glacier

The Columbian Icefields, Canadian Rockies

We headed north on the Columbian Icefields Parkway. We had a 3:30 appointment with the Athabasca Glacier so we stopped along the way to enjoy the sites. Our first stop was Bow Lake, shown above. It was right off the road. The next stop was Peyto Lake. We had to hike up to the viewpoint which was mostly uphill but it was worth it.

Our next stop was the North Saskatchewan River, a Canadian Heritage River.

From there we arrived at the Columbia Icefield Discovery Center. We piled on a bus that took us out to an area near the glacier where we transferred onto an Ice Explorer bus. This special bus was developed to drive onto the glacier while causing the minimal amount of harm. The tires are massive. At one point we were going down almost vertically. Quite the ride. Walking on the glacier was much like walking on regular ice. Some people tasted the ice melt that ran along the marked off area for visitors. It was all pretty thrilling.

It was a short ride from there to the Skywalk. This is a glass-bottomed walkway on a cliff with views straight down into the valley. Not really my thing but I did get some shots.

We got back to Banff pretty late after another long day. Next up – Banff and the Bears.

Lapham Peak in the Snow

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Kettle Moraine State Forest in eastern Wisconsin covers 30,000 acres.

A long time ago, the area was covered in glaciers.  A moraine is an accumulation of glacial debris, such as rocks and silt.  Kettles are landforms molded by melting glaciers.

Lapham Peak was formed about 10,000 yrs ago by a glacier which made it the highest point in Waukesha County with a elevation of 1,233 ft above sea level. At the top is an observation tower (45 ft tall).  In the late 1800’s the Federal Signal Service Division of Telegrams and Reports established a signal station on the peak to receive meteorological observations from Pike’s Peak, Colorado.  Increase A. Lapham collected the data and relayed it to all the Great Lakes ports to warn them about approaching storms.

Lapham Peak now encompasses over 1,000 acres of cross country ski trails and other recreational activities.

As we entered the area we came upon a deer standing stock still looking right at us as if we had lost our mind.  It was beautiful.

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This is what 12 degrees F looks like.