Palms To Pines In 15 Minutes


March 9th 2011 

The Adventure Begins...

It's that time of year... Time to see the snow! Bunnaford, Sue, and Paul head 111 miles to the east to visit the aerial tramway in Palm Springs. The day begins with a call to Bunnaford... Does she get the signal???

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Bunny was up and ready at 9:30am... Jammie free

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
An easy drive... Two hours and we were there

Did you know? - Snow is a type of precipitation within the Earth's atmosphere in the form of crystalline water ice, consisting of a multitude of snowflakes that fall from clouds. Since snow is composed of small ice particles, it is a granular material. It has an open and therefore soft structure, unless packed by external pressure. Snowflakes come in a variety of sizes and shapes. Types which fall in the form of a ball due to melting and refreezing, rather than a flake, are known as graupel, with ice pellets and snow grains as examples of graupel. Snowfall amount and its related liquid equivalent precipitation amount are determined using a variety of different rain gauges.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
There is Mount San Jacinto

Did You Know? - San Jacinto Peak, 10,834 feet (3,302 m), is the highest peak of the San Jacinto Mountains, and of Riverside County, California. It lies within Mount San Jacinto State Park. Naturalist John Muir wrote of San Jacinto Peak, "The view from San Jacinto is the most sublime spectacle to be found anywhere on this earth!"

San Jacinto Peak is one of the most topographically prominent peaks in the United States. It is ranked 6th among peaks in the 48 contiguous states.

We Are There

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The only tower reachable by roads! Tower height 227 feet

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
I think it moved while we were there

Did You Know? - Mount San Jacinto is one of the "Three Saints," a name occasionally used to describe the high points of the three tallest mountain ranges in Southern California: San Jacinto Peak, Mount San Gorgonio (high point of the San Bernardino Mountains), and Mount San Antonio (high point of the San Gabriel Mountains).

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Interesting windows.. Out path today is directly up the center of the "V"

We Are About To Board The Tram

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"I am NOT scared!!! It was interesting that a passenger told about "accidents" he read about on Wikipedia...

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Loads of equipment makes everything work...

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
On our way up....Maximum existing traveling speed: 1,970 linear feet per minute. 21 mph

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Amazing rock structures all the way up

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The other car is going down the mountain... Weight (carriage, hanger and cabin) loaded: 22,000lb

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Down they go... Maximum output of DC hoist motor: 1,100 HP or 1,350 KW
Continuous output: 675 HP 855 KW

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The desert station seems very small from here

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Little wires hold us up

Did You Know? - Historically wire rope evolved from steel chains which had a record of mechanical failure. While flaws in chain links or solid steel bars can lead to catastrophic failure, flaws in the wires making up a steel cable are less critical as the other wires easily take up the load. Friction between the individual wires and strands, as a consequence of their twist, further compensates for any flaws. This method of minimizing the effect of flaws may also be seen in Damascus steel, employing multiple folding or laminations.


80 Degrees Below And 40 Degrees Above

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The snow is now visible. We could begin to see wild animals

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Plants growing out of the rock are quite interesting

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Striations in the rock... Solid granite core

Did You Know? - Granite is an igneous rock and is formed from magma . Granitic magma has many potential origins but it must intrude other rocks. Most granite intrusions are emplaced at depth within the crust, usually greater than 1.5 kilometres and up to 50 km depth within thick continental crust.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Careful study reveal small snow-slides.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Cochella Valley below us

Did You Know? - Coachella Valley (pronounced /koʊ.əˈtʃɛlə/) is a large valley landform in Southern California. The valley extends for approximately 45 miles (72 km) in Riverside County southeast from the San Bernardino Mountains to the saltwater Salton Sea, the largest lake in California. It is approximately 15 miles (24 km) wide along most of its length, bounded on the west by the San Jacinto Mountains and the Santa Rosa Mountains and on the north and east by the Little San Bernardino Mountains. The San Andreas Fault crosses the valley from the Chocolate Mountains in the southeast corner and along the centerline of the Little San Bernardinos. The fault is easily visible along its northern length as a strip of greenery against an otherwise bare mountain.

The Chocolate Mountains are home to a United States Navy live gunnery range and are mostly off-limits to the public. In comparison to the "Inland Empire" (Riverside-San Bernardino area and the California desert), some people refer to the IE 's sub-region Coachella Valley as the "Desert Empire" to differentiate it from the neighboring Imperial Valley. Geographers and geologists sometimes call the area, along with the Imperial Valley to the south, the "Cahuilla Basin" or the "Salton Trough"

There is some contention as to the origin of the name. Early maps show the area as "Conchilla," the Spanish word for "seashell." Since the area was once a part of a vast inland sea, tiny fossilized mollusk shells can be found in just about every remote area. Local lore explains the change in the name from Conchilla to Coachella as a mistake made by the map-makers contracted to transcribe the data supplied by the Southern Pacific Railroad's survey party. Rather than redraw the expensive maps, the railroad chose to instead begin calling the area by the misspelled name "Coachella" rather than its traditional name "Conchilla."

