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Re: BROCHURE 2012 TO 2013 (fwd)
- To: noelle
- Subject: Re: BROCHURE 2012 TO 2013 (fwd)
- From: robert <http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jan 2012 11:44:49 -0800
- Keywords: bogofilter, ifile: downloaded -14740.14486742 spam -14769.00302887 nonspam -15251.12220621 ---------, spambayes, spamprobe
Shangra-La ? Again??
> From: Noelle <http://dummy.us.eu.org/noelleg>
> Date: Fri, 6 Jan 2012 09:09:31 -0800 (PST)
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> Date: Thu, 5 Jan 2012 22:54:12 -0800
> From: Michael Ellis <http://www.footlooseforays.com/~mjellis>
> To: Michael Ellis <http://www.footlooseforays.com/~mjellis>
> Subject: BROCHURE 2012 TO 2013
>
> Hello everyone:
>
> Here are the updated trips for 2012 an 2013. You can go to the website to
> register online. The brochure should be in your mailbox by the first of
> February. I am heading off on a retreat Friday, January 6 to 14th and out of
> email/phone range. Back for 2 weeks and then to Tanzania for a month. YEA!
> Wildebeests, lions, cheetahs, baboons, elephants, vultures, galore.
>
> MONDAY FOOTLOOSE HIKING
>
> Michael's flagship hiking series, which began in 1984, is called Footloose. It
> takes place Mondays 10:00 - 1:30 in two 14-week sessions, fall and spring.
> Discover interesting places in Marin, San Francisco and Sonoma counties, learn
> the natural history of the Bay Area and meet fascinating, fun people. What a
> good way to start the week! Warning: there is often a long wait list for this
> series. Current hikers get first priority; some have been hiking for 20 years
> in the group! There are two leaders sharing the series -- Michael Ellis and
> Armando Quintero.
>
> COST: $455 per series
> DATE: Fourteen Mondays 10:00 to 1:30. Spring 2012 wait list only
> DATE: Fourteen Mondays 10:00 to 1:30 September 13 to December 13, 2012
>
> TUESDAY FOOTLOOSE HIKING - SONOMA
>
> The Monday hikes are constantly oversubscribed so I added a series for people
> in the North Bay. The territory covered is northern and western Marin, all of
> Sonoma and parts of Napa. We hike from 10:00 to 1:30 and from four to six
> miles. Any one in moderately good shape should have no trouble keeping up. This
> a great gift to yourself and a great chance to discover the natural riches of
> the North Bay. This is a wonderful way to learn about the natural history of
> the North Bay and meet interesting dynamic kindred spirits.
>
> COST: $425 per series
> DATE: Fourteen Tuesdays, September 14 to December 14, 2012
>
> THE MOJAVE AND DEATH VALLEY
>
> The focus of this weeklong car camping adventure is the Mojave Desert. We stay
> the entire week at a private oasis along the Amargosa River near delicious hot
> springs, just outside Death Valley National Park. Here Willow Creek bubbles to
> the surface, attracting a plethora of wildlife. The old T and T railroad (the
> beds battered by desert floods and home now only to coyotes and rattlesnakes)
> used to run through here. We head north into Death Valley and surrounding wild
> lands on day trips. Here the names say it all - Badwater, Dante's View and the
> Devil's Palette. These areas contain some of the most fantastic scenery this
> side of Mars. Dramatic sunsets, eerie tree yucca forests, rugged mountains,
> chuckwallas, coyotes, golden eagles, and abundant desert wildflowers are all
> found here. Exploring on foot and by car we travel the backcountry of this
> still Wild West. It always fills immediately.
>
> DATE: April 1-7, 2012 Wait list only
> DATE: April 8 -14, 2012 Wait list only
>
> COST: $525
> DATE: March 31- April 6, 2013. Sign up early!
> DATE: April 7 April 13, 2013. Sign up early!
>
> BHUTAN = SHANGRI-LA
> The little-known kingdom of Bhutan, approximately the size of Switzerland, is
> one of the last strongholds of Tibetan Buddhism in the world. Although
> isolated for centuries by its geographical situation, bound, as it is on the
> south by dense tropical jungles and to the north by the mighty Himalayas, in
> the last fifteen years it has slowly opened its frontier to a few privileged
> visitors and tourists. Last year there were only 20,000 tourists allowed in the
> entire country. The only way to travel into this untouched peaceful land is
> with a government-sanctioned travel agency. This moderate touring trip with
> numerous day hikes provides a wide, nearly comprehensive overview of the
> Kingdom of Bhutan with a particular emphasis on the flowering plants and trees
> for which the Himalayan region is so well known. Few places on Earth can match
> the breathtaking splendor of Bhutan -- a region of incomparable biological
> richness and natural beauty. Its lush, temperate cloud forests of pin!
