Kanada Honeymoon Lake

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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 30

    Jasper, dur de TagđŸ„°

    13. elokuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☁ 20 °C

    Hüt morge simmr los richtig See TourđŸ„ł ufem Weg simmr widr bi de wundrschöne Flüss verbii und hend da und det ahghaltet und dUssicht gnosse..😍 de ershte Hält sind bits nebedusse gsi und au ned Touristisch.. wo mer denn richtig Maligne Lake sind isches de au touristischer worde😅
    Am Nami simmr de nomal zrug id Unterkunft en SchwummđŸŠđŸ»‍â™€ïžđŸŠđŸœ go mache, bevors de am Abig uf en gfüehrti Bustour gangä isch… 🚌
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 224

    Maligne Lake

    13. elokuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☀ 17 °C

    Manche Orte sind so beliebt, da will jeder hin. So ist es bei Spirit Island im Maligne Lake.

    Der See an sich, liegt unglaublich spektakulär. Umzingelt von Bergen und endlosen Wäldern, bettet er sich als eine riesige türkis blaue Fläche in die Landschaft.

    Nach Spirit Island, was nur im Frühling, mit dem meisten Wasser im See, eine Insel ist, sind wir mit dem Boot gefahren.
    Marcel hatte sehr gerne Kanu fahren wollen, weshalb wir zurück aufs Wasset sind. Beide Fahrten, waren sehr sehr schön und machten großen Spaß.

    Leider hatten wir entlang des Moose Lake Loop kein Glück die Namensgeber zu sehen, dafür sahen wir einige Elche und Hirsche auf der Rückfahrt.

    Eine ganze Gruppe von Grizzlybären, haben wir knapp verpasst.
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 90

    Jasper, South to Banff,

    21. heinĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☁ 72 °F

    Found this site halfway south of Jasper, in typical Canadian forest, well mixed with aspen etc., just in time after 12:20 this p. m. - no sooner had we secured the site than a stream of vehicles started searching past the site.
    For certain Banff and Jasper are nothing but glorified tourist traps using Nature as a lure. So much for the ' Canadian experience' - thinking of a Yellowstone redux if we can find sites - but it will soon be August High season.
    Highschool geography stated that geographically, North America is defined by large swiftly flowing rivers. Right, about .4 of a km. from here she flows - esp. swiftly. The fascination is the creamy colour, due to silt frozen in the glaciers for eons, now released through climate change. We discussed kayaking, but if you can't see obstacles in the water it becomes a bit iffy - esp. with a very strong current. Image a lemon flavoured aquamarine milkshake - such is the colour of the Abathacas River - and other creeks and rivers that carry silt into the Artic Sea.
    Chariot needs an oil change next week in Calgary. Always thought Calgary was surrounded by peaks - it ain't. But was home to Winter Olympics.
    Certainly many more cosmopolitan tourists here - and spending. Also CAD is worth .75 US. Canada could be benefiting from US racial / homophobic attitudes. Have met a lovely couple from Poland, Jacwuine and Ella, a girl from Australia and our neighbours from Germany - all today. True tourism noon in Canada.
    In this camp for tonight and tomorrow (Saturday) night. Truly lovely high peaks, forest and river and as a reminder - damn fool raven that woke me up in my rocker beach chair - I thought it was a grizzly wanting to play peek-a-boo. (!)
    Truly amazed at the beauty and elegance of the elk we have encountered. Connie compares to South African kudu (antelope), in the magestic antlers and demeanour.
    Spending second night here (today Saturday), might have to boondok Sunday. Weekdays easier to find campsites.
    Bit of a letdown, Canada as a whole. Apparently East of here is pure prairie - West to the Pacific is allot more of Alberta, then British Colombia... so back Stateside we go. Certainly the drive Banff to Jasper was worth it, but - negatives already detailed. Enough!
    Very nice to be non-mobile for awhile.
    So... looking forward to Nature 'State side. Can't imagine why I am so oversold and disappointed in Canada - or are we in the 'wrong' part geographically?
    Images:
    Camp table, no roof? Yup, solar powered.
    Elk - poor shot.
    Row of RVs = Banff "parking lot" so-called camp ground.
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 18

