Colorado GOLD – A Fall Foliage Photography Workshop

Telluride Colorado Dallas Divide Photography Workshop

Photo workshop students line up for the sunrise shot.

Late September, 2012 – We went to Ridgway, Colorado, for a landscape photography workshop, and the Colorado Rockies were bursting with fall foliage colors when we arrived.

Dallas Creek Road Colorado Fall Foliage Ridgway Telluride Golden Aspen

The rising sun lights up our view.

Our group of 20 or so photography enthusiasts gathered at Ridgway Lodge the night before the big shoot to review our camera equipment and basic photography techniques.  My, oh my, I have never seen so many top-of-the-line Nikon cameras in one room.

The next morning, before dawn, we all piled into four cars and set off for our first shooting locale.  A scenic overlook along Route 62 heading to Telluride is a favorite among photographers, and we all lined up in front of a fence to get shots of the rising sun as it cast its pink and golden light across the colorful foothills leading to the San Juan mountains.

Dallas Divide Colorado Fall Foliage Photography Workshop

Sunrise at the San Juan mountains.

 

 

Our instructor, Nasim Mansurov, gave marching orders for how to set up our cameras for this shot.  He wanted us to shoot in manual mode, something Mark understands but that I’d never done before.  His instructions were spot on, and as the landscape before us came to life, the images on our cameras miraculously did too.  How funny it was, though, to stand shoulder to shoulder with other photography buffs in the pre-dawn light, waiting for the magic to happen in front of us!!

Telluride Colorado Dallas Divide Photography Workshop

Golden aspens and evergreens.

 

As we progressed from one shooting location to the next, Nasim explained the importance of using “leading lines” in our photos to draw our viewers’ eyes into our pictures.  “If you go to Rome or Egypt you’ll see that the ancient architects used leading lines everywhere,” he told us.

At a small pond along Dallas Creek Road, he explained that the pier could be used to create a leading line coming in from the lower left corner of the photo.  Suddenly all the cameras pointed that way to try to get the shot he described.

Dallas Creek Road Colorado Ridgway Telluride Autumn Colors

We learned about using “leading lines” in our photos.

 

 

We stopped again, trying this time to incorporate an old, crooked, wooden fence into our images.  Nasim explained that the fence in the foreground would lead to the golden aspen in the mid-ground and then to the craggy mountains in the background.  Neither Mark nor I were happy with our results, but an elk hunter who was watching all of us crazy photographers crawling all over the wooden fence got a chuckle out of the scene.

Telluride Colorado Elk Hunter Dallas Divide

A hunter tells me of a celebrity wedding on Ralph Lauren’s property.

 

The hunter and I began chatting and he told me that at this time last year Jeb Bush’s son and Ralph Lauren’s daughter had gotten married on Lauren’s massive estate (he owns most of the stunning land in this area).  What an event that must have been, with Secret Service protecting two former presidents, and helicopters bringing in celebrities from all over.  Apparently all the national forest roads were blocked off for several days, annoying more than a few hunters and campers who were stuck on one side or the other!   Isn’t it ancient wisdom that if you’re gonna throw a big noisy party you gotta invite all your neighbors??!!

Dallas Divide Colorado Aspen Grove Last Dollar Road Photography Workshop

The aspen get paparazzi treatment!

When we came to an unusual canopy of aspen trees shrouding a section of Last Dollar Road, Nasim asked us all to hold back before we walked in among the trees so we wouldn’t get in each other’s photos.  This made for a funny paparazzi crowd at the entrance to the aspen grove.  Those aspens were getting celebrity treatment worthy of Ralph Lauren himself!!

Telluride Colorado Last Dollar Road Dallas Divide Aspen Grove Photography Workshop

Photography students roam around under the canopy of aspen.

 

 

After a few moments we all wandered into the stand of aspens and let our cameras loose.  What a blast!

Last Dollar Road Colorado Aspen in the Dallas Divide

Last Dollar Road Colorado Dallas Divie Aspen Grove

True love.

Mark and I were lucky enough to be passengers in Nasim’s station wagon for the entire workshop, so we were privy to some lively exchanges between him and the other very knowledgeable folks in the car about the merits of all kinds of gear and various photography techniques and tricks.

Telluride and Ridgway Colorado Fall Foliage on the Dallas Divide

 

 

 

Colorado Fall Foliage Photography Workshop - what's in your bag?

A mascot comes along for the ride.

We heard about polarizing filters, graduated neutral density filters, and the quality of this lens versus that.  We chatted about figuring out an image’s hyperfocal length and dividing an image’s composition into thirds.  The discussions were fast and furious.  For us, it was an intense immersion into a new, exciting world.

As we piled in and out of the car all day, camera bags got loaded on and off laps at every stop.  And although each pocket of every camera bag was stuffed to the gills with the latest and greatest gear, Mark found one pocket that had been reserved for a special companion…

Dallas Divide Colorado between Ridgway and Telluride Fall Foliage Colors in the San Juan mountains

Inspiring Colorado views!

 

When the day began to wind down, we stopped for a sunset shot looking back across fields of hay bales towards the mountains.  Unfortunately, the sky didn’t cooperate with magical colors, and many of us had worn out our shutter fingers by then and reached the point of saying, “No more!!”  But Mark was still going strong, and he took one of my favorites shots for the whole day of a fence tucked snugly into a field of wildflowers.

Colorado wildflowers

Folks had flown in from all over the country, and some didn’t have to leave for another day or two, so an impromptu group gathered to take more photos the next day.  But the weather was deteriorating rapidly, and the crisp blue skies gave way to clouds and rain.  When we finally left the area, a heavy rain had fallen overnight, which blessed us with a sprinkling of snow on mountains.

Telluride Colorado Dallas Divide Fall Colors snow on mountains

What a glorious drive from Telluride towards Dolores!

Our drive from Telluride southwest to Dolores was among the most beautiful I have ever seen.  The aspens were rich in color and heavy with moisture, and the skies seemed to be brooding about the coming winter.

Telluride Colorado Dallas Divide Snowcapped Mountains and fall colors

Majestic scenery in every direction.

The aspens filled in the valleys with a vivid tapestry of green and yellow, and when I caught Mark smiling beside the edge of the road at one point, it seemed like he was standing in front of a painting.

Telluride Colorado Fall Foliage at the Dallas Divide

Is that backdrop real??

Route 62 Telluride Colorado Dallas Divide Aspens

The views continued to inspire us as our buggy sashayed along the twisting mountain roads through the mountains.  We stopped briefly at Lizard Head Pass and again in the tiny hamlet of Rico, shivering in the growing cold and sharing the exquisite views with all the other lookie-loos who’d gathered in the scenic pullouts alongside us, cameras and grins flashing.

Telluride Colorado San Juan Mountains fall foliage

The misty mountains got a little blue sky.

San Juan Mountains Colorado fall foliage

Nature’s tapestry.

Lizard Head Colorado Rocky Mountains

Colorful mountains beside Trout Lake

 

 

Finally, and sadly, the postcard landscape eventually came to an end.  We had been treated to a glorious stay in this gorgeous part of Colorado at the most colorful time of year.  As we dropped south out of the mountains into more mundane scenery, the brilliant images we had left behind became a blur in our memories.

