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Posts Tagged ‘Skies’

From Manitoulin marshes to Florida’s skies – Bonnie Kogos
Visiting my sister, Nancy, this morning I watch her on the sixth tee, take a swing and smack a golf ball straight down the middle. That golf ball flies, and our laughter flies during the week. I wake up in her house and hear the cooing of morning doves.[...]

Read more on The Sudbury Star

Crash survivor hopes to return to the skies
The morning sky above Joshua Tree was bright blue and dotted with a few clouds as Rocky Harvey eased his van out of the driveway.

Read more on The Desert Sun


I’m making a list & checking it twice. Here I show most of the gear that I’m bringing on an upcoming annual trip. This is not intended as a backpacking checklist, more as a hybrid between backpacking & car camping. Take care

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Few shots of the evening skies on a cold winter evening at Mt McKay Lookout, Thunder Bay. McKay was originally known as the “Thunder Mountain” (Animikii-wajiw in the Ojibwe language and locally written as “Anemki-waucheu”). The mountain is used by the Ojibwe for sacred ceremonies. Only with the construction of the road were non-First Nations allowed on this land. A lookout exists on the lower eastern plateau at an elevation of 300 metres (980 ft), providing a view of Thunder Bay and the city’s harbour. A small memorial commemorates Aboriginal people that fought in wars. There is a path on the eastern face of the mountain that can be used for hiking. Plants on the mountain include red and sugar maple and poison ivy (animikiibag—”thunder-leaf” in the Ojibwe language). The top of the mountain has glacial erratics and jack pines. A small grove of yellow birch grows just south of the entrance gate. A small, unmaintained trail can be used to reach the top from the lookout via the north face, with a heavy gauge steel cable that can be used for support. However, due to the grade and geology (mostly shale) of the face, this unsanctioned hike is considered dangerous, and is not recommended for novice hikers. There is also somewhat of a trail on the west side of the mountain. Shale is predominant in this area, making the western climb considerably more dangerous than the north face.

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