Old road pattern: Before 1969 Re: [Geysers] Geyser Report September 22
James Graber
jgra at loc.gov
Thu Sep 24 07:53:03 PDT 2009
Lynn and other unmet friends,
I had to look it up.
I had to google a bit to find it, but the Old Faithful interchange was
constructed in 1969.
So driving to Morning Glory must be before then. Since my first visit
was 1949,
I actually remember this road pattern. But so could anyone else over
50 or so.
Thanks for bringing back lots of fond memories.
Jim Graber
>>> Lynn Stephens <lstephens2006 at hotmail.com> 9/23/2009 9:06 AM >>>
Items from the Old Faithful logbook
Castle 0937 major
Daisy 0851, 1333ie
Daisy 0113E, 0346E, 0615E
Clepsydra pause 1431ie to 1433
Grand 0422E, 1330 (3B)
Great Fountain 1040ie
Riverside 0659ns, 1253ie, 1839
Beehive 0921 (Ind = 0921)
Lone Star 0945 vr (major, 1240vr
Plume 0806, 0919, 1030, 1522
Grotto 1823
Grotto Fountain 1821 d = 8 min
South Grotto Fountain 1826
Lion 1445ie
Sawmill 0619ie (end 0643) not ie 1925
Rift 0626iene
Oblong 0739ie, 1158ns, 1722ie
Victory 1837 d = 40 min
Till 1410 major
Flood 1037ie
Logbridge 1042ie
Narcissus 1042ie
White Dome 1044
Honeycomb 1432ie
According to one weatherman, the high pressure dominating the area will
continue to give us cold, starry nights, crisp mornings, and sun and
blue sky during the day for the next several days. This morning it was
cold enough that my fingers were tingling so I kept my gloves on while I
was cooking breakfast from the back of the pickup.
As I was gingerly walking along the icy jugwalk by Old Faithful to get
to Geyser Hill this morning, I first noticed a man having fun
deliberately taking a run and then sliding on the jugwalk. I continued
with my tiny, baby steps. A man passed me on my right, walking much
faster than I was going, but he had wisely stepped off the jugwalk and
was walking on the sinter on the Lodge side of the jugwalk. Just as I
was approaching the relative safety of the boardwalk, I man passed me
going the opposite direction, looked at me and asked, "Are you OK?" I
replied I was just taking it very slow and easy because I had no
intentions of falling.
Once I got off the jugwalk, I began to enjoy the sights of the morning
and decided to take a stroll around the hill since Dan Hatfield was
peering intently into Beehive's Indicator and would alert the gazers via
the radio when it started. I started taking pictures of Escher type
patterns in the bacteria/algae beds. Jim S. jokingly commented, "How
come you're using your camera instead of your phone?" Rainbows in
Plume, ice in the various runoff channels on Geyser Hill, sunlight
reaching the multi-colored wild rose bushes and a squirrel running
across the path with a pine cone in its mouth kept me entertained. I
had a brief conversation with a couple from England about squirrels.
They informed me they basically had only gray squirrels (the ones with
the big bushy tails). Their gray squirrels are much larger than the
squirrels they were seeing here. Their gray squirrels are also quite
aggressive and have killed off most of the red squirrels.
There were rainbows in Beehive and then again in Plume. A woman I had
stopped for Beehive's eruption who had followed me to get rainbows asked
if rainbows always occurred near the end of a geyser's eruption. I
explained that rainbows were a function of getting yourself between the
sun and the water and that Plume's rainbows were near the end of the
burst because it took that long for the water droplets to coalesce
sufficiently for the rainbow to form. Wouldn't it be nice if her idea
were true however--rainbows in every eruption of every geyser!
While I was waiting at the Steel Bridge for Till, I noticed a bald
eagle flying past. A few minutes later a woman approached my pickup,
then said she had noticed my license plate and wondered if I was
familiar with the area. False modesty has no part of my Yellowstone
experience, so I replied "Yes." She then very excitedly told me she had
just seen two bald eagles and wasn't that marvelous. I guess even those
of us who don't have bald eagles living in our neighborhoods year round
bcome accustomed to the sight of th bald eagles. I note them, watch
them if it is convenient, but don't make it a point to stop so I can
watch them. Her enthusiasm and excitement reminded me just how special
the Yellowstone experience can be.
When I passed the Fairy Falls Trailhead this morning on my way to Great
Fountain, which was already in eruption when I got there, I noticed
there were no long lens lining the road watching the remains of the
carcass. At 1300 a park ranger removed the cones that were still on the
west side of the road. The two "bear management/closed area" signs were
still in place when I left, but at least parking is no longer prohibited
at the pullout.
