Wednesday, June 25, 2008

A few more Yosemite pics



Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Yosemite: Ansel Adams Was Here

Ansel Adams photographed this view from southern Yosemite National Park, with El Capitan on the left, Bridal Veil Falls on the right, and Half Dome visible in the distance. I believe there is plenty of snow in the Adams picture. Actually, spring is a great time to visit Yosemite. First, the waterfalls are at their peak with run-off; second, there are hardly any visitors. One drawback is that the hiking trails become slippery with snow and ice as you ascend. But it's worth it, having the Park to yourselves.


Monday, June 23, 2008

Weird Pattern in the California Sky

Question: What is this oval pattern?

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Napa Valley Wine Tour

After a day in San Francisco, we spent a day in Napa Valley touring various wineries. Among others, we visited Hess, Frog's Leap, Raymond, and Trefethyn.



Sequoia National Forest: April 2008



Behind Rachel is one of the largest groves of giant sequoias in the world. View from the northern entrance to the Park.


Giant sequoias beside the road. It was very cold (sequoias grow at high altitudes) with few visitors to the park, mostly Europeans.

Rachel's first visit to General Sherman (largest tree in the world according to mass); my first since 1963.

La Plata Canyon

Today Jim and I drove through part of La Plata Canyon in Hesperus. Beautiful and cool and very green--especially considering that nearby Mancos is as dry as a bone from lack of rain. The Canyon is a short drive from my house. I'm so lucky to live in Colorful Colorado!


This cascade is more impressive than it seems in the picture; the water rushes down that narrow passage with a deafening roar.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Mesa Verde: Inside Balcony House

I definitely should have taken more photographs of this fascinating, cozy place. It must have felt pretty safe to the ancient Puebloans. I loved the view from this ruin. Our guide showed us the watering place, where even now water seeps through the sandstone. There are T-shaped doorways like at Chaco, also key-hole shaped kivas like the one in the picture. Interestingly, Balcony House was divided into two parts when a doorway was filled in with adobe mud--one of many mysteries about this place.



Balcony House: Ladders


Note the people above Rachel: they are climbing on footholds carved into the rock and supported by rebar handrails, like the course (for the fearless) that goes over the top of El Capitan in Yosemite. Acrophobiacs beware!

Mesa Verde: Climbing into Balcony House

Balcony House at Mesa Verde seems pretty inaccessible viewed from a distance. A series of ladders lead into and out of the ancient Puebloan dwelling.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Cheap Auto Insurance

Jim and I saw this vehicle a number of times near the UNM campus, but I never had my camera with me. We were wandering around neighborhoods near the VA, looking at houses for sale, when we suddenly came upon the stuffed-animal-mobile.

Back Again!

Jim and I like to hike on the volcano trails west of Albuquerque, where this picture was taken. It's too hot to go there now; 99 degrees there today. Furthermore, there's the rattlesnake factor. Jim saw one last May when he was walking the trail by himself.