Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Grand Canyon and Flagstaff
Be sure to click on the photos for larger views.
This installment covers Thursday (September 20) through Wednesday (September 26).
On Thursday morning our hosts served a pancake and sausage breakfast at their RV. About 11:30, we car-pooled downtown to join a 4-wheel drive tour of Antelope Canyon. After several miles through soft brown sand, we arrived at this slot canyon. Although we have seen photographs of this type of canyon before, this is the first one we have visited. The water has eroded the Navajo sandstone so that the canyon is open to the air, but undulates down to the canyon floor. (Due to low light, it was hard to get good photos – the ones below do not really do justice to the canyon.) The canyon is subject to flash floods, and no tours are held on days that there is rain in the area.
Friday was another fairly short driving day. En route, we stopped at a couple of roadside shops where we bought some Navajo souvenirs. We also stopped at Desert Tower at the east end of the Grand Canyon where we took a lot of photos of the decorations inside the tower. The tower was built by the railroad as a tourist attraction and was designed to blend as much as possible into the natural environment. We had lunch in the RV after arriving at the campground. In the evening our group boarded a bus for a sunset tour at the south rim.
On Saturday morning we took a bus tour along the east rim of the canyon. We stopped at a couple of overlooks and at an ancestral Puebloan archaeological site. We visited the Desert Tower again and had a group photo taken on the steps of the gift shop. It began raining on our return trip and continued off-and-on (with some pea-size hail in the evening) all afternoon and most of the night. In the late afternoon we saw a film about the Grand Canyon at an IMAX theater. We then had a nice Italian dinner at the Spaghetti Western restaurant. Much of their décor consisted of Italian movie posters for the Magnificent Seven and several of the Clint Eastwood westerns.
Sunday was a free day until dinner time. With threatening showers in the morning, we stayed in the RV until just afternoon. Since it’s finally getting cooler, we also swapped out some summer clothes in the RV for winter clothing in our storage areas. Since most of the south rim is closed to private vehicles, in the afternoon Carol and I rode the park’s shuttle buses to tour much of the south rim, including stops at several overlooks and a short hike along the rim trail between a couple of the overlooks. There were a lot of different views of the canyon, with glimpses of the Colorado River. We also saw the superstructure for an old copper / uranium mine which is now a Superfund site. This evening we had a good steak buffet dinner with our group at the Thunderbird Lodge. Back at the RV, I watched TV and began reading “Death in the Canyon,” a book about the various people who have died in the Grand Canyon, mostly by being stupid (walking backwards off the edge while taking photos) or unprepared for the activity they undertake (hiking in 120 degree weather with little or no water).
Monday was a short driving day, about 100 miles, from Grand Canyon to Flagstaff, Arizona. In the afternoon we ran shopped and ran errands. In the evening we had another nice group dinner at Horseman’s Lodge. Since this is season premiere week on television, and since the campground has cable TV, we spent much of the evening watching new shows.
Tuesday was an all-day bus tour. This morning we visited Oak Creek Canyon to see a deep V-shaped canyon. Next we toured Sedona, where we took photos of the red hills, shopped for gifts, and ate lunch. Then we got back on the bus to visit two parts of Montezuma Castle National Monument – the main area with cliff dwellings and nearby Montezuma Well, a natural spring that was surrounded by a small pueblo settlement.
Wednesday was a free day. We took the CRV and visited Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument, where there was a volcano between 1040 and 1100. After a picnic lunch, we toured the Wupatki National Monument, the site of another ancestral Puebloan site. In addition to the normal cliff dwellings, this site had a large community center and a Mexican-style ball court. This evening was dinner in the RV and more of season premiere week.
This installment covers Thursday (September 20) through Wednesday (September 26).
On Thursday morning our hosts served a pancake and sausage breakfast at their RV. About 11:30, we car-pooled downtown to join a 4-wheel drive tour of Antelope Canyon. After several miles through soft brown sand, we arrived at this slot canyon. Although we have seen photographs of this type of canyon before, this is the first one we have visited. The water has eroded the Navajo sandstone so that the canyon is open to the air, but undulates down to the canyon floor. (Due to low light, it was hard to get good photos – the ones below do not really do justice to the canyon.) The canyon is subject to flash floods, and no tours are held on days that there is rain in the area.
