Switchbacks!!

During the drive to Takakkaw & Twin Falls (both gorgeous) we ran across a new traffic pattern. All vehicles over 7 m(21 ft) were required to back up or down the middle portion of a set of switchbacks since they could not make the turn at the corners. Appropriate yield signs were placed at both ends of the middle section and everyone waited while a 20 passenger tour bus in front of us backed through that section. I love the Miata! The road was posted “No Trailers”. Good Idea!

Glacier House

We trekked past the foundations of Glacier House, a 1900’s Canadian Pacific RR resort, now just a historical marker and the foundations remain. Apparently it was quite the resort for about 25 years until relocation of the rail line through a tunnel by the Canadian Pacific RR cut-off direct access to the resort. It closed in just a few years after the tunnel opened.

QueCarBBQ

We came across an old caboose converted to BBQ “pit”. They had a big roaster out front that smelled so wonderful I couldn’t resist checking it out and Kent never turns down local BBQ. The Big Daddy brisket sandwich was great as were the brisket beans. So far, local BBQ has never failed to please.

“Hunters, know your bears!” “Grizzlies are protected in Washington.”

That was the sign we found at the entrance of all the campgrounds along Baker Lake today. We were just day tripping so not a big deal for us else a little un-nerving even as we have gotten used to the idea of sharing space with the black bears. Our wildlife today didn’t include bear, just deer, elk, and a coyote or maybe a fox (a little hard to tell for sure when you just see the rump trotting down the road) and several bald eagles checking out the lakes.

The hydroelectric plants won here

Even within a National park, a couple of the Cascades’ biggest dams are along this water shed of the Skagit River. They claim that they are upstream from a natural salmon barrier, huge boulder cascades, so these dams are safe from the fate of the Elwha River dam that is coming down in Olympia. Folks at the local environmental center were pretty psyched that with all the water this year people are seeing the river in its natural state since the dams are diverting and the riverbed isn’t dry like it usually is. It is easy to see why this area was attractive for hydro power. There are huge snow fields in the mountains, lots of rain, very narrow gorges that are readily dammed. Magnificent valleys and rugged rivers were lost but some beautiful lakes created.

Birding from the water side

We put the boat in the water at Clear Lake. We are an hour or so north of San Francisco. It has been a bright sunny day in the 70s so just about perfect for floating around. We were bird watching. I love watching the Western Grebes courtship dances. It is just like I have seen on wildlife films. They face off, go through a whole series of head bobbing maneuvers then simultaneously push themselves clear up out of the water and run high speed until they tire. They rest a few then do it again. Some times as many as 3 pair go through this sequence at once. No fishing today. The regulars say it isn’t so great this week but we might try tomorrow anyway. We will see.