James Ussher, Archbishop of the Church of Ireland, established the time and date of the creation as the “entrance of the night preceding the 23rd day of October 4004 BC.” Well, okay then.
Big sky country Utah style...
on my 18 mile ride yesterday in upper Castle Valley. Outstanding!
Click on images to enlarge.
The largest tree in Utah...
is this Fremont’s cottonwood (Populus fremontii) that heralds one’s arrival into our rural community outside of Moab. Read the account of establishing this tree as the state champion in a 2016 article penned by our local scribe in the Castle Valley Comments.
The woody behemoth on a beautiful autumn afternoon, estimated to be more than 130 years old.
This tree is even highlighted as landmark on Google Maps. It’s big!
X marks the spot...
above Castleton Tower this morning, targeting Castle Valley for chemtrail application today.
Afternoon update: You thought I was kidding. I got sprayed during my ride near Round Mountain.
Major changes on the trails...
from a series of recent rains, especially in the arroyos where erosion and sedimentation have reshaped the terrain.
FASSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSST!
There’s no comparison between my former and new telecommunications providers at my high desert hacienda. See for yourself:
Out with the old: Frontier Communications DSL speedtest results.
In with the new: Emery Telcom fiber optic speedtest results.
Orders of magnitude performance increase on both download and upload speeds. WOW! But more than speed, the increased reliability of the fiber optic network is another important factor. Me likey.
The late bloomer...
in the high desert is a member of the sunflower family, and it’s at its peak brilliance right now. Absolutely radiant.
Rubber rabbitbrush (Ericameria nauseosa (formerly Chrysothamnus nauseosus)).
The water year...
is off to a good start in the La Sal Mountains of southeastern Utah, seen here freshly draped in snow from the season’s first winter storm. SNOTEL sites in the high country report 10, 12 and 13 inches of newly accumulated snow from yesterday.
Mostly cloud-free GOES-West satellite image showing snowpack in the Rocky Mountains after the winter storm.
Communing with bison...
in the Lamar Valley in the northeastern part of Yellowstone National Park. I spent an entire day observing about 500+ bison in several small herds, only about a tenth of the total estimated population in the park.
The majestic American bison (Bison bison).
Typical scene in Yellowstone: Always yield to a huge animal with horns when it decides to cross the road.
Lip-smacking good.
Time for a dust bath.
Catching a midday nap.
Heart Mountain...
is a beautiful and solitary peak (8,123 ft (2,476 m)) located north of Cody, Wyoming, the eroded vestigial remnant of an enormous slide block that was emplaced nearly 50 million years ago. A ~4 km thick sheet of rock about 1,300 square kilometers in area detached from the plateau to the west, sliding rapidly on a 2 degree detachment plane tens of kilometers towards the southeast into the Bighorn and Absaroka Basins. Heart Mountain is technically a klippe, and here’s more information about the largest terrestrial mass movement on Earth.
Sunrise behind Heart Mountain.
The summit block is composed of Paleozoic-age carbonate rocks, sitting on shale of the Willwood Formation that is 300 million years younger.
Autumn colors...
on the Fish Lake trail this afternoon, a signal for me to begin my migration south to red rock country.
Butterflies are in the air...
California tortoiseshell butterfly (Nymphalis californica) resting on a ponderosa pine tree.
Successful wet work...
in Puget Sound as team members for Apex Expeditions undergo a refresher course in the Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW). The three day course in Edmonds, Washington covers water survival, fire fighting and medical training for individuals who crew vessels at sea.
Left to right: Peter Harrison, Shirley Metz and yours truly peeling off our Gumby-like full immersion suits after training in the cold water. (Image by Ingrid Nixon.)
Peter and Shirley are among the founders of Apex Expeditions and I am their go-to geologist during their worldwide travels. Peter has just published his extraordinary new book on seabird identification and Shirley was the first woman to ski to the South Pole from the edge of the continent in 1989.
Come travel with us! Apex Expeditions
Aerial maneuvers...
in the wetlands as the pelicans flock to the departure gate, continuing their seasonal migration.
My wetlands assault vehicle...
is the ultra quiet, nicely camouflaged and heavy hauler RadRover 5. It gets me down the road and onto the trails in the surrounding forests and wetlands. The tripod with a gimbal head is on the front rack while my camera and 500 mm prime lens is secured in a padded case on the rear platform.
Field setup with pod of pelicans near the center of image. This waterfowl paradise is only four miles away!
Paddling paradise...
in the wetlands on a calm morning. Everybody was out enjoying the mellow conditions.
American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos).
Mallard Duck (Anas platyrhynchos) family with mom, junior and dad (top to bottom).
Canada Geese (Branta canadensis).
Early lunch.
Reinforcements arrive from the air...
as the pod of pelicans doubles in number in the wetlands this morning.
American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos).
That’s a pouch full of fish!
Western Osprey (Pandion haliaetus).
Pelican-palooza...
in the wetlands this morning, where a ~25-strong flotilla collectively harvest a bountiful breakfast. The early bird easily gets the fish and nobody is going hungry. Magnificent and fun!
Pod of American White Pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos).
Those are two fish going down the hatch!
Click on this image to enlarge.
Click on this image to enlarge.
Mule deer buck in velvet...
bedded down right behind my house.
Cool and refreshing rain...
returns to the Inland Northwest, rejuvenating the forest critters and me alike.