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Private RV Campground

January 30, 2015 Las Vegas, Nevada, Part 1

We left Boulder City and headed to Las Vegas.  Bill had been there several times but this was my first time.  Neither one of us are gamblers, so we knew our time in Vegas would center on sightseeing in and around Vegas and perhaps taking in a show.

We stayed at a campground about 15 minutes from the strip making the drive wherever we wanted to go very convenient.

One day we headed to the downtown area which was the original gambling strip and still the location of many casinos.  We stopped at the famous Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign, one of the most photographed signs on Earth.  We had a free audio tour of the Las Vegas area so we played that as we drove.16424644035_17a986b659_o

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Fremont Light Show

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Fremont Light Show

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Designed by architect Frank Gehry, this is the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health

After dark we concentrated most of our time in the Fremont Street area where we saw a sound and light show featuring 12.5 million lights.  There are many interesting sites to see downtown!IMG_20150202_231247

One of Bill’s favorite things he did while in Vegas was going to the Gun Garage and shooting some automatic weapons.  He shot an MP5-9mm, M4-9mm, UZI-9mm and an AK-47.  He even has a bruised shoulder for his efforts.  His target showed what a great shooter he is!  I was content to stand to the side and be the photographer!

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World Renowned AK-47

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MP5 rifle with laser sight

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December 31, 2014 Hemet, California

We have had a wonderful year traveling and exploring this beautiful country of ours and we wanted to write one final post in 2014 to wish you a very Happy New Year and thank you for reading our blog this year.

In 2014 we traveled 7,600 miles, visiting seven states including a month in Baja, Mexico and a short visit to Canada. 13-IMG_20140208_135648 IMG_20140214_P1040593 20140217_P1040436 P1040830 IMG_0033 IMG_20140506_000729 IMG_0333 IMG_0362 IMG_0722 IMG_0792 IMG_1100 IMG_1187

Mount Baker

Mount Baker

25 mile long Ross Lake

25 mile long Ross Lake

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Mt Hood from the south side skiing lodge

Mt Hood from the south side skiing lodge

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We finally made it to the world famous Yosemite NP

We finally made it to the world famous Yosemite NP

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Waimea Canyon

Waimea Canyon

Wailua falls

Wailua falls

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Overlook of Diamond Head Crater and Waikiki Beach hotels

Overlook of Diamond Head Crater and Waikiki Beach hotels

In 2015 our plan is to visit the Grand Canyon, Mount Rushmore and Yellowstone National Park with many places in between!  We will be spending two months in New Zealand beginning in February.  We also plan to fly to Florida in late fall to visit loved ones.

May you have good health and many blessings in the New Year!

Bill and Diane

 

September 18, 2014 Yosemite National Park Part 2

On our next visit to the park we decided to drive to Glacier Point.  As I said before, it is quite a drive to get anywhere in the park and this was two hour drive each way from the campground, but well worth the effort.  Glacier Point gives a panoramic view of Yosemite Valley and Half Dome.  There is a paved walkway which takes you to various lookout points with views 3,214 feet down into the valley.  It was really neat to look at the park from above and see the roads we had traveled and bridges we had crossed.

A viewpoint at Glacier Point

A viewpoint at Glacier Point

Half Dome as viewed from the Glacier Point viewpoint

Half Dome as viewed from the Glacier Point viewpoint

The valley below Half Dome

The valley below Half Dome

The Yosemite Valley as viewed from Glacier Point

The Yosemite Valley as viewed from Glacier Point

Half Dome

Half Dome

Half Dome is 8,842 FT

Half Dome is 8,842 FT

Beautiful Half Dome

Beautiful Half Dome

Zoomed view of Half Dome with several people that hiked to the top

Zoomed view of Half Dome with several people that hiked to the top

Zoomed view of North Dome and Basket Dome

Zoomed view of North Dome and Basket Dome

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Yosemite National Park is known for its waterfalls, and we had been warned in other blogs that the waterfalls in the park were dried up due to the severe drought as well as late summer heat.

In the spring Yosemite Falls runs off the mountainside

In the spring Yosemite Falls runs off the mountainside

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Nevada Falls in upper right and Vernal Falls in lower left

Nevada Falls in upper right and Vernal Falls in lower left

317 FT Vernal Falls blowing in the wind. Those are people in the pool below.

317 FT Vernal Falls blowing in the wind. Those are people in the pool below.

594 FT Nevada Falls

594 FT Nevada Falls

The best time to see the waterfalls is late spring/early summer, and we hope to someday return earlier in the year to Yosemite.  From our viewpoint at Glacier Point we were surprised and delighted to see two waterfalls far in the distance; Vernal Falls and Nevada Falls, with a little water still flowing.

