Of course, if you have not heard, it’s been extremely dry across most of the West Coast, including Glacier. And accordingly, wild fires have been a problem. And when there is a temperature inversion, all that smoke can get trapped in the valleys, as it did one day for us. Here is a shot from around 3:30 PM from the Many Glacier Lodge.
Seeing wildlife is another of the reasons to go to Glacier,
and we saw quite a bit – deer, moose, antelope, mountain sheep, etc. But somehow, we missed the bears. We knew they were around, as you have the
park’s standard reminder.
And then, the rangers occasionally post a more urgent
notice.
And finally, when the mixture of bears and hikers reaches a
critical mass, you get trail closures.
Interestingly, we had been at the location described on this sign, or
very close to it, about the same time it was posted. But luckily (or unluckily, depending on your
perspective), we saw no bears on the trail.
As for me taking this trip to recharge my creative batteries
– well no, that was not really the case.
It was just a bit of vacation. And
actually, I tended to take the idle moments on this trip – on the train, on our
balcony in the evenings, even in a city park in Cut Bank, Montana – to write on
book 2. But when you are writing a blog
about writing, and you took 10 days off for some R&R, you have the give a
blog post title that fits the theme. Right?
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