I'll try this again. Tried to write yesterday and lost the I-net mid sentence ... we'll see if we have a more stable connection today.
We arrived in Malta Tuesday afternoon after a pleasant and uneventful drive north from White Sulphur Springs. Our RV park is on the Milk River and just beside the railroad trestle that crosses the river so we are contending with Amtrak, freight trains and their horns all night long. This is one of only two parks in the area and after checking the other one out, we decided we could live with the train noise for a few days.
After three years of waiting, Gloria finally got to see her favorite dinosaur, Leonardo. Montana is the premium location for dinosaur fossil digs and Malta has a excellent museum as well as a field station where we were led on a wonderful tour (Thank you Rhonda!) around the facility where they "clean the bones" and reassemble the pieces. Absolutely fascinating!
We went to see Cindy at her work here in Malta yesterday. She works at Art's Furniture Store. I have been Cindy's "second Mom" since she was three years old and I started taking care of her while her mom worked. She is the same age as my daughter, Violet and fit into our family like one of my own ever since.
Her daughter, Jessie and granddaughter Skylie (18 months) came down from the ranch where her husband Ryan works north of Whitewater to see us and her youngest boy, Tim called while we were there at the store to tell us he is on his way from Vancouver, WA today and to expect him tonight because he's driving straight through. So ... tomorrow we're planning a BBQ at their house in Saco, about 27 miles east.
Gloria, Les, Phil and I drove out to Saco after dinner last night to see Cindy's house, visit with her and her husband Ron then on the way home, we got caught in a major storm that was moving north out of the southwest. At Gloria's insistence, Les turned around and drove us back into town, parked next to an old abandoned gas station and we sat it out. That was a good call by Gloria because thunder, lightning, torrential rain and wind blowing sideways pummeled the car for about half an hour while the storm raged across the prairie. It was both frightening and exciting at the same time to watch the power of Mother Nature and realize just how helpless and insignificant we really are.
We tried to take some pictures just before it started and I haven't checked them yet to see what we got. The lightning was spectator and like nothing I've ever seen before, except once over thirty years ago in Memphis, TN when I witnessed an spectacular electrical storm and it rained so hard, the street looked like a river when it was over. Anyway, I'd just as soon not go through one of them again anytime soon.
Phil and Les are waiting for some calmer weather to go fishing. It's really windy today but it's a lot cooler because of it. Yesterday, in the "calm before the storm", the temperature topped out around 95' ... Just a bit too warm for me!
About the trains.
ReplyDeleteEverytime we hear a train or see some active tracks either me or my wife says: "There has got to be a campground arund here somewhere." It seem that about 95 percent of the time we overnight at a commerical campground it is near a busy rail route. Of course a child I lived right beside the tracks in a small town.