Moose 2.0

After watching the mother and daughter moose for a while I moved on down the road.  Ole eagle eye JohnBoy then spotted something way off the road to the left.  I pulled over to that side of the road and shut the car off.  With my camera I could see that it was a bull moose, laying down in the grass.

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He was just to the left of the tiny tree I am pointing at (pretty clever under the heat of the moment, eh?).

I watched for a few minutes and it started to drizzle.  I closed up all but the drivers side window and continued to watch.  I saw some movement to the left and learned there was another moose laying in the grass not far from him.

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The rain got steadier and I rolled up my window until action was needed.  Well, it didn’t take long.  As I was looking at the rain through the windshield here came a huge moose, running from right to left across the road about 10 yards in front of me.  Scared me half to death!

He slowly worked his way toward the two who were still hunkered down way off the road.  Once they saw him coming they stood up and watched him slowly approach them.

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As the third moose (an even younger bull with shorter antlers) got very close the older bull bugled, I presume to express his dominance.

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They all kind of walked around in a circle for a while, getting acquainted.  Eventually all three headed for the woods for some privacy.

Marmot 1.0

As I drove further down the road from my second moose encounter it had stopped raining and the sun was back out.  I saw a marmot run across the road a ways from me and slowed way down, crossing over to park on his side of the dirt road.  It didn’t scare him off, in fact he walked right along side my car just outside my window.  I took some quick pictures with my phone then, making no sudden movements, switched to my digital camera.  After a few more pictures I looked down to make sure I had put the car in Park.  I had, so I took my foot off the brake and the car rolled forward just a few inches.  Down the marmot hole he went….

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Since he hadn’t run off when I first pulled up I decided to play the waiting game.  I sat there for about 5 minutes waiting for him to emerge.  For all I knew he had used another exit and was now quietly letting the air out of my tires on the other side of the car.  Well sure enough, after a few more minutes out popped his head.

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While I had been waiting I had shifted my attention to a marmot up on his hind legs just a little further up the road.  He was apparently scouting the area for predators and he was fascinating to watch.  I took some pictures but they were through my windshield so they came out blurry.

He sat upright facing right.  Then he quickly shifted his position 45 degrees to his left.  After another few seconds he shifted another 45 degrees to his left.  It was neat to see.

During this time I started hearing a chirping sound.  That is their alert sound and the guy still thinking about coming back outside perked up, then dropped back underground.

I decided to stick my head up and through the sunroof  (in a marmot-like fashion, it occurs to me as I write this) to get a clearer view of what was going on ahead of me (which I’ve never done before, honest).  After I shifted my position inside the car (and looked even more ridiculous than I already did in my Safety Sam vest) I got comfortable for more picture taking.  I saw one or two marmots cross the road ahead of me.  With my binoculars I discovered that there were two marmot sentries, high on a rock formation off the right side of the road, who were making the chirping sounds.

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Moose 3.0

After a few minutes of taking pictures of the marmots I looked to my left and was shocked to see that a large Moose cow had emerged from the woods and was quietly munching on vegetation about 20 yards from where I was parked.  I lowered myself out of the sunroof and focused my attention on her.

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She was wearing a most attractive black and orange necklace.

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I assume it is a tracking device.  Either that or it will vibrate when her table is ready.

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I watched her for a while, then drove up and down the road one last time before heading back to Fort Collins.

Dinner at “the Mish”

I never made it to Steamboat Springs.  I was having such good luck with wildlife sightings on Long Draw Road that I decided to spend a good part of the day there and just take Route 14 back to Fort Collins. It wasn’t 5 o’clock yet when I got back to the Forest Service center so I stopped in to thank the young couple for their earlier guidance on Long Draw Road (I really wish I had taken their picture.  They’re going to be off for the next 3 days so I may not see them again).  Then, as I continued backtracking on Route 14, I stopped at “the Mish” for dinner as I had promised the gentlemen earlier in the day.  It was threatening to rain when I got there so I opted to eat indoors, overlooking the river.

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I had their Fish and Chips, listed on the menu as one of their specialties, and a beer, the Mish Ale which is made exclusively for them by a local microbrewery.  Both were excellent, including the tartar sauce they make themselves.

While waiting for dinner I asked if I could take some pictures inside the building and in the outdoor amphitheater area.  While doing that I saw the gentleman I had seen earlier in the day and told him I was back for dinner as promised.  He remembered me and said he was pleased I had come back.

After dinner (and complimenting the kitchen crew) I asked the bartender, who had been my server, how to pronounce the name of the river.  When I got outside there were two other employees taking a cigarette break and I asked them as well.  I was telling them about the guy I had encountered in the morning and they said he wasn’t the owner, but the caretaker who lives across the highway (“You’re the caretaker, Mr. Torrance, you’ve always been the caretaker…”).

Well here came Mr. Caretaker and I said “There you are again, I was just telling them about how you yelled at me this morning”.  Well, he took great offense to that and said “I never yell at anyone.  I can’t believe you told them that.  I’m the nicest hippie you’ll ever meet.  I can’t believe you told them I yelled at you” and started walking away, shaking his head.  I apologized profusely and told him I wasn’t being serious (as one of the kids was rolling his eyes in reaction to when the man had said).  I changed the topic to how much I enjoyed my dinner and he lightened up a bit.  I apologized again as I got to my car and hope we parted on better terms.

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Tomorrow I will go directly to Rocky Mountain National Park and get my bearings there.  Another surprise awaits inside the Park (see hint, above).  I will also be meeting my nephew, Sam, who is working inside the Park for the summer, for lunch on Thursday.

Posts from the past will probably happen tomorrow.

