Sunday, December 5, 2010

2010 5 Dec - Mesa


I had a very nice Thanksgiving with my family. My brother Dean's family and my mother and I drove up to Glendale (north Phoenix, about 50 minutes from my house) to my niece Heather's house. We got to meet her recently-arrived foster daughters. We had turkey with all the trimmings. I got to play some card games and our favorite board game "Settlers of Cazan" as well.

I feel very busy, with so much to do to get ready for Christmas. And there are so many activities during December at church. I'm singing in the transition choir at Valley Unitarian Universalist Church again, and am really enjoying that. It's a small choir that sings to people who are dying. But we also sing to people who are sick, and at nursing homes, etc., and practiced today with bells, which is a first for me. Fun!! I've re-joined the church choir, and am enjoying that very much as well. I'm going to be singing some duets at our Christmas program. There are other concerts as well - my niece and nephew have their Christmas concerts, and my niece Heather and I are going to the Phoenix Symphony's presentation of the Messiah. I may even manage a Messiah Sing-Along in here somewhere.

I haven't managed to get to my goal of walking every day yet, like I'd planned to do when I got back to Mesa. But I have taken some wonderful walks. One afternoon I spent walking around the ponds at one of my favorite places - the Water Ranch in Gilbert, AZ [photo on left]. I saw so many birds there, including several kinds of doves, a green heron, a couple of snowy egrets chasing and fighting with each other, European starlings
[photo at right], lots of coots, lots of geese, lots of mallards, a juvenile pied-billed grebe (with stripes!, black-necked stilts, lots of long-billed dowitchers, and several kinds of hummingbirds (there are at least twelve different kinds of hummingbirds in Arizona!) - several of these were new birds for me. It was an afternoon that was replenishing and soothing to my soul. [photo of Anna's Hummingbird above]

I've found time to do a little geneology work, though not a lot, mostly just trying to get organized, and figure out what I have. I did find my father's mother's father's family information, which was exciting! Up till now, his family has been a blank page.


This evening as I was walking along the Tempe Canal Path, another favorite, not far from my place, as the sun set, I couldn't help snapping a couple pictures. :-)


The weather has been wonderful - a little cooler when I first got here, but in the 70s this week. I love it!

And I love being back in the valley, with the mountains on the horizon. I miss the mountains when I'm not here, and I feel like they welcome me back home.

Monday, November 22, 2010

22 Nov 2010 Mesa, Arizona


I'm back in Mesa. Arrived here this evening. It was two long days of driving to get here from Austin, but it went smoothly. I stopped at Cracker Barrel, as usual, and got a couple audio books to listen to. It makes the trip go so much faster. You can pick them up at any Cracker Barrel and return them to any Cracker Barrel, for a reasonable rental fee. I stopped in El Paso and had breakfast with a friend there. It's cooler here than it was in Austin, but it still feels good, probably in the 60s. Loved watching the sun set behind the mountains on the way here. It feels good to be back. I left June 15th, so I've been gone over five months, and driven over 15,000 miles. Without any major incidents. If you don't count getting stuck in the sand on the beach in Oregon. :-) Whew! It's been a great trip, a wonderful summer, but I'm looking forward to staying in one spot for awhile. [Photo taken coming in to Phoenix in 2008.]

Sunday, November 21, 2010

21 Nov 2010 Heading to Arizona

I leave this morning for Arizona, expecting to arrive there on Monday or Tuesday. I've loved my time in Austin. Good friends, good food, beautiful weather, walks in some of my favorite parks. But I'm looking forward to Arizona.... :-)

Sunday, October 31, 2010

5 Nov 2010 Austin

I am spending a couple weeks in Austin, Texas. It's time for my annual routine medical check-ups. (If I don't see my doctor once a year, she refuses to keep refilling my prescriptions, for some reason!!) I lived here for 30 years and love this town. I am visiting family here and many friends. I hope to make it to all my favorite restaurants; Austin (and San Antonio) have some of the best Mexican food anywhere, and lots of other really good places to eat.

I am enjoying the warm weather (70s and 80s) and my favorite hiking spots.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

31 Oct 2010 Back in Texas


As I write this, I am parked in a Dallas RV park, with my door open, and my fan on, listening to the lovely sound of a katydid chorus. It's dark outside, but it's still in the 80s. The sound of the katydids and the fan make me feel like I'm back home.