Friday was another fairly short driving day. En route, we stopped at a couple of roadside shops where we bought some Navajo souvenirs. We also stopped at Desert Tower at the east end of the Grand Canyon where we took a lot of photos of the decorations inside the tower. The tower was built by the railroad as a tourist attraction and was designed to blend as much as possible into the natural environment. We had lunch in the RV after arriving at the campground. In the evening our group boarded a bus for a sunset tour at the south rim.
On Saturday morning we took a bus tour along the east rim of the canyon. We stopped at a couple of overlooks and at an ancestral Puebloan archaeological site. We visited the Desert Tower again and had a group photo taken on the steps of the gift shop. It began raining on our return trip and continued off-and-on (with some pea-size hail in the evening) all afternoon and most of the night. In the late afternoon we saw a film about the Grand Canyon at an IMAX theater. We then had a nice Italian dinner at the Spaghetti Western restaurant. Much of their décor consisted of Italian movie posters for the Magnificent Seven and several of the Clint Eastwood westerns.
Sunday was a free day until dinner time. With threatening showers in the morning, we stayed in the RV until just afternoon. Since it’s finally getting cooler, we also swapped out some summer clothes in the RV for winter clothing in our storage areas. Since most of the south rim is closed to private vehicles, in the afternoon Carol and I rode the park’s shuttle buses to tour much of the south rim, including stops at several overlooks and a short hike along the rim trail between a couple of the overlooks. There were a lot of different views of the canyon, with glimpses of the Colorado River. We also saw the superstructure for an old copper / uranium mine which is now a Superfund site. This evening we had a good steak buffet dinner with our group at the Thunderbird Lodge. Back at the RV, I watched TV and began reading “Death in the Canyon,” a book about the various people who have died in the Grand Canyon, mostly by being stupid (walking backwards off the edge while taking photos) or unprepared for the activity they undertake (hiking in 120 degree weather with little or no water).
Monday was a short driving day, about 100 miles, from Grand Canyon to Flagstaff, Arizona. In the afternoon we ran shopped and ran errands. In the evening we had another nice group dinner at Horseman’s Lodge. Since this is season premiere week on television, and since the campground has cable TV, we spent much of the evening watching new shows.
Tuesday was an all-day bus tour. This morning we visited Oak Creek Canyon to see a deep V-shaped canyon. Next we toured Sedona, where we took photos of the red hills, shopped for gifts, and ate lunch. Then we got back on the bus to visit two parts of Montezuma Castle National Monument – the main area with cliff dwellings and nearby Montezuma Well, a natural spring that was surrounded by a small pueblo settlement.
Wednesday was a free day. We took the CRV and visited Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument, where there was a volcano between 1040 and 1100. After a picnic lunch, we toured the Wupatki National Monument, the site of another ancestral Puebloan site. In addition to the normal cliff dwellings, this site had a large community center and a Mexican-style ball court. This evening was dinner in the RV and more of season premiere week.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Photos for the Last Post
We have a good Internet connection at last, so here are the photos that should have accompanied the last post. Plan to update with a new post on Wednesday night.
Golbin State Park
More Goblin State Park
Capitol Reef National Park
"Settlers Wall" in Capitol Reef NP
The "Tanks" in Capitol Reef NP
"Capitol Dome" in Capitol Reef NP
RVs Climbing to the Summit (click on photo to enlarge)
Bryce Canyon National Park
"Queen Victoria" (the formation on the left) in Bryce Canyon (click photo to enlarge)
Rick and Carol in Bryce Canyon
More Bryce Canyon
Cedar Breaks National Park
Hikers on Top of Ridge in Zion National Park (click photo to enlarge)
Rick and Carol in Zion National Park
"Checkerboard" in Zion National Park
Kolob Canyons Unit of Zion National Park
Pipe Springs "Fort" Today
Pipe Springs "Fort" in 1891
North Rim of Grand Canyon
"Angel's Window" (with Colorado River behind) at North Rim of Grand Canyon
Vermillion Cliffs
Glen Canyon Dam
Glen Canyon Bridge
Houseboat Marina on Lake Powell
"Navajo Tapestry" in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
Cliffs in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area from Boat Tour (white area would be underwater when lake level is at its highest)
Glen Canyon Dam with Lake Powell Behind
Golbin State Park
More Goblin State Park
Capitol Reef National Park
"Settlers Wall" in Capitol Reef NP
The "Tanks" in Capitol Reef NP
"Capitol Dome" in Capitol Reef NP
RVs Climbing to the Summit (click on photo to enlarge)
Bryce Canyon National Park
"Queen Victoria" (the formation on the left) in Bryce Canyon (click photo to enlarge)
Rick and Carol in Bryce Canyon
More Bryce Canyon
Cedar Breaks National Park
Hikers on Top of Ridge in Zion National Park (click photo to enlarge)
Rick and Carol in Zion National Park
"Checkerboard" in Zion National Park
Kolob Canyons Unit of Zion National Park
Pipe Springs "Fort" Today
Pipe Springs "Fort" in 1891
North Rim of Grand Canyon
"Angel's Window" (with Colorado River behind) at North Rim of Grand Canyon
Vermillion Cliffs
Glen Canyon Dam
Glen Canyon Bridge
Houseboat Marina on Lake Powell
"Navajo Tapestry" in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
Cliffs in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area from Boat Tour (white area would be underwater when lake level is at its highest)
Glen Canyon Dam with Lake Powell Behind
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Rocks and Canyons
Due to a poor internet connection, there are no photos with this installment. Photos will be posted in a separate entry once we get better WiFi connectivity.
