Moose Mountain

   
Canadian Rockies scrambles, panoramas and photography - Canadas Mountains




Canadian Rockies Scrambles and Panoramas
by T. L. Helmer
   
 
 
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Moose Mountain - Canadian Rockies

moose_mountain.jpg (19775 bytes)

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Moose Mountain
from Jumpingpound Mountain



Moose Mountain
from Ole Buck Mountain
The oil rig on the right is drilling for Natural Gas. The Moose Mountain syncline is one of the largest Natural Gas reservoirs in North America.

Sunday November 4/2001/4:51PM

It's exactly one season since I was on my way to the Crowsnest Pass for a holiday, August 4th; feels like a year.

But I just got back from Moose Mountain. This was the umpteenth time I've been up there, less than ten times though.

I reached the top in 1:40 and the total trip time was under 3 hours, but I stopped the timer for my sun break in the trees on the way down. A few weeks or more have passed since I've enjoyed sunshine like that and I feel a lot better too. Be it understood, if I could, I'd stay with the wood, and I should.

Did you know that the pineal gland, located in the head, is photo sensitive? If you don't get some sun, the human body knows it. A primordial section in our genome left over from the Iguana days I guess.

When you get some sun iguana be a great day!

summit_moose_far.jpg (32688 bytes)

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summit_moose_closer.jpg (39348 bytes)

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This is how the summit appears when you start out. Both summits can be seen from this angle.

The first summit from closer, the main summit appears as a small blip on the left skyline.

Lots of other people were trying to get to the top, some on mountain bikes. Over the first summit the wind gusts were blowing me into a 45 degree tilt. Lots of fun. On the way back I was stunned to see some shorts clad people still going up, their legs pink from the wind. The wind-chill was near zero so it wasn't that bad I suppose. In Calgary it was 20 Degrees C.

summit_moose_closer2.jpg (51351 bytes)

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summit_moose_first.jpg (47678 bytes)

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Now I'm on top of the first summit and the main is in view.

This is looking back down from the spot where the next photo below is taken, near a corner.

 

summit_moose_almost_there.jpg (67616 bytes)

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summit_looking_down.jpg (42538 bytes)

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Looking up the final stretch from the corner, the lookout is just visible.

Looking down from the summit. The parking area is on the small hill at the right hand side of the treed ridge. Distance is about 7km.

While on the summit I enjoyed my traditional can of sardines, and an apricot cliff bar. The long chained fatty acids in fish and eggs prevent you from getting moody; their synergistic with the sunshine. I'm a vegetarian now, and I feel like I'm still working on the food technology side of it. I've left myself a bit short on the nutrients at times and have paid for it. I won't get into the details of that right now.

summit_moose_pad.jpg (33689 bytes)

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Here are some friendly French people, their dog was friendly too.
Jumpingpound Mountains in the background

My physical performance has been boosted, mostly in a slower heart rate. My blood pressure has dropped from 160 to 120. Weight is down from 230lbs. to 185lbs. This helps enormously.

If you want to live longer and feel heartier, go vegetarian, but do your homework first, don't stumble into it like I did.

Famous Quotes   <-- click

ever would it occur to a child that a sheep, a pig, a cow or a chicken was good to eat, while, like Milton's Adam, he would eagerly make a meal off fruits, nuts, thyme, mint, peas and broad beans which penetrate further and stimulate not only the appetite but other vague and deep nostalgias. We are closer to the Vegetable Kingdom than we know; is it not for man alone that mint, thyme, sage, and rosemary exhale "crush me and eat me!" -- for us that opium poppy, coffee-berry, tea-plant and vine perfect themselves? Their aim is to be absorbed by us, even if it can only be achieved by attaching themselves to roast mutton.

Cyril Connolly
1903-1974, British Critic




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© CanadasMountains.com + Tim L. Helmer
Friday February 08, 2008 11:19 AM

 

 

 

 

 

 

The First Fifty
Mountains

1. The Black Tusk
2. Tunnel Mountain
3. Mount Rundle
4. Mount Temple
5. Moose Mountain
6. Mount Robson
    Mumm Peak.
7. Heart Mountain
8. Mount Swansea
9. Mount Nestor
10. Mount Whyte
11. Mount Niblock
12. Eiffel Peak
13. Grotto Mountain
14. Ha Ling Peak
15. Mount Baldy
16. Prairie Mountain
17. East Mt. Rundle
18. Mt. Lady MacDonald
19. Doorjamb Mountain
20. Squaw's Tit
21. Jumpingpound
22. Sunwapta Peak
23. Mount Chester
24. Mount St. Nicholas
25. Mount Olive
26. Mount Ware
27. Mount Yamnuska
28. Mount Glasgow
29. Mount Cornwall
30. Outlaw Peak
31. Mount St. Piran
32. Mount Fairview
33. Blackrock Mountain
34. Barrier Mountain
35. Paget Peak
36. Mount Bourgeau
37. Mount Cory
38. Cascade Mountain
39. Fortress Mountain
40. Big Sister
41. Turtle Mountain
42. Crowsnest Mountain
43. The Wedge
44. Cirque Peak
45. Beatrice Peak
46. Mount Ball
47. Pigeon Mountain
48. Mount Allan
49. Loder Peak
50. Stoney Squaw

The Second Fifty
Mountains