The Year of Perfect Vision Strikes Again! (9-5-20 to 9-9-20)

Days 4-8 of Lupe’s 4th Summer of 2020 Dingo Vacation to Montana & Wyoming!

9-5-20, 9:32 AM, Pass 10140, Beartooth Mountains, Montana – For once, SPHP had been the one to wake up early.  After the American Dingo’s witching hour return from a hugely successful journey to the Froze to Death Plateau and Tempest Mountain yesterday, Lupe was the one still zonked in the tiny house.

As SPHP packed for the journey back to the West Rosebud trailhead, Looper snoozed as long as she could.  Not until a bee flew into the tiny house did she decide to emerge to lay on the grass, permitting SPHP to roll up her sleeping bag and begin disassembly, a task soon completed.

At Pass 10140. Mount Wood (12,660 ft.) (L). Photo looks NW.

A final contemplation of Froze to Death Mountain (11,760 ft.), where she’d been only yesterday, and Lupe set out across the broad plain of Pass 10140.  Picking up Phantom Creek trail No. 17, she started the long trek down to Mystic Lake.

Farewell, Froze to Death Mountain (Center)! Photo looks SW.
About to head down Phantom Creek trail No. 17. Photo looks WNW.

Saturday, first day of Labor Day weekend!  The weather was perfect, the single track trail in great condition, and the scenery stupendous!  Going down was so much faster and easier than coming up had been.  Upon reaching the trees, Lupe kept an eye out for squirrels.  SPHP was in a cheery mood, and often spoke to hikers on their way up.

By the time Loop made it Mystic Lake, she’d passed 18 people intent upon climbing Granite Peak (12,799 ft.), the Montana state high point.

Scenic Phantom Creek trail No. 17. Photo looks SW.
Pausing for refreshment.

9-5-20, 12:16 PM, Mystic Lake – Mystic Lake was busy!  Lots of people around and more arriving all the time.  And why not?  What a jewel!

Loop and SPHP found a relatively quiet spot along the S shore.  No real rush to get back to the West Rosebud trailhead.  For a serene half hour, Lupe rested next to Mystic Lake, enjoying a cool breeze while watching the waves roll in.  SPHP sat nearby, soaking a couple of sore paws in the Oh, so refreshing! water.

Mystic Lake in the Beartooth Mountains! A new favorite place! Photo looks WNW.
Ahh! This is the life!

SPHP’s paws comfortably numb, the Carolina Dog hit West Rosebud trail No. 19.  Before heading through the gap on top of the wall of rock E of the lake, Lupe paused for a final look.  What a gorgeous mountain lake!  Easily accessible, too!  Only 3 miles and 1,000 feet of elevation gain from the West Rosebud trailhead.

Mystic Lake, Beartooth Mountains. Photo looks WSW.
Exquisite! What a setting! Photo looks WSW.

Mystic Lake was no big secret.  Hordes of people were coming up the West Rosebud trail.  Many canines to sniff with, too!  Lots of kids and people with fishing gear.  Everyone was in fine spirits.  The march down Trail No. 19 was rockier than SPHP remembered, but it all went fast.

9-5-20, 3:00 PM, 90ºF, West Rosebud trailhead – Hoo-eee!  Summer ain’t over yet!  Baking hot down here!  SPHP had noticed a picnic area during the drive in 3 days ago some miles back along the washboardy road to the trailhead.  Once all the gear got stashed in the G6, Lupe enjoyed some AC on the slow, bumpy ride to it.

Although everywhere else was overrun with people, the picnic ground was empty.  Good spot to spend the rest of the day!  West Rosebud creek, a lovely stream back up at the trail, was a full-fledged river here.  Beef stew, rest, relaxation!  Despite 91ºF heat, Lupe refused to leave her pink blankie in the G6.  SPHP rolled all the windows completely down, and gave her plenty of food and water.

Crunching away, the American Dingo complained between mouthfuls.

I can’t believe it, SPHP!  You really did have a bag of Fritos in the G6!

Told ya!

Why didn’t you bring them with when we went into the mountains?  I sure could have used them to entice those salt-starved mountain goats!

Never really considered that angle, Loop.  Besides, Fritos don’t travel well jammed into a backpack.  All we would have gotten up there with would have been some salty roasted corn flour.