> e and rhododendron provide sanctuary to for a great variety of flora and
> fauna. Bumthang, located in the geographical heart of the Kingdom, is
> comprised of four high valleys covered in forests that embrace small
> monasteries, chortens, traditional stone houses and markets. Few places on
> Earth can match the breathtaking splendor and unique botanical and
> ornithological diversity of Bhutan. While this is not a trek you must be in
> moderately good shape to participate. We will be hiking at elevations that
> range between 4500 and 11000â?? on steep trails that may not be well
> maintained.
>
> COST: $6400 land costs. Non-refundable deposit $500
> DATE: May 10 to May 27, 2012
>
> THE LAKES BASIN
>
> This unique biological region (the boundary of three major ecosystems â?? the
> Sierra, the Cascades and the Great Basin Desert) is tucked away in the northern
> Sierra Nevada and I can take you there. While most people are crowding into
> Lake Tahoe or Yosemite Valley, the Lakes Basin area of the Feather River is
> virtually empty. Located near Yuba Pass along Highway 49 this area is home to
> over 23 lakes. From our comfortable group campsite we are right in the center
> of numerous streams, lakes and waterfalls. The summer wildflowers literally
> spill from lake to lake. We hike through the montane meadows and open forests
> to high mountain vistas. We will visit the nearby Sierra Valley; one of the
> premier birding spots in Ca It is the largest alpine valley in North
> America, part of the continental crust that was dropped by the same faulting
> that raised the Sierra Nevada. Here are abundant Sandhill Cranes Yellow-headed
> Blackbirds, Wilson's Phalaropes, Black Terns, and a host of !
> ducks and other marsh-birds. Another great highlight is a tour of the
> Plumas-Eureka State Park, Jamison Mine and historic Johnville. Some of us can
> take the challenging hike up the Sierra Buttes. Evenings are spent stargazing,
> sitting in front of the big fire and at least one night hike. We will spend
> nearly a week thoroughly discovering this wonderful part of the world.
> COST: $500 Wait list only
> DATE: July 22- July 28, 2012
>
> GREAT BASIN NATIONAL PARK
>
> This is one of my favorite trips and it has been years since I last offered it.
> The Great Basin National Park is in eastern Nevada but travel time from the Bay
> area is less than that to Death Valley! I have spent several months thoroughly
> exploring every nook and cranny of this magnificent wilderness. It's very
> similar to the Sierra but without all the people. Gentle streams cascade
> through alpine fields and meadows are bursting with wildflowers. We will have
> the option of climbing the second highest mountain in Nevada, Wheeler Peak at
> 13,063'. We can taste a remnant from the last ice age, an honest-to-goodness
> glacier. Ancient bristlecone pine forests cling to the scree slopes. In fact
> the Forest Service cut the oldest living tree in the world down here in 1964 (
> your government at work). With the park's naturalists we'll explore Lehman
> Cave. As an added delight is the nearby town of Ely, where steam trains still
> ply the historic Northern Nevada Rail line. This is a car cam!
> ping trip but there are motels nearby.
> COST: $500
> DATE: July 30 to August 4, 2012
>
> MONO LAKE IN THE AUTUMN
>
> The eastern Sierra Nevada is glorious in the fall, the air is crisp, the sky so
> blue. The aspen groves will be shimmering in brilliant shades of burnished gold
> and orange as we explore the wonders of Mono Lake and environs. This body of
> water is over 1 million years old - a remnant of a much larger inland lake. Its
> wildlife, unearthly scenery, and life-sustaining streams were recently released
> from hostage to the water needs of Los Angeles. Bizarre tufa towers, fantastic
> cinder cones, spooky lava caves, gurgling hot springs, and dramatic mountain
> canyons are its backdrop. We will get intimate views of Ca gulls,
> coyotes and the nearly two million eared grebes that stop here in the fall.