    A Blank Day

    13. heinĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    Well, I’m not quite sure what to say this evening, as all plans went out of the window this morning. We woke up to what we would call blanket fog everywhere. It was so thick first thing, we couldn’t even see the water of Lake Louise. I learned later that this is the result of the wildfires. The wind had changed direction to our detriment. As I mentioned it has been hazy the last couple of days, reducing visibility, but this morning there was none. Consequently, we had to put aside our plans to explore Yoho NP as there would be literally nothing to see. It was moving day anyway, so we made our way to Banff, our final port of call, earlier than planned. We arrived early afternoon and it was heaving, a somewhat unpleasant shock after the last few days! We had a car hire problem to sort out and so took the opportunity to do that. It took the rest of the afternoon!!
    We are staying at Buffalo Mountain Lodge on the outskirts of the town and will have to wait and see if conditions improve overnight. I’ll keep in touch, but sadly nothing of great interest to report.
    I’ll post some photos that didn’t make the cut the first time round, for your interest.
    Firstly, of David Thompson the explorer/ geographer who produced the first map of the area. A great friend of Simon Fraser of a similar ilk. Both have rivers named after them, named for one by the other - if you get my drift!
    Secondly, some delicious food pics to make you drool. Yep, tasted as good as they looked.
    Thirdly of a rather sad lodgepole pine. Many of the forests are looking very sad as the lodgepole pines are slowly dying, due to the infestation of a little beetle that is boring through the bark and allowing disease and freezing temperatures to kill great swathes of the forest. Sadly, there is nothing to be done and natural selection will have to take its course. In case people have forgotten it is the way of the world, not just in trees!
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 16

    Driving the Icefields Parkway

    11. heinĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☁ 14 °C

    The Icefields Parkway was constructed in the 1960s and took one year to complete, which is some feat when you consider the length of it. Today we were driving one section from Jasper to Lake Louise, which is a distance of just under 250 kms. Those of you who have had the pleasure of this journey do not need me to tell you how spectacular it is in every direction. You seriously do not know where to look. There are many pull offs along the way to stop and admire the majestic scenery, so it is a stop and start trip! Interestingly, you meet the same people at each stop, as you are all doing the same thing. It becomes quite funny. The best way to give you an idea is to post the photos. The weather was cloudy today and not so clear, so please bear in mind that these only give half an indication of the drama and beauty of the scene. In reality the views are mind blowing.
    Our lunch time stop was at The Columbia Icefields Centre. Here you are able to get up close and personal with the Athabasca Glacier and it was obviously a chance I could not pass by. Peter was, I think, ambivalent until we arrived and he saw the scale of the ice. I had booked a lunchtime slot, which was quiet and we set off in the Columbia Bus on the five minute drive from the Adventure Centre to the stop where you board the Ice Explorer. This is a huge 6 wheeled ice tractor capable of climbing and descending 30degree slopes and driving on to the ice. We drove slowly down the steep lateral moraine (debris left at the sides by the glacier) and on to the end of the glacier and had the chance to then spend 20 mins on the ice. That was enough, the temperature was a good twenty degrees cooler than up at the Centre, but what an experience.
    This glacier originates from the Columbia Ice Sheet, which is the size of the cities of Washington DC and Vancouver together. Six glaciers overflow down mountainsides in the area and are in truth slow moving rivers of ice. They are fascinating. From a distance the glacier looks smooth, but it is far from it close to. Where it tumbles over a ridge the ice is rucked and thrown up in large spikes with deep crevasses splitting the glacier. As it hits smooth ground the ice river fans out, but is still ‘hummocky’ with rivulets of water running off it. When you can see the pure ice it is a clear blue, although the surface is often dirty as it slowly erodes. The ice was formed during the last Ice Age, 18,000 years ago, when the Wisconsin Ice Sheet covered virtually the whole of northern Canada and what we see today are the remnants. The Adventure Centre is some way away overlooking the glaciers built high on the terminal moraine (debris pushed in front of the ice). It shows you how the ice has retreated since 1840 and of course is still doing so. Interestingly, this is the second time that I have heard promulgated that the natural cycles of earths tilting on its axis have a lot to do with the cooling and warming of the atmosphere; tropical periods and Ice Ages, every 100,000 years. Geology can of course substantiate this. Our habits have undoubtedly not helped, but the Canadians feel that human activity is far from the simplistic answer.
    We followed this amazing experience, with a visit to the Sky Walk. This is recently built and undoubtedly a technological wonder. A semi circular glass walkway projects out over the Sunwapta Valley and you can look down at your feet through the glass floor to the valley floor some 200feet below. This glass is strong enough to hold the weight of several Ice Explorer tractors and yet looks fragile and elegant. I am not that good with heights, but never felt in the slightest bit nervous. It is a very clever piece of engineering.
    So, quite a morning. We left the centre at four o’clock to drive the rest of the way to Lake Louise, arriving at 6.30. This is our luxury stay at The Chateau on the Lake. Gorgeous!
    We can look out of the bedroom window to the clear turquoise Lake Louise, named after Queen Victoria’s fourth daughter, Princess Louise. We will enjoy!
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 14

