Laramie Peak, Wyoming (8-9-15)

A post about August 9, 2015, Day 1 of Lupe’s grand Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation which took her to parts of Wyoming, Colorado and a new Lupe state – Utah!

Finally the long-delayed day for the start of Lupe’s grand Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation arrived!  The trip had been postposed by the terrible injury Lupe suffered to her left front leg on Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 135 to Peak 6820 & Crooks Tower (7,137 ft.) on 6-27-15.  She had run straight into a downed 5-strand barbed wire fence in Trebor Draw and gotten all cut up.  Thankfully, lead emergency veterinarian Dr. Erin Brown at the Emergency Veterinarian Hospital in Rapid City was available late that Saturday night to stitch up the gaping wound on Lupe’s leg.

Lupe had then spent a mostly very dull July and early August encouraged to do as little as possible while her leg was healing.  Other than a trip to Cascade Falls on Xochitl’s birthday, nothing very fun had happened to the increasingly discouraged Dingo.  So Lupe was surprised and hopeful, when SPHP got up a little after 4:00 AM on the morning of 8-9-15, and started loading the G6 with the small mountain of supplies that had been sitting in the living room.

Packing the G6 seemed to take a long time.  SPHP kept remembering additional things that needed to be brought along or done before departure.  Lupe, already perched up on her stack of supplies, pillows and blankets in the G6 began to wonder if anything was really going to happen or not.

Lupe became bored in the G6 waiting for her great summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation to begin while SPHP kept thinking of more things to do before departure.
Lupe became bored in the G6 waiting for her great summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation to begin while SPHP kept thinking of more things to do before departure.

It was nearly 10:00 AM, by the time SPHP backed the G6 out of the driveway.  Although Lupe’s perch in the front passenger seat was arranged the way it normally was on Lupe’s prior vacations, at first Lupe didn’t seem to remember that this meant something great was about to happen.  It was over a year since returning from her 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies and Beartooth Mountains, a very long time to Lupe.  She didn’t start getting excited until she was already on the highway and saw cows to bark at.  She sprang into action with her usual deafening enthusiasm.

The sky was overcast in the Black Hills, but Lupe and SPHP drove into sunshine leaving the hills.  At Mule Creek Junction in Wyoming, SPHP stopped long enough at the rest area to snap a quick photo of Lupe and the cloud still hanging over the Black Hills in the distance.

Lupe at Mule Creek Junction, Wyoming. A last look back towards home at the big cloud still hanging over the Black Hills, SD in the distance.

Lupe by-passed Lusk, WY by taking the more scenic Hwy 270 to Lance Creek and then S to Manville, WY.  A few miles before reaching Manville, Lupe and SPHP stopped for a short break at some interesting rock formations.

Lupe near the rock formations along Hwy 270 N of Manville, WY.
Lupe near the rock formations along Hwy 270 N of Manville, WY.

From Manville, Lupe went to Douglas, WY and then S on Hwy 94.  Hwy 94 turned into a gravel road well before reaching Esterbrook.  Lupe was on her way to her first peakbagging goal of her Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation – Laramie Peak (10,272 ft.), the highest mountain in the Laramie Range.

Lupe near Laramie Peak. Photo looks SSE.
Laramie Peak from the NNW.
Laramie Peak from the NNW.
Lupe W of Laramie Peak, Wyoming.
Lupe WNW of Laramie Peak, Wyoming.
Lupe N of Eagle Peak (9,167 ft.), which is about 4 miles W of Laramie Peak.

Shortly before reaching Friend Park Campground, there was a left turn that led up a hill to the Friend Park Trailhead.  Only 2 other vehicles were at the dusty trailhead when Lupe arrived.  The owners of one vehicle returned while Lupe was still at the trailhead.  They told SPHP they had gone quite a distance up the trail to Laramie Peak, but they had children with them and had to turn back before reaching the summit.  There was a $5.00 fee required to hike the trail.

It was 4:02 PM when Lupe started up the Laramie Peak Trail.  The trail goes through a pine forest nearly all the way to the summit.  The first half mile or so on the way to Friend Creek was relatively flat, and may have even lost a little elevation.  Although the area looked like it had been very dry recently, Lupe and SPHP were glad to see that Friend Creek still had pretty good flow in it.

