Last year, my quilty friend, ShaRee, wanted me to put a quilt in the show for Alpine Days but I was too chicken to join her. I didn’t think I had any quilts good enough to show off. This year when she asked, I decided to be brave and do it. I entered my “Off the Grid” quilt, which is a sliced nine-patch I made to display at Thanksgiving time. The show is not adjudicated but just for fun and I thought my quilt wasn’t embarrassing next to all the awesome ones in the show. Scott thought it was as good as any there, but I think he’s a teensy bit biased. Anyway, it wasn’t as scary as I thought and if I ever get some time to quilt, I might finish up some more in 2012. Hope so!
Dogs, buffalo, & stalagmites
Day 3-Montana
We stopped off at Greycliff Prairie Dog Town State Park and saw, yes, you guessed it, many prairie dogs but no rangers. I guess the dogs trusted that we had a state park pass. We saw LOTS of the little guys and also listened to them make squeaky, chirpy warning sounds.
The town was just off the interstate but it didn’t seem to bother the dogs much. Very interesting but small and didn’t take too much time. It gave Scott a chance to experiment some more with the new camera, however. And both of us a chance to learn way more about prairie dogs than we ever knew before.
Next stop, Madison Buffalo Jump State Park which was interesting if somewhat primitive. We hiked up a short but steep trail to a pavilion with markers, looked at the face of the jump and read about teenage boys trained to be buffalo runners to lure the herd to the edge, jump to safety and then cling to a ledge as the animals fell over to their deaths. Sounds gory when I tell it like that.
Back in the car to listen to “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” and crochet while Scott drove us to Lewis & Clark Caverns State Park. We got there just as a tour was about to leave at 3:30 so we rushed to grab jackets and the camera and raced off to join the end of the line on the long climb up the mountain to the cave entrance. It was hot, somewhat steep, and I was pretty exhausted from the previous days’ activities, so it was a hard slog for me. We had neglected to grab water and I was dying of thirst while pushing myself up the trail. It was somewhat grueling. When we got to the cave entrance, blessed relief! It was cool! I was so hot that I didn’t put on my jacket until the very end of the tour-it took me that long to cool off.
So, the caverns. Very interesting formations. We noticed at the beginning that many of the formations seemed broken off, then the guide told us why. In the early part of the twentieth century, an entrepreneur built a spiral staircase down into the caves and gave guided tours. He also allowed visitors to break off a piece of the formations by the entrance as a souvenir to take home. Since the formations at the entrance are not active, no new growth there forever.
During the Depression the cave became part of the National Park Service and was developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps who replaced the wooden stairs with concrete and installed lighting. They blasted out a new exit so visitors didn’t have to go back the way they came and run into visitors coming down, and then found that it created a giant wind tunnel that was drying out the only live part of the caverns. So they built airtight doors at each end. When we left, we all got in the 500 ft. tunnel and the guide shut the “dungeon door” behind us. It made a loud bang and the vibrations moved right through us with a reverb all through our chests. Cool!
The NPS later gave the caverns to the state and it became Montana’s first state park. The first part of the cave had some nice formations that were mostly white but as we got deeper there was more color and more varied formations.
The entire tour is a two-mile trip which includes “some bending and stooping”, according to the signage. This is an understatement of the grossest proportions. We’ve toured some caves in our time and these were the tightest squeezes ever. “Bending” included completely over and still bumping our heads and backs. We also had to slide on our butts down the “beaver slide”, and walk backwards down some wedge-shaped steps so small our feet barely fit on them. So this trek is not for the faint of heart. But it was worth it.
The second half had the more impressive formations and one section along an almost continuous long down stairway had many beautiful sights we all had to keep stopping to take pictures of for posterity.
Because the tour descends inside the cave, when we exited the caverns we had a level trail back to the car. The view over the Jefferson River valley from the exit was lovely.
While passing Butte on the interstate, I happened to look up and see a statue on the top of a mountain. I made Scott take off at the next exit and go back so we could take pictures. She is called “Our Lady of the Rockies”, is 90 feet tall and stands on the Continental Divide at an elevation of over 8000 feet. She was built by volunteer labor and contributions and there is an interfaith chapel beside her. She is a tribute to the women of all nationalities and creeds who travelled through or settled this area and is an impressive sight from the ground. We circled back and stayed in Butte over a week later and pulled in at night. She is brightly lit and that was also impressive.
