When we got to the trail the morning after surviving driving through a cloud during what Mom called a “lighting storm,” the sun was out, but the rain was still hiding in the air and the wind felt like a wintry scowl. “No one’s going to believe how rotten this weather is when we post the pictures,” Mom grumbled as we climbed our first rocks of the morning, and my leg muscles snoozed like the legs of a lazier dog.
“Well yeah… we are,” Mom said, like I was being dense. “But I saw this back way on the map, and thought it might be cool to add a few extra miles.”
“So you don’t know where we’re going?”
“I still have the map, see?” She waved The Witch at me, like it meant something. “And the trail goes pretty much straight that way,” she said, waving her arm at the solid wall of mountain. “The trail doesn’t even squiggle a lot, so it must be mostly flat.”
I’m a dog, and dog maps are made of smells and time, not lines and blue dots. “Yeah, but where’s the lake?” I asked, looking in a straight line the way that Mom had waved.
“I don’t know, behind the mountain, I guess?”
“And how do we get over the mountain? I don’t see a notch or a pass or anything? Are we going to teleport?”
“I’m sure that we just can’t see it from here. It’ll be obvious as we get closer,” Mom said, in a bold voice, marching on like Don Coyote.
“Oh dog doo,” Mom said. “That’s ice.”
“It’s very nice looking,” I said, jumping onto some rocks that were Momproofed under an inch and a half of water. “…Hey, what are you doing?” When I looked back at her, Mom was crouched down low and walking her front paws out onto the shiny log like she was climbing a tree. “You don’t need to climb it like that when it’s lying flat,” I explained.
“I do if I don’t want to fall into that river,” Mom said, pulling her leg up into her armpit like Spiderman who hadn’t done yoga in a long time.
“Careful, dude, it’s deep!” Mom said, snapping at me not to take another step on the path I was on. “That rock’s too steep for you to balance on. You’ve got to go this way,” she waved her paw at some logs.
“But walking on logs is for lame-os and humans!” I complained. “Don’t you watch gymnastics? Balance beams are for girls.”
“Well here it’s for dogs who want to stay dry!” Mom said. I ran down the log like Simone Biles, and tried to shake the cold out of my fur as I waited on the bank for Mom to totter across behind me.
“Yippee! I’ve never climbed a glacier before!” I panted.
“And you’re not climbing one today either,” Mom said, turning around and looking down the slope we’d just climbed.
“Chicken,” I thought, as I took my place 2 millimeters behind her heels for the descent. Suddenly Mom’s butt started lowering right toward my head. “What are you doing?” I asked, as she sat down.
“I’m not walking down this,” Mom said. “It’s too steep and any one of these rocks could slip an take us down with it.” And with that she started boot scooting down the trail. I nestled up close to her back so that I could lean against her for balance as I inched down behind her. For safety. Then, something changed and instead of scooting one buttstep at a time Mom was sliding smoothly.
“What are you doing now?” I asked.
“This rock that’s wedged in my butt crack… It may be pointy on top, but seems to be flat on the bottom,” she said. “It’s sliding quite nicely on this layer of snow on these rocks.”
“I always wondered what that slot in human butts was for!” I said. “It’s for installing your sled!!!” And with that, we sledded the rest of the way down the hill until it was safe to walk again.
“It’s a snowboard,” Mom said. “And it means that things aren’t looking good for us on this trail either.”
To my surprise, a man-voice called back. “I think you can go that way, but it’s kind of treacherous.”
I ran up to sniff him. “Hi, I’m Oscar!” I wagged. “I too know about the manliness of lady things! It’s called being flamboyant, which means making manly look hot. Maybe Mom can show you my fascinator. It’s sparkly and feathery, and it’s in that ammo pouch on her belt.” But he didn’t even need me to put on my fascinator, he recognized how fascinating I am without it, and reached out to pet me while he and Mom talked.
“We’re up here to shoot some backcountry snowboarding shots,” the man with the flowing hair said.
“Yeah, I don’t do snow, and I don’t do treacherous anymore.” Mom smiled, so the guy would know that she was down with cool people, even though she’s old and lame. “But you guys have fun…”
“We have helmets and stuff,” the guy said, like he thought maybe Mom was worried about him. I realized that he thought that Mom was the kind of grown-up who doesn’t approve of fun.
“Oh, she’s not a grown-up,” I explained to him. “She still laughs when I fart.”
“Oh, I’m sure you guys will be fine,” Mom said. “Although your buddy there looks like he could slip at any second.” We all looked at the other guy that was still digging in the white dirt. I had no idea what he was doing, but when I looked back to Mom for an explanation, I could tell that she didn’t know either. As we watched, one of his legs slipped out from under him, and he waved it around, trying to stick it back into the white dirt looking for enough balance to dig again.
“Don’t fall, Travis!” my Friend with the Flowing Fur yelled as he scratched behind my ears, where I would tuck my fur too if it were as shampoo commercial long as his.
“Don’t fall, Travis!” Mom shouted, to let the cool guy know that she was cool too. But she just sounded like a vice principal again, so she wished the guys luck and we turned around.
Oscar the Fascinating

