Tuesday, October 30, 2012

all to ourselves

Well, they closed the campground; but they don't turn the electricity off until next Monday, so we're using our own internal tanks and water pump..... and enjoying the beautiful setting we have all to ourselves.  There are a few trailers left stored here for the winter; and the owner lives just down the road ... so he comes driving thru a couple of times a day to check on the place.
I just went out and took photos of us and our views:
The owner left us three trash cans.... to last a week .... ?

 
I saw a wild turkey hen down at the bottom of this field just before I took the photo.
 
 


This is our "side yard"
Since there's no one else here, we sometimes let the dogs off leash to run and play .... and roll in the grass and leaves.

We are pretty pleased with our temporary home..... as long as this 50-60 degree weather holds out.

Later, Marilyn

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Bangor, Maine

Well, this is starting to feel like home .... sort of.  That's a good thing .... since we have 10 more days to spend here.  Normally we would take off for some side trips and then return for Vera's appt. on the 5th; but since we have 'weather' predicted here (wind gusts 40-60 and lots of rain) we will just 'shelter in place'..... and pray there's no severe cold episodes.

Since I'm a little short on news of exciting adventures ...... I'll add a few additional pictures from down on Mount Desert Island, mostly in Acadia National Park.
These are from the top of Cadillac Mountain, with Bar Harbor below (with a couple of cruise ships in port).
You can see what I've been saying about the islands being solid rock, and shaped by the ancient glaciers.





These next two are Sand Beach in Acadia; and a view of the Penobscot River from an observation tower in Bucksport (which is at the head of a large bay a few miles inland).



These next three are of downtown area of Bangor.  The two houses (historical mansions) are representative of the French influence seen so much.  The last is a bad photo, but I wanted to show what the downtown 'flavor' is.


 


And last, a sample of the variation of color seen within a single tree.

Oh, I do have one more 'exciting' thing to report.  Our campground is about a half mile from the end of a runway at the Bangor airport.  The good news is Bangor International doesn't have a real heavy schedule of large commercial planes.  The bad news is the National Guard has a base there and shares the runway for its really big transports and refuelers (those big tankers that refuel the fighter planes in the air) that seem to run training shifts 24/7.  It literally wakes us up about 1:30 am every morning.  Other than that it is really quiet out here now that there are only two campers left in the park.

Later, Marilyn

Friday, October 26, 2012

Hurricane ?? !!

We will be here in the Bangor area until Nov. 6th .... the day after Vera's followup doctor visit.  We are getting pretty nervous about getting caught here in the first winter storm...... but who would have figured we'd get cornered by a hurricane !   I say "cornered" because we'd probably run inland if there were a way to. But there's not really:  no freeways running east/west ... only one freeway and it runs down south into the hurricane path, or north up to the Canadian border.  The roads heading west are so slow (small state roads running thru a jillion small towns), that we'd still be "running" this time next month. So we are where we are.  At this point it seems the storm will come inland just about where we planned to be about two weeks from now..... plan adjustments are in order.

We are in a very pretty campground, which is closing "at the end of the month".  I think after this weekend we will be the only ones left here.  But the water gets turned off this coming Monday, then the sewer gets shut down, then on the following Monday the electricity gets turned off ...... so they gave us some discounts, and we'll just dry camp and use our generator occasionally.  But we will have the whole place to ourselves.  Good thing the moon is getting fuller, or it could get a little dark around here.
We took the coach out today and filled up with diesel (for the generator), and propane (for the heater ... 30 to 40 degree nights).

Later, Marilyn

Monday, October 22, 2012

13 inches per hour

One of the interesting things we have been watching while we've been here on Mount Desert Island, is the tremendous height of the tides ..... 12 to 13 feet.  Right now in this phase of the moon it is running 13 feet every 12 hours.  Now, I'm not into the details of the tide charts nor do I claim to understand tides very much ...... but to me that translates into 13 inches per hour.  That's really a lot.   On our way into town, we see piers on mudflats, boats lying on the shore, etc,  ..... and on the way back from town that same pier is surrounded by water and the boats are floating.  The two pictures bbelow are taken from the roadside at approximately the same point.  It's just something I'm not used to seeing and it fascinates me.



Another thing that really fascinates me is the "footprint" of glaciers upon this area.  The historical information here says that this area was once covered by ice at least a mile thick ..... talk about a heavy load!  There is very little topsoil (one reason for the forests being shorter), and the granite rock of this area is seen everywhere.  The islands are all shaped (in profile) similarly due to the ice sheet sliding up over one end, and fracturing the opposite end into sharp cliffs as it moved on the downside.


