Butterfly Lake, about a hundred yard from our campsite, 10,000 ft up in the Unitas Mountains in Northern Utah.
Interesting factoid: The Unitas are the only mountain range to run east to west in North America.
Around the lake were lots of blue dragonflies in mating flight, dipping to the water to lay eggs against the upcoming winter, and these blue flowers springing up in the marshy meadow around the lake.
We travel light, and snug. This time in a campground with large RVs and shaft toilets, water spigots and trash containers. Lots of people and loads of children are enjoying the campground too.Small streams wound through meadows that must have been spectacular with wildflowers a few weeks back.
The pine tips were glittered with crystal sap droplets. (Click on the picture to see that effect!)
Bernie taught me something: These bunched branches were the result of constant "trimming' of a branch by by-passers. A similar technique is used deliberately in bonsai work.
I love how tiny streams cut through meadows and how wild flowers follow the streams.
This was Ruth Lake...and it was the center of a hive of activity: a Boy Scout troop was whooping it up, fishing, swimming, throwing rocks, climbing trees, racing...you name it, it was being done, with the non-stop boasting and challenging and laughter that only boys create.
I thought to myself: What a pity it was that boys that age are ever cooped up in a classroom, when they are obviously so created for this sort of setting.
At that moment on of the boys in the lake shouted out: It is 15 degrees in here!
Hmmm...well, I guess some classroom time is in order, unless the boy was using Celsius in his temperature reporting. (That would be 59 degrees F. then. That was possible...but if it was 15F., then the water should have been rock hard.)
Back to those darling blue marsh flowers....The tracery inside is so lovely.
I left Bernie to fish, and climbed up above the lake a bit to a rocky flat.
Pockets of soil were sustaining small moss gardens.
Or maybe a golf course.
At 10 thousand feet up, the few butterflies I saw were going flap flap flap WHEEZE wheeze...flap...wheeze...Oh I need to rest for a minute...
It was pretty easy to get this shot. The butterfly just stayed right there the longest time.
It was interesting to follow a small stream and meadow up to the end of the timber line.We are still not sure what bird this is: A gray jay or a ?????
Dad? Any clues?
The bird and his buddies demanded we feed them. Thankfully we did have some peanuts in our trail mix or I don't know what would have happened.
B. actually only caught and kept one up at Ruth Lake. The others (and the ones he released) he caught later that day back at Butterfly Lake.
Seriously...is this not gorgeous? And there was entertainment too, as we watched a man and his father launch a canoe, and promptly tip over in the water, only to emerge covered with slime.
They cheerily called out "The second show will be held at 8 pm!"
Bernie dry fly fishing. Yes, he caught the fish on dry flies!
We enjoyed a fire in the cool evening air, and I read John Adams aloud by lantern.
Back home we knew it to be close to 100 degrees F.
Being high in the mountains is a great solution to August heat.
Come morning...trout for breakfast!Of course fishermen were fishing...
We pulled over a bit more down the road, and Bernie took a try at a bit more angling.
This was pretty wonderful too...
and this. I never get tired of photographing flowers.
More geology...the colors! It could be bark if the blue wasn't in it.