Posts Tagged ‘lists’

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The Yellowstone scavenger hunt

May 15, 2012

“Oh, look another shatteringly beautiful alpine lake”, C said numbly as we drove through Yellowstone.

The day before, we would have stopped on the freeway for a good picture of a buffalo or bison (they are separate, we had to look it up; North Dakota had buffalo, Yellowstone had bison). By the time we were headed out of the park, we didn’t even slow down to look at whole herds of them as they grazed (aka stood motionless) by the side of the road.

We got a little jaded. Part of it was the same phenomenon we had at the National Art Museum, once I’ve seen a fifty(?) unbelievably beautiful things, I lose the ability to process new incredible things. The appreciation part of my brain gets tired and falls asleep. Then I’m left with the feeling of “why the hell am I here?”

One problem was that we started out tired (hmph). What I most would have appreciated in the natural landscape included quieter birds, a lounge chair and a glass of lemonade.

But no, Yellowstone is not about that. It is about being whacked in the head with incredible beauty, over and over again.

However, while I filled up my camera with photos, none of them are very good, at least not compared to the real thing. So I’ll show you the interesting stuff instead of the lovely. I asked C to share his much better photos with me as he goes through them so there may be more.

So, let’s get started. First, keep your hands and arms inside the ride at all times.

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To which I say, “Duh!”

Bison are big. I mean, not like “whoa, that horse is kinda big and if I sit on it like you want me to, the earth will be so far I can’t touch and when I fall (and I will), it will hurt. A lot.” Naw, horses are tiny compared to bison. And bison are tiny compared to bull moose. Neither one of them will want to eat me but either one could step on me by accident leaving me bloody and unconscious while they walk away unperturbed.

Ok, so the path around Yellowstone is a loop (ignore the road in the middle, that is for wimps). We came in through the north entrance and headed straight so we were going around the loop clockwise. See the map (much bigger here).

The first thing we came to was Mammoth Hot Springs. Which was a giant hot spring. All the white in the photo is mineral salts.

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All of the color comes from thermophiles, those wacky creatures that live in mineral rich boiling water. I figured they were microbes or like red algae. Anyway, this was immense and amazing and we only saw a small part of it, something that was brought home as we drove around the back… it would have been easy to spend the day hiking around the mammoth hot spring, finding neat nooks and crannies.

Shortly thereafter, we saw a bison standing along side the road, maybe twenty feet from the road. It wasn’t moving at all. I mean, really at all. I believed it was fake. We’d just gotten to the park and all, it seemed like a good place for a stuffed bison. I mean, it was posing at the roadside. I can’t be blamed for thinking they faked one to show people the majesty (and huuuugeness) of the bison. Christopher laughed and laughed at my insistence it wasn’t real.

When we went to Lassen years ago, I was surprised by the warm temperatures and the snow (well, glacier). Yellowstone has that too. It is distinctly odd to go from getting hot walking around in tshirt and jeans to slipping and sliding in the snow. Makes for pretty pictures though. I could imagine hiking along here until sunset and getting a fabulous picture.

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Oh, but what about those thermophiles? Well, when we saw a hot springs by the side of the road with no one else around, we stopped. We stayed on the stable looking areas but this didn’t have a boardwalk so I was a little wary of placing my feet. Even so, it was C who saw them… worms wiggling through the boiling water! Crazy!

There are some in the first part of that video but it is at the end where a little red worm S-curves its way across the screen.

There were lots and lots of hot springs (an geysers). The main barrier to seeing them was how far we were willing to hike (not being altitude acclimated, the climbing made my heart go pittypat if we went to far). We did stop the car several times to explore, sometimes by ourselves and sometimes at the major marked spots.

We saw the aptly-named-but-not-what-I-was-expecting Porcelain Basin. This area of the part had geysers all over. And hot springs of every color (different minerals means different colors, that bright turquoise in the pic doesn’t really capture the startlingly colored water).

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Ok, there was a lot so hiking on that one. I did see a geyser spew water and many of them release steam. Somehow, we started to get really fatigued and not only physically. We’d already felt like we were on a mission. Mission goal: Visit, view, and photograph Yellowstone!

Objectives:

  • Bison
  • Snow capped mountains
  • Close views of snow
    • Snow with water
    • Snow with trees
  • Other large fauna (geese and ducks do not count) (though a bear would clear all of the other objectives)
  • Waterfall
  • Mud pot
  • Steam vent
  • Geyser, with water spewing
  • Interesting color pools due to thermopliles
  • Interesting color pools due to mineral deposits
  • Lava rocks
  • Picture of my sweetie

Bonus objective:

  • Visible thermopiles
  • Herd of bison by a river
  • Snow capped mountain reflected in water

Um, did anyone notice where this went off the rails? Where it became a scavenger hunt instead of a deep appreciation for natural beauty? Because we played the game for a little while before C said that crack about another shatteringly beautiful alpine lake which caused me to crack up.

