Monday, April 16, 2012
Back in SLC
My daughter called me last week after an appointment with her doctor, and she's moving along a little faster with this baby than she did with her first. Which is normal. It's also normal for me to hear something like that and say "I want to be home." So we are. I'm sure I'll do a few postings over the next few weeks, But in the meantime, we're safe and we're home.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Indescribable.. but I'll try
Yesterday we drove along a portion of the Colorado River that's north of Moab and also made a quick visit to Castle Creek Winery along the way. But the biggest portion of the day was devoted to Arches National Park, just five miles north of Moab, UT. We’ve been here before (Jim twice and me three times) and it’s an amazing place worth many trips. The park's arches, spires, balanced rocks and what park literature calls “sandstone fins and eroded monoliths" were caused by an underground salt bed that moved “like toothpaste” as a park ranger put it (albeit very slow-moving toothpaste). The prehistoric Colgate pushed rock layers upward and causing them to buckle. Then surface erosion stripped away some of the layers, leaving the geologic features.
Words -- and actually photos -- don't do them justice.
On the left is the aptly-named Balanced Rock. You can (barely, but hopefully better if you double click to enlarge) see a woman standing on a lower rock near the center of the photo. |
A scenery shot with eastern Utah's La Sal Mountains in the background. |
Today it was Canyonlands National Park -- just 25 miles from Arches -- and a place neither one of us had been. (Pathetic on Bev's part, since I've lived in Utah 38 years.) Canyonlands is huge --- 527 square miles --- and made up of three distinct sections: Island in the Sky, The Needles, and The Maze; no roads within the park link the three. Island in the Sky is the park's northern-most section and is the part we explored. It’s wedged between the Green and Colorado Rivers; their confluence is at the southern tip and it's those two rivers that carved the park's canyons. The Needles makes up the park's east/southeast section. The Maze is the west/southwest section of the park and has NO improved road leading to it.
We listened to a ranger presentation made at Island in the Sky's "Grand View Point Overlook," the furthest point out on a developed road.
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Monday, April 9, 2012
Back in Utah!
We are now in Moab, Utah -- only about 250 miles from Salt Lake City in case Ashley and Shad's little boy decides to make an earlier-than-expected-arrival. But to catch up on our travels: after the Cottonwood Campground in Chinle, AZ, our next stop was Sand Island Campground in Bluff, Utah. Managed by the BLM, it has 27 campsites and a boat launch where people rafting the San Juan River put in or take a break. Cost to camp is $10 a night, but because Jim has a “senior pass” (or as we call it, his “old guys' card") we paid $5. The old guys' card also gets us into all national monuments for free. This card costs $10, is available to anyone 62 to older, and has to be one of the best deals around.
The scenery on the way to Bluff on Highway 191 was gorgeous. |
Another view on Highway 191. |
Goats on the reservation being herded by a pick up truck and a dog along Highway 191. |
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Our camping spot at at Sand Island Campground. We arrived the Saturday before Easter; a family pulled in with their RV late that night and had an Easter egg hunt the next morning. |
The bluff that rims part of the campground has a large panel of petroglyphs. |
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Random thoughts while on the reservation
Chinle, AZ (where our campground near Canyon de Chelly National Monument is located) is small town with few amenities. It does, however, have cattle, sheep and horses grazing in town plus quite a few dogs. One of the dogs lies on the sidewalk in town and chases cars whenever he gets in the mood; we were one of its victims. I don’t think I’ve had my car chased by a dog since the first year I got my driver’s license.
We met a couple at the campground from Polk, Ohio, just 20 miles due south of my hometown of Wellington, Ohio.
We visited Four Corners Monument, the only place in the United States where four US states (Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado) meet.
The Four Corners Monument is on the Navajo reservation. The long, low buildings house booths where Navajos sell beads, paintings, and pottery. |
Bev behind other tourists at the Four Corners spot and trying to get Jim’s attention. |
Bev standing on the Four Corners spot in front of Utah. |
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Jim eating Indian fry bread we bought at Four Corners. It was so windy we ate the fry bread in our car. |
Horses grabbing a bite to eat in downtown Chinle, AZ. |
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Ya’at eeh (That’s “hello” in Navajo)
We are at another “wow” spot: Canyon de Chelly National Monument near Chinle, AZ on the Navajo Indian Reservation.
I told Jim this place would be in my top five most beautiful sites visited. He agreed, not counting brew pubs.
We hiked into the canyon on the White House Trail. At the bottom we saw the White House Ruin, built by ancestral Puebloan people 1,000 year ago.The trail is named for a dwelling that is covered with white plaster. Along the way we saw amazing view after amazing view. Photos below. Also, at the bottom of the canyon were Navajos selling necklaces, paintings and pottery. I wanted to buy two necklaces, but didn’t have any money with me. No problem. Just leave the money at the Chevron in Chinle and tell them to give it to Sharon. Sale complete.
Further up the canyon rim road, we also saw Spider Rock, an 800-foot sandstone spire. In the Navajo culture, the Spider Woman is a deity who taught the Navajo people how to to weave.
A view near the beginning of our hike into Canyon de Chelly (prounouced Canyon De Shay.) |
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Bev on the 2.5 mile round trip trail. |
Another view. |
And another view, this time including Jim. |
And another view with Jim. |
A couple from California took this photo of us. |
The twin spires of 800-foot-tall Spider Rock. Spider Woman is a Navajo deity who taught the Navajo to weave. |
Jim with Spider Rock behind him to his left. |
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