Soon after crossing the bridge over Friend Creek, the trail started to climb steadily.  Switchbacks helped to slow the rate of ascent to some degree, but the trail was fairly steep all the rest of the way up the mountain.  Occasional very small streams crossed the trail, and at one more point the trail came near Friend Creek again.  A sign said something about a waterfall, but there weren’t any notable falls apparent from the trail.

As Lupe gained elevation, now and then there were views of a high ridge to the NW.  It wasn’t until well up on the mountain that some glimpses of a large valley to the SW came into view.  Most of the time, the forest hid the views pretty effectively.  About 3/4 of the way up, Lupe met a couple of women coming down the mountain with a little black and white dog named Decker.

Decker liked Lupe and didn’t want to leave when the women continued down the mountain after chatting briefly with SPHP.  Lupe wasn’t terribly gracious.  She didn’t want to be sniffed.  Lupe growled at Decker.  Decker wasn’t discouraged.  The women had to come back up to retrieve Decker before they could continue on down.  Decker and the two women were the only other party Lupe and SPHP encountered anywhere along the trail.

About 45 minutes before sunset, Lupe and SPHP finally reached the top of Laramie Peak.  It was disappointing to see how much human junk was there.  There were metal sheds, antennas, solar panels, wires and cables left behind from apparently abandoned communications systems.  Fortunately there didn’t appear to be any broken glass, although there were a few boards with nails sticking out of them.

A lot of human debris from old communication systems greets the eye on the approach to the summit of Laramie Peak. A disappointing find!
A lot of human debris from old communication systems greets the eye on the approach to the summit of Laramie Peak. A disappointing find!
Lupe on Laramie Peak. This photo looks S.
Lupe on Laramie Peak. This photo looks S.

Lupe on Laramie Peak 8-9-15Fortunately the summit of Laramie Peak was very rocky and the forest did not extend up onto the rocks.  The summit was pretty rugged.  There were big rounded boulders of reddish rock at the very top.  Lupe and SPHP worked around the various boulders and rock outcroppings exploring different parts of the summit area.  Since there weren’t trees at the top, there were some really great views in most directions.

Looking SE from Laramie Peak.
Looking SE from Laramie Peak.
View to the SSW from Laramie Peak.
View to the SSW.
Looking NE from Laramie Peak. A high ridge of solid rock and boulders separated the E side of the summit area from the W. Unfortunately more junk marred the otherwise terrific view.
Looking NE from Laramie Peak. A high ridge of solid rock and boulders separated the E side of the summit area from the W. Unfortunately more junk marred the otherwise terrific view.

Lupe couldn’t get up to the very tippy-top of Laramie Peak, because the last couple of boulders at the top were just way too large for her to jump up onto.  She did get very close though.  Close enough for Dingo work to claim success!  Lupe seemed very pleased to have climbed Laramie Peak, a considerable trek for the first mountain of her Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation with nearly 2,800 feet of elevation gain.

Lupe near the some of the very highest boulders on Laramie Peak. Photo looks N.
Yeah, Lupe didn't quite make it up there. Shown are the very top boulders on Laramie Peak. Photo looks E.
Yeah, Lupe didn’t quite make it up there. Shown are the very top boulders on Laramie Peak. Photo looks E.

There was one structure up on Laramie Peak that looked very interesting.  A short distance to the NW of the very summit was what appeared to be a viewing platform with a metal ladder leading up to it.  The platform would have been a great place from which to take a look around.  It would offer great views to the NW, a direction difficult to see from where Lupe and SPHP were.

Lupe started heading toward the viewing platform, but the way was full of really big boulders separated by equally big drops.  With the sun due to set soon, SPHP decided it wasn’t going to be worth the effort to get over there.  Even though the platform wasn’t very far away, there was no sense getting stranded away from the trail in the dark.  The terrain was just too rough for that!

Lupe with the high viewing platform up on Laramie Peak visible beyond her. This platform would have offered great views to the N and NW, which were not easily seen from the rest of the summit area where Lupe and SPHP were.
Lupe with the high viewing platform up on Laramie Peak visible beyond her. This platform would have offered great views to the N and NW, which were not easily seen from the rest of the summit area where Lupe and SPHP were.  Photo looks NW.