IMG_2453 IMG_2447 While in Yosemite we were saddened to hear of the devastating wildfire which swept through the town of Weed, California.  You may recall this sweet little town was our home base for 4 days over Labor Day while we visited Mount Shasta.  This town was where we found the geocache on the totem pole at the beginning of the Alaskan Highway, and also near the metal sculpture garden memorial to those who served our country.  From the news reports the fire was very devastating and the town will have a long road to recovery.  Also during our stay in Yosemite we heard of wildfires near Lake Tahoe which we had visited just a week before.  One of the campers in our campground in Yosemite told us they had just left Lake Tahoe and had to drive a different route out because some of the roads were closed.  We also closely followed reports of wildfires on our current projected route out of Yosemite to Kings Canyon/Sequoia National Park.

We hope that this video link below made from Glacier Point will be easy for you to view.

http://youtu.be/98ZIpWStoVk

September 16, 2014 Yosemite National Park Part 1

We had two main goals for our summer travels.  One was Glacier National Park in Montana and the other was Yosemite National Park in California.  Bill in particular had been wanting to visit Yosemite for some time.  Just as wildfires in the northern Cascades altered our route to Glacier,

We finally made it to the world famous Yosemite NP

We finally made it to the world famous Yosemite NP

we followed closely and somewhat anxiously the wildfires near Yosemite.  A couple weeks before our scheduled arrival, we read news reports that hikers had been evacuated from an area in Yosemite.  We checked the latest reports on the Yosemite website and proceeded with our travels.  Little did we know the stressful trip to follow.

We decided It was best not to take the route which would have taken us through all the traffic in South Tahoe, especially since the road is hilly and they were having a big bike race on our travel day.  We took Highway 88 toward the Nevada/California border.  After passing into California we had to cross Carson Pass with an elevation of 8,573 feet.  With a grade of 8% for twenty miles, our brakes overheated twice and we had to stop to let them cool.   As if that wasn’t enough, we still had to make the climb into Yosemite.  We had been warned about New Priest Grade Road to Yosemite from a fellow RV blogger, so when we reached the foot of the mountain we unhooked the car and I drove the car to help minimize the pull on the RV.  There was a sign warning drivers to turn off their air conditioning to avoid overheating, and there was a place you could stop and get water for your radiator if needed.  We began the steady six mile climb up the steep winding road with a grade of 6% to 7% and a hundred curves some of which were hairpin curves.  I am sure the scenery was fabulous, but with constant curves and no guardrails, our hands gripped the steering wheels and our eyes never left the road.   When we reached the top we felt both a sense of relief and victory.  We had conquered the road from hell!

IMG_2386 IMG_2387After driving an additional twenty miles we finally arrived at our campground which was conveniently located five miles from the west entrance to Yosemite National Park.   Over seven hours after leaving Carson City, we arrived at our campsite as the sun began to set.

After our stressful travel day, we decided to rest the next day.  We did drive the five miles to the visitors center at the entrance to the park to get a map and some information so we could plan our next several days.

Our first day into the park we decided to drive to the Yosemite Valley Visitors Center.  At 747,956 acres, Yosemite is huge, and since 94% of the park is protected wilderness, most of it is never seen except by back country hikers.  There are some roads you can drive in the park, but it takes quite a bit of driving to get anywhere.  The park does offer a free shuttle bus which IMG_2396 takes you to various places in the park, but we preferred the flexibility of using our own car which was a luxury since gasoline in the park was $4.79 a gallon.  It was a 23 mile drive each way to Yosemite Valley, but the views were well worth it.  We were surprised at how much traffic there was even after Labor Day, and we could imagine how crowded it must be in the summer.  There were many turnouts to stop and take pictures, including massive cliff faces such as El Capitan and Half Dome, two of the most popular icons in the park.  El Capitan is a massive granite monolith that stands 3,593 from base IMG_2404

7,569 FT El Capitan has a 3,000 vertical face

7,569 FT El Capitan has a 3,000 vertical face

to summit.  Half Dome is Yosemite’s most distinctive monument.  It was shaped by forces uplifting as well as erosion from rivers and glaciers.  While it appears to be a dome that was IMG_2422

Upper Yosemite Falls is dry in SEPT

Upper Yosemite Falls is dry in SEPT

The Iconic "Half Dome"

The Iconic “Half Dome”

broken off to leave a half dome shape, scientists now think the half dome is the original shape.

