Paris 2012

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Still in Bozeman

Another vid reminder...when viewing in your browser, don't forget to go full screen, those four diverging arrows at the bottom right.

This is the 160th blog post since I started in 2011.

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A bit more on Genghis.  Because he conquered so much territory (map below) and because he encouraged some of his followers to stay behind in his conquered lands, intermarry & raise families, it is said that 1 in 200 of the earth's population today carries DNA that traces back to these folks.


 
GK did not have a well thought out succession plan.  A very long story very short, his empire fell apart in the 14th century during his grandson's generation.

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I mentioned a 2nd poem awhile back.  Here it is.  With no punctuation whatsoever, it took me several readings to group the thoughts into phrases and sentences.   Some of the capitalization helps.


Anzick Child, by Al Nyhart

Hunting marmots in August
near the Shields River
we found parts of you

buried in a sandstone outcrop
with tools washed in red ochre
Twelve thousand years

before you could tell us
of your ancestors leaving Siberia
walking the land bridge

into the Americas
Child of hunter-gatherers
you were too young

to forage wild plants
growing near your camp
or fear the mighty mammoth

kept near by the mountains
We borrowed you awhile
to examine your bones

then put you back into the earth
where the spirits of your descendants
celebrate your return

It turns out the above poem is based on fact, not imagination.  There was an archeological find in 1968 about an hour's drive from Bozeman.  Anzick is the name of the property owner where the bones and tools were found.  The last paragraph, referring to the child's return to his burial site, happened in 2014.

Here are some newspaper accounts of the events.

WEBLINK 1

WEBLINK 2

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My laptop is on a partial fritz; it's become glacially slow.  This is due to an intrinsic Dell Inspiron problem on some units whereby something goes wrong in the operating system such that the unit no longer recognizes the Dell AC charger as correct for this laptop.  So it will not charge the battery.  But luckily, with the unit plugged in, it at least keeps the battery at the same level.






To do that, it goes into the battery-saving mode by slowing everything way, way down.


And that makes doing this blog more difficult & time-consuming.


So...with the addition of this next photo, I'm going to suspend the blog, probably for the rest of this trip until I can get back home to have this unit serviced.



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The other night we met with a bunch of folks from the local synagogue at a brewpub.  They call the event "Brews for Jews", held monthly.  This one was special because the synagogue just hired a new rabbi (the former rabbi retired) so it was also a "meet the rabbi" event.
 
Anyhow, I wasn't much into taking pics except to be reminded of Montana's screwy alcoholic beverage laws and the power of the lobby.


We've all seen the rise of microbreweries and brewpubs...Montana is no exception.  The bar & tavern owners saw this as a big threat and lobbied the state legislature (that only meets every-other year, another Montana oddity) to place restrictive rules on the brewpubs.  One is to limit the amount of beer to be served daily to each patron.  They do this with each customer receiving the following slip of paper, the front & back shown below.



So to purchase that 2nd & 3rd beer, you have to present the slip to the barkeep or server to be checked off.

This, of course, is really stupid because these slips are all over the place, scattered on every table & in front of every bar stool occupant.  Anyone wanting to go beyond the three pint limit (not me or Susanne!) just uses another slip.
 
Another rule is that they must close at 8pm and yet another is that they cannot serve prepared food.  The food thing is easily gotten around by having the on-site food service listed as another business entity.


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On Monday, we head to Billings for four days, haven't been there since our first Montana swing-through in 2008.  It's east of the Rockies, more plains than mountains and near the Little Big Horn, of Custer fame.

With this, dear blog reader, I'm signing off probably for the rest of the trip.


Thanks for stopping by!!!





Thursday, July 11, 2019

Getting Settled & Getting Around

I forgot to mention/remind you that if you receive this post by email, click on the title & you'll be taken to the web edition, complete with photos & videos (several posted below).

We had a lovely, lovely dinner the other night.  After ordering, I swore I'd take photos of the food, but it arrived & we dug right in.

I ordered Cioppino (an Italian-style seafood soup), Susanne had Miso Honey Salmon.  We shared a salad with chevre (goat cheese), beets & mixed greens, an unlikely combo but wonderful.  Everything was fabulous!  The best meal out we've had in a very long time and to think it was here Montana.

We've sworn to go back again before we leave.  (And maybe even take some food pics!)

