Sunday, September 2, 2012

Waterton Lakes to Sandpoint, Idaho


We left Waterton Lakes Tuesday morning, stopping at Pearl’s Café for my cup of coffee (and Liam and Kai’s hot chocolate without and with whipped cream and the pastries looked good so we had one too and so it went with the cinnamon buns).  We entered the United States at the point where Canada’s Waterton Lakes National Park meets Glacier National Park in Montana. 

Glacier is one of the places to which we will return.  There were some obstacles to getting there.  We received our most thorough interrogation by a border patrol officer in all the multiple times we’ve crossed.  He wanted to know all of the places we’d been since entering Canada, who was in the car and how we were related to each other.  I immediately forgot.  Fortunately Eric didn’t. (I know what you're thinking: why not just give him a link to this blog?  If only I had thought of that).      

We thought we were home free once we entered Montana, until we encountered the next obstacle:



I decided to take the bull by the horns.  I rolled down my window and yelled “Excuse me!”  Heads turned, but the road remained cowful.  I thought to myself, “when in Rome…” and shouted “Moo!”  Nothing.  Eric rolled down his window and politely but firmly said “Mooooove!” and they ambled into the other lane.  Glacier here we come. 
       
People told us Glacier is stunning but they didn’t mention that it has a personality.  We entered the park on a beautiful sunny day and drove up and up and up to a lookout point over the lake.  Here’s the lake just after we got out of the car.  Serene, no?


We turned to look the other way toward the tops of the mountains.  Something had really pissed them off.


Then a wind blew down like a door slamming.  Liam hightailed it into the car before it whisked him over the edge of the lookout.  The wind threw parking lot gravel into my hair and against the car and tried to tear the bikes off the roof rack.  It picked up the lake water and scattered it across the surface like a giant Jackson Pollack.  I was afraid to open the car door because of the sand and debris beating sideways against the car. 

It took less than five minutes for the lake to go from serene and sleepy to wild and angry, its back up and hair standing on end.  



















We turned the car into the wind and drove up the road into the shelter of the trees just as the rain hit.  As we rounded a corner, a bear galloping down the mountain flashed across the road just in front of us and disappeared into the trees.  It turned its head to look at our oncoming car.  Fortunately, I had the camera in my hands.  It was on and pointing right toward the front window.  

It never occurred to me to use it. 

That’s all I have to say about Glacier, because it was so beautiful that we are going to come back and stay for a week.  We stopped once more to see one of the waterfalls, and Liam took this shot:

Then we drove and drove to Sandpoint, Idaho where Eric’s cousin Fred and his wife Tracy live, the lucky dogs.

-Juliet

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