11 October 2010

Rainbows on the Prairie

Photobucket

We took another autumn drive through the prairie yesterday, through SE Wyoming to Ft Laramie National Historic Site, then a revisit of Scottsbluff National Monument, followed by a rainy trip home via I-80 and -25. We had a fabulous time, despite or perhaps because, it was an unsettled and stormy day and so different from the dry, sunny days we generally seek out for our trips. Had the weather been much more severe, keeping us from getting out of the car at all or making driving conditions hazardous, things probably wouldn't have worked out so well. But our timing seemed to be magical all day, and we managed to do most of our driving between storms rather than through them. The picture above is of the day's first rainbow, taken in SE WY.


Photobucket

We stopped for gas and a drive-through breakfast in Cheyenne, and then slowed the car down enough to take this picture, a sign that was evidently preserved when an old Husky station was torn down (its now a mini-storage facility). I've seen the sign before when driving through here, and today I finally had the chance to take a picture.


Photobucket
scene along the road between Chugwater and Wheatland, WY


Photobucket
another photo from the same stretch of road, the clouds adding massive drama to some already breathtakingly beautiful scenery

Fort Laramie, WY

Our first stop was at the Ft Laramie National Historic Site. It was our second visit, our first was almost a year ago. 


Photobucket

Fort Laramie consists of buildings in various stages of rehabilitation, some with rooms recreating different periods of fort life. Some of the buildings are no more than stone foundations, some are mere wall remnants. It is an interesting place to walk around, and we spent a couple of hours doing just that on our last visit. The area surrounding the fort, with the convergence of the Laramie and the North Platte Rivers, is also very scenic.


Photobucket
a porch on one of the houses at the fort


Photobucket
a hardy zinnia in one of the flowerboxes in front of the porch. It and a couple of similarly-hardy snapdragons were the only color left in the plantings


Photobucket
vines growing up the porch railings are drying out


Photobucket
picture of a reflected Ellen taking a picture of Joe...


Photobucket
...who then returned the favor. I'd planned for a picture of one of my new outfits, but it was so windy I wound up sliding this coat on over it all, although one tie from the gray sweater is peeking out under the coat hem. For most of our time at the fort I had my hood up, it was that breezy. Not at all cold, but very very breezy.

We stopped for lunch at the Fort Laramie American Grill (FLAG), it was good, then we headed for:

Scottsbluff, NE

where we headed for the national monument, a return visit from just a few weeks ago and the subject of my previous post.
Photobucket

By the time we got to Scottsbluff, we could see that we were running into some storms, so we decided to see what we could see at the top of the bluff. Like our last visit, it was very windy on the top, but this time conditions seemed much more ominous. There were a couple of cars in the parking lot, but their occupants quickly scrambled off the trails and jumped in them as big, cold raindrops started to fall. We'd heard a few thunderclaps and seen a few lightning flashes on the drive up the hill, so it was way past time for these folks to be getting out of such an exposed situation. Anyway, they all took off down the hill, while we stayed in our car to watch the developing storm.


Photobucket

Rainy areas around the bluffs had a blue, misty covering that obscurred any ground details and had the appearance of a sea. At some points, it really looked like this bluff was surrounded by misty water. Then part of the mist would clear and houses, trees, etc, would be visible, looking a bit like a "shorline." A very cool effect!


Photobucket

The storm intensified pretty quickly. For a short while it was raining so hard we couldn't see much beyond the hood of the car--and just a couple of minutes earlier we had been able to see a couple of hundred miles distance...


Photobucket

The storm produced small hail, maybe half-pea sized. We could hear thunder all around us, but had no sense of directionality of the sound's origin. Thunder in 360, it was great. Not a lot of lightning, but some, mostly horizontal-appearing flashes. Several of them together, usually, with the thunderclaps also seeming to be grouped in waves. We enjoyed the storm.


Photobucket

Before long, the clouds moved away, the sun came out, and we were rewarded with another beautiful rainbow. The storm lowered the temperature about 10 degrees, and everything looked and smelled that wonderful after-the-rain fresh. So crisp and beautiful!

We watched the storm move away and others move closer. Too many thunderheads in the area to risk any hiking, so after a bit we headed down the hill and started for home. Here are some pictures I took from the road in the monument coming down from the bluff:
Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

We decided to head for Kimball NE and then take the interstates home. It was getting pretty stormy by then, and it seemed like our best bet. We drove through a few storms but nothing too intense, thankfully. One storm did turn into a nasty looking dark cloud as we watched it recede in the rearview mirror and then it produced an incredibly bright and vibrant rainbow (a double rainbow if you look closely), which turned out to be the final one we saw on the trip.


Photobucket
rainbow seen from I-80, east of Pine Bluffs, WY