Sharing photos, videos, vintage images I've discovered, and -- occasionally -- commentary and thoughts from retired life and travels.

wild fires

Setting

May 25, 2010

Canton Lake, Oklahoma, August 29, 2009


Gallery: Canton Lake – Oklahoma, August 29, 2009

(click on image for larger version)


The sun was setting in a sky laden with smoke particles from fire in the Los Angeles area.  Canton Lake was the first stop on our 2nd trip of 2009.


The Station Fire (August 26 – October 16, 160,577 acres (251 sq mi; 64,983 ha), 209 structures destroyed, including 89 homes) started in the Angeles National Forest near the U.S. Forest Service ranger station on the Angeles Crest Highway (State Highway 2). Two firefighters were killed on August 30 while attempting to escape the flames when their fire truck plunged off a cliff. The blaze threatened 12,000 structures in the National Forest and the nearby communities of La Cañada Flintridge, Glendale, Acton, La Crescenta, Littlerock and Altadena, as well as the Sunland and Tujunga neighborhoods of the City of Los Angeles. Many of these areas faced mandatory evacuations as the flames drew near, but as of September 6, all evacuation orders were lifted. The Station Fire burned on the slopes of Mount Wilson, threatening numerous television, radio and cellular telephone antennas on the summit, as well as the Mount Wilson Observatory, which includes several historically significant telescopes and multi-million-dollar astronomical facilities operated by UCLA, USC, UC Berkeley and Georgia State University. A 40-mile (64-kilometer) stretch of the Angeles Crest Highway was closed indefinitely due to guardrail and sign damage, although the pavement remained largely intact.


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Moraine Park Twilight

February 18, 2010

Moraine Meadows, smoke from California fires, 9-1-2009

The smoke, which enhanced the twilight in this photo of the mountains above Moraine Park and the people viewing elk, is actually from fires that were burning in California.

September 1, 2009

Rocky Mountain National Park


Gallery: Eastern slopes – September 1, 2009

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Mesa Top

December 18, 2009

September 15, 2009 – Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado

On our last full day in Colorado, we toured the six-mile Mesa Top Loop Drive, visiting most of the archeological exhibits and overlooks.

square_tower_house

Square Tower House cliff dwelling is named for the four-story-high structure standing against the curved back wall of the alcove.  About 60 of the original 80 rooms of Square Tower House remain.

square_tower_house-2

All of the cliff dwellings, including Square Tower House, were part of the final Mesa Verde building phase.  People lived here between AD 1200 and 1300.

lizard_on_the_ruins

Small lizard on a ruin wall

horses

After spending the morning among the ruins, we took a drive in the afternoon.  At one point, we found ourselves on open range, with the road blocked by a herd of horses.  As I very slowly eased the car forward, the horses parted and let us through.

Commentary and images from the road

image and information from September 15, 2009

This post is being simultaneously published on Exit78 and Haw Creek Out ‘n About

Pithouse – For thousands of years, native peoples were living in the surrounding areas before coming to Mesa Verde.  As with people all over the Southwest, Ancestral Puebloans lived in modest dwellings  — shallow pits dug into the ground, covered with pole and mud roofs and walls, with entrances through the roofs.

pithouse

In this excavation (above), what appears to be one pithouse is actually two.  The larger one, built first, around AD 700, was destroyed by fire. The smaller one, which looks like an antechamber to a larger room, is actually a second pithouse built soon after the first one burned.  It contains a new feature, a verticle ventilator shaft in one side, which appears in pithouses from then on — innovation!

cermonial_chamber

Above is an Ancestral Puebloan kiva – an undeground religious room.  The small circular hole in the floor is a sipapu, a symbolic entrance into the underworld – the Pueblo place of origin.  This early kiva design was continued in the Mesa Verde villages and cliff dwellings.

fire_signs_at_mesa_verde

Many fires have swept across Mesa Verde over time.  Recent fires have exposed previously undiscovered Puebloan sites.

our_campsite

At our campsite on our final afternoon in
Colorado, 2009.

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Heading for cooler weather!

August 12, 2007

That’s it! I give up!

We’re pulling out tomorrow — heading for cooler weather.

Actually, this has been planned for several months — before it got so beastly hot. Though we have not planned the whole trip out yet, our intent is to be gone until the end of next month. The first ten days are pretty well planned out. We’ll be camping outside Wichita, Kansas the first two nights. From there we’ll be going to:

  • North Platte, Nebraska
  • Badlands National Park
  • The Rapid City, South Dakota area — Mt Rushmore, Crazy Horse Mountain, Deadwood, Custer State Park, etc.
  • Devils Tower, Wyoming, and
  • Lewistown, Montana
  • Great Falls, Montana (new addition — found out that’s where my youngest brother moved to)

Our travels after that are going to be dependent upon weather and wild fire conditions. We don’t really have any desire to be going someplace where there’s a lot of smoke.

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