I鈥檓 not Mr. Nature. More of an indoorsman,听if you will. I grew up in Toronto, a snowball鈥檚 throw from downtown, then moved to New York, where I dated women who鈥檇 take in my blinding urban pallor and say things like, 鈥淵ou gotta get out of the city.鈥 And I鈥檝e been perfectly happy in the traffic of Los Angeles鈥攂ingeing NPR in my air-conditioned SUV for the last ten years.
I don鈥檛 camp, hike, or go anywhere I can鈥檛 plug in my electric toothbrush.
It was my wife, Ilene, who booked a family getaway to Yosemite National Park. She tried to convince me we鈥檇 be staying in nice places: the historic Majestic (formerly Ahwanee) Hotel and a new hipster outpost called听. She assured me that she听and our two boys听could do all the outdoorsy stuff while I lounged in the lobby, sipping hot chocolate.
I was (reluctantly) sold.
Then听tragedy struck. My 14-year-old son, Diego, came down with a 103-degree fever. No way he was going anywhere. And no way his mother was leaving him. But that 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 the tragedy. It was too late to cancel. Now I鈥檇 have to go alone. Well, with our 12-year-old, Kingsley, who was super-excited to go.
I had no choice.
So I loaded our bags into the Highlander and caffeinated myself just short of a heart attack for the five-and-a-half-hour drive I鈥檇 now be doing unassisted from our home. As I settled in behind the wheel, I turned to Kingsley and said with all the sincerity I could muster,听鈥淭his is gonna be a great trip!鈥
I 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 being completely phony. Kingsley is a great traveling companion. We don鈥檛 fight. We have inside jokes. We鈥檙e both on the frugal side. 鈥淢aybe we should skip dessert,鈥 he鈥檒l say. 鈥淭his dinner might get a wee bit pricey.鈥

I 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 worried about spending the next five days with him. I was worried about disappointing him. He鈥檇 be exploring one of the country鈥檚 most famous natural monuments with a guy whose idea of roughing it is bad Wi-Fi and public toilets.
To prepare for our voyage into the elements, I did what any self-respecting nerd would do鈥攄ownloaded an app. 听offers audio tours of scenic drives around the world. We entered the park, and after a lengthy geological preamble covering the past few hundred million years, it alerted us to our first Yosemite moment.
As we entered the famous mile-long Wawona听Tunnel, it advised us to slow down as we came out the other side and pull听into the turnout to take in the view. We did and beheld a breathtaking vista I鈥檇 only seen as wallpaper on my MacBook鈥檚听operating system: a vast pine-floored gorge with the undeniable alabaster face of El Capitan on one side and the piercing Half Dome on the other. People climb those things? I was getting vertigo just posing for a selfie in the parking lot.
We got to , and I immediately felt more in my comfort zone. First, thanks to the complimentary afternoon tea and cookies. Second, because when I started to walk around, I realized, it鈥檚 the lobby in The Shining! Stanley Kubrick meticulously recreated it on sound stages in London. But no self-respecting fanboy could look at the hotel鈥檚 red elevator doors without seeing an ocean of blood pouring out of them.
Built in 1927, the Majestic was conceived and built on a scale befitting Yosemite:听Cathedral ceilings. Fireplaces so big you can literally sit inside them on a built-in bench听and warm yourself while a pianist plays Beethoven on a Steinway grand. The place is as much a landmark as its surroundings. It鈥檚 worth seeing, even if your budget鈥攍ike mine鈥攂alks at staying there.
I have a West Coast kid who craves East Coast weather. His mom pitched Yosemite as a 鈥渨inter wonderland.鈥 But Yosemite听Valley was mostly snow-free. So the next morning, we took a shuttle up to Badger Pass, the park鈥檚 ski area. The hotel concierge warned that it could be 10 or 20 degrees colder there, so we bundled up in hats, scarves, and parkas, then shedded most of our layers as soon as we got out of the bus. Despite the snow, the sun made it way warmer than the park鈥檚 shaded valley floor.
My son would be exploring one of the country鈥檚 most famous natural monuments with a guy whose idea of roughing it is bad Wi-Fi and public toilets.
It鈥檚 taken me years to establish myself as the one person in our family who doesn鈥檛 ski. So I pushed for cross-country, and听for $90, we got skis and a lesson from a young instructor who demonstrated the basics, took us into the woods, then left us to explore on our own. Kingsley immediately snapped off his skis, dropped his poles, and made a snow angel. This was what he was here for!
