Friday, March 6, 2015

The end of a fantastic journey


 After leaving St. George, Utah we traveled up in elevation over 2000 ft. and this is what we encountered. A few days earlier, there was a severe snow storm in the area and it left a lot of snow in the mountains. The roads were perfect and the scenery was spectacular but this was just a reminder that winter was still around and was not going to go away just yet.

 Just outside of Salt Lake City it was evident that this is a big city with lots of of people and lots of traffic. The Interstate 5 and the freeway system has greatly improved over the years but  also the population has increased tremendously. This is not the place to pull a big trailer through during rush hour or you could be waiting a long time.
 We stayed in a campground in Idaho Falls for the evening and left early on March 6th and caught a spectacular view of the early morning sunrise. It was so beautiful and peaceful to travel at this time of morning. Sort of makes coming home a little more entertaining.






March 6th 2015, we cross the Canadian border at Coutts. It is good to be back home in our beautiful country.


As we arrive closer to home we both are feeling excited about home.

As we reflect back on this once in a life time, bucket list trip we feel so grateful to have experienced this amazing journey. So many fun adventures, spectacular memories and wonderful people. We feel very blessed and thank God for guiding us, protecting us and keeping us safe through out our entire journey. Reflecting back on our journey is some interesting facts. We traveled through 7 provinces, 32 states and 19,000 miles, we left home August 1st, 2014 and arrived back March 6, 2015 for a total of  8 months in a trailer and we survived to tell the story.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

The Journey Home, March 2015




Making our way back home...
Our journey that we embarked upon On Aug 1st, 2014 is slowly coming to an end. After spending some time in Apache Junction, Phoenix we are now heading north towards home.  We left Phoenix on February 26th and drove to Bullhead City, Arizona to spend a day visiting with relatives. The signage picture was taken in Kingman, Arizona.




 
Driving to Bullhead City we always enjoy seeing the rock formation that resembles a middle finger sticking up to the sky.   



Nevada Solar One.jpg
Photograph of Nevada Solar One, with the Las Vegas Valley beyond the mountains behind it. Highway 95 running beside the solar plants.


                            
Just before entering Las Vegas on Highway 95 we saw a solar panel plant. Nevada Solar One is a concentrated solar power plant, with a nominal capacity of 64 MW and maximum steam turbine power output up to 74 MW, spread over an area of 400 acres (160 ha). The projected CO2 emissions avoided is equivalent to taking approximately 20,000 cars off the road annually. The project required an investment of $266 million USD, and the project officially went to operation in June 2007. Electricity production is estimated to be 134 million kilowatt hours per year. It is the second solar thermal energy (STE) power plant built in the United States in more than 16 years, and the largest STE plant built in the world since 1991. It is located in Eldorado Valley in the southwest fringe of Boulder City, Nevada, and was built in that city's Energy Resource Zone, which requires renewable generation as part of plant development permits.










And across Highway 95 from the solar panel plant is miles and miles of high tension electrical poles, supplying electricity to Las Vegas and area.
Driving into Las Vegas, NV 

The 2013 population of the Las Vegas metropolitan area was 2,027,828. The city is one of the top three leading destinations in the United States for conventions, business, and meetings and is one of the wealthiest major cities in the country. In addition, the city's metropolitan area has more AAA Five Diamond hotels than any other city in the world, and is a global leader in the hospitality industry. Today, Las Vegas is one of the top tourist destinations in the world. Located on the basin floor of the Mojave Desert it is surrounded by mountain ranges on all sides.














Travelling on the Interstate 15 between Mesquite, NV and St. George UT.























We are staying at a park in St. George, Utah which  is a city located in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Utah on the Utah-Arizona, Nevada border. The city lies in the northeastern-most stretch of the Mojave Desert, 117 miles (188 km) northeast of Las Vegas, Nevada and 303 miles (488 km) south-southwest of Salt Lake City on Interstate 15.




 Today we visited Snow Canyon State Park, a 7,400 acre scenic park tucked amid lava flows and soaring sandstone cliffs in strikingly colorful desert environment. Sand dunes, up to 2,500 feet thick, eventually cemented into stone. Burnt orange to creamy white color in color, Navajo sandstone, the predominant rock in the park, is what remains of the ancient desert sea. Over time, water cut and shaped the sandstone to form canyons. Cinder cones erupted causing lava to flow down these canyons filling them with basalt.
 
 Throughout the park you can see lava boulders.

 Beautiful views of the canyons in orange to creamy white Navajo rock.


 On our way out of the park you can see the fresh snow on the mountains surrounding St. George.