The ride through the Wind River Canyon was very breezy today
but it was good to see the water level is fairly high for this part of the
state. There are some great looking campgrounds along the reservoir. (made a
note to perhaps explore again another time)
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Aug 19-22 (Dillon MT, Cody WY)
Uneventful ride to Dillon MT; just spent the night at a very nice Best Western before
moving on to Cody WY. On the way to Cody we once again cut through the
northeast entrance of Yellowstone NP. This time the traffic was much better even
though it was Saturday. What we learned along the way was there is a problem
with the water in the Yellowstone River so fishing activity was severely
restricted in this part of the park. We believe this is why traffic was so light. We were not able to get any pictures but
we did get stopped by a herd of buffalo that insisted on exercising their
right-of-way. Since those bulls & cows are a bit bigger than us, exposed as
we were on the bikes, we just sat quietly and waited for the crowd to pass.
Our lodging for the next couple of nights in Cody was
perfect – an older motor court right next to the Buffalo Bill Museum – the Sunrise
Motel.
Sunday we rode the Chief Joseph Highway (WY 296) and Beartooth Pass (WY 212) to Red Lodge for lunch.
Sunday we rode the Chief Joseph Highway (WY 296) and Beartooth Pass (WY 212) to Red Lodge for lunch.
Also observed to the west toward Yellowstone was the effect of the winds having picked up in the latter part of the afternoon. This fire has been burning since Aug 12 and is likely to get worse again overnight. There is a Red Flag warning in effect for the area Monday - Wednesday. We were considering staying another night in Cody until we woke Monday morning to the strong smell of smoke and very poor air quality. Decision made we are moving on to Casper WY.
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Aug 15-19 (Kalispell MT)
We crossed back to U.S. today at Roosville Border Station
in British Columbia. That means we’ve hit 4 of the Canadian Provinces this trip;
Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and lastly, BC. We moved on to Kalispell MT for the
next few days. Kalispell is a perfect base location with which to explore
Glacier National Park. We decided to ride the park on Monday after finding out
that buddy Steve is nearby in Idaho Falls and will meet up with us for dinner later this
evening. The ride on the famous Going-To-The-Sun road was uneventful on the way
east with a break at Logan Pass on the top but not so much in reverse. We turned around after lunch at the
Rising Sun stop and rode back the other way. Let me simply explain that there
are just some folks that have no business behind the wheel of a F-150 truck on
a road that provides no provisions for others to go around. This dude never got above 18 mph all the way down the hill!
The highlight of the day was Steve showing up for dinner and
drinks at the Montana Club across the street. Plus by now we have all made
quick friends of a group of 6 other motorcycle riders who are also staying at
the Econo Lodge.
This group of friends, from Emmett Idaho, comes to Kalispell
every year at the same time to get away, hang out, share a few laughs, and ride
the area’s good roads. (We most certainly will see these folks again as emails
and phone numbers have been bookmarked.)
We also met a couple of guys from South Carolina who are riding the Continental Divide on their KLRs, a couple from Indiana riding their respective BMWs to Yakima WA and then back to Indiana on their 2-week vacation, and a single rider from Vermont riding around somewhat like us with no hard & fast deadline.
Tuesday Steve, Jay & I tour a local historical home built by one of Kalispell’s founding citizens, the Conrad House, The Hungry Horse Dam and check out the local Cabela’s store.
We also met a couple of guys from South Carolina who are riding the Continental Divide on their KLRs, a couple from Indiana riding their respective BMWs to Yakima WA and then back to Indiana on their 2-week vacation, and a single rider from Vermont riding around somewhat like us with no hard & fast deadline.
Tuesday Steve, Jay & I tour a local historical home built by one of Kalispell’s founding citizens, the Conrad House, The Hungry Horse Dam and check out the local Cabela’s store.
According to local legend, The Hungry Horse Dam got its name
when the severe 1900-01 winter left two freight horses lost and starved in the
rugged Flathead River wilderness. Fund a month later, their owners nursed them
back to health. “Hungry Horse” became the name of a nearby mountain and creek
and, later, this Reclamation Project.
A single drop of Hungry Horse Project water travels more
than 1, 100 miles from Montana’s mountains to the Pacific Ocean. Water from the
Hungry Horse Dame comes from the South Fork Flathead River. Hundreds of workers
– many of whom were returning veterans – started building Hungry Horse Dam in
July of 1948. President Truman threw the switch in 1952 to start generating
electricity at the dam.
The reservoir stores almost 3.5 million acre-feet of water
for later release producing clean hydroelectricity for almost 270,000 homes.
Wednesday was laundry day plus Jay was able to get in an oil
change for his bike. While he was doing that I got to spend some quality time
touching some beautiful locally spun yarn and talking knits & purls with
the shop owner (this is the knitters version of motorcyclists kicking tires in
a parking lot) and yes I bought more yarn and had it mailed home for me.
original court house bldg. now used for law offices |
big wooden boot in western store downtown |
antique fire truck spiffed up for parade happening tomorrow morning for the NW Montana Fair & Rodeo |
Saturday, August 13, 2016
Aug 10-14 (Calgary/Banff, Alberta)
I’m posting these pictures now that I am online our last
night in Calgary so that you may see some ofthis gorgeous countryside that we’ve
just spent the last 4 days exploring. I will return to add some explanatory
narrative in the next couple of days.
shot of downtown Banff Township |
standing in line for gondola ride to top; gave up when announced 2 hr wait |
the gondolas we decided against waiting for |
the Canadian Rockies around Banff PNP |
downtown Calgary walking on Stephen Ave |
drinking water for all heights including the dog |
statue outside the Glenwood Art Museum |
Jay is standing on clear platform at the top of Calgary Tower; looking down at street; Calgary Tower built during 1988 Olympics |
Bow Tower; office building |
aerial shot of downtown Calgary |
these sculptures are metal over walkway on Stephen Ave; not sure what symbol they represent |
if you click on pic and enlarge this metal head lights up at night |
these slats represent people standing at transit station; from other direction they are orange & yellow |
lifesize statues in downtown park; see below for explanation |
this is Olympic Ceremony Park built for 1988; major activity hub now for Calgary; kids splashing in water |
same park area setting up for upcoming Gay Pride weekend |
3 storied glass sculpture representing Arora Borealis; displayed in middle of museum |
this horse was constructed with 1 mile of barbed wire |
this bear constructed of red felt flower |
on the road |
Kanakasis Highway |
stunning ride; so much so we turned around and rode the other direction |
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