Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Rio Grande Nature Center State Park

The Sandhill cranes are big birds about 3 feet tall, gray with the bright red spot on top of their head. Cranes, as well as the geese, migrate down from their nesting areas in Alaska and Canada in the fall to winter along the Rio Grande River, mostly at the Bosque del Apache Refuge which is about 2 hour drive south of us. There are a lot of these birds that go to Texas to winter, too. They usually start arriving here in November. In late winter, about now, they start their migration back north to the nesting grounds. There used to be so many of these unique birds that it was unbeleivable. My grandmother told me of watching them in the fields especially of doing the stange dance they do when mating. I have seen this at other times but none were doing it on this day. The sandhills almost were gone at one time but they came under the protection of many bird groups and now there are lots of them again. If you are lucky and I mean very lucky you might see one of the extreamly rare hooping cranes in with the sandhills. The hoopers are almost white and taller. I did get to see one at a distance in the Bosque del Apache Refuge a long time ago. We had planned to go there but decided it was to far on this day. Link to the Bosque del Apache http://http://www.friendsofthebosque.org/Friendsindex.html#whatsnew


And a link to the Rio Grande Nature Center http://http://www.rgnc.org/index.htm

















This state park of New Mexico is set on the edge of the Rio Grande River in an older section of the city of Albuquerque about 20 miles from my home. The nature center is home to many native plants and animals and lots of birds. There are many people who enjoy birding that come here to see the birds that live here and the ones that are just passing through as were the geese and cranes that we saw yesterday when we went there. It has been about 10 years since I have been here but not much had changed except then it cost $1 to get in and now it is $3 per car. We didn't see any of the sandhill cranes in the park but did in a field as we were leaving. One of the most interesting birds we saw was way off at a distance and I didn't get a close shot of him. It was a Kingfisher bird which I had never seen before.









He is the tiny bird in the top of the tree in the photo.





























































































































Monday, February 8, 2010

Hoya Vine Flower

My hoya vine is blooming again. It has a sicking sweet smell to me. Don't know what the cat thinks of it. But sure are pretty little clusters of flowers.







Icy Canopy



Ice-encrusted trees bend over and touch the ground, unable to bear the weight of ice that has accumulated from the freezing spray of Lake Superior. Taken at Tettegouche State Park near Silver Bay, MN.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Summer blooms

Remember the Frost flowers from earlier in the year? This is how they look in the summer:


White crownbeard (Verbesina virginica).


Heal-all or Self-heal (Prunella vulgaris).


A thing that looks like Blackeyed Susan, but may actually be a type of Sunflower, but I'm not really sure.


Passionflower or Maypop (Passiflora incarnata).
The fruit is edible. I tried it once - it tastes like lemonade. Like a pomegranate though, it's somewhat difficult to eat.


Mimosa pods. For a horrible alien invasive they sure look nice. (And at least they stick to the edges.)

Some other very interesting flowers. Really, they're quite unique. Click to see what I mean. I can't decide whether I like the pitcher plant or the nautilus shell the best. If you happen to have several thousand extra dollars just lying around, you can surprise me. Oh and wouldn't a Venus flytrap be great in this series?!

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Car to Car on the Grand in 5:17!

At the trailhead..sage advice:-)

"Nice tights, you guys are idiots, I'm a guide, I know a lot."



Congrads to all involved!



Jared hadalready done it in7:21 last month climbing and skiing wth 2companions that continued on the traverse.







Nathan Brown, was dropped itto 7:15:33…car-to-car.Nate went solo, used steel crampons and two ice tools, Dynafit TLT5 Performance boots, custom 160cm Igneous, and down-climbed the Chevy Couloir, as opposed to rappelling.









Then the batman team went at it.









http://jasondorais.blogspot.com//06/6-28--speed-attempt-of-fordstettner.html





http://slcsherpa.blogspot.com//06/grand-teton-ski-descent-speed-record.html



http://www.tetonat.com//06/26/grand-teton-ski-descent-speed-record-set/



And just to add to the fun, Ptarmigan was skied last month as well.



http://cascadeclimbers.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1023902/TR_Mt_Rainier_Ptarmigan_Ridge_#Post1023902



Amazing spring conditions we are having!

Friday, February 5, 2010

Monday, February 1, 2010

Blue Ice gear is here again!

If you live in North America and have been looking,I have a limited stock of Blue Ice,Octopus packs, the Chouca lwt mountaineering harnessand a few dozen of the Boa ice tool leashes now in stock and ready to ship. Sorry, the Warthogs are sold out again!



details here:



http://coldthistletools.blogspot.com//04/blue-ice-gear.html