Showing posts with label 2024-spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2024-spring. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Road Trip Wrapup

Better late than never, I finally finished going through my photos from our last road trip. (Sorry, it's a long post, I couldn't get motivated to split it up.) After our week at Five Springs (with a break in Sheridan) we stopped in Cody to clean up. We stayed at the Chamberlin Inn, another historic hotel. (Hemingway stayed there) It's just a block off the main street with a nice garden in the back.

The next day we drove through Yellowstone and Teton National Parks. On our way through Yellowstone we ran into a large group of cars and people stopped beside the road. We couldn't tell what they were looking at but there was a place to pull off so we stopped. It turned out to be a grizzly bear and two cubs, on a hillside quite far from the road. I pulled out my longest telephoto and took lots of photos, although it was tricky taking photos through the trees, and I was hand holding when I really needed a tripod for such a long lens. So the shots aren't great, but they're the first I have of a wild grizzly. I had to wonder at the people trying to take photos with their phones. The bears would be tiny dots.

Grizzly bear and cubs

Grizzly bear cubs

It's been a while since we've driven by the Tetons. It seems (is!) a long time ago when we climbed Grand Teton (the high point in the photo below).

Tetons

At the other end of the size/rarity spectrum from the grizzlies, I like this ground squirrel with a mouthful of flowers.

Ground squirrel

At our next campsite, just past Jackson, we had a friendly squirrel come looking for handouts.

squirrel

squirrel

I followed this butterfly through the forest. It had a habit of pausing briefly on tree trunks so I eventually got some photos of it.

Comma butterfly

Comma butterfly

The next day we were passing by Idaho Falls and noticed they had a zoo so we stopped. It wasn't very big but I always enjoy seeing the animals. (despite the debatable ethics of zoos) It's always hit or miss whether zoos work out for photographs. Too many bars and mesh and dirty windows and uncooperative subjects. But occasionally it works out.

Ring-tailed Lemur

Patagonian Mara

Aldabra Giant Tortoise

flamingos

Peacock

Our next stop was Craters of the Moon National Monument. We were a little worried that the campground might be full since it was a weekend. But there was a huge windstorm and most of the people with tents were leaving. I sometimes feel a bit guilty about having our van instead of tenting, but it is nice to escape the weather. People ask us how we manage in our tiny van, but to us it's a big step up from tenting. Whereas people with huge fancy RV's and Sprinter vans still feel it's a step down from their house. Despite (or because of) the windstorm, there was a colorful sunset.

our van at sunset

The next morning the wind had died down and I ran the North Crater trail out and back. Later in the day it's a busy trail, but first thing I didn't see a single other person. It's only 8 km but 350 m (1100 ft) of elevation gain. Our next stop was at an obscure campground on the Snake River just past Boise. We never would have found these places before Google Maps. $10 per night and the campground was almost empty :-) A wild turkey with chicks went by, and several California Quail. The occasional milkweed plants were a big hit with the insects. I looked for Monarch caterpillars, but no luck.

Wild Turkey and chicks

California Quail

honeybees on milkweed

Milkweed beetle

Small Milkweed Bug

The next day we stopped to eat lunch in Willamina. We were sitting in the park by the pond when we heard a weird noise. I thought it might be a bullfrog. Sure enough, just a few feet away there was a big fat bullfrog. It disappeared when we started taking photos but I spotted it again a bit later. American Bullfrogs aren't native but they've spread widely, partly because people introduced them in order to eat them. Nowadays, frog's legs aren't as popular and the bullfrogs have multiplied and eat anything and everything they can catch and stuff in their big mouths. What goes around comes around.

American Bullfrog

American Bullfrog

There were also quite a few of these Eight-spotted Skimmers, a large striking dragonfly.

Eight-spotted Skimmer

Back at the coast we headed for Cape Lookout State Park. We were a bit surprised to find the campground was full. Despite the signs we stopped at the entrance booth and it turned out there was one yurt left. We were happy not to be searching for somewhere else at the end of a day of driving. I was surprised to see this Cedar Waxwing in the campground. In Saskatoon I thought of them as winter birds.

Cedar Waxwing

This White-crowned sparrow posed nicely in the evening light.

White-crowned sparrow

Our lunch spot the next day yielded a common loon and a crab spider that Shelley spotted.