The fall colors were gorgeous on my drive from Fargo to Minneapolis. I felt like I was driving through the Master Painter's fall pallette - rusts, yellows, tans, browns, reds, light greens, dark greens, and lots of oranges. It made me think of driving through some of the scenes of swirling colors in Robin Williams' movie, "What Dreams May Come". I saw some color all along the way, but the peak was in the Ozarks as this time of year they are orange. Totally. Imagine the gentle hills of solid green - all turned to orange. Impressive. [photo I took of the Missouri Ozarks, Fall 2008, above].

I was able to gather lots of old family photos and family history information from family in North Dakota and Minnesota, on both sides of my family, during the last month. I also visited with a cousin in Independence, Missouri, on my way down to Texas, and she had lots of old photos and information on my dad's mother's family. I was able to meet with the people I wanted to meet with, and, for the most part, gathered the information I was hoping to gather. So I am pleased about that. I have gathered LOTS of information and photos, to sort through, and publish on ancestry.com, and will have plenty to do this winter in Arizona. :-) I was able to see lots of family during this trip, though I didn't stay long at any one place, feeling like I had to keep moving, as I knew I was on borrowed time, and that winter could arrive any time.

I made it south just ahead of the 5 inches (or more) of snow that some parts of North Dakota and northern Minnesota got last Tuesday, and was very glad to be south of the mess, as I watched the weather news Tuesday night. But I didn't manage to get south fast enough to avoid the hurricane-strength winds and record low barometric pressure on Wednesday. I was driving through snow, off and on,Tuesday and Wednesday, though the ground was too warm for it to "stick" (as we say in Texas) and it melted when it hit the ground. Looks like the winds damaged my TV antennae, though. :-(

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

23 Oct 2010 North Dakota and Minnesota


As I write this, I am listening to the sounds of geese honking as they fly overhead in their V-formation. I have no idea why they have to honk as they fly, unlike other birds, who fly silently. My dad says that the theory is that they are talking to each other. "Hey, you're getting too close, Buddy! Move over." "Do you see that cornfield cafe down there? Let's stop off for lunch." I see and hear them several times a day when I am outside. No one else notices them up here, they are such a common occurrence. But I enjoy seeing and hearing them each and every time. They are still a treat for me.


When I was traveling through the middle of North Dakota, to visit with family, I saw more hawks in two days than I’ve seen in my entire life before [red-tailed hawk, dark phase, left, and juvenile osprey, right]. I was amazed. It seemed like there were hawks on every ten telephone poles all along my route. My dad says that I saw so many because they are migrating now. Loved it.


One of my first days in Minnesota I drove through the middle of the lake country, from Fergus Falls to Park Rapids. For about 90 miles, I kept track of the lakes I went by - well, those that had signs, anyway: Pelican, Buck, Prairie, Detroit Lakes, Franklin, Sauer, Melissa, Lind, Cottage, Meadow, Muskrat, Munson, St. Clair, Schulz, Howe, Cotton, Little Toad, Big Twin, Sivertson, Toad, Wolf, George, Height of Land, Holbrook, East Lake Lizzie, Fish. I missed a few. And that didn't include the many unsigned unnamed ponds, sloughs, and lakes. But there was another lake every three miles, on average.


The water table around here continues to rise. A couple years ago when my dad was driving me around the countryside where he grew up, he pointed out lake after lake -"That lake didn't used to be there; I used to walk through that field." "Those two lakes are joined into one now; they used to be separate lakes." Etc. Etc. And I can tell that they've grown even larger since then. Lakes have grown a lot in his lifetime. Devil's Lake in North Dakota is in the news from time to time as it swallows more and more land, but what's happening there is quietly happening all over this part of the country. I don't understand it. I assume it has something to do with global warming, but I don't really know.



It's late enough that most of the trees are bare, most of the red is gone from the maples. But there is still a flash of brilliant color occasionally - aspen gold, red maple, golden tamarac.