Dallas Divide Telluride Colorado Autumn Colors aspen

Fields of gold.

 

What a place.  If you haven’t seen the fall colors in Colorado, it really deserves a spot on your lifetime bucket list!!!  The magic happens sometime around the third week of September…

Rico Colorado fall foliage

Rico, Colorado – near the end of this magical drive.

 

 

 

 

 

Of course, our next stop in New Mexico’s Bisti Badlands was pretty exotic too, and it capped off one of our best summers in our trailer!

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Ridgway, CO – Peak fall foliage on the Dallas Divide – WOW!!

Ridgway Colorado Fall Colors - Owl Creek Pass Chimney Rock Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

Chimney Rock, Owl Creek Pass

Late September, 2012 – Over the summer, while I busied myself converting our website to WordPress, Mark delved into a passionate study of photography.  Pouring over books and websites for days at a stretch, his photography skills soared.  Mine improved a bit too, since he had a tendency to read every favorite passage (which was pretty much everything) out loud.

Ridgway Colorado Autmn Foliage Yellow Aspens Owl Creek Pass Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

Owl Creek Pass

In his studies he found a photographer who was offering a one day Fall Foliage Landscape workshop in Ridgway, Colorado, at the end of September.  We signed up immediately.  For over a month, getting to Ridgway by September 22nd  shaped our travels.

We left Fruita, Colorado, behind, and trucked down to Ridgway a few days before the workshop so we could begin the hunt for a spot to boondock.  We drove the dirt road that goes up and over Owl Creek Pass, and were thrilled to find one absolutely jaw-dropping vista after another.  The aspens were at the peak of color and the air was crisp and cool.  Our camera shutters clicked like mad all day.

Ridgway Colorado True Grit Shootout Location Owl Creek Pass

Gotta truck camper? What a boondocking spot! It’s also where the shootout took place in John Wayne’s “True Grit.”

We found an ideal boondocking spot, but there was no way we could ever get the trailer to it on that skinny, steep dirt road.  After admiring the spot for a while — and imagining how we’d set up camp and orient the rig to maximize the view — a couple showed up.  The husband walked over to me.

“Are you a True Grit fan?”  He asked.  “Did you know this is the location of the big shootout near the end?”

True Grit?” I said dumbly.  “Is that a movie?” Mark smirked and the guy raised an eyebrow.

“It’s one of John Wayne’s best ones!  A lot of it was shot right here on Owl Creek Pass!”

Ridgway Colorado True Grit John Wayne Drunk Scene Owl Creek Pass

Mark channels John Wayne.

We drove on and Mark filled me in on John Wayne.  I confess that I didn’t know a whole lot about his movies, so Mark had a lot to say since he had been a big fan as a kid.

Ridgway Colorado True Grit John Wayne Drunk Scene Owl Creek Pass

The Duke gets drunk on Owl Creek Pass

Up around the corner we came to another gorgeous clearing in the woods with a peek-out view of the colorful mountains.  That guy we’d just talked to and his wife pulled up at the same time.

“This is where John Wayne got drunk!” He said, plopping down on a rock and posing as if taking a swig.  His wife took a few photos of him, lining up the mountains in the background. Then he hopped up and motioned for Mark to sit down and for me to get a similar picture.  I had no idea how the shot was lined up in the movie, but I took a guess while Mark pretended to tip back a bottle.

Ridgway Colorado Fall Foliage Dallas Creek Road San Juan Mountains Dallas Divide

Dallas Creek Road

A few days later,  we located a copy of the movie and  waited eagerly for the drunk scene on the mountain — and then there it was!  We had gotten the shot pretty darn close!

Ridgway Colorado Autumn Colors West Dallas Creek Road Dallas Divide

This spot always has photographers in it.

The next day we met up with our workshop instructor, Nasim Mansurov of PhotographyLife.com, and we piled into his car along with some other students to scout out locations for the workshop the next day.  What fun!  We started at the fence where we would take our morning sunrise shot.  This is a very popular place for photographers, and sure enough a few were there with cameras set up on tripods.

Ridgway Colorado Fall Colors West Dallas Creek Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

West Dallas Creek Road

Ridgway Colorado Autumn Foliage Dallas Creek Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

Dallas Creek Road

We drove out on Dallas Creek Road where the colors ran from yellow to vivid reds and oranges.  One of the key pieces of equipment for this workshop was a polarizing filter that would enhance the fall colors.  I had inadvertently left the one for my wide angle lens on our boat back in March. Arrghh!!

However, I did have the one for my 55-300 mm lens.  So here I was looking at these wide open, vast, colorful panoramas with a telephoto zoom lens. Oh well! I focused on finding patterns in the landscape.

Ridgway Colorado Fall Foliage Dallas Creek Road Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

Dallas Creek Road

Ridgway Colorado Fall Colors West Dallas Creek Road Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

West Dallas Creek Road

Telluride Colorado Autumn Colors Last Dollar Road Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

Last Dollar Road

 

Ridgway Colorado Fall Foliage West Dallas Creek Road Dallas Divide San Juan Mountains

We drove on a washboard dirt road…(smile)

Mark tried some wonderful artistic techniques he’d read about, and got some cool effects.

Ridgway and Telluride Colorado Coyote

A coyote poses for an instant.

On our way down out of the mountains on Last Dollar Road we passed a coyote who posed just long enough for us all to hang our cameras out the car window and take some shots.

Coming into Telluride, the afternoon sun lit the entire town in brilliant colors.  We had fallen in love with Telluride years ago when we visited in a car with a tent.  But that had been in July when the town’s colors were grey and green from the mountains and trees.  Now it was a kaleidoscope of colors and was truly sensational.

Telluride Colorado Fall Colors

Telluride’s red rocks and golden aspen

We were both ecstatic to find ourselves surrounded by such beauty.  Colorado is challenging for our style of RVing, since the roads are steep and narrow and there are rules and regulations preventing RVs from parking just about anywhere.  So we had decided against it as a destination — until this workshop.  Sure enough, we never did find a place to boondock.  After four months of never paying a dime to camp, we suddenly found ourselves paying $29 a night for a site at Ridgway State Park.  Ouch, that hurt!!  But the thrill of taking photos in this incredible location was worth ever penny.

Telluride Colorado Autumn Foliage

Telluride – one of America’s prettiest towns!

That night we oohed and ahhed over each other’s pictures as we downloaded them on our computers.  We could hardly wait for the workshop to begin on the Dallas Divide the next morning with the sunrise shot at oh-dark-thirty.

Last Dollar Road Colorado Fall Foliage

Last Dollar Road on the way down to Telluride

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Colorado National Monument & Fruita CO – Red Rocks, Cycling & Wine!

Fruita Colorado National Monument Mountain Biker

Fruita is cycling heaven!

Mid-September, 2012 – We dropped south from Dinosaur National Monument to Fuita, Colorado, where we found a huge billboard of a mountain biker catching air on the side of an industrial building. How cool! We had heard from friends that this area was mountain biking and road cycling heaven, and so it was!

