This past weekend, we drove up into the Slovenian Alps with
our friends, Rok and Petra, and a couple of their friends, Rok and Martina
(yes, Rok is a quite popular name here).
We shared a house in Kobarid, the location of a brutal battle in World
War I (see The Soča Front from last year) and home of everything mountain
adventure these days. Chantelle and I
and the kiddos shared one room and the Roks, Petra, and Martina shared the
other. Not the ideal set-up for a great
night’s sleep, but we managed.
Here’s more or less how our weekend went:
Saturday morning, we woke up (much earlier than the folks in
the other room…) and found a little outdoor café where we could get some cheese
toast. As we looked around, we realized
we were the only table not adhering to the "There isn't a meal that can't be paired with beer or wine" policy (see the fellas at the table next to us below). Normally, we have an attitude of “When in
Rome,” but…we stuck to our bella kava.
Later in the morning, we drove and then hiked up to the top
of the mountain near Kobarid where all of the paragliders take off. It was a half-hour drive up a single-lane
gravel road on the edge of the mountain, which made for some tense passing of the logging trucks on their way down. Rosetta
sang her “Mountain” song the entire way:
“Driving up the mountain, driving up the mountain, driving up the
mountain…” You get the drift. Once at the top, the view was just
spectacular. To be completely cliché,
Chantelle posted pictures to Facebook titled “The Hills Are Alive!” The kiddos hopped from stone to stone and
were most enamored with the cows (and cow poop) at the top and the fifty or so
paragliders flying around. After coming back down, we ate a late lunch and then donned our swimsuits
and went for a dip in the river to cool off.
Sunday, the Roks insisted on taking me rafting down the Soča River. So, while the kids went swimming
again with Mommy and Petra, we got a raft and gear and started off. I knew we were going to hit level four rapids
at some point but had no idea what that meant, so at each rapids I’d ask what
level they were. When Rok kept
responding “That was somewhere between one and two” after we’d bounced through
what seemed to me to be fairly significant rapids, I was questioning the wisdom of
what I’d gotten myself into. But, of
course, I couldn’t chicken out…that would be even more dumb. Eventually, we got to the challenging part of
the river and actually made it through fairly smoothly, despite Rok falling out
of the raft twice and us getting completely spun around in the middle of one of
the rapids. And it was fun. I suppose maybe I'm hitting my "second puberty," as the woman at Pipestrel suggested.
Once again, we have to give the kiddos credit for being
troopers on the trip. They were way off schedule and way worn out. On Saturday, we
got stuck behind a logging truck coming down the mountain and didn’t get to
lunch until 3:00. I’ve never seen the
kids collectively eat that much at one meal.
And we didn’t get home Sunday night until 10:00. I got to go to work on Monday, which means I
not only owe my wife for the three hours of rafting on Sunday but also for
dealing with nine hours of “vacation hangover” alone.
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