Autumn Loop at Redbud Valley

November 17, 2013

Wendy and I enjoyed a 1.3 mile stroll at Redbud Valley and then walked at Woodward Park on a warm autumn day.

Redbud Valley (click image for slideshow)

Depth of Field

Tulsa Skyline from Woodward Park

 

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Rough Canyon Loop at Robbers Cave

November 9, 2013

Rough Canyon Trail Loop (click image for slideshow)

Tumbling leaves are dispersing peak autumn colors, so Wendy and I joined Betty and John Henderson for a drive back to Kiamichi Country, the southeastern corner of Oklahoma known as Little Dixie, to hike 3.2 miles around the Rough Canyon Loop at Robbers Cave State Park.

Our latest day trip

My car is out of the shop with a new wheel bearing, but the tires are cupped. I had one wheel rebalanced awhile back and the car has a fresh alignment, but on my next tire rotation I’ll ask them to inspect the shocks and struts. Meanwhile, the crankshaft on Wendy’s car has a failing harmonic balancer. So we were grateful to John for driving Betty’s 2012 Camry on our expedition.

We picked up sandwiches at a QuikTrip, with me delightfully snacking on a warm soft cinnamon pretzel at the Generation 3 store we visited. I don’t particularly like the layout of those new stores, but they do have those pretzels! We reached the trailhead at Robbers Cave itself a bit after noon and headed west towards Rough Canyon.

Wendy delighted in the multicolored leaves on many trees as we walked on the step-like tree roots past Fourche Maline creek (pronounced “foosh-ma-lean” and referring to the “Treacherous Fork” of the Poteau River). A shower of red leaves across the trail was a welcome sight. We climbed the hillside past rock ledges and fallen trees, the trail decorated in autumn colors that were quite beautiful and painterly.

Wendy and the Hendersons paid attention to the various mushrooms along the way, with Wendy searching for puffballs; some of the larger toadstools attracted my gaze. We reached Rough Canyon and took pictures of each other at the sign, with Betty having her usual fun. We then turned north to follow the eastern edge of the rocky stream, with autumn colors nestled amidst evergreens.

Rough Canyon colors

I always love to bushwhack along the rocky ledges in the creek, and found a spot where we could ease our way down to the pools and ledges for lunch. Wendy and I sprawled out on a soft mossy ledge while the Hendersons found a convenient edge of ledge for sitting. After enjoying my half of a delicious Turkey and Swiss on Berry Wheat sandwich, I looked at the leaves in the water streaming across the ledges while John located a side spring, Betty delighted in a large crawdad and fed the fish in a large pool, and Wendy celebrated the peaceful surroundings.

Leafy pools

After that lovely break, we set off eastward toward Lost Lake. Even the trail surface is quite picturesque at this time of year, with beauty underfoot. We saw many more fungi along the way and the cameras were out in full force to capture the autumn beauty at Lost Lake. Wendy sat on the dam to capture the reflections across the water, while I took my shots from the lakeside.

Following the “People Trail”

We saw more enormous toadstools as we wound our way back to the cave area, including a coral mushroom spotted and shot by sharp-eyed Wendy, who also found a tiny tree frog, so small my camera couldn’t grab focus before he hopped away. We took the “People Trail” to the cave area, where Wendy and Betty relaxed while I took John up to the cave, which he had not visited previously.

The rocky hilly trail made the 3.2 mile trek seem longer and we were grateful when John drove us to Giacomo’s in McAlester for an Italian feast and interrupted the drive home with a stop for ice cream in Okmulgee. I am very glad we made the long journey south for more Kiamichi Country colors, but after two long day trips on consecutive Saturdays I think my next day hike will be much closer to home.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Hiking and Vikings

November 2, 2013

Spider at the Manor

For Halloween this week Mother Nature gave me a treat, or what some might view as a trick, in the form of a large orb-weaver spider, with a commensurately impressive web. The arachnid built its trap from ground to gutter in front of the garage door at Meador Manor, but failed to ensnare any costumed children.

