It’s back to Glacier for part two, which has turned out to be the far more adventurous half of this trip. After meeting back up in the park yesterday, the three of us took a short, not-that-steep hike to two waterfalls.
Relive the excitement of my cross-country trip and keep track of my new adventures.
Showing posts with label Sunset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunset. Show all posts
Monday, August 29, 2016
Light the Sky and Hold on Tight
It’s back to Glacier for part two, which has turned out to be the far more adventurous half of this trip. After meeting back up in the park yesterday, the three of us took a short, not-that-steep hike to two waterfalls.
Labels:
Glacier National Park,
hiking,
lightning,
Montana,
mountains,
National Parks,
Sunrise,
Sunset
Location:
East Glacier, MT, USA
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Alberta, Alberta - Where You Been So Long?
Because there’s a $700 surcharge to rent a car in Montana and return it in Canada, I come to you tonight from Calgary.
Let me explain. Originally, this
trip had us flying into Kalispell, renting a car, making our way across
Glacier, crossing into Canada to see Banff, and flying out of Calgary. The
surcharge effectively ended that idea. Fortunately, I managed to pry enough
brain cells away from the Rule Against Perpetuities to come up with a solution:
Do half of Glacier, go to Banff, do the rest of Glacier, and return the car in
the country from whence it came. In my eyes, an eminently reasonable solution.
And one that no one wanted to do. I’m still not entirely sure why the
opposition, but in my delicate pre-bar state, I had no patience for people
being irrational. The only obstacle keeping us from visiting the Canadian parks
was gone, so what was the problem?
In any event, if they wouldn’t do
my solution, I’d split off from the group and do it myself. I figured it was a
good idea anyway, in the event of a repeat of the Yosemite situation, to give
us all a break if needed. It wasn’t really needed, but it did get me the
opportunity to see another of the world’s most scenic landscapes. So here’s how
that went.
Labels:
Alberta,
altitude,
Banff National Park,
Canada,
Driving,
glaciers,
hiking,
Icefields Parkway,
Jasper National Park,
mountains,
National Parks,
Rain,
Scenic Routes,
Sunrise,
Sunset,
Waterfalls
Location:
Calgary, AB, Canada
Thursday, August 25, 2016
The Legend of the Drop Bear
A wise man once told me of the
drop bear. A fearsome, yet rarely seen, beast, the drop bear lives among the
trees, waiting to strike any prey who dare pass below. When the moment is
right, the drop bear, true to its name, strategically drops from the branches onto
the unsuspecting passerby. Owing to its unusual largeness, this allows the drop
bear to incapacitate and eat its victim. The only known defense to drop bear
attacks is to place forks in one’s hair (tines up).
While Glacier seems to be free of
the dreaded drop bear, its grizzly cousins stand ready to “drop in” on park
guests almost anywhere, without notice. Over the last two days, they seem to
have been circling closer and closer, although I’ve managed to hold them off so
far.
Labels:
bears,
clouds,
Cold,
Glacier National Park,
hiking,
Montana,
Rain,
Scenic Routes,
Sunrise,
Sunset,
Waterfalls
Location:
Browning, MT, USA
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Finding My Place
Two years gone. Has it really been that long?
As will probably become clear from these next few posts, in
many ways I’m a different person than I was when I took my last blog-worthy
road trip a little over two years ago. Although, as I’m frequently reminded, my
penchant for hokey sentimentality remains a constant, law school has sucked some
of the tolerance for hopeless unbridled optimism and positivity out of me. I’m
more inclined now to skip past nonsense and get to the point. I also spend more
time doing and less time observing. What does all that mean for a relatively
unknown travel blog with new entries coming at roughly the same frequency as new
Sherlock episodes? I’m not sure yet.
But let’s dive in already.