> American Avocets, Western and Least Sandpipers, Snowy Plovers, White-faced
> Ibises, and Dowitchers are stopping to feed on their journey south. While this
> is not an official photography seminar, bring your camera because the photo
> opportunities are incomparable. A list of accommodations!
> is sent upon registration.
> COST: $340
> DATE: Tuesday, September 25 to Thursday, September 27, 2012
> Friday, September 29 to Sunday October 1, 2012
>
> BIRDS BIRDS BIRDS
>
> The return of the waterfowl to Ca's Great Central Valley has been
> described as one of the greatest wildlife spectacles on earth, and it happens
> every winter. We'll visit the famous Gray Lodge Refuge to see thousands of Snow
> Geese joining Canada and White-fronted Geese. Around the defunct volcanic
> Sutter Buttes we'll see aerial displays of the sandhill cranes and tundra
> swans. We'll hike around the Colusa Wildlife Refuge and then to the Sacramento
> Refuge for more avian delights - ruddy ducks, pintails, shovelers, bitterns,
> night herons, mallards, harriers, rough-legged hawks, gallinules et al. Not
> only will we learn how to identify these birds, but also we'll learn about
> their evolution, behavior and physiology. Discover why so many people make this
> an annual trip. It's fun! You'll need to arrange your own lodging for Saturday
> night after you receive a list of the area's accommodations.
>
> COST: $275
> DATE: November 27-28, November 29-30, December 1-2, 2012
>
> GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH: THE SERENGETI
>
> I hate to say it but if you ever plan on going to this part of the world you'd
> better do it soon. Tanzania, not Kenya, has the best wildlife show left on the
> planet. And we will be there at the peak of the wildebeest calving season -- 1
> million animals giving birth in a 3-week period! Giraffes, elephants, lions,
> gazelles, oryx, hyenas, jackals, cheetahs, dikdiks and zebras; and more birds
> than you can possibly imagine -- flamingos, storks, pelicans, white-crowned
> shrikes, bee-eaters and ostriches --- all make their home in the parks we'll
> visit. Comfortable tent camping combined with cozy lodges make this a perfect
> trip. Resident Tanzanian naturalists accompany us throughout the trip while we
> visit Arusha National Park, the Serengeti Plain, Tarangire National Park,
> Olduvai Gorge and the Ngorongoro Crater. This is truly the trip of a lifetime;
> you owe it to yourself. I have been leading trips to the Serengeti every
> February since 1992! It remains my favorite all time natural!
> history experience. Every visit is superb and perfect in every way. No one
> ever regrets going to Tanzania, they just wonder what took them so long and
> when can I return?
>
> COST: $8550 land cost Non-refundable deposit $500
> DATE: January 27- February 14, 2013 nearly full
> DATE: February 12 to February 27, 2013 nearly full
>
> AN EXPLORATION OF EASTERN TURKEY
>
> This trip explores a part of Turkey that The Turquoise Coast (see below) does
> not cover, and is a grand opportunity to begin your exploration of this
> fascinating region. We tour some seldom-visited parts of Istanbul; then we fly
> east to Urfa and drive to Gobleki Tepe, a mysterious religious center that
> scholars believe to be the earliest example of monumental architecture yet
> discovered. Another highlight is seeing the unusual northern bald ibis, which
> nests in a protected sanctuary near the Euphrates River. We will visit Mt.
> Nemrut National Park and see the huge statues of Antiochos, the King of
> Commagne. Further east, at Lake Van, we will explore Akdamar Island, home to
> the Armenian Church of the Holy Cross. On this leg of the trip we will visit
> two wetlands that are home to numerous species of birds. Then we visit Ani,
> once the capital of the old Armenian Kingdom. It was a city of 100,000
> inhabitants and a legendary 1,000 churches. Of course, since our local guide
> -Yas!
> emin - has written and photographed an extensive book on the wildflowers of
> Turkey, we shall be constantly looking at the diversity of plants on our
> journey as well. After Kars we will spend some leisurely days driving
> northwest through the Pontic mountains towards the Black Sea, stopping for
> Georgian churches, magnificent wildflower displays, and hikes through
> beautiful mountain passes. When we arrive at the Black Sea we will go for a
> hike to visit the Monastery of the Black Virgin of Sumela, built on a edge of
> sheer rock, and later spend the night in Trabzon, a favorite vacation
> destination for both Turks and Russians. Then we fly back to Istanbul for a
> day and then onward to home (or maybe the next trip in Turkey.)