This installment covers Monday (September 10) through Wednesday (September 19).
Monday was a travel day from Moab to Torrey, Utah, near Capitol Reef National Park. En route we stopped in Green River at a museum that documents the first real exploration (in the late 1860s) of the Colorado River Valley. Next we stopped at Goblin State Park. The park has some unusual rock formations which in some ways are reminiscent of Bryce Canyon. After a group dinner in the campground this evening, we enjoyed a half-hour talk (by a former museum director) on one of the groups of Anasazi Indians who lived in this area for about 75 years between 1100 and 1200 A.D.
Tuesday was a free day, and we explored Capitol Reef National Park in our car. At the end of a scenic drive into the park, we hiked about 1.5 miles (3 miles round trip) through Capitol Gorge. In the canyon we saw Indian petroglyphs and a wall where early settlers had signed and dated the canyon walls in the late 1800s and early 1900s. At the far end of the hike we scrambled 0.2 miles up some rocks to visit the “tanks,” where water is trapped in an otherwise dry area. We had a late picnic lunch after the hike, then returned to the visitor center to watch a short movie on the park. We then stopped at another petroglyph site and picked a few apples in a U-pick Orchard in Fruita.
On Wednesday, we drove from Torrey to Bryce Canyon. One segment of the drive was on challenging Highway 12, part of which runs along a high ridge with big drop-offs on each side of the road. The highest elevation on this segment was 9600 feet. En route we stopped to see an Anasazi Museum and some roadside views. At the campground we socialized for about an hour and a half before walking to Ruby Inn for an excellent buffet dinner with our group.
On Thursday, Carol and I went sightseeing in Bryce Canyon. In the morning we walked the 1.6 mile roundtrip Queens Garden Trail, which goes about 320 feet down into the canyon. The trail ends at a viewpoint for the Queen Victoria formation. After struggling back uphill, we drove to the far end of the canyon and worked our way back through all the sightseeing stops along the way. We also stopped for a picnic lunch, and later at the Visitor Center where we saw a short film on the park. After a couple of hours back at the RV we drove back to Sunset Point to see the park at sundown. The sunset did not make as much difference in coloration of the canyon as I had expected.
Friday we drove from Bryce Canyon to St. George, Utah. Just past the 10,000 foot summit, we parked the RV and drove the toad a short distance into Cedar Breaks National Monument. This high canyon was very much like Bryce Canyon. It was windy and cool at the monument. We then drove down into St. George, a booming retirement community which (in the summer) is consistently one of the hottest places in Utah. In the evening we had a group buffet dinner at a performing arts center, followed by the musical Cinderella in an open-air amphitheater. The play, which included real horses pulling carriages, was very entertaining. In particular, the two women playing the wicked stepsisters were quite good. On the bus ride to dinner and the play we saw sand dunes where some western movies have been filmed, and a range of lava mountains formed when rock was pushed up through a crack in the earth’s crust.
On Saturday morning we took a bus to Zion National Park. The owner/operator of the RV park (and his 9-year-old son) served as our tour guide(s). In Zion, we had to debus and travel on one of the park shuttles. We rode to the end of the park where we walked a portion of the riverside trail. After stopping at one scenic viewpoint on the return trip, we stopped and walked to Weeping Rock, where rain that fell 1200+ years ago and seeped through the limestone has finally hit an impervious layer and moved sideways to drip out the side of the mountain. On our tour, we learned that the rock at the top layer of the Grand Canyon corresponds to the bottom layer of Zion, and that the top layer of Zion corresponds to the bottom layer of Bryce. After lunch at the Zion Lodge, we saw an IMAX movie on Zion and some of the other parks in Utah.