WTF - Welcome to Fruita

Besides a vibrant mountain biking culture — or maybe because of it — this town seems to enjoy being a little bit irreverent. Stickers and patches emblazoned with “WTF” were for sale everywhere. It’s short for “Welcome to Fruita.”

Fruita lies to the west of its much bigger neighbor, Grand Junction. Paved bike paths weave along the edge of the Colorado River, which flows alongside by these towns, and we enjoyed several rides in the area.

 

Fruita Colorado Paved River Bike Path

Paved bike paths weave along the river.

Colorado National Monument - Scenic Rim Rock Drive

Scenic Rim Rock Drive

However, most serious road cyclists here head into Colorado National Monument to take on the challenging climbs and sweeping descents of Scenic Rim Rock Drive. We decided to tackle it with the truck instead, so we could bring spare lenses and tripods, and were told at the gate, “You can do the drive in about 45 minutes…”

Colorado National Monument a great place to take your RV!

Beautiful views!

Four hours later we’d made it through only half of the park! What a stunningly beautiful drive. It is loaded with gorgeous viewpoints and short hikes, and we found it impossible to drive straight through without stopping every few minutes. We came back the next day to try to see the rest of it, and after another four hours still hadn’t seen it all.

Colorado National Monument - Window Rock

Window Rock

The road twists and turns along the edges of the canyon, poking out onto peninsula-like points and winding back around valleys, offering ever-changing views of red rock formations. One of the most impressive pinnacles is Independence Monument, a 450 foot tall monolith that dominates the center of the valley.

Fruita Colorado National Monument - Independence Monument

Independence Monument

As we scrambled along the wonderful flat rock shelves that make up the Canyon Rim and Window Rock hiking trails, we kept hearing voices from the valley below us.

Rock climbers on Independence Monument at Colorado National Monument

Watch this!!

We couldn’t tell exactly where they were coming from for the longest time, but then suddenly a group of people appeared on the top of the spire. Independence Monument is a tall skinny rock, and the tiny figures ambled around on top, peering over the edges.

Suddenly they threw a rope over the side and started rappelling down. Now this is not just a straight sided cliff. There is a huge rock overhang at the peak, and each climber dangled for a few moments on the rope, bumping his way down until he got his footing on the rock below. Yikes. We were glad to have lots of solid footing all around us on all sides!

Monument Canyon at Colorado National Monument

Monument Canyon

We learned later that every Fourth of July local climbers scale this peak and plant a huge American flag on the summit of the spire.

The first climber to scramble up that sheer rock wall was John Otto, and today’s most popular route to the top is the one he took in the early 1900’s. He loved this canyon and wanted it to be preserved for future generations, and he campaigned tirelessly for the creation of the Colorado National Monument.

 

 

Devils Kitchen - Colorado National Monument

Devils Kitchen – for scale, see my red shirt!!

It was finally established in 1911. Not only did he oversee construction of Rim Rock Drive, which was initially called the Serpents Trail with 52 switchbacks in just four miles, but while he was the park’s first custodian he created many of the hiking trails that are still enjoyed in the park today.

Fruita Colorado National Monument Cold Shivers Point

Cold Shivers Point

Even more intriguing than the official park history, however, was the bizarre history we found engraved in the stones at Cold Shivers Point. As we walked towards the edge of this spectacular overlook, stepping across nature’s broad, unevenly spaced patio stones, we looked down and saw each one was etched with all kinds of names, initials, and dates. The dates ranged as far back as the early 1930’s, and included every decade to the current year.

Fruita Colorado National Monument Cold Shivers Point graffiti

Engraved initials date back to the 1930’s

Some names were big, some small, some were in pairs with a plus sign, and others were surrounded by hearts.

Fruita Colorado National Monument Cold Shivers Point graffiti

The Wongs were here 70+ years ago

The Wongs had included a Chinese character, and “R.A.S” had pecked his/her initials out like a woodpecker in 1938.

Fruita Colorado National Monument Cold Shivers Point graffiti

This guy used a woodpecker technique

This was a lover’s lane of sorts, and we found out later it has also been used as something of a lover’s leap too.

Back down in the valley of Fruita we discovered this area is rich farmland. The farmer’s market had some of the most wonderful fruits and vegetables we have sampled anywhere. The apples were tiny but crisp and bursting with flavor, the cucumbers tasted heavenly — who would think a cucumber could taste heavenly? — and the melon stand had a line of people around it slurping noisily. “We don’t have to go to Green River to get good melons,” an old fellow said to me, wiping his chin. We knew what he meant. We’d been to Utah’s Green River during the melon festival years ago, but these melons were every bit as delicious.

Fruita Colorado Farmers Market band

A band was playing at the farmer’s market

A lady selling alpacas and their wool kept the kids occupied for hours. These friendly, gentle animals made sweet humming noises as the kids hung over the fence and petted their thick fur. They are relatives of camels, she told us, but they’re so much cuter!

Fruita Colorado Farmers Market Alpacas for sale

Alpaca

This is also wine country, and on the other side of Grand Junction the small town of Palisade is home to lots of vintners. We drove the wine route and sampled some delicious wines. The port wine from Graystone Winery  was my favorite, while Mark fell for a white wine early on in our tour. But by the end neither of us could remember which one it was!!

Fruita Colorado Palisade Colorado Wineries and Wine Country

Palisade boasts lots of wineries

In late September we often go to the Interbike trade show in Las Vegas to check out the latest bicycles and cycling gear.  This year, however, we opted to attend a photography workshop in Colorado instead.

Fruita Colorado Palisade Colorado Wineries

We had fun on a wine tour

We did get a tiny whiff of bike stuff, though.  A friend of ours builds bicycle wheels at DT Swiss in Grand Junction, and we got a peek at the shop. Spokes were flying off the production line and the truing stands were whirring at this small, high end bicycle wheel manufacturer.

Grand Junction Colorado DT Swiss Wheel Building Factory

DT Swiss bicycle wheel builders

Soon the photo workshop day arrived, and we made our way to Ridgway, Colorado, where the leaves were in the absolute peak of color. What a majestic place that turned out to be!!

More blog posts from our RV trips to Colorado:

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Dinosaur National Monument, UT – More than fossilized dinosaur bones!

Dinosaur National Monument has great road cycling

Dinosaur National Monument is great for cycling.

Early September, 2012 – Dinosaur National Monument is a big park that sprawls between NE Utah and NW Colorado. Many visitors buzz through this park, seeing only the bone display at the quarry.

However, the scenery, homesteads and petroglyphs elsewhere in the park kept us hanging around for quite a few days.

Dinosaur National Monument Road Cycling

We had fun on the bikes.

Dinosuar National Monument Lizard Petroglyphs

Lizard images crawl up the wall

We rode our bikes on the ~12 mile road that heads into the western heart of the park. This is a fantastic road for cycling.

Dinosaur National Monument skulls in a tree

Skulls hung in a tree.

Only a handful of cars passed us in four hours of pedaling and stopping for photos, and the sweeping turns, rolling hills and stunning vistas were a total thrill.

Dinosaur National Monument Petroglyph

What’s that on his head??

