
Grey and brown are our colors of late. We’ve been waiting for this big snowstorm that has been in the forecast for days, but it hasn’t hit us yet. Meanwhile, we have plenty of moisture (aka mud). 🙂
And every now and then, a ray of light.

Grey and brown are our colors of late. We’ve been waiting for this big snowstorm that has been in the forecast for days, but it hasn’t hit us yet. Meanwhile, we have plenty of moisture (aka mud). 🙂
And every now and then, a ray of light.

Be still my Spring-Creek-Basin-devoted heart.
Mustang (Sundance). Check.
McKenna Peak. Check.
Temple Butte. Check.
Perfection. CHECK!

Kestrel seems to be pointing the way to McKenna Peak and Temple Butte, foggy with light snow in the background of Spring Creek Basin.
Yes, we see you, beautiful girl. 🙂

From this vantage point on the “back side” of Filly Peak, you can see Temple Butte, Round Top, Flat Top and Brumley Point. There be mustangs among those weathered folds of hills and arroyos.

Happy Thanksgiving to all those whose gratitude for wild places and the wild lives that inhabit these places helps keep those beautiful lives wild and free. With your voices, you speak for the wildness that we love.
Endless thanks!

Pretty girl Winona on a pretty fall day.

On Monday, November’s “beaver moon” – also a supermoon – will rise. The moon will be closer than any other lately (70 years, it says below) … and it won’t be this close to Earth again until 2034.
Here’s more information – “Why November’s Super-Close Supermoon is a Full Beaver Moon” (isn’t that an awesome headline?):
“November’s supermoon — the name given to a full moon that occurs when the satellite is at its closest point to Earth during the lunar orbit — will be the biggest supermoon in about 70 years.
“Algonquin Native American tribes as well as American colonists called the November full moon the Beaver Moon because ‘this was the time to set beaver traps before the swamps froze, to ensure a supply of warm winter furs,’ according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac.
“An alternative name for November’s full moon is the Frost Moon, which was also coined by Native Americans, according to the Almanac. [Supermoon November 2016: When, Where & How to See It]”
*************************************************************************
Deep gratitude to active-duty service members and veterans of America’s military. We cannot repay our debt to your service and sacrifice, and that of your families as you spend time away from them to ensure the protection of ours – of all of us.

This was the brighter arch of a full double rainbow over Disappointment Valley. And this photo was taken from outside Spring Creek Basin looking in. Filly Peak is visible at far left (in shade), McKenna Peak and Temple Butte are visible to the right of center, and the rainbow is crowning Brumley Point.
Neither the widest-angle camera lens I own nor my cell phone could capture the full arch of the rainbow – let alone its double. Please believe me when I say (type) how stunningly, awesomely, amazingly, phenomenally, magnificently, marvelously SPECTACULAR it was!
This photo also clearly shows that there be magic in Disappointment Valley. 🙂
(The road into the basin was too wet to drive on – or so advocate Pat Amthor and I thought. The next day was the first day of third rifle season, and slippery mud does not overeager hunters deter – nor the fact that such driving will leave terrible ruts when the now-wet road dries. It’s orange country out here right now, and I ain’t referring to the Denver Broncos.)

Duke is a mustang classic. He has lived his entire wild life in Spring Creek Basin, with that familiar horizon. These days, he hangs out alone or with the younger bachelors. His presence is a gift for them and for us.

Skywalker, walkin’ on Earth – a pretty beautiful slice of Earth, pretty close to heaven.
McKenna Peak and Temple Butte in the background.