We stopped at Swinging Bridge to have lunch.  We couldn’t figure out why it was called swinging bridge since the bridge didn’t swing, but could only guess that the swinging bridge washed away and was replaced by this more permanent bridge.  We tried to have lunch at a nearby picnic area but the bees swarmed over the food to the point we were afraid we would swallow a bee so we had to retreat to the car to finish eating.

Swing Bridge doesn't swing anymore

Swing Bridge doesn’t swing anymore

Diane in the Yosemite valley

Diane in the Yosemite valley

Bill in Yosemite valley

Bill in Yosemite valley

A parked deer

A parked deer

We arrived at the parking area for the Yosemite Valley Visitors Center which was crowded with cars and people.  There is actually a half mile walk from the parking lot to Yosemite Village where the visitors center is located.  This is truly a busy little village for tourists with the visitors center, gift shops, a nature center, art gallery, museum, theater, Indian Culture exhibit, Wilderness Center, a market, restaurant and post office.  We have found that the national parks have excellent movies on the parks, and we watched two outstanding movies on Yosemite Park at the visitors center.

The idea of establishing a national park first began with Yosemite.  A man named Galen Clark was disturbed by the logging he witnessed in the park and lobbied to protect Yosemite Valley from development.  This led President Lincoln, in the midst of the Civil War, to take time to sign the Yosemite Grant in 1864 to protect the land.  Yosemite became the nation’s third National Park in 1890.  We have been hearing a lot about naturalist John Muir since we first visited the Redwoods several months ago.  Muir had a major influence on enlarging Yosemite, including a three day camping trip in the park with President Theodore Roosevelt.  John Muir said of Yosemite, “It is by far the grandest of all the special temples of Nature I was ever permitted to enter”. During their camping trip which included weather so cold they bedded down with forty wool blankets and awoke to five inches of new snow on the already five feet of snow already on the ground, Muir showed Roosevelt the beauty of the park and convinced him of the need for further conservation.  Roosevelt signed the Yosemite Recession Bill in 1906 which expanded the park boundaries.  During his presidency Theodore Roosevelt signed into existence five national parks, eighteen national monuments, fifty-five national bird sanctuaries and wildlife refuges, and one hundred and fifty national forests.  President Roosevelt said, “There can be nothing in the world more beautiful than the Yosemite, the groves of the giant sequoias….our people should see to it that they are preserved for their children and their Children’s children forever, with their majestic beauty all unmarred”. IMG_2403 IMG_2395

September 13, 2014 Carson City/Virginia City, Nevada

We certainly enjoyed our time in Carson City.  Even though it is the capital city of Nevada, the city itself was quiet, friendly and the traffic was unbelievably light.  They had plenty of restaurants, stores, an occasional casino, and we were able to do our Walmart grocery run before we left, but what amazed us was the lack of traffic, even during what would be normal rush hour times.  Both the capital building,IMG_2345 IMG_2343 completed in 1871, and the State Legislature building have beautiful silver colored domes visible throughout the city.  The Kit Carson Trail runs throughout the city.  IMG_2342  IMG_2344IMG_2346 IMG_2347

Before arriving in Carson City we spent one day and night in Reno for the purpose of getting some repairs done on the RV.  Reno was the closest place in our travels to have an approved repair facility.  Bill and I are not gamblers and the lure of the casinos and all that goes with it did not appeal to us, so one night and day was definitely enough in Reno.

On our last day in the area we decided to make the fifteen mile trip over to Virginia City. IMG_2350 Just the mention of Carson City and Virginia City took our minds back to one of our favorite childhood TV shows, “Bonanza”. IMG_2348 As we neared Virginia City we were surprised at the 15% grade climb to get up to the city.  Along the way we saw mining operations since they are still mining for some gold and mostly silver in the area. The mining operations is bringing the mountain down around them.

