Showing posts with label Panhandle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Panhandle. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Through Idaho and Ready for Glacier

Wednesday, July 11th

Before I left Coeur d'Alene this morning, I checked out the cute little town and the beautiful large resort right on the lovely lake.  It is a nice, seemingly quiet little resort town.

I headed north, at 81 degrees, on Rt. 95 to catch up with Rt. 2 which will take me east into Glacier National Park.  95 is not a very scenic nor interesting route but easy driving.  With not much to look at, I noticed:
  • Idaho is the Lewis & Clark state
  • a huge amusement park (Silverwood) is in the middle of nowhere - well 10 miles north of town - with a huge roller coaster, huge parking lot, many other attractions and a nice "in-the-pines" RV campground
  • purple was the color of the day for roadside flowers
  • the skinny upper part of Idaho is called the panhandle just like the skinning top part of FL
  • I haven't found the eastern version of this yet:
Rhoda loves being in the mountains!

Met up with Rt. 2 in Bonner's Ferry and shortly thereafter saw a sign for the time zone change.  So I've lost an hour but what is funny is that Rt. 2 is this little 2 lane, no shoulder, in bad condition road and there's a sign for the time zone but on the large interstates with many, many more cars, no sign.  About 2 hrs. later I also realized that I think this sign must have also announced that I was entering Montana because I remembered seeing on the map that the 2 coincided.  But I'm so use to seeing a big sign "Welcome to Montana" that I didn't notice if there was even an announcement of the event on this little road.   Along this road too - which had a speed limit of 70!!  there were MANY little white crosses on stands, sometimes 2-3 on one stand, 1 time there were 8 little crosses.  I'm sure these signified people who had died on this 2 lane little country road with a speed limit of 70.  Sad.

I had been following the swollen, fast moving, sea-glass green Kootenai River for quite awhile.  About 25 miles out of Bonner's Ferry there was a large pull off on the opposite side of the road for historical information so I joined the many other cars who'd also pulled off.  Much to my surprise it was my unexpected pleasure of the day - not the snack bar tucked into the woods, not the peaceful , surrounded-by-pines picnic grove down the path a ways but the sound of powerful waterfalls and signs telling of the path to them so off I went.  Interesting path - started out paved, became pine-needled, then sloping, then a narrow walking bridge over train tracks, then 65 metal open steps down a fire-tower like structure so that you could see all the way to the bottom (Buzz, you would have been so proud of me), 
Hard to see but believe me - a long way down
then a decision 
Hummmm - which way?
then rocks sticking out of the dirt path on more decent and THEN the falls - after you clambered up on to a rocky ledge.  Oh my gosh!!  They weren't high but very broad and so much water rushing down.
I couldn't get the full width of them
 and you can only see a little bit of the falls on the right

This is downstream just a bit

Just listen to the sound - it's only 2 seconds.


The mountain peaks still have snow on them so I'm sure it's still melt-down time plus I guess they had a lot of rain the last couple of weeks.  There were no guard rails (so if you come, Holly - put Tanis on a leash!) and you just knew that there would be no hope for life if you slipped and went over.  But they were magnificent to behold - just mesmerizing!

But I had to continue so clamored back down the rocky ledge, hiked over the rock-protruding inclined trail, up the 65 metal, see thru steps, over the train tracks, up the steeper inclined path onto the pine-needled path, past the in-the-pines picnic area, onto the paved path and right past the snack bar.  What a wonderful treat the falls were - I didn't need ice cream on a stick.

Down the road I passed an Upper, Middle, and Lower Thompson lake which reminded me of the Chateaugay Lakes and my neighbors already enjoying themselves there and of Mike & Evelyn leaving today to keep my camp warm for me until I get there.

Today I reflected on all the Native Americans who originally inhabited this area:  the Flatheads, Blackfeet, Kootenai, etc.  How they set up their tepees, hunted, fished, farmed, fought and lived in these many beautiful valleys between the large peaks.

I was trying to hunt with my eyes but there's been so much logging over the years and with the left-behind remaining stumps in between the scattered pine trees, my eyes kept deceiving me thinking I was seeing a bear but it was only an old stump but it kept me busy anyway.

I'm staying in a motel/RV/cabin complex in a one Hungry Horse town where it's main attraction is a cafe advertising huckleberry pie and milkshakes - maybe for breakfast?  I'm only about 15 miles outside the western entrance to Glacier National Park!

I may not be posting for a couple of days while in the park so hang in there!

DATA:


mileage:  247                    campground  $30           gas:  $44  @ $3.54
                                                                                         $ 69 @ $3.56 (and extra 10 cents/gal for full-
                                                                                               serve to help a young kid out)

Names I liked today:  Branch Ranch, Shilo, Stampede Lake, Mountain Meadow Lane, Pot Hole Rd,
                                  Wolverine Rd., Bear Creek, Bob Cat Acres (guess they like their wild life) and
                                  Watch for Ice - didn't know if they meant on the road or an ice berg or a glacier - 
                                           both of which I understand I might see in the park)
















Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Hot & Windy - Not me, the weather

   
Wednesday,  May 23

     A total driving day in 30 mph winds with gusts to 40 (according to NPR) so it was a white knuckle kind of day.
     Left at 9, got lost getting to my "country road" route but Navigator helped me on my Droid.  Did that for about an hour and the wind was so strong that with no shoulders and narrow roads and not much to really see, I headed back to I-40.  While "in the country" I noticed:

  • LOTS of grain - as far as the eye could see at points (how many acres would that be, David)
  • flat, flat land with lots of wind turbines
  • red soil
     I-40 was still white knuckley because the big trucks added to mother natures gusts but not that many trucks so can't complain.
     As I got close to TX, you could see the difference in the land - it became shrubby, dry, and not red and when I got out at the first rest area (ask Grace why I did this probably) - because the TX welcome center was 100 miles from the border:( - it was like a sauna - hot, dry and still wind to blow the door out of your hands.  The pioneers who settled here must have arrived in the fall.
     Reflections:

  • A Large Shamrock Inn & Restaurant with a very purple roof just didn't seem right
  • There's a chain of "Jesus Christ Travel Plazas" in E. TX panhandle. I didn't stop.  I didn't need filling up.
  • Last nights and tonight's campground both have storm cellars - very reassuring still
  • Rhoda's rocking and rolling in the wind as I sit in her with AC blasting and am comfortable.  I tried to type this in the storm cellar/game room on a nice big table but duh - it's a storm cellar - no internet connection
                                                            DATA:
mileage:  276
gas:  $69   @ $3.30
camp:  $32 (with an indoor pool - temp in the room - 86) at the Fort Amarillo RV Resort, TX
shopping:  $40 - Cheyenne Trading Post aka souvenir shop but it gave me a break from the wind
street name:  Groom  (must be from the Runaway Bride movie) or Honeyfarm Rd. - wonder why
temp:  96, windy, dry, sunny