At the heart of the town of Jasper, the park visitors’ center stands out by being on a big open piece of property and made of local materials. It was designed by one of the very early park superintendents and helps set design standards for the town. They gave us really good advice for our hikes through the park.
On the grounds outside, they used cones for mulch around their evergreen trees. It was quite nice at least visually, but we have no idea how effective it is as a mulch. Since growing conditions are harsh here, weeds have a harder time getting established, so little mulching is actually needed.
Jim popped out of the car to take a picture of some nice scenery at one of many such places and his nose was assaulted with a rotten egg smell. A nearby sign said that this place was called Cold Sulfur Spring. The milky white color of the outflow was from other minerals, but the smell was from the sulfur.
Wildlife was abundant in the park, both small and large animals made appearances from time to time. We watched a group of golden mantled ground squirrels apparently playing.
A different kind of ground squirrel, a Columbian, wasn’t sure if facing Jim and his camera or dealing with an oncoming train was a worse fate. He managed to scamper away from both of us.
Mountain goats strolled around various places, including the side of highways.
Elk are reasonably comfortable around people. We saw lots of females and young, but no adult males. One of the females had a bird riding around on her back. It was there for at least 10 minutes.
At the edge of town, a mule deer climbed along the top of a stone embankment, just a few feet from the few cars that passed that spot.
Perched atop the cupola of a business in town, a raven seemed to be yelling the message “shop here, shop here”.
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One part of the trail around Lake Annette was closed because there was a pair of eagles nesting who had a chick. The chick was very camera shy, though. Every time he popped his head up, Jim would line up his camera at its longest lens setting and the chick would duck (no, it’s an eagle, not a duck, Jim).
When we first approached the lake, Jim insisted that Ardith stop the car. She reluctantly did so, and he got the picture of a fisherman that he glimpsed from the road.
Jim enjoyed the smells of the forest; Ardith’s sinuses were stuffed up and she couldn’t appreciate it. His sniffing reverie was interrupted by horses coming along the path where he was dawdling. There were separate paths for horses and hikers and he had strayed.
The lake itself was a typically splendid mountain lake. We were both in awe and often just stopped to admire.
The lake wasn’t just for hiking and fishing, families were enjoying the beach.
There were a number of great wildflowers along our hike around the lake.
Our next hike, to Five Lakes, also showed other great wildflowers to us.
The trail leading to Five Lakes climbs up and down a few times. Ardith wasn’t sure if she could / should do it. She persevered and was extremely glad she did. Each of the lakes had their own color, partly due to the differing mineral content, partly to the way the sun hits the lakes.
Even though the lakes were never close to a road, there were a few places with rental rowboats. You could get a key from a shop in town.
Jim’s camera has settings to take black and white or sepia pictures. He thought this would be a good place to show the contrast between them and color pictures.
One late afternoon, Ardith needed a break and Jim took advantage of the time to venture to Maligne (ma leen) Canyon. There is an easy hike here and a more strenuous one, so Jim chose the latter. There are 6 bridges that cross the canyon and they are numbered rather than named.
The head of the more challenging trail is at bridge 5. The trail crosses a broad stream there that flows very rapidly, but there are few rocks there to cause rapids. Steep, high slopes await after crossing the bridge.
As you proceed upstream, the gap narrows. Roaring rapids appear.
You get to a place where the gap is so narrow, you can only see the bottom at a few brief places along the trail.
There are many places along the trail with fences between it and the canyon. Early on, they were mainly for handholds where climbing and to note areas that might have a bit of danger. Jim crossed one of these to get one of the shots above. In other places, the message was “don’t even think about going on the other side of this fence”. These were marked with chain link supplementing the steel rails.
There were some nice falls between bridges 1 and 2 where the easy trail went through the canyon.
Jim had spent loads of time photographing and just absorbing the splendors of the canyon. When he got to bridge 1, he realized that he had been on the trail for about two and a half hours. The trail was supposed to take one hour. He realized that Ardith would be thinking about dinner, so he decided to take the trail back that appeared to be shorter. That trail stayed away from the canyon. Jim thought it would be fairly flat, but about a tenth of a mile after the trails split, there was a steep climb up. He couldn’t see the canyon or the other trail until the after shorter one came back down.
