08-18-2015 | #151 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
Hi Bob,
Lyndi does not drive the ZR-1 when we are traveling. We have an equitable arrangement. I drive and she rides. Jim |
08-18-2015 | #152 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
I gave up on the Hotel WiFi and used my Verizon WiFi Hotspot.
We drove north from Golden on the mountain route to Estes Park. We stopped at the small town of Nederland, CO: Nederland is a fascinating place. Some of the streets aren't paved and some of the buildings are unused, but there is a ski resort nearby and they seem to be doing OK. They have a music festival in the summer and a Frozen Dead Guy Celebration in the winter: The festival celebrates winter and was started after a local resident had his cryogenically preserved uncle shipped to Nederland. There is a nice steam power museum so we got a photo with a steam shovel that was used in construction of the Panama Canal. Why the steam shovel ended in Nederland was not revealed: This sign had us wondering who the target audience is: After we worked our way through the Colorado mountains, we reached our destination: to be continued... |
08-18-2015 | #153 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
|
Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
We spent Monday afternoon touring Rocky Mountain National Park. At one of the overlooks, there were chipmunks and birds entertaining the visitors by eating the food that the visitors are not supposed to be feeding the wild life. Lyndi caught this Clark Nutcracker in flight:
We drove up the Trail Ridge Road to the Alpine Visitor Center. At 11,796 feet elevation, the Visitor Center near the top of the mountain. While we were there, we were surprised by a surprise snow storm: We continued on towards Grand Lake. In a meadow we were able to photograph two elk grazing: We crossed the Continental Divide near Milner Pass: There were many over-looks that allowed us to stop for a view and a photo: to be continued.... |
08-18-2015 | #154 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
While we continued our visit to Rocky Mountain National Park, our travel companion, Army Man, got his photo with the mountains in the background. Army Man join us while were traveling on the Glenn Highway near Anchorage, Alaska in 2012:
The views from the Trail Ridge Road were amazing. The road was built from 1926 to 1932 and takes drivers to the top of the Rocky Mountains. The Trail Ridge Road is the highest continuously paved road in North America with the peak elevation of 12,183 feet: As we returned to the lower elevations the pine forests were beautiful: Jim |
08-18-2015 | #155 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
|
Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
On Tuesday, we returned to Rocky Mountain National Park to do some hiking and to try to see and photograph a moose. We went to Lilly Lake where Moose had been seen a few days ago. The lake was beautiful, but there were no moose:
We also visited Bear Lake: We drove the Trail Ridge Road for a second day to see the views again and to reach some hike trailheads we were interested in. The Trail Ridge Road is the center piece of the adventure in Rocky Mountain National Park. It 53 miles of well constructed two-lane road. It is in excellent condition. On many parts of the road, one side is a sheer drop off of thousands of feet. Near the peak, the road appears to go to the sky: Near the summit, we stopped, and I used my phone to measure the altitude: Several places on the road are marked with a simple sign: We hiked a trail across a meadow and reached the head waters of the Colorado River. It was fun to stand at the beginning of the river that carved the Grand Canyon: Rocky Mountain National Park is a wonderful place. The beauty and grandeur of the Rocky Mountains is hard to describe. It was fascinating to spend two days at elevations of 7,500 feet and above. For a lot of our visit we were above 10,000 feet. We adapted well to the altitude and enjoyed our visit. Jim |
08-19-2015 | #156 |
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Lake Bluff, IL
Posts: 2,096
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
Pretty much my arrangement also, although in a pinch she will take over if I am too tired. --Bob
__________________
2016 Long Beach Red Z06 #10281 "POPS Z" 1995 Polo Green #409 "WARP TEN"--Haibeck 350/510 package, 4.10s, Hurst, Stock Exhaust with QTP Cutouts --Sold but still running strong 1993 Quasar Blue #161 "HIL KING" --Sold but still running strong, now with more than 120,000 miles 1967 Marlboro Maroon/Saddle Corvette Coupe 300 hp/4-spd --Sold a long time ago ZR-1 Net Registry Founding Member #95 NCM Lifetime Member Favorite Quote--Attributed to Mickey Thompson: "Too Much Horsepower is Almost Enough" |
08-19-2015 | #157 |
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Dunbarton NH
Posts: 7,493
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
Jim, how are you, Lyndi and the purple Z doing at 2 miles above sea level?
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08-19-2015 | #158 |
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Scottsdale, AZ
Posts: 2,452
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
As usual AWESOME Pics, unlike performance at 12,000 foot, 1 reason road in good shape, closed for winter, onto Golden for tasting at Coors?
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08-19-2015 | #159 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
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Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
Lyndi and I have done OK at these elevations. We have been above 7,000 feet most of the time for the last 11 days. We didn't do any strenuous hikes, though. The ZR-1 has been running fine. It pulled well on the long up grades.
Jim |
08-19-2015 | #160 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
|
Re: Purple ZR-1 Road Trip to Yellowstone and the Pacific Northwest
On Wednesday, we left Estes Park, CO and began our trip home to Maryland. We drove east on US-34 through the Big Thompson River Canyon. If you are ever driving around the Estes Park area, I highly recommend US-34. It is about 20 miles along the river in a deep rock-wall canyon. We were greeted by two female Big Horn Sheep grazing on the roadside:
We turned north on I-25 and entered Wyoming: As we approached Cheyenne, we saw some camels grazing in a field. We later learned that Camels were indigenous to the Wyoming area 14 million years ago. We had a good time seeing the sights in Cheyenne. The Union Pacific Railroad Depot has been beautifully restored and is now a visitor center and a museum: In Holiday Park, I got my picture with Union Pacific Locomotive 4004. This massive steam engine is one on eight surviving "Big Boys" that the UP had built starting in 1941: to be continued.... Last edited by QB93Z; 08-20-2015 at 11:26 PM. |
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