My wife and I have been to RMNP two times. Well go again no doubt. Its that kind of place. Its not elbow to elbow with crowds like many of the parks.
There are lots of visitors mind you, but they more or less spread out. The City of Estes Park is right on the front door step of RMNP. If you see crowds, it will be in town where all the shopping boutiques are located. Estes Park is charming.
RMNP is about wildlife and beauty. Elk herds congregate in September-October and the bulls can be heard bugling their rutting calls from just before dusk to dawn. Its an eerie sound really. Especially because you can hear them for quite some distance through the mountains. Once youve heard the call, in the dark of the night, you never forget it.
The elk, their calls, and their harems are striking. The elk is a handsome and majestic creature. When one witnesses a large bull bugling in the cool morning air, the jet of steamy breath leaving his mouth and nostrils at the end of his outstretched head, a sense of strength and independence comes upon you. You know that he owns that turf at that moment.
And surrounding that strength and independence is wild, yet tranquil, beauty. High mountains, rolling meadows, contrasts of dark forest against golden grass. Its a painters paradise.
This little painting is the first in a series Im going to do. Its a lone, windswept, ponderosa pine at the edge of a meadow just as the earth begins to incline upward to the higher elevations. Smaller specimens dot the hill side and far in the distance a nice stand exists.
I suspect this one survived a fire. The youngsters in its shadow look up to it, as if for inspiration.
Much like the elk, its a symbol of strength and independence. When I saw it, I knew it owned that turf for the moment.







2 Comments
looks like a great day
Thanks for the comment Billjr,
it was a great day
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