Stonehenge (Washington state)

This being “eclipse day” I thought it was the perfect time to post these photos.

A few weeks ago, after driving south from Washington down to Oregon, I posted a few pictures from in and around the Maryhill Museum.  It is on east/west Route 14 on the Washington side of the Columbia River, near the intersection with north/south Route 97 on which I was traveling that particular day.  The day I took this I was driving east on 14 and came across this memorial shortly after passing Route 97.

This is an exact replica of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England.  As you can see, this version is fully intact.  The original Stonehenge was built with precision, as it was used by people of that era to observe specific celestial events, measure time and mark the seasons of the year.  Every stone needs to be in a very specific place.

IMG_20170808_140827830

IMG_20170808_140720609_HDR

IMG_20170808_140910647

IMG_20170808_141049100

This monument was constructed (from 1918 through 1929) as a memorial to soldiers who served in World War I.  There is also a memorial nearby dedicated to local men and women who perished in other, more recent conflicts.

********

Those of you who have been following this blog from the beginning know that one of my very first posts, back in early July, was of a thing called “Carhenge,” located near Alliance, Nebraska.   Ironically, Carhenge, and Alliance, are in the direct path of today’s total solar eclipse!

 

Write your own caption

I came across this on the Washington State side of the Columbia River Gorge a few weeks ago.  It was in the little town of Bingen.

As George Takei (who played Mr. Sulu in the original Star Trek TV series) used to say in one of the commercials he did for a particular TV brand, “Oh my!….”

IMG_20170808_120906622_HDR

Portable toilet near Craters of the Moon

As I was taking pictures the day I approached Craters of the Moon National Monument in southern Idaho, I discovered this portable toilet laying on it’s side well below the road surface and out of sight of passer-bys.  I hope no one’s inside!

IMG_20170812_113650268

Can you image what the company which owns it is thinking?  Now why would someone steal one of our portable toilets???

Jackson, Wyoming

The first photo is of what is undoubtedly the most photographed thing in the town of Jackson, Wyoming.  Yes, there are some pretty photogenic mountains just north of town, but I’m talking about the town itself.

IMG_20170813_143448689

This is one of 4 arches, one at each corner of a one-block city park in town.  What you are seeing are elk antlers.  Lots and lots of elk antlers.

Then, as I was passing the aforementioned mountains north of Jackson (in the Grand Teton National Park), I saw this military aircraft taking off from the Jackson airport.

IMG_1670

IMG_1675

IMG_1677

IMG_1679

I was hoping to see a passenger jet take off or land (it’s a regular airport and I saw jets on the ground) but I was pressed for time and couldn’t wait for that to happen.

 

Gizmo near Togwotee Pass

IMG_1752

As I was driving southeast on Route 287 in northwest Wyoming I noticed this large object way up on the top of a mountain to my left (this photo was taken using quite a bit of zoom.  It was WAY up there, and it is REALLY big).  Does anyone have a clue what this thing is?  I assumed I’d be able to Google the location and figure it out but I’m coming up blank.

IMG_1754

IMG_1761

IMG_1766

It almost looks like a huge drive-in movie screen.  I think it might be some type of reflector for transmission signals.  I’m really stumped.

Various places in Wyoming

After leaving Jackson, Wyoming I headed north past the Grand Teton mountain range to the little town of Moran.  There I took Route 287 southeast through western Wyoming down to the little town of Rawlins, along Interstate 80, where I got a motel room for the night.  I intended to get to an Airbnb in Laramie, Wyoming where I had a reservation but for various reasons I didn’t make it that far (my first no-show in 2 1/2 years) and I let the host know by e-mail not to expect me.  We had been exchanging messages throughout the day about my increasingly late ETA.  I stopped by the house in Laramie the next day to apologize in person.

The northernmost part of Route 287 was on my list as a preferred scenic road but let me tell you, it was pretty awesome all the way to Rawlins (well, until it got too dark to see how awesome it was).

IMG_1784

IMG_1783

IMG_1780

IMG_1791

IMG_20170813_175519322

IMG_20170813_175523942_HDR

IMG_1740

IMG_1739

IMG_20170813_175739315

IMG_20170813_175830732_HDR

IMG_20170813_173225856

IMG_20170813_173304369

As you can see from many of the photos, a storm system was in the area (fortunately is was moving away from me).  As I was nearing the split where Route 287 would branch off from Route 26 I saw this curious atmospheric phenomena.  As the sky lightened after the storm had passed, a light colored cloud reached towards the ground.  This cloud was quite far ahead of me so it had to have been very large.  Rainbow-like colors, the full spectrum from red to violet (remember Roy G Biv?), appeared in this cloud.  I have seen it once since then, but the one I saw this day was a first for me.  There was no conventional rainbow, just the wide cloud which was reflecting colors from the setting sun.  It was really cool.

 

IMG_1821

IMG_1815

And right before the sun was about set I saw these little guys when I stopped at a rest area.

IMG_1843

IMG_1849

 

 

JohnBoy the Law Breaker

IMG_20170817_114314736

Yes, those are the unmistakable red and blue lights of a US Park Service ranger patrol vehicle in my rear view mirror.  Seems our hero was doing 51 in a 35, which the ranger thought was a tad excessive.

After reviewing my credentials, discussing my attire (what are you wearing that vest for?) and giving me a stern talking to, I was fortunate to get off with just a verbal warning.

When he brought my license and registration back to me he asked me what I had been taking pictures of.  I thought that was a really stupid question to ask someone in Colorado, and I resisted the temptation to say something smart-ass because I figured that would just get me in more trouble than I was already in.

I was a few minutes late meeting Sam for lunch outside the Park, but none the worse for wear.

What a Difference a Day Makes

When I visited Rocky Mountain National Park the second day I noticed some changes from when I had been here the day before.

IMG_20170817_104028590_HDR

Those white rectangles denoting the pedestrian walkway weren’t there on Tuesday.

No, silly, that’s not what I’m talking about (although it’s true, they hadn’t been painted yet).  This was a picture I posted the day before:

IMG_20170816_132000063

And here was the same view today:

IMG_20170817_104123300_HDR

I will be posting another more dramatic example of how things can change from one day to the next tomorrow.

Hidden Valley Visitor Center

IMG_20170817_101624877_HDR

The second day I was in Rocky Mountain National Park I stopped at this Visitor Center to use the restroom.  As I was pulling in I noticed lots of people walking around in the areas next to the parking lot with Safety Sam vests on and carrying long grabber sticks.  At first I thought they were having an Easter Egg hunt but no, they were volunteers picking up trash.

After doing what I stopped here for I spent some time reading the signs and looking around the property.  I learned that this site was once home to the Hidden Valley Ski Lodge.  The Park Service deconstructed the Lodge from 1999 to 2003 and reused many of the materials in building this beautiful new visitor center.

IMG_20170817_102712409

I also found a group of people under a shelter talking to a Park Ranger.  They were the volunteers I had seen picking up trash.  I got there just as the Ranger announced they he had combined all the trash which had been picked up and it weighed in at 8 1/2 pounds.  Some people are such slobs….

IMG_20170817_103051434

I had noticed when I pulled in that there was a US Park Service Fire & Rescue vehicle parked near the building and a firefighter was talking to one of the rangers who was working here.  Turns out he was there to give a demonstration to a group of youngsters who were having a Junior Ranger learning session inside the building.

IMG_20170817_103011269_HDR

And of course I couldn’t leave without getting my picture taken.  Meet JohnBoy the Park Ranger.

IMG_20170817_101945234