Till erupted at 1410--a double interval of 19h39m, or an average of
9hr34.5m. So much for the 9hr to 9h15m "regular" intervals it had been
having.
Maureen Edgerton watched Grand this afternoon (a three-burst eruption
where the second wasn't really high but the third was truly huge), then
went to Fountain. I stopped at Whiskey Flats after Till to use the
facilities, noting that the children's log cabin had been demolished,
before going to Fountain. As we walked up, I could see that Clepsydra
was in a pause, and we both saw water surrounding Fountain's crater, so
knew that we had missed it.
One more new toy story--I discovered today that the phone vibrates, or
as Kitt says, "makes the pant's pocket dance" when I've missed a call
because I wasn't in a service area. Thanks for trying to reach me
MaryBeth, but Till doesn't have cell phone service either.
As I indicated in my report on Victory Geyser, I spent the rest of the
afternoon and early evening at Victory.
About 6 pm or so, Jerry and Pat from the DNBS joined me in my sit.
They had overheard some of the gazers talking about Victory and came out
to see if they could watch it. A woman had biked down, saw me sitting
at Victory, and said, "It looks like it won't erupt in the next 20
minutes." About three times I asked her, "Which won't erupt?" before I
changed my question to "Are you talking about Riverside or Victory?"
She was talking about Riverside, but was interested in information about
Victory also and said she had heard about the nice lady with the
embroidery.
When Grotto Fountain started, the woman on the bicycle was at
Riverside, so I yelled "Grotto Fountain" to get her attention. This
brought the entire Riverside crowd (about 15 people) over for Grotto
Fountain and Grotto. After Grotto Fountain ended at 1829, I went back
to Victory. When Victory started at 1837 I yelled, "Victory" and not
just Pat and Jerry and the woman on the bicycle, but some of the
Riverside crowd, most of which was still at Grotto, came running down to
look at a 3 foot geyser. When Riverside started at 1839 I lamented the
fact I couldn't see the rainbow in it, but Pat and Jerry and I all
decided a "rare" 3 foot geyser took precedence over Riverside because we
could always catch rainbows in it another day but didn't know whether
we'd ever see Victory again.
Overheard while waiting for Victory:
Cell phone conversation where woman walking down the path was
requesting, and presumably receiving, a rundown on last night's Dancing
with the Stars episode.
Hmmm--Being here in the park with no TV, I had forgotten it's
about time for a new TV season to start. By the time I get home we'll
probably be in reruns already.
Young girl saying to her parents, "What if he got eaten by a
geyser?"
Father's reply, "Well, we'll hear it on the news."
Hmmm--Interesting, I wonder what the news will emphasize--The fact
that he disappeared, or the fact that a geyser can eat.
Also, while waiting for Victory, I watched a man sit down on the
asphalt, then go prone. As he stayed there for a few minutes, I decided
I'd better go over to see if he needed any assistance. He replied he
didn't, that he just needed to rest, and the last time he had been here,
20 years ago in 1988 before the fires got going, he KNEW he had driven
to Morning Glory because he remembered seeing Riverside with his kids
and KNEW he couldn't have walked that far so the road must still have
been open then. Well, I KNOW I was walking/biking the asphalt trail in
1988, and years before that also, but didn't pursue the issue since he
didn't appear inclined to listen to me.
At 1901 I noted the lucky osprey flying by. By then I was hoping
Victory would end soon because I didn't have a flashlight with me and it
was getting near dusk. victory ended at 1917, for a duration of 40
minutes. As I reached the parking lot, I noted the sunset was a
delicate pink with a few wisps of clouds to make the sky colorful. The
crescent moon low on the southwestern horizon stood out against the pale
lilac sky. An elk bugling completed the day.
More departures today--Keith and Lotus ended their September stay and
left this morning after breakfast. While waiting for Beehive, Jim S.
told me today was his last day in. Keith helped MaryBeth load Trixie
into the Suburban and MaryBeth moved out to the duplex in West in
preparation for her trip home to Texas. I'll have to remember to leave
the trailer porch light on all the time since she won't be there now to
turn it on if I don't get back before dark. I'll sure miss having
several sets of eyes in the basin, radio calls of geyser times, MaryBeth
and Jim's entries in the logbook, and most of all the companionship.
Cocoa will be the only one at the trailer getting an earful when I vent
about some of the day's happenings.
Lynn Stephens
_________________________________________________________________
Insert movie times and more without leaving Hotmail®.
http://windowslive.com/Tutorial/Hotmail/QuickAdd?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_HM_Tutorial_QuickAdd_062009
More information about the Geysers
mailing list