 

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Helicopters land on the yellow squares to service the towers moving parts

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
No wind this day says the anemometer

Did You Know? - An anemometer is a device for measuring wind speed, and is a common weather station instrument. The term is derived from the Greek word anemos, meaning wind. The first known description of an anemometer was given by Leon Battista Alberti around 1450. They are also very easy to make as a project. Anemometers can be divided into two classes: those that measure the wind's speed, and those that measure the wind's pressure; but as there is a close connection between the pressure and the speed, an anemometer designed for one will give information about both.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
We made it!!!

Lunch Time At 8000 Feet In The Sky

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Bunnaford and the bubbly.. A dangerous combination

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Oops... Bunny was not wanting carrots for lunch

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Look carefully into her eyes and there is Paul

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Dining in the evening at Peaks Restaurant

Seriously, Sue Wanted To Volunteer For This Guys Seat Doing Down

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The cable inspectors ride in their respective locations

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"Hell of a ride"

Inside It Was Warm And Quite Pleasant...

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Someone said "Watch out for mountain lions"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"Boo... It's OK, I am stuffed"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Did You Know? - The cougar (Puma concolor), also known as puma, mountain lion, mountain cat, catamount or panther, depending on the region, is a mammal of the family Felidae, native to the Americas. This large, solitary cat has the greatest range of any large wild terrestrial mammal in the Western Hemisphere, extending from Yukon in Canada to the southern Andes of South America. An adaptable, generalist species, the cougar is found in every major American habitat type. It is the second heaviest cat in the American continents after the jaguar. Although large, the cougar is most closely related to smaller felines.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
In a wine shirt often mistaken for bamboo

Time For An After Lunch Walk

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The weather was excellent

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Because of budget cuts, they could NOT afford a "K"

Did You Know? - Mount San Jacinto State Park encompasses the weathered granite summit of Mount San Jacinto at 10,834 feet (3,302 m) above sea level the second highest mountain range in Southern California. It is close to both Los Angeles and San Diego. It is accessible by the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway and lies on the Pacific Crest Trail.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Magnificent view of a dead tree ... Or, is it a nig brown catapillar?

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Watch out when these three are together...

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
A snow person out by himself

Did You Know? - A snowman is an anthropomorphic snow sculpture. They are customarily built by children as part of a family project in celebration of winter. In some cases, participants in winter festivals will build large numbers of snowmen

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Look carefully and you can fine another lost snowman

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Be careful of the snow bunnies

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
... and they are serious

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Oh oh.. We fed her earlier

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Yes... Those are crazy people out walking in the snow

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Ground finders in action

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"Let's go play in the snow?!?"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Nearly had a heart attack... Thought it said 75 miles

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
...Dapper Paul sporting his latest snow retardant jacket... Except, Sue got him with a snowball

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Mr. Hollywood

Snow Baby Time

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
It's beginning to take shape

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
A snow baby being made ... Hope it does NOT follow us home

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
A snowmans funeral

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Look deep out there

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Bunnaford testing out the snowshoes ... So far so good

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"OK, that's enough... Let's head back up!"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
We did NOT realize how far we had walked down

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Notice how blue the sky was!

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Who is gonna be first???

Down The Mountain We Go

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Darned thing kept moving

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
It moved up and down about 50 feet depending upon the loads in the cars

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Making Arrangements For A Meeting

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Hello... Mr. Real Estate man??

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"I is ready to go... Can't I ride on the outside?"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
We had better count them

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Wild ride

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Goodbye snow

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Can you believe helicopters land on the platforms??

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
"Hang on !!"

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
I is hanging!

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Now we know where the snow goes

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Lots of maintenance gear

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Car dimensions: 8ft high inside 18ft in diameter

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
We kept it under 100 all the way down

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

Time To See Some Real Estate

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Great view.... and the grass, tree, and mountain are OK also

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
On the course

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Naked in the pool could scare the golfers

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Keep looking...

Heading For Home On The Palms To Pines Highway

Did You Know? - State Route 74 (SR 74), a part of the Pines to Palms Scenic Byway, is a mostly scenic highway in the U.S. state of California. It runs from Palm Desert in Riverside County westward to San Juan Capistrano in Orange County.

Route 74 passes through many parks and National Forests along its route. Some of these places include the San Bernardino National Forest, the Cleveland National Forest, the Ronald W. Caspers Wilderness Park, Lake Elsinore State Recreation Park, the Soboba Indian Reservation, Lake Hemet and the Santa Rosa Indian Reservation.

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Amazing skies

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
We took the Palms To Pines Highway ... The city is lighting up

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
Neat drive... better in the daytime

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
The desert below

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011
On great Avalon ... Take us home

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011

What Is The Next Adventure???

Aerial Tramway with Bunny 3/9/2011