Monday, June 24, 2013
Slept like a baby last
night, so the breathing machines worked great!
We met John and Fran up at
the Ice Field Experience Lodge this morning. We got on a bus to go across the
highway and to the beginning of the Ice Field, then we transferred to a special
bus called an Ice Explorer,
which is a massive bus designed for glacial travel. Our driver is our guide and he has plenty of tidbits of information for us on glaciers, icefields and their impact on our environment.
Our destination is the
Athabasca Glacier, which is reported to be as thick as the Eiffel Tower is
tall. It is hard to imagine ice that thick! We were allowed to get out of the
Explorer and walk on this glacier.
Glacier ice is blue, and the runoff water is
clear as glass. I guess some people tasted the water, but not me! Clear it may
be, but not necessarily clean!
After leaving the ice
field, we continued with our trip north towards Jasper National Park. We made
several stops at view points, but my favorite was Athabasca Falls,
which is
along the Athabasca River. As with all of the rivers up here right now, this
one is flowing fast and furious.
As it flows down through a narrow rock gorge,
it makes a spectacular falls and the roar of the water is so loud, it’s hard to
carry on a conversation.
Today was our day to
finally see some wildlife along the road.
A young male Caribou was feeding on
the grass right along the highway.
We also came across some young Big Horn
Sheep in the middle of the highway,
they were totally engrossed in licking the tar
line where it had been put down to seal some of the cracks in the road. Traffic
had to go around them, as they would not move! These little guys were part of a
bigger herd of Big Horns that were climbing all over the rocks just around the
bend.
These antics were being watched by the rest of the herd as they lounged
on a small hill right next to the road. Right now, the Big Horns are shedding
their winter coats
and looking a little ragged in the process!
When we reached the town
of Jasper, we hooked a right onto Highway 16, heading for Hinton, AB, where we
had reservations at the Hinton/Jasper KOA for the next couple of nights.
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