Sunday, January 18, 2015

Quartzfest 2015 Part 2

Opening Ceremony 
 
This is the official beginning of Quartzfest.  This is a panorama of the main fire ring area.  People are getting ready for the opening ceremony.  We bring our chairs and set up so we can see the speakers.  Several seminars take place in this location, as well as other areas in this location in the Arizona desert, during Quartzfest.  
Panorama of the main fire ring area at Quartzfest

Here are a couple more views.  As you can see, there are a lot of RVs out here in the desert and all of the activities are outdoors.  There are many talks about different aspects of Amateur Radio, talks about the desert area and ‘”how to”  do different things to adapt ham radio to RVing.  Kris, the organizer of Quartzfest, is giving announcements. 
Kris, organizer for QuartzfestGetting ready for Quartzfest opening ceremony.

We had speakers telling of the events and talks that they had scheduled for the coming week.  The BLM Ranger talked about camping on BLM land and some of the rules and regulations.
The BLM Ranger speaking about rules and regulations for using BLM land.One of the speakers and his friend announcing details of an upcoming activity or seminar at opening ceremony.


After all of the business was taken care of, there was a door prize drawing.  The traditional prizes of Yaesu world maps, Yeasu Hats, cookies and jam as well as some other special Ham Radio items were given out.

There is a special event station that people can use to contact other HAMs around the world.  It is solar powered and has a hex beam antenna.  The call sign for the station is W7Q.  One of the things many Ham radio operators do is to try to contact as many of these special events as they can. 
Quartzfest event statiion,

 
There was another beautiful sunset tonight. 
Sunset looking northwest from our trailerSunset looking west from our trailer

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Quartzfest 2015 Part 1

Thursday – Saturday, Jan. 15 – 17, 2015

We are headed to Quartzfest in Quartzsite, AZ.  Quartzfest is an Amateur Radio Operators Convention in the desert of southwestern Arizona.  Almost everyone attending is an RVer  We drove to the site over two days and spent Thursday night at River Run RV Park  in Bakersfield , CA.  It is a very nice park.  The sites are large and not crowded together.   However, because California has been in a drought for the last three plus years, the river was not running.  We arrived after dark, so the pictures that you see were taken on Friday morning before we left on the second leg of the trip.  It is a little foggy.  Here are photos of our campsite and the river as viewed from the back of our site.  Note that the river is supposed to be in the sandy looking beige area just before you get to the grassy bank in front of the houses.
Our campsite at River Run RV Park, Bakersfield, CA

View of the Kern River behind the RV Park

We arrived at Road Runner BLM short term camping area after dark on Friday and found our friends Rich and Cathy, thanks to cell phones as there are no landmarks in the desert.  We set up  temporarily until morning when we would be able to get the lay of the land and decide where we really wanted to end up for the next week.

Saturday morning was spent repositioning and settling in.  This is dry camp meaning no hook-ups for water, electric, or sewer. We needed to get to a spot where our solar panels could collect sunlight for electricity.  Here is where we ended up.   There are some more folks coming to join us later in the week, so we will have a small circle, but for now there are only two RVs.  The chairs that appear to be in the middle of nowhere are saving space for the others who will arrive.
Our camp in the Roadrunner BLM short term camping area at Quartzfest.

The first day of the RV Show that happens here in Quartzsite every January was also on Saturday.  We went to the Big Tent in the afternoon.  During the RV Show, the tent is filled with everything the RVer needs and “can’t live without”, everything from clothing and accessories, cooking items, food items as well as parts and pieces to repair and/or upgrade your RV, no matter what type of vehicle you have.  I forgot the camera, so there are no photos of that yet.  Those will come later when we return to see the rest of the displays.  We did find some “treasures” that we just had to have and seem to be able to find only at Quartzsite.

As you know by now, I like sunsets and we had a very nice one on Saturday night.  This is the view looking approximately west from where we are parked.  We had a campfire that can be seen in the foreground and Venus is located just above and to the left of the Palo Verde (bushy) tree in the middle of the picture.
Sunset and Campfire at  our camp in Quartzsite.  Venus visible above and to the left of the palo verde (bushy) tree.

Tomorrow is the official beginning of Quartzfest.  I have been very busy for the last few months and have not done any blogging.  While we are here, I am hoping to get some new posts up, in addition to the ones about Quartzfest, to fill in the blanks of our summer trip to Alaska, so you may get notifications of new posts that are dated between May and August of 2014.  It is not a mistake, just me trying to catch up.
 

Friday, August 29, 2014

Arlington, WA to Home 8/27 - 29/14

Day 117 - 119 of Our Summer Trip
Final leg of the four month adventure.