There are lots of petroglyphs along this road.  Most are a bit faint, and you have to do the billy goat thing to get up close to a few of them, but they are intriguing, with odd designs of people wearing strange things on their heads.

Dinosaur National Monument Josie's Cabin

Josie’s Cabin

 

Someone had hung a slew of animal skulls in a tree that we passed.  It was a little weird and gave the area an air of mystery.

The clearest petroglyphs we found on this road were on a sheer wall filled with lizards (photo above).  They march upwards from the bottom of the wall towards the top.  One six foot long lizard heads off to the right.  A perfect photo op would have been if a real lizard had snuck across the petroglyphs for us, but we didn’t get that lucky!!

Dinosaur National Monument Josie's Cabin

It’s a tiny, wee cabin

At the far end of this road, after it turned to dirt, we came across the Josie Morris Cabin.  This tiny four room cabin was home to a very plucky single woman for fifty years.  Married five times and divorced four, a rarity in her time, she bought this small ranch when she was a single mom nearing 40 in the early 1900’s.  She lived here first with her son and then alone until her death at 90 in 1964.

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Road

McKee Springs Road – Where the artists rocked!

The building is wee, and walking around the property to her chicken coop and pasture, it was hard to imagine what life had been like out here, miles from nowhere.  But she was a tough old biddy.  She brewed apricot brandy during Prohibition and got arrested twice for cattle rustling when she was in her 60’s.

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Petroglyphs

McKee Springs Petroglyphs

 

 

 

 

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Petroglyphs

One morning we came into the park from another angle, taking the road to McKee Springs.  Here, in a wide valley, we found the finest petroglyphs we have ever seen anywhere.

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Petroglyphs

This must tell a story.

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Petroglyphs

Dinosaur National Monument McKee Springs Petroglyphs

A ghostly double? Two sets of arms? Huh??

Like all petroglyphs in this part of the country, they date back about 1,000 years to the Fremont culture, but lord knows what they say. All the figures wore headdresses or spiky things in their hair (antlers? feathers? antennae?). Some had elaborate decorative things around their necks, wore earrings, or dressed up their hair on the sides of their heads.

These petroglyphs are all lined up along the sheer faces of a cliff at eye level, and a path leads from one set to the next.  It is like walking through a museum, but there are no curator’s notes explaining what you are looking at.  That is left up to the imagination!!

Dinosaur National Monument Rainbow Park

Dinosaur National Monument’s Rainbow Park

At the far end of this road there is a tiny campground on the Green River at Rainbow Park.  Not a soul was around.  We thought about bringing the rig down here, but we wanted to get to the other side of the park, and for that we had to go into Colorado and come in from the southern end along Harpers Corner Road.

Dinosaur National Monument Echo Canyon Scenic Drive

The drive to Echo Canyon was beautiful

The highlight of this road was the 13 mile drive down the steep dirt switchbacks into Echo Canyon (4×4 required).  At the top the views stretched on forever, and as we dropped lower and lower into the canyon, the cliffs soared upwards on either side of us.

Dinosaur National Monument Whispering Cave

The cliffs towered on each side of the road.

Dinosaur National Monument Chew Homestead

The Jack Chew Homestead

 

Partway into the canyon we stopped at another early 20th century homestead, this one built by the Chew family.

Dinosaur National Monument Whispering Cave

You gotta stoop to get into Whispering Cave.

 

 

Dinosaur National Monument Whispering Cave

This cave features vaulted ceilings!

Unlike Josie’s solitary life, the Chews brought 6 of their 12 children to live here, starting with a dugout in 1910 and moving into a cozy one room cabin in 1911.  How a family of that size could squeeze into one small room during the long dark winters baffled us.

Steamboat Rock Dinosaur National Monument at Echo Canyon on Yampa River Green River

Steamboat Rock

But this gorgeous, harsh land has sheltered people in tiny places for eons.  The Whispering Caves a little further on had a low entrance but high ceilings inside, and a steady cool breeze blew from between the towering cliff walls.

Steamboat Rock is the centerpiece of Echo Canyon, and we hiked around the valley get a look at it from many angles.  The Yampa and Green Rivers swish around its base, and folks were swimming and kayaking around it.

Dinosaur National Monument Harpers Corner Trail

Views of thousand foot cliffs from Harpers Corner Trail

Instead of swimming, we got our exercise hiking Harper’s Corner Trail, a fantastic out-and-back trail that goes along a ridge overlooking canyons on either side.  From this high vantage point it was easy to see how the rivers had carved out their route between the craggy, horizontally striped cliffs.

Dinosaur National Monument Green River Views

The Green River weaves its way towards us.

 

 

 

 

On the other side of the trail the Green River made its curvy way towards us.  We watched a group of river rafters floating down stream, a thousand feet below us.

The night skies in this park are among the darkest in the country, and when we ventured out of the trailer one night, the Milky Way was a thick white band, like a wide belt, that crossed the entire sky.

Star Trails at Dinosaur National Monument

Star Trails

Mark had been reading up on various photography techniques, and this was a great place to try a star trails photo.  Pointing the camera at the North Star on his tripod, he left the camera shutter open for an hour to catch the movement of the stars in the sky.

Well, he meant to do it for an hour.  He came into the trailer to warm up, laid down on the sofa, and promptly fell asleep.  When he woke up, an hour and a half had passed!  Oh well — it just made the star trails a little longer!!

We were both very well rested by the time we pulled ourselves away from Dinosaur National Monument, and we were ready for a little in-town activity in nearby Fruita, Colorado.

Our story Dinosaurs and Much Much More was featured in RV Life Magazine in the September 2013 issue.

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Vernal, UT – Colorful Gateway to Dinosaur National Monument

Vernal Utah summer flowers

Flowers decorate the streets of Vernal, Utah.

Early September, 2012 – From the brilliant colors of Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area in Utah we dropped south to Vernal, Utah.  The town streets were lined with colorful flowers in planters and hanging baskets, and I hung my head out the window taking photos on the fly.  What a beautifully decorated town!

From our RV window we see a dinosaur welcoming us to Vernal, Utah

A dinosaur welcomes us to Vernal!

We see a lot of small towns in our travels.   Some we like immediately while others grow on us slowly.  Vernal was one of those that made us smile right away.

The dazzling masses of flowers were so inviting.  It seemed like a happy town, and we both said in unison, “I like this place!”

Dinosaur Museum Vernal Utah

Dinosaurs were everywhere!

Some small towns have a theme, especially if it hosts a lot of tourists.  The theme might be something general and a bit vague, like “seaside beach town” or “woodsy mountain town” or “college party town.”   Sometimes you have to kind of hunt around to figure out what it is.

Dinosaur at Best Western in Vernal Utah

Come stay with us at the Best Western hotel!

But Vernal’s theme is right out there, front and center:  This is Dinosaur Town!  Dinosaurs were everywhere.  They were welcoming folks to town, hawking rooms at the Best Western, inviting kids to go swimming, and milling around outside the Dinosaur Museum.  There were so many dinosaurs in this town that we did a special bike ride up and down the streets to capture as many as we could with the camera.  What a totally fun place.

