Probably my favorite photo from the Two Medicine area and one of my favorites from the trip. |
It was a BEARY good day.
We were on the way to Glacier's Two Medicine Valley when we fulfilled one of Randy's bucket list items: We saw a BEAR! Unfortunately, I don't have photographic evidence. You'll just have to take our word for it.
While we Kansans are used to seeing deer in ditches along our roadways, seeing a BEAR was just a bit surreal. We were just driving along at 65 MPH, and there was a black bear in the ditch. We looked at each other in disbelief. We considered turning around and seeing if it was still visible. But, we drove on ... and texted the kids that Dad had fulfilled one of his bucket list items for the trip - seeing a bear!I did get a photo of some "free range" animals that day. They did a better job of posing for the camera.
No other cars were around. We had to laugh because some of them had yellow ear tags, just like ours at home. I joked that if someone came by, they'd think we'd never seen a cow and
calves before. We did send Tye a photo and wondered if he'd like to gather
cows and calves in the wide open spaces of Glacier - ha!
Two Medicine Valley sits in the southeast corner of Glacier. Two Medicine is less visited than other parts of Glacier. It doesn't require a vehicle registration for the day, which was another plus.
Maybe it doesn't get the "press" that other areas of Glacier receives, but it was peaceful and beautiful in a whole other way. The day we visited was overcast and rain threatened periodically.
Before we reached Two Medicine Lake, we stopped at Running Eagle Falls. The falls are named after a female Blackfeet warrior known for her bravery. It's also known as Trickery Falls because it's famous for "tricking" visitors with a seeming change in water flow (according to the park signs anyway).
Sometimes when trails at Glacier were marked "easy," we thought it was false advertising.
As noted before, we are not hikers. However, in this case, it was an easy hike to see the beautiful falls area. It was sprinkling, so we donned our K-State ponchos. K-State gear is always good as a conversation starter, but we didn't see many people at this particular location.It was beautiful.
The area again demonstrated the clear Montana waters and how colorful the rocks are.
In the short time we were there, the wispy fog of clouds was playing hide and seek with the mountains and changed the scene innumerable times.
After returning to the car, we drove on to Two Medicine Lake. I'm sure the scene would have been different on a clear day, but the overcast sky gave it a different kind of beauty.
A panoramic view |
We didn't have a reservation to ride the boat there, but Randy added our names to a waiting list. Our patience was rewarded. After those with reservations boarded the boat, we were among those who also got a ride on the boat, Sinopah. It was built in 1926 and is the oldest wooden boat in the Glacier Park Boat Company's fleet. Like other tour guides, our boat captain shared lots of history about the Sinopah and Rising Wolf Mountains and the Blackfeet tribal history in the Two Medicine area.
For many of the boat riders, it was a way to get to a trailhead. Randy and I stayed on for the round-trip return to the dock, along with one other couple, but most of the boat riders disembarked and were going to begin hikes there.
By the time we returned to the dock, the wispy clouds changed the scene there, too. And, again, note how clear the water was!
On the way to Glacier's St. Mary's entrance |
The photos of the wildflowers just don't do them justice. I suppose the people who live in the mountains become immune to the beauty around them - kind of like I sometimes don't really "see" the beauty as the wind rustles ripened wheat or when a winter day opens with a silent symphony of pastel blues and pinks on the eastern horizon just down the road from my house.
After entering Glacier National Park from the east, we stopped along the Saint Mary Lake.
That's where we saw and heard a loon. Unfortunately, I also don't have photographic evidence of this sighting or audio either. But Randy did venture down to the shore to get a better look.
We should have stopped at a pullout for Wild Goose Island, but we had to settle for another spot down the road. (While this particular shot will not be considered for any of Glacier's marketing, it does show Wild Goose Island as an itty-bitty spot in the lefthand portion of the photo. Oh well!)We also saw the Jackson Glacier (below). Since we didn't hike any of the trails, this was our only glacier sighting. Thankfully, we were still able to see it through the clouds and rain.
Jackson Glacier Overlook is home to the best view of a glacier along Going-to-the-Sun Road. In 1966, Jackson Glacier measured 316 acres. By 2015, it measured 187 acres. It is approximately the seventh largest of the remaining 25 glaciers in Glacier National Park.
Those innocuous-looking wispy clouds turned out to be a driving challenge as we neared the top of the mountain. We were literally driving through the clouds. I said an audible thank you to the National Park Service for marking the roads so clearly with yellow lines. I wasn't driving, but I was watching just as intently so we didn't run into anyone or plunge over the side of the mountain on the narrow roads!
It got even worse than this ... or so it seemed.
When we got to Logan Pass - my favorite stop on the Red Bus Tour the day before - we couldn't see a thing. I was glad that we were able to view the beautiful wildflowers the day before - even though it wasn't a sunny day either. And besides, I'm sure we wouldn't have been able to find a parking spot either.
Thankfully, it did get better as we headed off the mountaintop.
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