Thursday, July 31, 2008
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Grinnell Glacier: A high-country adventure
The day began with an inspiration. I listened, and soon found the wheels rolling on the bumpy pavement on the highway to the East Side of the park, en route to Iceberg Lake. I arrived at Many Glacier at 10 am, before the tourists flowed out of the hotel onto the well-travelled trails around the area. On a whim, I checked with the ranger at the station, who informed me that the Iceberg Lake trail was closed due to excessive use of grizzlies. I wanted to see a GB, but being obedient to park rules (and out of respect for my safety) I chose a different destination: Grinnell Glacier. I didn't think twice about hiking alone in bear country, after taking a glance at the parking lot: full. I knew plenty of people would be on the trail to one of the most photographed glaciers in the country.
The 6.5 mile hike up wasn't too bad; I enjoyed feeling the sun's rays grow stronger as I climbed the well-worn trail uphill towards the snow-covered peaks. I jogged when I could- something I would regret at the time of posting this blog!
I passed several lakes, including Grinnell Lake, which glowed an eerie aqua/turquoise color. (you know how I am with colors...) The picture is accurate, despite not having a polarizing filter on my camera.

The glacier was simple: a snowfield. Several bighorn sheep scaled the steep slopes above the moraine. The biggest one sat on an outcropping of rock nearby, watching the tourists eat their lunches at the picnic area. I climbed above the glacier to a frozen lake, and explored the area a little. I splashed around in the icy water, and laid in the snow to cool me off from the hike. I did a little bouldering on this cool-looking rock and left my camera along the trail for someone to take a picture of me. Sure enough, two nice french-speaking ladies came along and were more than happy to take my picture. I thanked them and climbed back down.

The fields on the hike back down were gorgeous! Beargrass, a common alpine flower (related to lilies) that grows all over the park. It makes for some nice photos.

I spent the rest of the day playing in the waterfalls, catching some sun, and driving home on the Going-to-the-Sun road. I was greeted at the pass by a bighorn sheep ram, who made good company as I ate a snack, and observed him eating his supper of wild bushes.
The setting sun from the Going-to-the-Sun road on the drive back home.

The days here never cease to amaze me- the beauty, wildlife, and activity one day contains make me extremely grateful for this experience!
The 6.5 mile hike up wasn't too bad; I enjoyed feeling the sun's rays grow stronger as I climbed the well-worn trail uphill towards the snow-covered peaks. I jogged when I could- something I would regret at the time of posting this blog!
I passed several lakes, including Grinnell Lake, which glowed an eerie aqua/turquoise color. (you know how I am with colors...) The picture is accurate, despite not having a polarizing filter on my camera.
The glacier was simple: a snowfield. Several bighorn sheep scaled the steep slopes above the moraine. The biggest one sat on an outcropping of rock nearby, watching the tourists eat their lunches at the picnic area. I climbed above the glacier to a frozen lake, and explored the area a little. I splashed around in the icy water, and laid in the snow to cool me off from the hike. I did a little bouldering on this cool-looking rock and left my camera along the trail for someone to take a picture of me. Sure enough, two nice french-speaking ladies came along and were more than happy to take my picture. I thanked them and climbed back down.
The fields on the hike back down were gorgeous! Beargrass, a common alpine flower (related to lilies) that grows all over the park. It makes for some nice photos.
I spent the rest of the day playing in the waterfalls, catching some sun, and driving home on the Going-to-the-Sun road. I was greeted at the pass by a bighorn sheep ram, who made good company as I ate a snack, and observed him eating his supper of wild bushes.
The setting sun from the Going-to-the-Sun road on the drive back home.
The days here never cease to amaze me- the beauty, wildlife, and activity one day contains make me extremely grateful for this experience!
Saturday, July 26, 2008
The Elusive Harlequin Duck
Recently I have 'conveniently overlooked' the goal of the project in order to find a feeling of success in our surveys. Simply put, Harlequin Ducks are uncommon in the park, so finding them on randomly selected streams has been virtually impossible. We have been gathering good data, but I haven't seen a harlequin duck since my first day on the job. I admit to thinking quietly to myself, "I may never see another Harlequin Duck again this summer!"