Dinosaur Museum Vernal Utah

Welcome to the Dinosaur Museum

Of course, there is a reason this is Dinosaur Town, besides the townsfolk having a fascination with them.  Vernal is the gateway to Dinosaur National Monument where paleontologist Earl Douglas found a nearly perfect Apatosaurus skeleton in 1909.  It all started when he first unearthed a string of the beast’s vertebrae buried in the dirt in a nice little row.  The skeleton now resides at Carnegie Museum (Andrew Carnegie funded the work of Douglas and later scientists who quarried bones here).

Apatosaurus (Brontosaurus) at Dinosaur National Monument Utah

Apatosaurus

Apatosaurus is a long necked and long tailed plant eating dinosaur that walked on all fours, stood about 16 feet high, and was 70 feet long end to end.  If one of them tried to hide behind a typical one-story ranch style house, the head and tail would stick out either end.  Watch out for that swishing tail!

A Dinosaur in Vernal Utah invites kids to swim at a hotel pool - taking your RV there is fun too.

What a fun pal in the swimming pool…

This big guy has also been known as Brontosaurus, a name I remember from my childhood.

How did that 149 million year old skeleton happen to wind up on a hillside in the vast, empty, rocky area south of Vernal, waiting for a fossil-collecting paleontologist to find it in 1909?  It turns out it was sitting in the middle of what scientists discovered was something of a dinosaur graveyard.

Vernal Utah is a great RV destination with a fun dinosaur theme

Did you know dinosaurs liked watermelon??

Back in dinosaur days, all those millions of years ago, North America and Eurasia were just beginning to go their separate ways, and the climate was dry in this part of the world.  Rivers and flood planes wound through the area.  Dinosaurs ate the vegetation at the river’s edge, and as the water flooded and receded, they died in the muddy riverbed and were quickly embalmed in sediment.  Over time, at a molecular level, the sediment replaced the organic parts of the carcasses, and the bones became petrified, or crystallized, into rock.

RV Blog - dinosaurs in Vernal Utah

Dinosaurs mill around all over town.

Dinosaur in Vernal Utah

In this area a lot of dinosaurs met that fate, and consequently the “Dinosaur Quarry” is a deep and wide field of bones from the Jurassic Period.

The find that Earl Douglas made fired up the imagination of the early 20th century folk.  These were the days before the children’s book “Danny and the Dinosaur,” the Flintstones’ “Dino,” and lovable, purple Barny.

Vernal Utah dinosaur bares its teeth to RV travelers

This one has teeth!!

The newspaper accounts of the time had to follow the word “Dinosaur” with the explanation, “a pre-historic animal-reptile,” since not everyone knew what a dinosaur was.

Shuttle bus rides to Dinosaur National Monument make it feel like a Disney Theme Park

Is this a Disney Theme Park?

Douglas’ dream was to allow the public to see what the hillside looked like when the topsoil was removed — since it is a veritable pile of massive bones — and he envisioned a viewing area built over the quarry that would protect it from the elements and offer shade to visitors. The National Park Service obliged a few decades later.

Wall of bones on display at Dinosaur National Monument

A wall of bones is sheltered by a unique building.

At the visitors center we hopped into one of the open air shuttles that the NPS provides visitors to get to the quarry site. We felt a little like we were at a Disney theme park when we jumped in. It is a short, steep ride to the unique quarry building.

In our RV travels we found a Dinosaur graveyard at Dinosaur National Monument

This was a dinosaur graveyard.

The original building was considered a masterpiece of design, set off with a graceful butterfly roof. But the geology of the area wasn’t fully understood at the time, and natural forces began to wreak havoc with the structure. The National Park Service renovated the building in the early 2000’s and now it will presumably last a long time.

When we walked in the door, we found ourselves staring at a wall of dinosaur bones.

A reconstructed dinosaur skeleton at Dinosaur National Monument

It is hard to fathom how big these guys were and how long ago they lived.

History came alive as we walked along this slab of earth where Earl Douglas and so many subsequent paleontologists have painstakingly studied these layers of bones.

Vertebrae, skulls, leg bones and other intriguing things are all lying there, still encased in the rocky soil.

The National Park Service encourages visitors to touch the dinosaur bones

Mark checks out an enormous bone.

Visitors are encouraged to touch the bones, and putting a hand on an immense bone is quite a thrill.  However, we both still found it very hard to fathom the vast span of time that the dinosaurs existed (nearly 90 million years), and the antiquity of that era (they went extinct about 65 million years ago).  Usually our visits to “ancient sites” take us to places where humans lived just a thousand or so years ago.

A skull on display at Dinosaur National Monument

That is one big head!!

Wildflowers outside Dinosaur National Monument

To our surprise, we found out Dinosaur National Monument is loaded with treasures from those more recent times too.

So we stayed for several days, seeking out some of the best petroglyphs we have seen anywhere, hiking and driving through some spectacular scenery, and wandering through two homesteads from the early 1900’s.

 

Click here for our next post about PETROGLYPHS and CYCLING at Dinosaur NM.

Our story Dinosaurs and Much Much More was featured in the September 2013 issue of RV Life Magazine.

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Flaming Gorge Utah – Fiery canyons, a cool river, and nearly tame bighorn sheep

Flaming Gorge Utah Rainbow over our RV

A rainbow frames the buggy

Early September, 2012 – Leaving the northern half of Flaming Gorge in Wyoming, we settled down near the heart of the gorge in Utah where it is a part of the National Park Service.

Flaming Gorge Utah RV Views

Mark gets a front row seat to the view.

The storms continued to march across the sky every afternoon, and one day, just as the sun was setting, the sky went black and a brilliant rainbow formed right over the buggy.

Flaming Gorge Utah Greendale Overlook

Kids monkey around for the camera

The overlooks and walking paths near the Visitors Center offer the most impressive views of the gorge, and we wandered out to the edge of the cliffs repeatedly to see the breathtaking scene from every possible vantage point.

Flaming Gorge Utah Canyon Rim Hike

The Canyon Rim hike goes through the woods too.

Brilliant mornings complemented the brooding afternoons.  As we paused one afternoon to enjoy the views from one overlook, a crowd of young families showed up.

Flaming Gorge is a perfect area for families, as there are all kinds of things to do, from hiking to biking to camping to visiting with herds of grass-eating animals to taking a tour of the dam.  This group of families was having a ball.  Half the parents were out on mountain bikes somewhere while the other half chilled at the overlook.  The kids romped all over the place in very high spirits, despite the gathering afternoon storm.

RV boondocking view of Flaming Gorge Utah meadow at sunrise

Meadow at sunrise.

They posed for their moms to take a photo, and they were all so cute I had to get one too.  Just minutes after that the skies opened up and we had a downpour that pelted everyone and everything and soaked us all to the bone.  The kids laughed it off, but we felt badly for the late returning dads who had to hurry in the driving rain to get all the mountain bikes back on their bike racks before they drove off in a blur of spray.

RVers coming to Flaming Gorge will find stunning views and camping

Breathtaking views at every turn.

