By Amy, on December 4th, 2011%
In my last post about Glacier National Park, I’d just finished my hike above Avalanche Creek. At that point, I headed back to St. Mary. As the shuttle drew close, I was captivated by the channel that drains water from St. Mary Lake into Lower St. Mary Lake:

The ranger who I had spoken with when I first arrived in the park mentioned there was a trail leading from the visitor’s center to the campground, and that this trail crossed the channel. So I set off to explore when I returned to St. Mary. As I look at this picture, I’m reminded of how incredibly hot it was that day. The temperatures were in the upper 80s–very unusual for Glacier in July. I guzzled water like crazy, and the heat slowed me down quite a bit, especially since St. Mary is at a lower elevation than Avalanche Creek, and therefore even hotter. It wasn’t pleasant out on that bridge at all:

I soon decided to move along to Many Glacier, which is north of St. Mary. When I visited the park in 1994, my friend Jen and I hadn’t made it up to that corner of the park, so I was curious to go there. On the road to the Swiftcurrent Lodge and the Many Glacier Visitor’s Center is a trail to Apikuni falls. The field at the trailhead caught my eye, so I stopped with the intention of hiking:

I was careful to have my bear spray with me when I got my things together for the hike. I was somewhat emboldened by my succesful walk above Avalanche Creek. Heh, bears, I thought. I’d be lucky if I even saw one. I wasn’t entirely over my fear of running into one, but definitely gaining confidence and feeling bolder. Especially with my trusty canister of bear spray at my side.
With new-found courage, I strode toward the trailhead. Bears, I ain’t afraid of no bears! I can hike this trail!
Well, maybe not:

I know when to respect a sign. I turned around, got back in the car, and continued driving toward the Visitor Center. More from this area in my next Glacier post.
By Amy, on October 22nd, 2011%
Wasn’t sure I was going to get to any Glacier pictures this week. I’ve been having some work done on my house–including new windows–and my belongings have been in the middle of the rooms for weeks now. It’s all turning out even more beautiful than I imagined, but it’s also exhausting. And it’s far from done–I still have to decide what to do about window treatments, and I already know I’m planning to sew a bunch of the curtains. I’ve also had training at work this week, which has been intense. And now it’s becoming cold and dark here in Minnesota.
In short, all I want to do is curl up with soothing music and a slice of cinnamon bread–not muck around on my computer with pictures. It would be a shame to never get through my images of Glacier, though, so tonight I opened up Photoshop.
I’m glad I did. The world seemed warmer and brighter with the first image I processed:

I think those are something like Harebells or Purple Penstemon, by the way, but I’m too dang tired to look it up at the moment. If I get a chance, I’ll update this post with the correct information. Fortunately, on the day these pictures were taken, I had plenty of energy, so I started on the trail that winds up from the Avalanche Creek viewing area. I wasn’t very far along when I stopped to look over the valley behind me and take this picture:

When I look at views such as this, I imagine myself walking across the scenery before me. It looks so easy, so peaceful from a distance. Yet I realize that the distances before me are bigger than I imagine and the terrain considerably more challenging than it appears. It would take days, perhaps weeks, to go the routes I take in with a glance. I guess that’s part of the fun of looking at mountains. You simultaneously feel both smaller and bigger than you really are, when you see them at a distance.
Up close, of course, mountains contain so much more life than you realize when you see them from afar. All kinds of lichens, mosses, and other tiny plants find whatever bit of rock they can cling to:

Such plants don’t need much more than a surface to grow on, and they begin the process of breaking down the rock and building soil. Soil that other plants, such as the fern in this picture, need to grow. Those plants, in turn, help build even more soil and nutrients, which allow yet bigger plants to grow until eventually even trees can thrive. Trees then fill an area until a large disturbance from wind or fire clears some of them out, which allows the plants below them to receive more sun and take over. Until the trees once again grow and shade them out.

This transition from one set of plants to another is called succession. Many things shape which plants come when–and you don’t get the same plants on a mountain as on the planes, for example. Even in the mountains, there are different plant communities at different elevations, for example. But in each case, the plants that come before pave the way for the plants that come after. Not intentionally, of course. In fact, plants fiercely compete with each other. For light, for space, for water, for nutrients. What we see as a peaceful landscape of green is actually a scramble for survival with different tactics and strategies employed by the various players.
I failed to appreciate plants very much until I learned all of this. Now I wish I’d paid more attention in my botany classes! Anyway, try not to think too much about the struggle for survival going on in these pictures. Instead, I hope you experience the serenity I felt when I was there, surrounded by it all.
By Amy, on October 7th, 2011%
When I took the shuttle from St. Mary in Glacier National Park my first day, my intent was to go to Logan Pass and hike a trail to Hidden Lake. Unfortunately, Logan Pass was still full of snow in July. The road had been cleared only days before my arrival, and while I knew that, I somehow wasn’t expecting what I saw when the shuttle arrived up there:

I didn’t take the picture above, by the way. My stepfather, Jim, did, when he and my mom met up with me a couple of days later. Thanks, Jim!
Anyway, when I saw all this snow my first day, I didn’t even bother to get off the shuttle. No way was I hiking on that! Instead, I rode the shuttle back toward East Glacier. Halfway to St. Mary, I got off at the Avalanche Creek stop. I’d been intending to spend time there, anyway, as I heard on the Glacier podcast that Dipper birds could be found there. Unfortunately, I didn’t see any Dipper birds (more on those in another post), but I did see this butterfly:

No, I don’t know what kind of butterfly it is. I really need to get some insect guides!
The creek was charging with runoff from the melting snows and quite impressive. Very difficult to adequately capture, though, as the stream bed was well below the path and there was considerable contrast with the sun appearing quite brightly in spots. If I’d hung out there longer, perhaps I’d been able to figure out how to take better pictures. However, I really had to pee and there were no public restrooms. That meant finding a convenient bush. So I hurried through some shots and headed up a trail above the creek, knowing I needed to go a ways in before I’d be far enough away from crowds to feel reasonably sure nobody would stumble into me at an inopportune moment. I also needed to find a bush that wasn’t too hidden, as I didn’t want to accidentally run into a bear. Which is worse–running into a bear, or getting caught peeing? You might feel like you’re gonna die from embarrassment if someone sees you peeing, but bears have big claws and teeth, and I am soft and squishy.
Ah, the challenges of nature photography!
Here are the best of the ones I did get of the creek:



When I was taking that last photo, I had to lean over a wall a bit and look straight down. Not an angle anyone else was using to view the creek, and I attracted quite a bit of attention. Folks walked over to see what I was looking at–the flowers were only visible if you looked down. Then they’d mimic my shot with their own cameras. Made me laugh. Especially since some folks waited patiently for me to move off so they could look for themselves! Walk around with a honking big camera and lens, and people assume you know what you’re doing.
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