Monday, October 31, 2005

Jasper National Park, Alberta - Elk





Elk mother and baby. The baby was born in the spring around April or May, according to our knowledgeable tour guide.

The elk come right into town and their droppings can frequently be seen in someone's lawn. On the way back from our tour, there were two more grazing right on the center divider of the road!

Jasper National Park, Alberta - Shark Tooth Ridge

Jasper National Park, Alberta - Tangle Creek Falls



If you look carefully, there are icicles along the sides of the falls.

Jasper National Park, Alberta

Jasper National Park, Alberta - Icefields

Snow is blown off the top of the peak, with an excellent view of a glacier embedded in the mountainside. (Bluish at center and center-right of photos.)





The river-like rectangular area at the bottom is part of the Columbia Icefield, the largest of several icefields in the area.



More glacier. If you look carefully you can see swatches of silvery-blue peeking out from the snow all over this entire surface.


Banff National Park, Alberta











This last photo shows bits of bluish glacier peeking out from under the snow, center right.

There's more!

But... I just can't keep my eyes open any longer. The rest will have to wait until I can get internet access again.

Banff National Park, Alberta - mountain sheep





These two are females. The mating season has recently passed, so males have gone off by themselves and only the females stick together in groups.

Jasper National Park, Alberta - ravens at the Columbia Icefield









For you, Raven. Close encounters of the bird kind. ;)

The trail guide said he'd never seen them do anything like this in all his 22 years here. Must have been a sign!

Jasper National Park, Alberta - Columbia Icefield



That's us, with the Columbia Icefield in the background (partially obscured by snow). The Columbia Icefield contains several glaciers and is the largest ice mass south of the Arctic Circle, covering roughly 130 square miles to a depth of 1148 feet. Contrary to popular belief, glaciers are not from frozen liquid water but rather get created when the amount of snowfall in a winter is more than what summer can melt away. Over time as this process repeats, the pressure from new snow compacts the layers beneath into a solid mass. The glaciers here have snow from hundreds, or in some places, thousands of years ago.

Jasper National Park, Alberta



Rocks can be dragged by glaciers many miles away from where they originated. If you have flat smooth land area, for example, and suddenly see a large rock that is completely out of place, it is often due to glacial activity.

Jasper National Park, Alberta - rockslide



Our guide informed us that this rockslide occurred quite some time ago. If memory serves, he said it's at least a few hundred years old.

The orange-ish rocks in the front were overturned to make the road. The rest are blackish due to growth of lichens. Interestingly, this is part of nature's recovery process. When bare rock has been exposed due to fire or other upheavals, it's the lichens who begin growing first on the rock surfaces. In time, moss makes its home in the nutrients provided by the lichens. As the moss and lichens continue to reproduce and die, they provide more rich nutrients that can support other plants in what is really the development of new soil. These other plants live, die, and decompose, and soon trees can also take root in the new soil. Eventually it's all covered over by vegetation, and in a case like this, you'd never know there was a rockslide at all. But this process will take hundreds of years.

Jasper National Park, Alberta - coyote



Jasper National Park, Alberta - Athabasca Falls









The water is a turquoise color due to silt from its water source: the melting glaciers to the south between Jasper National Park and Banff National Park.

Sunday, October 30, 2005

Jasper National Park, Alberta





Entering Jasper National Park, 10/29

The beauty has only begun!

These pics were taken with the "real" camera not the camera phone... so they are clickable for larger views. Enjoy!! We sure did!

Saturday, October 29, 2005

Random observations

Ah! At long last, an internet connection. No cell phone reception, much less internet, while crossing the prairie regions. That goes for the U.S. as well as Canada.

Ok, here's a wierd post. A listing of some things I've learned about Canada, either through being here previously (I was born here, and I've been back to visit twice), research before leaving this time, or things I've noted during this trip:

Knew/learned before leaving:

There are no $1 bills. You have $1 coins (loonies - due to the image of a loon on the back) and $2 coins (toonies - well, it just made sense somehow).

$1 US ~ $1.20 CAN

Even English teachers say, "eh?"

Most French-speakers are in Quebec. In rural areas especially, there are many who don't know English at all. In main city centres like Montreal, there are more who are bilingual.

Quebec has expressed the desire to cede from Canada and become its own nation. Canada has tried to placate it and satisfy its needs while still remaining one nation.

"Out" is pronounced "oot" (as in "boot"), not "owwt." "About" is "aboot." "Been," as in "Where have you been?" is "bean."