We had breakfast with my cousin, then we had to say good-bye and head for home.  We are planning to make these next few days travel days so we can get home by the weekend.  As we left Arlington, which is north of Seattle, the traffic became very heavy going through the Seattle area, even though we took the freeway that went around the main part of town.  Things cleared up the farther we got south of the Seattle metropolitan area, then we went into Portland, OR.  It had just as much traffic as Seattle with stop and go for miles.  It was only Wed., but we think there were some folks trying to get a jump on the Labor Day Holiday weekend, as well as the usual work day traffic.  We spent Wed. night in Albany, OR at the Blue Ox RV Park.  It was a very nice camp with concrete pads and a cute little seating area with the blue ox mascot and a nice shady area to sit and enjoy the surroundings.


On Thursday morning, we continued traveling south toward California. Driving on I-5, we heard a strange sound.  We looked around and, just next to us, a tent trailer blew a tire as he was passing us on the left.  We slowed down so he could get to the right side of the highway shoulder, then we stopped to check if anything had hit us and to help, if they needed it.  It turned out that this was a younger couple with three girls age about 6 - 11.  They were heading to Crater Lake, OR, from their home in Seattle, for the Labor Day Holiday.  We assisted some while the dad of the family changed the tire.  We had had blow outs on other trailers, so we knew what they were going through and they were glad to have our company on the busy highway.

Once we got on the road again, we followed this RV from Oregon and were trying to figure out what they were carrying on the back of their CRV.  When we enlarged the photo, we could see that there was a name on the items.  It turns out that these are some very expensive recumbent tricycles that are hanging on the bike rack bottom to bottom.  They are by a company called Catrike, if you care to look it up online.

Everything was going very smoothly until just after we got into CA.  You may know that California is in the third year of a drought and the forests are primed to burn because they are so dry.  Well, there are several very large fires burning in Northern CA and southern Oregon right now.  Here is what the sun looked like. 


I did not crop or enhance or color the above photos on purpose.  This is the color that the sun looked through the smoke.  You didn't need sunglasses to look at it because the smoke from the many wild fires in the northern part of the state was so thick.  A couple times it completely blocked the sun.  While I was sorting through my many photos, I noticed that I could see what looked like sunspots, which really surprised me, since I do not have a real fancy camera.  It is a Panasonic Lumix DMC-2525.  Basically I use it as a point and shoot camera and adjust the automatic scene setting once in awhile.  Anyway, I did some enhancing of the following photo and if you enlarge it, but not too much, and look closely near the center of the sun, there are two sunspots that can be seen as darker dots to the left and right just below the center.  Moving the screen on the laptop back and forth to change the angle that you see the picture may help you see the dots more easily, also.

Now that you know where to look, they can also be seen in the first sun picture, above, but you have to look closely.  Below, you can see how thick the smoke was that the sun was trying to shine through.  That is smoke, not clouds.


It was so dark from the smoke in the sky, that traffic had to turn on their headlights and the street lights came on, too.


Eventually, we got past the plumes of smoke, but we could not see Mt. Shasta or Mt. Lassen, the two higher mountains that are usually snow capped.  Mt. Shasta is reasonably close to I-5 and is easily seen on clear days.  Mt. Lassen is farther away and not as high, but is also easily seen on a clear day.  I told you that we are in a drought in California and Lake Shasta, a huge reservoir, is the lowest that we have ever seen it.  They do have to let water out to fill the Sacramento River to provide the fish with water to swim and spawn in, but soon they will not even be able to do that.

We spent Thursday night at the Redding RV Park in Redding, CA.  This campsite is located on a terraced hillside.  They claim to have views of Mt. Shasta and Mt. Lassen, but there was no viewing in the distance, while we were there.  The atmosphere had way too much smoke.  I took this photo just before we closed up to leave on Fri. morning.  My guess is that, if we could see one or both mountains, it would show up in the distance at the right of the picture.

The rest of the drive home was uneventful, except for heavy traffic near Sacramento and in the Bay area.  It is, after all, getaway day for the Labor Day weekend. 

We have been home for a few weeks now and I am trying to catch up with my blog.  If you have been following us, there is more to come as I try to add new photos and info by back dating the posts to when they actually happened.  Stay tuned for updates.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Beaver Creek, YT to Haines Junction, YT 8/10/14

Day 100 of our summer trip.  The Alaska Highway.