Many trees around here are blazing autumn colors, so Wendy and I planned to drive south on Saturday to the Ouachitas in quest of fall foliage. Princess the Camry has been rumbling and shaking more than even her 12 years of use and 210,000 miles of wear should warrant. I suspected a bad wheel bearing, so I took her into a local repair shop on Wednesday, knowing that most of its repairs take an extra day or two for parts. But it took three days for the mechanic to clear his backlog and confirm a dry bearing on the driver’s side rear wheel. Sure enough, parts have to be ordered and won’t arrive until late Monday. So I won’t get the car back until Tuesday, a week after it went into the shop.

Wendy has graciously been transporting me to and from school and we used her car, Xanadu the Impala, for our journey south. Having been disappointed on multiple occasions by haze or fog and late autumn colors on the Talimena Skyline Drive, I made her first visit to the Heavener Runestone the focus of our day.

Our day trip to the Ouachitas (click image for slideshow)

We had a lovely breakfast at Eggbert’s and headed south in Xanadu towards Poteau for lunch. When Wendy spied a sign about the nearby Spiro Mounds, she expressed her interest in visiting the only prehistoric, Native American archaeological site in Oklahoma open to the public. As on my first visit a few years back, she found the mounds underwhelming; they had to be reconstructed after severe looting in the 1930s and later scientific digs sent off the remaining artifacts, so Wendy wants to someday visit Norman’s Sam Noble Museum to see artifacts which were taken from the site by archaeologists from the University of Oklahoma in their excavations between 1936 and 1941.

Autumn through the roof

But we had a nice walk around the big burial mound and nearby took some shots of the decaying example of the kind of leader house which was built atop many of the dozen mounds back when this was a thriving Mississippian-culture center 500 to 1,200 years ago. In contrast to the recent reconstructions of a Chickasaw village we saw earlier this month at Sulphur, the Spiro house’s thatch roof is in tatters, exposing the beams, and the walls have been put to use by insects, but Wendy still composed a nice view of autumn leaves through the rafters.

We had a tasty pizza at Mazzio’s in Poteau and then drove south to Heavener to tramp 1.7 miles about the very hilly terrain of the former state park. The state closed the park in 2011 due to budget cuts, but thankfully the citizens of Heavener are keeping it open. I agree with skeptics who think it was carved in the 19th century, but the park is a beautiful area to explore, with challenging trail terrain.

As we walked along the stone trail down to the runestone, Wendy wondered if the extensive stone railing and walkway were another product of the CCC. I presumed it was, but it turns out the land wasn’t donated to the state until 1965 and opened as a park in 1970. The main stone trail and steps are showing their age but are still in good shape overall.

On our way down to the building protecting the large carved stone, we saw Callicarpa, which are appropriately called Beautyberries. After viewing the runes, I took a shot of Wendy in front of the adjacent bluff and waterfall, which we would explore later.

The Sickener

We ascended to the perilously steep nature trail, which has an appropriately tilted sign at the other end. The trail surrounding the runestone had oodles of mushrooms of various types all along its length. Wendy was adept at spotting them, from Russula emetica (The Sickener!) to a group of fungi with an accompanying ‘pede — I’m not adept enough to distinguish a millipede from a centipede. I spotted serrated ‘shrooms as we trekked up and down the steep hillsides and across dry streams with tumbled slabs of stone.

We climbed the steep grade to the other end of the nature trail at the visitor center, where I posed out on a rock projection, and then walked along the road uphill to what I knew was a bluff providing westward vistas. I located the overgrown trail on the west side of the road which led over to and along the bluff; this is a lovely walk with great views of the rocky bluff, its lichens, and great views, so it is a pity the trail is not being maintained.

The Bluff

We reached the mowed overlook area with its winding rock walls and enjoyed the panorama, wildflowers of various sorts, and the trees scattered and leaning about the park. I led us down and across the road to find the trail leading back to the runestone. Along the way Wendy spotted a large golden fungus growing in a stump.

Back at the runestone, Wendy walked over to examine the waterfall pool while I shot the stream and we poked around the eroding shale bluff with its fallen blue and gray stones and cracked surface, with Wendy composing a nice shot of leaves amidst the damp stone. We ascended the steps toward a final blaze of autumn color to return to the car.