>
> COST: TBDâ??land costs and internal air. Refundable deposit $500
> DATE: May 13 to May 28, 2013
>
> THE TURQUOISE COAST AND EXOTIC TURKEY
>
> The Eastern Mediterranean was the cradle of civilization almost 10,000 years
> ago. The alphabet and our numerical system originated here as well as most of
> the great religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. To travel in Turkey is to
> explore the roots of modern day civilization itself. This exotic country, at
> the crossroads of Europe and Asia, boasts magnificent Greek and Roman
> antiquities as well as the extraordinary legacies of the Byzantine and Ottoman
> Empires. Now it is a dynamic, modern, democratic nation with friendly people,
> delicious cuisine, fantastic shopping and beautiful scenery. In addition to
> visiting Turkey's most important historical and archeological landmarks, we
> will spend five days sailing the famed Turquoise coast. The sea is crystal
> clear and the coast is lined with pretty fishing villages and pristine beaches.
> Our local guide is my dear friend, Yasemin. She is currently finishing a guide
> to the wildflowers of her remarkable country. She is also one of!
> the cultural highlights of this trip!
>
> COST: $TBD land cost. Refundable deposit $500
> DATE: May 29 to June 14, 2013
>
> MADAGASCAR
>
> The worldâ??s fourth largest island is home to an increasingly threatened
> population of unique, rare and endangered plants and animals. This 600 mile
> long island has been separated from the African continent for the last 165
> million years and 80% of the plants and animals that evolved in this isolation
> are found no where else in the world. Madagascarâ??s most famous mammals are
> its lemurs â?? 14 species of primates that range in size from the tiny
> nocturnal mouse lemur to the huge black and white Indris. Lonely Planet says: â
> ??Madagascar's forests are a shimmering, seething mass of a trillion stems and
> dripping leaves and slithering, jumping, quirky creatures out of nature's bag
> of tricks: lemurs, periwinkles and baobabs, aloes, geckoes, sifakas and octopus
> trees. Sadly, they are threatened by aggressive deforestationâ??
>
> This deforestation is from humans that only arrived in Madagascar 1000 years
> ago. And they did not come from Africa but rafted west from Malaysia! I spent
> the entire month of July 2007 exploring this country. Our itinerary includes
> most of the best-preserved areas where our chances of seeing the diversity of
> bizarre baobabs, changeable chameleons, leaping lemurs, and bodacious birds are
> best. This trip is limited in number, which makes wildlife spotting (lemurs!)
> in the dense forest much easier for everyone.
>
> COST: about $6400. Refundable deposit $500
> DATE: September 16 to October 2, 2013
>
> PALAU AND YAP
>
> Micronesiaâ??s thousands of high volcanic and low sand and coral islands are
> interspersed with low-lying atolls and coral reefs encircling still blue
> lagoons. Just north of the equator, this is the remote unspoiled Pacific, with
> palm-thatched huts, outrigger canoes and coconut trees.
>
> Harboring more species of marine life than any similar-sized area in the world,
> Palau is one of the best snorkeling sites on the planet. The abundance and
> diversity of its marine life, shallow water accessibility, and clear water
> visibility reveal a dazzling array of rainbow-colored fish and breathtaking
> corals. The famous Rock Islands are a maze of unsurpassed beauty, tropical
> gardens atop limestone ridges set in glass-clear waters. In addition to its
> great marine biodiversity, Palau is also renowned for Jellyfish Lake where
> visitors can swim with non-stinging jellyfish in a landlocked marine lake.
> Another aspect of Palau is its historical role in WWII. Remnants of the war
> remain prevalent especially at sites such as Peleliu, which was a major
> battlefield. Culturally, Micronesia is fascinating and a visit to Yap will
> bring us to the most traditional corner of Micronesia where Yapese continue to
> practice their traditional lifestyle. Yap is also known as the best place!
> for seeing manta rays on a consistent basis, and in recognition of the areaâ??
> s importance, the government recently established the Yap manta marine
> sanctuary.
>
> COST: Refundable deposit $500. TBD.
> DATE: November 2013
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Michael Ellis
> Footloose Forays
> 1275 4th St. #311
> Santa Rosa, CA 95404
> 707 570-2187
> http://www.footlooseforays.com/~mjellis
> www.footlooseforays.com
>