Friday, August 6, 2021

Salt Lake City, Utah

 Salt Lake City, Utah has been less inviting than what we thought it would be for or trip west. It's a big city with heavy traffic. We are at the Pony Express RV Resort on the northern edge of Salt Lake City, just off of I-15. Smoke from the forest fires is real thick today but temperature today was finally well below 100 degrees. Traveling to anything you want to see is an ordeal with traffic and distances being 75 to 100 miles or more. The Temple Square and Mormon Temple in downtown Salt Lake is not easily accessed. Heavy traffic with no parking in site and there is a ten foot wall around the entire area. We gave up on seeing it. We leave Saturday, heading east on I-80 and I-25 to Denver Colorado.

We did drive north today to the Golden Spike National Historic Park north of Brigham, Utah. That was a 90 mile drive, one way but worth the trip. The railroads met there on May 10, 1869 and drove the final "golden Spike" that linked the east and west. The site was busy with railroad construction workers and became a small town called Promontory, Utah. It was dismantled in 1869 when it was no longer needed. The park site where Promontory was located, north of the Salt Lake and 35 miles out in what looks like desert area. There is a lot of history here at this small historic park so I have a lot of photos.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promontory,_Utah

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_spike

An unexpected find was the large Northrup Grumman plant that tests (makes?) rocket engines, not warheads or satellites, for military and NASA. It's just north of the Golden Spike so we drove to it. The plant is spread over the hills in an area of a few miles in length. It appears to be empty, just a few vehicles here and there in the parking lots. There is the ATK Rocket Garden in front of the office building. Below the Golden Spike photos are a few photos of rocket engines.





These are very detailed replicas of the original locomotives that met at the site.

The original golden spike is now located at Stanford University.

These boys are talking about the "cow catchers" on the front of the engines.
The railroad called them the Pilot, designed to deflect objects on the track.


Union Pacific from the east.

The Central Pacific from the west.



Union Pacific locomotive was coal fired.

Central Pacific was wood fired.


The restored monument.

Buffalo were killed for sport by hunters that came by the new trains on the railroad.
The estimated 1000 buffalo left by the early 1900's were headed to extinction.




The ATK Rocket Garden



The two photos below are the shuttle reusable rocket



The Minuteman's were the missiles located in silos around the country,
one site we visited in South Dakota.


Small rocket motor used to steer larger satellites. 


The Patriot is the missile used to protect against other missile attacks,
used in Desert Storm and in Israel.




Monday, August 2, 2021

Last Day at Yellowstone

 We took sometime to see more of the caldera area at Yellowstone, along US-191. Old Faithful is only one of many geysers, mud pots and steam vents. The  Yellowstone supervolcano last erupted about 640,000 years ago. When it did, it left behind a caldera, a landform created by the inward collapse of a volcano's peak. These links will explain it. Our next stop will be Salt Lake City, Utah.

https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/volcano.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellowstone_Caldera


South Entrance going north on US-191


Scenery is great, ranging from mountains, canyons and open land.

The next photos are from the Firehole Lake area, a short drive east of US-191.
The Firehole River follows US-191 on the west side of the highway.

The red stains are from algae that lives in the hot water.

Boiling water.


Calcium carbonate covers the ground around the vents.


A lot of calcium carbonate. We just missed the eruption here.






More boiling water.


There are several water falls in Yellowstone.




















































Sunday, August 1, 2021

Old Faithful and Grand Tetons

 We left early this morning to see Old Faithful before the huge crowds arrived. It was about fifty miles from are RV. The crowds did arrive but some time after we arrived so parking was easy for us. We waited about an hour in the fifty degree weather for the eruption at about 8:45 am. It's not on an exact schedule. This was apparently a short eruption, some are as long as five minutes.


Waiting, waiting, waiting. Other geysers are in the background.


The growing crowd waiting, waiting, waiting.

The Lodge and there are several other buildings at Old Faithful.



The Grand Tetons are about 40 miles south on US-191. We drove as far as Colter Bay Village where we had a good view of the mountain range. The famous Jackson Hole is another 50 miles south but that was too far today. Maybe next time.... 


Jackson Lake


Colter Bay Village

The US-191 below Yellowstone is a memorial to Rockefeller since he
contributed a large sum of money to the area.

One more post is coming about our return trip to our RV.