Showing posts with label homestead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homestead. Show all posts

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Snowbound

 
 
 
 
I like this photo taken through our front window  because there's blue sky behind the icicles.
 
Which is nice.
 
Because it means, for now at least, it's not snowing.
 
Three feet of snow in three days and I've been housebound.
 
Here's a summary of my rural life this week.
 
I watched my car slowly disappear from view.
 
 
I watched the elk descend from the mountain,
through our homestead and cross the street.
(Yes, that is a For Sale sign in our yard.
We put our house on the market this week.
And no, we're not sure where we moving to. Yet.
But I'm hoping for someplace that doesn't snow in April.)
 
 
 
I watched my husband brave the elements and attempt to dig us out.
 
 
 
 
 I cooked.
 
 
 
 
 
 I baked.
 
 
 
 
 
I baked some more.
 
 
 
And I took photographs.
 
I think I need to make a trip to the store for more flour before it starts snowing again.
 
 
 
I'm sharing with


Saturday, April 13, 2013

This Week on Our Homestead - Mr. Coyote




“Coyotes move within a landscape of attentiveness. I have seen their eyes in the creosote bushes and among mesquite trees. They have watched me. And all the times that I saw no eyes, that I kept walking and never knew,
there were still coyotes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
"When I have seen them trot away,
when I have stepped from the floorboard of my truck, leaned on the door,
and watched them as they watched me
over their shoulders,
 
 
 
 
"I have been aware for that moment
of how much more there is.
Of how I have only seen only an instant
of a broad and rich life.”  

--Craig Child, The Animal Dialogues:
Uncommon Encounters in the Wild

 

 


Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Rocky Mountain High in Colorado

Loch Vale, RMNP


Today I'm joining Wanda Ann of "Memories By the Mile" and her "Tuesday Trivia - Colorado". 

It's been almost three years since I first moved to Estes Park, Colorado with my new husband, and I've been blogging about life at high altitude almost that long. One of the best things that has happened to me here is discovering the joy of photography. My husband gave me his spare camera after seeing the poor images I captured with my little cell phone (I didn't own an iphone), and I've been pointing and clicking ever since. Blogging gives me the opportunity to pair photography with my other creative outlet: writing. 

Since we live just 10 minutes from Rocky Mountain National Park, I thought I'd give you a tour of this magnificent place through my camera lens.
Endo Valley
Rocky Mountain National Park is visited annually by over 3 million people. And it's no wonder, when you consider the natural beauty of its 415 square miles.





An abundance of wildflowers and native plants can be seen in the park from early spring to the first snow. 


Wild Rose



Choke Cherry



Indian Paint Brush


Fireweed


Bush Sunflower

RMNP boasts over 300 miles of hiking trails. I've only been on a few of them, but each one has left me in awe of what God has created.





Bear Lake



Moraine Park


Endo Valley Picnic Area



Hallett's Peak



Sprague Lake


Alberta Falls
Upper Beaver Meadows


Fern Lake Trailhead




Fire Trail to Loch Vale



Meadow just off Old Fall River Road

Glacier Creek


Upper Beaver Meadows (Longs Peak in the distance)
Chasm Falls

Longs Peak is a well-known landmark in RMNP.
At 14,259 feet, Longs Peak is the highest peak in Rocky Mountain National Park and Boulder County, and the 15th highest peak in Colorado. People from all over the world come to climb it.


I never tire of photographing the wildlife inhabitants of Rocky Mountain National Park.


From the large


Bull Elk



Elk Cows at the Watering Hole




Bull Elk Resting in the Tundra



Bull Elk in Sprague Lake


Bull Moose
Buck



to the small



Doe and Fawn - Endo Valley




Coyote



Myna Bird



to the tiny


"Chippy"
and the tiniest.
Hoary Comma

Because we live in a protected area, I'm blessed to have wildlife photo ops in town and our homestead. 


Yard Bunny


Chillin' downtown



Uh-oh, there she is with her camera again.


Lazin' on a sunny afternoon.



Baby Elk don't care where they nurse. This is near downtown Estes.

Twin Fawns in our side yard.





Mama Doe and her twins crossing the street in front of our homestead.



Bull Elk downtown Estes.


Elk Cow in our side yard.


A herd of deer in our yard.


Gentle bunny in our yard.





Doe seen from my kitchen window.






Nuthatch in one of our ponderosa pines.




A hummer stopping for a treat.


A sweet fawn peeks around the back of our barn studio.


These sweethearts hung around our homestead all summer.


The deer especially can be very tame and easy to capture with my camera. But there are some animals I prefer to photograph from a very safe distance.


Driving through the canyon we spotted this bear trying to get into a trash bin. We pulled over to get some photographs. No humans were harmed in capturing this image. (Translated to "I never got out of the car.')


Well, that's it. Too many photos, maybe? I hope I didn't bore you. 

Enjoy your Tuesday, and stop by Memories by the Mile to see Wanda Ann's post on Colorado. She's got some great shots.



Linking to:
Memories by the Mile