Blog
Epiphany
Exploration of Alberta, Canada’s Rockies and largest city Calgary.
Seven minute read:
The Canadian Rockies
Lake and waterfall galore
Wildlife
The journey begins with a series of fortunate events
299 Miles: Glacier to Calgary
Kalispell, Montana | 48°18'27.0"N 114°15'12.2"W
The few lights of the border crossing at Roosville disappeared in the mirror of our 4Runner rental just after midnight. Since landing at FCA – Glacier International Airport in Kalispell Montana - one hour before and traversing into Alberta, CA we focused on finding somewhere to stay.
Surprise number 1.
Thirty minutes earlier – before complete darkness occurred about 11 pm - I had seen a moose with her two calves grazing on the roadside. I had never seen moose before, but it was on the bucket list. My expectations of seeing one over the next 10 days had been both sanguine and restrained, so I left feeling energized. This was a positive omen for our trip.
Surprise number 2.
At 1 am, while passing through the village of Sparwood, we saw hotspots of forest fire on the east facing slopes to our left, about a kilometer away. Not raging infernos as I had imagined from the regular reports of Canadian fires earlier in the summer, but quiet, amorphous red-orange flickering blobs. It was difficult to understand the scale because of the distance and darkness. There were fire fighting vehicles on the service road where I pulled off to try to get a cell phone photo. This time it felt eerie and foreboding, the total opposite of before.
Around 2 am, having being told at a dozen motels ‘no vacancy’ – for reasons we could not figure – we decided to keep on trucking to our reserved room in Calgary. That was a vestige of our original travel plans just 48 hours earlier before I realized Kate’s passport had recently expired. To make our journey to Banff and Jasper happen we would have to drive across the boundary with two passports and one birth certificate.
Surprise number 3.
Around 2:30 am, thoroughly exhausted, we pulled onto a pull-off lane of Highway 22 “Cowboy Trail” northbound to take a nap. With the engine and lights off the air was utterly still and totally dark. At 3:15 I woke to the high speed woosh of a passing truck, still tired but after several minutes, awake and feeling refreshed enough to continue. Then I looked up for the first time, thinking I saw the first signs of dawn on the horizon. But after rubbing my eyes thoroughly and a moment of confusion, realized it was not astronomical twilight before us, but the northern lights. This time I felt exhilaration. I had no expectation for seeing the Northern Lights in 2023. Our latitude was a lowly 49°52'. But the time and the conditions of the magnetosphere that particular day proved to be serendipitous.
Calgary
Calgary, Alberta | 51°02'41.2"N 114°03'11.3"W
Moraine Lake
Banff National Park | 51.3217° N 116.1860° W
Mount Edith Cavell
Jasper National Park | 52°40'06.0"N 118°03'24.0"W
Mistaya Canyon
Icefields Parkway | 51°57'01.0"N 116°43'00.0"W
Lake Louise
Banff National Park | 51°24'42.0"N 116°13'41.0"W
Banff
Banff National Park | 51°09'53.1"N 115°33'46.7"W
Jasper
Jasper National Park | 52°53'09.1"N 118°03'27.2"W
Music used to create this post: Black Muddy River (DeYarmond Edison), Scott Street (Phoebe Bridgers), So Now You Know (The Horrors), Jetstream (Doves), Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd)