Tuesday, September 26, 2017


NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPEDITIONS ULTIMATE


This is the second year in a row I have done this trip and it really is an ultimate experience for my clients! 5 National Parks in 15 days: Tetons, Yellowstone, Glacier, Olympic and Grand Canyon. It was a whirlwind of exhilaration!


THE TETONS


Grand Teton National Park was established by Calvin Coolidge in 1929. The acreage of the park has grown since its inception from 96,000 to 310,000


A moose sighting is always a thrill, but when you get a mama and her baby it is an added bonus. The marshy parts of the park provide the perfect habitat for these ungulates.


YELLOWSTONE

 Being in Yellowstone multiple times a year allows me to share my love of the park with many travelers while I work on my photographic skills. Getting to know these phenomenal features aids me in capturing them on camera.


The majestic Grand Prismatic Spring! On a sunny day the colors are truly spectacular. The largest hot spring in the U.S. and third largest in the world.


Artemesia Geyser may look like just a hot springs when calm, but it goes through regular minor and major eruptions. After a major eruption its pool drops apx. 2 feet. I love the brilliant blue.


Morning Glory's current color is dramatic, but the result of a sad fact: years of tourist trash. Visitors to the park have unfortunately deposited refuse and wishing coins into the pool, which has lowered the temperature. This has allowed microbes that thrive in cooler water to grow, giving it this yellow and green color versus the blue that it would produce otherwise.


I just love the Mud Pots in Yellowstone. Their gurgling and bubbling never fail to astound new visitors.


I often post pics of the falls in the Canyon area of Yellowstone from a distance. This shot is atop the brink of the Upper Falls. Powerful and chaotic!



The water at Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces is mostly underground. Scientists say that only 10% is on the surface.


GLACIER

On this trip we were supposed to stay at the Historic Lake McDonald Lodge in Glacier National Park, and I had hoped to wow you with pics of this rustic yet impressive structure. Unfortunately fires were encroaching the area, so we had to make other lodging plans in Whitefish.


Along the way to Glacier we visited the Berkeley Pit. I is the sight of an open-pit copper mining operation that was active from 1955-1982. Since it closed, the pit has filled with contaminated water that includes arsenic and sulfuric acid. It is now a Superfund site, meaning the EPA has given it special status for cleanup as it poses a risk to humans and/or the environment. It is an example of how greed can bring devastation.



My client Marianne enjoying a smokeless moment in the bit of Glacier we were able to visit.


OLYMPIC

I was saddened that I was not able to show my clients all that Glacier has to offer, but nature is unpredictable so you just have to roll with it. I was pleased to get to Olympic National Park, where the air was clear and beautiful views were unobstructed by smoke.


Sun soon to set over Lake Crescent......


...and sunset!




I love this shot along the Hall of Mosses Trail. It has an impressionistic appearance, like Monet's "Water Lillies."



 A grove of mossy Big Leaf Maples. Their limbs reach out in dramatic gesture, thus giving them their nickname, "the grand dame" of the Maple family.





The plaque for this very special Sitka Spruce says it all!


GRAND CANYON

By the time we got to the Grand Canyon we'd been traveling for 12 days! Covering so much ground (literally!) is exhausting, but luckily the Grand Canyon is equally inspiring and invigorating. Can't think of a better finale to cap off an incredible journey.

I will just let these pictures of the canyon speak for themselves.





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