This is a rare non-hiking related post for us but we wanted to share the story of the wonderful gift that Buddy was to our lives. For the last 17 years he brightened our lives and while that seems like a long time in years it felt way too short.
Shortly after we moved into our first house in 2002 we decided to add a cat to our family. In December we visited the Humane Society where Buddy made it clear that we would be taking him home with us. (He never did stop telling us what to do and when to do it.) When we had made our choice (given in to his demands) the folks at the Humane Society gave us a note that had come to the shelter with Buddy, a note that we’ve kept to this day.


Dominque was 7 so we had the little boy covered.

Grace also mentioned that Buddy liked having his belly rubbed, something cats often do not care for. He loved a good belly rub though and would curl up around your hand.

Things got off to a rocky start for us, Buddy was so excited to have a home that he wasn’t bothering to eat. We took him to the vet and tried several things eventually having to leave him there overnight so that they could feed him intravenously and get his stomach used to food again. They explained to us that if cats don’t eat for a while they will stop feeling the need to, some sort of defense mechanism to ease the pain of starving. The stay at the vet worked and after he came back home eating was a favorite of his.
Buddy shortly after coming home with us.
A year after Buddy joined us we brought Hazelnut home. Buddy did his best to welcome her and we would often find them curled up together in the early days.





Buddy loved to jump up on things to get as high in the house as he could and getting into any drawer or cupboard that he could.





His jumping days were cut short by arthritis in his hip which required medication but his love of opening drawers and cupboards never faded. Often we would come home from a trip to find half the cupboards and drawers wide open.
He also loved to curl in the sink when he could still get up on the bathroom counter (and fit) and he never met a sack or box (he especially loved boxes) that he didn’t need to get into.




Buddy’s one vice was that he loved to chew on things. We had a no plant rule in the house (other than grass that he could eat) because he would make a b-line straight for anything green, including the fake Christmas tree which he gnawed ends off. Toys that were attached to strings were largely ignored so that he could simply chew on the string. There was also a strange obsession with pipe cleaners. Dominique had used them at one time for a school project and for years after that Buddy would (if he got into Dominique’s room) somehow manage to find one and drag it out to chew on. None of us, including Dominique, could figure out where he was getting them but he had a stash hidden somewhere. The only time string didn’t temp him was when it was the yarn Heather was using for her crochet. Somehow he knew that was off-limits.
Partners in crime in the Christmas tree.
From day one Buddy was a lap cat.






January 4, 2020

He spent all of his 17 years with us by our sides when we were home. On weekends, before work, and in the evenings he was either on one of our laps or laying right next to us. Until his arthritis got bad he had a routine of getting on the bed when I got home and waiting for me to come over so he could stand on his hind paws with his front paws on my chest and nuzzle under my chin. I called it our hugs. When he was a kitten he would sit in one of our laps and bat popcorn out of our hands as we tried to eat it. After growing out of that phase he just tried to lick the olive oil as he loved olive oil and green olive juice.
In addition to the arthritis in his back hip Buddy lost a couple of teeth along the way which earned him the nickname snarls.

He did have one tooth though that would often stab into us when he fell asleep with his head on our hand/arm as he was wont to do.
He also lost his hearing, but that didn’t stop him from telling us when it was time to get up, time to feed him, or time to go to bed and it didn’t stop us from talking to him.

He let me know every night when it was time for bed. He would wait for me near the bed and as soon as I got in he would come up to snuggle in.


He enjoyed being carried around the house so he could get a close up view of everything that was out of his reach. He also liked to take a few minuts after dinner to play, his favorite game was chasing that crazy red dot that he could never quite catch. His other loves were trying to sneak out into the garage, sitting on the heating vents, and of course cat naps.

