Day 8 -
Friday, September 14th
On the way
to Glacier National Park
Brrrr.
And I thought I was cold last time I stayed here! No wonder why I haven’t seen
any mosquitoes around because this time, as Jerry and I woke up, we were in an
ice cave
– literally... The inside of the windows and the ceiling of the topper
were all frosted over with a good layer of ice. We could barely scrape the ice
off it had frozen over so hard. Jerry’s wrist watch, which included a barometer
and a thermometer, had during the night read somewhere around 27°F, which meant
that outside it had probably gotten as low or even
lower than 20°F. The Cat’s Meow, a 20°F synthetic sleepingbag,
had not kept me quite warm enough during the night, so now we were off in
search of a warm spot to cook some hot breakfast!
Jerry and I stopped by
Lake Louise
early in
the morning. We were some of the first visitors there – even before the sun! It
was cold there so we did not stay too long. Next lake was Lake Morraine.
It was fun to visit there again. Jerry and I crawled on top of the huge pile of
boulders and rocks that had accumulated at the end of the lake. Jerry with his
black pants and blue jacket was all camouflaged against the blue and grey toned
rocks – “Find Henry”.
What a beautiful visit it had been here in Banff Nat. Park. I am so sad to leave, as I will
miss the mountains here and all the exciting nature, well, I guess that will
just have to be a good excuse to come back again another time.
On our way to the Canadian/US border we stopped by our favorite (and only one)
in fort McLeod, where we had good pizza and
beer.
How many miles can we go on yellow? The little yellow light indicating low fuel
levels had been on for a while now, enough to where I started to get a little
antsy out here among all the
cow pastures and hay fields.
“Don’t worry” said
Jerry, we can go at least 60 miles on that light. What really worried me about
that statement was, we were now past the point where
the crows had turned around! Sitting very still in my seat I quietly counted
the miles, 20, 30, 40, now starting to sweat a little, 50, go slow Jerry, it
will give us better gas miles, 60 miles,
here is the border but still no gas
station.
At least we reached the border. Today was the 14th and tomorrow my
passport would have expired on the 15th. The border patrol officer
was really friendly – and I thought really nice especially as he let me back
into the US,
contrary to what Jerry had hoped for! Only one thing better than being back
home in the US
was –a gas station one mile down the road. We pulled, in filled up, and
breathed out again, no longer worried about the little yellow fuel light. I
wouldn’t mind if I never had to see that light again on this trip.
It was only 18:30 so we decided to go on to Cuttbank, MT.
It was late before we drove through the town. There was no safe place to pull
over and spend the night, so we looked around for a campground. A sign showing
an RV park was all we could find. One sign after the other led us deeper into
the neighborhoods, this can’t be right we both thought, then through an area
that looked more like an industrial area, and right behind a huge building we
find this little RV park. A tiny building was the office and I believe the
Teepee was the bathroom. Everything was closed so we just crawled in our
sleeping bags and called it a day.