We got back to the hotel too late for tea and cookies,听so made do with a light supper in the Majestic鈥檚 bar. Pork sliders three ways for Kingsley and, for me, a charcuterie platter听whose only really worthwhile element was the p芒t茅. Years ago, in the heat of an argument, Ilene called me an 鈥渆ffete weirdo.鈥 Ever since, I鈥檝e enjoyed playing the part to the hilt. Sipping my cocktail, I prepared some ripostes for when we got back to L.A.
Ilene: 鈥淪o how鈥檇 you like Yosemite?鈥
Me: 鈥淣ice views. Substandard p芒t茅.鈥
The next morning, Kingsley was eager to get back to Badger Pass, determined this time to get in some downhill action. What was I gonna do? Look like a wuss in front of my 12-year-old son? Even effete weirdos have some modicum of pride.
So we went to pay for our lift tickets and the guy said, 鈥淚鈥檓 gonna comp these, 鈥檆ause it鈥檚 gonna be an hour, maybe more, for the rentals.鈥 He 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 exaggerating. The line was massive. We waited. And waited. An hour turned into an hour and a half. By the time we got our skis, we鈥檇 lost two hours of slope time. Which I feigned outrage over鈥攁s if skiing less 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 my goal鈥攁nd they comped our rentals, too.
The runs aren鈥檛 huge (thank God), but the views are stunning. And it was free. To my credit, I only fell twice. Off the chairlift.
Luckily, Kingsley鈥檚 not the type to get embarrassed. Even by his spaz dad.
After two days of alpine sports, we designated our last full day to lower-altitude sightseeing. For our day of nature communing, we weren鈥檛 after anything too strenuous. Like I said, I鈥檓 not the guy who gets up at 4 A.M. for a 12-hour trek up Half Dome. Neither is Kingsley. A nice half-miler to Bridalveil Falls was more our speed.
We parked in the designated stop on the Loop Trail鈥攁ll听stops are听numbered on the park shuttle service鈥攁nd followed an icy riverbed up to the fall. Bridalveil isn鈥檛 Yosemite鈥檚 biggest waterfall, but it鈥檚听one of the prettiest. From there, we wanted a closer view of El Capitan and so walked along a path next to an open field, gazing up at its awesomeness.
In homage to Free Solo, we free peed听behind a tree.
Our next hike鈥攎ore of a brisk walk鈥攚as to Lower Falls, where, crossing a bridge, we stopped to gape at the large black mammal reposing on a log in the riverbed. I believe it鈥檚 called a bear. Let me rephrase that:
鈥淗ELP!!! A BEAR!!!鈥
Our cross-country instructor had assured us that black bears don鈥檛 attack humans. And if one should happen to come barreling at you, it鈥檚 a 鈥渂luff charge.鈥 Stand your ground, and it鈥檒l stop a few feet away, all 300 to 500 pounds of it.
I was starting to feel more and more like John Muir, who, I realized from looking at a photo in the lobby of our hotel, was the original lumbersexual.
See, this is why I don鈥檛 like nature. The chance, however slim, that it might kill you.
In the face of the small mob that had formed to point their phones at the bear, this mild-mannered Yogi turned and moseyed off up the river. We forged ahead, wondering if we鈥檇 have to stand up to a bluff charge. But no. Our mettle remained untested.
Spring is supposedly the best time for the falls in Yosemite, when water gushes forth as if from a thousand hoses. But they looked pretty good now, in the middle of winter. Like backdrops for a bottled-water ad. Which, I realize as I write this, is apparently how I judge scenery.
The base of听Lower Falls is guarded by a heap of boulders jumbled on top of one another. Kingsley felt a sudden urge to scramble over them. Again听I followed, rather than wuss out. We got as close as we dared and cupped the rushing water into our mouths. It was clear and pure and better than any bottled water.
I was starting to feel more and more like John Muir, who, I realized from looking at a photo in the lobby of our hotel, was the original lumbersexual.
The water, the bear, wiping out in the snow. Mother Nature was not quite yet my friend, but she was no longer my enemy.
We needed somewhere to rest and reflect on our experiences of the last 36 hours, so we walked to the nearby Yosemite Valley Lodge to check out one of the park鈥檚 newest听and most popular听attractions: Starbucks.
A grande latte never tasted so good.