Sunday, June 22, 2025

Happy Summer!


 Happy Summer!
 
Every season seems to pass too quickly, doesn't it?

Here is some springtime catch-up on what has been happening with us...


We had a very rainy, cool spring, so everything is very green in our part of Colorado right now.



Our four grandchildren kept us busy all spring with many activities--concerts, dance recitals, an art show, continuation from middle school to high school, two birthdays, and many Lacrosse games



Our spring garden bloomed beautifully, and right on schedule, my June roses bloomed!


We were visited by local wildlife, but thankfully, no bears, mountain lions, or moose have appeared as yet!


We all had fun attending two Colorado Rockies baseball games at Coors Field when they hosted the New York Yankees and the New York Mets!


I was a fortunate winner of this wonderful America's Test Kitchen cookbook called Umma--a Korean Mom's Kitchen Wisdom and 100 Family Recipes from The Book Club Cook Book website this spring.


I've enjoyed making many delicious recipes from the cookbook and have many more earmarked to try in the future!



So, what is ahead for us this summer?

 Hopefully, many walks along our local trails with wildflowers growing along the way, and hot summer days cooling off at our community pool. We are also continuing my husband's cardiac rehabilitation routine at our community gym three days a week. Riding the stationary bike while watching beautiful scenery roll by on the screen is almost as good as an actual bike ride!

What are your summer plans? 

Please let me know in the comments!


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Sunday, June 8, 2025

North Park Colorado and the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge



Last week, I blogged about our drive west from the Fort Collins, Colorado area along the Cache la Poudre River Scenic Byway into North Park--click here to read that post.
North Park is a high, sparsely populated basin (approximately 8,800 feet (2,700 m) in elevation) in the Rocky Mountains in north central Colorado
It is an expansive valley that stretches from north-central Colorado into Wyoming. Weighing in at more than a million acres that are 65% public land, North Park’s lakes, rivers, and wetlands draw all manner of wildlife, and the area features some of the most remote and sparsely populated wilderness terrains in the state.



North Park is comprised of a vast basin that’s fed by the North Platte, Michigan, Illinois, and Canadian Rivers, and is flanked by the Park Range to the west, the Medicine Bow Mountains, and the Never Summer Mountains to the east.




With over 71,000 acres to explore, State Forest State Park offers a diverse landscape of forest, majestic peaks, and alpine lakes, all brimming with wildlife. Stretching from the western slope of the Medicine Bow Mountains to the northern end of the Never Summer Mountain Range, the park offers year-round activities such as snowmobiling, geocaching, birding, hunting, horseback riding, and many more in one of the most stunning natural settings in the state.


“Moose is our claim to fame,” reads a line from State Forest State Park’s website. North Park is hailed as the Moose Viewing Capital of Colorado. The site goes on to say that an average of 600 moose are observed in North Park annually. 
We did not see any moose during our drive, but we were still excited about the female moose and her yearling calf we viewed in Rocky Mountain National Park the day before--click here-- to read that post.


As we drove along ....


...we soon passed by the small town of Walden.


There were also many cattle ranches in this area.



South of Walden, we stopped at an overlook for the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge sits at elevations as high as 8,700 feet, making it the highest animal refuge in the National Wildlife Refuge System in the continental US. The refuge’s habitats, which include irrigated meadows, riparian, sagebrush uplands, wetlands, and mixed conifer and aspen forests, host an abundance of diverse wildlife species.


The overlook view was magnificent!


The winding blue Illinois River fills the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge, traveling through sagebrush and native grasses.


Please click on the photo to enlarge it to read the information on the placard.

The refuge was established in 1967 to furnish waterfowl with a suitable place to nest and rear their young. It was created in part to offset losses of nesting habitat in the prairie wetland region of the Midwest.



Please click on the photo above to read this refuge exhibit, one of many placards on site, to read how the North Park basin was formed 45 million years ago! 



The top wall of the overlook also had many informational plaques to read.



Please click to enlarge the photo.

The refuge is also home to elk, beaver, pronghorn, and porcupine.
To protect the fragile wildlife habitats it hosts, the refuge consistently closes much of the area to visitors, but a 6-mile self-guided auto route is open for year-round visitor activities and stunning scenic overlooks. We wished we had time to explore more, but vowed to return one day to see more of the refuge and North Park.


We loved seeing North Park and its natural ruggedness.

As we drove home, we passed the town of Granby and saw the headwaters of the Colorado River, and also sadly, the remains of the 2020 East Troublesome Wildfirethe second-largest wildfire in the history of Colorado.


Next, we passed through the ski town of Winter Parkwhere the slopes were still full of snow during our trip at the end of April.


We could have driven an hour home directly from Fort Collins, but taking the Cache La Poudre to North Park Scenic Byway-- Highway 14--was well worth the extra three-hour drive, as we passed through so many wonderful sights. 
I hope you enjoyed seeing them in my blog posts over the past few weeks!