Between storms we were gifted with glorious sunshine.  We hiked the Canyon Rim between the visitors center and the Canyon Rim Campground, taking two photos for every five steps.  What a place!  Rock outcroppings hang out over the edges of the cliffs all along the rim, making for dramatic views (and a little bit of stomach churning if you stand on the edge and look straight down).  Campers can set up in sites with marvelous views.

RV boondocking offers amazing views of Flaming Gorge

Now it’s my turn to perch on a cliff.

The big horn sheep are very much at home in this terrain, though, and a large herd was mingling with the campers in the Canyon Rim Campground.

Another woman watching them through the viewfinder of her camera (just like we were) told us they had been wandering between the campsites  all four days she had been there.

Bighorn sheep at Flaming Gorge's Canyon Rim Campground, an RVers delight

A herd of bighorn sheep hung out at the campground. Rangers track their movement by radio.

As we chatted, the group of sheep stood and stared at us, barely moving.  They formed something of a protective circle, facing outwards.  They stood there so long the young ones got bored, as we did, and eventually two of them laid down behind the shield of their parents’ legs.

Big horn sheep at the Flaming Gorge Canyon Rim Campground

We watched each other carefully.

These guys were very accustomed to humans, and they let us get close enough to see that the largest one had been outfitted with a radio collar.  A large antenna stuck out from the radio on his neck like a third antler behind his head.  Rangers told us they track the herd very closely.

Flaming Gorge Dam

Flaming Gorge Dam

Flaming Gorge used to be a free-flowing river, and one afternoon we took a tour of the Flaming Gorge Dam.  Built in the late 1950’s, it was one of the West’s many water reclamation projects of the mid-1900’s that tamed the west’s wild rivers and provided electrical power to nearby communities.

Flaming Gorge Dam turbine

An original turbine was replaced recently and is now on display.

The most amazing thing about these dams, I find, is that in order to build them the rivers had to be re-routed temporarily.  At Flaming Gorge, as at all the other major western dams, a huge tunnel was dug into the cliff so the water would bypass the dam construction area.  The concrete is so thick in Flaming Gorge dam that it will take 100 years to cure fully at its center.

Turkey vultures dry their wings on the scaffolding outside the Flaming Gorge dam.

When the sun came out, the whole flock dried off its wings.

That means the concrete at the core is only half cured now, and it puts the cure date sometime just before 2060!

A turkey vulture at Flaming Gorge Dam

Seeing an original turbine that had recently been replaced was interesting, but what really caught our attention was the huge flock of turkey vultures sitting on the scaffolding outside the dam.

Sweeping views from the Flaming Gorge Visitors Center in Utah

Flaming Gorge was an awe-inspiring place to visit.

When we started the tour raindrops were falling, and these guys were hunkered down waiting for the typical afternoon deluge.  But when we emerged from the bowels of the dam’s massive structure an hour later at the end of the tour, we discovered the sun had come out and all the turkey vultures were now sitting with wings outstretched, drying off their feathers!

Flaming Gorge is a magical place, and we dallied for a while.  But eventually the lure of dinosaurs drew us away and we drove further south to Vernal Utah and Dinosaur National Monument.

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Flaming Gorge, WY – Absolutely spectacular, colorful views and friendly big-game animals

Overlooking Lucerne Valley in Flaming Gorge, Wyoming, while boondocking in our RV

View of Lucerne Valley in Flaming Gorge

Early September, 2012 – Putting our tire troubles out of our minds for the moment, we left Pinedale and Rock Springs, Wyoming and headed south to the incomparable Flaming Gorge.

Flaming Gorge Wyoming Sunset

Sunset in Lucerne Valley, Flaming Gorge

The north half of Flaming Gorge sits in Wyoming and the southern half sits in Utah.  Five years earlier, at the beginning of our full-time travels, we had driven down the eastern flank of this large body of water and gotten a glimpse of some of its magic.

Rainbow at Flaming Gorge, Wyoming

We saw glorious rainbows every day.

This time we drove down the western side with plans to stay a while and really soak up its essence.

Pronghorn Antelope at Lucerne Valley Campground

Pronghorn roamed between the campers at Lucerne Valley Campground

 

Lucerne Valley has some wonderful views, and we drove and rode our bikes and walked along the roads taking it all in.  Late summer in this area produces some fabulous, looming clouds, afternoon downpours and rainbows.  Every day we were treated to nature’s best.

Pronghorn antelope at Lucerne Valley Campground in Flaming Gorge, Wyoming

Pronghorn at rest.

Down in the Lucerne Valley campground a herd of pronghorn antelope had taken up residence.

On a ledge at Flaming Gorge Red Canyon Visitors Center

Checking out the views near the Visitors Center.

We rode our bikes around the campground loops and we watched the herd wandering between the trucks and trailers, motorhomes and satellite dishes. They acted as if they owned the place!

Rainbow at Flaming Gorge Wyoing

Colors light up the heavens.

They weren’t too concerned when we approached, but if we got too close they would bound away, as light on their feet and as nimble as dancers.

Wildflowers at Flaming Gorge, Wyoming

While the views in the heart of Flaming Gorge are all about brilliant red rocks plunging down to the serene Green River a thousand feet below, up in the Lucerne Valley area the green farmland makes a beautiful contrast to the hills in the distance.

Boondocking views of Lucerne Valley Flaming Gorge Wyoming

Spectacular views everywhere.

As the clouds fingerpainted the sky with stormy hues, we kept a sharp eye out for unexpected rainbows and were never disappointed.

Sheep Creek Geological Loop Drive in Flaming Gorge Wyoming

Sheep Creek Geological Loop

We took the Sheep Creek Geological Loop backcountry drive which is a 14 mile loop off the western side of the gorge.  Here we saw soaring cliffs and beautiful views as we crested the top of the loop.

Bighorn sheep in Flaming Gorge Wyoming

Bighorn sheep

The drive is noted for offering close-up encounters with big horn sheep, but we didn’t see any until we returned to the main road.

Then we saw three of them grazing right alongside the highway.

One glanced at our truck briefly.  He didn’t seem to mind my paparazzi-like camera clicks in his direction as I hung out the window of the truck and took his picture.

Sunset at Flaming Gorge Sheep Creek Canyon Wyoming

Sunset view from Sheep Creek Canyon

 

There are some switchbacks along this steep road, and as seems to have been a common occurrence for us this summer, it started to pour as soon as we started to climb.  But the views from the overlooks at the top of the hill were worth every moment of white knuckles on the way up.

Flaming Gorge Sheep Creek Canyon Overlook from our RV

Flaming Gorge is truly breathtaking

We enjoyed the beauty of this place and we stayed quite a while, first taking a few day trips down to the Utah part of Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area and then eventually heading down there to stay with the rig.

 

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Pinedale, WY – A beautiful modern-day Boomtown

Wyoming's Centennial Highway

Sweeping turns on the Centennial Highway

Late August, 2012 – Heading south out of Jackson, Wyoming, we followed the Centennial Scenic Byway (Route 191).  This is a lovely curvy road that weaves between mountains and eventually emerges into wide open spaces where there is virtually nothing but undulating land as far as you can see in any direction.

