Oh puhlease!
Saturday, December 09, 2017
Friday, December 08, 2017
Maui: Haleakala Sunset
While it is very hard to get a booking to watch the sunrise from the summit of Haleakala, and places are strictly limited, we managed to get up there to watch the sunset. Although it was very cold, it was absolutely unmissable - the sunset above the clouds.
Maui; Haleakala: The Crater
The crater on Haleakala is one of the strangest and most wonderful places I have ever been. The eleven mile walk from siding sands, down into the crater and out the other side descends thousands of feet, and ends with a strong climb back up the rim.
The colours of the ash, the dry, unvegetated ground, the wild mountainous landscape, all work together to create a unique, and magical atmosphere. It is no wonder the locals regard Haleakala as a sacred space, and once worshipped their god Pele here, regarding the mountain as his bones.
Telescopes and military stuff on the summit of the mountain.
Walking is hard in the harsh heat, even at 10,000 feet. High enough to just feel the atmosphere being slightly thinner than comfortable when climbing.
The exit path ascends this ridge, we left a car at the exit point on the way up, saving miles of walking at the end of a long, hot day.
Pele's Paintpots are said to be one of the few places on earth where you can 'hear', (or rather experience), absolute silence. The ash soaks up all the different sound waves, while the absence of vegetation prevents a food-chain emerging, while the crater protects the place from wind. The pulse throbs audibly in the ears. I lined my family up here, to soak up the silence......... which was shattered by my young daughters sudden braking wind. Moment ruined, memory made.
Thursday, December 07, 2017
At Reekie Linn
Scotland is rich with 'hidden treasures' like this. Reekie Linn is a lovely 45 metre cascade, within a few minutes walk from the B954 north of Alyth. The drab looking car park, with it's riverside picnic bench gives no clues as to what is just around the corner, where the river plunges into a deep gorge. It's not a safe spot for small children or dogs, so be careful; but the gorge-top walk round to the view-point looking back on the cascade is wonderful.
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