Sunday was a free day. In the morning, we drove the CRV north to the Kolob Canyons section of Zion National Park. This area features a number of box canyons. At the end of the scenic drive, we hiked a 1.0 mile trail to a high overlook. On our return to St. George, we had a late lunch, shopped a little, then saw a western – “3:10 to Yuma”.
Monday was a short driving day from St. George to Jacobs Lake, located about 40 miles from the north rim of the Grand Canyon. En route, we stopped at Pine Spring National Monument. This is an early home – purchased by the Mormons from a rancher in the late 1800s – which sits atop a natural spring. We had a ranger-guided tour of the fort – the main house that has 2 feet thick walls, a lookout tower, and gun ports on the top. It was operated for years as a “tithe ranch,” where livestock that were tithed to the church were raised.
After arriving at Jacobs Lake Group Campground, where we dry camped, we drove to the north rim of the Grand Canyon. Carol and I tried to see all the overlooks. One of the overlooks on the road to Cape Royale was the Angel’s Window, a natural arch or bridge through which you can catch a glimpse of the Colorado River. We finished the day at the North Rim’s Grand Lodge and saw a sunset from a lookout on the Bright Angel trail. On our trip back to the campground after dark, we passed a large number of mule deer. We also stopped at a roadside pullout to spend a few minutes watching the stars – the roadside at that time of night was both dark and quiet.
Tuesday was our shortest driving day yet, from Jacobs Lake to a campground in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. After setting up camp, Carol and I explored downtown Page, had the car serviced while we shopped, stopped at an overlook of the Glen Canyon Dam, then stopped at the (closed) visitor center from which we snapped a few photos and walked out on the dam-side of the bridge across the Colorado River. Back at the campground for the evening, we had social hour with the other members of our caravan,
On Wednesday morning we had a 3-hour boat tour of a very small portion of Lake Powell, the man-made lake behind Glen Canyon Dam. We sailed up Navaho Canyon to see the Navaho tapestry – also known as desert varnish, or manganese oxide – which makes black designs as it washes down the rock cliffs. The water level in the lake is about 100 feet below its all-time high, and the cliffs generally run another 300-400 feet above that. We also sailed into Antelope Canyon, a much narrower canyon that we are scheduled to visit tomorrow by open-air 4-wheel drive vehicles. The lake is home to an amazing number and variety of houseboats – a boat slip at the marina costs $25,000 plus $1,200 per month, but from the size of the houseboats, it looks like their owners can afford it.
After the boat tour, Carol and I returned to the Glen Canyon Dam visitor center. While there, we took a 45-minute guided tour to the top and bottom of the dam. We learned that the concrete in the center of the bottom of the dam is only 98% cured, and that it continues to dry to this day. We also learned that as the water in the lake rises seasonally, the dam itself moves as much as two inches due to changes in the water pressure. The Glen Canyon Bridge, just downstream from the dam, was built before construction on the dam started; prior to construction of the bridge, it required a 100+ mile trip to a downstream crossing to get from one side of the canyon to the other. Following the tour, we walked out onto the bridge again, and got some more pictures of the dam and the Colorado River.
Wednesday evening, we had an excellent group dinner at the Wahweah Lodge, overlooking Lake Powell. This name is a Piute word meaning bad or bitter water, the Indian’s original name for the Colorado River in this area.
This installment covers Monday (September 10) through Wednesday (September 19).
Monday was a travel day from Moab to Torrey, Utah, near Capitol Reef National Park. En route we stopped in Green River at a museum that documents the first real exploration (in the late 1860s) of the Colorado River Valley. Next we stopped at Goblin State Park. The park has some unusual rock formations which in some ways are reminiscent of Bryce Canyon. After a group dinner in the campground this evening, we enjoyed a half-hour talk (by a former museum director) on one of the groups of Anasazi Indians who lived in this area for about 75 years between 1100 and 1200 A.D.