Labels:
Family,
Glacier National Park,
hiking,
kayaking,
Montana,
mountains,
National Parks,
Sunset,
Waterfalls
Location:
Hungry Horse, MT, USA
Saturday, May 24, 2014
I’ve Got Nothing
Sorry, folks. After hours of thinking it over, I’ve been
able to come up with nothing significant to say about today. Maybe it’s that
I’m becoming progressively more tired each day, as I stay up later and later to
write these things (which does not bode well for next week when classes start
again). Maybe it’s that spending time with another person in the car means that
I’m spending the driving days having actual human interaction, instead of the
kind of pure reflection that tends to produce the best posts here (although
when I make the last 2 legs of the journey alone tomorrow and Monday, I’ll have
plenty of time to myself). Not that I’m complaining – I’m sure this trip has
been better than if I had taken it by myself. It’s just that it may not lend
itself as well to blogging.
Labels:
Cities,
Driving,
Kentucky,
Memphis,
Mississippi,
restaurants,
Sunset,
Tennessee
Location:
Terre Haute, IN
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Keep On Walking
Ah Chicago,
we hardly knew ye. Just as quickly as our time together began, it has come to
an end. But before the end, we two travelers checked off 3 items the
Quintessential Chicago Experiences list: taking the L, riding the Navy Pier
Ferris wheel, and seeing a Cubs game at Wrigley Field.
The fact that I have nothing of interest to say about the L
probably constitutes a positive review. The best way to explain the view from
the Ferris wheel is probably to show it to you:
Location:
Hazelwood, MO
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Darling It’s Better Down Where It’s Wetter
Under water, things are peaceful. All it takes to escape the
noise and chaos of a community swimming pool during, say, a kid’s birthday
party is a brief submersion. Under the water, we’re in our own private worlds
into which it’s almost impossible for others to trespass. Sound fades away,
while everything moves slower and seems more graceful. At least most of the
time. There are some occasions when being under water is far from this kind of
peaceful experience. Today’s activities straddled both sides of that line.
Well, sort of.
Labels:
Beaches,
Cruises,
Mexico,
National Parks,
Sunset
Location:
Cozumel, Mexico
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
The Life Aquatic
I may have been a little hard on ol’ Steve
yesterday. This cruise thing may be growing on me. A little. Maybe.
Location:
Somewhere Else in the Gulf of Mexico
Friday, August 9, 2013
He Liked to Drink a Lot of Juice
After yesterday’s crazy hiking shenanigans, this morning
came as a warning from each of our bodies that we daren’t try that again
lest the bodily rebellion we were feeling today return even more forcefully
tomorrow. It turns out that when I call hiking down 3,200 feet a knee breaker,
that’s pretty accurate. This morning my knee (only one though… weird) was so
sore from turning through all the switchbacks yesterday that I was often
reduced to going on stairs using my blown-out-kneed-mother’s mantra of “up with
the good, down with the bad.”
For sure, we were all in need of a quieter itinerary today. Tioga Road was more
than ready to answer the call. It was a peaceful drive with occasional stops,
like the obligatory one at Olmstead Point and a less-obligatory but
felt-essential one at the Tuolumne Meadows Grill and Store for lunch and junk
food (all of which disappeared within 4 hours).
Labels:
altitude,
California,
Driving,
Family,
mountains,
National Parks,
Scenic Routes,
Sierra Nevada,
Sunset,
Yosemite National Park
Location:
El Portal, CA
Thursday, August 8, 2013
And When You’re Up You’re Up
Finally, a day free of drama. A day when we were finally
free to do what we wanted, without constantly looking over our shoulders. In
short, a vacation from what our vacation had become.
Labels:
altitude,
California,
Family,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
Sierra Nevada,
Sunset,
Yosemite National Park
Location:
El Portal, CA
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Who Says You Can’t Go Home?