The unusually warm weather continues. It gets down below freezing at night occasionally, but mostly has been in the upper 30s. I've warned everyone that, if the temps get lower into the 20s at night, I'm heading south. :-) But, so far, the weather has been great. I'm loving it!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

101005 Montana and North Dakota


The drive from Salmon, Idaho, to Billings, Montana, yesterday, then from Billings to Dickinson, North Dakota, today, was a beautiful one. I enjoyed again the drive through the Salmon River Valley, with all the golden aspens. I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed the drive through Montana. And the western part of North Dakota has the impressive badlands. They were especially pretty, with the fall colors.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

100930 Salmon, Idaho


ATVs – Thursday we got in Marcia’s ATV, including Marcia's dog Suzie [Suzie waiting for us to go, left], and drove over to her neighbor Val’s. From there Val led us on her ATV up a trail into the mountains east of their neighborhood. We drove by an active gold mine, which I'd never seen before. We went up into the mountains (not far) and stopped at a pretty place by a creek and had a picnic lunch. Stopped by an abandoned cabin and took some pictures. Marcia suggested this cabin could be my new Idaho base camp! Val kept looking out for, and talking about, bears seen in the area. We didn't see any. But she had brought her gun, for protection, in case we needed it.
Hot Springs – After we got back, Marcia, Val, and I went up to the hot springs only about 30 miles from Marcia's. It was great being there at night, with the Milky Way and gazillions of stars overhead. They mix the hot water from the springs with cold water, so you can stand to be in it. But it's still hot, and I was popping in and out, getting warm, getting cool.

Yurt - Friday We picked up Val and went into town for a couple errands. Stopped at the fudge store and I got a few necessary things. :-) We stopped by Marge's on the way. It was great seeing Marge. Then Val, Marcia, and I drove over to their friend Sharon’s place about 30 miles north of Salmon. Before we saw anything else, we saw where the hole in her son's yurt had been repaired, from when the bear's claws ripped it! Impressive. I’m so glad I got to meet Sharon. I love her yurt, her life “off the grid”. It’s so great to know it can be done so elegantly. She has more room in her charming yurt than I do in my RV, actually. And it stays warm in the wintertime, heated by her wood stove. She says she actually has more trouble with it getting too warm than too cold in the wintertime. Her son lives nearby, and chops wood for her. She has a garden, a composting toilet, and only goes into town a couple times a month in the wintertime. Her vehicle is a RV (Class B, van chassis) that she traveled around with, and lived in, for years. So we had a lot to talk about. :-)

Bill's Tour - As always I am having a delightful visit with Marcia. Saturday we went on Bill's Tour. Her friend Bill played tour guide for Marcia, their friend Molly, and me on a day-long drive, through a couple of valleys and over a couple of mountain ranges. Well, Marcia actually did the driving. We’ve had five days in a row of 80-degree weather – very unusual for this time of year, but we're all loving it! I loved the drive. We stopped at a local fish hatchery, which was interesting. I learned a lot about Chinook salmon spawning. We saw the runway in the middle of nowhere for some rancher's 727. Loved driving over the passes. We got as high as 8300 feet at Double Springs Pass. We saw Mount Borah, the highest mountain in Idaho (12,600 feet); it still had some snow on it from the snow they had in the mountains on Sep. 9th. We stopped and had a picnic lunch at the top of the first pass we went over. We stopped at the earthquake scarp from a 1983 earthquake here that killed two children in Challis. Loved driving through the Salmon River Valley. With all the cottonwoods turned golden, it was an especially beautiful drive. We stopped and had another picnic lunch at a park on the Salmon River, near the river, with yellow cottonwoods all around us. Both picnics were special. I love the mountains around here - so many different colors, shapes, and patterns. Bill is an amateur geologist, so he explained to us about the calderas in the area, and we stopped and saw ripples in a rock cliff where the rock used to be under water (all of the Salmon River Valley used to be under a huge lake). I especially appreciated that he showed us a spot where you could plainly see the 6-10-inch layer of ash in the dirt, from the explosion of Mount Mazama (Crater Lake’s volcano) 10,000 years ago. When Mount Mazama exploded and Crater Lake was created, ash covered everything for hundreds of miles around. The layer of pumice and ash was ten feet thick around Mount Mazama, and as much as 3 inches thick way up in British Columbia. Here it was 6-10 inches thick, and you could plainly see it where the road cut through the hillside.

Smoke - Marcia and I drove up the Salmon River Valley on Sunday, but ran into smoke from a prescribed burn that the Forest Service had set, reportedly to clean out dead trees. By dinner time, the smoke was at Marcia's place, and I was glad I was leaving the next morning. My last evening in Salmon, there were scattered showers on all sides of us, and a smoke-enhanced sunset. I sat outside and just listened to the birds and watched the sky and the play of sun and shadows against the mountains for a long time.