Lately, we have been noticing a lot of these white flowers, that seem to sparkle in the sunlight, along the roadside, and wondered what they were.  When we looked at them, it turned out that they were the white fluffy seeds of dandelions.  When we thought about it, there were a LOT of yellow dandelions along the side of the roads earlier in our travels, so it only makes sense that they all would go to seed at the same time.  The photo on the right is of some fireweed that has bloomed all the way to the top.  Now the pink pods will mature and open up revealing seeds with whitish, feathery tails that will look like puffs of smoke.  Then the leaves will turn red to make it look like “fire”.  We have learned that fireweed is one of the first wildflowers to sprout following a forest fire.  For that reason and its appearance, it got the name of fireweed.
These fireweed flowers have bloomed to the top.  The next phase is for the long red spiky pods to develop and open with a feathery white seed that gives the appearance of smoke..White flowers are actually the white seeds of the dandelions, look like snow

The Kluane National Park was off to our right as we continued southeast along the Alaska Highway.  The mountains and glaciers began to appear more often, too.  The glaciers are a part of the icefield range that is the largest non-polar icefield in North America.
A view of some of the icefield ranges of the Kluane National Park, Yukon Territory, the largest non-polar icefield in North AmericaA view of some of the icefield ranges of the Kluane National Park, Yukon Territory, the largest non-polar icefield in North America

Here are a couple views of the Kluane River.  The first is hard to see, but it is a light line at the base of the mountains that is easier to see if you enlarge the picture.  It winds around and into the area that is shown in the second photo.
Kluane River.  Spruce trees topped with massive numbers of pine cones (brown).A view of some of the icefield ranges of the Kluane National Park, Yukon Territory, the largest non-polar icefield in North America.  River at the base of the mountains.


We went through a town that had the world’s largest gold pan, Burwash Landing,YT.
World's largest gold pan.

The Kluane River flows into the Kluane Lake, the largest lake in the Yukon.  Here are views from two different locations.  The second area is called the Horseshoe Bay.
Kluane Lake, Horseshoe BayKluane Lake

We drove on and suddenly the terrain changed to this interesting landscape.  It is at the southern end of the Kluane National Park.
All of a sudden, different terrain and landscapeAll of a sudden, different terrain and landscape

This area is where the Tachal Dhal Visitor  Center is located.  We stopped by and saw these Dall Sheep way up high on the mountain near where the green areas, in the middle of the photo, disappear.  They could be seen with the naked eye as white dots that really stood out against the green and the brown dirt of the mountain.  However, I had to zoom in all of the way to get these tiny images that look like some sort of a four legged animal standing and eating or lying down resting.  We got out our spotting scope and could magnify them a little more to see better, but that didn’t help with the photography.  It was very cool to see the Dall Sheep in the wild.
Dall Sheep at Tachal Dhal Visitor CentreDall Sheep at Tachal Dhal Visitor Centre

We arrived in Haines Junction and stayed at the Kluane RV Park.  This certainly is Kluane country!  We had another nice setting for our camp.
View of the mountains from the Kluane RV ParkOur campsite at Kluane RV Park

After we got settled, we took a drive through town and took some pictures of some of the unique points of interest in the town.  The Village Monument is “the Muffin” or "the Animal Cupcake”.  It depicts the relationship that the community has with the mountains and the wildlife.
The Haines Jct. Village Monument aka "the Muffin"or the Animal Cupcake"The Haines Jct. Village Monument aka "the Muffin"or the Animal Cupcake"

There are two unique, historic churches in town.  This is Our Lady of the Way Catholic Mission.  It was built in 1954 by a catholic priest.  Though resources were scarce, he was able to convert an old Quonset hut that the military had used during the building of the Alaska Highway.  It has the distinction of being the most photographed church in the Yukon.
Our Lady of the Way Catholic MissionOur Lady of the Way Catholic Church

The other historic church is St. Christopher’s Anglican Church   The original church was built right after the Alaska Highway was built.  The current church was built in 1990 by volunteers and is unique because it is an eight-sided log cabin structure.  It is a little difficult to detect that it has eight sides, through the foliage.
St. Christopher's Anglican Church, an octagonal log building

It was an interesting day. 

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Delta Junction, AK to Beaver Creek, YT 8/9/14

Day 99 of our summer trip

We are continuing to head in the direction of home.  Today we crossed into Canada and back into the Pacific time zone.  Just a few miles down the Alaska Highway from Delta Junction, we crossed over a bridge that is dedicated to the Black Veterans of the Army Corps of Engineers who helped build the Alaska Highway in the early 1940s.  It is the Gerstel River Bridge.  It is one of four bridges, of the thirteen that were built along the Alaska Highway, that used the "steel through truss-style" of construction.


 
We saw some beautiful scenery in Alaska, along the way.




 
Then we entered Canada, the Yukon Territories. 
 
We  drove to Beaver Creek and found a very nice campground, the Discovery Yukon Lodging Campground.

They are building a new boardwalk over a cattail filled pond just across from our site.

This is a view of the mountains that are the other direction from the previous picture.  you can also glimpse them in the photo of our campsite.
 
The next leg of our trip is to Haines Junction, tomorrow.