 

Best day EVER 

These photos were all taken before 9:10 am, local time, this morning!  I’m showing them in sequence.

First, I drove past this beautiful little lake.

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Then I drove further up the road and when I went over a small hill here was the huge mountain staring right at me.

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I parked at a pullout area at the bottom of the hill where I then found Lake Marie.

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When the snow melts off the mountain and in to Lake Marie the runoff goes over this small waterfall to the left of the roadway I came in on…

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and emerges of the other side of the road…

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where it feeds this small pond…

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which then overflows under the bridge you see at the top of the photo to this small waterfall…

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which ultimately drains through this huge rock field.

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Oh, and to the right of the bridge in the pond photo were some very colorful granite boulders (bigger than my head, and some days I have a pretty big head!).

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I have more photos of all these things and will post them in the coming days.

I am so sorry for the two day delay is blog posts.  I hope this helps make up for it.

 

How the day started

I stayed in Rawlins, Wyoming the night before and got up early to get to the scenic road I was planning to drive so I’d be there early and have a better chance to spot some wildlife.

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Only about 2 minutes after getting off the interstate there was a pronghorn (antelope) running just a short distance off the right side of the road, parallel to it, at about my pace.  I continued driving a short ways so that by the time he reached me I’d have the camera ready.  Well, when I got in position he turned away from the road and ducked behind a snow fence.

What’s a snow fence?  I’ve seen these lots of places during this trip and was saving them for the right time.  These are constructed a few hundred yards off roadways to try and force blowing snow to drift on them and NOT the roadway.  I see them everywhere.

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And to give you some idea as to how big they are, here are two photos with pronghorn standing not far in front of them (from my vantage point).

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When I got further down the scenic road I found some more pronghorn.

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Observation tower

There was this observation tower at a high point on the road I was on (Route 130) and I spent a good portion of the late morning there.  It not only afforded a great 360 panorama of the area but also gave me the chance to finally get some marmot photos!

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A marmot is a large squirrel.  It looks like a small groundhog.  It’s nickname is rockchuck (like woodchuck, but with rock) because they like to live in rock clusters.  I saw one the day before while I was still in Idaho but got better pictures of this one.  The one I saw in Idaho was a yellow-bellied marmot, thank you very much.  It was more slender and a darker brown than this garden variety marmot.

When I arrived at the tower there wasn’t anyone there.  When I went up the steps to the viewing area and walked to the south edge, there was a marmot, not 10 feet away.  Well, he scurried into hiding before I could get my camera ready.  I then walked to the west edge and damned if there wasn’t another one 10 feet away and he scampered off too.  These photos were taken (with zoom) after they re-emerged down the hill and were scouting for food (or keeping watch for predators).

People kept coming and going so they never came back out up high.  There was another animal I was hoping to finally get a photo of while at this spot but it remains elusive.

 

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Vedauwoo Recreation Area

East of Laramie, Wyoming I found this National Recreation Area located just off Interstate 80.  It consists of many large (and I mean large) clusters of huge boulders.  Hard to believe these formations were created naturally.  Part of it is now a campground and roads and paths weave through the various groups of rocks.  It had started to rain so I positioned the car so I could take these out the driver’s side window and not get my new camera (or my Safety Sam vest) wet.

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Note the big camping trailer at the bottom of the last photo.  I have lots more pictures of these formations but only posted the best ones.

Various locations today

Here are some random photos taken throughout the day

As I was waiting for critters show up while loitering in the Observation tower I heard a jet flying high overhead:

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After leaving the scenic area I had spent most of the morning in I drove east to Laramie, Wyoming, where I was supposed to stay last night before deciding to get a motel room in Rawlins.  I stopped to apologize in person to the woman in whose home I was supposed to stay.  I then visited a few places in the Laramie area.

University of Wyoming/Laramie (Go Cowboys!!).  Their campus has the most beautiful sandstone buildings:

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East of town there is a tall statue featuring a bust of Abraham Lincoln peering down at the interstate highway.  He doesn’t look very happy.  His head is HUGE (visualize it compared to people who could be standing on the steps at the bottom of the photo).  This statue is at 8,640 feet of elevation near Sherman Hill, the highest point the transcontinental railroad route reached (see next photo).

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Next, further west to the Ames Monument, a tribute to two men, Oliver and Oakes Ames, who were promoters of the transcontinental railroad.  It is 60 feet tall and was constructed in 1881-82.  It marks a point called Sherman, a train inspection station,  before the railroad tracks were moved by Union Pacific railroad.

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Finally, as another brief rainstorm moved in to the area, I drove down to Fort Collins, Colorado, where I will be staying the next 4 nights.  As I got into town the rain had stopped and there was a double rainbow.  The right part of the inner arch was incredibly bright, perhaps the brightest I have ever seen.  As I waited to turn left and proceed into downtown Ft. Collins I noticed that I could see the entire lower arch.  I was hoping my Airbnb host, Eric, lived at one of the two ends but he does not.

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I had an awesome meal at a Mexican restaurant Eric recommended and was off to bed so I could get up at midnight local time and resume blogging!  The end of another totally awesome day!!

I will be posting more photos and information about the scenic area I was in in the coming days.

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Tomorrow I’ll start exploring Rocky Mountain National Park here in Colorado.  But I still need to go back two days and wrap up some loose ends from Hell’s Canyon and other parts of southern Idaho.  Those posts will start tomorrow evening.

Perry the Mountain Goat Redux

Before I begin today’s posts let me update one from yesterday.

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When I arrived at the Hell’s Canyon office today I saw a “please don’t feed the animals” poster containing a picture of a mountain goat.  This is what Perry would look like up close, not from a quarter mile away.