Showing posts with label Utah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Utah. Show all posts

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Monument Valley


Welcome to Monument Valley! Situated within the Navajo Nation Reserve, and spanning Utah and Arizona, Monument Valley is home to spectacular and iconic red sandstone buttes. They stab up dramatically from the desert floor in heights of 400 to 1000 feet, yielding some of the most memorable geologic formations in the world.

The red sandstone landscape becomes magical in times of transitional lighting, like sunrise and sunset. I was fortunate enough to time my visit with the late evening sun, with a weather front moving in simultaneously. Wow, was it beautiful!

Unfortunately, there were no hiking trails to explore the land on foot, but there was a driving loop which hit most of the highlights of the valley. It was a dirt road, rutted and soft sanded indiscriminately, so I recommend not attempting this drive with a low-clearance vehicle.


The formation below is known as the Mittens. I wonder why? ;-)


The elongated shadows and the red hues made this an unforgettable experience.



Below are the Three Sisters. Back-lit by the sun, they make an impressive profile.



It was one of those times when the lighting and the clouds made it good photography a no-brainer.



I forget what they called this one, but it is still pretty cool.



Below is the Totem Pole. Everywhere you looked was a new focal point to draw you in.



Light. Dark. Red. Green. Black. White. Wicked. Good!



As I rounded the driving loop, the weather front pushed through, stirring up the wind and darkening the sky, but that just added a new dimension of beauty.



It was amazing that with just a slight change in angle, a whole new perspective of beauty was visible. I caught myself looking at the same things I had just looked at many, many times; each time finding something new.



With the sun setting, I had to make my way back out of the park, just like the care in front of me. Until next time, journey on!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Zion National Park


Welcome to Zion National Park! It is a rugged and beautiful place in, like so many others locations in southern Utah. Yet Zion has a beauty and majesty all of its own on a gigantic scale which makes it truly a unique treasure.

Established as a National Monument in 1909 by President Taft, the park has been slowly gaining ground, legally speaking. The Kolob Canyon was incorporated into the park boundaries in 1956. Plus, in March of 2009 President Obama added over one-hundred twenty thousand acres of surrounding wilderness to further protect this national treasure.

The region's beauty attracted Native American settlers and nomads thousands of years before European explorers would set foot there. However, a period of droughts and floods in the 11th and 12th century made sustaining life in the valley extremely difficult, and resulted in the Native Americans leaving the scenic valleys for a while. Eventually, the Native Americans returned, and who could blame them?

The age of exploration brought some Europeans, and European-Americans, through the area, but the area wasn't really settled by those of European ancestry until the Mormons moved into the region around 1847. The Mormons had headed west to escape religious persecution, and ended up settling some of the most beautiful lands in the United States. Beautiful, but rather harsh at times. That harsh living may have helped to preserve these lands to be the jewels to us that they are today.

Above, I am posed in front of Timber Top Mountain and Shuntavi Butte (that somewhat cylindrical formation at the end of the range) which is part of the Kolob canyon system. The name Kolob comes from Mormonism, the Book of Abraham, where Kolob is described as being the star closest to God's throne. That gives you an indication of how heavenly beautiful the Mormon settlers considered this place to be!


I started my two day journey in Zion National Park in Kolob Canyon, where sheer Navajo sandstone cliff jutted proudly out of the ground in reddish-brown hues.


The Taylor Creek Valley had a nice interpretive trail, if you could interpret it, and maybe if you had a machete!


A scenic drive took you to most of the prominent highlights of Kolob canyon, but there were also several trails available to explore in detail, many of which that did not require trailblazing skills!


There was more than just Navajo sandstone to gawk at, such as the Kayenta formation, which formed as flood plain deposits, trapping basal conglomerates, siltstone, and mudstone into diverse striations. Zion surely has a rich geological history!


I used the La Verkin Creek trail to stretch out my little legs, and to get a different perspective on these giant mountains.


As you can see, this was a very easy trail to follow. It was quite enjoyable too.


That lovely piny smell of juniper often passed through the air.


From the Timber Creek Overlook trail, you could see a mountain off to the west which was steadily burning, and occasionally you could smell a little smoke mixed with that juniper. The dry, arid climate makes the region subject to periodic forest fires.


The next day I explored the Zion canyon part of Zion national park. The name Zion comes from the Bible, where it is often used in connection with Jerusalem in prophesy. The Mormons weren't the only religious groups moving through the area. Many of the formations in Zion canyon were named with their present names by a Methodist missionary by the name of Frederick Fisher.


Highway 9 runs through part of the park, making it one very scenic highway.


As with the Kolob canyon, Zion canyon had monumental mountain peaks with sheer faces.


As you continue on Highway 9, you go through the Zion-Mt. Carmel Tunnel, which is over a mile long! When it was dedicated on July 4, 1930, it was the longest tunnel in the U.S.A. After you exit the tunnel, the landscape seems magically transformed into a rocky wonderland. Strange formations, such as Checkerboard Mesa below, treat the eye around every turn.


Back down in Zion Canyon, I took a hike to the Emerald Pools. It turns out that they were "emerald" because they were full of algae. Ha!


Algae pools aside, the Emerald Pools hike was still fun, partly because of spectacular views of the canyon, like this one. Check out that arch in the rock.


