We made a stop in Cardston to go to the temple but it was closed for it's annual cleaning. So we decided to use the time to take in the Remington Alberta Carriage Center. There are all kinds of carriages and wagons. They also have a place where they restore/rebuild wagon/carriages for people. Some that they have rebuilt came to them in the trunk of a car, consisting of only the metal parts of the original carriage.
There were a few things that I learned about wheels in this area.
1) Iron rims expand, and thus come off, from hitting against hard surfaces such as rocks or cobble streets.
2) The spokes in a wheel are slightly pointed on one side so that they get assembled correctly. Spokes are put in at a slight slant.
3) The wheel is concave from the rim to the axle. It goes on the wagon with the concave surface facing out. This keeps the wheel from coming apart when going around corners and the pressure is shifted.
One of the freight carts that I found interesting is called a Red River cart. It was made completely of wood. Even the axle was all wood. The spokes, cross bars, etc. were kept in with wood wedges driven in to the ends.
The story goes that a freighter left with two regular wagons and several of these two wheeled Red River carts. He lost one of the wagons when it fell apart and the other when it sank. He reached his destination with all of the Red River carts. They float but the bottom things need to be protected as they will get wet.
We made a swing through Calgary, with the hopes of seeing one of my cousins, but she was not feeling well.
We passed through Canadian prairie as we went north to Calgary. This picture is of the prairie ending where it approaches the mountains.
The rain that we had in Glacier continued, but we went on to Banff. We parked the trailer at a campground just out of Banff (town) and then went driving with the truck.
This is around the town of Banff.
The white at the upper end of the lake is dropped from glaciers. There are glaciers further up.
Not far from Lake Louise is Lake Moraine. (Google Moraine to find out what this means.) These next two were on the way to Lake Moraine. One shows the formation well because of the snow. (I forgot to tell that there was fresh snow on the peaks when the clouds starting raising.) If you click on the other one, you can see where the rock wall lost a huge area looking almost like a cave entrance.
Lake Moraine gets it's name from the glacier pile of debris that has formed a dam. They think the slide occurred further up the canyon and rode down on the glacier, being deposited when the glacier melted.
This was looking out the tram as we went up, before we reached the cloud level.
2 comments:
Grandma thank you for the picture. You gave me an idea of something to draw. - C
I loved the pictures, especially those taken when you were above the clouds and those showing the impressiveness of the rock formations. It sounds like it was a great trip.
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