It seemed like no matter what we were doing he was there with us. He would wake us up, wait on the toilet seat or vent while we showered (sometimes he would pry open the door and get in only to remember that he didn’t care for water) and sit with us until it was time for work. In the evening he sat on the lap of whoever was sitting down and when it was time for bed he’d let me know. He usually split his time in bed snuggling with each of us during the night. In other words he was a constant companion and his absence is felt in everything we do now. Even in typing up this post he would have been on my lap forcing me to put my arms in awkward positions to try and type.
In June 2019 he started showing signs of difficulty breathing. He was diagnosed with congestive heart failure and a pound of fluid was removed from his lungs. He was placed on medication and responded fairly well. He was slowed down and began losing weight but otherwise seemed like himself for a few months. He took to wearing sweaters to help keep him warm but time finally caught up to him and the fluid returned, worse than before.




He started showing signs of increased difficulty breathing after Christmas and slowed down noticeably.
January 10, 2020
We moved up a follow up appointment at the vet fearing the worst but hoping for the best. That morning before work he laid his head on my forearm and purred while I petted him as that one tooth dug into my skin for the last time.
The vet confirmed our fears, the fluid was back and worse than before. Another procedure to remove the fluid would likely have been to much for him. It was the hardest goodbye either of us had ever experienced. Buddy brought us so much joy and happiness over those 17 years. We couldn’t have asked for a better furry friend. Heather’s friend gifted us with a wonderful framed picture of our Budder-ball which captured his personality perfectly.

He will always have a special place in our hearts, we miss you Buddy!









Ocean coming right up to the rocks.





Trail at lower right with a little standing water.



Three Arch Rocks – one of two wilderness areas in Oregon off limits to visitors.
















Looking back north from the dune crest.
Looking north at what was to come.
Thick forest between the bay and the dune.
One of several semi-circles created by grass going back and forth.



Cape Lookout from the trail to the picnic shelter.
Seagull atop the shelter.

Snow queen
Red flowering currant
Toothwort
Fairy slipper
Glacier lilies
Chickweed monkeyflower
Giant white wakerobin
Giant fawn lilies
Camas and plectritis
Fringecup
Bleeding heart
Bluebells?
Dogwood
Large solomonseal
Vine maple
Chocolate lilies
Coltsfoot
Wild rose
Ball-head waterleaf
Arnica
Manzanita
A currant
Showy jacob’s ladder
Oregon anemone
Lupine
Vanilla leaf
Larkspur
Woodland stars
Popcorn flower
Salsify
Deadly nightshade
Rock clematis
Twinberry?
Bluebells
Cinquefoil
Meadowrue
A violet
Shooting star
Old man’s whiskers
Western stoneseed
Blue dicks
Balsamroot
Slender phlox
Cutleaf daisy
Large head clover
Kittentails
Hairy clematis
Yellow bell
Brown’s peony (blossoms hadn’t opened yet)
Small flower miterwort
Vetch
Yarrow
Houndstongue
A catchfly
Branched hareleaf
Watercress
Fiddleneck
Rough eyelashweed
Penstemon
Phlox
Spreading dogbane
Buckwheat
Scab penstemon
Oregon sunshine?
False sunflower?
Sticky purple geranium
Threadleaf phacelia
Skullcap
Stream globe mallow
Blue mustard?
Ragged robin
Blanket flower
Cusick’s paintbrush
Wild onion
Monument plant
Rockcress
Hoary balsamroot
Camas
White-stem frasera
Milk vetch
A clover
Dwarf yellow fleabane
Iris
Iris
Paintbrush
Blue-eyed mary
Cat’s ear lilies
Candy flower
Thimbleberry
Stonecrop
Youth-on-age
False lily of the valley
Coralroot
Fairybells
Scouler’s cordyalis
Coralroot
Ookow
Anemone
Bunchberry
Rhododendron
Wild bugbane
Avalanche lilies
Paintbrush
Western pasque flower
Valerian
Mountain heather
Penstemon
Manzanita
Dwarf lupine
Pussypaws
White dwarf lupine
Sagebrush false dandelion?
Daisies
Foxglove
Self-heal
Tailed kittentails
Goldenbanner?
Vetch?
Larkspur
Phlox
Paintbrush
Lupine
Violets
Lousewort
Marsh marigold
Salal
Thistle
Monkeyflower
Cultivated radish?
A clover
Beach morning glory
Groundcone
Some sort of rose
Striped coralroot
Penstemon
Arrowleaf buckwheat
Star-flower solomonseal
Raceme pussytoes
Beargrass
Coralroot
Blue-head gilia
Penstemon
Groundsel?
Inside-out flower
Starflower
Candysticks
Wild strawberry
Columbine
Showy phlox
Trillium
Bladder campion?
Catchfly
Aster or fleabane
A currant
Wood violet
Pussytoes
Lousewort
Jacob’s ladder?
Wallflower
Wild ginger
Giant blue-eyed mary
Coneflower
Cow parsnip
Tall mountain bluebells
Scarlet gilia
Orange agoseris
Owls clover
Some sort of phacelia?
Honeysuckler
Wild onion
Twin flower
Penstemon
Two types of paintbrush
Stream orchid?
Tiger lily
Penstemon
Field chickweed
Lupine

