Friday, August 29, 2025

Into Canada

And so it came to pass that on August 8th--exactly one month after departing Cary--we entered Canada, via Eastbrook, into British Columbia, Pacific Time Zone.

At the border

Clear skies in Cranbrook where we spent our first night; high hopes for seeing the northern lights...

Beautifully restored '51 Mercury V-8

No Wallydocking in Cranbrook, but Canadian big boxes are a bit more
accommodating

Incipient badlands

Lots of varmint viaducts and critter crossings on the highly traveled
roads; rather fewer as you proceed north

Interesting formations

Didymo--aka rock snot--here in Canada, last seen
by us in New Zealand

Animal crossing modeled after Roman bridges

After three tries over two days to get into the Lake Louise parking
lot, this is all we saw; fortunately we'd seen it before...in 1972; in
Banff NP

Overflow RV parking at Lake Louise

It was tough, but we made it; and were to suffer worse in the Yukon

Into Jasper NP

A bit of the Columbia Ice Field, which feeds the Atlantic, 
the Pacific, and the Arctic Oceans


Lots glaciers hereabouts

Vicki driving

Interesting picnic table design

Logging is alive and well in BC

In Beaverlodge, BC

At official start of the Alaska Highway, Dawson Creek, BC



































































Vicki there in 2002


Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Jackson To Yellowstone, Missoula, Lochsa, And Beyond

The next couple weeks saw us driving up through the left side of Yellowstone, into Montana, and eventually our former home in Missoula, where we spent a week with Kim and Dave (last pictured with us a year ago in London), visiting with them and other friends and making a variety of changes and refinements to the camper. After that, we drove the Lochsa River, another favorite, eating at the Lochsa Lodge and staying at the Powell campground, and from there took US route 95 through northern Idaho and crossed over into Canada.

A small stack of firewood in Jackson or Grand Teton
NP will set you back $14.99; evidently cut from a special
grove of billion-dollar trees

Jackson has changed so much in the 54 years we've been
visiting it; here, beef aging in the Albertson's, reminiscent of
La Grande Epicerie de Paris

Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chaose

X-rated items in the local drug store; curtained, at
least, unlike Walmart

Another sign you're out west

"Oh no...another squirrel-sighting!"...en route from Jackson, Gros Ventre,
to Colter Bay

But there were several hundred of the critters

And a serious traffic jam



Moving right along, we are now in Yellowstone NP, which we really
like in the winter




Approaching the West Yellowstone entrance to Yellowstone NP

Four lanes of traffic, backed up all the way into town: why we like
YNP mostly in the winter

We were busy at Kim and Dave's and didn't take many
pix: here, 3 fauns are resting after brunching on Kim's
flowers

Hector Protector at a Missoula Walmart

At Lochsa Lodge

On the Lochsa, which we rafter with Rebecca and Rachel in 1996

Camping at Powell

The drive down the river was all rain and clouds, but still enjoyable;
one of our favorite drives

Bird city in darkest Idaho

In our travels we have seen boot fences and bra fences and toilet walls, but this
is our our first bird-house fence


Parting thought from Idaho


Teton Scenes

From 1970 on, the Tetons have been one of our happy places, and we spent nearly a week there in later July, the best part being able to stay most of that time at the Jenny Lake campground...something we'd not been able to do since the mid-70s, when a storm and slide destroyed much of it. The campground was subsequently rebuilt but has not permitted anything but small vehicles and tent camping since then. Our new mini-van rig allowed us in. The blog probably contains hundreds of pix from the Tetons, both pre- and post-retirement for us (just enter "Tetons" in the search box), but we can't resist adding a few more.

The Grand, Gunsight Notch, Mt. Owen...the perennial snowfields
still perennial, Teton Glacier still there

Something new to us...OTC oxygen...seemed maybe to help me... 

Also new to us: rental bear spray from a vending
machine

Among the wildflowers

Enjoying ice cream at the Jenny Lake visitor area

Helpful model...

Looking across Jenny Lake to Symmetry Spire and Mt. St. John,
both of which I climbed in 70s

The view from our campsite at Jenny Lake


Also from our campsite, Teewinot, most of which we climbed together
in 1972; and which I soloed a few years later

Mt. St. John's, Rockchuck Peak...

Indian Paintbrush




On an excursion out to the Lupine Meadows parking lot, looking
for the unmarked trail that begins the climb of Teewinot

In 1972, we got about as far as the high notch, but then turned back...
all recounted here










































































































On the trail to Teewinot, 2025



















The crowds in the Tetons were pretty overwhelming; here,
people are parked along the highway half a mile either side of
the entrance to the Jenny Lake parking lots, which fill early
in the morning; same thing at various day-hike lots; Lake
Solitude has been renamed Lake Multitude



Campsite visitor



Nearly every day rangers or wildlife management people stopped by
to tell us there was a bear in some campsite or other; but we never saw one















Cathedral Group


Cabins at Jenny Lake Lodge were $1102 per night--still out of our
price range

But we though we'd have lunch there anyway; undistinguished
and disappointing...

But we did finally get to camp again at Jenny Lake