Last night’s saga continued into this morning, although the
worst was behind me. I woke up less angry – as tends to happen – and by the end
of this morning’s trials, I was past it. I was too busy getting excited about
what would be revealed the moment we emerged from the Wawona Tunnel. We had
planned Tunnel View as the very first perspective on Yosemite
Valley my mother would see, and it did not disappoint:
Labels:
altitude,
California,
Family,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
Sierra Nevada,
Sunset,
Yosemite National Park
Location:
El Portal, CA
Monday, August 5, 2013
Modern Family
After taking enough of these
trips, some patterns begin to emerge. The one that shows itself first is that
Day One is all about feeling out how things are going to work for the rest of
the trip. That’s when decisions are made, consciously or not, about things like
how to organize bags and vehicles, how much travel companions will indulge each
others’ special interests, and probably most importantly – what will be the
tone for the rest of the trip. As far as Day Ones go, today fit the bill.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
On Top of Old Smoky
While it wasn’t covered in
cheese, it was still the main event on today’s schedule. But before I get to
that, there is much scenic driving to report:
Labels:
altitude,
Camping,
Driving,
Great Smoky Mountains National Park,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
North Carolina,
restaurants,
Scenic Routes,
Sunset,
Tennessee
Location:
Gatlinburg, TN
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Chasing Waterfalls
Success!
I laid out a rather ambitious plan for today – carefully
navigate to 4 waterfalls in a precise order and then wind up a dirt road to set
up camp and climb a mountain. All this needed to happen within 12 hours.
With so many places where parts of today’s plan could have
gone awry, I’m pleased to report that I reached each of those destinations and
did everything I wanted to do at all of them. The only low points of the day,
and to call them low points is a stretch – were that I didn’t get as good of a
picture of Looking Glass Falls as I had hoped and I wasn’t so happy with the
Max Patch Road. But more on those momentarily.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
After the Morning After
North Carolina comes through again. Having
trudged through 200 miles of fog yesterday all through Virginia – your remember
Virginia: my least-favorite state due to its questionable politics, overeager
state troopers, those ugly-named suburbs of DC, and Shenandoah National Fog
Park – I awoke today to a Virginia invasion across its southern border. In
other words, Wildcat Rock was still enveloped quite thickly in fog. In fact,
after turning out all the car lights last night the fog still seemed to glow
even though there weren't any signs of civilization for miles. Spooky.
With no Plan B, I just kept on
going down the Blue Ridge Parkway,
knowing that the forecast called for “AM clouds / PM sun” and that the road
would be rising higher than in Virginia, which might put
me above the fog. Apparently I also had the sun on my side, as it burned off
all of the fog by the time I stopped in Boone (yes,
a real place name – as is “Gooch Gap”) at 9:00. Of course, by that point I had
reached the one stretch of the Parkway that I was able to drive last year so
there was nothing new to see. I was even there at the same time of day.
Labels:
Asheville,
Blue Ridge Parkway,
clouds,
Detours,
Driving,
hiking,
mountains,
North Carolina,
Scenic Routes,
Sunset,
Waterfalls
Location:
Asheville, NC
Monday, August 13, 2012
A Thoroughfare for Freedom Beat
This is a public service announcement to all Canadian
taxpayers: Your government has been stealing from you.
You pay the equivalent of over $4.50 a gallon for gasoline,
much of it taxes, yet you have the highway infrastructure of a third world
country. Either your government is full of waste, fraud, and abuse (more than
even the US government), or the Trans-Canada Highway (which, as far as I can
tell is not yet complete) is being built across the most hostile terrain ever
encountered by road makers. I’m skeptical about the latter, since they manage
to make roads out of ice every year. So boreal forest can’t be that tough to
build on.
Yet there I was, paying $63 for a tank of gas when I’d never
before paid more than $50, and yet every local road I took until mercifully
limping onto the big 104 was as unpaved as unpaved could be. I’d call them dirt
roads, but dirt would have been a welcome alternative to the ridiculousness I
encountered.
Labels:
Bay of Fundy,
Beaches,
Camping,
Canada,
Detours,
Driving,
Katahdin,
Lighthouses,
Maine,
Massachusetts,
mountains,
New Brunswick,
Nova Scotia,
Oceans,
Rain,
Sunset
Location:
Marlborough, MA, USA
Saturday, August 11, 2012
You’ve Already Won Me Over, In Spite of Me
Nova Scotia,
you’ve been holding out on me. After today, it’s clear that you’ve just been
teasing me – showing me your less attractive features so that your best
qualities stand out that much more starkly.
