Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Arches National Park; Moab, Utah

Arches National Park contains the world’s largest concentration of natural stone arches.  This park is a red, arid desert, punctuated with oddly eroded sandstone forms such as fins, pinnacles, spires, balanced rocks and arches.  The 73,000 acre region has over 2000 of these ‘miracles of nature’.

Continuing on for more punishment, we went hiking again but this time started at 6 AM when it was a little cooler.  It was a good thing because when we were heading back to the campground around noon we could see that the parking lots near the closer arches were completely packed with people double parked and even parked on the shoulder for half a mile along the internal road, making it difficult for other cars to get by.  The distant cluster of arches had 15 mile hikes associated with them to get to the arches so I imagine that in this heat there were fewer people out there (mid 40* C again).  

At Double Arch

(If you want to see a larger version of the pictures just clik on the image.  Look carefully as five of the images have people in them.  Sorry if the photos aren't in a balanced order; a learning problem!)

How Arches are Formed

Pinnacles
Balanced Rock

An Arch Being Formed
Delicate Arch
Hoodoos
Turret Arch 
Double Arch
The Three Gossips

Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Canyonlands; Moab, Utah

Canyonlands National Park

The last time we were in Moab was 22 years ago with Robin and this was a funky little town; now it is 10 times the size with tourists from all over the world. Young people come for the outdoor adventures - Slik Rock cycling, river rafting, rock climbing, ATVing, hiking, zip lining, etc, etc; while older ones and families come to see the great natural sites among the rich, red rock at Canyonlands and Arches.  After spending 6 hours at the first park and 5 hours the next day at the latter, both with hiking in the blazing heat, we decided to move on in hopes for cooler temperatures.  46*C was just too much!  Although close, both parks are so different.  At Canyonlands you are on the top of a 6000 ft mesa and you look down 2000 ft into the canyons that the Colorado and Green Rivers have carved out over millions of years.  In Arches you are at the 5000 ft altitude with all the arches above you and they have been carved out by wind and rain.  

46 C
Mike overlooking the canyons

Colorado River, a 2000 ft drop

A 4x4 on the Shafer Trail, 1000 ft below

The road up the Shafer Trail

Mesa Arch

When I was here years ago a German tourist was unsuccessfully trying to get his girlfriend to stand on the top of the Mesa Arch so he could take a photo but she insisted on crawling on her hand and knees.  When I offered to take a photo of both of them up there, he climbed up and immediately got down on his knees as well.  It turned out the arch is less than 10 ft wide but there is a drop of 1000 ft on the far side!





















Monday, 1 September 2014

The Great Salt Lake, Utah

25 miles north of Salt Lake City there is an 8 mile causeway that goes out to Antelope Island, a 25 mile long island with a 1500 ft mountain peak, situated in the Great Salt Lake.  Four rivers flow into the lake but since there is no outlet, as the water evaporates the lake becomes saltier.  
We went out to see the lake and found that we could get a camp spot overlooking the water. The temperature was in the high 30’s C during the day so we waited until 6 pm to walk to the shore, which took 20 minutes as the water level was so low.  Gorgeous sand on the way but billions of teeny brine shrimp along the edge, with a million sand flies eating them.  They didn’t bother us as the mass was only 4" high but flew forward in waves with each step you took.  Some people had gone swimming but the most we did was put our feet and hands in the water and immediately they were coated with salt.  The water here at the island is 25% salt while at the north end of the lake it’s 45%.  Since there are no showers (or fresh water) at this campground we chose not to submerse ourselves, even though it would have been fun to float on top of the water.  
Moved on to Moab, Utah, which will be my next entry.
Distant Campsite
Our spot from the shore
View from our spot
Tumbleweed



Our silhouettes
Sunset over the lake

Monday, 25 August 2014

Idaho


There is interesting country along the back roads of Idaho and one can see this is definitely mountain terrain.  From a once prosperous gold mining area to a little cattle ranching, now firms offering river rafting trips everywhere you look, you can see that younger people have taken over from the prospectors.  Like Whistler, the occasional ski town has a 4 season focus by adding mountain biking, golf and mansion building (as in Sun Valley).

Taking a bypass from Boise we headed towards Craters of the Moon, a 750,000 acre National Monument that the Shoshone Indians passed through on their annual migration.  The volcanic activity here dates back 15,000 years and the most recent was as early as 2000 years ago.  There was never a massive volcanic eruption but vast volumes of lava flowed from a series of deep fissures.  The lunar astronauts trained here in 1969 and now a small part is open to the public via a 7 mile driving loop that winds through the park, taking you to areas of different lava.  There are examples of the dried flows, spatter cones, cinder cones, projectiles, and if we wanted to hike in 7 miles, we could also see some of the lava tubes and caves.  The following photos are a few examples of what we have seen in the past few days.

Snake Warning

Sawtooth Mountains

National Monument

Road Built over the Flows

Rope-Like Twists

Projectiles

A Cinder Cone We Climbed

Saturday, 23 August 2014

Palouse Country, Washington

After heavy hail in Manning Park; finding cherries and peaches for $1 a pound in the Okanagan, and torrential rain north of Spokane, we finally arrived in the sunny Palouse country in southeast Washington. Who gets excited about wheat fields, or "the Dried Pea and Lentil Capital of the US". Why would that area appeal to anyone, or us?
Think of an area from Vancouver to Abbotsford squared, covered with rolling hills formed by a dust called Loess, anywhere from 12 to 18 meters deep.  This rich soil produces double the amount of wheat and lentils, unirrigated.
In the midst of the area is the Steptoe Butte that rises 1000 ft above the surrounding hills with a road that circles the butte twice on it's way to the top.  Mike and I spent several hours there at dusk last night capturing images of the amazing play of shadows and light on these dune-like hills.  Up at 5 am today to head back up for the dawn light, when half way up the butte Mike noticed that our gas gauge was on the very bottom end of the RED warning section.  Afraid we'd end up miles from any passing cars we headed back down and with our hearts in our throats, we crept into a gas station, after finding that the first station had a "No Gas" sign posted on the pumps!
Today we learnt to: never let our gas run that low; that the Nez Perce Indians called their spotted horse breed Appaloosa, after the Palouse region; that here a 'creek' is called a 'crick' and that yes, there really is a Lentil Ice Cream!
Contrasts


Approaching Storm

Dune-like

Wheat Harvesting 




Rolling Hills


New Power Sources




Tuesday, 19 August 2014

LEAVING HOME

Just getting ready to head out on a 5 week ramble to the US Four Corners region.  This is where Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona meet at one spot.  Our first major destination will be Taos and Santa Fe, New Mexico, followed by many sites we visited 20 years ago with Robin in northern Arizona, southern Utah and the mountains of Colorado.  Who knows where else?

In June 2013,  at 40* C and after a long 7 mile climb up a summit of 4000 ft our trusty Westphalia just couldn't make it!  All the bells and whistles were protesting so after a 2 day drive south to the Oregon/California border we decided to head back home, knowing that there were higher climbs ahead had we continued.  That was last year and now, after a new engine in Westie, we are going to try again.


Wednesday, 30 July 2014

Hi Folks,
Just testing this new blog.  Please bear with me.
H