Still would have worked, SPHP!  Those goats were desperate!  They lick pissed-on rocks for salt!  Do you really think they would be too fastidious to munch a little corn flour?

OK, OK!  My bad!  Next time, alright, Looper?  Can we just forget it?

Oh, I suppose.  Too late now, anyway!  Any more Fritos left?  Pass me some more, would ya?  And fill my water bowl again, too, please.

9-6-20, 6:40 AM, West Rosebud trailhead overflow parking – The sun was just rising.  SPHP immediately saw how lucky Lupe had been the past several days.  2020, the Year of Perfect Vision, had struck again!  Smoke of distant forest fires filled the air, obscuring the Beartooths.  Deja vu!  Getting to be a tiresome theme, but one likely to keep repeating unless the W got some serious rain.  Fat chance of that this time of year!

A rest and positioning day, anyway.  The Carolina Dog was done here.  Smoky or not, no sense in sticking around.  Loopster had a grand time barking at cows and horses as the G6 went on the prowl, searching for the next big adventure.  Reasonably clear skies were now the primary criteria.

9-6-20, 9:47 AM, Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River, Hwy 120 – Driven out of Montana by the haze, Lupe stood on the bank of the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River shortly after entering Wyoming.

This was the same river she had a favorite camping spot next to with a view of Pilot Peak (11,699 ft.) high in the Beartooths, E of Yellowstone National Park.  Up there, it was a lively mountain stream with rapids and a chilly swimming hole, just on the verge of becoming large enough to be worthy of the designation “river”.  Down here in the sagebrush desert, the Clarks Fork was much wider, still rippling along, but also far more placid and ordinary.

Along the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River. Photo looks SE.
Wyoming Hwy No. 120 bridge 8 or 9 miles S of the Montana border. Photo looks N.

The Edelweiss Bar & Cafe, along with its mostly deserted campground and picnic area, was just a quick sniffing stop, a chance to get out and stretch.  Quiet today, but once upon a time this had been an exciting spot, an integral part of one of those heroic, dramatic events so common in the tragic history of the world.

In 1877, the Nez Perce tribe under Chief Joseph made a daring, desperate escape from the U.S. Army in this area.  Sadly, their success did not last.  The army caught up with them shortly before they reached the Canadian border, where they’d hope to join up with Sitting Bull’s band of Sioux.  A series of plaques at the bar’s parking lot related the story.

Less than a mile SW, Hwy 120 went over the Clarks Fork a second time.  A primitive dirt road on the R (NW) provided a less developed access point.  Why not?  Lupe had all day.  SPHP nursed the G6 along a rutty road before finding a spot to stash it near the river.

The Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone is running a little low, but after all, it is September! Would look a lot different during the spring runoff from the Beartooths!
Looks like Wyoming to me! See the Beartooths on the horizon? No? They’re in the haze.

The only thing clear about the Beartooths, which still ought to have been easily visible from here, was that they were much too smoky to entertain the notion of remaining anywhere in the general area.

Out on the sagebrush plains of Wyoming, Lupe kept a close watch as SPHP drove S, but even cattle were scarce.  Lacking entertainment, the Carolina Dog’s eyes grew heavy.   Soon she was snoozing in AC’d comfort as the miles rolled by and temperature soared.

9-6-20, 1:24 PM, Wind River Canyon, Hwy 20/789, S of Thermopolis – Not much of a water Dingo, Lupe preferred to rest on the bank of the Wind River while watching SPHP swim, but SPHP had carted her out to the white rock she sat on now for a photo.  She didn’t know it yet, but there wasn’t going to be a free ride back to shore.  Looper was going to have to wade, SPHP’s diabolical plot to force her to get thoroughly cooled off, but she wouldn’t mind.  In fact, since it wasn’t deep, she’d linger a minute or two, enjoying the cool water.

Oh, the Wind River Canyon is beautiful! Not quite so smoky, either! Maybe we’re headed the right way?

SPHP had just enjoyed a refreshing half hour swim in Rattler Whirlpool, an enormous eddy in the Wind River with a gentle current along the near bank that consistently flowed upstream, greatly reducing any prospect of being swept down river.

This was the second time Lupe had been here this summer.  SPHP had gone swimming in this exact same giant eddy back in July, too, but the name “Rattler Whirlpool” was a new one.  No one had been here when Loop first arrived today, but a Jeep had soon come down the access road, parking 40 feet away.  Whoever was in it stayed inside for a while, then suddenly leapt out to shout the news that there was a rattlesnake over there and to be careful, before leaping back in and driving off.

