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Showing posts from December, 2018

Skywatch Friday: Lodgepole Pines

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I've been home from Yellowstone for almost three months and there isn't a day that goes by that I don't miss it. Did you know that Lodgepole Pines make up about 80% of the trees in Yellowstone?  You'll also find spruce, fir, and other various pine trees in Yellowstone, but the Lodgepole is dominant. I took the above picture on a hike to Cascade Lake in June.  They grow up to 75 feet tall.  When the wind blows you can hear them creaking as they sway back and forth.  They have cones that remain high in the crowns of the trees until a fire sweeps through.  Then the cones open and disburse their seeds so the forest can regrow.  The devastation of the 1988 fires in Yellowstone that burned 1.2 million acres is still evident, but the forest is coming back stronger than ever in most areas thanks to the Lodgepole pines.  They love the carbon rich soil that is left behind after a fire and seedlings will start popping up very quickly. They ar...

This and That

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I really don't know how I ever had time to work full-time and take care of a house and kids.  I also don't understand people who say they don't know what they'll do with their time after retirement.  Irv probably wishes I'd go back to work so that I'd stop thinking of projects.  So here's a synopsis of what we've been up to the last few weeks. Updating our guestroom was overdue.  We still had the green walls that were popular several years ago plus the furniture needed an update too. We started by painting the room.  Irv is the best painter ever.  He hardly makes a mess at all whereas when I paint I am covered from head to toe in paint.  We chose a neutral gray. Luckily, Irv is agile and he can climb up to those high places. Here he is acting like Michelangelo.  I have to give a shout out to Walmart paint.  I'd recently read a review of their paint and decided to try it.  We had bought enough to do two coats s...

Skywatch Friday: Mid-December Hike Around the Garden

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Yesterday was a beautiful day in Southern Colorado so we headed over for a hike in the Garden of the Gods.  This is one of my favorite close by hikes and this time I tried to take photos of some rock formations that I normally don't shoot. Unfortunately I don't know the names of these formations, all I know is that they are beautiful!  Garden of the Gods got its name from two surveyors who came across the formations in 1859.  One of them suggested it would be a great place for a beer garden.  The other thought it was a fit place for Gods to assemble and he called it the Garden of the Gods.  I think this is a much better name than Beer Garden although it would be fun to have a beer garden in the midst of these spectacular formations. Above is the Kissing Camels using my telephoto lens.  Can you see it? Here it is from way down below. We got to see this beauty along the way. He held still only long enough for me to snap t...