Monday 12 November 2007

Lake Louise at Dawn

After a night of tossing & turning due to the over eating & too many glasses of wine, I decided to drag my arse out of bed & see what the lake looked like at dawn. The snow had stopped & the skies were fairly clear. It should be noted that dawn here at the moment is just before 8am.
Pretty lake isn't it. Kind of explains the millions of tourists that stop here every year.

This scene is on a million postcards & a million calendars, but these ones were taken with a 6.3 Mpix pocket camera. Not bad hey?
It's only the second time I've stayed at a hotel more than a mile above sea level. Lake Louise is at 1735m. The only other time was Mt Pilatus in Switzeland above Lucern at 2300m (7000 ft).
This is a different shot of Lake Louise.
Dawn at the moment brings some brilliant colours at this time of year & I usually get to see them across my desk at work. This photo is no exception. It's completely unaltered. Usually I need to correct the brightness or contrast slightly to take the haze out of the photo, but it didn't work at all with this one.

This shot is of the ridge to the North of the lake. We actually hiked up to the foot of the Big Bee Hive (top left of shot above & below) back in September. Lake Agnes is tucked in behind that feature. Believe it or not, Lake Agnes is 400m above Lake Louise.
After our traditional mountain Sunday breakfast of Pancakes with toppings, we set off for the Icefields Parkway to have a look at a few of the lakes & ranges that we'd seen in summer. I was so glad to have the all wheel drive & anti-lock brakes in the car because it was.... well..... Very icy! All the snow the day before had made the roads super icy.
I decided to rename the "Icefields Parkway" the "Ice Parkway". Check out the snow on the road! I guess I'll just have to get used to it.
We saw two cars off the road & in the ditch beside the road due to incompetent driving. The first one happened literally a few hundred metres in front of us. We gave the driver a lift back half a km to the Num-Ti-Jar lodge where he worked, to organise a tow & to get a load of abuse from his work mates. He was more worried about the ridicule from his mates than the damage to the van. And he was an Aussie! How embarrassing!
The other one was only a few kms further up & was clearly due to a nervous driver that panicked the first time they tries to stop the car.
Personally, the trip was a great excercise in learning ice driving.
You may remember a few lake mirror shots of Bow Lake from Summer time (see blog entry Aug 1). Well this is the same place with the winter closing in.
The mountains are a wonderful place because you can keep going back to the same place & it will look different every time.

Above is a pair of shots that clearly shows what a difference in season can make. These are near identical aspects, but the difference is massive. The lake has even started to freeze over on the far side.
I love the mountains!!!