Lupe stayed up on top of Laramie Peak while the sun set.  The view struck SPHP rather strangely.  Around the mountain were still largely unspoiled scenes from the Old Wild West, conjuring up in the mind images of vast empty tracts of land where huge buffalo, deer and antelope herds roamed free.  It couldn’t have looked much different during the days of Indians, tipis, cowboys, covered wagons, cavalry and forts.  But those storied days, which still really aren’t all that long ago, will never return.  They have passed into a history no one has any living memory of now.

Contrasting with the images of the Old Wild West was the debris on the mountain.  Among it all, an abandoned American flag hung limply from an old antenna.  Now and then the sun lit the flag up, as it fluttered briefly in a breeze, only to droop again as if it were exhausted.  None of this stuff served any purpose any more.  It was a monument to the wasteful despoiling of the natural world by humanity for temporary gain.  It looked and felt like national decline and the end of the American dream.

An abandoned American flag droops among the debris at the top of Laramie Peak at sunset.
An abandoned American flag droops among the debris at the top of Laramie Peak at sunset.

The sunset was still pretty, though.  Lupe and SPHP spent the last few moments together watching the sun disappear from view.  When it was gone, it was time to start down the mountain.Sunset on Laramie Peak 8-9-15

A final look back toward the summit of Laramie Peak after Lupe and SPHP started down the trail.
A final look back toward the summit of Laramie Peak after Lupe and SPHP started down the trail.

About 1/3 of the way down, twilight had faded to the point where SPHP had to bring out the little flashlight.  It was 10:54 PM when Lupe reached the G6 again.

In the middle of the night, Lupe finally seemed to understand that her great Summer of 2015 Dingo Vacation had really begun.  She was all excited, and not the least bit sleepy.  She ran around sniffing like a Dingo possessed in a huge dark field surrounded by even blacker forests.  Stars blazed above her in a moonless sky.

At last, she was done.  Lupe returned to SPHP.  She fell asleep on SPHP’s lap.  The night grew chilly.  A warm Dingo felt good.Sunset from Laramie Peak 8-9-15

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Hesse Mountain, Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming (8-6-14)

It seemed like a very long night.  SPHP kept waking up expecting it to be dawn, but it wasn’t.  Finally dawn came.  The sky was about 50% clear with some haze – a promising start to the day.  Lupe and SPHP were on USFS Road No. 28 at Merle Creek in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming.

Disappointingly, by the time breakfast was done, the sky was completely overcast.  SPHP drove Lupe over to USFS Road No. 29 off Hwy 16 near Hesse Mountain (10,385 ft.) and Hazelton Pyramid (10,534 ft.).  Both peaks were socked in the fog with the darkest clouds around.

Hesse Mountain (L) and Hazelton Pyramid (R). This shot was taken after Lupe had climbed Hesse Mountain from near Road No. 29 and Hwy 16.
Hesse Mountain (L) and Hazelton Pyramid (R). This shot was taken from near Road No. 29 and Hwy 16 after Lupe had climbed Hesse Mountain.

Hope sprang from a patch of blue sky to the W.  SPHP decided Lupe should try Hesse even in the clouds.  If the fog lifted, Lupe would go on to Hazelton Pyramid.  If not, Hesse Mountain would be Lupe’s last peakbagging success of her grand summer of 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies and Beartooths.  SPHP took USFS Road No. 444 to Munkres Pass and parked the G6.  Lupe left for Hesse Mountain at 8:20 AM.  It was 48°F and calm.  Hesse Mountain was still in the fog.

Hesse Mountain
Hesse Mountain in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming.  The high point near the center is the true summit, though it is a very close contest with the high point on the left.

There was no trail, but Hesse Mountain is only about 1.25 miles SE of Munkres Pass as the crow flies.  Lupe and SPHP climbed through the forest.  Eventually Lupe reached tree line.  Fog was now swirling around the mountain.  At times Lupe and SPHP could see the summit or in other directions.  Visibility was good enough to guide Lupe to the top.  The area above tree line was dominated by boulder fields interspersed with some grassy areas which became increasingly scarce as Lupe gained elevation.

Lupe nearing the summit of Hesse Mountain.
Lupe nearing the summit of Hesse Mountain.
Looking back towards the N high point (not the true summit) on Hesse Mountain.
Looking back towards the NE high point (not the true summit, but almost as high) on Hesse Mountain.
Near the summit of Hesse Mountain.
Near the summit of Hesse Mountain.