Neither Loop nor SPHP saw the rattler before walking back up to the G6.  Probably for the best.

9-6-20, 4:00 PM, 90ºF, Lander city park – Nearly a week into September, and still 90ºF!  Actually a little cooler now than it had been earlier.  93ºF on the way over from Riverton!  There’d been one more stop, a brief one to examine a herd of wild horses racing through the desert beneath a stormy sky – a mural painted on the Hudson town hall.

Snazzy mural on the side of the Hudson, Wyoming town hall.

Like Rattler Whirlpool, Lupe had been here before, too, this summer.  At the S end of 3rd Street right across from the beautiful Middle Popo Agie River, Lander city park was awesome!  Free camping on a soft green lawn beneath shady old cottonwoods.

The park was going to be home for the evening.  Normally, small streams flow in a couple of ditches running through the park, but they were bone dry now.  A stroll over to the Middle Popo Agie River revealed that it was almost gone as well, a trickling remnant of its normal self.  Shocking!  Lupe had never seen the Popo Agie so low before.  Fortunately, that didn’t interfere with a thrilling evening of squirrel watching.

Riveting times on the soft green lawn of Lander city park.

Unfortunately, still pretty smoky out.  Maybe tomorrow would bring good news on that front?  SPHP tried to be optimistic, but, in truth, felt mighty skeptical.  Attempts to evade smoke hadn’t worked on Looper’s last Dingo Vacation.  There wasn’t much reason to believe they would pan out this time around, either.

Labor Day, 9-7-20, 11:56 AM, Lander city park – Actually got chilly last night.  Breezy and definitely cooler this morning.  Apparently not going to be another scorcher.  Encouragingly, not quite so smoky either!  After walks through the park, Lupe had spent the morning dozing whenever there was a lull in the squirrel watching action.

Hey, Loopster!

What’s up, SPHP?

Got the trip journal caught up.  About ready for the next big adventure?

Sure!  Where we going, SPHP?

Thinking we’ll head up to the trailhead for Atlantic Peak (12,490 ft.) here in the Wind River Range.  We were going to climb it back in July, but the access road was closed due to road construction, remember?  The repairs were supposed to wrap up back on August 20th.  Ought to be open by now.

Sounds good!  Are we leaving right away?

Yeah, in just a few minutes.  Need to make a quick stop at Safeway to pick up some supplies before we leave town.

Heading SE out of Lander on Hwy 287/28, Lupe was just getting psyched up for some much anticipated barking at cows and horses, when SPHP made a sudden U-turn.

Forget something, SPHP?

No.  Did you see that big lighted sign next to the road, Loop?

Umm.  Can’t say that I did.  Wasn’t paying much attention to signs.  What about it?

It was unbelievable!  Gotta take another look.  Maybe I read it wrong?

Making another U-turn, SPHP drove slowly past the sign again.  No doubt about it.  Alternating with a “High Fire Danger” message was another one saying “Heavy snow, poor visibility, 9PM to 6PM Tuesday”.

“9PM to 6PM Tuesday”!  That must mean they’re expecting this storm to hit at 9PM on Monday, Loop.

Today is Monday, isn’t it, SPHP?

Yeah, it’s Labor Day, and Labor Day is always on a Monday.

How can that sign possibly be right, SPHP?  Not even 8 hours until 9PM right now, and it’s 77ºF!

I don’t know.  A blizzard tonight?  Seems impossible.  Maybe the highway department is just testing the sign?  It was 93ºF only yesterday!

Just keep going, SPHP.  Maybe another sign will say something different?

Loopster was right!  Along Hwy 28 on the way up into the SE end of the Wind River Range, more lighted signs appeared.  All bore exactly the same message, different from the first sign’s message.  Unfortunately, not much different.

So what now, SPHP?

What now, indeed?

Sheesh!  The Year of Perfect Vision strikes again!  Sure knows how to throw us one curve ball after another, Loopster!

Are we still going to the trailhead, SPHP?  Do you think it’s wise?

Umm, no.  That’s all we need, to wake up tomorrow morning in a blizzard already snowed in at 9,400 feet, miles from the highway.  Time for Plan B, Looper!  Or maybe it’s Plan C or D by now?