I would like to stay longer, but feel I need to be moving on, as it’s already getting down below freezing some nights in North Dakota. And Monday the weather isn’t going to be as good, some rain in the forecast, so it’s a good day to move on.

I'm going to be doing some sight-seeing, but mostly I'm going to be visiting with family in North Dakota and Minnesota for the next month, so I don't expect to be posting regularly here for awhile.

100928 Montana and Idaho


Clark Fork – I continued to drive along the beautiful Clark Fork of the Yellowstone River most of the way to Missoula. Pretty drive. Gorgeous day. It’s in the mid-80s!!!! I love this part of the country. As my friend Marge says, where you are born isn't necessarily where you are meant to be. I was meant to be in the mountains. This part of the country feels like "home" to me.

Missoula - I made an appointment to get my oil changed when I was in Missoula, and did that. (It cost me more here than it has cost me anywhere else in the country! Next time I will pick a different town.) I drove away from my RV site without unhooking my electric cord this morning. I don't know what I was thinking!! Well, I wasn't thinking, obviously. To make a long story short, I was able to find an RV repair place that was willing to fix it right away, was lucky that the damage was only minor, and was able to get on the road again by late afternoon. Whew! That's the second time I've done that (in six years). Obviously, I need some kind of system that reminds me to unhook before I drive away. Maybe I'll tie a towel on my steering wheel or something.

Salmon - The drive from Missoula to Salmon, over Lolo Pass, and another pass, alongside the Bitterroot Mountains, through the Salmon River Valley, is another scenic drive. In late afternoon, the sun turned everything golden. A gorgeous day, a glorious drive. It's great to see Marcia, and it feels good to be back in Salmon.

100927 Idaho and Montana


Drove along Pack River (though it was too late in the season to see many birds) and the beautiful Pend Oreille Lake this morning [on left]. Saw ten wild turkeys crossing the road - the most I've ever seen.


Drove along the beautiful Clark Fork of the Yellowstone River, another scenic byway. Saw a school of beautiful Trumpeter swans flying through the valley. Beautiful birds. I'd never seen any in the wild before.

Kat and I spent the afternoon chatting and wandering around town. We watched the geese on the lake for awhile. It was great to see Kat again, and to share with her, for just a little while, this beautiful country. Kat and Jim live very near the Clark Fork [photo below], and in a national forest.
We saw a number of deer wandering around town, resting in people's yards. Reminded me of Waterton, Alberta. The deer think they own the town there too. :-)

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

100926 Back in the USA


Scenic Byway - I've enjoyed all the fall color in the little towns I've driven through on this trip. My last drive through Canada was another scenic byway. Honestly, every road I drove on in Canada was scenic! High, green fir-covered hills with splotches of golden.

US Border – (Sunday) I think I just need to tell them up front that I’m semi-retired when I'm at border crossings. The ICE guys seem suspicious of my free-wheeling attitude and lack of a schedule. This time they inspected my fridge to make sure that it contained no other fruits or vegetables except the yellow onions I declared! The Customs guy made a comment that made me think that, actually, he just wanted to see the inside of my RV. :-)

Groceries – I had not bought groceries the whole time I was in Canada because they are so expensive, so I stopped in Bonner’s Ferry, Idaho, for groceries. I felt like a kid in a candy store – so much selection! Reasonable prices! I could buy anything I wanted! When I made this comment to the grocery store clerk, he reminded me that the Canadians have free health care, though. Good point. There are trade-offs no matter where you live.


Blue Lake CG – I’m staying at the nicest little campground, beside a pretty little lake in northern Idaho. I walked part way around the lake when I got here. Quiet. Serene. The owner is very friendly and helpful. There is a human-sized chess set by the lake and a seat with scope and birding book set up so you can watch the birds on the lake. Their love and care for this place is evident everywhere. I would recommend this campground.

Home - It feels good to be back in the USA. It was a wonderful trip, one I hope to repeat, sooner, not later, but there's no place like home.