Another memorable hike in the Zion canyon is called the Narrows. I was glad that I was laminated, because I had to walk through the water many, many times on this hike. And it was c-c-cold water! Of course, you don't really notice it after the tenth or eleventh time you cross. :-)


In some stretches along the river, there were no banks on either side, for footsteps or vegetation. Of course, that didn't stop me, and it didn't stop the more persistent plants which would gain a foothold in the nooks and crannies of the rock wall, like this flower.


The walls were towering hundred of feet above my head, making the passage seem even more narrow, but that didn't prevent interesting formations at ground level from being there.


In several spots the walls looking like they had been painted like zebras! In places where the water seeped through the rock wall, it would carry with it dissolved lime, some of which would be redeposited on the face of the wall upon exiting, thus forming the white marks. In those same spots, plants would often grow and their root systems would catch some dirt and organic matter, forming a sort of soil. Not all of the soil gets kept in place, and so you get these black stains running down the walls as well.


Awk! The walls are closing in on me! I guess it's time for me to go. See you next time!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Arches National Park


In the southeast region of Utah is a place of mysterious landforms; turquoise soil, balanced rocks, and stone arches. The arches are the namesake of this place; Arches National Park. Flat Stanley arrived at the park late in the afternoon, which was both good and bad. The late start meant most of the park went unexplored, but the late-day sun really showcased a magnificent display of colors.

The geologists are a little puzzled over exactly how many of the arches were formed. One key may be salt. At one time, it is suspected that this area was covered by an ancient salty sea. Below the sandstone surface are huge salt deposits, thousands of feet thick in some places, which were formed as the sea evaporated. Once dry, debris from erosion of surrounding lands accumulated in the valley of the former sea. Add lots of time and more erosion debris, and you eventually get sandstone. The problem is that salt is not inherently stable building material. So when the opportunity presented itself, the salt, mixed with a little groundwater, flowed from on spot to another like when you squeeze a tube of toothpaste. The rock above fell in some areas and rose in others. This shifting ground is suspected to have provided cracks in the sandstone that accelerated the erosion process. Sometimes there were stress concentrations that fractured the rock below the surface. These weakened locations eroded away, leaving intact a stone bridge or arch. At least, that’s the theory.

Relatively close to the entrance to the park is a formation known as the Three Gossips. At the time we got to the park, the sun was near the “heads” of the Gossips. Flat Stanley believes that a better name may be the Three Kings, particularly at that time of day, referencing the Biblical story of how three kings followed a star to see the baby Jesus.

The Delicate Arch is probably the park’s most famous arch. In fact, this arch is on the Utah license plates.

Much of the surface of the ground here is covered with a bumpy, dark brown crust known as cryptobiotic soil crust. The cryptobiotic skin is made up of cyanobacteria, mosses, soil lichens, green algae, microfungi, and bacteria. This skin helps make it possible for other plants to live in the desert by depositing nitrogen from the air into the soil, providing a safe haven for seeds, and providing resistance to the forces of water and wind erosion.



The Three Kings/Three Gossips



Delicate Arch



Valley View



Landscape Arch



Valley View



Balanced Rock


Sunday, April 27, 2008

Capitol Reef National Park


Southern Utah unfolds like entering another world. Flat Stanley watch with awe as the scenery of the unknown constructs of earth passed by. The adventure began with a road trip on an unpaved road, called Skutumpah Road, leading through the western boundaries of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Capitol Reef National Park’s neighbor. The Grand Staircase is a geological spectacle of cliffs and terraces arranged in sequence, showcasing diverse array of sedimentary rock layers in a staircase fashion. Flat Stanley followed the dirt road as far as he dared in his rental car, but, clearly, this level of adventure was more intended for those with all wheel drive, or at least high ground clearance. So a grand view of the Grand Staircase was not to be had on this trip. Maybe on the next one…

As he passed through the entrance to Capital Reef National Park, Flat Stanley found himself entering an orchard of over 2700 fruit trees. In Fruita, as it is known, there are cherries, apricots, peaches, pears, and apples growing in the government-maintained orchard. And the best part? They are free to pick! If they are in season, the fruits of Fruita can be yours for the effort of climbing a latter and helping yourself.

We took the Scenic Drive that up to a short road through a rock formation known as Grand Wash. Grand Wash was a canyon pass between large sandstone walls, capped off with brilliantly red rock and other sedimentary layers. We stopped several times along the drive to absorb the beauty of this raw and rocky earth.

After the scenic drive, Flat Stanley opted for a short hike to a naturally formed rock bridge. The Hickman Bridge Trail led to a rather unimpressive natural bridge, but the hike was still very nice due to the scenery along the way. It was particularly interesting to see black volcanic pumice stones litter the grounds there, showing evidence of an eruption in the past, but not too long ago…

From there, Flat Stanley was a car trek down a better-maintained unpaved road to see part of the formation that is the namesake of the park. The original Indian inhabitants called the Capitol Reef “The Land of the Sleeping Rainbow”. Rainbows of rock do seem to jut out from the surface of the land, as though sticking up from under a bed sheet. Cool!

They call this rock formation The Castle



On the Scenic Drive



On the Scenic Drive



On the Scenic Drive



On the Scenic Drive



In the Grand Wash



In the Grand Wash



In the Grand Wash



In the Grand Wash



In the Grand Wash



On the Hike to Hickman Bridge



On the Hike to Hickman Bridge



The Actual Capitol Reef