Lupe reached the summit of Hesse Mountain and found a cairn there.  On the other side of the mountain was a steep drop.  Soon fog moved in and completely shut off all views.

Reluctantly, SPHP decided this was it.  There was no sense in having Lupe try to go on to Hazelton Pyramid, which was seldom even in view with all the fog.  With no trails, if the fog moved in and stayed, it would be easy to get turned around and lost.  It didn’t seem that likely, but on the other hand, the Beartooths to the W where Lupe had just come from had been overcast and drippy for several days.  The weather in the Bighorns usually comes from that direction.

Success! Lupe at the Hesse Mountain summit 8-6-14.
Success! Lupe at the Hesse Mountain summit 8-6-14.

Lupe seemed perfectly happy with her ascent of Hesse Mountain.  SPHP was happy with it, too.  At least Lupe had gotten to the summit of Hesse, even if Hazelton Pyramid had to be left for another day on another dingo vacation.  On the way back down, the fog continued to swirl around and come and go.  At times, the views were pretty good.  Five or ten minutes later, the clouds would close in again.  It felt kind of mystical.  Views came and went in unpredictable directions.

The lower NW high point on Hesse Mountain.
The lower NW high point on Hesse Mountain.
Rocks near Hesse Mountain summit.
Rocks near Hesse Mountain summit.
Looking N towards Hwy 16 from Hesse Mountain.
Looking N towards Hwy 16 from Hesse Mountain.

Lupe reached the G6 again at 12:22 PM.  It was a pleasant 65°F, still overcast, calm and almost foggy.  Lupe and SPHP had lunch near the stone pillar at Munkres Pass before heading out.

SPHP hatched another peakbagging plan for Lupe.  Even though she was about to leave the Bighorn Mountains, she might still go up to Warren Peaks (6,650 ft.) or climb Inyan Kara (6,360 ft.) in the Black Hills of Wyoming on the way home.  It didn’t happen.  At a gas station convenience store in Buffalo, WY there was news on the TV about severe storms and flooding in the Black Hills.

Lupe and SPHP just cruised E on I-90 back to the Black Hills of South Dakota and home.  The 74th annual Black Hills Motorcycle Classic was going on in Sturgis, SD.  It was kind of fun to be packed in with huge numbers of motorcyclists flocking to the area.  There were still big clouds around, but the storms seemed to be over in the Black Hills by the time Lupe reached them.

Shortly before 6:00 PM, Lupe arrived home.  Her great summer of 2014 Dingo Vacation all the way to the Canadian Rockies and back was over.  Lupe had been gone 23 days, 22 nights and traveled 3,288 miles in the G6.  Dingoes are very practical.  They don’t dwell on the past or statistics much.  If Lupe was sad that it was all over, she didn’t show it.  As soon as she got home, Lupe happily ran next door to Dog Heaven to hit up the neighbors for a treat.

Hesse Mountain in the Bighorns was Lupe's last peakbagging success of her summer of 2014 Dingo Vacation.
Hesse Mountain in the Bighorns was Lupe’s last peakbagging success of her summer of 2014 Dingo Vacation.

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                   This Dingo Vacation                              Prior Dingo Vacation

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High Park Lookout & Sheep Mountain, Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming (8-5-14)

SPHP woke up in the G6 about 7:30 AM on the morning of 8-4-14.  Lupe and SPHP were parked near their favorite camping spot on the Clark’s Fork of the Yellowstone River in the Beartooth Mountains.  The previous day Lupe and SPHP had spent a wonderful long day climbing Lonesome Mountain, the highest mountain Lupe has ever climbed so far.  The sky was overcast, but not too dark.  SPHP had hopes of pitching the tent next to the Clark’s Fork of the Yellowstone, and spending a lazy recovery day there with Lupe while plotting new adventures in the Beartooths.

It was not to be.  Although by 11:30 AM SPHP was able to claim Lupe’s favorite camping site, it started to rain.  The rain lasted for several hours and then quit.  The skies remained heavily overcast.  The tent didn’t get set up.  The mosquitoes were bad.  The skies never cleared.  Everything outside was sopping wet.  No ray of sun appeared.  Lupe and SPHP spent most of the day in the G6 resting up and waiting for the weather to break.  It looked like it could start raining again at any moment.  Another night was spent in the G6.

On 8-5-14, SPHP woke up at 6:45 AM.  52°F and still heavily overcast, almost foggy.  Lupe was well rested again by now.  There wasn’t going to be any keeping the lively dingo satisfied with another day in the G6.  SPHP’s plans for more Lupe adventures in the Beartooths had to be scrapped.  It was time to move on.  Lupe and SPHP headed for Cody, WY via the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway, Hwy 296 and then Hwy 120.  Lupe’s 2014 Dingo Vacation to the Canadian Rockies & Beartooth Mountains was rapidly drawing to a close.

It wasn’t over yet, though.  The fog and clouds were hanging over the mountains to the W, but Lupe and SPHP drove out into the sunshine even before reaching the pass on Hwy 296.  SPHP still had a few adventures in mind for Lupe.  After  fueling up in Cody, just to see something new Lupe and SPHP continued SE on Hwy 120 through Meeteetse all the way to Thermopolis.  Lupe was happy just to be moving again with the opportunity to bark at cows and horses along the way.  Neither SPHP nor Lupe had ever taken this route before, so it was all new and interesting.

Most of the way from Cody to Thermopolis was like much of Wyoming – sagebrush, dry high plains with ridges and buttes all around and higher mountains in the distance.  Very Old West looking and largely unspoiled.  Meeteetse is in the Greybull River valley where there were some green trees, green irrigated fields, and a little more going on.  Meeteetse itself is less than 400 population.  Thermopolis was considerably larger, around 3,000 population.  It is named after natural hot springs in the area.  After days spent outdoors, SPHP was pretty grimy.  SPHP was looking forward to the hot springs as a great relaxing way to get cleaned up.

Lupe at the Stegosaurus roaming the grounds at the Thermopolis hot springs.
Lupe roaming the grounds at the Thermopolis hot springs with a Stegosaurus.  American Dingoes are natural born leaders.

Fortunately the day hadn’t heated up much yet, with temperatures still around a comfortable 70°F.  SPHP left Lupe in the G6 parked in the shade with the windows partially down.  She set about entertaining herself by watching squirrels in the trees.  SPHP spent a pleasant hour and a half in the pools or on the waterslide at the State Bath House, and returned much revived to the by-now bored dingo in the G6.  Nothing promotes an appreciation of cleanliness like long days spent outdoors.

It was time to head for the Bighorn Mountains!  The drive on Hwy 16/20 from Thermopolis to Worland was flat and dull with little to commend it, but heading E from Worland to Ten Sleep on Hwy 16 was another matter.  The scenery was wild, remote and dramatic.  At Ten Sleep, SPHP noticed that Dirty Sally’s was still open, but didn’t stop.  E of Ten Sleep, Hwy 16 started up beautiful Ten Sleep canyon into the Bighorns.

A little over a mile past the lodge on Meadowlark Lake, SPHP turned S on FS road No. 429.  SPHP parked the G6 just off No. 429 close to the highway.  Lupe was certainly ready to get out and stretch her legs again.  No. 429 is a gravel road that leads about a mile up through mostly open meadows to a forest near High Park Lookout (9,477 ft.).  There is a small parking lot at the edge of the forest.  A 15 minute hiking trail winds up through the forest to the old lookout tower.  The now unmanned lookout tower is closed to the public due to a broken support beam.

Lupe along road No. 429 on her way to High Park Lookout in the Bighorn Mountains. No. 429 is accessed via Hwy 16 a little over a mile SE of Meadowlark Lake.
Lupe along road No. 429 on her way to High Park Lookout in the Bighorn Mountains. No. 429 is accessed via Hwy 16 a little over a mile SE of Meadowlark Lake.

Lupe and SPHP followed No. 429 and then the hiking trail to the High Park Lookout summit.  From some rocks near the lookout tower the best views were toward Meadowlark Lake to the NW and the higher mountains to the NNE.  On the way back down to the G6, Lupe followed the trail to the little parking lot, but did not follow No. 429 again.

Instead, Lupe and SPHP took a shortcut through the beautiful high country meadows and a small forest.  That got Lupe more into the spirit of things than just following the road.  She started sniffing and exploring around more enthusiastically.

