Post a travel photo

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Doug_Tipple
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Post a travel photo

Post by Doug_Tipple »

I have just returned from a vacation in the American southwest. Even though I had lived in the Arizona desert for 30 years, I have been away too long, so now it no longer feels like home. I was very happy to return to the green woods and fields of Indiana. Here are two travel photos taken near Tucson, Arizona.

In the first photo I am resting on a metamorphic gneiss in Finger Rock Canyon. I had forgotten how steep and rocky the trail is. I was thinking to myself that I am getting too old for this.

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The second photo is was taken in the same area of the Santa Catalina Mts. near Tucson. The saguaro cactus were in bloom.

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emmline
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Post by emmline »

Those are nice Doug. I'm planning to never be too old for rock scrambling.
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Post by djm »

Gneiss pics. I am planning to never go any place hot.

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I'd rather be atop the foothills than beneath them.
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Whistlin'Dixie
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Post by Whistlin'Dixie »

Great pictures Doug. I love when the desert is blooming! And how about the sky at night?!?!? Wonderful!

I lived up in Flagstaff for awhile, back before Sedona got "trendy"...
It was wonderful then.

But I like where I live now, too. :party:

M
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Redwolf
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Post by Redwolf »

Nice! I love the desert. Arizona was my favorite state, hands down, both times we traveled across the country.

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Re: Post a travel photo

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emmline
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Post by emmline »

What does that cactus feel like to climb?
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Post by Tyghress »

Image

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Post by chrisoff »

From a trip to Greece last year:

View from the mountain in the middle of Kos looking over Tingaki (horrible resort we stayed in) towards Turkey
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Looking into the crater of a volcano on a nearby island
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Standing in the very eggy smelling crater!
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Post by Jack »

Those are super, Doug!

I am unable to travel much anymore because I'm too sick, but about 10 years ago, as a kid, I went to the Detroit Zoo. That's kind of traveling. And I snapped a picture of penguins behind the glass. One of the penguins is just hitting the water and the others are standing around looking big and dumb.

The thing that's made me keep the picture all these years is that there is a strange person in the picture, on the left side, who I have absolutely no idea who he/she is.

I don't have a scanner, but I took a digital picture of the picture:

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I will never know who that person is, but I will always have his/her face in my photo album with penguins. :P Normally with travel pictures, you look at them to remember the things you did and saw while you were traveling. But every time I see this one I don't think about the penguins at all, but about the strange person I captured.
emmline wrote:What does that cactus feel like to climb?
Homoerotic? Just a guess. :P :lol:
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Doug_Tipple
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Post by Doug_Tipple »

emmline wrote:What does that cactus feel like to climb?
Photos may lie. Believe me, you don't climb a saguaro cactus. Birds and lizards can do it, though.
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Post by jim stone »

I spent a year in Tucson. What a swell place.
Those photos sure bring it back. Thanks.
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Post by Walden »

I traveled, I don't know, maybe a mile, to take this cactus picture.

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Post by herbivore12 »

Nice desert pics. I miss the spring bloom inthe Mojave, which I used to see each year when I lived in southern California. It's like a Persian carpet is laid over the world there for a little while.

Here are a couple lousy pictures from a trip in northern California; at least they'll serve as an antidote to all the dry places pictured above:

A fallen tree in Fern Canyon. An amazing place: the canyon is very narrow, and the walls are vertical, and completely covered in large ferns. There are huge-leaved bog plants throughout; it feels very prehistoric. You keep expecting to meet a tyrannosaur:

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And that's me in the canyon. A little while after tis pic was taken, I noticed several very fresh sets of bear prints on the ground, and fresh scat, heading in the same direction I was walking. The canyon dead ends at a vertical wall, so I was a bit worried about meeting the bear(s) on their way out, as I was heading in . . .:

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And some elk I crept up on for a photo. That's the Pacific Ocean in the background; I was lurking in brush just outside of the redwood forest behind me:

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Post by brewerpaul »

My favorite Adirondack mountain:

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Giant Mountain, in Keene Valley. It's about a three mile hike to the summit, with a vertical climb of about 3000 ft. The Ridge Trail is the way to go-- you get your first view after about 1/2 mile and get increasingly better ones as the hike progresses. Giant is the Easternmost of the major peaks, so when you sit on the summit and look West the entire 6 million acre park is laid out before you.
Although they look vertical in this photo, most of the slides are actually tame enough to climb without ropes-- I've done two of them.
I'd be glad to take anyone on a guided tour...
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