Tuesday was a free day, and we explored Capitol Reef National Park in our car. At the end of a scenic drive into the park, we hiked about 1.5 miles (3 miles round trip) through Capitol Gorge. In the canyon we saw Indian petroglyphs and a wall where early settlers had signed and dated the canyon walls in the late 1800s and early 1900s. At the far end of the hike we scrambled 0.2 miles up some rocks to visit the “tanks,” where water is trapped in an otherwise dry area. We had a late picnic lunch after the hike, then returned to the visitor center to watch a short movie on the park. We then stopped at another petroglyph site and picked a few apples in a U-pick Orchard in Fruita.
On Wednesday, we drove from Torrey to Bryce Canyon. One segment of the drive was on challenging Highway 12, part of which runs along a high ridge with big drop-offs on each side of the road. The highest elevation on this segment was 9600 feet. En route we stopped to see an Anasazi Museum and some roadside views. At the campground we socialized for about an hour and a half before walking to Ruby Inn for an excellent buffet dinner with our group.
On Thursday, Carol and I went sightseeing in Bryce Canyon. In the morning we walked the 1.6 mile roundtrip Queens Garden Trail, which goes about 320 feet down into the canyon. The trail ends at a viewpoint for the Queen Victoria formation. After struggling back uphill, we drove to the far end of the canyon and worked our way back through all the sightseeing stops along the way. We also stopped for a picnic lunch, and later at the Visitor Center where we saw a short film on the park. After a couple of hours back at the RV we drove back to Sunset Point to see the park at sundown. The sunset did not make as much difference in coloration of the canyon as I had expected.
Friday we drove from Bryce Canyon to St. George, Utah. Just past the 10,000 foot summit, we parked the RV and drove the toad a short distance into Cedar Breaks National Monument. This high canyon was very much like Bryce Canyon. It was windy and cool at the monument. We then drove down into St. George, a booming retirement community which (in the summer) is consistently one of the hottest places in Utah. In the evening we had a group buffet dinner at a performing arts center, followed by the musical Cinderella in an open-air amphitheater. The play, which included real horses pulling carriages, was very entertaining. In particular, the two women playing the wicked stepsisters were quite good. On the bus ride to dinner and the play we saw sand dunes where some western movies have been filmed, and a range of lava mountains formed when rock was pushed up through a crack in the earth’s crust.
On Saturday morning we took a bus to Zion National Park. The owner/operator of the RV park (and his 9-year-old son) served as our tour guide(s). In Zion, we had to debus and travel on one of the park shuttles. We rode to the end of the park where we walked a portion of the riverside trail. After stopping at one scenic viewpoint on the return trip, we stopped and walked to Weeping Rock, where rain that fell 1200+ years ago and seeped through the limestone has finally hit an impervious layer and moved sideways to drip out the side of the mountain. On our tour, we learned that the rock at the top layer of the Grand Canyon corresponds to the bottom layer of Zion, and that the top layer of Zion corresponds to the bottom layer of Bryce. After lunch at the Zion Lodge, we saw an IMAX movie on Zion and some of the other parks in Utah.
Sunday was a free day. In the morning, we drove the CRV north to the Kolob Canyons section of Zion National Park. This area features a number of box canyons. At the end of the scenic drive, we hiked a 1.0 mile trail to a high overlook. On our return to St. George, we had a late lunch, shopped a little, then saw a western – “3:10 to Yuma”.
Monday was a short driving day from St. George to Jacobs Lake, located about 40 miles from the north rim of the Grand Canyon. En route, we stopped at Pine Spring National Monument. This is an early home – purchased by the Mormons from a rancher in the late 1800s – which sits atop a natural spring. We had a ranger-guided tour of the fort – the main house that has 2 feet thick walls, a lookout tower, and gun ports on the top. It was operated for years as a “tithe ranch,” where livestock that were tithed to the church were raised.
After arriving at Jacobs Lake Group Campground, where we dry camped, we drove to the north rim of the Grand Canyon. Carol and I tried to see all the overlooks. One of the overlooks on the road to Cape Royale was the Angel’s Window, a natural arch or bridge through which you can catch a glimpse of the Colorado River. We finished the day at the North Rim’s Grand Lodge and saw a sunset from a lookout on the Bright Angel trail. On our trip back to the campground after dark, we passed a large number of mule deer. We also stopped at a roadside pullout to spend a few minutes watching the stars – the roadside at that time of night was both dark and quiet.