Comstock Mining harvesting gold and silver

Comstock Mining harvesting gold and silver

Comstock Mining harvesting gold and silver

Comstock Mining harvesting gold and silver

Chollar Mine shaft as seen from town

Chollar Mine shaft as seen from town

Virginia City itself was even more touristy than we expected with every gimmick imaginable to get money from the tourists.  There were carriage rides, train rides, ghost tours, souvenir shops, fake gunfights and saloons galore.  We walked the main street wooden promenade and tried to imagine what life was like in the days of our beloved Bonanza, but it was hard to  IMG_2373 IMG_2370 IMG_2363 IMG_2360 all imagine with all the tourist attractions.  The one attraction advertised that we really wanted to do was ride in a stagecoach with Bill riding shotgun.  I had read great reviews of this attraction beforehand.  When we arrived we were disappointed to learn it was one of the few attractions closed for the season.   Bill had to be content with having a beer in one of the saloons and imagine that Miss Kitty would come along.  OOPS!  Wrong western! IMG_2356

We managed to grab a geocache before heading back to the car and back to Carson City. One thing we really liked was every few feet along both sides of Main Street they had banners with the names of men and women from the area who have served our country.  In one storefront we saw a small memorial to Sept 11. IMG_2365 The Comstock Lode definitely had a huge impact on the area.  George Hearst, owner of the newspaper and father of William Randolph, became rich from the Comstock Lode.  Many people came to this area in search of gold and silver, but we believe many more left disappointed than wealthy. IMG_2375 IMG_2376

 

September 8, 2014 Lake Tahoe, California/Nevada

Carson City, the capital of Nevada, was our home base during our visit to Lake Tahoe.   We settled into a small no frills but very comfortable campground.  The owner was very nice and accommodating and we knew right off we had made the right decision to stay in Carson City which is about a twenty minute drive from Lake Tahoe.

Lake Tahoe is very pretty and South Tahoe is very much a resort area with casinos, hotels, restaurants, plenty of souvenir shops, and a lot of traffic.  We looked hard for a campground that could accommodate the size of our RV and was away from traffic noise.  Not being able to find anything that worked for us in Tahoe, we decided on Carson City.

A nice view on the pass from Carson City to South Lake Tahoe

A nice view on the pass from Carson City to South Lake Tahoe

We drove from Carson City to Lake Tahoe twice.  The first day we purchased an audio tour to use as we drove the seventy-two mile loop around the lake.  It gave us the history of the lake as well as some fascinating stories about some of its inhabitants over the years.  Lake Tahoe is basically made up of five distinct sections; South Shore which is the most touristy area, West Shore with private homes, Truckee River & Squaw Valley with its famous ski resort, North Shore with Tahoe City, and East Shore.  The traffic in South Tahoe was almost bumper to bumper and since this is off season, we could only imagine how bad it must be during the summer and busy ski season.

Lake Tahoe, named “Big Water” by the Washoe Indians, IMG_2254 has enough water to cover the entire state of California with fourteen inches of water.  The water in Lake Tahoe is said to be 97% pure, almost the same as distilled water.  It is twenty-two miles long and twelve miles wide, with one third of the lake in Nevada and two thirds in California. IMG_2270 IMG_2271  It is the third deepest lake in North America with an average depth of 989 feet.  It is fed by sixty-three streams and two hot springs. IMG_20140910_153135

Kayakers enjoying Lake Tahoe

Kayakers enjoying Lake Tahoe

Kayakers enjoying Emerald Bay

Kayakers enjoying Emerald Bay

Lake Tahoe's water is very clear

Lake Tahoe’s water is very clear

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Lake Tahoe sits at an elevation of 6,229 feet in a valley between Sierra Nevada and the Carson Range.  The mountains surrounding Lake Tahoe are usually snow capped, but we did not see any snow since we were arriving in late summer.  The lakeshore gets an average of 125 inches of snow with the surrounding mountains getting an average of 300-500 inches.  The lake is also surrounded by three national forests; the Eldorado, the Humboldt-Tolyabe, and Tahoe. Since 25 percent of the lake is privately owned the lake was never able to become a National Park.

On our second visit to Lake Tahoe we took a narrated boat tour of the lake aboard the MS Dixie II paddlewheel boat. IMG_2304 IMG_2308

Having a party on Lake Tahoe

Having a party on Lake Tahoe

It was a leisurely trip out to Emerald Bay which is one of the most photographed places in the world.  Once we reached Emerald Bay

The famous Emerald Bay and Fannette Island

The famous Emerald Bay and Fannette Island

the boat entered the bay and circled around Fannette Island, the only island on Lake Tahoe.