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We took a short drive into the Bozeman countryside.  This part of Montana has been having unsettled weather; we experienced it during the drive.


Even in July there is mountain snow.  The lower ranges have snow patches, the higher peaks remain covered.








There always seems to be a thunder shower going on somewhere.


Not having a super-wide angle lens on my little point-and-shoot Nikon, I took a vid to show the variety of weather conditions existing simultaneously.




Note: You can't view any video in an email.  You'll need to click on the post title above "Getting Settled" to see it in your browser.


After this shot, we headed back to town and ended up driving right through the downpour.



We did our annual tour of the Museum of the Rockies.



Click here for their website: 
  WEBSITE


MOR is  most famous for its dinosaur exhibit, very extensive.  It turns out that the earth's layer containing the dinosaur fossils is most exposed in Montana.  Here are some pics.

Big Mike as he is called, is actually a life size sculpture of a T-Rex.




Here's another T-Rex inside. 




And a pair of Triceratops, a baby & a young adult.  Brown = actual bones, white is plaster fill-in.




Here's a shot to give scale to the size some of these guys can be.



There was a current exhibit all about Genghis Kahn.  The first thing we learned was the Mongolian pronunciation of his name...the first "G" is soft, as in "judge".


We took a guided tour, got so enthralled, didn't take any photos.  Major points:


1.)  Lived 1160-1227 AD, was illiterate.  His tribe did not have a written language; he developed one later.


2.)  Conquered more territory than anyone else, including Alexander the Great.  Employed superior military tactics & had a better weapon.  His bow surpassed the English long bow of 200 years later; could fire an arrow 100 meters farther.


3.)  Ran a merit based organization which is how he was able to organize so many tribes and build a large army.  To advance in his military command, there were only two requirements: You had to have a special skill and you had to be trustworthy.  Tribal/family origin & religion were irrelevant to GK.  Contrast this with European military commands that were hereditary up through WW I.


4.)  He was totally ruthless...certain death to any person, village or tribe who opposed or betrayed him.


Fascinating guy.



GRIZZLY TIME!!!


What's a visit to Montana without a (safe, well controlled) grizzly encounter?


Meet Bella, born in Alaska, came to this sanctuary as a cub, now five years old.





Grizzlies are not particularly social animals so although there are four grizzlies here, they only show them one or two (if they're mutually compatible) at a time.   Bella is characterized as a mischievous teenager who needs her own space.


Here's a Bella-vid.  Fortunately she's further away than this telescopic view would indicate.



Here is the sanctuary website:  WEBSITE


 
That's it for now.  Will send this on its way.




Thursday, July 4, 2019

In Bozeman

Just to let you know, my desire & motivation to take photos & do this blog have been decreasing for the last several years, probably starting with our last Paris trip in 2017.

It's alot of work shooting many pics, then downloading them to the laptop, writing the text & uploading the chosen images to the blog.

Making it seem even more difficult is our recent move to smartphones.  It is so simple to upload the shots to Facebook and tap out a comment.

No, I do not want to encourage my blog folks to become my FB friends.  I have a quota (already full) and don't want to enlarge it.  My FB account is much, much more than what my travel blog would be.

I could create a FB group maybe called Steve's Travel Blog and encourage you to go there.  But it requires ongoing administration, approving new members being the easy part.  It's the ongoing review of comments & group member's posts that I don't want to have to do.

It may turn out that this blog has run its course & will just end.

So I'm in a quandary that hasn't been resolved yet.

Just giving you a heads up.

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We had a smooth, uneventful trip up.  This year, instead of renting a car (to save mileage on our already aging vehicles) we drove our new Toyota Highlander (bye-bye Tundra, you were a good, loyal friend for many years).  It drove like a dream.

The first day, Scottsdale to Beaver, UT was mostly state highways above Flagstaff.   Flagstaff to Page is a straight run through desolate desert with colorful red cliffs most of the way.  The terrain got a bit friendlier after Kanab, UT.

Beaver is a nice little town; stayed at the same Best Western motel as the previous two years.

The second day is alot easier, Interstate 15 all the way to the next stop, Idaho Falls.  Our motel was right across the street from the falls, not high, but runs along the road for maybe a half mile.  Turns out it's man-made, a hydroelectric project done in the '80's.  The falls were always there, just human-rebuilt to produce electricity.

Our last morning heading into Bozeman was back to local highways, with a drive along the western edge of Yellowstone National Park, along the Gallatin River in Gallatin Canyon.  It's a rushing stream flowing north with wading fisherman trying their luck.  That was yesterday.

Gallatin is a very popular name in these parts...Bozeman is the seat of Gallatin Country.  We have Meriwether Lewis to thank for this.  Albert Gattatin was Thomas Jefferson's Secretary of Treasury along with James Madison, Jefferson's Secretary of State.  These three gentlemen played a role in authorizing & financing the Lewis and Clark expedition to find the source of the Missouri River.  Lewis honored these men by naming the three rivers that joined to form the Missouri after them.

Turns out, the Jefferson isn't much of a river.  The Madison is a major, major fly fishing stream with the Gallatin not far behind.

The weather was great as we arrived in town, but turned stormy by mid-day beginning with a humdinger lightning & thunderstorm (rare back in AZ) and continuing off & on into today.

Not much to photograph except the side of this trash collection truck.


Today was gloomy with rain & thunder showers on & off most of the day.  Same forecast for tomorrow, July 4th, so that may nix our sojourn to Ennis.  We'll do our early morning yoga, then see what develops.

We did do Main Street today with a few pics.

A sky crane in a small Montana town is always a good sign.  In this case, the construction of a new building on one of the two adjacent commercial sites that experienced a terrible gas explosion in 2009, one person killed.   


How bad was the explosion?  Here's a photo from the local paper's archives.  Yes, it was in winter, March.


Buildings repurposed...this corner store was a bakery, now a jewelry store.  The most obvious are the former bank buildings.  I'll post a few shots later.



For the tourists there are lots of souvenir signs, many about Montana and others...life advice, like this one.


July 4th.  The weather continues chilly & gloomy so we passed on spending the day in Ennis but had a great early morning yoga class.  The teacher lets us spread our mats in the back of the yoga room and do our own thing.  So Susanne does her Yin Deep Stretch and I continue my Ashtanga Mysore practice.

Every region has a culture.  I love the Montana outdoor way of life.  Had I discovered this wonderful place a few decades ago, I might've bought a summer condo here.  I understand what Ted Turner & Craig Barrett (retired CEO of Intel) love about this state.  Of course, they have ranches & huge land holdings.  We have our rented Garaj Mahal.

If you're at all outdoorsy, you'd love the mag "Outside Bozeman", here's their website:

Outside Bozeman

And here's a poem from the current issue.
 
Meadow, by HG Moser

The gift of a mountain meadow
deep into summer
at rest by a winding brook
almost silent
a mayfly skitters over the surface
leaving her eggs
a mule deer observes from a
distant hummock
my presence a temporary curiosity
Awakened from drowsiness
by a foraging squirrel anxious
on leaving the pine grove
something we share with the
waning sun

There's another longer, even lovelier poem I'll save for a later post.

OK, not much in the photo department but I think I'll send this post on its way.







Monday, June 24, 2019

Heads Up...Heading Back to Montana

It's been almost a year since I posted cuz that's when we traveled last.  But we're going north again and will be blogging but I'm not sure how much.

We usually go to Missoula first, then on to Bozeman.  But because our Missoula place was already committed for our preferred time, we reversed the trip...going to Bozeman first.

Last summer in Missoula I explored a little known museum called the Museum of Mountain Flying.


CLICK HERE FOR LINK


As you scroll down the many photos, you'll come across a particular aircraft, a Douglas C-47 twin engine transport plane.  This plane had lots of history back when those photos were posted and the future was mentioned as a goal to participate in the Normandy Invasion 75th anniversary commemoration earlier this month.

As a C-47/DC-3 with much history, she was to become known as "Miss Montana" for this mission.

Skip to the summer of 2018 when I was there.  I toured the museum but didn't blog about it.  Here are a few shots from last year.

Her intro:




Her mid-restoration state, engines not installed yet.



A close-up of her nose art, copied & re-named from a vintage B-29.  The lady who posed for this shot came to the museum.  (She's 95 now.)


The cockpit & instrument panel.



Outside the hangar, getting ready for her test flight.



And finally, a shot of her flying over England, taken last month.  As you can imagine, getting her there was no small feat.  A fairly short range aircraft, she made many stops on the way over.  An oil company provided a full fuel scholarship for the trip.



The museum tells me she'll be back in Missoula by the time we're there.  I'll post some "after" photos.