One can only assume that the French explorers who named the mountain “Grand Teton” were without the company of females for some time, as its resemblance to a “big breast” (ie. the English translation of "Grand Teton") was pretty much lost on us. Nonetheless, the splendid anatomy of Grand Teton and her neighbours provided happy hiking and sight-seeing for us for four days.
The Teton range rises abruptly from the floor of the glacier-scoured valley known as Jackson Hole. The peaks themselves are accessible only to experienced rock-climbers, which of course we are not, so we instead satisfied ourselves with walks on the lower slopes around Jackson Lake and Jenny Lake. The most pleasing walk took us into the secluded Cascade Canyon, giving us a peek at Grand Teton herself, who is mostly hidden behind lesser peaks from the main Jackson Hole valley.
The following day we indulged in some retail therapy in the town of Jackson, at the southern end of the Tetons. Jen got some new walking boots, and our bed got an extra thick blanket – the nights are beginning to get mighty chilly at this elevation! The lovely town of Jackson is a year-round sportsman's and naturalist's Mecca; the four antler arches in the town square attesting to the huge number of elk in the vicinity.
One of the lab's less successful (and costly – over $1 billion in the 1960s) exploits was an attempt to build nuclear-powered jet planes. The rotting carcasses of these giant beasts now languish in the museum car park.
Nearby, on the edge of the desert plain is the weird landscape of Craters of the Moon National Monument. Here, dried lava flows encase the ground in a barren, black crust whose tortuous formations give the place an eerie other-worldly ambience.
The flows stretch for several hundred square miles and encompass hundreds of tubular caves, through which the lava once flowed. Roof collapses into the lava-tube caves provide easy access for exploration. The lava is such a good insulator that ice is found in the caves year-round, despite temperatures sometimes rising to 140 Fahrenheit outside (though thankfully not while we were there!).
After Craters of the Moon, we headed up into the mountains to drive the Custer Motorway – a 50 mile stretch of unsealed road that was formerly a toll road to the 1880s gold-rush towns of Custer and Bonanza. Once home to more than 600 gold-rush hopefuls each, Custer and Bonanza are now ghost-towns.
It is not difficult to discover gold on the motorway – the stream-beds sparkle with tiny specks of the stuff. However, despite out best efforts panning with our dinner-plates, we just couldn't get the goodies out!
With great relief, we made it off the bone-shaking Custer motorway, back to tarmac roads, turning south to the Sawtooth Mountains. We spent a couple of days here, walking and swimming in the lakes (you can just see Andy's head in the water in this pic, as well as the jagged profile of the mountains, which gives them their name), before heading south across the plains again to Utah.
Next, we will be visiting the centre of the Mormon world, Salt Lake City.
1 comment:
Still enthralled by the stories. With you on the 82%!
Just some goss back, we're getting a Scottie dog and LD are "possibly" doing the same to me as they did before!
Still got too many cars and my first Autograss race is 21st September.
Keep 'em cummin...big hugz
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