Fannette Island

Fannette Island

Fannette Island with Mrs. Knight's Tea House at the top

Fannette Island with Mrs. Knight’s Tea House at the top

Fannette Island

Fannette Island

We were also able to get a great view of a castle named Vikingsholm.  It was built in 1929 as a summer home, and the owner and her guests would often be rowed over to the Tea House on the island for Sunday tea.  The castle is said to be one of the finest examples of Scandinavian architecture in the United States.  Today it is maintained by the California State Parks Foundation.

Vikingsholm is now a California State Park

Vikingsholm is now a California State Park

Vikingsholm is located at the head of Emerald Bay in Lake Tahoe, California

Vikingsholm is located at the head of Emerald Bay in Lake Tahoe, California

We loved seeing the beautiful Ponderosa pines along the lakeshore.  Back in the late 1800’s miners were lured to the area with the promise of gold and the discovery of the Comstock Lode (the first major discovery of silver ore in the United States).  As a result almost all the pines around the lake were cut down to support the mining industry needs in nearby Virginia City.  Most of the Ponderosa pines we see today are second generation plantings.

Castle Rock with highway tunnels

Castle Rock with highway tunnels

Kayakers enjoying Lake Tahoe

Kayakers enjoying Lake Tahoe

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Lake Tahoe is beautiful but it doesn’t begin to compare to the majestic, breathtaking beauty of Crater Lake.

Some Lake Tahoe tidbits:

  • Lake Tahoe was originally called “Dao w a ga” by the Washoe tribe.  First pioneers mispronounced it as “Da ow” and the name was eventually changed to Tahoe because it was deemed easier to say.
  • Mark Twain loved Lake Tahoe calling it “the fairest picture the whole earth affords”.
  • The 1960 Winter Olympic games were held in Squaw Valley.  It was the first games to be televised and the first time the U.S. won a gold medal in ice hockey.
  • The Ponderosa house, used in the TV show, “Bonanza”, was moved when the show ended to the area and until recently was open for tours until it was sold.
  • If Lake Tahoe was drained, it would take 700 years for it to refill naturally.
  • The evaporated water from Lake Tahoe each day, could supply the daily water needs of the city of Los Angeles for five years.
  • Tahoe Tessie is a prehistoric fish which legend says lives in the lake.
  • Jacques Cousteau made a deep water dive in the mid 1970’s and when he came up he refused to share any of his underwater photos.  He said, “The world isn’t ready for what was down there”, and never spoke of it again.  Some speculate he came across someone in “cement shoes” since the Mafia loved Lake Tahoe, while others guess he saw Tahoe Tessie.
  • Speaking of the Mafia, the movie “Godfather II” was filmed at Lake Tahoe, as well as “The Bodyguard” with Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston.  Also filmed in Tahoe was “City of Angels” with Nicholas Cage and Meg Ryan.

 

 

 

 

August 29, 2014 Weed, California

We spent a relaxing four days at Collier Memorial State Park near Chiloquin, Oregon.  We had been without internet or good cell phone service for over a week so we spent lots of time working on blog posts, doing paperwork and planning our fall and winter itinerary.  It takes time to research places to stay and make reservations.  Now that summer is over the parks will not be as crowded, but there is always the holidays to plan for, and the earlier the better.  There are many snowbirds that come down from Canada and snap up spots in the nicer RV resorts.

Our second day at Collier we began to notice smoke in the air from four surrounding Oregon wildfires.  Even though the fires were not that close, we could definitely smell the smoke.  The smoke continued to worsen during our stay and when we left on August 29th for Weed, California, there was hazy smoke in the air.

We had a wonderful time in Washington and Oregon and the time passed by so quickly.  Today we entered California again.  We passed through farmland with cattle grazing and the beginning of irrigation and crops growing in the fields.  We made a stop in Klamath Falls, Oregon at a Walmart to stock up on supplies and food.  We wanted to take advantage of this last Walmart in Oregon since Oregon has no sales tax.

As we crossed the border into California we had to stop at an agricultural checkpoint where we were asked where we were coming from and if we had any fruits or plants.  Bill told them we had just bought a bag of apples at Walmart in Oregon and they told us we could go.  We thought as we traveled further south the smoke would begin to dissipate, but if anything it got worse.  For most of our two hour trip the visibility was only about two miles.

We checked into a small, no frills campground in Weed, California (population 2,900), for a four night stay during the Labor Day holiday.  Weed is a little spot in the road but we wanted to stay away from the craziness of crowded state and national parks during the final summer holiday.

