Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Tue 30 Apr 2013


Most beautiful 5 miles







Leaving Moab, taking HWY 70, I did not
expect anything for the day.

But what a surprise when I stopped at the
rather unknown state park, with the name Goblin.
A real surreal landscape, seems directly from
a comic book. An endless scattering of small
statue like sandstone boulders on a pedestal.
You just have to see it and walk thru the
valleys. Let your imagination go, and you
start 'recognizing' different silhouettes.


more



But then, the big surprise. A 5 mile hike
thru a very, very small canyon.
The name itself sounds so interesting:
Little wild horse canyon.



The only moment I saw another person, I had
to go back several minutes, so that we could
pass each other.




And so many miles more






After this, I want to start another series.
The most beautiful mile ever.
And this canyon will be high on the list.
I know, short memory, Antelope Canyon was
less than one mile.
Little wild horse canyon, counts for five miles.


Monday, April 29, 2013

Mon 29 Apr 2013

Day of the overlooks.



Still in Moan,. Did the scenic loop following
the Colorado River, back thru Castle Valley,
over the La Sal Mountains.
Then up to Dead Horse State Park,


and Canyon lands, Island in the Sky.
Down the steep Shafer Trail, back to Moab.
Still a lot of steep. sharp curves to go for
little Duvelke....


More than a 1000 ft lower, and still great overlook.



By the way, I need help. My camera
does not like to much sand. And it starts
sometimes to refuse to cooperate. The help
is not the sponsoring, but the time to find
a good type (small, handy, sand resistant)
but with a great wide angle and great zoom.
I have now the Panasonic Lumix, 25 mm wide angle
and 16 x zoom.
Email or comment with suggestions. Thanks



Sun Apr 28 2013

Finally in Moab (... Brewery).

Moab, close to Arches Nat. Park. Here a double arch
for the price of one.



Past another eccentric place where a guy build
a 5000 sqt ft house in to rock. 



And currently
a museum of very nice useless things.






Easy Sunday. Just went (again) to Arches National
park. Similar experience as before. Coming from
colder areas, the sun and the heat slams you in
the face. No intentions, for even a one mile hike.
Just was the regular tourist to see the arches from
close' to the parking spot.  And enjoyed the sunset, at
the 'windows'.




The brewery, still have the Scorpion. From many
years ago, I remember this as the best beer,
Now, same name, but totally different. Way more
hopy, and even porter aftertaste.
The new winner is 'Dead Horse Ale'.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Sat Apr 27 2013

This must be the Colorado River, I presume.


And the Green river merging the milky like water
with the darker Colorado Mud.


Again  a series of canyons.
But at the end (?), still quite unexpected, you
see the 300 feet drop the Colorado River.
Yes, you see Canyons, rocks, mountains, everywhere.
But a sudden vertical drop of 300 feet is still
an incredible view. Only difficult to capture the 3D
drop in a picture.

And no there are no fences.
You have to use all four. 2 legs, 2 hands.
And also your butt sometimes to slide down.
But especially your eyes and your brains.
Watch, see what is possible, and stop or
backtrack if it is to much.

Seen the picture of the overhang. If you stand
on the edge for a picture....


And on the way, From the top, you can see the path,
and this goes straight up to the other side of the Canyon.



Friday, April 26, 2013

Fri Apr 26 2013

Found the needle (in the haystack)



Cowboys roamed this place. Does this not look like
a perfect place to stay a couple of months ?



One Canyon in, down to the valley, and then up again
to the next one. Some moments, it looks like real
rock climbing. But reading the mountain helps so
much to make it easy or difficult. But climbing
300 feet, you feel this.

And here we go. Into the field of the Needles, in the far,
far distance.


But first a few canyons down and up again.


Also this is the way, between two huge rocks.
Amazing, but this goes on for a quarter mile.
Just wide enough for me. 


And sorry, the hundred other pictures of this day
are only one request ;-)


Thu Apr 25 2013

Found the lost Canyon.


After a dry night (except the secret duvel)
went on in search of the Needles national park.
After passing the 1000 years old newspaper,
learned that the campground was full, again.
Reason, it is really spring,  the first week
that the weather is perfect. I agree.
Found a perfect camping ground, a few minutes
away, even with a trading post (see later).

While reading the Rock-in-the-wall, I wanted
the try the expedition to the Lost Canyon.
Some difference: I got a map, GPS, and somewhat
marked trail. But even now, in this terrain
reading the mountain is so extremely difficult.
Knowing what is behind the next rock, is it feasible
to go up or down ? Many times I had to backtrack
just to find a possible route.

Yes, that is how it started.


On top of the first Canyon. Find your way down,
cross the canyon, go up into the next Canyon.


The next Canyon, a little steeper, to go all the way down.
See the small cairns (small pile of rocks as markers) to find
roughly your path


After 4 or 5 of these canyons, each 2 or 3 miles,
found the little lost Canyon, with plenty of water
for your horse.
Only it's completely impossible to pass these
steep up and down rocks with a horse.

Now, only find your way out, next to the cliff.
This was the only place with a small ladder.
The rest was all up to your "reading the mountain"


Another day with a 15 mile expedition.
Small, but needed to find the park, the camping
ground, and enjoy the rest of the evening.

After the hike, on the way home, stopped in the
trading post and found the "WYLD", brewed by
"UINTA", in Salt Lake City, Extra Pale Ale,
Earth, Wind and Beer.
Perfect for watching the sunset over the Needles.



Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Wed Apr 24 2013

Once in Natural bridges, you have to visit
the bridges. The 15 mile loop trail,
mainly thru the valley is an amazing hike.



Yes, and sometimes you have to climb, but
the ladders are already in place.



And continuously, looking for old settlements
in the rocks.



And then the last bridge



After the good hike, continue thru the amazing
landscape, where to roads seems to fight
the mountains. If you good in the far right distance
you see a huge modern hole-in-the-rock, blasted away
a large corridor for the road.



Passed 'Blanding', so small, no restaurants.
On to 'Monticello'. Something more. But none that
serve any alcohol. Can I blame the dam Mormons ?
Going up north to 'Moab', was also no solution.
There is a mayor auto show. All rooms sold out.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Tue Apr 23 2013

Real cowboys still exist.




Started in the morning with clouds, and rain in the
far the distance. But haven't seen a drop myself.
More than 1 hour drive, just to get to the first next
town: "Bluff". They have an amazingly good open
air museum, with displays how the Mormons opened
the route "Hole in the Rock". Bought the book
with that name by David Miller. It describes
how about 200 people in 1879 created the most
difficult passage on the Colorado river, to get
to the San Juan River.
And when you see the landscape, and think about
the first settlers, you are more and more
impressed.



Then up to the sight seeing. Yes, started with
the "Valley of the Gods" road. And off-road 17
mile drive. between the rocks, similar as monument
valley.



And yes the cowboy was guiding his cows in the
"Valley of the Gods". Coincidence ?

Up to Gooseneck state reserve. Ever seen a river,
here the San Juan,  which really meanders....



The google satellite shows this even more
impressive.  Search this in google maps, and
select satelite:


"Goosenecks State Park, San Juan, UT"
Or click the link below (if this works).

Gooseneck


And then, up another plateau. Literally:



Arrived in the late afternoon, in 'Natural Bridges'.
Campground totally full. But they showed me a place
for 'dispersed wilderness camping'. That was a
quiet night. No one in any direction.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Mon Apr 22 2013

Still (stuck) in Arizona.

Driving thru the desert.

Visit to Navajo National Monument, with the small
village in the rocks (around 1250): 'Betatakin' Canyon.


And then the 17 mile drive thru monument Valley.
Impressive. 

Very windy. Was even afraid to get my camera out in
the beginning. Sand and these cameras don't go together.
But after a while, less wind, more sun.
Really helps, to be really impressed by the magnitude
of the landscape and the rocks.



And some show from one of the many local venders


And just when I wanted to go up north to Utah,
there was a major bomb alarm on a tourist bus,
and all roads (the only one) was totally blocked
by the police. So, stay in the very expensive
hotel in the park, or return 30 miles.
But still part of the huge Navajo Indian Reservation.
And no alcohol. It's bad to be stuck.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Sat, Sun Apr 21 2013

Saw the light in the darkness.




Driving from the South rim of the Grand Canyon
(and I won't bore you with 100 additional pictures)
to Page. Somewhere before Page, the road was
closed due to a mayor avalanche. a small detour
of 2 hours brought me over the Navajo bridge, 834 ft
long, 467 high over the Colorado river, Marble Canyon,
the silver cliffs, lake Powell,
and the Glen Canyon Dam.

The Horseshoe Bend is also 'worthwhile'
to stop, if you pass by.



I'm not the only one to enjoy it





But the main thing is the Antelope Canyon.
From the 200 pictures where I saw the light
a few...


 You watch deep in the Godzilla Eye




 What do you see here ?




By the way, discovered the Damber, a local
beer of DAM BAR, brewed by Lumberyard.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Thu Fri Apr 19 2013

Just went to the post office.

I nice lady showed my the way to the post office,
where they stamp the mail "send by mule".
It was a little longer than expected to get there.
More than 3 hours, one way. The office happened to
be in a pub. And after some tasting, it was to
late to return. So, needed to spent the night there.
Good, because it took more than 5 hours to go back.
To the next pub (you know, you have to drink a lot
when hiking, even of the hike is to the post office).

And these guys deliver the mail.




Other part of the story.
Wednesday, I did only the 3 mile point down,
and I passed everyone the way up. The views
where so extreme, that I went to the back country
office to try to get a permit. And miracle: got it
and the last camping spot in 'phantom ranch', just
next to the bridge over the Colorado river.

On one hand cheap, free camping, the permit only 15 $,
but I needed a good backpack, and the ultra light,
high tech jetboil water heater...

The way down was relatively easy. The amazing part
was that I  met so many (older people, e.g 72 years
young) who just went down and all the way up again
in the same day.

The way down



And more


And more


And more


And more









Skip a few pictures, but it is still down




And finally the bridge


Was down, just at lunch time, time to visit the
beach, cool my feet in the river, did some local
exploration. And, of coarse, found the local post
office, only served by mules

The post office was also the local pub. Yes, really.
Got several beers, before closing time at 4 PM,
just in time to get a very interesting talk from
the local ranger Emmily, about condors.

After dinner, using my new tool, there was a more
interesting talk from Emmily about failures in the
history of discovery and exploitation of the canyon.

Next morning, the way up. Just amazing. At every corner
the views are totally different. But, also went back
2 billion years in the making of the earth.

At the bottom, you find the "Elvis Chasm Gneiss" rock
which is 1840 million years old. Going up, layer by layer,
you can see more recent rocks. Every step brings you
several million years closer to more recent rock formation.



The last mile up, was somewhat hard. But after a good
Amber in the historically hotel, I was ready to walk
another 3 miles to my car.