Appreciating Photography
I appreciate
Good photography by friends
Here are my favorites










Great photography
Inspires me to grab my phone:
Let SnapChat do it!!

Hah! Too many to post ’em all!
See ya later…
I appreciate
Good photography by friends
Here are my favorites










Great photography
Inspires me to grab my phone:
Let SnapChat do it!!

Loving each other
Includes the birds of the air.
We love our raptors.

The Bridger Raptors
Are celebrated each year
At this Festival.

Wonderful surprise –
Look at who I encountered:
Our ATV Buds!!

What a great surprise!
They were right there on the deck
Enjoying birds, too.
I decided to
Have a bit of fun with Bob.
Here’s my new boyfriend!

I showed this photo
To Bob, and told him “Tough Luck!
I have a new friend!”

Always the good sport.
He looked to find the foursome.
“Great to see you, Buds!”




Here’s a toast to birds…
A toast to fillet mignon…
To Scott for great wine!

We came home with a book that will continue to help us learn more about our raptors. Do you have raptors in your part of the world? What’s your favorite bird? I’m fascinated by bald eagles. We actually see them in our area. What bird that fascinates you do you see in your area?


See ya tomorrow.
When you think of “love” – it usually is love between persons, right?

But at our Madison Valley Woman’s Club meeting yesterday,
LOVE was expressed as it relates to nature and the love of climbing.
Our guest speaker was Wendy Gustin.

Wendy doesn’t like climbing.
She doesn’t like it a little bit.
She LOVES it!!
Wendy told us about her adventures in 2017
when she hired a guide and a sherpa
and took off to climb Mt. Everest.
It is the Earth’s highest mountain above sea level,
located in the Mahalangur Himal sub-range of the Himalayas.
Nepal and China run across its summit point.
Wendy reached the summit.
She is one of the 450+ woman in recorded history ever to do so.
The summit is 29,029 feet!!

I had the privilege of sitting this close to the slide show.
After seeing a few slides in the presentation, I grabbed my cell phone.
I knew this was going to be a treat – and I wanted to share it with you.
I didn’t take notes in order to give you exact words,
but the pictures speak for themselves.
Just look!!

Strap on your 20 lbs of boots, and let’s go!

The tiny airport where she landed
is one of the most dangerous in the world.
(Sorry I don’t remember its  name)
Miss the landing and you end up in the mountain
sooner than you anticipated!

The steps were steep, but much more doable than
the glacier-covered, steep mountainsides.

Doesn’t look THAT steep, you say?
Guess again!

Those tiny orange and yellow specks
at the bottom of the glacier are the tents
at Base Camp.

Climbers had to connect to a single rope
that guided their path – and required teamwork.

No way you’d catch me climbing that ladder!
(My kitchen stool –
and the circular staircase
to my sanctuary each morning…
that’s my idea of climbing!)
Hats off to the brave souls
who love this kind of climbing!

They had to navigate these kinds of ice flows.
Wendy said to look carefully –
can you find some climbers up there??

Here is Camp 3.
From this 20,000 ft. level, they climbed
up to 25,000 ft. and back down to this camp
several different days to get acclimated
for the final climb to the summit.
The wind at this level was brutal at times.
We saw a video of the tents being blown away
(if they did not have climbers in them to hold them down).

This is the sherpas inside Wendy’s tent.
They greeted her each morning,
“Good Day, DeDe!”
as they gave her the hot tea
they had prepared for her.
(“DeDe is a term of affection and greeting
used by the Nepalese).
They also made her breakfast.
Wendy said she got pretty spoiled!

This is the sherpas’ tent.
Many of them stay the whole season
up there at the 25,000 foot level!!
Some are born at the 17,000 foot level
and are acclimated from birth to these elevations.

It is hard to imagine the exhilaration
of reaching Mt. Everest’s summit!
Have you ever had a hankering
to do something like this?
I have the utmost respect for Wendy,
her team, her courage,
her determination and tenacity,
her success!!
Imagine the fitness routine,
and savings plan, for 5 to 10 years
to get ready –
strong enough –
and have sufficient funds –
to do this.
Hard to imagine, isn’t it?
Congratulations, Wendy!
Thank you for sharing your passion
and the beautiful slides with us.
My pictures of them often reflect light-
and do not do them justice,
but you, my friends, got the idea, right?