We ventured out to Main IMG_2136Street to visit the post office.  We did a little geocaching and it is always amazing to find some unexpected sites in these small towns!  We came across this Alaskan totem pole where a geocache was located.  Turns out this totem pole  is at the beginning of Highway 97 which is the beginning of the Alaskan-Canadian Highway.  If you stayed on Highway 97 you would eventually pass through Canada into Alaska.  There is another totem pole at the end of the highway in Alaska.

Another wonderful find while geocaching was the “Living Memorial Sculpture Garden” located about fifteen miles from our campground on Highway 97.  This garden, located with a view of Mt Shasta in the distance, was founded in 1988 by a group of Siskiyou IMG_2152County veterans to celebrate veterans of conflicts from the Revolutionary to the present.  Dennis Smith, a Vietnam veteran, is a metal sculptor whose works are displayed in the garden.  There is also a Memorial Wall and every Memorial Day and Veterans Day, new names are etched on the wall and read aloud. At the entrance to the area is “The Peaceful Warrior”, a lone figure with one arm raised,  representing those who love peace and will fight aggression to preserve that peace.  This sculpture honors those willing to step forward when asked to do so.  There are nine other sculptures in the park where we walked through a labyrinth to see them.  We took pictures of some of our favorites to share in the blog.  “Those Left Behind” is a  female figure accepting the American flag.

Those left behind

Those left behind

“Who can repay those who have lost loved ones in combat?  What on earth can compensate them for the loss of life?”  “The Greatest Generation” sculpture depicts the second raising of the flagIMG_2141 on Mt Suribachi, Iwo Jima, on February 23, 1945.  “The Nurses” sculpture honors nurses, Navy IMG_2151corpsmen, Army medics, doctors and pharmacists  who bring healing.  “The POW-MIA” sculpture was the most moving, showing a soldier in a cage.  Outside the cage is a metal arch where  IMG_2148 over the years people have left POW and MIA bracelets, wreaths, flags, flowers and personal notes.

Our main reason for stopping in Weed was to see Mount Shasta, the largest composite volcano in the Cascades and the second highest peak in the Cascades, with only Mt Rainier being higher.  When we arrived in Weed, Mount Shasta was nowhere in site due to the smoke and haze from the wildfires.  We hoped the visibility would improve during the four days we IMG_2144  were there and on the day before we left the smoke cleared enough for us to get some fairly good pictures. IMG_2166

North face of MT Shasta and MT Shastina

North face of MT Shasta and MT Shastina

South face of MT Shastina and MT Shasta

South face of MT Shastina and MT Shasta

IMG_2177 We drove the fourteen mile Mount Shasta Scenic Mountain Drive which took us halfway up the mountain to an altitude of 7,900 feet. IMG_2155  Many mountains are considered to be sacred places, especially to Native Americans, but we found Mount Shasta to be considered one of the most sacred mountains in the world.  There are small sacred communities near the mountain offering spiritual energy and peaceful experiences as well as spiritual guidebooks of the area.  At one viewpoint we found many sacred circlIMG_2164es made of rocks.  We took a hikeIMG_2165 on the Panther Meadow Trail which would have been prettier in the spring when the wildflowers were in bloom.

Trailhead for MT Shasta starting at 7,900 FT

Trailhead for MT Shasta starting at 7,900 FT

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Bill spent the rest of Labor Day laboring with jobs around the RV like washing the tow car, checking the water in the RV batteries and cleaning the tanks.

 

August 12, 2014 Redmond and Bend, Oregon

We had a great time in Redmond at the FMCA International Rally.  It was five full days jam packed with seminars, vendor shopping, looking at new RV coaches on display and entertainment.

Looking East in our neighborhood of motorhomes

Looking East in our neighborhood of motorhomes

Looking west over the sea of motorhomes with the three sister mountains

Looking west over the sea of motorhomes with the three sister mountains

Whew, it was exhausting!  While there we had three days of rainy, chilly weather followed by sunny skies.  We managed to get a picture of the Three Sisters as we left the Redmond Expo Center where the Rally was held.  The Three Sisters form a volcano comprised by three volcanic peaks of the Cascade Volcanic Arc and the Cascade Range in Oregon.  Each peak exceeds 10,000 feet and are the third, fourth and fifth highest peaks in Oregon. Together they have 15 named glaciers, nearly half of the 35 named glaciers in Oregon. Interestingly, although they are seen as one unit, the three mountains formed under different geologic situations.  The North Sister is extinct, the Middle Sister is inactive, and the South Sister last erupted about 2,000 years ago and still could erupt.  Satellite imagery in the year 2000 detected uplift in South Sister and the U.S. Geological Survey made plans to improve monitoring in the area.  The mountains were originally named Faith, Hope and Charity by the early settlers but those names did not last and today they are called North Sister, Middle Sister and South Sister. IMG_1945-001

We arrived in Bend, population 80,000 and checked into a small private campground. Surprisingly there are not many RV park choices in Bend, and while this park was crowded with tight sites.  While the park wasn’t great, we certainly enjoyed our activities while in the area.