Tuesday was our shortest driving day yet, from Jacobs Lake to a campground in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. After setting up camp, Carol and I explored downtown Page, had the car serviced while we shopped, stopped at an overlook of the Glen Canyon Dam, then stopped at the (closed) visitor center from which we snapped a few photos and walked out on the dam-side of the bridge across the Colorado River. Back at the campground for the evening, we had social hour with the other members of our caravan,
On Wednesday morning we had a 3-hour boat tour of a very small portion of Lake Powell, the man-made lake behind Glen Canyon Dam. We sailed up Navaho Canyon to see the Navaho tapestry – also known as desert varnish, or manganese oxide – which makes black designs as it washes down the rock cliffs. The water level in the lake is about 100 feet below its all-time high, and the cliffs generally run another 300-400 feet above that. We also sailed into Antelope Canyon, a much narrower canyon that we are scheduled to visit tomorrow by open-air 4-wheel drive vehicles. The lake is home to an amazing number and variety of houseboats – a boat slip at the marina costs $25,000 plus $1,200 per month, but from the size of the houseboats, it looks like their owners can afford it.
After the boat tour, Carol and I returned to the Glen Canyon Dam visitor center. While there, we took a 45-minute guided tour to the top and bottom of the dam. We learned that the concrete in the center of the bottom of the dam is only 98% cured, and that it continues to dry to this day. We also learned that as the water in the lake rises seasonally, the dam itself moves as much as two inches due to changes in the water pressure. The Glen Canyon Bridge, just downstream from the dam, was built before construction on the dam started; prior to construction of the bridge, it required a 100+ mile trip to a downstream crossing to get from one side of the canyon to the other. Following the tour, we walked out onto the bridge again, and got some more pictures of the dam and the Colorado River.
Wednesday evening, we had an excellent group dinner at the Wahweah Lodge, overlooking Lake Powell. This name is a Piute word meaning bad or bitter water, the Indian’s original name for the Colorado River in this area.
Sunday, September 09, 2007
Moab -- Arches and Canyonlands National Parks
Be sure to click on the photos for larger views.
This installment covers Tuesday (September 4) through Sunday (September 9).
Tuesday we drove from Santa Fe to Moab, Utah, where our WIT caravan will start on Thursday afternoon. In the late afternoon, we had a social hour with about 9 couples who have already arrived for the caravan. On Wednesday, we ran errands and relaxed with another evening social hour.
On Thursday morning we took the car to town for souvenir and gift shopping. Mid-afternoon we had our caravan kick-off meeting, preceded by some light snacks. In the evening we had our first group dinner, then took the “Canyonlands by Night” boat tour up the Colorado River – no photos allowed. On the first part of the tour, our guide pointed out a lot of features of the high river cliffs. On the second part, we saw a sound and light show that told the geologic and cultural history of the area. It was a moonless night, and when the light show lights were out, we had an unencumbered view of the heavens – including several satellites – through a clear desert sky.
On Friday, we had an all-day bus tour that took us through Arches National Park, the Island in the Sky section of Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point State Park. These three parks encompass a variety of types of rock formations and offer a lot of scenic views. The views in Canyonlands were marred by smoke from forest fires in other western states. Our guide not only talked about geology, flora and fauna, but also pointed out sites where a large number of Hollywood movies have been made.
A view in Arches NP.
Carol and Rick at Double Arch
Newspaper Rock
Carol and Rick at Green River Overlook in Canyonlands
On Saturday morning we had a two-hour jet boat tour down the Colorado river. Along the way we saw colorful cliffs, 4-wheel drive vehicles climbing a road that’s rated 4 out of 5 for 4x4s, and the local potash plant. After returning to the dock, we got into air conditioned 4-wheel drive vehicles for a two-hour trip up an easy 4-wheel drive road to Gemini Bridges, located on Bureau of Land Management land adjacent to Dead Horse Point State Park. In the afternoon, Carol and I drove about 15 miles along the Colorado River then into Castle Creek where we viewed Castle Rock, a rock tower that has been the site of a number of automobile commercials. We returned to buy wine at the Castle Creek Winery and to tour their basement museum which recalls many of the movies that have been filmed at least in part in Grand County.
View of Colorado River Canyon from Jet Boat
Castle Rock
After a short stop in the RV, we departed about 6:00 p.m. for Arches National Park. We drove the to far end of the park and spent 1-1/4 hours hiking the 1.6 mile plus round-trip trail to Landscape Arch (the thinnest arch in the park – 6 feet thick at its narrowest point) with side trips to Tunnel Arch and Pine Tree Arch. With the sun setting, we got were able to capture some different colors in our photos. It began to cool off by the early evening, with a nice cool breeze in some of the low, damper spots on the trail. Tunnel Arch lies at the end of a narrow canyon – when we arrived some ravens were flying through the narrow part of the canyon and the sound of their wings was echoed off both sides, making a loud, eerie sound.