    The Flora & Fauna of the Maligne Valley

    9. heinĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    As an addendum, I would like to introduce you to some of the flowers and animals we saw today. I felt the previous section was already too long, so have added this piece.
    The flora around Maligne Lake was subtle and beautiful as you will see. It is the time for wild flowers so I will be keeping my eye out for more, particularly in the Alpine Meadows.
    The photos will tell the story.
    Of course there is wildlife galore in the Rockies, some sweet and harmless, others less so.
    Our guide gave us a long lecture on what to do if meeting a bear round the corner - heaven forbid! The précis of it all was if it’s a Grizzly play dead and it ‘should lose interest’. I was rather perturbed by the ‘should’! If it’s a black bear you’ll have to fight for your life if you can’t retreat, because it will kill and eat you. Hit it on the nose seemed to be the preferred strategy. I’d have died of fright first, so possibly not necessary.
    On our way back we came across an osprey and it’s nest, two mountain sheep traversing an unbelievably steep rock face, an elk resting in the undergrowth (no photo sorry), and finally a black bear foraging by the side of the road. How lucky were we?
    Our guide on the Mary Schaffer told a fantastic story of Mike, the wildlife warden, in these parts, whose job it is to keep,an eye on the animal population, in particular the bears. He watches them by powerful telescope high up in the meadows and was worried to see a Grizzly laying on its front, day after day. In the end, he decided he would have to investigate and made his way up there. To his astonishment the bear was happily laying on the carcass of a dead elk, feasting and sleeping continuously, obviously protecting his food supply by laying on it!! He knows most of the bears individually and when this individual woke from hibernation the following spring, he arranged to weigh him. After hibernation, when a bear will lose one third of its body weight, he still weighed 700lbs! I asked Nick how on earth you weigh a Grizzly? ‘ Ah’ he said, ‘it’s complicated and basically involves a block and tackle and a helicopter’ The mind boggles!
    Enjoy the photos.

    My phrase of the Day for you all:-

    The Meaning of Life : Create, Experience, Understand, Expand.
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 13

    Athabasca Falls

    12. kesĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☀ 14 °C

    Amazingly powerful waterfall.
    Athabasca Falls is a waterfall in Jasper National Park on the upper Athabasca River, approximately 30 kilometres south of the townsite of Jasper, Alberta, Canada, and just west of the Icefields Parkway. Lue lisÀÀ

  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 12

    Maligne Lake

    11. kesĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☁ 13 °C

    Amazing journey on Lake. We visited Spirit Island.
    Maligne Lake is a lake in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada. The lake is famed for the colour of its azure water, the surrounding peaks, the three glaciers visible from the lake, and Spirit Island, a frequently and very famously photographed islet.Lue lisÀÀ

  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 12

    Spirit Island

    8. kesĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☁ 21 °C

    Spirit Island ist eine kleine (Halb-)Insel im Maligne Lake im Jasper-Nationalpark von Alberta in Kanada, unmittelbar südöstlich der Samson Narrows, einer nur 130 Meter breiten Engstelle etwa in der Mitte des fast 22 Kilometer langen Sees. Abhängig vom Wasserstand des Sees ist sie häufig durch eine schmale mit Gras bewachsene Landbrücke mit dem Ufer verbunden, so dass sie dann nur noch eine Halbinsel ist.

    Spirit Island ist die Hauptattraktion des Sees. Da dieser jedoch nur an seinem 14 km entfernten, nördlichen Ende mit einer Straße erschlossen ist, kann man sie nur mit einer Bootsrundfahrt, nach einer längeren Wanderung oder per Kajak erreichen. Die von Bäumen bewachsene Insel mit dem südlichen Teil des Sees und den Gipfeln der Rockies im Hintergrund zählt zu den bekanntesten Fotomotiven der Kanadischen Rocky Mountains.

    Einer Legende der örtlichen Ureinwohner zufolge war die Insel der heimliche Treffpunkt eines jungen Liebespaares aus verfeindeten Stämmen. Als der Vater der jungen Frau von dieser Beziehung erfuhr, verbot er ihr, die Insel jemals wieder aufzusuchen. Ihr Liebhaber aber kehrte sein Leben lang immer wieder hierher zurück und wartete auf sie, bis er schließlich sogar an diesem Ort verstarb. Sein Geist soll heute noch auf dem Eiland umgehen und hat ihm so den Namen Spirit Island (zu deutsch Geisterinsel) verliehen.
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  • PĂ€ivĂ€ 12

    Maligne Lake

    8. kesĂ€kuuta 2023, Kanada ⋅ ☀ 23 °C

    Der See liegt auf einer Höhe von 1670 m, hat eine Oberfläche von knapp 20 km², eine durchschnittliche Tiefe von 100 m und eine Uferlänge von 45 km. Er wird vom Maligne River, einem Nebenfluss des Athabasca River, mit Gletscherwasser gespeist und seine Temperatur steigt nie über 4 °C. Im See liegt mit der Insel Spirit Island eines der Wahrzeichen der kanadischen Rocky Mountains.

    Hier haben wir dann eine Bootstour zur Spirit Island gemacht, was wirklich super schön war. Das junge Team an Bord war sehr unterhaltsam und informierte uns ausführlich über die Sehenswürdigkeiten rund um die See, sowie die Geschichten dazu.
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