Yesterday morning as I woke up, that thought silently slipped away like campfire smoke into the forest. This was a good day, I could feel it. The anticipation was high as I jumped into a government truck, and headed for McDonald Creek to do brood surveys with several other park researchers. My chances of seeing female harlequin ducks had increased tenfold, and the possibility some would have young ducklings with her was also quite high. Nathan and I surveyed the upper portion of McDonald, which was 6 kilometers as the crow flies, and took several hours to traverse, bushwack, ford, and wade through the icy current. To sum a day's work into several paragraphs: we were successful! We found a lone female first (probably on her own after an unsuccessful nesting attempt) and then a pair consisting of a MALE!? and female harlequin. This is incredibly late for male harlequins to still be here, as they normally migrate back to the Pacific Northwest (Northern Washington and British Columbia, in the case of our GNP birds) to molt and "play golf" while the hen ducks raise the ducklings then migrate to the coast. In addition to the three ducks I've already mentioned, we sighted a female with three chicks, which looked about 10 to 12 days old. They were diving and following mom around, already proficient at navigating the whitewater, boulders, and eddies.

My last overnight trip (a short one) took us up into the North Fork (almost to Canada) in the northwest corner of the park. This was wolf country, and we found numerous wolf tracks, scat, and kill sites. Because we camped undesignated (not in an established campground) along a stream, the water was loud enough to keep us from hearing wolves. It also rained hard all night. (I stayed quite dry...)
To make up for a lack of the comedic lack of harlequin ducks on our streams we surveyed, we found many other interesting things, including several shed elk antlers, wolf tracks, and a mother Spruce Grouse with one chick. (Next three pictures)



It's hard to believe my summer is almost over... I have roughly two and a half weeks of work left, which will fly by! No pun intended.. =)
Soon the humidity of the midwest will clog my nostrils and my lungs will long for the pure, clean air of northern Montana. Each breath I take is bigger and fuller, as I savor the flavor of a summer I will never forget.
Yesterday morning as I woke up, that thought silently slipped away like campfire smoke into the forest. This was a good day, I could feel it. The anticipation was high as I jumped into a government truck, and headed for McDonald Creek to do brood surveys with several other park researchers. My chances of seeing female harlequin ducks had increased tenfold, and the possibility some would have young ducklings with her was also quite high. Nathan and I surveyed the upper portion of McDonald, which was 6 kilometers as the crow flies, and took several hours to traverse, bushwack, ford, and wade through the icy current. To sum a day's work into several paragraphs: we were successful! We found a lone female first (probably on her own after an unsuccessful nesting attempt) and then a pair consisting of a MALE!? and female harlequin. This is incredibly late for male harlequins to still be here, as they normally migrate back to the Pacific Northwest (Northern Washington and British Columbia, in the case of our GNP birds) to molt and "play golf" while the hen ducks raise the ducklings then migrate to the coast. In addition to the three ducks I've already mentioned, we sighted a female with three chicks, which looked about 10 to 12 days old. They were diving and following mom around, already proficient at navigating the whitewater, boulders, and eddies.
My last overnight trip (a short one) took us up into the North Fork (almost to Canada) in the northwest corner of the park. This was wolf country, and we found numerous wolf tracks, scat, and kill sites. Because we camped undesignated (not in an established campground) along a stream, the water was loud enough to keep us from hearing wolves. It also rained hard all night. (I stayed quite dry...)
To make up for a lack of the comedic lack of harlequin ducks on our streams we surveyed, we found many other interesting things, including several shed elk antlers, wolf tracks, and a mother Spruce Grouse with one chick. (Next three pictures)
It's hard to believe my summer is almost over... I have roughly two and a half weeks of work left, which will fly by! No pun intended.. =)
Soon the humidity of the midwest will clog my nostrils and my lungs will long for the pure, clean air of northern Montana. Each breath I take is bigger and fuller, as I savor the flavor of a summer I will never forget.
Friday, July 18, 2008
Life in a Burn
Quite an oxymoron, isn't it?
The past few days I've spent over on the "East Side"- of the park, that is. The mission, should we have chosen to accept it (did we have a choice!?) was to survey the Red Eagle drainage. All of us were relatively excited, because this was a burn area. My understanding of the history surrounding this puts Boy Scouts on the stand as the guilty culprits. Matt informed me that in 1998 the Boy Scouts were camped at the same campground we would stay at the second night, and accidentally caught the forest on fire! The burn consumed several thousand of acres of forest, and (I hope I have my facts straight) couldn't be contained to the park. Anyways, I was excited because that meant a new type of habitat for birds I hadn't seen yet (and easy bushwacking!)