Wyoming's Centennial Highway

Pretty views along the highway

What a surprise it was, then, when we suddenly came upon a huge construction project that appeared to be the erection of a large bridge over the highway — one that could easily support several lanes of traffic — but with no roads leading to it on either side.

Pinedale, Wyoming bridge for wildlife

Wildlife bridge under construction

We drove further and discovered a second similar bridge being built.  Huh?  Then more construction followed with workers busily paving a bike path along the edge of the highway.  Cool!  But what really knocked our socks off was the sudden appearance of two brand new 3-story hotels on either side of the road: upscale Hampton Suites and Baymont Inn and Suites.  What in the world?  Minutes ago we had been driving through vast empty plains.

Pinedale, Wyoming, Carriage Rides

Horse and buggy ride in Pinedale

This was Pinedale, Wyoming, we learned, something of a modern version of Montana’s Virginia City and Nevada City gold mining towns, where drilling for natural gas was driving a boom like we’d never seen.  Beautiful schools, lovely city parks, a chic brewpub, a horse-drawn carriage taking people through town — these were the fallout from massive multi-national corporations coming to town to set up shop and drill.

Pinedale, Wyoming, Deer

Deer visit our trailer in Pinedale

We learned that the two big bridges outside of town were for wildlife, not people or cars.  Large animal migrations cross the highway each spring and fall, and the new bridges would give the deer, elk and other migrating creatures a way to cross the road safely — and spare many cars from being totaled.

Pinedale, Wyoming, Footbridge

Footbridge in the pretty city park

 

 

 

 

 

A tunnel was being dug for these guys as well, since some animals like to take the high road while others prefer the low road… Wow!  I hope the animals can read the road signs leading to their bridges and tunnel!

Wind River Mountains behind Fremot Lake

Wind River Mountains beyond Fremot Lake

After a few days in town enjoying the fabulous library and strolling the pretty paved paths in the woods and along the streams in the city park, we ventured out of town towards Fremont Lake and the Wind River Mountain Range.

Unfortunately the smoke from fires further west was still quite thick and the views were hazy at best.  So we drove down to the lake’s marina where we found sailboats and motorboats and elegant outdoor dining on a deck overlooking the water.

Pinedale Wyoming Sailboat Marina

Sailboat at the marina

A sailboat left the dock and sailed towards the middle of the lake on a beam reach under a light breeze.  Watching the wind fill the sails caught us between two worlds for a moment, as we hadn’t thought about our boat or sailing or the water for a very long time.

Pinedale Wyoming Sailboat Marina

A sailboat reminds us of our other life!

Returning to Pinedale, I indulged in another passion I hadn’t thought about for a long time, and rented a pair of skates for an hour.  I buzzed around the town’s skating rink, very wobbly at first but gaining enough confidence to show off for Mark a bit, since he had never seen me skate before, something I had done intensively as a child.

Pinedale Wyoming Skating RinkThe wonderful town ice skating rink, the new skateboarding park, the excellent high school track, the well appointed city park and all the other public amenities were all top notch in every way, easily suitable for a city of 20,000.  But Pinedale is said to have just 1,200 to 2,000 residents (depending on which brochure you read), and the number undoubtedly changes monthly as the profits in the gas fields wax and wane.

Pinedale Wyoming Laundromat

The laundromat is decorated with trophy heads.

A fellow who was removing some heavy clothes from a laundromat washing machine labeled “Oil Field Clothes Only” told us the town had been in a slump in recent years as gas prices had fallen, but that gas prices were on the way up again and the companies would likely resume full-scale operations.

Stopping in the BLM office to ask about camping options, our conversation wandered away from camping and the clerks opened our eyes to another side of living in a boom town: prices were higher here for everything from real estate to food to gas at the pump, and one woman just shook her head as she said worriedly, “Who’s going to foot the bill for maintaining all this when the gas companies leave town?”  Gold mining and gas drilling, boom towns and ghost towns — as we looked around it seemed to us that life in the 1860’s and 2010’s had quite a bit in common.

Pinedale Wyoming Lake

A lake on the back side of town

Exploring the back side of Pinedale, we discovered a pretty, peaceful lake.  Watching the ducks leaving their triangular wake in the otherwise glassy water, as they have done for millennia, we found it hard to believe that both of the 3-story hotels we had seen on the way into town had been booked for two years before they were even completed.  Such intense activity in such a placid place.

Pinedale WyomingWe loved every minute we spent in Pinedale, but our time there drew to a close.  We left in high spirits, singing away as we drove at 55 mph on the brand new asphalt of one of the smoothest, flattest roads we had been on all summer.  Suddenly, a loud flapping noise right behind the truck jerked us to our senses.  Instantly, Mark pulled over.  We jumped out of the truck and saw that the tire tread had spontaneously peeled right off of one of the trailer tires.

Fender damage to our trailer

Fender damage from our tire disintegrating

Parts of the tread were wrapped around the axle, bits were strewn in the road, and a long strip of it was still partially attached to the tire along one edge.  The tire was still at full pressure and the tread was plenty deep, but the trailer fender had been damaged badly when the tire failed.  Good grief!!  Mark whipped out his tire changing gear and got the spare installed in minutes.  But we spent a long five days in Rock Springs, Wyoming, first getting all the trailer tires replaced and then trying to sort out the warranty situation with Michelin/Uniroyal.

Quick tire change on an RV

Mark pulls the shredded tread off the axle.

Michelin/Uniroyal had just recalled 849,000 similar tires a few weeks earlier, because they had a tendency to have their tread peel off unexpectedly (hmmm!!).  But ours was a slightly different model number.  So, rather than an easy recall process we had a very difficult warranty process that started with us paying to ship the failed tire to Uniroyal via UPS (not cheap!).

Tire without any tread

The denuded tire – all the tread had peeled off!

Their process is entirely based on the US mail service, rather than fax and email (which they don’t consider legally viable), and it involves getting documents notarized and mailing off written quotes from RV repair facilities.  None of this is easy to do while traveling in remote places.

But we did what we could while in Rock Springs, Wyoming, and carried on.  After many hours on the phone, Michelin/Uniroyal promised to reimburse the cost of shipping the tire to them and they agreed to allow us more than the usual 45 days to complete the warranty claim process.  Phew!!  Wyoming and Utah’s Flaming Gorge was looking really good by now, and we hustled down the road to get there as quickly as we could!!!

 

 

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Jackson, WY – The Wild West Tamed & Gentrified

Yellowstone National Park Wildlife on Road sign

Drive carefully!

Mid-August, 2012 – After leaving Ennis, Montana, and Earthquake Lake, we continued into Yellowstone National Park and then on into Grand Teton National Park.  These are enormous parks that take hours just to drive through at nearly highway speeds without stopping to see anything.

Grand Tetons Not Visible due to Wildfire Smoke

On top of Old Smokey…

On a mission to spend time at the Tetons, we didn’t stay long enough at Yellowstone to see any of the big game animals.  But we did see a cool big game animal road sign!

A rash of wildfires burning in Northern California, Nevada, Idaho and Montana had filled the air with smoke, and it hung over everything in a thick brown cloud.  Standing at the enormous plate glass windows of the Jackson Lake Lodge, which usually frames the mountains, we could barely see the outline of the peaks.