Spotted coralroot
Lupine
Avens?
Farewell to spring
Penstemon
Washington lily
Wintergreen
Pinesap
Pinedrop
Paintbrush
Mock orange
Prince’s pine
Bachelor button
Pyrola
Queen’s cup
Aster (or a fleabane)?
Bog orchid
Elephant’s head
Rainiera
Ghost pipe
Scouler’s bluebells
Monkshood
Pink monkeyflower
Creeping wire lettuce
Fireweed
Penstemon
Aster (or a fleabane)
Spirea
Hedgenettle
Scouler’s St. Johns wort
Gentian
Pennyroal
Chicory
A pea?
Thistle
This pearly is in better shape from an August hike.





































































































































MCormack Slough in the Umatilla Wildlife Refuge.
Looking towards Hells Canyon from Freezout Saddle.
Wenaha River Canyon



Road walk at Henry Haag Lake
Decommissioned road to Baty Butte.
Cross country to Thayer Glacial Lake.
Snow falling on our Freezout Saddle hike.
Rain shower approaching at Cascade Head.
Taking cover under a tree in the Mollala River Recreation Area as a rain shower passes overhead.
Rainbow framing the Wallowa Mountains from the Feezout Saddle Trail.
View from Cascade Head after the shower.
View from the morning across the Mollala River Canyon.
Neat 3D display at Wildwood Recreation Area.
View atop Huckleberry Mountain.

Gales Creek – Coast Range
Dry Creek Falls – Columbia River Gorge, OR
Camassia Natural Area – West Linn
Two Chiefs and Table Mountain – Columbia River Gorge, WA
Oak Island – Columbia River
B.C. Creek Falls – Wallowa Mountains
Wallowa Mountains
Harsin Butte – Zumwalt Prairie
Sardine Mountain – Willamette National Forest
Gorton Creek Falls – Columbia River Gorge, OR
Mt. Hood from Lost Lake
Mt. Hood from Vista Ridge
Sand Mountain Lookout – Willamette National Forest
Cape Kiwanda and Haystack Rock from Sitka Sedge Beach
High Lake – Mt. Hood National Forest
Tidbits Mountain – Willamette National Forest
Bunchgrass Meadow – Willamette National Forest
Breitenbush Cascades – Willamette National Forest
Mt. St. Helens from Cinnamon Ridge – Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument
Mt. Jefferson from Bear Point – Mt. Jefferson Wilderness
Sawmill Falls – Little North Fork Santiam River
Three Fingered Jack, The Three Sisters, and Mt. Washington
Scramble route to Baty Butte – Mt. Hood National Forest
Boulder Lake – Mt. Hood National Forest
Drift Creek – Drift Creek Wilderness
North Sister and Thayer Glacial Lake – Three Sisters Wilderness
North Sister, Middle Sister, and The Husband from Four-In-One Cone – Three Sisters Wilderness
Mt. Hood from Tumala Mountain – Mt. Hood National Forest
Bull of the Woods Lookout – Bull of the Woods Wilderness
Mt. Hood from Elk Cove – Mt. Hood Wilderness
Mt. Jefferson and Hunts Cove – Mt. Jefferson Wilderness
View from Olallie Butte – Warm Springs Indian Reservation
Lillian Falls – Waldo Lake Wilderness
Olallie Mountain Lookout – Three Sisters Wilderness
King Tut – Crabtree Valley
Mt. Jefferson from Ruddy Hill – Mt. Hood National Forest
Henry Haag Lake – Scoggins Valley
Waldo Lake and the Cascade Mountains from The Twins – Deschutes National Forest
Bobby Lake – Deschutes National Forest
Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground – Mt. Rainier National Park
Fog over the valley from Mt. Pisgah – Eugene, OR
Twin Peaks and Gifford Lake – Olallie Lake Scenic Area
Mt. Adams from Lookout Mountain – Badger Creek Wilderness Area
Mollala River Recreation Area
View toward Washington from the Pacific Crest Trail near Indian Mountain – Mt. Hood National Forest
Clackamas River – Mt. Hood National Forest
Forest Park – Portland, OR
Tilikum Crossing – Portland, OR




