Showing posts with label Jasper National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jasper National Park. Show all posts

Thursday, January 2, 2014

gorgeous Mount Edith Cavell


In September 2013, my husband and I hiked the Mount Edith Cavell trail to Cavell Pond in Jasper National Park, Canada.  It is a short, easy hike at 11,033ft (3,363 m) elevation.  The views along the way are spectacular!








There are several glaciers visible on the North face of the mountain.  Angel Glacier (above) forms in a bowl or cirque.  The glacier flows downward.  Some of the ice breaks over the vertical cliffs forming the angel's wings.  Because of the constant movement, this is an avalanche area.  We did see several while we were here and heard their resounding BOOMS!




I love the patterns, colors, and shapes of the plants, lichens, and rocks.  stunning decoration!




If you look very carefully in the middle of the photograph, you will see a person in blue.   This will give you an idea of the scale.



See the people--blue and red?



Cavell Pond is just below Cavell Glacier.  Ghost Glacier is the highest snow area above on the left.  In August, 2012, a very large chunk (equivalent to 1428 city buses) of Ghost Glacier broke off and avalanched down the mountain into Cavell Pond causing a tsunami that closed trails and the parking lot.  (video link below)



Icebergs float in Cavell Pond.









silly photo of me




pattern and texture



Back to the beginning of the trail, Cavell Lake can be seen in the distance, a gorgeous turquoise blue due to the suspension of glacial flour.









LINKS:
Banff and Beyond trail description and photos
lots of photos AlbertaWow
Parks Canada
Map  nearby roads and trails 
video of the avalanche (warning:  4 -letter word at the 5 second mark)

about Edith Cavell, a British nurse in WWI who saved many lives

My Post:
water  a couple photos of Cavell Pond and Cavell Lake




Alphabe-Thursday, hosted by Ms Jenny, is so much fun!  This week our letter  is "G."  Come visit others' submissions HERE and join in the fun! 



photos by me  © 2013     all rights reserved

Thursday, October 24, 2013

water


a few photos from my trip to the Canadian Rockies in September of this year...
Athabasca River in Jasper National Park


Cavell Lake near Mount Edith Cavell in Jasper


Cavell Glacier and Cavell Pond with floating icebergs



along the Icefields parkway in Banff National Park, Canada--Bow Lake


along the shore of Lake Moraine, a glacially-fed lake in Banff 




Alphabe-Thursday, hosted by Ms Jenny, is so much fun!  This week our letter is "W." Come visit others' submissions HERE and join in the fun! 






I'm also linking up with SkyWatch Friday 
Come join us in this awesome meme, link up, and meet folks from all over the globe!  Skywatch Friday is hosted by Yogi, Sylvia, and Sandy.

photos by me © 2013   all rights reserved

Thursday, September 26, 2013

signs

I've come across in my travels...
Lots of bears--both black and grizzly--roam the Canadian wilderness in Jasper and Banff National Parks.  This sign is on a large trash bin.


sign in Castries Market in the Caribbean island of St. Lucia.  I wrote about this market HERE. Of note is that this market made National Geographic's "World's Best Top Ten Food Markets" list at #3!


more Castries Market


This bear sign is in Glacier National Park in the US.  I saw 13 bears on my last trip here, some of them fairly close.


 
I'm including this just because I like the photo and this path.  This walking/bike trail is 75 miles long and goes through 5 counties and 11 cities/towns.  There are a number of connector trails and more are planned.  It's not far away from where I live.The slippery bridges have now been paved over and so are much safer.


parking lot at the post office/gift shop in the tiny town of Hell in Grand Cayman


LINKS:
past post on signs 
past post on the bike trail
Little Miami Scenic Trail
Loveland Bike Trail
National Geographic Top Ten Food Markets 




Alphabe-Thursday, hosted by Ms Jenny, is so much fun!  This week our letter is "S." Come visit others' submissions HERE and join in the fun! 



photos by me © 2010, 2011, 2013   all rights reserved

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

lunch spot


...along the Athabasca River in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada.  The sky is wrapped in clouds and so are the mountains making for an ethereal atmosphere. 


The river itself is a milky gray or liquid silver due to the high content of glacier flour (ground up rock in suspension).