100925 Meadows in the Sky


Meadows in the Sky Parkway – I drove through two more (small) national parks today: Glacier [photo left] - the Canadian one - and Mount Revelstoke [below]. I took a couple hikes and enjoyed views of more snow-topped mountains, but the drive up Mount Revelstoke on the Meadows in the Sky Parkway was the high point for sure. It helped that the sun came out and it turned into a gorgeous afternoon. I stopped and had lunch in my RV, at a "scenic turnout" part-way up the mountain, with a view of the town of Revelstoke and the Columbia River valley below. Once I got to the top, the best view was from the fire tower, for sure: incredible views of snow-topped mountains to the north, with beautiful Lake Eva in the valley below. Then I walked part of the way on the Meadows in the Sky loop that takes you to the east side of the summit, where I looked out on more snow-topped mountains, as far as the eye could see. I had the trail to myself, one of the advantages of coming so late in the season. A statue of an Indian lifting his pipe and singing in homage to the Great Spirit had been placed there, and it evoked the sense of wonder and awe appropriate for this powerful place.

Ferry – About 25 minutes from Revelstoke, there is a free ferry across Arrow Lake, which seems to have been created by damming the Columbia. This ferry is just part of the highway system, as it is the only way to get from one side of this large lake to the other, and this is the only road. I waited about 30 minutes, but the ferry itself only took about 15 minutes. This part of BC seems very remote. Wilderness, even, except for the logging they’re doing here. I saw a few men putting their canoes into the water at the ferry landing. This is wilderness, with civilization just around the corner.

100924 Yoho National Park & Eagle's Eye


Yoho - I drove through Yoho National Park this morning. I was planning to see Takakkaw Falls ("takakkaw" means "magnificent" in the Cree language), but, I turned around when I couldn’t make the second curve on the switchbacks. The signs had said “no trailers” and “7 meter limit”, but I’m just a little over 6.7 meters so I wasn’t worried about it. Then I had to go forward and back, and forward and back, to make it around the turn, and that was only the second one, and I didn’t know how many more there were, so I turned back. That's the first time that's happened to me, that I haven't been able to make the turns on a switchback road. :-(

I stopped at Natural Bridge. The bridge wasn’t much – it was tiny, in the middle of the river [photo above]. But the river was that gorgeous glacier-melt azure blue, and the sun came out for just two minutes while I was taking pictures there. Very pretty.

I drove up to aptly-named Emerald Lake, another pretty little alpine lake. But the highlight of the day, without a doubt, was my lunch at the Eagle's Eye Restaurant outside of Golden, BC. Golden is an aptly-named city, as there are golden birches and aspen on the hills and golden cottonwoods in the valleys all around the town. I drove the 8 miles or so up to the Kicking Horse lodge, where I got on the gondola that took me up to the top of the mountain, and, boy!, was that a ride! It just kept going up and up. By far the highest ski lift/gondola ride I've been on. The brush was golden and orange and red and the birches were golden. The views at the top are touted as the "best views in British Columbia" and I can see why. It was sprinkling when I started out, and lightly snowing up on the mountain when I first got there. But it quit snowing, and the sun even came out for a few minutes before I left. They sat me at a window table, so I had a view of the mountains while I ate. The windows are all huge. The best views were from the "back deck", though - mountaintops as far as you can see. Incredible! I ordered their pasta special, beef mushroom stroganoff on wild rice, which was a treat (a little dry, though tasty). I’d gotten a coupon for $10 off from the Information Center, so I got a real good deal on it. The Eagle's Eye goes on my list of recommended restaurants, because the views are incomparable, and the ride to the top of the mountain is an unforgettable experience. From my seat, I could see the bikers starting off on their run down the mountain (they took the ski lift ride up). Amazing ride they had ahead of them! There were black bears on the mountain halfway down, they said, and I could see the group of people watching the bear, as my gondola whizzed by, but I couldn't see the bears.

CG – I stopped early (5 PM) because I was tired. I'm at a campground in a little town outside of Golden. The views here are great, with mountains in every direction. “sigh” I thought I was going to get WIFI at this cg tonight, but it wouldn't connect. :-(

Flicker n Jays - The first thing I noticed here in the campground is Stellar’s Jays hanging around the office and yard, then I noticed a Northern Flicker. First time I'd seen one. And I realized that it’s the one that sounds like a Star Wars laser gun that I've been hearing from time to time, ever since Oregon. The German-accented owner says that his daughter feeds the jays, and they follow her around as she’s working in the yard, which explains why they let me get so close. One jay got so close to me that my camera wouldn’t focus on him, and he was talking to me like crazy. I would enjoy having them around. The views here from the campground are fantastic, on all sides. The owner says that they winter in Arizona!