Bridge over a small stream.
Heading into a little bit of fog.
Too cloudy for any real views.







Saltzman Road at the 2.5 mile mark of the 3.2 mile stretch.

Aproaching Leif Erikson Drive.











Hawthorn Bridge












Marquam Bridge from Tilikum Crossing.
Behind OMSI

Cormorants








There was a nice sunrise while we waited for enough light.
Alder Flat Trail at the trailhead.
Passing the old beaver pond.
Beaver pond from the former trail around it.
The trail around the pond petered out on the far side of this log.
Alder Flat Trail in the forest.
Arriving at the campground.
Swimming hole (It was a little too cold today.)
The Rainbow Campground




In the forest for a bit.
Viewpoint from above.
Back in the forest.
At the river.
Sun peaking through the trees.
one of several rock formations along the trail.
Another view of the Clackamas.
Side creek crossing.
Back along the river.
Rock pinnacle in the Clackamas River.
Spur trail to the Riverside Trailhead.
Viewpoint near the spur trail.
Viewpoint near the spur trail.
Another rocky beach along the Clackamas.
Looking down river.
Now from above the rock beach.





Clackamas River at the Riverside Campground.













Chindrie Mountain from across Wahtum Lake.




Chindrie Mountain
Tanner Butte
Table Mountain
Chindrie Mountain again.
Indian Mountain
Mt. Hood


Crossing FR 660 near Indian Springs
Trail sign at the junction with the currently closed Indian Springs Trail.







Table Mountain and Greenleaf Peak with Mt. St. Helens in the background.
Mt. St. Helens
Mt. Rainier
Goat Rocks
Mt. Adams and Chindrie Mountain



Mt. Hood and Mt. Jefferson
Mt. Jefferson
Mt. Hood from the former lookout site.
Mt. Hood with Lost Lake Butte (
Snow on the north side, green on the south.
Mt. St. Helens with some snow on the trees in the foreground.
Crystals on a bush.


Stream crossing
Herman Creek Trail junction.


Looking at the summit from the trail.

Mt. Hood








Lots of beargrass clumps.
Trail to Tomlike on the left.



There’s at least one cairn here.





Mt. Adams to the right.
Mt. Hood with Indian Mountain rising up behind Chindrie Mountain to the right.
Heather crossing the ridge below the summit.

Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Rainier, Goat Rocks and Mt. Adams from left to right.
Mt. St. Helens
Mt. Rainier
Goat Rocks
Mt. Adams
Anthill Trail on the left.



Mt. Jefferson
Wahtum Lake and Chindrie Mountain