Wordless Wednesday--where I linked up: 




The Art and Tree Chatter of Aquariann
  





photo by me © 2013  all rights reserved

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Athabasca Glacier

Located in the Canadian Rockies, Athabasca Glacier is one of six principal "toes" of the Columbia Icefield.
In the above photo, Athabaca Glacier is the tongue of ice in the valley between the mountains.


The cool thing about this glacier is that you can almost drive up to it.
This photo was taken through the front window of our car--see the wipers?  There's a small wooden building to the left of the parking lot.  You'll see that building again.


See that gorgeous aqua glacial lake on the right?  Here's another view.
We park.  We've already donned multiple layers of clothing.  We add jackets.  I get out my gloves and headband.  It's already cold and it will be much colder up close to the glacier.



We start up the path.


There is an "other worldliness"  to this landscape.



looking back.  See the building?  It looks so tiny already.  The trail is a little over a half mile in one direction, going uphill gently and steadily with short, steeper sections.  The trail begins at 6500 feet (2000 meters) elevation with a gain of 165 feet (50 meters).  not impossible.  The windy coldness increases as we approach the glacier.



informational signs



We have arrived at the toe of the glacier.  There is glacial melt--a small waterway--in the foreground. 
See the tiny people?



A plank has been laid to enable the fearless (foolhardy) to cross over to the glacier.




STOP
not a public 
access
DANGERS BEYOND THIS POINT:
crevasses and millwells (DEEP HOLES, SOMETIMES HIDDEN)
Changeable ice conditions
Swift flowing creeks with slippery banks
PARTIES PROCEEDING BEYOND
THIS POINT MUST HAVE:
Mountaineering and rescue equipment
The knowledge of how to use it

You may have noticed those people on the glacier.  Yep, a few folks wandered onto the glacier in spite of signs like this and one detailing the fall of a young boy into a crevasse a couple years before.  (It's easy to take a SnowCoach trip onto the glacier with a guide--see LINKS below.)



Glaciers form because more snow falls in a year than can melt during the short summer season.  Over time the accumulated snow transforms into ice and begins to flow outward through gaps in the mountains.  This creates great tongues of ice called glaciers.  The Columbia Icefield receives about 33 feet (10 meters) of snow annually, falling every month of the year. 
In places the ice is 2,952 feet (900 metres) thick.



Glacial ice is in continuous motion, creeping forward at the rate of an inch or so per day, flowing down the valley like a frozen, slow-moving river.  The Athabasca Glacier has been receding/melting for about 125 years because of a warming climate.  The extent of its retreat during that time frame has been about a mile.  Signs mark the years when the glacier reached farther.  The shrinking glacier has left an other worldly landscape of rocky moraines in its wake. 



The Columbia Icefield at 126 sq miles (9325 sq km) is the largest icefield in the interior of North America.  It feeds six glaciers, of which Athabasca is one.  However, this glacier makes up only 2% of the total mass of the Columbia Icefield.

Through the glaciers of the Columbia Icefield, fresh water flows into three oceans--east to the Atlantic, west to the Pacific, and north to the Arctic.  This forms a triple continental divide.  Since Snow Dome is the highest peak in the Icefield, it is the hydrographic apex* of North America which means that this is the center of water distribution to the continent.


Meltwater from the Athabasca Glacier feeds into the Athabasca River which then flows into Lake Athabasca in northeastern Alberta. 

LINKS:
Parks Canada  Columbia Icefield Area and Athabasca Glacier
satellite view of the Columbia Icefield 
Banff and Beyond  photos and information, including SnowCoach trips 
Climb Wild great information on the Columbia Icefield with photos

my post--peaceful  Athabasca River in Jasper National Park 

*One other apex exists on the continent of North America--Triple Divide Peak in Glacier National Park, Montana, USA.



We've begun round 8!!
Alphabe-Thursday, hosted by Ms Jenny, is so much fun!  This week our letter is "A." Come visit others' submissions HERE and join in the fun! 


photos by me © 2012 all rights reserved

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

peaceful


along the Athabasca River outside cabins which are located on the Icefield Parkway in Jasper National Park, Canada (Becker's Roaring River Chalets).  We stayed here in September, 2012.  (a good restaurant, by the way!)



Wordless Wednesday--where I linked up:


The Art and Tree Chatter of Aquariann
 



Pictimilitude





photo by me © 2012  all rights reserved