Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Early Days in Montana and the Guysers visit the Geysers of Yellowstone

 6/12-6/23

Spent the first couple of weeks hanging around Heron. I did do some hikes however.

-I hiked up to Scotchman's Peak in Idaho and climbed another nearby mountain. Did some fun snow glissading

-Hiked up to lower and upper cedar lakes then up to Dome Mtn. There was lots of snow and beautiful views of the Cabinet Mountain Wilderness from the top of Dome Mtn. Bushwhacked up to the top of Grambaeur mountain. It was quite a challenge with the snow and bushwhacking. Then hiked the Gramauer Ridge. Occasionally a trail here and there. Climbed Scenery Peak, then it was back down on the trail down to the car. A great day! About 23 miles in total

-Hiked with Elisha to the gorgeous Leigh Lake at the base of the Cabinet Wilderness' tallest peak, Snowshoe Peak


6/24/20

Drove to Yellowstone National Park. Camping at Madison CG. S'mores and brats for dinner. It's a nice campground by the river.

6/25/20

We visited the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. W went to many viewpoints of the canyon and the 2 big waterfalls. The waterfalls were super impressive with all the water and their force. We also took a beautiful hike to point Sublime, along the super colorful canyon with the raging river below. We also hiked down into the canyon and took another hike to the "brink of the upper falls"

After lunch we went to Norris Geyser basin, which was really cool and is home to the tallest geyser in the world (Steamboat Geyser). The Norris Geyser basin had lots of springs and bubbling areas, and we witnessed Veterans (I think was the name) Geyser erupt. Next we visited an area called Artists Paintpots, which was an area full of bubbling mud. Back at camp we walked to the river before enjoying a Thai dinner by the fire.


6/26/20

We first drove on the Firehole Lake Drive and saw white dome geyser erupt. It was really cool. We raced in the car to get there. We then visited Midway Geyser basin with the unbelievably beautiful Grand Prismatic spring that is multicolored like a rainbow, and the steam rising has the colors of a prism. We then hiked up to a very impressive viewpoint on the Grand Prismatic spring! 

We had lunch along a meadow and then visited Biscuit Basin where there were some gorgeous pools and where we saw a cool geyser erupt several times. Next we headed over to Lower Geyser Basin. In this basin there were some pretty pools and bubbling mud as well as a really fun geyser, spasm geyser.

Next we headed over to the Old Faithful area (Upper Geyser Basin). We watched old faithful, which was cool and of course a must do. We then walked the Geyser hill area and saw some stunning pools. We got super lucky and saw Grand Geyser erupt. It was so impressive and powerful!! It's the tallest predictable geyser in the world. We also saw sever other smaller geysers in that area erupt, including spasmodic geyser, tardy geyser, and penta geyser. We then finished the trail through the upper geyser basin that goes along the Firehole River (what a great name!). So many geysers! Many with cool "towers" such as Castle Geyser and Grotto Geyser. And we had a good chuckle at the name economical geyser. There were also many gorgeous pools including the cleverly named "beauty pool". The most wondrous of the pools was Morning Glory pool. On the way back we saw the Lion geyser group erupt. 

Next we started the drive to Yellowstone Lake. We stopped at West Thumb Geyser Basin, which was cool because it was along the lake. The lake was so calm with a backdrop of snowy mountains. There were also several elk in the thermal area, including some cute calves. We then drove along the lake shore until we arrived at our camp: Bridge Bay

6/27

Our first stop today was the mud volcano area, which had really impressive bubbling mud and some fieresome roiling areas. Next we went to the Mammoth Springs area. We first walked the upper terrace oop, then the lower terrace loop. There was the beautiful canary spring and some cool red terraces, including Painted Terraces. We had lunch at Arch Park below Teddy Roosevelt's large entrance arch. There were 7 cute elk calves in the area. We walked a bit through Gardiner, MT, had ice cream, and took a shower.

In the afternoon we drove to the Lamar Valley. What an amazing afternoon we had there! We saw black bears at to separate locations, saw 2 grizzlies together up on a ridge, lots of pronghorn, and hundreds and hundreds of bison. We also saw a wolf pack in the far distance feeding on a bison carcass. Later, right before darkness fell across the land, we saw a black wolf harassing (and in return being chased) a bison. We got back to camp really late

6/28

We went back to the Old Faithful area. Saw Old Faithful erupt again as well as the Beehive Geyser at the same time. The Beehive geyser was pretty cool as it was a powerful and noisy jet of water. I then walked the basin trail in the rain (Elisha stayed back at the lodge to get a coffee) and then saw Daisy Geyser erupt (I had to run to make it in time as it erupted earlier than predicted). 

