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One of the less interesting roads, disappearing into the distance |
Utah is a fabulous place, perhaps
not round every corner, but certainly within an hour or so’s drive there is
something different and amazing, literally too much to do! We made a plan not
to try to do too much and we thought our plan was fairly modest, but we’re
finding we can only do the most amazing things and are having to miss out
slightly less amazing things, that anywhere else would be fabulous.
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Stunning semi-desert scenery on the SR-24 |
We can’t do
all the hikes and scenic drives and rock climbing is coming in a dismal third!
There are some great looking single and multi day hikes into really remote but wonderful
back country with slot canyons and gorges to explore and there would be four
wheel drive adventures and river rafting if only time and money would allow. A
year in this state alone would not be enough, so how do we decide what to do?
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Capitol Reef NP |
Well, we left Moab after Arches
and Canyonlands NP and an evening of climbing feeling we’d barely touched the
surface of what was there, took a 2.5 hour drive along the I-70 freeway, then
down towards our destination of Bicknell on the SR-24 which, after turning East
turned out to be a fabulous scenic drive (there aren’t enough adjectives to
describe the scenery!) which led through the top of Capitol Reef NP and
eventually on to Bicknell and our destination for three nights, the Aquarius
Inn. Bicknell is a town of 300 people with one adequate restaurant and about 12
miles from Torrey, the next nearest with a few more adequate restaurants.
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This is known as The Chimney, a big boulder perched atop a crumbly sandstone column |
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Two suspect characters peer through holes in the rock |
Capitol Reef NP is not a No. 1
destination, but is still a stunning place. It’s a National Park 100mile long
(N-S) but quite narrow, that protects the ‘Waterpocket Fold’, which was a
ripple of the earth’s crust, like a ruck in a carpet, that has since eroded to
reveal sandstone layers that span 200 million years of history and is the
largest exposed monocline in N. America. Not only is it dramatic to look at, containing
canyons, cliffs, towers, domes and arches, it’s also a geologists dream, as we
found out when we went on a walking geology talk with Sophie, a young female
Ranger, who had a huge knowledge of geology and, despite the rain, made it a
very interesting and worthwhile outing to the Hickman Natural Stone bridge.
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On our geology walking lecture |
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The Hickman Natural Stone Bridge |
With her we learnt about rock layers from the Permian period (270 million years
and the time of the ‘great extinction’ where 96% of life on earth disappeared)
through to the very thick layer of Navajo sandstone, laid down when the area
was a dry desert and little life existed here. It’s possible to see diagonal
stripes in this layer, which is where sand was blown and deposited on the leeward
side of a dune, allowing geologists to even work out which way the wind was
blowing at the time. On top are round black rocks with lots of holes, which are
volcanic rocks ejected by old nearby volcanos and probably transported here by
glaciers during the last ice age, although there is some disagreement on this
theory.
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A different view of the natural bridge from underneath |
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The original school house (seats up to 30 students) |
Anyway, enough of geology, the fertile
area in the middle, at the junction of two small rivers is called Fruita and
was (is) a small village, then very isolated, settled by Mormon pioneers who
planted fruit trees and developed their own community, occupied until 1969. The
trees and old buildings are now managed by the park authority and we took an
interesting history tour round the original buildings and orchards, the fruit trees
of which anyone can visit and eat the fruit for free on site, only paying a
nominal amount if fruit is taken away.
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Into the first canyon |
Erosion of the land has created a
number of accessible and inaccessible canyons, one with several side slot canyons.
We drove the scenic road into the park, entered a couple of canyons in the car
on gravel roads, crossing several watercourses and parking beneath massive
canyon walls and then walking along the watercourse bed to narrowing, sheer
canyon walls. Don’t get stuck in here in a flash flood! Signs at the entrance
tell you not to enter if a storm threatens, the dry watercourse can change to a
raging torrent within a matter of minutes, with few places to climb to safety!
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Group photo time, camera balanced on a rock shelf |
Driving along these twisting dirt roads between high cliff walls wondering
where it leads and whether it will be possible to turn round is bad enough in a
car, but we saw quite large campervans (RV’s) with worried looking drivers
negotiating them, trying to squeeze past cars coming in the other direction!
