Showing posts with label Bear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bear. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Queens River Eclipse Trip 2017 Day 5

Not a lot of space to pitch a tent, but I made it work.

The morning air smelled of smoke.

And smoke misted the distance.

These really look like blueberries, but until I can positively identify them, I must leave their tempting blue roundness alone.

Not exactly ideal trail for a healing ankle sprain.

A distant waterfall along the ridge. 

More of those "donkey roller" rocks on the trail.

Another waterfall, with an interesting artifact. 

In this close-up, you can see the huge boulder stuck in the channel. 

I know it's not a long trek, but I'm really tired of hiking slower than Ambrose.

I hope a formal reroute gets in place here for next year. The current one is a bit difficult to parse. 

If we had approached the crossing from this side initially, we would have been momentarily fooled into thinking the Queens River had dried up.

Instead of merely shifting its course by about 20 feet laterally. 

Getting closer to the last ford - the last time Ambrose will shuttle my pack across to protect my ankle.

This uprooted tree now marks the crossing. I initially sat beneath it to wait for Ambrose to make his trips, but then I looked up at the rocks held precariously in place by dead roots and dirt and moved out of the potential line of fire.

Maybe next year I'll bring an ax out and spend the day whacking my way through this.

Now that's more like it - soft grass, nothing too tall to hide rocks in. So of course the trail doesn't stay like this long.

One last tricky section through the bog, then it's easy trails.

Ambrose climbing up to the high road reroute. 

I should be in front! I'm supposed to be the hare in this pairing.

One last little stream crossing.




We made it! 

The water's much lower than it was back in June.

There are still far more cars here than what I consider normal for this trailhead.

The next day, while driving home, I was, as usual, keeping my eye out for wildlife beside the road. Now, usually, when I see what I think is a bear, it turns out to be a burned out stump.

Not this time.

From the safety of our cage - that is, car - we came to a stop to observe the bear. 

If he or she wanted to cross the road, they were welcome to do so without our roaring car interfering. 

Instead, she or he went behind some bushes, so we pulled forward to get a better look. As you do. 

This one's my favorite of the pictures.

And then she or he ambled up the slope, disappearing over the ridge and we finished the drive home. 



Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Outdoor Encounters...

There's nothing quite like a night spent in the wilderness.

Okay, I'll admit that an established campsite isn't quite wilderness, not to an exacting standard. But it is outdoors. It is out there, at least, the one that I visited is out there. And in Idaho it's still early enough in the season that we had the Willow Creek Transfer Camp all to ourselves... for the most part.

But I'm getting ahead of myself.

I took Friday off of work last week so Ambrose and I could drive out to the Pine and Featherville area and check out the trailhead that I'd be starting at for my solo this summer. Unfortunately, this plan necessitated getting up just as early as if I were going to go to work...

We were on the road by 6:30 a.m. and ended up making it to Pine well before we anticipated. The plan was to get lunch at a local cafe, but we arrived at 9;30 in the morning and didn't have high hopes. So we figured we could get some breakfast and eat that for lunch.

We underestimated the kindness of folk who want your money.

The cook/cashier/waiter on duty offered to cook up some lunch and we ordered grilled chicken sandwiches and fries. It was a good thing that we did, because, for some reason, I got really hungry not long after we left the restaurant. (Could it have been the delicious scent coming from those styrofoam take out containers?)

I started my lunch around 10 and finished it well before 11. While I munched, Ambrose drove. We stopped at the Willow Creek Camp Ground (not the same as the Transfer Camp). It was there we had our first encounter.

Now, I grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. My experience with wildlife, and wild death, is minimal. So I got pretty excited when I saw the bones.


And I was even more fascinated by the nearly whole forelimbs strewn near the fire pit. 


After I finished marveling at the carcass, we drove on. Ambrose wanted to drive into the Baumgartner hot springs area, but it was barred off. So we drove on, hoping to circle around to the Big Smoky campsite and find a spot to spend the night. The next day we would drive out through Fairfield and get a burger. 


That was the plan. 

But in the outdoors, you can't always get what you want. We wanted to keep driving, but encountered a tree lying across the one lane road. To the right, a steep drop down to the water and to the left, a steep bank. No way around it. Not even a way to turn around. Ambrose had to back out until we found a turnaround. 

We explored the Kelly Creek camping area and the Iron Mountain trailhead, but ended up deciding to head back to Willow Creek. This time we passed the place we found the carcass, exploring because we could. We had no timeline, no schedule. 

We ended up at the Willow Creek Transfer Camp and settled in. Of course, it was pouring rain when we set the tent up, and stopped soon after we finished. After the tent was erected, we relaxed. Okay, I took a nap and I don't know what Ambrose did. 

When I woke up, I looked around a bit. I had a thought, to get something from the tent, when Ambrose said the word that makes any camper's hairs raise. 

Bear. 

But not in that urgent way. More an alert. The bear was across the Willow Creek. Way up high on a hill. I could hardly get a picture of it on my highest digital zoom. 
Where bear?

There bear.


The only problem was, the bear was heading down. And heading down fast. We tracked its movements until it disappeared behind a copse of trees. 


Now where bear?
At this point, I retrieved my bear spray from the tent. I keep it tethered to a belt, which I slung across my body for hands free carry. I made sure I could remove the safety cap and followed Ambrose as he walked on the road that circled the campsite as far from the creek as possible. We knew the creek would pose no barrier to the bear's passage, but where would it emerge? 

I went back to the tent to fetch the monocular so we could get a closer look without actually getting closer. I wanted to run, but I didn't. I forced my steps to be even and unhurried as I walked back to Ambrose. He faced the creek, which was flowing briskly enough to drown out quieter sounds. I heard a few crunches that I thought might be a bear stepping on branches, but I couldn't pinpoint the location. 

Then I saw the bear, less than 20 yards past Ambrose, emerging from behind a little hill just beyond the road. 

"Ohmygod!" 

Yep. That's what came out when I saw that bear, so close, so unexpected. And the bear heard me. It turned its head, pausing for just a moment. And then it galloped off in the direction it had been going, ignoring us. And I mean galloped. That bear was fast. Way too fast for me to get a picture.
Imagine a bear popping up.

Why yes, I am planning on hiking by myself here later this summer...
The rest of the day was much more relaxed. We had dinner. I read a lot (Kameron Hurley's Infidel mostly). And we slept as rain tapped on our tent. 

The next morning, as we drove towards home, I took a picture of what I actually found to be the oddest encounter of the whole trip. 


I didn't know payphones still existed, let alone on forest service roads. 

We also found a piece of the Idaho Centennial Trail. 


In all, it was a great first trip of the season.