Once it became a game, it was clear the appreciation part of my brain had turned off.

The plan (oh, the plan) was to spend the night near Yellowstone and have a whole 24 hours to enjoy the park. There is a that loop to drive around and then a path to wend south to the Grand Tetons.

We did a quarter of the loop and left to get food and rest. Maybe if we hadn’t been so  tired, we might have been so transported that we needed to see more, to get rest and food and go back and see more. Maybe it if wasn’t so close to home and the end of our trip.

But, it is a driving park. While there are lots and lots of places to stop and hike, most people drive through, stopping occasionally. I’ve actually done enough driving, thank you.  C didn’t even realize until we approached home that we hadn’t followed the plan, he though he’d just driven fast.

If I had to do it all over again, I think the way to enjoy Yellowstone is to camp and hike. To only see one site a day, maybe two. Not five or more as we did. And not the thirty or more you can go see if you do drive the loop. Normally when I say mind-numbing, usually I mean tedious and boring. But now I have found other ways to numb my mind. I don’t know if that is a good thing.

 

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Why my feet hurt so much

April 29, 2012

Tomorrow we leave DC so we needed to cram everything that we could. The Library of Congress was closed which is ok because they don’t carry my book. (Hmph!!) We walked by the LOC but saw a lot more than that:

Capitol South Metro station

Capitol Hill

  • Peace monument
  • Grant monument
  • Garfield monument
  • The other reflecting pool (this one with water!)

US Botanic Garden and Conservatory

National Air and Space Museum

  • Space Ship One
  • Spirit of St. Louis
  • Apollo 11 return capsule
  • Touched a moon rock!
  • Wright flyer
  • Space lab twin
  • There were so many amazing aircraft, i can’t begin to list them.

L’Enfant Plaza Metro station

National Museum American History (briefly, it was very crowded)

  • Instruments (small exhibit! Found more instruments near the lobby but still oddly small)
  • 1933 exhibit

National Gallery of Art

  • Nineteenth century French (including impressionists)
  • Dutch etchings
  • Italian religious paintings (old, ole triptychs)
  • Amazing rotunda and indoor fountain
  • Rembrandt
  • Rodin and Degas sculptures

Oh, and when we walked by the Butterfly Garden today, I realized we walked through it yesterday lunch. This is not the Butterfly Habitat, that was something else that we opted not to do.

Oh, and since I mentioned dinners, tonight we got takeout from Carmine’s, It was a lot of pasta pomodoro. And a fantastic champagne cocktail.

(C, you said you didn’t want to know so stop reading. Everyone else can scroll down.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Both days I clocked in over 20k steps and more than 9 miles a day. My feet (at least) look forward to a short walk in the morning and then getting in the car to go to Hartford, Connecticut.

 

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Some things we did in Washington DC

April 29, 2012

This covers only Friday and Saturday.

Air and Space Museum (Udvar-Hazy Center, near Dulles Airport)

  • Space shuttle Discover ( awesome )
  • Enola Gay
  • Concord
  • SQ-71 with Skunkworks symbol on tail
  • Assorted airplanes, satellites, helicopters, missiles, and things that really didn’t look like they should have flown

Pizza Pi Pizzeria

Metro Center’s huge cavernous multi-level multi-line subway station

National Mall

Washington Monument (closed)

World War II memorial

Reflecting Pool (drained)

Constitution Garden Pond (half drained, smelling of swamp)

The Ellipse (President’s Park, flag football game)

White House South Lawn (busloads of tourists getting pictures of other tourists’ backs)

National Christmas Tree (mostly dead)

William Tecumesh Sherman Statue

Smithsonian Natural History Museum

  • Big elephant display in the rotunda
  • Triceratops (!! I love Tris!!)
  • Assorted other dinosaur bones
  • Fossilized plants (a lot of them)
  • Tiny, tiny horse
  • Giant ground sloth (giant!!!)
  • Assorted other mammals
  • Hope Diamond
  • Rocks from space
  • Assorted other rocks
  • Assorted other gems (Heard in the jewelry area, small child “Is this all treasure?”)
  • Insect zoo (this was strangely neat, I held a lovely caterpillar and we saw butterfly hatchery)
  • Icky mummies

National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden

American Portrait Museum

  • Art of the Video Game (enh)
  • One neat stained glass window
  • Lots and lots of portraits. Really, lots. Winthrop was funny looking.

Spy museum gift shop

Cowgirl Creamery

Dinner with Stacey Banks at Ella’s Pizza and Pasta

Franklin Park*

White House North Lawn*

Sunday morning bells of the Church of Epiphany*

 

*E only.

 

And now we are off to add to this list… Which doesn’t cover the architecture we’ve seen, a whole ‘nother post.

 

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A little tired

April 23, 2012

I ended up driving the whole day today. C drove almost all of yesterday’s much longer leg. But I am a little tired now. Let me catalog how I felt when when we stopped (most of this was typed waiting for checking into the hotel and then waiting for dinner).