Even the mountains on the big island have the same shape:


We did a short hike today .... 1 1/4 mile, but it was along a rocky shore trail .... so it was probably more than Vera should have done with her "tired" pacemaker .... but wow, was it invigorating. (Vera gets her pacemaker replaced Wednesday as an outpatient).

That's Vera on the trail.

Here's another picture of the carriage trail from "the carriage":


Tomorrow afternoon we will move the motorhome back up to Bangor, Maine (1 hour North). We will stay there, closer to the hospital, for several days after Vera's surgery. We will need to stay in this area until her followup visit in about 10 days ..... so we may come back down here to Mt. Desert Island for another week.  We love it here !!!!!

Oh, one more thing:  Mount Desert Island was named in 1604 by Champlain when he discovered and mapped it; but it was a long french phrase which meant "mountain void of vegetation". So the word "desert" is meant like the verb "to desert", or to leave deserted, (not the noun like something sweet to eat).  The french name was later shortened.

Later, Marilyn

Saturday, October 20, 2012

rolling fog

There is a fjord that almost bisects the island of Mount Desert .... it is called Somes Sound.  It is the only fjord on the eastern coast, and is quite beautiful. It is also the home of some very wealthy people, tucked on the mountainsides along the shores. We drove the shore today in the drizzle, which I think makes the leaves more colorful.  We stopped at the end of the sound and watched as a fog bank came rolling over the mountain and down the slope.  Look at the mountainside in the picture to see the weird "wave" shape.



We stopped at the Jordan Pond Teahouse to have popovers and lemonade .... and shop of course.


One half of the island is crisscrossed with 45 miles of single lane "carriage trails" for use by equestrians, horse drawn carriages, bicycles, hikers .... and crosscountry skiers.  In 1913 John D. Rockefeller, Jr. built the broken stone roads and bridges in an effort to keep the island from being overrun by automobiles.  He then donated 10,000 acres of parkland, including a lot of the most scenic shoreline.  The trail bridges cross over the roads, with rather limited, specific access. The craftsmanship of the bridges is quite good:


Like I said, the fog had 'rolled in'.
Speaking of rolling .... we stopped back by to listen to the rocks roll; and I've decided the closest thing it sounds like is somewhere between these two sounds: a.) a car driving on ice crusted snow on a quite, still morning .... amplified many times, or b.) a truck pulling a log over sharp crushed gravel ... amplified many times.     I love the sound.
Here is a typical road view of the interior of the park roads:


Vera is scheduled to go back to the Bangor hospital on Wednesday to have her pacemaker battery replaced ..... outpatient basis.   Which is too bad, because the view of the Penobscot River from her hospital room was great:



As you can see, I've finally gotten the hang of inserting these photos .... aren't you glad?
Later, Marilyn


Friday, October 19, 2012

rolling rocks

Vera is back with us .... she will go back Wednesday to have the battery replaced in her pacemaker.  We will probably be here in this area almost another week .... I know, we're pushing our luck with the winter weather!
Our campground here in Acadia National Park is about 1/4 mile from the lighthouse on the southernmost point of Mount Desert Island.  Right out here where the Atlantic waves give the land their best.
One of the most interesting phenomenon I've encountered is the sound of rolling rocks. After the surf crashes in, and as the water is receding; it carries the rocks back down the slope ... producing a rolling thunder sound .... I love it.   The rocks where I observed this were about the size of a cantalope .... more or less..  and really bring to reality the concept of erosion that I've known all my life.


 

The last two shots above are almost the same shot without surf, and then a moment later with surf. The rocks acutually move around.
Ok, so much for my geology lesson.
The next one is lobster boats bringing in their traps for the winter.


Everywhere you look you see preparations for winter:


Road color, and my substitute driver, Toby:


 
And one last shot of the beautiful surf:


Later, Marilyn

hiccup

little setback: Vera spent last nite in the ER in Bangor, Maine .... they think it's just an adjustment on the pacemaker that is needed.
The coach and Charlie and the dogs are still down in Acadia Park (about 1 hour south of here).
We laughed and said you can get whiplash going from standing on a rocky coast in the ocean spray ... to a hospital guerney in an hours time.  Oh well, it's all an adventure.

The ER doctor didn't think it is a serious problem, but they wanted the monitor information.
Later, Marilyn