Spelling differences: Such as favour, colour, centre, cheque, catalogue, splendour, favourite.

Tim Horton's (coffee and donuts, essentially) is to Canada what McDonalds, sports bars, popcorn at the movies, and apple pie are to the U.S. - but all wrapped up into one. There, they sell Timbits, their hottest selling item. You probably know them as "donut holes."

Canada is generally much cleaner than the U.S. - in terms of litter, air quality, water quality, etc.

Canada has adopted the metric system. The U.S., if memory serves, is the only remaining country still using the old English system. (I don't think even England is still using the English system.)

Learned during this trip:

I was told that the reason Toronto has grown exponentially into the most populous city of Canada, is that Quebec passed laws insisting on French as the language of choice. At this point, many English-speaking citizens left and most of the English-speaking businesses took their business elsewhere. That elsewhere was Toronto.

I've only previously been to Alberta, but when I was there, I remember the place being immaculate. No litter, no graffiti, no homeless on the street. I didn't get a chance to see much of urban Alberta this time, but I did see urban areas of other provinces, and I report with some sadness that this is not true for them. Of these, graffiti is the main problem I've seen. Still, it's not as bad as in the States.

Canadians are used to having a pretty good mass transit system. They think nothing of walking a few blocks so you can catch the bus or hoof it to where you're going.

Maybe as a direct result of the above, there are definitely less people here with overweight problems.

There are stairs *everywhere*. I've often found myself wondering how people in wheelchairs get around this country, because I've seen comparatively few ramps.

There are recycling bins everywhere. In the train stations, inside the trains, on the street corners. They're pretty committed here to getting people to recycle.

There is a Chinatown in every major city. Not just west coast, not just east coast. Every major city we've seen.

There are something like 50 different ethnic groups represented in Edmonton and 42 in Toronto, if I remember right. Including restaurants for all their traditional foods. Mmmmmm!

There are way more vegetarian restaurants and vegetarian options than you'd think, in all the major cities we've seen.

If you're avoiding MSG, you really have to watch it here. It's in most soups, flavored crackers, and flavored chips.

The richness of First Nations (what we usually call "Native American") cultures are to be seen everywhere. Carvings, paintings, instruments, clothing, and all manner of other household items, arts, and crafts can easily be found. They are so beautiful.

Canada is a lot bigger than you'd think just looking at a typical U.S.-centric map.

Southern... Saskatchewan I think, actually has cactus-filled desert areas.

Here you don't add "creamer" to your coffee; you add "whitener."

Monday, October 24, 2005

Niagara Falls (New York and Ontario sides) and upstate New York

Well, I have to say that despite my fears of potential problems due to the rough train ride, we had a completely AWESOME time with my son at Niagara Falls, then later at his campus. We were blown away by the beauty of both!

You can never really find words to convey the inspiring majesty of the falls. Despite the fact that it rained the whole time we were there, even the cloud cover and rain couldn't take away from the sights and sounds to behold. The color of the water was a sparkling teal/sea foam green. Copious amounts of mist arose from the base of the falls. Boardwalks allowed close-up views of the rapids beginning their plunge to the dark rocks below. A footbridge led from the mainland to an island in the middle of the river. The footbridge gave way to tree-lined paths on the island, all splashed with varying shades of red, orange, yellow, and green foliage. There's no way to see all of this and not be overwhelmed by its beauty.

My son's campus is gorgeous. There are so many beautiful trees everywhere that you imagine the original site as a forest, out of which just enough space was cleared to allow for the widely spaced buildings and nothing more. At the entrance to the college, and at many locations throughout the campus, you can see nothing but forest. It looks like you're in a national park, not a top-notch university! We were taken completely by surprise. It's easy to see why my son fell in love with this place! To top it off, the foliage is turning here, too. The entire place is awash in color. What a delight it must be to wake up here every morning and see such spectacular beauty.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Arizona





(Somewhere near Flagstaff)

And I thought Arizona was all desert!

When I was little we used to live in Tempe, near Phoenix. It was all flat dirt with scattered scrub, and that's all you got. I guess it eventually had to give in to the trees and such of Colorado, but I never suspected for a minute that that might be in the middle of AZ.

Kind of reminds me of the first time I went to Death Valley on a job (a story and photo album for another blog). Whenever you see scientists interviewed there, or news coverage there, it's stark, bleak, and featureless. But when you actually go there, there's an amazing variety of terrain and scenery. You have vast white salt flats, in the lowest point in the country if not the continent, and this is surrounded by hills and mountains splashed with red, blue, yellow, green, and orange from all the rich mineral deposits found in the soil. There's a place there called Artist's Palette because it's so saturated with colors, it looks like just that. There's even a band of wild horses out there! Death Valley is one of the most amazing and strikingly beautiful places I've ever seen. And if I hadn't been there to see it myself, I'd still be convinced it's nothing but a big stretch of sand.