Common Loon

Goldenrod Crab Spider ?

Our last night we stayed at a campground near Olympia. The only attraction was that there was a nature area nearby with turtles and ducks and reflections.

Painted Turtle

Wood duck (female)

reflections

Our last day we stopped at the Tacoma Zoo since we hadn't been there for a while and their new aquarium was finally open.

Tufted Puffin

sea otter

Muskox photobombed by swallow

magnolia ?

Barn owl

See all 98 photos in this batch

Thursday, July 04, 2024

Sheridan, Wyoming

Halfway through our six days at Five Springs we decided to take a break (and a shower). We crossed over the Big Horn mountains to Sheridan since Shelley hadn't done that drive. Along the way we saw two moose by the road.

moose

moose

We like to look for out of the ordinary hotels, in this case we found the Sheridan Inn which opened in 1893. Buffalo Bill even stayed there.

For a small town, Sheridan has some nice walking trails. We were crossing a bridge when we spotted this mink with a big catfish it had caught.

American Mink with fish

It disappeared into some rocks and then reappeared briefly without the fish. I wonder if it had some kind of nest under there.

American Mink

We found a nice pond on our walk, with Painted Turtles, Bullfrogs, and Red-winged Blackbirds.

Painted Turtle

American Bullfrog

Red-winged Blackbird

There were swallows nesting under another bridge.

Cliff Swallows ?

The downtown had a lot of sculptures. I took photos of a few animal oriented ones.

rattlesnake sculpture

frog sculpture

Sheridan didn't turn out to be a good place for vegetarians. We eventually ended up in a brew house where I settled for a salad, which they proceeded to bring out with a big slab of chicken on it, even though the chicken was extra and I hadn't ordered it. I guess it was inconceivable that you could eat a meal without meat.

On the way back to Five Springs the next day we stopped at the Big Horn National Forest Visitor Center. It had a nice nature trail with lots of wildflowers.

Prairie Smoke (Three-flowered aven)

Prairie Pasqueflower

Hairy Clematis ?

Locoweed

See all 37 photos in this batch

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Five Springs

On our recent road trip we headed back to Five Springs so I could do some paragliding. It's an obscure spot that we discovered years ago. There are signs that other people paraglide here, but I've never run into anyone else flying. These days I don't do enough flying to be very good at it so I try to stick to easy, relatively safe conditions, when the wind and thermals are mellow. That means I mostly get short, tame flights, but better safe than sorry. Thanks to Shelley for the videos. (If you're reading this by email and the videos don't work, try viewing them via the website or directly on YouTube.)

I also like Five Springs for the surrounding country, with desert below and mountains above, especially in the spring when there are so many wildflowers.

the path less taken

landscape

wildflowers

Western Blue Flag

Western Blue Flag

I think this is Fragrant Evening Primrose. It's normally night blooming so it was nice to see some flowers out during the day.

Fragrant Evening Primrose

I think this is Northwestern (or Desert) Paintbrush, which I think of as normally red, but can be a range of colors.

Northwestern Paintbrush ?

I was on the lookout for insects on the flowers. I found a couple of these Ornate Checkered Beetles on Balsamroot flowers. (checkered beetles are pollinators)

Ornate Checkered Beetle ?

I was photographing this flower when I noticed the ants all over it. Looking more closely I realized they were farming/herding aphids. (The aphids aren't visible in this photo.)

Western Wallflower ? (with ants)

With lots of flowers, I expected more butterflies, but I didn't see many.

Common Ringlet butterfly ?

Checker butterfly

I spotted this bird in a distant bush and I could see it had markings on its head and yellow/green on it. I managed to get close enough to get an identifiable photo. It's a Green-tailed Towhee. There are Spotted Towhees in Victoria but they're quite different (more like an American Robin).

Green-tailed Towhee ?

This Dusky Grouse played hide and seek with us but eventually it came out in the open where we could get some photos.

Dusky Grouse ?

There were quite a few rabbits and chipmunks around.

Mountain Cottontail rabbit

Least Chipmunk

We stayed at Five Springs for 5 nights and I managed to get in 10 short flights (the longest was 30 minutes). We've been coming here since 2017 and I always enjoy it. Hopefully we'll make it back a few more times.

See all 46 photos in this batch