Didn’t get to the insides of the windows today but it will be even warmer tomorrow.
Day: October 10, 2017
Snow on the mountains
When I went out to get coffee this morning (yes, friends, I fell off the “I’m not drinking any more coffee” wagon about halfway through this trip) I saw this mountain off to my right. It is Longs Peak, the highest point in Rocky Mountain National Park (the east entrance of which isn’t that far away from where I’m staying) and it tops out at 14,259 feet. I couldn’t see it when I arrived yesterday. In fact, I couldn’t see much of anything most of the day yesterday. Visibility until I got up here was probably no more than a mile in any direction at any time, and often less than that.
I took this about an hour ago.
I’ve also looked at the RMNP website and discovered they have several webcams throughout the park. This is the view from the Alpine Visitor Center which, at 11,796 feet, is the highest Visitor Center in the entire National Park System. It is one of two points in the Park I hope to get to early afternoon tomorrow on my way to my next Airbnb stop. I have two pieces of unfinished business in RMNP and something I hope to see at this place is one of them.
(Photo credit: nps.gov Webcam)
I should also mention that to see lots of great National Park photos from more vantage points than I’ll ever get to, and also many live webcams, you should go to the National Park Service website for the Park of your choice.
Gee, you may not need me any more…..
I’ve also been thinking about what Monday’s snow event brought to Pikes Peak, which didn’t have any snow on it the day before. I checked a few webcams online and here’s what I found:
From on top of the mountain itself, looking down towards Colorado Springs:
(Photo credit: cograilway.com Webcam)
And looking at the Visitor Center on top of the mountain:
(Photo credit: coloradosprings.gov Webcam)
And from down on Highway 24, looking at the mountain:
(Photo credit: utepasscams.com Webcam)
********
Oh, and I should mention that I was NOT required to buy chains for my car. The rule out here is that passenger cars must have qualified snow tires with a certain amount of tread depth, or All-Season tires which have an “M+S” rating (for Mud and Snow), or a Snowflake symbol, on the sidewall to travel on interstates or over various mountain “passes” under certain weather conditions. My new tires do have the M+S designation and are only about two weeks old, so tread depth wasn’t an issue.
********
Still only 43 degrees here at noon local time. It was very foggy early this morning at the housing development where I’m staying but the sun is out and all that has burned off. It is supposed to get up in to the mid 60’s and I’ll wait until mid-afternoon to clean the car.
CORRECTION – Now they’re saying only mid-50’s today.
Temperatures and Altitudes
I mentioned in another post that the winter storm here in Colorado is causing a major one-day drop in temperatures.
At 6pm local time it was just above freezing here in Loveland, which is at around 5,000 feet elevation. When I started gathering information for this post at around 130am local time (yes, Matilda, call me crazy but I generally post my blog in the middle of the night…) it was 25 degrees.
Over in Breckenridge (at around 9,600 feet) it was 24 degrees at 6pm and is currently 17 degrees.
Back in Durham, NC (which is only at around 400 feet) it is currently 75 degrees (at the RDU airport, actually) at 330am Eastern time. It’s not even that warm INSIDE the house I’m staying in out here!
In Albuquerque, New Mexico (see next post) it is currently 43 degrees (they are on Mountain Daylight time, as is Colorado). ABQ is at around 5,300 feet elevation.
********
Other than altitude, the distance from the equator is also a factor in temperature.
Albuquerque is about the equivalent of Charlotte on the east coast.
Breckenridge is about the equivalent of Baltimore, Maryland.
Loveland is about the equivalent of Hagerstown, Maryland.
********
I’m getting back in my nice warm bed now….
I’ll post some more “close-ups” from earlier in this trip in the morning as I wait for it to get warm enough outside to clean my car. Goodnight.
Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta
The 10-day Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta is underway and will wrap up this coming weekend down in New Mexico. As usual, they are having great weather for it.
When I added bonus time to this road trip I gave serious consideration to being in town for it but decided against it. I have a friend who lives in Corona, NM and he told me things get really crazy in Albuquerque for Fiesta and there is gridlock on the roads daily. These days I much prefer the laid back pace of my scenic roads and I don’t like gridlock (and ABQ is doing road work on a major artery in town and there was already gridlock three weeks ago).
At times Fiesta is gridlock in the air. Some years they have as many as 500 participants! One of the reasons they hold this event there each year is something called the “Albuquerque Box” which is a repeating atmospheric condition of predictable wind currents which allow the balloon pilots to stay in the same basic area close to town by simply changing altitude.
While I was in Albuquerque a few weeks ago I did go to Fiesta HQ (near the Ballooning Museum which I went to a few years ago) and bought some nice notecards containing photographs of prior festivals. I guess since I paid for them I can do whatever I want to with them so I took pictures of the pictures and they appear below.
Photo credit: These were all originally taken by photographer Sandra Layne
To see other Fiesta pictures taken by various photographers go to the Fiesta website at balloonfiesta.com (I especially like the Yoda balloon!)