Category Archives: Photography

Deep History in Illinois

Illinois was first colonized by the French on the Mississippi River. The Kaskaskia area contains the secrets of that time period.

Grandpa’s hat traveling with us

Fort de Chartres provided a staging area for the French communities in the area: Prairie du Rocher and even Ste Genevieve in Missouri.

The rear gate
Torchless
The Turret

Fort Kaskaskia down the river didn’t fare as well.

Leading to the Ruins
Deterioration of the Walnuts
The tombstones of two hundred years
The Chester Bridge

The only way to get to the old city of Kaskaskia Illinois is to cross the Mississippi River and drive through Missouri. This is the only section of Illinois west of the Mississippi River.

Much Discord
A strange, strange tale

Kaskaskia was the most populous city when Illinois became a state, and it served as the capital for a few years.

1741 – French Colony

Ste. Genevieve, MO is the oldest continuously inhabited city in Missouri. Kaskaskia and Ste Genevieve are in the same area.

The newest National Park Land
Rich French Colonist
The Quick Lime Factory
The rerouting of the river

In 1881 a major flood wrecked the area and the Mississippi River took over the Kaskaskia river channel. This is how this section of Illinois ended up on the “wrong” side of the river. In the map, the Mississippi is in the background. But in 1881 the mighty Mississippi took over the river in the foreground.

Carry On

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The Ghost of GnomePa on the Lincoln Trail

In 2016, Grandma died.

In 2017, Grandpa took off with me to visit all the state parks in Illinois.  We left on our first trip two days after Christmas in the winter of that year. The temperature was -2 F. When we reached Starved Rock State Park, he pulled out his CAT orange stocking hat and immediately transformed into Gnomepa.  We only made it on two trips. In the fall of 2018, Gnomepa succumbed to illness.  His last words to me: “I wish we were at the Ice.”

The mission continues…

August 2020, during this journey my cousin and I visit parks #21-24 out of 72.  Fox Ridge, Eagle Creek, Wolf Creek, and Ramsey Lake State Park.  Plus we added on State Historic Sites: Lincoln Cabin, Monroe House, and Vandalia First State Capitol.

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GnomePa in the Ice

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Careful Communion in the Time of Covid

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On the Lincoln Trail in Charleston Illinois

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Illinois treats Lincoln Well

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Like Living in the 1850’s

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GnomePa would have said “This is Cool!”

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Eastern Illinois Pioneers

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A working farm

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White Oaks of Some Sort

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Grandpa loved the woods

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And trails to the river

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And Sandbars

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August was kind to us

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living creatures of all kinds

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The Monarch still rules

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Ramsey Lake

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Filed under American History, Photography, Travel, Uncategorized

Becoming a Voyageur

I ran into an off duty park ranger at the historic Kettle Falls Lodge in Voyageurs National Park. After we exchanged pleasantries, discovering we were both from a St Louis county in two different states, and joking about the St Louis Arch becoming a National Park, he asked, “Why did you come to up here? Let me guess – you have a list?” He continued to complain to me that the people of the lists just stop at the visitor centers and get “passport” stamps and never really see Voyageurs. He shook his head slowly.

Of course I have a list. This is my 50th National Park out of the current number of 62. My group had rented a boat and were seeing the park. I don’t think the ranger noticed. He may have just wanted to preach a bit. He finally sped away in his speedboat equipped with dual 150HP motors leaving us to slowly explore the park in our 50 HP powered, dinted pontoon boat. Pre-Cambrian rocks 2.8 Billion years old

Sunset in northern Minnesota. 48.6 degrees north latitude.

Time to “wake” up

Bracket Fungi

The Precambrian spine of North America

Voyageurs from St Louis MO to St Louis MN

Kettle Falls Beauty

Voyageurs met at this portage site for hundreds of years

The electric generator of the dam

The sideways attitude of Kettle Falls Bar

Tiny islands tiny ecosystems

The loons watching the people

Gulls stand like sentinels – no wake please

Ash River Visitor Center

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Filed under Art, National Parks, Photography, Travel

Images from the Plains

Some people say that Kansas, Oklahoma and Eastern Colorado are a bit boring, a bit flat, and a bit desolate.  I guess it depends on where you look…

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June 21, 2020 · 2:06 pm

Springtime Drizzle

The lightest of rain on the greyest of days didn’t bother the flowers at all.

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Filed under Art, Photography, Uncategorized

Off the Coast of California

Before the days of Sheltering in Place. February 16th, 2020.  From St. Louis to LAX – Three days to see National Park #47 for me.

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One thing to do in LA

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iconic?

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A leisurely stroll

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fantastic service

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From the Pier

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To the Channel Islands

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A Forest in the Sea

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Sea Urchin

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Time suspended

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Eternal Spring

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For another day

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The Spine of a National Park

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Sunset on the Pacific

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Thousands of Dolphins

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Arches and Spires

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Sunset in Ventura

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For the love of Dog…

Ruby the Protector and the Pistachio the Playmate

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The Ides of March

Beware the Ides of March.

This has always been a fun theme for my birthday.  But in 2020, the Covid-19 virus arrived.  People abandoned the streets, breweries, restaurants, museums, and coffee shops.  Schools closed.  Businesses died.

I was able to cross a few things off my travel lists:

  1. Finished up visiting all the breweries in St. Louis at Charleville.
  2. Went to the final of six National Parks in Missouri at the Ulysses Grant National Historic Site.
  3. Had coffee at the Mud House one final time, before it closed.  I hope it reopens after the plague.

After cancelling a trip to Sonoma Wine Country, we did the best we could to make up for it in 24 hours.  On March 16, 2020 – we were asked to stay inside.  Social Distance. Flatten the Curve.  We are homebound.

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What does the Future hold?

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Empty Cherokee Street

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The National Parks were empty

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White Haven abandoned

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Magic Mountain eerily similar

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The LAST coffee…

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The Mud House closed after our visit

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A final treat before quarantine

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Fright, Fight or Flight?

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Charleville empty

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Social Distancing

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Happy Birthday to Me

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Yosemite – the Mother of all National Parks

This was my 45th National Park to visit.  Yosemite has it all:  The soaring granite domes, roaring waterfalls (in July), majestic trees, and whitewater streams.

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A Dark Road We Travel Often in the USA

As I traveled across the country this summer, I made a point to seek out this concentration camp built for our American citizens in 1942.  The Citizens of Japanese descent were offered a safe place to “relocate” to protect them.  They gave up everything and complied.  When they got to the camp, they found out that they were prisoners.  The guard towers weren’t there to protect them from others; it was built to protect their country from them.  Such sadness.

 

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