What’s Plan B, or C or D, or whatever?

I’ll let you know, as soon as I think of it, sweet puppy!

SPHP kept driving right over the Wind River Range.  81ºF at Farson, but more signs bearing the same message had been seen along the way.

OK, Loop, here’s the deal!

Do tell!  I’m all ears, SPHP!

Well, not entirely, but they are pretty big.  Apparently some freak storm is moving in tonight.  I mean, who has ever heard of a blizzard on Labor Day?  We’ve never even run into one clear up in Alaska this time of year.  Anyway, this goofy storm will clear the air out, and the temperature will likely rebound within a few days.  However, if it drops a lot of new snow as expected, might be very difficult to do anything among the high peaks until some big portion of it melts, which might easily take several more days.

Logical enough, SPHP.  So what do we do about it?

Plan B, which probably makes the most sense, is to cut and run right now.  Just call it good, and head for home.  We could be there late, late tonight!  No sense hanging around here for nearly a week waiting for a blizzard to hit, and then for the snow to melt.  At least we got lucky and got to have a grand time in the Beartooths for a few days.

Pathetic!  So, our Dingo Vacation is over already?

Afraid so.

What about Plans C & D, SPHP?

Plan D, I haven’t come up with yet.  Plan C is to head S trying to out run the storm.  Maybe it won’t get past the Uinta Range, or miss it to the E?  Don’t really have anything planned down there, but we could probably come up with a few peaks to climb somewhere in Utah.

I like Plan C better, SPHP!  Can we do that?

I suppose.  If that’s what you want.  Sort of a long shot, but who knows, it might work out fantastically!  Sometimes it pays to be flexible.

If you don’t mind then, SPHP, let’s go for it!  What have we got to lose?  It’s an adventure!  Onward!  G6, ho!

Well, there was all that money wasted on fuel to lose, if Plan B didn’t pan out, but SPHP complied.  The whole situation was surrealistic.  Driving S on Hwy 191, the G6 registered 86ºF.  Fleeing snow?  Tonight?  Absurd!  Ridiculous!  The only indicator of any big change in the weather was that it was getting windy.  And off to the N, (Yes, the N!), the formerly smoky sky was turning blue.

Even if Plan B proved futile, which remained to be seen, the scenic drive was fun!  After entering Utah, SPHP briefly dropped by the visitor center at the Flaming Gorge dam.  Personnel inside confirmed that the forecast was for 2 days of snow.  Might possibly be able to do something around here tomorrow morning before it hit.

A N wind was blowing during a brief stop at Flaming Gorge reservoir, Utah.

Tomorrow morning?  That wouldn’t be enough time to accomplish much.  Onward!  The drive S continued.

Not windy S of the Uintas!  At least, not yet.  Instead, it was back to the same old problem.  At Steinaker Reservoir, N of Vernal, the air was thick with smoke.  A sickly orange-pink sun glimmered through a choking haze, it’s light reflecting on the still large, but half-withered lake.

Not looking so good, is it, SPHP? Steinaker Reservoir, N of Vernal, Utah.

Vernal was the land of Mordor, suffocating in a dense blanket of smoke.  Off to the W, though, the sky was brighter, as if there was a definite edge to the cloud.  A check of the atlas.  Hmm.  There was a Gray Head Peak (9,496 ft.) and an Indian Head Peak (9,959 ft.) shown SW of Duchesne.  Maybe Lupe could climb one of them tomorrow?

Potentially promising!  Definitely less smoke, and not so stifling hot (68ºF), when SPHP parked the G6 for the night in the Ashley National Forest SW of Duchesne.

9-8-20, 7:17 AM, 32ºF, Hwy 191, Ashley National Forest – Lupe hopped out of the G6, ready for adventure.  Sleet, borne on a cold, raw breeze!  Must have just started, only a little clinging to the G6 so far.

Well, at least the smoke is gone!

Sorry, Lupe.

Not happening, is it, SPHP?

Nope.  No way we’re going to climb Gray Head or Indian Head today.  Gotta face the music, Loop.  We could keep going, but it doesn’t make any sense.  If we go far enough to escape the storm, we’ll just run into smoke.  Umpteen fires blazing away out in California, and we’d just be getting closer to them.

Seems the Year of Perfect Vision has us cornered, doesn’t it?