Labels:
Beaches,
Camping,
Canada,
Cape Breton Highlands National Park of Canada,
clouds,
Driving,
hiking,
mountains,
National Parks,
Nova Scotia,
Oceans,
Scenic Routes,
Sunrise,
Sunset,
Waterfalls,
Wildlife
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Hello City
I awoke this morning to the dulcet tones of some horrible
bird-rodent shrieking in a tree above my tent. This was followed shortly by
what I thought was a raccoon stealing the sealed screw-top bowl of Gordo food
I’d accidentally left on the picnic table. Much to my surprise, when I peeked
out to see how many of the diseased monsters were working on this half ounce of
dry dog food, I instead saw a chipmunk trying to drag the bowl up a tree. You
know, the way an ant would drag something, if it didn’t have that super ant
strength. Rather than throwing my shoes on an chasing it away (I knew from Bryce Canyon
trail mix experience that he’d only come back with reinforcements), I feebly
tried clapping once to scare it off, and went back to bed. I figured that if it
was able to get something larger and heavier than itself up a tree, it deserved
the dog food. An hour later, I was a little disappointed to find the bowl still
on the ground, but twisted open and emptied of its contents. I’m still not sure
how many dozen of these creatures lacking in opposable thumbs it took to open
it.
Labels:
Bay of Fundy,
Beaches,
Camping,
Canada,
Cities,
Fundy National Park of Canada,
Halifax,
hiking,
Lighthouses,
National Parks,
New Brunswick,
Nova Scotia,
Oceans,
Sunset,
Waterfalls
Location:
Dartmouth, NS, Canada
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
One Does Not Simply Walk Into Canada
Tonight I find myself in the New
Brunswick of the north, east of eastern standard time – at site
287 of the Chignecto
North campground in Fundy National
Park. The first leg of a journey that will
largely revolve around the park’s namesake, I consider it something of an
accomplishment just to have made it here at all. Whenever I’ve prepared to
cross the border into Canada
(all 2 times), I’ve developed somewhat irrational fears that I won’t be allowed
in. First it was the dog and how I almost wasn’t able to get a copy of his
rabies certificate, but I was able to get that straightened out so that wasn’t
it. Then it was the thought that the border agent wouldn’t like what I had
planned, but his only complaint could have been that my itinerary wasn’t
concrete enough and if that’s what he thought, then I would have had serious
doubts about the mental faculty of the people guarding this country’s borders.
Maybe my failed car inspection sticker would keep me out, but why would an
agent of the Canadian government care whether my car’s tire pressure was up to Massachusetts’
standards? After persuading myself that all of these reasons were no cause for
concern, about 20 miles from the border I remembered reading about some
international car insurance documentation which I didn’t have and obviously
couldn’t get at this point. But I’d been to Toronto for more than 24 hours only a few
months ago and hadn’t needed it, so why would the rules be any different at
this crossing?
Labels:
Bay of Fundy,
Camping,
Canada,
Driving,
Fundy National Park of Canada,
Lighthouses,
mountains,
National Parks,
New Brunswick,
Oceans,
Sunset
Location:
Fundy National Park, Alma, NB, Canada
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Waterworld
Water, water everywhere. Except I’m really not that thirsty.
If Captain Planet
were real (don’t tell Don
Cheadle it’s not), the girl with
the 4th ring would have loved today, because it was all about water.
It made its presence known before today technically began, by way of a massive
rogue thunderless storm whose path was trained directly on Mt. Desert Island from 10pm until about 3am. I know because it woke me up and kept me nervously
checking the corners of the tent for the water that never did manage to get
inside.
Labels:
Acadia National Park,
Beaches,
Camping,
clouds,
hiking,
Lighthouses,
Maine,
mountains,
National Parks,
Oceans,
Rain,
restaurants,
Sunrise,
Sunset
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