Holy Cross made four additional appointments for chemo infusions without notifying me. They just appeared on my Holy Cross App that I happened to check. Included in the appointments were day-after-infusion injections. I assume these to be one of two things: nausea or immune system boost. I’ll probably find out about that on Wednesday.
It was good to be back home. This is gonna be a very busy week with all the appointments. I thoroughly enjoyed the trip. Hiking in the woods and seeing waterfalls gave me peace of mind and I feel I am in a better place to start the process involved with my breast cancer treatment. I look forward to the time after the initial infusions that I might be able to get back on the trail and do some more hiking. Hopefully, I’ll get used to the chemo quickly and will have enough stamina to continue to get out in the woods.
Meanwhile, here are a few photos that didn’t make the original posts.
My first view of this was along the Avalanche Lake trail in Glacier National Park several years ago. The photograph above is the mature branch of another plant I found along the Twin Falls Trail. In Mississippi, they have a similar plant, Aralia spinosa, and it is called Devil’s Walking Stick. It’s really nasty. I can attest with a personal story. I was collecting plants at Tishomingo State Park and began an uncontrolled slide down a hill and I grabbed the first thing that came into view. That was a big mistake. Click on the link and you’ll see why.
The rainforests in the U.S. are Tongass National Forest in Alaska, Hoh Rainforest in Olympic National Park, Chugach National Forest in Alaska, Redwoods National Park, Mount Hood Wilderness, Appalachian Temperate Rainforest in the southern Appalachians (north Georgia and western N.C.) Quinault Rain Forest in Olympic National Park, and the only tropical rainforest in the U.S., El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico. Of these, I’ve been in Hoh, Redwoods, and Appalachian Temperate.
I plant to blog updates to my cancer treatment so if that bothers you, this will be the last Salish Lodge/Snoqualmie Falls update.
Author: searcyf@mac.com
After 34 years in the classroom and lab teaching biology, I'm ready to get back to traveling and camping and hiking. It's been too long of a break. I miss the outdoors and you can follow my wanderings on this blog.
View all posts by searcyf@mac.com
One thought on “Salish Lodge and Snoqualmie Falls – Day 6”
Great blog. I enjoy the vivid descriptions and fascinating photographs. I was particularly impressed with the appearance of the water in the time-lapse photographs. BTW, I think you were awake closer to 27 hours straight, not just 16. Too bad about all the a/c and all the stuff when you got home. Glad it is taken care of now. Keep the blogs coming.
Great blog. I enjoy the vivid descriptions and fascinating photographs. I was particularly impressed with the appearance of the water in the time-lapse photographs. BTW, I think you were awake closer to 27 hours straight, not just 16. Too bad about all the a/c and all the stuff when you got home. Glad it is taken care of now. Keep the blogs coming.