Bend is bordered by the Deschutes National Forest and the Cascade Mountains, with the Deschutes River meandering through the center of the town. We drove around downtown Bend and stopped at lovely Drake Park where people were taking walks, riding their bikes or sitting and reading. Ducks danced across the water and tubers floated downstream. IMG_1966

Floating in the city of Bend OR on the Deschutes River

Floating in the city of Bend OR on the Deschutes River

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One day we drove the Cascade Lakes Scenic Byway,

IMG_1980 an 87 mile drive through a volcanic and glacial landscape. Volcanoes built up the land and glaciers tore it down. We saw evidence of this volcanic history along the road. IMG_1983 IMG_1982 During the last Ice Age glaciers flowed down both sides of the Cascades and cut deeply into the volcanic cones, gouging out glacial valleys. As we drove through Deschutes National Forest with views of snow-capped mountains and many lakes, we could see why this road is called one of America’s most important scenic byways. We drove on Century Drive, so named in the days of horse and buggy because it was a hundred mile dirt road and at one time was an ancient trading route for Native Americans where they hunted, fished and gathered. Appearing before us was magnificent Mount Bachelor,

Mount Bachelor

Mount Bachelor

at 7,700 feet another volcano and home to the most popular ski resort in the Pacific Northwest.   We were also able to make out the Three Sisters and Broken Top mountains. Those mountains were features in the movies “Homeward Bound” and “Rooster Cogburn”.

Oregon has many beautiful lakes and on this drive we passed Sparks Lake, Devils Lake, Elk Lake, Little Lava Lake and Big Lava Lake to name a few.

Big Lava Lake with Mount Bachelor in the background

Big Lava Lake with Mount Bachelor in the background

Little Lava Lake is the source of the Deschutes River. During the Ice Age, eruptions took place under the glaciers and often melted holes in the ice, forming the more than 100 small and large lakes behind volcano dams and in craters.

We drove to the Pilot Butte State Scenic Viewpoint. Pilot Butte is a cinder cone rising 511 feet above the city. From the viewpoint we had views of Mount Bachelor, the Three Sisters and could just make out Mt Hood. We had a nice view of downtown Bend.

At the Pilot Butte crest was this bronze compass dial that showed the mountains peaks that could be viewed assuming good visibility

At the Pilot Butte crest was this bronze compass dial that showed the mountains peaks that could be viewed assuming good visibility

IMG_1948 The day was a bit hazy so it was hard to get pictures.

We loved our time in Bend but we were looking forward to getting away from the cramped private park and heading to La Pine State Park just down the road.

August 3, 2014 Missoula, Montana

We left our campground at Glacier National Park on yet another hot day and headed towards Missoula, Montana.  We didn’t have any particular reason to go there except just to hang out a few more days in Montana.  Along the way we passed through farmland with many signs advertising cherries for sale as we passed one cherry orchard after another.  We continued to marvel at the large lakes, in particular Flathead Lake, which is the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi and originated from an ancient massive glacier.  All but the northern tip of Flathead Lake is part of the Flathead Indian Reservation.

We arrived at our campground, a delightful private campground owned by Jim and Mary.  The office looked like a little fairy tale cottage with beautiful flowers growing alongside a white picket fence.  Mary said her husband plants the flowers from seeds and all throughout the park were little flower gardens.  We parked the RV in a nice spot under some shade trees and spent a relaxing two days at Jim and Mary’s.  One evening I caught a glimpse of a little black bunny as he scurried along one of the flower gardens.

One day we drove into downtown Missoula which had the usual box stores and restaurants.  I wanted to drive down Main Street which was smaller than we expected and didn’t have the western flair we thought it might.  We did a grocery run and I did some laundry at Jim and Mary’s super clean laundry facilities.

It was a wonderful relaxing two days in Missoula after the crowds, traffic, heat and rush to take in everything at Glacier.