This place reminds me of that. The last things I expected to see were big green groves of trees and brush. The man sitting behind us told us Flagstaff is home to the biggest grove of trees and biggest population of elk in the world.

Going to Death Valley taught me that no matter how many times you've seen a place on documentaries, never to judge a place before seeing it yourself. Today I learned that you can't judge a place just because you've been someplace nearby, either!

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Set up mobile posting for the blog

A few more hours left!

Last-minute wrapping up and we're off to the train station.

Set up data access today with our cellular provider so we can post from the road. Thanks to promotional deals, when you sign up for $5/month for 1MB internet, or $3/month for sending of 20 multimedia messages, each of these services has the first month unlimited access! Is that a perfect time frame, or what?? Hehe. We can post to the blog by e-mail, so I just want to be able to do e-mail offline, log on for 5 minutes and do my send/receive, then sign off. These plans I signed up for couldn't possibly be more perfect.

This is gonna be so awesome!!!

Los Angeles, California - inclement weather

Just in case anyone is under the illusion that we never get inclement weather here...

...these are all from today.


Heavy hailstorm


Streets flooded up over the sidewalk


The river that was the 60 freeway onramp - Hacienda Blvd.

While I will grant you that this isn't our usual weather, it's not like we haven't seen it hail before. Just not this hard. I've seen really heavy rain before, but I've never seen the skies just open up quite like that. It started as sheets of rain, then suddenly came down with hail just as hard. The streets were instantly flooded, and we knew if we didn't get out of there soon we were going to have a stalled engine.

Maybe God wanted to prepare us for the weather we're going to experience on our trip? LOL

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Los Angeles, California - and random commentary



There are still things in L.A. that are just beautiful. I snapped this with my phone this morning when we went out for coffee. These formations promptly dissipated and were completely gone within 2 minutes after I took the photo.

And while we're on the subject of beautiful things in L.A., we couldn't believe our eyes when we saw this doe recently, right here in the city, at Griffith Park:



In addition to the interesting cotton-ball cloud formations this morning, I happened to see a flock of sparrows feeding underneath a tree. They'd get frightened by a passing car and they'd all fan out and whoosh up into the branches above, like an explosion in slow motion. The interesting thing was that the branches were the same color as they were, so when they did they disappeared completely. Then, slowly at first, they'd come fluttering down... like leaves with a life of their own, spinning and tossing in the wind as they fall off the tree. The brownness of the branches made the illusion complete. I couldn't take my eyes off of them. I watched this amazing cycle over and over again until they took refuge in the tree as it started to rain.

All of this served to remind me today that no matter what you think you dislike about a place, there is still abundant beauty to be had.

Preparations, aka mad rush time

Well, we made it through the workweek!

Now it's been a flurry of preparations. For reasons I won't bore you with, preparations involve more than making our reservations, buying supplies, and getting everything packed. We also have to do the equivalent of helping 4 people move... 1 is very messy and a hardcore packrat, 1 is messy and a severe packrat, 1 is messy and a recovering packrat (myself), and one is a compulsive purger (Nickie). Do you ever wonder why I feel sorry for the woman? LOL Anyway, we are utterly exhausted but hopeful that the worst is over and we can get started doing some actual, you know... PACKING done. Hehe.

Departure: day after tomorrow

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Made reservations

Reservations made with Amtrak today:

*****************************************************************
Dep 10/18 6:45p Los Angeles, CA (LAX) - 4 Southwest Chief
Arr 10/20 7:26a Kansas City, MO (KCY)

Dep 10/21 7:26a Kansas City, MO (KCY) - 4 Southwest Chief
Arr 10/21 3:20p Chicago, IL (CHI)

Dep 10/21 7:55p Chicago, IL (CHI) - 48 Lakeshore Limited
Arr 10/22 7:05a Buffalo, NY (BUF)
*****************************************************************

I don't have our passport #'s with me to make the reservation with VIArail (Canadian train system). I'll have to call tomorrow morning and make the reservation with VIArail, then call Amtrak with the reservation #'s (one # for each of us).

One more day of work...

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Random commentary

I called my offspring a couple days back and he said he would be interested in going to Niagara Falls together. He had the additional idea of "doing a little border-hopping" over to Toronto. Now that would be awesome!! So I've checked it out and it looks like if we leave on the 19th we can make it to Buffalo, NY by Saturday 10/22 at 7:00 a.m. If he takes a Greyhound from his college to Buffalo, we can rent a car, pick him up, have until Sunday evening to do our Niagara Falls thing and see Toronto, then drive back with him to his college.

As full-time RVers always say, "you make your plans in jell-o." Things can change at any time if you decide you like a place more and want to stick around, or decide you're more interested in something else.

Incidentally, there are elevator and hiking trips at Niagara Falls that take you to the base of the falls and even behind them. How awesome is that??

2 more days of work...

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Random commentary

Our Los Angeles neighborhood


Too many cars and no place to park. Hard to see here but many streets are hard to navigate, because due to the parking crunch, parking is often allowed even where it shouldn't be and cars are jammed into any available space... frequently making already narrow streets into unnerving tight squeezes when you're driving up the street and another car comes from the opposite direction.


Dried-up unkempt lawns with garbage strewn everywhere


Wrought-iron fencing, garbage and debris on the sidewalk and in the gutters, walls completely covered with graffiti


The gang-infested alley we have to drive through to get home, because the only entrance street is so jam-packed with traffic and most people are too rude to let you in to make the turn onto our street. Further down this alley, not pictured here, is a favorite area of several homeless who make their cardboard shelters and leave their garbage here.
_______________________________________________________________

There is something primal about driving in downtown L.A. traffic that can turn a gentle, mild-mannered humanist into an out-of-control, raging, cursing, feral beast. One episode can do it, but doing it 5 days a week is liable to bring out a side of you you didn't know existed, a side you wish didn't exist. After almost a year of this, I'm so through with this commute. I'm a pretty defensive driver, but almost every day I have a dangerous near-miss situation as someone makes a reckless move and almost takes out everybody around them. This, coupled with the fact that the main freeway I take has regularly been plagued with drive-by shootings in recent months, often makes me wonder why in the world anyone would ever move to L.A. and how existing residents can stand it here. It doesn't help that my current job is frustrating sedentary work in one of a sea of cubicles. I think there is something about being that caged up that can drive people to the brink. Maybe that's why we have so much craziness here.

If there's one thing that working field positions in a wide area has taught me, it's that the farther away from L.A. you get, the friendlier and more peaceful people are. You find that the grocery clerk stops to chat with you, people on the street say hello to each other, and drivers cooperate so everybody can get where they're going safely. I mean, naturally there are always exceptions, but in general I've found that this friendliness factor is in direct proportion to your distance from L.A. Of course, I don't know how far that radius actually extends.

I am so looking forward to finding out. :)

Friday, October 07, 2005

Take off, eh!

Bob and Doug McKenzie once sang, "Take off, to the Great White North!"

Nickie and I have decided to heed that advice.

It's Friday. Only one more week of work left. I gave 3 weeks notice at my job, 2 Mondays ago. Now it's just a waiting game. It's gonna be awesome!! I wanna take off like a bat out of you-know-where. I take comfort in the fact that it is a Friday, so I have some reprieve before another stressful week. Then it's time to pack up and embark on our adventure!

The North American Rail Pass gives you unlimited train travel throughout the US and Canada for 30 days. In the US, all trains lead to Chicago (it's some kind of hub). So first it's off from L.A. to Chicago then east to see my offspring and Niagara Falls in NY. Then north à Montréal, où tout le monde parle français. We'll then head back west through Ottawa (who can resist seeing the capital?) and Toronto (who can resist seeing the largest city? And the CN Tower, the tallest human-made structure in the world?). On westward, possibly stopping in Alberta to visit relatives, my birthplace, or Banff. Then all the way to the coast for the majority of our trip.

We will be scouting for a new place to live, starting in the Greater Vancouver area. Since going to Vancouver without checking out the gardens, butterfly nursery, and provincial parks by Victoria has to be some kind of cardinal sin somewhere, we are committed to a stop on Vancouver Island.

Our scouting will continue down into WA, OR, and northern CA. I like the idea of staying somewhat coastal (i.e. within 100 miles or so) so as to avoid drastic cold in the winter followed by drastic heat in the summer. Although frankly, if I never saw another 80-degree day in my life, that would be just fine, even if it meant dealing with some occasional snow.

We are chomping at the bit. There are some things to wrap up before we go. Maybe I will make a list here later.

Take off! It's a beauty way to go.
nineteenthcentury-no