On the drive over, we found ourselves sitting in construction traffic along the Going-to-the-Sun Road. Not the worst spot to be stranded, given the surrounding landscape of craggy peaks, green vegetation, and a steep drop a thousand feet over the side of a cliff, should I lean too far over the short wall...
The burned area contrasted strikingly to what I had prepared myself for. I had pictured stealth-black remnants of trees, still smoldering among clouds of ash hanging over a barren wasteland. As I trotted along the trail (hiking alone, of course!) was in fact, the opposite. Wildflowers carpeted the ground layer with reds, blues, whites, and yellows. The greenness of everything was surprising. It reminded me of the Smoky Mountains, except something didn't seem right, and it took me several minutes while I hiked to figure it out, and as soon as I did the transition had been complete. At the trailhead, everything had been untouched by the fire, and as I hiked deeper into the wilderness, the trees grew more dead, and more-burned, until I was hiking through waist-high green foliage of flowers, stinging nettles, and pretty blue flowers. Over my head though, the trees canopies gradually grew thinner, until most of the trees had been burnt off half-way up. Several miles in, the wreckage of tree trunks, and charred remains of what was once a great forest of spruce, pine, aspen, and cedar trees. Now, the skewed skeletons stand to tell the story of the ecological history of the area.
The trip itself went smoothly. We hiked in and camped at an undesignated site. I cooked supper, then did some birdwatching before bed. The next morning's weather dictated our schedule. The weather cooperated for a while, but the morning began with rain showers, and I spent most of my free time (not counting birdwatching) in my tent getting rained on. I stayed warm and dry, thanks to a newer-generation tent! Once the weather moved on we began surveying, and Matt and I waded a good stretch of the creek in the cold water, wearing our packs. The afternoon flew by. The sunset after a rainstorm did illuminate the landscape in an ephemeral way, and the beauty radiated on every mountaintop, tree, flower, and blade of grass. The day ended with more weather, but it was a good day's work, and I fell asleep full of good food and high hopes for the following day.
The birdwatching was incredible! I added 6 new birds to my Montana state list, and two to my life list, that I had never seen before. (Lazuli Bunting, and black-backed woodpecker) The birding on this trip put me at just over 100 species for the state! Other fun birds included Osprey, bald eagles (i found a nest with 1 immature in it) and numerous Goldeneye, woodpeckers, and songbirds. Hopefully I can keep adding to my list, although it gets increasingly more difficult to find birds I haven't seen yet.
Overall, the trip was wonderful! It got cut short by an executive decision made by our crew leader, considering factors such as the habitat, etc. I found myself for the first time not wanting to leave the backcountry to come back! I will admit that the monster cookies sitting in the freezer tasted great... Thanks Mom!
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
As I sit on the slab of granite, slowly warming from the sun's showering rays, I take a deep breath. I close my eyes, and then open them slowly to help the reality of where I am sink in. The breeze dances over my sunburnt arms, giving me goosebumps. The surrounding mountains unfold before me like a pop-up book. I feel like I am sitting in one of the panoramic posters that are displayed on the walls of every gift shop, visitors center, and museum here in Glacier. It is beautiful, but I picture the scene before me in several week's time. The vast fields of summer snow that I skidded across to reach my current perch will soon melt, and the small, delicate glacier lilies will soon emerge gently from the lichen-clad slopes of scree and alpine flora. I feel a warmer breeze in my imagination and picture a mountain goat traversing the steep hillside below me. I take in a deep breath as I close my eyes once again, to savor the thinning air, and the unmistakable sound of silence. I am surrounded by beauty, that I am making my own, cherishing it in my thought. I am at peace.
Photo Essay III More Wildlife
Monday, July 14, 2008
Smiling Goats!
It's been a fantastic week here in Glacier National Park! It's hard to believe that a month ago today was my first day on the job, and I have just over a month until my employment ends. Time sure does fly when I'm busy!
