-
14th August 09, 08:13 AM
#1
-
-
14th August 09, 08:16 AM
#2
-
-
14th August 09, 08:24 AM
#3
Great photos Chris looking forward to the rest of them.
-
-
14th August 09, 09:17 AM
#4
I have hiked all over that area, and simply love it. One quick question, is the last picture from the BonTon in Ouray?
Glen McGuire
A Life Lived in Fear, Is a Life Half Lived.
-
-
14th August 09, 01:52 PM
#5
-
-
14th August 09, 03:19 PM
#6
Boy does THAT look familiar! I live 30 miles from Idaho's Silver Valley - Wallace, Kellogg, Smelterville - the richest silver deposit on the face of the earth. Loads of old mine heads and plenty of towns and ghost towns and rusty streams...
Great photos and Happy Birthday!
-
-
14th August 09, 03:51 PM
#7
That picture of Ouray looks like it was a toy town compared with the mountains surrounding it.
Great pictures again Chris - Thank You.
Regards
Chas
-
-
14th August 09, 10:05 PM
#8
Hey how cool is that!!??
I worked in the Idarado back in 1963 - wandered those hundreds of miles of tunnels as a sample boy and mine engineer's assistant (Rodman).
Did you happen to notice the Saltire flying from the first house at the bottom of the hill in Ouray - south end of main street, east side?
Some of the guys I worked with underground in the Idarado have thier names on the Miner's Memorial by the city pool. The statue is just what they looked like back in the day. We really did carry candles to check for bad air - had too. Some of the old timbers in the early drifts were 100 years old and their decomposition created unbreatheable air. Most of those areas were sealed off...but you never know.
Great times back then...even if we had no clue what we were doing environmentally.
You could take the tunnels all the way from Red Mountain, where your pics are from, through the mountain to above Telluride where they sent the ore down to be crushed.
An amazing mine - I would be six miles in, a half mile deep, and still 10,000 feet above sea level. It was dark and it was always wet...like being in a constant rain storm...but sure was beautiful in the stopes where you could see the ore and the crystals.
Up on the high levels where it was freezing cold there's be walls of elegant ice crystals as big as your hand, but so transparent there was no way to photograph them.
And some of those high level portals opened out onto beautiful remote alpine lakes and fields of wildflowers.
Thanks for them pics for sure.
Ron
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
-
-
14th August 09, 10:59 PM
#9
Impressive !
Best,
Robert
Robert Amyot-MacKinnon
-
-
16th August 09, 07:45 AM
#10
Those are great photos, which bring back memories of when I toured the area in 1981.
-
Similar Threads
-
By Ayin McFye in forum Miscellaneous Forum
Replies: 22
Last Post: 3rd July 08, 07:49 AM
-
By Rob Wright in forum Miscellaneous Forum
Replies: 16
Last Post: 3rd February 08, 03:07 AM
-
By gilmore in forum Miscellaneous Forum
Replies: 15
Last Post: 1st November 07, 02:25 PM
-
By 12stones in forum Kilt Board Newbie
Replies: 38
Last Post: 29th October 07, 08:00 AM
-
By CameronTaylor in forum Kilts in the Media
Replies: 8
Last Post: 23rd March 07, 01:06 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks