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Stars were
bright all night with just the occasional cloud passing by; I awaken several
times during an average night; always have.
And the morning came bright and fair, and the best day since I left for
the High Desert more than a month ago.
Christmas being two days off and my supplies needing a top up, I headed
for Lakeview, 60 miles off. I would have
liked to have painted on a day like this, but I didn’t want to go to town on
Christmas Eve, as I have no idea what the business hours might be. I discovered that the water pump at the
campground actually was working, and so I filled my containers; later I also
discovered that it depended on the temperature whether water actually came out
or not, but it was interesting to know, that it didn’t seem to be closed off
during the Winter.
I drove through
Plush, 15 miles from the CCC Campground, and which has only a small general
store, stopped to take some photos of an old green barn, which I intend to
paint at some point.
Green Barn in Plush
I continued on
up out of the Warner Valley, via the Plush Cutoff Road, and with Drake Peak, to
the southwest as a landmark, I enjoyed the drive along the rolling terrain of
the plateau. A few miles along I noticed
a large herd of cattle, about two
hundred, far off to the west that had not been there two weeks earlier; they
looked odd, so I pulled over and glassed them with my binoculars, and lo and
behold they turned into ANTELOPE! Here I
have been in the Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge for almost two weeks,
and not one sighting of an antelope, and here they are across the valley! Sadly, they were two far for decent
photographs. I stopped again just before
joining Hwy 140 to take some more photos of Drake Peak (altitude 8407’); this
is part of the Warner Mountains.
Drake Peak
I liked the look
of Lakeview, (population 2294; 2010 census); it’s an oasis of trees and houses
in the High Desert. First I had lunch at
the Burger Queen; I felt like having a cheeseburger at a local one-off café, for
a change. Next I visited my bank and as
I was strolling through the doors, I noticed across the street a tiny home-like
building with a sign saying, “Town Hall.”
I enquired of the teller, if that was actually the Town Hall across the
street, and upon receiving a yes, I
paused for a few seconds, searching for words, and said, “How sweet!” Well … it was; what else need be said? Chuckling to myself and exiting to the street,
I looked at the sweet Town Hall again,
and proceeded to the Safeway, the only food store in town that I was aware of. Then after topping up my stores, I drove
around the town a bit; I was surprised at the variety of and number of shops
there were; perhaps I shouldn’t have been as it is a long ways to anywhere else.
I tanked up on petrol, gave my Mom a call, wishing her a Merry
Christmas, and headed back to the wilds. I hoped to find a road into the mountains that
wasn’t too snowy, and find a clearing among the pines to spend Christmas, but
even though I found one that might have been OK, and after driving a short way
along it, I decided not to risk it … snow, and the memory of my recent mudfest of a few weeks ago, militated
for caution.
In the end I
returned to the CCC Hut Campground, sighting no antelope on the way, but a herd of
deer with one stag, as I dropped down into Plush, and another herd as I entered
the campground, also with one buck. I
Mountain Bluebird was gracing the fence as I pulled into my campsite; they are
a beautiful blue, these birds … a bit of sky come to Earth. I took a few photos of the last sun on the
Hart Mountain Ridge (both of these below are from my campsite).
Last Light on Hart Mountain #1
(& Poker Jim Ridge)
Last Light on Hart Mountain #2
There were some cloud layers to the southwest as the
sun set, and as I prepared supper, I thought I glimpsed Venus low above the horizon. This was confirmed later, when I brought up
my Astronomy App on my tablet … so, Venus will now be an Evening Star for the
next few months. My tent neighbors of
the night before had gone up the mountain this morning, so I again had the camp
to myself. I watched the thin crescent
Moon until it set at 18:43, read a bit and turned in for the night, hoping the
morrow would be as nice as this day had been.