Tuesday, August 30, 2016

A unique date, a birthday and another dinner party...

Busy day! This morning, I drove into town to run some errands and do a mystery shop. On the way, I spotted this para-glider making his descent over the Tetons before landing in a field. Snapped these through my windshield...




Later, a co-worker fixed me up with her friend who is a caretaker at a property next door to the ranch. Nice gig if you can get it! Last week, the property owner held a big RNC fundraiser at his home and House Speaker Paul Ryan was the guest of honor, along with John Boehner. Secret Service agents were everywhere and the ranch owners had to move horses to different pastures to accommodate the event and access to it. Apparently, Judge Judy Sheindlin lives one house over on the same road.

 
The property I visited sits on 3 acres along the Snake River and boasts a guest cottage, irrigated pond, lush lawn, and enormous log home.


 Anyway, I rode my bike over for the date yesterday. My new friend has watched over the property for a decade, lives in the guest cottage and is well taken care of by his Houston based employer. His "cottage" has a garage, deck, river view, workout room, laundry, etc... much nicer digs than any of the ski resort or ranch employees have around here. He keeps his ski boat and dogs there and has access to all sorts of toys including a Polaris that we took for a spin along the dike. He brought his 2 labs, tubes and a Yeti cooler full of Miller Lite, and we waded across the rocky bottom of the river to explore some of the islands. A lot of fun!


The Snake River is constantly shifting based on water flow and melting snow, and sometimes these rocky islands are completely submerged. When they reappear, there's no telling what one might find there. Our wranglers frequently go over on horseback on their days off and find all sorts of old elk and other carcasses, skulls, raptor feathers and other cool things. Today, we saw some bear scat and also this huge tree that had been chewed by beavers.


The afternoon date was brief because it was my boss's birthday, the ranch owner, and he sprung for drinks for the crew at a nearby bar. Good crowd & lots of fun...such nice people to work for!



A ranch co-worker from Vero Beach invited me to tag along with her to a dinner party afterwards in a nearby town. Her friends have a house here in WY and are building a home in FL just south of Vero. I met them at the Stagecoach a few weeks back and thought they might be nice people to know when I'm in FL this winter, so I went. Their neighborhood, Red Top Meadows is a rural area of modest homes, cabins and equestrian properties with access to national forest, located 12 miles south of the town of Wilson.

We started off with drinks and snacks in the Host's garage "man cave", a cozy, lower level  space with a wood stove, flat screen TV, and cool bar built from 100 year old wagon wheels. That's me in front of it, draped in a fox pelt ;)


Their cabin was charming, recently remodeled, with a rustic feel. We had a delicious Italian dinner of lasagna, meatballs in sauce, garlic bread and kale salad, followed by strawberry short cake.


Really fun people, and a perfect cool night to enjoy their outdoor fire pit while we dined al fresco! I still can't get used to the 40-50 degree evening temps in August.



South Fall Creek Road, the route we took to get to the cabin, was winding, very scenic and gained elevation to the point that our ears popped on the way there and back. Like most Wyoming highways, it was pitch black after dark, and the hosts warned us to watch out for deer and elk on the drive home. Sure enough, I spotted a deer on the roadside, and as we slowed, it ran right across the road in front of us. Close call, but we made it back to the ranch safely. Ah, Wyoming!

Monday, August 29, 2016

Jeremy Houghton exhibit at the Diehl Gallery

 
Recently, I heard that the Diehl Gallery in Jackson was having an Artist's Reception for a fairly famous, young and very talented artist named Jeremy Houghton. He's 41, British and paints sailboats among other things. He has a long list of credentials and accomplishments, and I decided to attend.


Diehl Gallery is the only one in the US that carries Houghton's work and represents him on this side of the pond. They specialize in national and international contemporary art and always put out a nice spread, this time with pate', shrimp, cheeses, stuffed grape leaves, wine and my 
favorite... Prosecco ;)

 

This 15"x20" original watercolor was $2,800. I'd love to have it! ;)


His watercolors of sailboat races were excellent and looked exactly like what I experienced while ocean racing in regattas along the east coast. (Me above in blue, during the J24 Silver Anniversary Regatta in Newport, RI).

 

Here is Jeremy's long list of impressive accomplishments, including Artist in Residence for Queen Elizabeth!

– Awarded Best Sporting Artist by S.E.A. in 2012
– Official BT Olympic Artist at the London 2012 Olympic Games
– Official Tour Artist for the Aston Martin Centenary Tour of Europe 2013
– Artist in Residence at Windsor Castle for HM The Queen in 2014
– Artist in Residence at Goodwood for 2015/16, painting the summer season of speed
– Artist in Residence for Land Rover Ben Ainslie Racing, visually recording the journey towards the America’s Cup in Bermuda 2017
– More recently, the James Hunt Foundation has commissioned Houghton to produce the official collection of paintings for the 40th anniversary of James Hunt’s Formula One World Championship in 1976.

This painting looks like every starting line I've ever waited on and crossed during a regatta, except the sail logo tells me this was a Laser event... not a boat I usually sailed on in NC.



Houghton also paints a lot of horse, steeplechase and polo images, as well as skiing and other sports.


















Here's a really nice one of the back of Queen Elizabeth's head... simple, but there's no mistaking who it is.


