| Friday, July 9
On Friday we arrived in Kalispell, rented a car, and drove to East
Glacier. There we checked into the Glacier Park Lodge for two nights.
The lodge was noisy, housekeeping was minimal, and the
guards were unresponsive to the inmates’ complaints, but it
was a cool-looking building.
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| Saturday, July 10
On Saturday we warmed up with a 12-mile round-trip hike to Cobalt Lake. Lots of mosquitoes that day.
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Two Medicine Lake, where the trail to Cobalt Lake began |
Waterfall beside the trail to Cobalt Lake |
Cobalt Lake |
Keith persuaded Mary to go a little further and see some alpine country. |
Looking back. That top-of-the-world feeling, which is why we hike in the mountains. |
Sunday, July 11
The temperature was down, the winds were up, the clouds were coming and going, and in general
the weather seemed unpredictable. So, we took a break
from hard hiking and drove up to Waterton Lakes National Park (Keith’s first visit to Canada).
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The Prince of Wales Hotel – It has a magnificent view of the lake (especially in better weather) |
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Cameron Lake, where we did a short, easy hike. Montana is visible in the distance. |
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Black bear at Waterton – Keith thought that Mary got a little too
close for this photo, especially since the bear looked young and Mama Bear might be nearby. |
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Chief Mountain, on the drive back from Canada with a little more blue sky |
Monday, July 12
We didn’t come to sightsee. We came to hike. So, Monday
we got back to business with a pleasant little 10-mile hike from
our cabin at the Swiftcurrent Motor Inn to Iceberg
Lake. The trail had been closed because of a family of bears. Monday was the
first day it was open, and it stayed open only a few days before
the bears were sighted again.
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A bird that pecked at our boots at one spot along
the way. It was near Ptarmigan Falls and everyone assumed it was
a pterritorial ptarmigan (since we were mostly ignorant of
ptarmigans). We learned later it was actually a grouse (spruce grouse maybe?). |
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Keith on the trail to Iceberg Lake |
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Mary with Iceberg Lake in the background. There’s a reason they call it “Iceberg Lake.” |
We enjoyed watching mountain goats high on the cliffs above
the lake through binoculars, but a photograph wouldn’t have
captured it.
Tuesday, July 13
Our big hike of the week was the Highline Trail. We took a
shuttle from Many Glacier to Logan Pass and hiked from there to
Swiftcurrent Pass and then down to Many Glacier – about 15 miles
in all.
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One of the first sights we saw on the trail: mountain goats up close and personal. |
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Young mountain goats playing |
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A hoary marmot |
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Granite Park Chalet - A good place to stop and eat our lunches |
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View of Many Glacier on the way down from
Swiftcurrent Pass - The trail gets exciting in places.
You’re walking along and seeing the edge of the trail about 6
feet away and the valley floor a couple of thousand feet beyond.
It’s hard for the brain to integrate the two views while you’re
walking. Needless to say, you don’t want to trip. |
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You can see that here at least it wasn’t a sheer drop of 2000 feet, but it was far enough. |
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Moose in one of the lakes at Many Glacier (Bullhead Lake we think) |
Wednesday, July 14
On Wednesday we changed pace and took a boat-and-walking tour of Lake
Josephine and Grinnell Lake. It was a touristy thing to do,
but enjoyable. Our ranger guide taught us how to yell to warn
the bears away when walking through the woods.
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View from the boat on Lake Josephine. Angel Wing and the Salamander glacier are visible beyond the lake. |
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After Grinnell Lake we decided to hike as far as we
could to Grinnell Glacier. We knew the trail was still closed
near the end because of snow and ice, but crews were blasting
the ice and the rumor was that the trail might open by the
afternoon. We heard the sound of blasting while we were in the
valley.
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View of Grinnell Lake from the trail going up to Grinnell
Glacier – Mary framed this photo. Note: Last time I checked (December 2009), this photo
appeared in the first page of Google image search results for “Grinnell Lake.”
Actually, several photos from this collection are ranked high with Google. Good job, Mary! |
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We eventually reached the spot on the trail where
it was closed, and we waited and watched while the crew worked to
clear the trail. Mary took this photo just after one of the
blasts. |
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Finally a ranger came and told us the trail was open. We were
the first two hikers to get through after the trail opened.
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The glacier in the middle is called the Salamander. |
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Grinnell Glacier |
| Thursday, July 15
The Van Cleef family visited Glacier National Park the same
week we did. We arranged to meet them Thursday in Apgar Village
for lunch followed by a hike to Avalanche Lake. Doug likes
cycling more than hiking, I think, but he humored us.
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The Van Cleef family at Avalanche Lake. From left
to right: Carol, Doug, Joshua, Jordan, and Daniel. |
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Jordan |
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Carol and Joshua |
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Daniel, Jordan, and Joshua |
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Joshua and Carol at the end of the hike |
| Friday, July 16
Keith wanted to do one more strenuous hike to Sperry Chalet
(13 miles). We can’t recommend the hike, but the chalet seemed like
a good place to visit. The trail is used by horses, and the
resulting smell and flies were unpleasant. The weather was also
unpleasantly warm that day. Fortunately the chalet had plenty of
cheap lemonade and free water.
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Sperry Chalet |
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This mountain goat at the chalet seemed almost tame. |
Saturday, July 17
By Saturday we had hiked enough and were ready for another
easy day. We visited some of the western parts of the park and
played in Lake McDonald but did no hiking. Our most strenuous
activity was to paddle a rented kayak on the lake for a couple
of hours.
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The Village Inn had a great view of the lake. This
was the view from our balcony at about 21:00 Saturday
night. The sun set about 21:30, and it didn’t get really dark till about
22:30. |
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