July 29, 2014 Glacier National Park, Part 3

The heat continued, not a stifling humid heat, but a dry heat that still made for some discomfort.  We decided to drive back up to Logan’s Pass, and we knew we needed to get a really early start to get a parking spot in the Visitor’s Center lot.  We drove once again on the Going-To-The-Sun Road and continued to marvel at the views and wonders of nature.  Even though we had driven this route just a couple days ago, we never tired of the views and it was like seeing the jaw dropping beauty for the first time. The drive was faster since we didn’t feel the need to stop at every overlook to take pictures.  We arrived at Logan’s Pass by

Heavens Peak

Heavens Peak

Clements Mountain

Clements Mountain

IMG_1637 IMG_1655 IMG_1653

Reynolds Mountain

Reynolds Mountain

Columbian Ground Squirrel

Columbian Ground Squirrel

Columbian Ground Squirrel

Columbian Ground Squirrel

10:00 AM and even though the sign said the parking lot was full, there was no Ranger to stop us from entering.  It took quite a few times circling the lot before we finally spotted someone leaving.  We spent time taking pictures and enjoying the scenery and by the time we left the Rangers had once again closed the lot and were directing traffic further east for the elusive parking spots.  We returned home by heading west so we could see the views from the opposite direction, stopping for a picnic lunch at one of the scenic overlooks.  We arrived home early enough in the afternoon to escape being out in the worst heat of the day.  Unfortunately as I was fixing dinner the power went out throughout the campground.  At 91+ degrees outside, the inside of the RV quickly became uncomfortable, driving us and our neighbors outside.  After an hour and a half the power was restored.

Friday we spent the day exploring the east side of the park, even though we knew it would mean a lot of time in the car driving.  We decided to drive west on the Going-To-The-Sun Road and then come home on the southern route outside the park.  The heat was not quite as bad today, but the number of cars and people seemed to be growing and the traffic

Jackson Glacier

Jackson Glacier

IMG_1567 IMG_1560 IMG_1556 IMG_1673through the park was heavy even though it was early in the day.  Our main destination today was “Many Glacier”in the northeastern corner of the park, considered to be the heart of the park and one of the less visited areas.  The views here were gorgeous and we hoped to see a bear or two since we were told it was more likely to see one here.  There were trails throughout the park which had been closed to hikers because of bear activity on the trails.  Even though we kept a sharp eye out, we failed to see bears or big horn sheep or even mountain goats on this day.

Lower Two Medicine Lake

Lower Two Medicine Lake

Lake Sherburne

Lake Sherburne

Lake Sherburne and Grinnell Glacier

Lake Sherburne and Grinnell Glacier

We wanted to find a geocache located seven miles from the Canadian border on the Chief Mountain Highway which connects the U.S Glacier Park with the Canadian Glacier park.  The geocache was located at a scenic spot with a view of Chief Mountain.  Legend has it that an Indian Chief was killed in battle and his wife, crazy with grief, leaped from the mountain

Chief Mountain

Chief Mountain

with her baby.  Supposedly you can see the shape of a woman and child in the face of the mountain but we couldn’t pick it out.  Bill had to roll under a barbed wire fence to retrieve the cache, somehow managing to dodge cow patties in his path.  We encountered quite a few cattle on the road, including one standing in the middle of the road.  We also saw many horses along the side of the road with no fence between them and the road.IMG_1595

We headed home on the long drive around the southern tip through the Blackfeet Indian reservation, a little disappointed with our lack of bear sightings.  We were traveling down the  highway when we saw two cars stopped in the middle of the road.  In this area, that could only mean one thing, someone had spotted something.  Sure enough we stopped and on the side of the road and up a small incline was a large brown bear.  I have since learned they

Second Bear

Second Bear

are all called black bears even though they can be black, brown or blonde in color.  Bill was able to snap some quick pictures before he lumbered farther into the brush and out of sight.

We really enjoyed our time in Glacier National Park.  We had hoped to do more hiking but the heat made it somewhat difficult to do any long hikes.  Truthfully, while the park is beautiful, we both felt that the Northern Cascades were prettier with many more glaciers and much more snow.  A Ranger told us in the North Cascades that there is more water in one glacier in the Cascades than all the glaciers in Glacier National Park and we could see that is true.  In 1850 there were an estimated 150 glaciers in Glacier National Park and by 1968 there were around 50.  Today there are 25 glaciers and it is estimated that they will be gone by 2030 due to climate changes.