When the trail came down, it joined another. Jim had been on lots of trails in the park before this point. At every trail junction there had been a map with a clear dot indicating “you are here”. There was none here. Jim chose a path and after about 15 minutes, he decided it was the wrong way. There was actually a big plus to this. On his way up the canyon, there was a sign explaining that the stream though the canyon was being continually fed as it went downstream. There were a few falls coming down.
The main source of new water came from a huge system of underwater caverns that flowed from a lake that was about 10 miles away. There were a few outlets on the other side as Jim made his way up the canyon, but they were far away from him.
As he walked the wrong way on the trail, he came to a place where there was just soil on one side of the trail. The other side had water gushing out. The outflow expanded to be more than 15 feet wide where it joined the main stream.
He did find his way back with no problems.
We had some great dinners, starting with the one mentioned in an earlier blog entry at Papa George’s. We both had excellent prime ribs at the Prime Rib Village. Jim neglected to take pictures. We were in the second story Villa Caruso early and got the best seats in the house, overlooking the main intersection in town.
They had a lot of game meats on the menu and Jim is usually game for something different. He had a wild boar chop. It was a lot more flavorful than a pork chop, but thicker and chewier. The forest mushroom sauce that came with this was the best mushroom dish he has had since he was in rural Russia in a village where people regularly went into the woods to find wild mushrooms for export. Ardith loved her pork tenderloin with an apple, maple syrup and pecan sauce. They also did a great job with the veggies, cooked just right. Ardith really liked their fruit ciders.
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One of 3 ways into the town of Jasper crosses the railroad just a half block off the main street. There are often long trains passing by. Wise motorists know to immediately make U-turns, but some people waited for as much as 20 minutes in our observations.
Pedestrians and bicyclists can take advantage of a tunnel that was built about 3 years ago. Cyclists enjoy zooming down the hill into the tunnel.
Jasper isn’t just about nature and eating and shopping (we didn’t do any of that). There are also a few fun things to look at. To Jim’s warped mind, the people of town don’t regard dogs as pets.
At the top of the list of things to do in Jasper that Ardith had prepared before leaving home was to take the aerial tramway. The upper station lured to us from town, looking like a secret laboratory from below.
Each day we would watch the sky and head toward the base of the tramway. Each day as we approached, clouds would come rolling in and we would return to town or another activity. On our last full day there, Jim returned from his early morning activity and announced ”the sky is clear, lets go up”, so they quickly got themselves read and headed to the base station. Their timing was fairly good. They had about a ten minute wait to buy tickets, then another 20 minutes until their scheduled “flight” up the mountains. Lots of people came after they did.
Each "flight" on the way up was pre-booked and was well filled.
The instant he got out of the gondola that transported us, Jim zipped over to a railing to taked pictures.
There was an optional climb up from the top station. About half the people opted for that. We split 50-50 with Ardith being sane and sticking to the pavilion level, enjoying the views and looking for wildlife. She tried her best to see what Jim was up to. When he got to the summit she could see, he stopped to take a shot looking down to where Ardith was.
He then ducked around to the side to attempt a good picture of 5 lakes that we had hiked earlier and also one of Lake Beauvert, one of Jim's early morning subjects.. It was a bit hazy, but the best it has been the whole time we were here.
There was a rock protruding from the summit that a lot of people climbed and posed for pictures.
There was a second summit that was hard to see from the pavilion and Jim decided to hike to there. Only a small number of people made it to there. Jim had been listening to languages and accents of people around Jasper and especially on the trip up the mountain. More than half the people didn’t speak English as their native language. At the top of the second summit, about half of people spoke German. He only heard one group of Americans out of about 30 groups of people that were on the path to that level.
He was alone on the second summit for about five minutes and decided to attempt a 360° panorama photo. When he got to his last shot, a family appeared having a race to the summit where he stood.
The camera apparently didn't record one of the picture in the full panorama, so here are a few excerpts:
The camera apparently didn't record one of the picture in the full panorama, so here are a few excerpts:
When Jim got back down to the pavilion, he found a very concerned wife. He had been gone a lot longer than a lot of people and was unsure of his status. She had tracked him up to the first summit, but couldn’t see the second one. After a while, she was consoled by a nice, simple lunch in the restaurant there.
Loved the three lakes and the canyon pictures. Glad to see the post was getting worried about you guys. Love Cordell
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