Landscape Arch
Carol at Pine Tree Arch
On Sunday morning we took the CRV into Canyonlands National Park. After a brief stop at the visitor center we stopped at the overlook for the 4-wheel drive road down into the canyon. (If you enlarge the first photo below, you can see a car on the road about half way down into the canyon.) We then visited Mesa Arch – when looking through the arch you can see both a distant mesa and the closer Washerwoman Arch. There is still smoke in the air, so we never got any good Canyonlands photos – but we do have some excellent ones from earlier visits in 1991 and 2002. This evening we will have a chuck wagon dinner and western show with our caravan group.
View of Car Climbing Road Out of Canyon
View Underneath Mesa Arch
This installment covers Tuesday (September 4) through Sunday (September 9).
Tuesday we drove from Santa Fe to Moab, Utah, where our WIT caravan will start on Thursday afternoon. In the late afternoon, we had a social hour with about 9 couples who have already arrived for the caravan. On Wednesday, we ran errands and relaxed with another evening social hour.
On Thursday morning we took the car to town for souvenir and gift shopping. Mid-afternoon we had our caravan kick-off meeting, preceded by some light snacks. In the evening we had our first group dinner, then took the “Canyonlands by Night” boat tour up the Colorado River – no photos allowed. On the first part of the tour, our guide pointed out a lot of features of the high river cliffs. On the second part, we saw a sound and light show that told the geologic and cultural history of the area. It was a moonless night, and when the light show lights were out, we had an unencumbered view of the heavens – including several satellites – through a clear desert sky.
On Friday, we had an all-day bus tour that took us through Arches National Park, the Island in the Sky section of Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point State Park. These three parks encompass a variety of types of rock formations and offer a lot of scenic views. The views in Canyonlands were marred by smoke from forest fires in other western states. Our guide not only talked about geology, flora and fauna, but also pointed out sites where a large number of Hollywood movies have been made.
A view in Arches NP.
Carol and Rick at Double Arch
Newspaper Rock
Carol and Rick at Green River Overlook in Canyonlands
On Saturday morning we had a two-hour jet boat tour down the Colorado river. Along the way we saw colorful cliffs, 4-wheel drive vehicles climbing a road that’s rated 4 out of 5 for 4x4s, and the local potash plant. After returning to the dock, we got into air conditioned 4-wheel drive vehicles for a two-hour trip up an easy 4-wheel drive road to Gemini Bridges, located on Bureau of Land Management land adjacent to Dead Horse Point State Park. In the afternoon, Carol and I drove about 15 miles along the Colorado River then into Castle Creek where we viewed Castle Rock, a rock tower that has been the site of a number of automobile commercials. We returned to buy wine at the Castle Creek Winery and to tour their basement museum which recalls many of the movies that have been filmed at least in part in Grand County.
View of Colorado River Canyon from Jet Boat
Castle Rock
After a short stop in the RV, we departed about 6:00 p.m. for Arches National Park. We drove the to far end of the park and spent 1-1/4 hours hiking the 1.6 mile plus round-trip trail to Landscape Arch (the thinnest arch in the park – 6 feet thick at its narrowest point) with side trips to Tunnel Arch and Pine Tree Arch. With the sun setting, we got were able to capture some different colors in our photos. It began to cool off by the early evening, with a nice cool breeze in some of the low, damper spots on the trail. Tunnel Arch lies at the end of a narrow canyon – when we arrived some ravens were flying through the narrow part of the canyon and the sound of their wings was echoed off both sides, making a loud, eerie sound.
Landscape Arch
Carol at Pine Tree Arch
On Sunday morning we took the CRV into Canyonlands National Park. After a brief stop at the visitor center we stopped at the overlook for the 4-wheel drive road down into the canyon. (If you enlarge the first photo below, you can see a car on the road about half way down into the canyon.) We then visited Mesa Arch – when looking through the arch you can see both a distant mesa and the closer Washerwoman Arch. There is still smoke in the air, so we never got any good Canyonlands photos – but we do have some excellent ones from earlier visits in 1991 and 2002. This evening we will have a chuck wagon dinner and western show with our caravan group.
View of Car Climbing Road Out of Canyon
View Underneath Mesa Arch