In a way, but our little fiascos are nothing compared to what others have had to deal with this year.  So shake it, off Lucky Dingo!  Your summer of 2020 adventures might be over and done with, but others will be heading your way soon enough.

That last part turned out to be true enough.  Having given up on this Dingo Vacation, just getting home proved to be an adventure in itself.

9-8-20, 10:38 AM, 32ºF, Hwy 40, NW Colorado – Vernal had been a balmy 44ºF this morning as SPHP drove through it, but snow had been visible on the foothills of the Uinta Range, and dark clouds hung low obscuring the mountains.  Maybe best not to go back that way!  As a result, SPHP had kept driving E.  However, conditions had rapidly deteriorated E of Dinosaur, Colorado.

Now Lupe stood out in the gale at a “Point of Interest” 4 miles W of the little town of Maybell.  What the point of interest might pertain to was a mystery.  Signs were all plastered in snow and ice.  The Year of Perfect Vision was putting an emphatic end to any notions of “Summer of 2020 Dingo Vacations”.  Substitute “winter” for “summer” and maybe Lupe would be on to something.

So much for the summer of 2020!

Craig, Colorado was in a low spot.  No snow, just rain.  Turning N, Hwy 13 climbed back into a winter wonderland.  Reaching Hwy 789, flashing lights on a sign near the Wyoming border indicated that I-80 was closed 50 miles ahead.  Through piles of slush, the G6 pressed on despite the warning, bucking a strong NW wind.  Snowing only lightly here, but 27ºF and the wind was building drifts.

I-80 was open at the junction with Hwy 789.  No problem getting onto it.  Heading E, only one lane was partially clear.  Crusty, half-frozen slush on the rest of it.  SPHP tailed several vehicles going E at 35 to 40 mph.  No traffic at all going W.  A lighted sign soon explained.  I-80 was closed at Sinclair, 16 miles ahead.

Heading E on I-80.

At Rawlins, Hwy 789/287 going N to Muddy Gap was closed, too.  With no routes open to the N or E, Lupe was stuck.  She really didn’t mind.  Half a foot of snow, 28ºF, and a frigid wind meant one thing.  About time for that cheapskate SPHP to break down and get the Carolina Dog a motel room.  Ahh, yes!  Pillows, blankets, and a big soft bed to stretch out on.  Now we’re talking!

9-9-20, 8:55 AM, 27ºF, Hwy 73 E of Baroil, Wyoming – Why on earth they had closed Hwy 789/287 yesterday was beyond SPHP.  A 10 or 12 mile long section of patches of snow and ice N of Rawlins, then the highway had been completely clear after that.  Snow in the fields, but the road was smooth and dry.

Loop was out of the G6 for a quick sniff.  Off to the NW stood an old friend, Whiskey Peak (9,225 ft.), decked out in white.  The American Dingo had been up there once, in June, 2017.  Fun to see it again.

Whiskey Peak from Hwy 73 E of Baroil. Photo looks NW.
Whiskey Peak with help from the telephoto lens.

The day warmed up.  In the 40’sºF!  Perhaps one last attempt to salvage something more from this Dingo Vacation?  Maybe Lupe could climb Mile High Hill (5,280 ft.)?  At MP 37.1 along Hwy 450 on the way to Newcastle, SPHP turned S on Lynch Road.  Good gravel for a mile to a junction with Piney Creek Road where the old Darlington School stood vacant, its last students having abandoned it countless years ago.

A pickup truck on Piney Creek Road was coming this way.  The driver turned out to be a friendly young guy who worked for the coal mine.  He’d never heard of Mile High Hill, but his phone showed the region it was in as BLM land.

However, 6 inches of snow were melting up in the Rochelle Hills, and he pronounced the remote dirt and gravel roads leading into the area a quagmire impassable to the G6.  His formerly white truck, covered in mud from wheels to roof, spoke eloquently in support of this assessment.

Oh, we’ll be back someday! Just you wait and see! Photo looks NW.

So that was it.  The last gasp, the final straw.  Smoke and blizzards!  The Year of Perfect Vision had put a screeching halt to Lupe’s summer of 2020 Dingo Vacations.  Might as well go home.  (End 3:41 PM, 54ºF)

Point of Interest, Hwy 40, 4 miles W of Maybell, Colorado, 9-8-20

Links:

Next Adventure                          Prior Adventure

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s Summer of 2020 Dingo Vacations to Wyoming, Utah & Montana Adventure IndexDingo Vacations Adventure Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.