Yesterday I woke up early and took an hour-long shuttle ride to the top of Logan Pass, at the Continental Divide. There, I explored, and hiked the 6 mile-stroll (haha) to Hidden Lake and back, doing a little fishing at the lake. I was happy to get back though! This is at the divide... Just after I took this picture (self-timer mode!) A big goat walked across the road and right under the spot I jumped! It would have been funny if I had waited a minute! Maybe I'll photoshop it in during some free time one of these nights...
The hike up to the saddle from the Visitor's Center was boring. It was just trudging up a snowy slope, but once I got to the saddle, it was beautiful! From there the trail continued uphill, and then the trail dropped down into Hidden Lake about a mile later.
Hidden lake was mostly covered in ice still, and the trout and arctic grayling were not very active. I fished for about an hour, with no luck. There were several other fisherman, all of which had waders, and could reach the deeper sections bordered by ice and therefore, caught fish. I waded in up to my knees, but as you could imagine, lasted about two minutes and then had to warm up in the sun! As I fished, mountain chipmunks would crawl over my feet, onto my pack in search of food. I didn't feed them. Hiking back to Logan pass (an elevation gain of 700 feet) I took the trail, which traversed several snow fields, which only several people have passed over, since the pass opened on the 3rd of July. It was slippery, but I only fell and self-arrested once- still on the trail. Hiking back I saw several skiers who had hiked up as high as humanly possible and skied down, drawing a crowd of tourists in the parking lot of the visitor's center, who wondered aloud at what crazy person would climb cliffs just to get a 30 second ride on old snow...
The view from the saddle
Some of the goats were quite friendly; this one walked right up to me and licked me!
Most of the mammals here in the park are in the middle of shedding their winter fur as the snow melts and the temperature increases. Some goats were pretty scraggly looking, but this billy goat gruff was a good looking fella, complete with broken horn. In my off-trail excursion, I encountered several additional groups of goats, some had newborn kids with them, that looked to be a couple of weeks old! They were very sensitive little guys!
A group of Bighorn Sheep also decided to hang out at Logan Pass yesterday, and I was able to snap some shots of the big rams before tourists corralled them into the parking lot. Here's to you, dad!
My last trip took me to the East side of the park to survey Reynolds Creek, which was some of the best Harlequin duck habitat I've encountered out here. I spent 3 days with Ashley, and we bushwacked several miles UP the drainage, bouldering up waterfalls with packs, climbing over numerous dead trees, wading waist-high through swamps of glacial-runoff, (good moose habitat!) trying to locate GPS points that didn't exist... Our trip ended with scaling a 400 foot slope, from the bottom of the drainage up the side of the mountain, to the Going-to-the-Sun Road. When we reached the road, we both collapsed and then ate lunch. The winds were strong, and multiple tourists slowed down to stare at us. I was too tired to care.
Here's a good idea of what most of Reynolds (waterfalls excluded) looked like:
Overall, it's been a good week- and I've been enjoying taking some time off. I went to church this morning, took an 18 mile bike ride, done some hiking, fishing, and some more photography. I'm looking forward to watching a re-run of the Wimbledon final as soon as I can get ahold of it! (Hint, hint- anybody!?)
Saturday, July 5, 2008
4th of July: out of the Belly
Today Nathan and I hiked out of the Belly River. (for the second time)
Two days ago we hiked in, from the Chief Mountain Trailhead at the Canadian border. The hike in went fast, because we were doing a good 4 mph pace, and we covered the 6 miles to Gablein no time. Being a holiday weekend, most of the campsites were full, so we grabbed a good one before taking off to do some surveying. My new tent works great! We surveyed a good 2-mile stretch of river (several hours worth of bushwacking, fording streams, and getting bitten by mosquitoes) As the afternoon elapsed, we returned to the campground and I cooked dinner and then went to the Belly River ranger station and visited with the resident rangers, and their guests, and continued reading a good book I've been working on.
The next morning we hiked from Gable to the head of Elizabeth Lake. There's no amazing tale to tell. Simply put, the bugs were bad and we didn't see any harlequins. (The habitat was good, however!)
Dawn Mist falls was a pretty sight along the way.
I might add that as I'm typing this, it's hailing marble-sized hail... I'm protected under the porch of the West Glacier gift shop, paying for access to wireless internet.
That evening, we relaxed and I took some photos of the surrounding peaks. Off the top of my head I think Ptarmigan Wall, and a few other famous peaks in the park surround Elizabeth Lake.
