Edmonton Day 4

So last night we checked into the charming Lobstick Lodge located in downtown Jasper (well, almost anything counts as downtown in Jasper), and went for a nice dinner at a nearby restaurant. A thunderstorm hit while we were eating, and even produced a couple of short power outages. Then it was run-to-the-car time and back to the hotel. Some Facetime with Joy and then it was bedtime. Our room didn’t have built-in A/C, but it DID have a table fan on top of the entertainment center. Guess it doesn’t typically get that hot, but it was that night.
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The next morning we went for breakfast & had an item to mail. But we nearly missed the post office, because it looks like a house. Built in 1939 and still operational:
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That business taken care of, we headed south to Athabasca Falls, which are like the Sooke Potholes on steroids. But at the Athabasca Falls, you do NOT want to get in the water, which is unbelievably powerful, and the drop, deadly:
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Did I mention it was powerful?
This little 5-petaled pink flower was common at the falls. Turns out its a wild rose, Alberta’s provincial flower:
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After that we drove to back to Jasper and had a short drive to the Jasper Tramway:
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It’s a 7-minute trip, and takes you from 1304 metres at the base to a final elevation of 2277 metres (7472 ft):
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When we reached the Upper Station, the temperature had dropped from 15c/59f to 0.5c/33f, and it was hailing:

According to the staff, hail is pretty unusual at the top of the lift.
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We decided to wait it out a bit in the restaurant with hot chocolate and food, and, sure enough, 15 minutes later, clear skies! But we just got our food, and so, in another 15 minutes, visibility was again zilch ๐Ÿ™‚ But it cleared up again and we could see a walking trail to the mountain summit through the window.
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I thought about the potential views from the increased elevation and it was more than I could resist! Hardave and Mavis decided to stay back, though, so I struck out on my own:
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A few hundred feet up from the Upper Station:
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A little further up:

Despite the ground being mostly piles of slate, a few plants still managed to thrive:
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The further up I went, the more the ground was composed of slate turned on its edge:
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As I reached what I thought was the peak, I peered over the edge, to find yet another peak, and a surprise!
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A closer look:
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Once at the snowman, I decided to just go to the top, after all it was so close, and why go this far and not? Well, it turned out not to be that simple:

So I didn’t make it to the top, but honestly, I don’t mind ๐Ÿ™‚
Not that going back down was all that much better:

Heh. Alright onto the next pic. I think it looks like a rock-igloo. I found a similarly sized rock to use as a tripod nearby, set the 10-second timer, ran back and jumped into position, and crossed my fingers that the wind didn’t knock the camera over (it didn’t):
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I was pretty confused when I saw this shot:
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…I didn’t remember seeing a hill like that. Well it turns out to be an optical illusion, and what appears to be a house at the top of a hill is actually the Upper Station about 600 feet below me. The foreground is actually at a slope of 20-25 degrees negative to the horizontal.
There were many inukshuk like these along the hiking route:
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Once I got back to the Upper Station, we had a brief opportunity to take a couple more photos with clear skies and look around the gift shop, then it was back down the tram and into the car to head home. But even heading home was not uneventful; we saw a couple white-tailed deer:
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We reached Edmonton around 8:30, had dinner at Swiss Chalet and were home by 10pm, in time to enjoy a nice sunset and reflect on another amazing day.
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Comments

6 responses to “Edmonton Day 4”

  1. You look to be on quite the trip, a very different world from Florida to say the least.

  2. Thanks for the blog entries, Krishen. The videos aren’t loading – the computer goes to a new page but don’t run.
    The pink flower with 5 petals looks like a wild rose.

  3. Cam: yeah that’s for sure! Nice to finally see what Edmonton and the surrounding area looks like. Not bad, what I saw was actually very beautiful, but the oil wells scattered in random places was a little depressing.
    Dad: Yep, I think I actually said that it was a wild rose.. unintended subliminal messaging ๐Ÿ™‚ Strange the videos won’t load for you, they load fine for me. Please start Safari and choose Help -> Installed Plug-ins and tell me the version number beside the heading “QuickTime Plug-in” (it’s about halfway down the page for me).

  4. It worked with Safari but not with Firefox.

  5. Miss Jane Avatar
    Miss Jane

    I had no idea there’s so much to see and do in Edmonton. I’ve only made one pit stop there ever! Thanks for sharing your travel experiences Kurry Spice!

  6. Dad: strange. works for me with Firefox 5.0 here.
    Miss Jane: You’re welcome! Glad you enjoyed it.

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