Do you LOVE climbing?
I must say, it’s not one of my passions,
but I certainly enjoyed doing it vicariously!
What is YOUR passion
that you’d train and save moneyÂ
for a decade to be able to do?

Tell me about it. What do you love THAT much?
See ya tomorrow.
Have a Fabulous Friday night.
I waited 28 years
For a card or letter
from my #1 grandson.
It was a card worth waiting for!!


In addition to the surprise
of a postcard from our #1 grandson,
we also received a wonderful
set of pictures exhibiting his
phenomenal photography skills.



I appreciated Mike’s photography so much in the few he sent me, that he created an Adobe album for me and sent some of the ones he has taken in Valais, Switzerland where he and Tania were born and raised.




Mike, you are a treasure!!

That postcard was worth waiting for –
That trip to Greece was worth waiting for –
That darling Tania was worth waiting for –

Everything worth having
is worth waiting for.
Trust in God’s perfect timing!
Thank you God for letting me live long enough
to see this #1 grandson so happy,
and so willing to share his joy!

Have a beautiful day, my friends.
I hope your dreams and prayers
come true, too.
Keep on praying and dreaming!
Remember, they are worth waiting for!

I lie there awake
It is three in the morning
Counting sheep in vain

Last night was the same
But I told my friend Derrick
That I’d count ponies

.
derrickjknightRamblings
Check out his blog.
It won’t put you to sleep.
It is delightful reading
and his photography is superb!!

Now I need to count ponies and try to get some sleep.
What works for you when you can’t sleep?


Virginia City, Montana
Last night I was invited to join 16 other friends on an old firetruck tour of our nearby “Ghost Town” – old mining town – still our Madison County capitol – Virginia City.
The tour began around 7:45 pm. The driver spoke non-stop into his microphone and gave us a history of this town where gold brought 60,000 people to live and mine in the period from 1863 to around the beginning of 1900.
Sunset over the Tobacco Root Range
We watched the sun set as we listened to the fascinating stories of the Old West.

Headed through the little one main road town on Highway 287, we passed the old courthouse, built in 1876, still beautiful and useful today.

Heading up the hill, we passed the welcome sign, acknowledging that VC has been “Resisting change since 1863.”

About 200 people call this home year-round … maybe double that number in the summertime. But, it’s a great tourist trap. Check it out on your AAA brochures! They give it 5 stars, I think.

There are plenty of old homes on Main Street (287) and the street just above it. Don’t miss Elling House and the old stone Episcopal Church a couple blocks up the hill. Also, the old Opera House, with its great Vaudevillle type performances, at the west end of town is a must see!

The sky kept getting prettier and prettier!

We stopped at the top of Virginia City Hill by an old cemetery for some appetizers at about 8:45 pm…

…and continued to admire the sunset.

It was dazzling!
And as the sliver of a moon began to shine in a darkening sky, we headed home.

I hope you had a lovely Wednesday evening, too.
Have a great Thursday!
Just love one another…

See ya later!
Yesterday Bob & I took our ATV, our dog, our lunches, and our stamina on a ride with friends up to the top of Mt Baldy in the Tobacco Root Mountains. From my sanctuary window, I can see the snow-topped mountain off to the north-west of us.

Hard for you to see, with the sunlight reflections on the glass, but it’s out there through the angels in the distance… the tallest of the snow capped mountains.
What does all that have to do with thoughtfulness? Well, without the help of our friends, we wouldn’t have ventured up there!
First of all, some of the trails were really, really rocky and rough. We wouldn’t chance it alone!
Secondly, I could not have made that climb up from the trail where we left the ATVs without the help of my buddies!

With kind thoughtfulness, they each took one of my arms and climbed with me. They stopped to rest when my breathing got to panting instead. God bless ‘em!

At the 10,788 ft. level, the view was spectacular and the air coming off the snow on the peaks beside us was crisp and fresh.
I hope you’re as blessed as we are to have such thoughtful friends!

Our buddy/neighbor/guide was Rex, who (with his wife, Penny) led the way. We’d have been lost without him!

Have a thoughtful day, my friends. Who can you help with his/her climb today?


Thank you for visiting JanBeek Come back soon for more adventures and inspiration.
Written
on September 18, 2019