Friday, August 26, 2016

A day on the boat at Jackson Lake

On Wednesdays, the ranch transports guests up to Jackson Lake for an afternoon of boating, water skiing, sunning and tubing. I finished work early and finally got to tag along, riding up in the truck with the guys and the tubes. It took about an hour, riding north through Grand Teton National Park. The scenery was beautiful. We dropped the tubes and chairs off at the rocky beach at Jackson Lake, then headed up to the marina to get the ranch's boat. A deck hand took us out to the mooring in a john boat, and we had some time to kill before the guests and kids arrived, so I got a tour of the lake. It's huge!



 

Jackson Lake is a natural lake and was enlarged in 1911 when the nearby dam was built. It's one of the largest high elevation lakes in the country, fed by the Snake River and utilized by Idaho farmers for irrigation on the north end. It's around 15 miles long, 7 miles wide and 438 feet deep. The water stays below 60 degrees, even in summer! Many local trout species call the lake home. The western shore is primitive with hiking trails and a few campgrounds. The eastern shore has several marinas.

We cruised around in the boat until the ranch Suburban arrived with the guests. Then I hopped off the boat, floated around in a tube and sunned myself on the rocky shore for a few hours until the sky grew dark. About an hour later, a storm rolled in and we packed up and headed home. What a pristine, beautiful, uncrowded lake! Another great day ;)

 

 


 


On the way home, the guys wanted pizza from a place at Leek's Marina, 10 miles north, so we detoured up there. It was really pretty and reminded me a little of Alaska. On the road up, we saw a wildfire on the hillside. In the days since, it has spread to over 12,000 acres and caused the closing of the south entrance to Yellowstone. Locals say these wildfires won't go away until it snows in November! Yikes...

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Raptors and a friendly game of cat and grouse

I had heard about the Teton Raptor Center in Wilson, WY and went online to book a one hour "raptor experience" for $12. Money well spent! Their worthwhile mission is to advance raptor conservation through education, research, and rehabilitation. Teton Raptor Center is located on Hardeman ranch and began in 1991 when two field biologists working in Grand Teton National Park began caring for injured raptors out of their home. Now they care for over 130 injured birds per year at their fully equipped rehabilitation facility.

 



It's a charming place. Our presenter, Becky, brought out a number of owls, large and small and an American kestrel and held them on her gloved hand while she told us about raptors and the specific birds' histories, injuries and origins. Raptors include hawks, eagles, owls, kestrels, kites and ospreys. All have sharp talons, keen vision, eat meat and use their unique curved beaks to tear apart their prey. Female raptors are usually larger than males. Their power center is in their feet which they use to crush, grab or pierce their prey.



This beautiful Barn Owl was my favorite. It arrived injured and was rehabilitated but was determined to be deaf, so now it's an education bird, unable to fend for itself in the wild.


 An innocuous looking Great Horned owl... very lethal to small mammals... including cats! 

 

A rare African owl "mix" born in captivity by accident in 2008. His keepers at another facility thought his parents were both male and housed them together despite their being from two different countries in Africa. Voila... a chick was born that can't be released back into nature due to his "hybrid" nature. Because of this he was cleverly named Mendel (remember the genetics biologist?) Sadly, he had an freak accident in his enclosure a few days after I met and photographed him, breaking his foot, and he had to be put down ;(

 

A Golden Eagle

 

                                                           A Goshawk 

 

A juvenile Bald Eagle that will likely never fly again ;(




The Teton Raptor Center also has a very interesting project affectionately known as the “Poo Poo Project.” It aims to prevent wildlife entrapment within vent pipes found on vault toilets throughout the U.S. through the design, distribution and installation of special screen covers.


Within the last year, the project hit a significant milestone, marking over 7,000 screens distributed. Each year thousands of cavity-nesters, animals that prefer dark, narrow spaces for nesting and roosting, become entrapped in vertical open pipes such as ventilation pipes, claim stakes, and chimneys. Vault toilets, the self-contained restrooms found in many of America’s wilderness areas, feature vertical ventilation pipes that mimic the natural cavities preferred by various bird species for nesting and roosting.There is growing documentation by regional resource managers that small owls are being trapped in these vault toilets after the birds, frequently owls, enter through open-topped vent pipes leading to the waste holding reservoirs below. Once they enter the waste pit they are trapped and unable to fly back up the pipe or out through the toilet... and they die. If you feel like making a contribution to fund one of these screens, here's the link: 
http://tetonraptorcenter.org/support/give

Also a great 4 minute YouTube video on the project. Please watch and spread the word:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmyEE58iiF0

All in all, a great time at the Teton Raptor Center... I learned a lot!
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Speaking of birds... the other day I was in my cabin and Scout was sitting just outside. I kept hearing what I thought was an agitated rodent of some sort cooing and clucking, and finally went outside to investigate. There was Scout on a nearby porch, surrounded by a family of grouse! (4)


  
This went on for some time and she looked interested but not like she was in hunting mode.

One of them actually hopped up onto my porch just outside my screen door... pretty bold.

 
                                      I'm amazed at how close they got to her!

 
Scout finally had enough of the grouse parade and made her move, slowly creeping 
towards them in "about to pounce" mode.

 
 They wisely waddled off to live another day. I guess at age 15, Scout's 
not  the hunter she used to be ;)