We then drove south to follow the Talimena Skyline Drive westward against the sun, but haze obscured the views and many of the trees had not yet turned. This made the drive slinking along the ridge more fun than the panoramas. Dinner at Krebs/McAlester was a bust, with such slow service at Isle of Capri that we left, only to find Pete’s Place too crowded and Patron Mexican Grill rather dirty. Our very late return to Bartlesville was ameliorated by the shift out of Daylight Savings Time, giving us back an hour.

Talimena Skyline Drive

We had a lot of fun at Heavener and hopefully can make it down to the Ouachitas later this fall for more hiking…without Vikings.

Click here for a slideshow from this day trip

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Lewis and Clark at Woolaroc

October 27, 2013

A Nice Rack at Woolaroc (click image for slideshow)

I last visited Woolaroc in December 2010 and was lured back out there today by the Lewis & Clark Corps of Discovery exhibition of 100 paintings by Charles Fritz, 14 paintings by Michael Haynes and 50 bronze sculptures by Richard Greeves. I was also interested in seeing renovations at the museum which have upgraded the lighting in several rooms. My photographs from the earlier visit showed how the old-fashioned lamps affixed above each large painting lit them unevenly; new track lighting on the ceilings has helped, although there are still some shadows.

I tagged along with John and Betty Henderson for the visit. On the drive in I saw live buffalo tongue and some stages of bison development.  Inside I enjoyed Joe Beeler‘s sculptures Whiskey Guard and Voices in the Wind, along with his painting Teton Sioux Hunting Camp.

I had a better view of William Robinson Leigh‘s great paintings than ever before, thanks to relocations and improved lighting: Pocahontas, Visions of Yesterday, Custer’s Last Stand, Westward Ho, and The Lookout. I neglected to get a shot of his Navajo Fire Dance, but I did get shots of two works by Thomas Moran, my favorite painter of landscapes: Ruins of an Old Church, Cuernavacaand Grand Canyon.

Other paintings from the regular collections which I captured were Brothers by Nancy GlazierGreat Distance by James G. SwinnertonEl Capitan by James FetherolfMount Corcoran, Southern Sierra, Nevada by Albert BierstadtWest Wind by Wilson Hurley, Eanger Irving Couse‘s similar paintings of Mending the Navajo Blanket and of the same model holding a figurine, Governor of Santa Clara by Henry C. Balink, and The Rabbit Hunt by Bert Geer Phillips.

Crossing the Most Terrible Mountains We Ever Beheld by Charles Fritz

I found Charles Fritz’s paintings in the Lewis & Clark exhibit somewhat uneven in their facial accuracy, but several of his paintings were striking, including Cordelling the Red Pirogue, White Cliffs of the Missouri, which is an adaptation of other paintings on display of the white cliffs.  I also liked The Arrival of Captain Lewis at the Great Falls of the Missouri of the scenery in Montana and his staging of Crossing the Most Terrible Mountains We Ever Beheld of Idaho’s Bitterroot Mountains. The most striking sculpture by Richard Greeves was Bird Woman of Sacajawea, with Jean Baptiste riding on a cradle board on her back.

Bird Woman by Richard Greeves

Back outside the museum entrance, we found many ladybugs crawling and flying around the colorful mosaics. We walked past the pond to the lodge to enjoy the view of Clyde Lake. On the drive out, we admired a nice rack of antlers. It was a nice way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Click here for a slideshow from this visit to Woolaroc

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Elk River Trail West

October 26, 2013

Elk River (click image for slideshow)

Wendy and I ventured along the Pathfinder Parkway today to locate the plank I bought for the pedestrian bridge over the Caney River. Then we drove an hour north to hike 5 miles round-trip from the west end of the Elk River Trail.

Wendy posed by one of the rock formations to give it scale, and we enjoyed trekking past the various rock walls and above and below the north bluff. A boat passed by along the river and there were some early autumn colors on display. I’m looking forward to more autumn colors on forthcoming hikes.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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