Jackson Wyoming Boondocking

A great spot for a few days!

So we dropped south a little bit to Jackson, Wyoming, thinking we might wait out in this hip tourist town until the smoke cleared out.  We found an ideal spot to camp for a while on a tiny bit of BLM land along the Snake River and watched river rafters float by.  They would skid along sideways and then twirl backwards and then regain their footing and slip forwards down the river right by our rig.

Snake River Rafting

River rafters floated past us every afternoon

One afternoon Mark was deep in a photography book and I was buried in my computer when two gals in bikinis knocked on our door.  Mark was delighted!

Jackson Wyoming Snake River Rafters

It’s a busy river.

They wanted to borrow our phone to call for their ride to pick them up, as one of them had decided she’d had enough rafting for one day.  Mark instantly ditched his book to help them.  It turned out they were recent law school grads from Harvard and BU who were celebrating graduation with a big trip out west.

Jackson Wyoming Horse Saddle Barstools

Giddyup!

Jackson is a fun trendy town where — we were told — the billionaires moved in and forced the millionaires out.  Very Wealthy People have homes here, and everything in town is quite expensive.  But enjoying the sights is still free, and we got a kick out of poking our heads in one bar and seeing a line of barstools made from horse saddles.  A little kid grinned at us from his carriage as he rode around the town square.

Jackson Wyoming Carriage Ride

Even kids love Jackson

Jackson Wyoming Pistol Doorknob

Where retired pistols end up…

Jackson Wyoming Pistol Doorknob

Shoot first, ask questions later.

The wild west has been tamed here, and pistols now serve as door handles and each corner of the town square has an arch made of densely packed elk antlers.

Bronze sculptures of some of America’s historic dignitaries sit on park benches around the square, and we took turns photographing each other with our arms around Ben Franklin, Abe Lincoln, Einstein and others.

Jackson Wyoming Elk Antler Arch

There are four of these antler arches…

Jackson Wyoming Abraham Lincoln Statue

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A fantastic paved bike path rolls up and down over the hills from town out towards our camping spot, and the map showed that other paved trails went in other directions as well.

Jackson Wyoming Paved Bike Path

There are paved bike paths all around town.

Jackson Wyoming Sunset over Snake River

Sunset over the Snake River

We were eager to ride them all, but the smoke lingered, burning our eyes and lungs, so we decided to save those adventures and the Tetons for another visit.  Little did we know when we left Jackson that the cool town of Pinedale, Wyoming, was going to catch our fancy down the road.

 

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Ennis, MT & Earthquake Lake – Small Town Charm & Airstream Trailers!

Ennis Montana elk bugling statue

Ennis, Montana

Mid August, 2012 – After leaving Nevada City, MT, we found ourselves buzzing through the small town of Ennis. It was so appealing we just had to stop and look around, and the next thing we knew two days had gone by and we were still in Ennis (population 840!).

Ennis Montna, Ennis Cafe

Cool sign above the Ennis Cafe

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is snow country and hunting country and elk and deer country, and there was vivid evidence of this all around town. We had recently discovered that “antler hunting” is a popular pastime when the elk shed their antlers each year, as the crazily shaped horns can be used for all kinds of intriguing home decorations.  Sure enough, there was a store in town dedicated to all things Antler.

Ennis Montana Fence made of Skis

A picket fence in snow country!

Ennis Montana guns on display in store

Hunting is a favorite activity.

 

 

But the little shop that got my interest perked most was CR.eations Yarn Shop, a little boutique store that sold specialty yarns from all kinds of woolly creatures from all over the world.

Ennis Montana Creations Yarn Shop

We found a wonderful yarn shop

Ennis Montana Creations Yarn Shop Cool Front Door

CR.eations has a very cool front door

I love knitting and crocheting and have always found something soothing and sensual about the different kinds of yarns you can work with.  But my needlework days were back when I was a teenager in the 1970’s, popping off sweaters and afghans to ward off those cold New England winters.  It was amazing to see how far yarn has come since then!

CR.eations Yarn Shop Ennis Montana

Christine in her colorful shop of plush yarns

Christine Rodgers is the German-born owner of this shop, and she eagerly showed me her many different wares.  She explained in detail how each yarn was processed, what kinds of animals it came from and what kinds of projects it would be best suited for.  She took me from shelf to shelf, putting soft fluffy skeins in my hands and describing how the wool had been pulled or twisted to create the yarn.  Coarse yarn, silky yarn, thick yarn, thread-like yarn – she has it all.  She even demonstrated the use of a primitive spinning wheel like the one the traditional Zapotec Weavers had shown us in Chiapas, Mexico last spring.

The woolly animals responsible for Christine’s lovely yarns are raised on special farms, but some other furry creatures entertained us right outside the buggy that afternoon.  We got a much needed deluge of rain, and a horse that had been quietly munching grass in the pasture behind our trailer suddenly went berserk, rolling around in the wet grass in a show of unbounded joy.

Ennis Montana Mule Deer

Deer frolicked near the buggy

Just as we were laughing about his crazy behavior a group of deer joined in the sport and soon they were all rubbing their backs in the grass and kicking their legs in the air in glee.

Airstream Trailer Caravan Summer 2012

We saw streams of Airstreams

The small herd of deer hung around quite a bit, and the next morning they wandered past our trailer several times on their way to and from the nearby woods.

Earthquake Lake Montana

Earthquake Lake

We finally tore ourselves away from Ennis and journeyed south towards Earthquake Lake.  We always take note when we see other RVs on the road, but this morning was special: at least twenty or thirty Airstream trailers passed us going in the opposite direction.  It’s uncommon  to see just three or four Airstreams in one day, so after the first half-dozen went by we knew something was up.

Earthquake Lake Montana

Sure enough, when we got to the Earthquake Lake rest area we poked our heads in on a couple in an Airstream and found out we were crossing paths with an Airstream Caravan, an organized 52-day rally of twenty-five trailers that was following Lewis & Clark’s journey.  On this particular day they were coming from Yellowstone in Wyoming and going to Dillon, Montana, but their overall route went across the country, following the explorers’ path.  What a fun way to spend a summer!

We hung around Earthquake Lake for a while and learned a bit of its intriguing history.  We hadn’t known that on the fateful night of August 17, 1959, there was a 7.5 earthquake right there in the Madison RIver Canyon.  In just moments the earth’s crust plunged 19 feet, submerging the north shore of Hebgen Lake (along with all its shoreside cabins) and thrusting the south shore upwards.  The lake became a giant, rocking bathtub, with water sloshing back and forth and over the dam.  28 lives were lost and hundreds of vacationers were trapped as portions of the highway slid underwater.  What a mess.

Views of Earthquake Lake Montana while boondocking in our RV

Earthquake Lake Montana

But today Earthquake Lake is beautiful and tranquil and you can’t even see a hint of the fiery forces beneath the earth’s surface that created such chaos above.

These were our final days in Montana, and it was sad to say goodbye to a state that had taught us so much history and shown us so much beautiful scenery over the past month.  But the lure of the stunning Grand Teton National Park tantalized us and drew us south to Jackson, Wyoming.

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