Flaming Gorge, The Little Hole Trail by the Green River & Spirit Lake, Utah (8-26-15)

The skies were overcast on the first morning Lupe ever spent in the state of Utah.  They remained so all day.  After the hot drive across NW Colorado on the way to Utah the previous day, Lupe and SPHP were glad.  Day 18 of Lupe’s great Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation was beginning up in the Uinta Mountains under much more tolerable conditions.

Lupe’s day started out with a visit to the Flaming Gorge dam on the Green River.

Lupe at the Flaming Gorge reservoir near the dam.
Lupe near Flaming Gorge dam.
When full, the Flaming Gorge Reservoir extends 91 miles N of the dam well into Wyoming, and has over 42,000 acres of surface area.
When full, the Flaming Gorge Reservoir extends 91 miles N of the dam well into Wyoming, and has over 42,000 acres of surface area.
This Flaming Gorge Visitor Center is located right at the W end of the dam.
This Flaming Gorge Visitor Center is located right at the W end of the dam.

Near the E end of the dam, there is a winding paved access road down to the Green River below the dam.  SPHP had been there before, years ago, and taken a half day raft trip down the Green River to Little Hole about 6 miles downstream.  SPHP remembered the raft trip as a pleasant, easy float with only a few small rapids.  The Green River itself had been beautiful, cool and clear as it passed through the lower end of Red Canyon.  Juniper-dotted red cliffs rose as much as 1,000 feet above the river.

The 502 foot high Flaming Gorge Dam was built in 1969. It is actually built across Red Canyon, not Flaming Gorge, which is farther upstream and now submerged by the reservoir.
The 502 foot high Flaming Gorge Dam was built in 1969. It is actually built across Red Canyon, not Flaming Gorge, which is farther upstream and now submerged by the reservoir.
The Green River below Flaming Gorge dam.
The Green River below Flaming Gorge dam.

Lupe wasn’t going to get to go river rafting, but SPHP thought she would enjoy the Little Hole Trail alongside the Green River.  Things had changed since SPHP had been here before, though.  It used to be free to just drive on down to the boat launch next to the river.  Halfway down there is now a parking lot and a fee booth.  It costs $5.00 to park or go down to the river.

After parking the G6, Lupe and SPHP left the parking lot along the Little Hole Trail.  The first thing Lupe came to was a big sign with a bunch of bureaucratic regulations, a couple of which neither Lupe nor SPHP had ever encountered anywhere else before.

Sheesh, they sure were bureaucratic here in Utah! Not only was Lupe prohibited from throwing rocks, she couldn't pitch people or vehicles over the cliff either!
Sheesh, they sure were bureaucratic here in Utah. Not only was Lupe prohibited from throwing rocks, she couldn’t pitch people or vehicles over the cliff either!

The first short section of the Little Hole Trail wound its way down the steep hillside.  There was a lot of cactus around, so Lupe had to be careful.  Soon Lupe was down next to the Green River.

Lupe along the Little Hole Trail on the way down to the Green River.
Lupe reaches the Green River.

Lupe at the Green River, UT 8-26-15Once down to the river, Lupe and SPHP followed the Little Hole Trail downstream.  No one was rafting on the river, but there were lots of  boats with people fly fishing from them.

Lupe on the Little Hole Trail by the Green River.
Lupe on the Little Hole Trail by the Green River.

Lupe near the Green River, UT 8-26-15Green River below Flaming Gorge dam, UT 8-26-15Lupe explores the Little Hole Trail, UT 8-26-15Lupe didn’t follow the Little Hole Trail all the way to Little Hole.  She only went a couple of miles downstream at most.  SPHP thought it might be fun to take Lupe upstream to the boat launch area below Flaming Gorge Dam.

A wooden walkway allowed Lupe to head upstream far enough to reach the boat launch below Flaming Gorge dam.

A look up at Hwy 191 near the E end of Flaming Gorge dam.
A look up at Hwy 191 near the E end of Flaming Gorge dam.
Lupe liked watching these big birds circling near the dam.
Lupe liked watching these big birds circling near the dam.  (Click on the photo to enlarge it and see them better!)