I had a strong memory of a spooky geyser from our trip as a family when we visited Yellowstone for Christmas. Bro and I had skied up to it. We were sitting next to this quiet pool surrounded by thick forest and deep snow when all of a sudden the pool produced a huge bubble. Well, I hiked up to Solitary Geyser and watched it's bubble eruption, and I'm 99.9% sure that's the geyser I remember from my childhood. On the way back down to meet Elisha at the car, I witnessed Old Faithful erupt yet again.

We had a lunch of ramen under the porch of the lodge as it was still drizzling. After lunch, we walked back out to see Riverside Geyser erupt, and we were again lucky to see Grand Geyser erupt again (and after a brief pause, and awesome and powerful encore).

There are a handful of large geysers that can be reliably predicted +/- 90ish minutes, which makes it possible to time when to see them (ex. grand, riverside, daisy). Other geysers erupt quite regularly, so if you just wait for a bit you'll see them (they are typically smaller ones), and then there are geysers that aren't predictable and some whose last eruption could have been 2 years ago (like steamboat geyser)

Next we visited Black Sand Basin, which had some nice pools and a couple erupting geysers, including the cool cliff geyser that kept on erupting. We got back to camp early for fire, beer, and jiffy pop. It then started to rain, but we sat by the fire all the same.

6/29/20

It poured rain all night, and it was very cold in the morning. A Chinese-American couple in the spot next to us, couldn't get their fire started and thus couldn't cook, so we boiled some water on our stove for them so they could make their noodles. We drove to some of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone vistas again---in the snow! 

After leaving Yellowstone, we drove to Missoula via Big Sky and had dinner with Elisha's friend Hannah.


Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Great Sand Dunes, Royal Gorge, Cañon City, and Garden of the Gods

 6/2/20

Drove to Great Sand Dunes National Park. Camped at a cool campsite looking down on the San Luis Valley and the Sand Dunes with 14ers all around. Took a short hike up to Zapata Falls, which still had ice inside. Had a nice campfire as we gazed upon the sunset


6/3/20

We drove to the town of Blanca where had had breakfast burritos. We then hiked up High Dune within the National Park. It was very surreal with the dunes extending all around and snowy 14ers surrounding the dunes. And then the creek flowing through the base of the dunes was one big beach scene with people and their umbrellas, castle building equipment, and boogie boards. After hiking around in the dunes, we took a trip to Alamosa for shopping and ice cream. 

In the afternoon we went back up High Dune to see the dune shadows and the sunset and have a beer in the sand. We had dinner in the National Park, and then I hiked up by full moon into the dunes again. It was really cool b/c the moon was so bright on the dunes you definitely didn't need a torch.

6/4/20

In the morning we rented sand boards and did some sand boarding. We then drove the Cañon City via Westfield. We REALLY liked Westfield and they had cheap property...  We had ice cream in Cañon City and then drove up the canyon above Cañon City to camp on BLM land. We watched the full moon rise, which was beautiful

6/5/20

We took a little hike in the canyon that had explanations of the fossils and dinosaur bones found in the area. It's famous for the dinosaur skeletons found in the area.

We then visited the Royal Gorge and Royal Gorge Bridge. The gorge is very impressive. It's so deep and such a long way down to the Arkansas River below that walking on the bridge is a bit nerve wracking. Crossing back across the gorge, we took the gondola as it was included in the (over)priced admission fee.

We then drove to Colorado Springs where we met Elisha's friend Sara at the Garden of the Gods for a social distancing picnic lunch. Elisha went to college with her, and Sara lived in Jordan and France previously. After our lunch, Elisha and I hiked through the beautiful geologic formations of the area. 

Ever wonder how Garden of the Gods got its name?  Well here is the story according to their website

"It was August of 1859 when two surveyors started out from Denver City to begin a townsite, soon to be called Colorado City. While exploring nearby locations, they came upon a beautiful area of sandstone formations. M. S. Beach, who related this incident, suggested that it would be a "capital place for a beer garden" when the country grew up. His companion, Rufus Cable, a "young and poetic man", exclaimed, "Beer Garden! Why it is a fit place for the Gods to assemble. We will call it the Garden of the Gods." It has been so called ever since."


When we got back to Estes, Zach was there. The next day we went golfing. I, sadly, hit a goose straight in the head with a fast 3-wood drive. Zach had it all on film. We ended that night playing trivial pursuit.

The following day, Mom, Zach, Elisha, and I drove over Trail Ridge Road. We had #mimosaswithjudy on top of the pass. In Grand Lake we rented a motor boat to go around the lake, had ice cream, and hung out on the swings at Grand Lake Lodge. Back in Estes we had Thai Take-out.



Sand Dunes by night






















Zapata Falls



















Sand boarding

sand boarding


West Cliffe


Black Lives Matter