Category Archives: Personal

Fall Walk

Yesterday André and I went for a nice long walk around our village to enjoy the balmy 20°C (68°F) weather and stopped by two small lakes nearby. Besides the usual mallards (Stockenten) and coots (Blässhühner) we saw two Egyptian geese (Nilgänse) on the first lake, but they were too far away to photograph. I’ve seen them there before, though. The Egyptian goose is an invasive species that has established self-sustaining populations all over Germany.

This is the second lake:

On this one, there were four grown white swans and one adolescent one which looked quite young for the season and was following another swan, presumably its mother.

Rodalber Felsenwanderweg

A few days ago André and I took advantage of the sunny fall weather and spent two days hiking the Rodalber Felsenwanderweg (offizielle Homepage auf Deutsch, Flyer mit Karte), which is a 45km (28mi) loop path around the small town of Rodalben in the Palatinate Forest, about 100km (60mi) from where we live.

Despite being not very far from the town, most of the path is actually a very narrow footpath through the forest, and it passes about 130 sandstone formations that are at least 15m long and 3m tall, but can be as big as 500m long and 18m tall. Many of them reminded me of the sandstone we’ve seen on our trips to the Southwest of the USA, but instead of being in a desert, these are in the middle of a large forested area with many rocks covered by trees, bushes and smaller plants like moss.

We were very lucky with the weather on the first day (Monday 26 October), which was very sunny. On the second day the sun didn’t manage to break through the fog which rose in the morning, so our hike took on a more mysterious air. The following photos were all taken on the first day.

The Bruderfelsen (brother’s rock) is Rodalben’s landmark, with a legend of two brothers who fought over one woman to go with it.

Detail of a sandstone formation:

There were many, many different mushrooms growing from the ground or tree stumps. Here’s a fly agaric (Fliegenpilz):

Fall colors:

I’m a big fan of National Parks

Cool Green Science: 10 Great National Parks You’ve Never Heard Of

  1. Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Colorado
  2. Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona
  3. Congaree National Park, South Carolina
  4. Great Basin National Park, Nevada
  5. Lassen Volcanic National Park, California
  6. Capitol Reef National Park, Utah
  7. Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas
  8. Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado
  9. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida
  10. Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota

We’ve been to half of these parks:

Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Colorado

Went there in 2005, but only on a brief visit. We had planned one or two longer hikes there, but André sprained his ankle a few days before so anything more than a few yards of hobbling around were out.

Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona

Visited in 2002 while traveling around Arizona and New Mexico.

[I don’t have a photo of this because back in 2002, we still used slide film instead of a digital camera.]

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

We spent a few days there in 2005 and went on a cave tour and a guided hike, among other things. We were the only two people who showed up for the guided hike, so we got a very exclusive tour. We also enjoyed the evening meetings around the campfire. Highly recommended!

Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

We briefly visited during our first trip to the US in 1999 and returned for a longer stay in 2012. Recommendations: the trail through Cohab Canyon (plus two Fruita overlooks), and the freshly-baked fruit pies you can buy at the Gifford homestead.

Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado

We also visited this park in 2005 and loved walking around in the dunes.

Happy New Year!

Hello world, I’m back.

Exactly two weeks after moving into our new home we finally got a landline and internet access today!

Meanwhile, we’ve enjoyed our new views and a few nice sunrises. This was one of the first ones:

After three years of living in the “big city” (Karlsruhe), we’re happy to be back in the country and hope to stay here for a long time!