Lupe waded in the shallow waters of the Green River near the boat launch.  She had a good drink.  She watched big birds circling up in the sky near the dam.  She watched fishermen getting ready to launch their boats.  Then she was ready to go.

Lupe seemed content with her visit to Flaming Gorge dam and the Green River below it.  Now it was time to complete her Flaming Gorge experience by taking a look at the reservoir from the cliffs above.  Lupe and SPHP left the Little Hole Trail.  After a picnic at a pond called West Green Lake, where there were ducks and a heron, Lupe arrived at the Red Canyon Visitor Center & Lookout.  Lupe couldn’t go in the visitor center, but she could go take a look at Flaming Gorge reservoir from the high cliffs at the lookout.

Lupe at the Red Canyon Lookout above Flaming Gorge reservoir.
Lupe at the Red Canyon Lookout above Flaming Gorge reservoir.
Looking upstream from the Red Canyon Lookout.
Looking upstream from the Red Canyon Lookout.

Looking downstream.
Looking downstream.

Flaming Gorge, UT 8-26-15The views of Red Canyon and the Flaming Gorge reservoir were impressive from way up on the high cliffs.  The cliff tops were interesting, too.  There were big cracks and deep fissures in the rocks.  It wasn’t hard to imagine some pretty big chunks of the cliff crashing to the bottom some day.

After seeing Red Canyon from above, Lupe was ready to move on.  Her next destination was Spirit Lake on the N side of the Uintas.  Lupe and SPHP took Hwy 44 to the Sheep Creek Geological Loop.  At the SW corner of the loop was a turn off onto gravel USFS Roads.  It was a fairly long drive, somewhere close to 20 miles from the pavement, to get to Spirit Lake.

Lupe reaches the N end of Spirit Lake in the Uinta Mountains.
Lupe reaches the N end of Spirit Lake in the Uinta Mountains.

Lupe and SPHP stopped first at the N end of Spirit Lake at a pullout near the outlet stream.  Lupe enjoyed getting out and exploring the area.  SPHP was more relaxed about letting her enjoy herself, too.  There weren’t any big cliffs around, just the lake, stream and the forest.

The sky grew darker and the wind started blowing.  Pretty soon it started to rain.  The wind hadn’t bothered Lupe, but Carolina Dogs know enough to come in out of the rain.  She hopped in the G6 and took a nap, while SPHP read.  After about half an hour, the rain quit.  Although the wind and rain were over, the sky was still leaden.  Before it got too late, SPHP thought it might be a good idea to check out Spirit Lake Lodge and the trailhead at the S end of the lake.

Spirit Lake Lodge at the S end of Spirit Lake in the Uinta Mountains. This lodge is at the end of long gravel roads to get here. It felt isolated and remote. Lupe and SPHP liked it.
Spirit Lake Lodge at the S end of Spirit Lake in the Uinta Mountains. This lodge is at the very end of long gravel roads to get here. It felt isolated and remote. Lupe and SPHP liked the area.  There is also a campground and a trailhead near by.

The Spirit Lake Lodge had a number of very rustic looking cabins.  Each cabin had its own name taken from an early western explorer.  Only one or two of the cabins appeared to be rented out for the night.  From outside, most of the cabins looked like they needed maintenance.   The lodge was open, though, and a sign said they were serving meals.

This cabin is named after John Wesley Powell, who gave Flaming Gorge its name after exploring it via the Green River in 1869. Other cabins were named after other explorers.
This cabin is named after John Wesley Powell, who gave Flaming Gorge its name after exploring it via the Green River in 1869. Other cabins were named after other explorers.

Lupe went down to check out the dock on Spirit Lake.  There were a few small boats available for rent there.

The dock at the S end of Spirit Lake.
The dock at the S end of Spirit Lake.

On the way back from the dock to the G6, a moose wandered through between the cabins, apparently quite at home here.  It headed out across a field in front of the Spirit Lake Lodge.  How cool is that?

A moose trots past Spirit Lake Lodge. This was only the 2nd moose Lupe had ever seen. She saw one once before in Canada in 2014.
A moose trots past Spirit Lake Lodge. This was only the 2nd moose Lupe had ever seen. She saw one once before in Canada in 2014.

Links:

Next Adventure                 Prior Adventure

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s 2015 Wyoming, Colorado & Utah Adventure IndexDingo Vacations Adventure Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.