I woke up early this morning, to solo hike out to the border. While cooking my breakfast (organic maple and spice oatmeal, and some hot chocolate) a large black bear smelled my breakfast, and wanted some. I spotted him coming down the trail into the campsite, and waited for a minute to see what he was going to do. He was downwind, and I believe he wanted some oatmeal. I stood up when he got too close, and waved my arms, and shouted "HEY BEAR!" He looked up and stopped, and as I walked toward him, clapping my hands he turned around and skipped away. I paced out the distance at 30 paces. Almost too close!
I hope y'all have had a great 4th of July, I certainly have. I have the next couple days off, and look forward to buying good groceries, and getting into town to go to church on Sunday.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
July at Last!
Wow! It's hard to believe that it's now July! I think I only have about 50 days left, until this experience is done! Looking back on June, I think of all the unexpected adventures, wildlife encounters, and other situations I've found myself in... Looking ahead, I anticipate more fun experiences, and hopefully a couple good bear sightings!
Several days ago, I received notice that because the female harlequins were on the nest incubating their eggs, we would get a few days off from work. Knowing Mom was in Seattle visiting family, I thought- why not surprise her? It worked out to fly out to Washington the following morning, and spend a few days hanging with the family. It was great! I was able to stay in Bellevue, see some old friends, and visit "the beach" which only gets better as time goes on! The landscaping was gorgeous, and it was wonderful to spend some quality time with Papa and Nana. My visit was enriched with wildlife encounters, from hummingbirds to raccoons!

Now that it is July, the mosquitoes are out here in Glacier, and we had a big thunderstorm early this morning, with lightning that splits open the sky, freeing the rain that seems to have been trapped in the giant clouds for the passing weeks. My recent trips have taken me past Polebridge deep into the heart of the park, where I hike alongside wolf tracks and step over missing sections of the trail, dug up by grizzlies looking for spring bulbs to eat. I am actually supposed to be on a trip right now, but we returned yesterday due to un-surveyable habitat and a campsite mix-up. Who knows where the next week will take me, but hopefully I'll have the 4th off to celebrate with other locals the great country we live in.
I biked past a bear cub the other day! The mom was nowhere in sight, and he kind of approached me- so I snapped a few pics and biked quickly away!

Right now I'm sitting outside the Canadian Embassy in West Glacier (???... that's what I thought, too!) and the "Canada Day" celebrations are winding to a close. It's the 141st birthday of Canada or something. I plan to do a quick 15 mile hike into the Belly River again and survey some tributaries tomorrow and on the 3rd, and hike out on the 4th. No fishing this time!!!
Seattle family- it was great to see y'all! Sending my love West- I'll be back!
Several days ago, I received notice that because the female harlequins were on the nest incubating their eggs, we would get a few days off from work. Knowing Mom was in Seattle visiting family, I thought- why not surprise her? It worked out to fly out to Washington the following morning, and spend a few days hanging with the family. It was great! I was able to stay in Bellevue, see some old friends, and visit "the beach" which only gets better as time goes on! The landscaping was gorgeous, and it was wonderful to spend some quality time with Papa and Nana. My visit was enriched with wildlife encounters, from hummingbirds to raccoons!
Now that it is July, the mosquitoes are out here in Glacier, and we had a big thunderstorm early this morning, with lightning that splits open the sky, freeing the rain that seems to have been trapped in the giant clouds for the passing weeks. My recent trips have taken me past Polebridge deep into the heart of the park, where I hike alongside wolf tracks and step over missing sections of the trail, dug up by grizzlies looking for spring bulbs to eat. I am actually supposed to be on a trip right now, but we returned yesterday due to un-surveyable habitat and a campsite mix-up. Who knows where the next week will take me, but hopefully I'll have the 4th off to celebrate with other locals the great country we live in.
I biked past a bear cub the other day! The mom was nowhere in sight, and he kind of approached me- so I snapped a few pics and biked quickly away!
Right now I'm sitting outside the Canadian Embassy in West Glacier (???... that's what I thought, too!) and the "Canada Day" celebrations are winding to a close. It's the 141st birthday of Canada or something. I plan to do a quick 15 mile hike into the Belly River again and survey some tributaries tomorrow and on the 3rd, and hike out on the 4th. No fishing this time!!!
Seattle family- it was great to see y'all! Sending my love West- I'll be back!
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