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The second canyon walk |
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The rainy start to the geology walking lecture |
Our Sunday morning geology walk
was done in the rain (they only get about 10 inches of rain a year we were
told, well, 5 or 10% of that must have fallen on Sunday!), fortunately it was not
in a canyon! That took a couple of hours, we got rained on intermittently, but
saw sun on surrounding peaks set against a black sky, rainbows, lightning flashes
and swelling rivers, all very atmospheric! The low cloud and rain afterwards made
us return to our inn, but we went out again in late afternoon when the sky
cleared to walk the high and less prone to flood Cohab Canyon, which had quite
an ascent up, but then a gradual descent, with several side slot canyons to
explore.
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Look at this sunlit peak against a dark sky |
We did three slot canyons, one just about wide enough to squeeze
through sideways that Pauline decided wasn’t for her. It was fabulous (lacking
better adjectives again), had amazing canyon walls eroded into fantastic shapes
and colours and was very worthwhile. We ended up back on the SR-24 road (that only
made this area accessible in 1962) and walked back to look at the ancient
civilization rock art (Petroglyphs). Their drawings look like men in space
suits to me – are they trying to tell us something?
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The uphill walk to the Cohab canyon |
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Looking back down to the Fruita village |
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Jackie checks out a slot canyon |
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And we have a go at this one - come back Jackie! |
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Pauline decides she's gone far enough and backs off carrying our rucksack |
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A rest out of the afternoon sun in Cohab canyon |
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In one of the slot canyons |
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Jackie gets eaten by a rock dinosaurs head! |
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Look at these amazing rock colours |
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A lizard basks in the sun |
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Ancient Indian rock art. Do they look like spacemen to you? |
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Buffalo, we finally saw buffalo (or are they Bison?) |
This morning was nice and sunny
for our scenic drive along highway 12 through the Grand Staircase NP, another
and huge National Park. This place is so remote that only highway 12 crosses
it. There are a few four wheel drive tracks that follow early pioneer routes,
but other than those it’s pristine. All hikes in this area are remote with no
established tracks and some of them, like ones to a slot canyon area sound
great, maybe we’ll come back later!
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Grand Staircase NP, a remote pristine wilderness. The road you see is the only crossing |
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Navajo sandstone. The diagonal lines mark the sand dune layers |
Eventually we came through the top of Bryce
Canyon, which is another amazing place of strikingly red sandstone sculptures
that we’ll be visiting later and on through Red Canyon, another bright red
canyon that is considered an ‘also ran’, but is fabulous. We stopped at the
visitors centre and chatted to a volunteer ranger who told us all about the
fantastic sights in Bryce Canyon, then told us about his Red Canyon, which also
sounds fabulous.
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Entering the top of Bryce Canyon |
Go to Bryce he told us, it will be busy, but afterwards come
here, where it’s almost as good, but we’ll probably be walking on our own! Then
he told us about the other nearby NP, Zion, which has some stunning walks. Bryce and Zion are going to need at least two
days a piece, Red Canyon at least one day and nearby Cedar Breaks National
Monument another day.
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A viewpoint over Cedar Breaks National Monument |
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Our apartment at Brian Head |
We’re in Brian Head now for seven
days, it’s a ski resort at 9800ft, but sadly not at the moment, the ski season
starts here on 20th November, but we’re in a luxurious ski apartment
with high mountains and ski lifts all around us. The grass is green, but the
aspen trees have turned to red, orange and yellow leaves and the scenery is
stunning! At 9800ft its cool and fresh here, low 60’s F (16 C), but bright and
sunny, so pretty good to walk around in. It’ll be colder tonight, but not
freezing, so we’re happy with that.
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From the other direction. Pauline's starting a jigsaw, Jackies on the computer |
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The view from our terrace and a ski lift going uphill |
Tomorrow it’s into Cedar City for
shopping and sightseeing, taking a round mountain trip of scenic roads and then
hit the National Parks on Wednesday. When we booked Brian Head for a week before
we left the UK we thought we’d be able to have at least one day of relaxation,
but now we’re thinking a week isn’t enough. There is too much to do and not
enough time!!
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The view a little bit further round |
2 comments:
Brilliant scenery xxx
Thank you for the fantastic photographs, great colours too.
I wonder who did the paintings of our alien friends. They look different to the Dogon tribe cave paintings of aliens who landed there hundreds of years ago.
Miaow, miaow, miaow, and love from John too
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