  • My eyes feel like they went to the beach and rolled around in the sand without me. Then they were put back in with an air gun to dry them out.
  • My eyelids are so heavy that every blink is an ever-increasingly-difficult effort of will. It made driving the last ten miles very difficult.
  • My lips tingle with sunburn and I think I’m glad I can’t feel the tip of my nose.
  • My fingers are tired both of gripping the steering wheel and tired of dangling limply from it.
  • My ankle is tired as though my foot was really made of lead. The cruise control only helps so much and it was not enough.
  • There is a muscle in my lower right back that has been threatening to cramp for the last hour. I think I can stretch it if I turn… aaaaaaah!!! not that way, no, don’t turn that way. That way leads to cramping.
  • My insides are so jostled my pancreas thinks it is my kidney and does not know how to do its new job.
  • My throat is so dry, I expect a tumbleweed to tumble out of my mouth. And yet my bladder is so full the it is going to be a disaster soon. How is this dichotomy possible?
  • My sinuses are so full of dirt and pollen from unknown plants, they don’t know whether to be stuffy or leathery dry, mirroring my windburned cheeks. So each one has done something different.
  • My hip hurts (though, really, not as much as I expected so this one is kind of a win).
  • My butt, though, oh, that doesn’t bear thinking about. Maybe if I don’t think about it the pain will go away. I may never sit down again. Certainly, I’ll need a tailbone transplant before we go on.
  • Even my hair feels tired.

A beer and some dinner and I already feel better. A quick shower before bed and I’ll be fine tomorrow. I hope. I suspect we’ll be sharing the driving duties from now on.

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Packing list

April 21, 2012

Food stuffs

  • Cold ice chest: powered by car and augmented by ice packs.
    • Sliced cheese
    • Some drinks
    • Jam
    • Ice pack
    • Odwalla kids smoothies
  • Insulated cooler for things we don’t want to get super hot (i.e. food bars)
    • Food bars for me (breakfast)
    • Emergency food bars for C
    • Peanut butter packets (actually almond butter packets)
    • Apples? Some sort of fruit
    • Sliced bread
    • Frozen waters
  • Other foods
    • Case of water, some orange-mango juices
    • Crackers
    • Animal cookies
    • Ginger snaps
    • Freeze dried fruit packets
    • Oatmeal (and brown sugar)
    • Cereal- brown rice crispies and honey nut Cheerios
    • Canned tuna
    • Mac and cheese
  • Other
    • Knives, forks, paper plates, napkins (paper towels?)
    • Doggie cleanup bags for trash
    • Travel mug for E

Gadetry

  • Camera + charger, lenses, monopod, backpack
  • Cell phones (2)
  • Lytro camera + USB cable
  • Small camera + charger
  • Fitbit charger (Fitbits are implied)
  • Wifi keyboard
  • Enough computing equipment to fill an Apple store + chargers
  • Kindle + charge cable
  • Aux hard drive
  • Small telescope
  • Binoculars
  • Power inverter and octopus power strip
  • Headphones (3 pair)
  • Drum pad and sticks
  • Small watercolor kit
  • Sketchpad + colored pencils

Clothes (traveling)

  • 10 unders each
  • 2 pair jeans each
  • 1 pair shorts each
  • 2 knee length skirts E
  • 3 short sleeve tshirts
  • 4 long sleeve things (2 sweater/sweatshirt, 2 tshirt)
  • E brown coat
  • E black windbreaker
  • C jacket: rain jacket
  • C jacket: leather
  • C fedora
  • E wide brimmed had
  • Baseball caps (2)
  • Swimsuit for each
  • Knit gloves for E

Being-there clothes

  • 2 button shirts for C
  • Slacks for C
  • Extra pants for each
  • Casual dress for E
  • 2 dressy blouses for E
  • (No tie for C, no little black dress for E)
  • Belt for C

Shoes

  • E Hiking sandals
  • E brown sandals
  • E tennis shoes
  • E tab dress shoes
  • C dress blacks
  • C tennis shoes
  • C hiking boots

Car stuff

  • Fuzzy green shawl
  • Emergency kit- silver blankets, flares, jumper cables, first aid, etc.
  • Hiking first aid kit
  • 2 Pillows
  • AAA membership card, TripTik, region books and assorted maps
  • Tire inflator?
  • Seat belt cutter and window smasher
  • Hand lotion
  • Large maglite
  • Picnic blanket
  • Sunscreen
  • Towel (?)

Drugs

  • Advil
  • Tylenol
  • Zantac
  • Prevacid
  • Allergy meds: Claritin, Benadryl, Benadryl gel
  • Cough drops (sugar free and not)
  • Prescriptions
  • Dramamine?

Bathroom bag

  • Fully stocked plus shaving cream and razors
  • Hair brush
  • Ear plugs

Soaps

  • Laundry detergent
  • Dish washing soap
  • Pump hand sanitizer
  • Sanitizer towelettes