Good Shabbos from the Killpecker dunes!


I’m enjoying the solitude here in the Killpecker Dunes. Some views from the drone:



Boar’s Tusk in the distance:



Goodnight from the Killpecker Dunes:

I tend to go to bed and get up early on the road. Nice sunrise:

See you tomorrow!
Yesterday, I met mountain biker Adam in the Visitor Information Center in Lander. He drove up today to ride with me. The ride started with a touch climb from the RV at 7000’ to the ridge at 8300’:


We continued on to Frye Lake:


At the Visitor Information Center, I saw that today, stage 2 of the American Solar Challenge would finish today in Lander. I’ve been fascinated by these races since high school, so I was thrilled to stumble onto this race in progress!
I checked out the competitors that had already arrived and watched other competitors complete the stage. The teams put water on the panels to reduce panel temperature, which increases panel efficiency:








University of Minnesota is winning the two-person class so far:





The stage finish line:



After the race was over, I headed back up Sinks Canyon and found a dispersed camping site on Frye Lake. Nice view out the door:


This morning, I drove to Lander, Wyoming and rode the Bus Loop trail network:



I then headed up Sinks Canyon, where the Popo Agie river goes underground and rises back up 3/4 of a mile away after flowing for roughly 2 hours underground. Heading up-canyon, I visited the “rise” first, where the water comes out of the canyon wall and forms a deep pool where a school of massive trout live:



Next up was the “sink”, where the river flows into its subterranean channel:




At the visitor center, they had this sand pit. A sensor above reads the “terrain” of the sand and projects a real-time colored topographic image onto the sand:


I ended the day dispersed camping up Sinks Canyon in the Shoshone National Forest at 7000-ish feet, at the trailhead for another mountain biking area:

The Middle Popo Agie River is a few steps from the RV:




See the trip map for today’s drive.