Lupe at the High Park Lookout in the Bighorn Mountains. Photo looks N.
Lupe at the High Park Lookout in the Bighorn Mountains. Photo looks N.
At look back up at High Park Lookout. Lupe was already on her way back to the G6. Photo looks S.
At look back up at High Park Lookout. Lupe was already on her way back to the G6. Photo looks S.

From High Park Lookout, Lupe and SPHP had seen lots of clouds around.  To the N where the Cloud Peak Wilderness is, all the high country was lost in dark clouds and fog.  Any thoughts SPHP had of taking Lupe to Cloud Peak were dashed.

There were fewer clouds to the S though, and SPHP started thinking about climbing Hazelton Pyramid as a substitute.  Consulting the maps, SPHP found it might be possible to hike three 10,000+ foot peaks easily enough in a day – Hesse Mountain (10,382 ft.), Hazelton Pyramid (10,534 ft.), and Hazelton Peak (10,264 ft.).  SPHP decided Lupe would try it the next day.

Lupe and SPHP headed E on Hwy 16 over Powder River Pass.  About a mile E of Powder River Pass, SPHP turned S on gravel road No. 29 and about 1/8 mile later onto USFS Road No. 448.  Half a mile later Lupe arrived at Munkres Pass.  Hesse Mountain and Hazelton Pyramid had been visible from No. 29 and looked like easy climbs.  SPHP was satisfied that Munkres Pass was a good starting point for Hesse Mountain the next day.

Lupe and SPHP left Munkres Pass to find water and a place to park for the night.  Water was found at Lost Cabin campground, and SPHP was fortunate to find a dispersed camping spot along gravel road No. 28 just after it crossed Merle Creek.

The G6 at the dispersed camping site on Merle Creek.
The G6 at the dispersed camping site on Merle Creek.

Lupe was quite happy with Merle Creek, a rushing little stream where she was able to drink and lay down to get cooled off.  She soon found squirrels to bark at in the surrounding forest, always a major dingo benefit.  SPHP checked the map and saw that only another 1.5 miles from Merle Creek, road No. 28 ended at the Sheep Mountain (9,610 ft.) lookout tower.  Leaving the G6 at Merle Creek to claim the spot, Lupe and SPHP set out along No. 28 to go see the views from Sheep Mountain.

The lookout tower at the top of Sheep Mountain.
The lookout tower at the top of Sheep Mountain.

There wasn’t much to see.  By the time Lupe and SPHP reached the top of Sheep Mountain, there was fog in every direction.  Dark clouds and thunder were to the E, but were moving farther away out onto the prairie beyond the Bighorns.   No one else was around.  Lupe and SPHP got up on the platform around the top of the lookout tower.  SPHP took a few photos.

The area immediately around the tower was not yet in the fog, but it was close by on all sides.  Less than 10 minutes after Lupe left, the Sheep Mountain Lookout Tower itself disappeared in the fog.  On the way back, instead of following the road, Lupe and SPHP headed down the SW slope of Sheep Mountain going almost directly back to the G6 through a big opening in the forest.

A happy American Dingo arrives at the Sheep Mountain lookout tower to see what there is to see.
A happy American Dingo arrives at the Sheep Mountain lookout tower to see what there is to see.
Normally the views would be great from Sheep Mountain. When Lupe was there, not so much.
Normally the views would be great from Sheep Mountain. When Lupe was there, not so much.
Lupe on the Sheep Mountain lookout tower.
Look, SPHP!  The view is almost as good with my eyes closed!

Despite the fog, the trek up Sheep Mountain had still been a pleasant excursion.  Once back at the G6, Lupe had some Alpo and entertained herself barking at squirrels.  Dusk came on.  The squirrels called it a day and disappeared.  Without the squirrels around, Lupe realized she was kind of tired too.  She wanted to get in the G6.  There she curled up for the night on her throne of blankets and pillows.  SPHP stayed up sitting on a big stone next to Merle Creek until it was too dark to write.

Lupe in Merle Creek, Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming, 8-5-14
Lupe in Merle Creek, Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming, 8-5-14

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Peak 9300 & High Park Lookout, Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming (6-30-19)

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s 2014 Canadian Rockies & Beartooths Adventure IndexDingo Vacations Adventure Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.