What’s Blooming…
I just got a new camera and wanted to try it out, so Sue and I spent a few minutes taking pictures of what’s blooming in her flower gardens right now. Click on the pictures to see them larger. Enjoy!
Wherein we meet Karl Malone
In general car shopping is not our favorite thing. Root canals aren’t far behind. Sue and I set out and our car shopping day didn’t start out so well. Our travels took us to Karl Malone Toyota where we were helped by a nice salesman who was obviously uninformed. Everything he told us about the car warranties seemed odd. When we questioned him, he just dug a bigger hole for himself. I don’t think he was intentionally misleading us, just didn’t really understand what was going on.
Eventually we decided to have him work up some numbers on one of the Toyota Corollas that we drove. He had been telling us all along that Karl Malone was at the dealership that day and we could go in and have our picture taken with him. Sue wasn’t interested in a picture, but I jokingly asked if he really wanted us to do that, because we’d need to tell him about the warranty confusion. He said that was fine. So we went inside and were introduced to Karl.
First off, I should say that he’s tall. But you were expecting that. He’s also still in good shape. We didn’t really intend to lay our concerns on the table, but then Karl asked us if we had a good experience shopping for cars that day. Wrong thing to ask! Sue has no qualms about telling lots of important people what she thinks, usually in a kind manner, so she told Karl that she was frustrated about the information we were getting about the warranty. Karl tried to help us, but it was quickly clear that he was in over his head and asked our salesman to get the manager.
When we started questioning the manager it became painfully obvious that our salesman was completely wrong about all the warranty details he was telling us (no, Toyotas don’t come with a 5 year, 60,000 mile bumper to bumper warranty; that warranty is 3 year, 36,000 miles). I finally asked to speak with the manager privately and went off to express my frustration at the incorrect information we had been given. The manager corrected everything and about that time Karl wandered over to see what was going on.
I told him he could get the details from the manager, but Karl insisted on hearing the issue in person. After hearing everything, Karl apologized and said that he wanted people to have a good experience buying cars at his place. If we weren’t having a good experience, he suggested that we not buy a car from him. He didn’t want us walking away from the experience frustrated; that wasn’t what they were all about. I thanked him, said we would finish getting numbers on the car and our trade-in, and then we would leave and look at some other cars, and if we decided we liked the Toyota, we would come back.
That was surprising to us. So often we are pressured to buy at car dealers and to have the owner of the dealership tell us his first concern was a positive car buying experience was a fresh view of things. To then have him back it up by telling us to walk away was completely unexpected. He could easily have blown everything off or just let his manager handle it. But he was personally involved to ensure we were happy and we really appreciated that. He’s “The Mailman” and he wanted to deliver.
So did we eventually buy the car? No. That might have been a nice end to the story, but we weren’t in love with the Corolla, and eventually bought another car later that day. But we appreciated Karl’s attitude and involvement. When I told a salesman at another dealership that we had met Karl Malone, they were surprised that he was actually there. “You mean, he actually goes to his dealership?” was one reaction. Not only was he there, but he was interested in what was happening. Karl’s manager told me that Karl expects things to go a certain way and for the customer’s experience to be a certain way and when it isn’t, the results are not pretty.
I know some of you are wondering why he didn’t just give us a screaming deal. I mean, he can afford it, right? I’ve thought about that and concluded that although maybe he personally can afford it, his dealership still needs to make money to support the employees and he can’t just go around taking thousands off for everyone who complains. Otherwise, everybody would be in there griping. Instead, he gave us a reason to return.
Karl, it was nice to meet you and thanks for your involvement and suggestion. While we didn’t buy from you this time, we feel like we could return there for our next car and know what you expect.
Our February Birthday Getaway
Sue and I decided to have a getaway this weekend, starting with my birthday on Thursday. We headed south to warmer weather, which was a good thing, since it was freezing in Alpine when we left (it was supposed to be warmer later). We decided to go to southwest Utah and decided to stay at the Driftwood Lodge in Springdale, which is about 5 minutes from the west entrance to Zion National Park. We spent Friday at the park. We went hiking on a couple of trails, Emerald Loop Trail, and Weeping Rock Trail, and also went east through the park, through the tunnel.
Here are some of the pictures: