Thank you! BTW, the GPS Motion X is an AWESOME program now that I can  
post my maps, waypoints, and routes directly to Facebook, Twitter, and  
Emails automatically while I am in the field...It just gets better and  
better!
Can't wait to here stories, trade notes, and walk in the forest with  
you soon.

Gary
On Jul 1, 2009, at 10:11 PM, [email protected] wrote:

> Gary,
>
>       I used Monica's Nikon Coolpicx5400.
>
>       Attached for your viewing pleasure are three more images of  
> yesterdaay's La Plata adventure. The first image is from above the  
> Cumberland Basin area, a big bowl-shaped depression just below  
> timberline. Cumberland Basin is the origin of the La Plata River.  
> The big ridge in the foreground is the summit of 12,388-foot  
> Cumberland mountain. You can see one remaining patch of snow. Our  
> path took us up onto the side of Cumberland Mountain. The second  
> image looks down into Cumberland Basin. The ridge in the foreground  
> is part of Snowstorm Peak. The third image is from the pass between  
> Cumberland Mountain and 12-511-foot Snowstorm Peak. According to my  
> GPS our elevation was 11,956 feet at the point of the photo.  
> According to the topographical map, our elevation was 12,000 feet.  
> The long line of peaks in the distance are the San Juans near  
> Silverton.
>
> Bob
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Gary A. Beluzo" <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, July 1, 2009 8:30:46 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: [ENTS] Re: La Platas
>
> Bob,
>
> What kind of camera did you use to get these beautiful shots?
>
> Gary
> On Jul 1, 2009, at 10:07 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> ENTS, WNTS,
>
>       Here are more photos from yesterday's record breaking trip up La  
> Plata Canyon to Kennebec Pass. I would like to point out that La  
> Plata Canyon, up which we drove, is a marvelously wooded mountain  
> gorge. Its depth by common methods of measurement and comparison is  
> between 3,000 and 3,500 feet - not so deep as the Animas River  
> Gorge, but for me, equally scenic. Along the way, I measured a  
> couple dozen Englemann spruce to heights of between 100 and 110 feet  
> - enough to satisfy myself that trees in that height class are  
> common along La Plata Creek up to an altitude of 11,000 feet - in  
> protected areas. However, there are populations of taller Englemann  
> spruces in the gorge, but their relative frequency would be  
> difficult to determine. I'm not going to be able to do it on this  
> trip. Somewhere in the gorge there is Englemann growing that we will  
> confirm to over 140 feet. My present belief is that is near the  
> maximum height that the species will achieve in the gorge and it  
> will do that only near the water and deep within the gorge.
>       The first image is obviously that of Rocky Mountain columbine. It  
> was too early to see it in profusion in the upper elevations, where  
> it becomes a carpet flower. Maybe next year.
>       The second image looks to the northeast and into the West Needle  
> and Needle subranges of the San Juans. To the right, the big peaks  
> include Elous at 14,083 feet and probably Windom and Sunshine, two  
> other fourteeners in the Needles.     
>       The 3rd image is of Cumberland Basin, directly beneath us. The 4- 
> wheel drive road to near Kennebeck Pass visible in the basin is the  
> one we drove. Faye Schrater expertly drove the road and made the  
> experience a complete pleasure.
>
>       Full report on today's activities this evening.
>
> Bob
>
>
>
> <Columbine.jpg><LaPlataSmall6539.jpg><LaPlataSmall6542.jpg>
>
>
>
>
> >
> <LaPlatasSmall6563.jpg><LaPlataSmall6542.jpg><LaPlataSmall6551.jpg>


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