Showing posts with label National Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Parks. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Craters of the Moon

Who would have thought lava could be so cool!  After a wonderful trip to Alaska we decided to hit up a local National Park - Craters of the Moon.  We picked up my brother Brian and away we went.  Little did we anticipate just how hot it would be at that national park!!!
IT WAS HOT!!
There really isn't any shade because there aren't really any trees.  There is just a bunch of black lava rock.  Vegetation is slowly starting to come back but it's still hot.  This park is definitely one to visit in the colder weather months!  These are the only pictures we were able to get.  Most of the things we wanted to see we couldn't get to because of park road construction - maybe we will try again this fall.  The caves we had intended on checking out but with a good 1/2 mile walk to get the the mouth,  a VERY cranky David and all the heat we decided to save the caves for another visit.







Alaska: Skagway

I know it has been FOREVER since i posted.  Here is one of the last posts that corresponds with our Alaska Cruise - last summer.  Yes, I know, it's been over a year since we took that trip.  I know, I know, I know.  Life got crazy, I did some rethinking about the blog and have decided to finish what I started and continue on.  Anyway, back to the trip....

Skagway, Alaska.
It's pretty cool.  The whole city is a National Park because this is where people came for the Klondike Gold Rush.  This was the starting point of all the expeditions.  Skagway is a small but very beautiful town.  Most of the town still looks like the town as it was built back at the turn of the 20th century.  The buildings are wonderfully maintained and have that charm of living in the time of the Gold Rush. 
There is a narrow gauge train that runs from Skagway called the White Pass Railway.  We didn't ride the train but we did get to see one of the snow plow trains that would help clear the tracks.  David was excited because we have a picture of this train in his train book.
Dustin & I did make sure that David was able to complete the Junior Ranger program here.  He was even able to get be an Alaska Adventure Ranger because he visited 3 Alaskan Public Lands.  He visited the Southeast Alaska Discovery Center, Mendenhall Glacier, & Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park.  We were pretty proud.








Friday, June 3, 2011

Colorado National Monument

For us this was an unexpected and unplanned visit.  We had spent the night in Grand Junction instead of heading on into Utah, so Sunday morning as we got started within 10 miles of getting on the interstate we saw a sign for Colorado National Monument.  We were excited to be able to visit another national park/monument that we might not get another chance to see.
This park reminded us alot of our visit to Mesa Verde in that you enter the park and proceed to drive up, up, up.  It wasn't as green but there were beautiful sights to see at the top.

We did the Canyon Rim trail.  This is right along the edge and David had VERY specific instructions about how close to the edge he could go.

So fun to get on last cancellation in our passports before we left Colorado and got home from spring break!

Black Canyon of the Gunnison

Our third national park we stopped at was the Black Canyon of the Gunnison.  (Our second park was Curecanti Recreational Area - it's mostly water recreation and when it's all frozen over there's not much to do but we did enjoy driving through - it was pretty.)  The canyon is BEAUTIFUL and very interesting!  We learned a lot by reading the signs at all of our stops along the road.

The first informational sign we learned from was about Pegmatite Dikes.  This is what the sign said:
"Over a billion years ago, molten rock was squeezed into fissures forming the light-colored bands which thread Black Canyon's otherwise dark walls.  You are standing on one of these bands.  As the hot fluid slowly cooled and hardened, minerals formed into crystals.  Look closely, you may recognize flecks of mica, feldspar, quartz and perhaps even garnet.
"These bands of lighter colored igneous rock - call pegmatite dikes - are more resistant to erosion than the dark gneisses (sounds like "nice-es") into which they intrude.  Consequently, the pegmatite weathers more slowly than the gneise.  The vertical position of the dikes here combined with their resistance to weathering has produced the fin-like appearance of parts of the canyon walls.  You will see pegmatite at nearly every overlook.
"The pegmatite dike you see across the canyon nearly half a milk away is the same one you are standing on!  Imagine the relentless cutting power of the Gunnison River."
 


Second interesting informational sign - Chasm View:
"Do you feel uneasy gazing into the canyon?  The steep walls of Black Canyon range in depth from 2700 feet north of Warner Point to 1750 feet at the Narrows, a short distance upstream from here.  The Narrows, between Pulpit Rock and Chasm View, is the shallowest and narrowest section in the monument.  Here the canyon is less than a quarter-mile across.
"The Gunnison River has a very steep gradient.  Within the monument, the river has an average fall of 95 feet per mile.  This gives the river the energy needed to cut downward faster than other kinds or erosion can widen it.  The words of an early surveyor reveal another view of this erosion:
""Hereto was unfolded view after vies of the most wonderful, the most thrilling of rock exposures, one vanishing from view only to be replaced by another still more imposing.  A view which could easily be made into a Scottish Feudal Castle would be followed by another suggesting the wildest parts of imposing height and majestic proportions...""

Third interesting informational sign - The Painted Wall:
"At 2300 feet, Painted Wall is the highest cliff in Colorado.  If the Empire State Building stood on the canyon floor, it would reach slightly more than halfway to the top of the cliff.
"The patterns that inspired the name Painted Wall were created more than a billion years ago when molten rock was squeezed (intruded) into fractures and joints in the existing rock, then cooled and hardened.  Unlike a painting, these patterns are 3-dimensional.  If you were to slice off a section of cliff, an entirely different pattern would be revealed."

I must admit that I think this has been one of the coolest national parks we have visited.  While it was a lot of driving and the boys didn't want to get out of the car Dustin and I really enjoyed taking turns to go out to the view point.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Estes Park/Rocky Mountain National Park

This year for spring break Dustin wanted to go to Colorado to see Danielle and our friends.  We had originally planned to visit some National Parks during spring break so we just changed the parks we visited.  We were able to visit 4 national parks.

After spending a couple of days with our dear friends the Padilla's we headed up to Estes Park.  Dustin was able to score us a REALLY good deal at the Historic Crags Lodge.  We were unable to check into our room when we got to Estes, so we drove around Rocky Mountain National Park.  We took routes that neither Dustin nor I had ever been on.  We were able to reminisce about our snowshoeing and hiking adventures of days long ago.  The boys were asleep in the back seat this whole time.  It was snowing while we were in the park.  We of course stopped at the visitor's center to get our cancellation.  We checked out the gift shop and picked up a couple of things.
When we were done at the park we headed back to Crags Lodge to check in.  It was a nice little space.  It had a living room area where the couch pulled out to a bed, window seat, a kitchenette, bedroom and bathroom.  The boys LOVED having the space to move around in and thought it was fun to run through all the doors.  Dustin ran to the grocery store to pick up a few things for us to make dinner for the night and  breakfast and lunch for the next day.
The next day we went back to RMNP to do a little hiking.  We hadn't brought our snowshoes and seeing all the snow David was concerned that we wouldn't be able to do any hiking.  However, knowing the park as we did we knew that we wouldn't need our snowshoes.  The trails are so popular they get pretty packed down rendering snowshoes pointless unless you are exploring on your own.  We had a great time and although we didn't do the trail we though we were going to we enjoyed the beauty of the park.

My boys in the snowy mountains!