Monday, September 2, 2019

Driving to Banff from Jasper



Today we left for Banff from Jasper. The weather looked pretty good, encountered some fog 5 miles down the road but the weather cleared up at 50-75 miles. Once we were out of the fog the scenery really improved. Drive was easy, not much traffic which surprised us as this was Monday of Labour Day weekend in Canada. Once to get to Banff we need gas, dump the tanks and get water. There was a long line in our Jasper campground so we decided to wait until we were in Banff.  

The drive down the Icefields Parkway to Banff was not as spectacular as it was 17 years ago, so much has changed.

Low clouds do add some interest

Always need to watch for animals






We call this glacier poop, looks like the rocks were placed





We arrived at Banff and went into town to get gas. The one thing we don't understand in both Banff and Jasper is why the only gas stations are in the center of town, not much space for any RV. If we were in an area with few RVs I could understand, but there are RVs coming and going on a constant basis. We filled up, stopped traffic across 3 lanes so we could get out and proceeded to the campground. 

We asked for a better site for our solar than what we had reserved. No problem and we ended up in a pretty good site, still with a lot of trees so our solar worked but we still had to run the generator during generator times.

After we checked out the site we dropped the car and drove back to the  RV dump. This is always a 30-minute process so we were happy there was no line. Did all this and called it a day.
9/3
Laundry and a local drive to Bow Falls on the Bow River. Both Jasper and Banff is tourist land and is no joy to drive around. Traffic all over, not much parking, hard to get around, etc. etc. 



An Elk on our drive

Bow Falls

Fairmont Banff Springs





With the number of RVs you would think it would also be more RV friendly for gas and diesel, it is not. 3 gas stations, all downtown and all tight to navigate.

Even the laundromats in both towns are downtown with no parking. Luckily I found one in Banff that was on the outskirts. Restaurants are the same, all in downtown, none on the outskirts.

Banff is gorgeous. It is nestled in the mountains with high peaks surrounding it.


9-4/7

Today we drove up to Lake Louise via a secondary road. Thought we would stop at Johnston Falls, no parking, and this was early. Lovely day for a drive. Lake Louise had no parking so we just turned around. We will stay out of tourist areas from now on, plenty of other things to see and visit.








9-8/9

Today was a travel day to Waterton Lakes National Park. The town was a total mess with construction and very poor signage. We went in the same loop 2 times before we stumbled across the temporary National Park visitor center on some back street. I went in and was give a map of the town and how to get to the campground. The town is only 4 blocks by 4 blocks but what a mess.

Not one sign leading to the campground without the map we would never have found it. The campground is brand new. Canada is putting money into their parks and rebuilding the parks for today's campers. Canada is rebuilding a 400 site campground in Jasper, was suppose to be done this year. We had driven past it and thought they were dreaming. Today it was announced that the campground would be closed another year.

The location of the campground and the town is right on the lake. Views of the mountains all around.  

The next few days we had planned to do a few nice drives and small hikes. Plans are useless. There was a major forest fire last year that melted the roads and they are closed until rebuilt. Then we decided to go for the boat ride on the lake, high winds had that closed down. We need to put this park back on our list for future years.   

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