Friday, August 21, 2015

Catch Up Time!

I just looked at my blog and realized I hadn’t entered anything in 3 months! Not good! So I’ll try to catch up with what has happened to me during those three quiet months.

First, being at Whitefish is nice. Except for the train, it is quiet and looking out onto an area of trees, grasses, all sorts of green is relaxing. I’m able to put my awning out and most of the time it is no problem, even if it should rain (longest rain has been about 2 minutes). The problem is when it is windy (there have been a few days).

I have been to Glacier many times since I have been here. I went several times during late May and early June. Here’s one of the pictures I took of Lake Macdonald. The breeze was blowing gently and for a few minutes it stopped. This looks like a mirror, but if you look, you can see the rocky bottom of the lake.
I also went out to Hungry Horse Dam. The town of Hungry Horse was actually named after some horses that were lost during a storm and when found were extremely thin and hungry. The dam is quite high and the road across it becomes dirt on the far side. There are some campgrounds around the lake, but I wasn’t interested in continuing on the dirt road very far. Here’s a picture of the dam and surroundings
.On June 11, the Going-To-The-Sun road opened. I was very early going up there and made it to Logan Pass without driving off the road, or into the rocks, or going stark raving crazy (questionable, maybe). At Logan Pass, I took a picture of the snowbank. Remember, this is June 11. The snow had disappeared by three weeks later.
I then went to Lake MacDonald Lodge and took the boat ride around the lake. It was beautiful, but the wind made whitecaps. Doesn’t this cloud look like Snoopy on a flying saucer?
On June 19, the eastern side of Going-To-The-Sun road opened. I went to the east side around the bottom of the park. I visited Two Medicine and took some pictures of Running Eagle Falls. Then, the two parts of the falls were running. I hear later on in the season, the top part of the falls disappears and the water comes out of the bottom part.
I then went up to Many Glacier. It, like just about every place in Glacier, is situated on a lake. The Many Glacier Lodge is 100 years old this year. It is a gorgeous place, in a gorgeous surrounding. The mountains and lake make for a wonderful atmosphere. I took GTTS road back home.
On June 26, the EPIC meetup of Kossacks (Daily Kos people) occurred in Glacier. After a welcome BBQ in Coram on Thursday evening, Friday was spent hiking up to Avalanche Lake. The lake is gorgeous and is surrounded by mountains and hanging valleys with waterfalls surrounding the lake. The hike was not that difficult, but the downs were not friendly to my left knee. Later that night, we had a picnic at Apgar Picnic area and I went into the lake to kind of ice down my knee. Shortly after doing that, I ended up with a cramp in my leg. Not fun.

On June 27, we took the Red Bus up to Logan Pass and one of the Kossacks and I went rafting afterwards. Then, dinner at Lake MacDonald Lodge. Wonderful. Expensive, but wonderful. Good company and good food. Couldn’t be better.
On July 1, one of the couples from the meetup and I rode the just started shuttle up to Logan Pass. We wandered around there for a while and then came back. It was great not having to drive myself. We didn’t take the boardwalk but did some off-road hiking. We saw a sheep far away and discovered that the earth was soggy in some places.

I went up to Logan Pass late one night to take pictures of the stars. That didn’t turn out so good. After a few hours up there, I went down to Two Medicine to sleep before the NPS Instameet – a ranger gives ideas for photos, etc. This was supposed to be for the sunrise on the mountains around the lake. But it was so smoky, the sun didn’t really make a dramatic statement on the mountains, which might have happened if it weren’t so smoky.

When I got up to Logan Pass at 10:00 pm or there abouts, there was a herd of Big Horns wandering all over the parking lot drinking either the antifreeze or condensation left on the ground during the day. Apparently they aren’t affected by the antifreeze.
The next day, I took pictures out of my trailer window of these babies. The table is about 10 feet away, and these babies were wandering about on either side until mom called them and they ran away. They won’t be babies long.
There was an Instameet at Lake MacDonald at Apgar boat launch to take pictures of the sunset. It wasn’t very spectacular or colorful, so I don’t have a lot of pictures to share of that. Before the Instameet, I hiked to MacDonald Creek Falls and took some pictures there. The falls were beautiful and there were a lot of people there.


I went up to Logan Pass at night again to take star pictures. I did a little better, but because my camera and lens aren’t the best, the stars appear out of focus. They might be. But I did get a picture of the Big Dipper.
There was an Instameet again to photograph the sunset. It was very smoky and difficult to see the distant mountains. The colors were more spectacular than previously, because of the smoke. There are now a couple of major fires happening in the park and after evacuations of St. Mary and closure of the GTTS road, it has finally reopened.
A new fire has started near Highway 2 around the southern end of Glacier, so that highway has closed. In addition, they’ve closed the railroad tracks, so we don’t have as many trains going through (yeah!).

So today, August 21, we are supposed to have a rainy day with high winds. So far, the winds part has come mostly true (not very high), but no rain yet.

It is also extremely smoky. It is hard on the eyes and lungs. Our campground (and all of Flathead County) is in a Stage 2 fire restriction – no campfires at all. The sun glows red, you can’t see the mountains and there are (by last count I read in the paper) 101 wildfires in Montana. There are also fires in Idaho and Washington sending their smoke our way. Yippee!

Took my truck to the doctor on Wednesday and was told it needed $1300 worth of work. So, instead of taking a volunteer position during the winter, which I really wanted to do, I now have to find a paying job during the winter so I can pay for the work. Oh well, I still have next summer and beyond to be unpaid!

I’ll get to this more often.