Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Kodachrome Basin


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We set out for our 40 mile drive from Escalante to Kodachrome Basin with a plan to stop at Subway to pick up lunch. It was Sunday, the town is very small and many places close on Sundays. I asked the lady attending the gas station where the Subway was located, if Cannonville would have a place to get lunch. That would be a no, it is Sunday and it is a Mennonite town. She did suggest Boots, a restaurant 5 blocks down Main street and take a right. The workers in Boots seemed to be just waiting for us as we bellied up to the bar and whipped up a giant sandwich for us to share on the trails. We will remember to stock up at the grocery store on Monday 

Staying in southern Utah and seeing lots of red dirt was our plan because Arizona was getting pretty hot which brings out the pollen and rattlesnakes. North of this area was still getting hit with winter storms.



We didn't see anyone on the trails until we returned to the truck. This state park doesn't get a lot of visitors due to its proximity to the national parks nearby. 
 
 
I see a gnome. Of course, you start seeing all sorts of things after wandering around the desert for long enough.
 
 

This is the oldest and most healthy cryptobiotic crust I have ever seen. The crust is a community of organisms that live on desert soils. It provides critical nutrients to plants, absorbs and holds water and aids in preventing erosion. The lumpy black crust is in its mature state, but is nearly invisible in early stages and easily destroyed by walking on it.
 
I feel sad and frustrated when I see people ignoring the signs to stay on the trails, traipsing off across the desert destroying the crusts.  But then again, people don't know what they don't know.



 
Couldn't miss the Secret Passage.




Mike saw a duck here.
 
After taking the 6 mile Panorama Trail, we hit the shorter 1 1/2 mile Angel Palace Trail.
 

We saw a KOA as we were leaving Cannonville and thought we could buy a candy bar there since everything else was closed and a Payday sounded great. Surely, someone would be manning the store. Wrong again.
 
Time to head back to Escalante or as I call it, the land of much wind.


Thursday, April 5, 2018

Hiking in the slot canyons

Hiking the Staircase

Toadstools in Escalante Staircase

On our previous visit to Lake Powell, we had taken a couple of organized tours, missing most of the Grand Staircase outback. This time we did more research to find hiking areas both on the Navajo Reservation and BLM and where to get the required permits.
On our way to the Toadstools, we also stopped at the Big Water BLM office and Dinosaur Museum for more information. There is little to no phone service out here. We wanted to be sure we were taking good roads with good directions, food and water.
 

 

Along the creek bed hiking trail, we passed variegated walls of sandstone that were quite pretty. 



Many toadstools had lost their tops from erosion.
 
  After the Toadstool hike, an easy 1.6 miles, we picked up some Subway and headed over to the Waterhole Canyon Trail on the Reservation to get in a longer hike. A $12 per person permit was required. We had to drive back to Page, go down a couple of more roads to find the office selling permits before driving back to the trailhead.

 The wind gusts were getting pretty strong, sandblasting our faces, causing us to finally call it a day and return to the Wahweep Campground to have our picnic while making better plans for our next two days of hiking.
 
 

Wire Pass and Buckskin Gulch Slot Canyons 

The BLM ranger had suggested we take the hike through Wire Pass into the gorge of Buckskin Gulch of the Vermillion Cliffs of the Paria Canyon since the water in the gulch was going to be up to our waists and very cold.

We drove Highway 89 to House Rock Valley Road, turned left  and drove 8.4 miles on this dirt road. Fortunately, it had been dry and the road had been graded, which made for an easy drive, paid our $6 a person (dogs are also $6) at the trailhead and hit the trail.
 
 For 12.5 miles Buckskin Gulch is a very narrow gorge 100 to 200 feet deep, flanked by walls of Navajo Sandstone. Buckskin Gulch is renowned not only because of its continuous challenging narrows, but also because there is no other canyon like it in the world and thought to be the longest.

 We took the Wire Pass Trail to Buckskin, which is a short 3.6 miles round trip, with its narrows even more confined than those in Buckskin. Then we headed up the gulch for another mile before turning around. 
 

We enjoyed the cool 47 degrees temps as we started out.

At the end of Wire Pass Slot is a big rock with a big drop for our short legs. We turned around when we could tell how to get down safely and found a trail that went along the top of the gorge and climbed over and back down.

Below is the exit of the slot and a scramble down. The trail got more beautiful as we hiked. I took so many pictures it was difficult to chose which to post.

The petroglyph arch at the confluence of Wire Pass and Buckskin Gulch.

As we continued through Buckskin, the water wasn't very deep.


We thought we would try to climb over the rocks on the way out.
Mike made it with me telling him where to place his feet.

I reached a place where I needed a little boost and was glad that I kept my pack on. Mike grabbed the pack and gave it a little pull so I wouldn't fall backwards.
 
Our blue truck turned red after driving on the dusty roads.

Waterholes Canyon on Navajo Tribal Land

On our third day of hiking, we drove out of Page 3 miles on Copper Mine Road to Le Chee to purchase the $12 per person permit to hike on Tribal Land. Then drove back to the small parking area on Highway 89  for our hike. We only saw 2 other people on the way in but a few more as we exited the canyon. There was also no one pushing us along to hurry us like the Antelope Canyon Tours.
We finally found the place to purchase the permit to hike.

We found the cairns leading us into the canyon.


The sandstone was nice and grippy but I still crab walked when the sand was loose.
 
 

The clouds came over making the photos better.
 At the top of the ladder was a very narrow path we had to squeeze through.
 
 After returning to the trail head, we walked to the highway 89 bridge and found the car that had wrecked off of it and another ladder. It was another short hike of 3 miles round trip and a little extra walking but a good morning walk.
 
We have some longer hikes planned once we leave Lake Powell. It is definitely good to be back on the road. We are finding that there are more people from Asia and Europe than ever visiting our treasures.

The stars shine so brightly in the very dark sky at night as we sit by our fire at night.



Saturday, March 31, 2018

We're baaaack...

On the road again!

The temperatures were rising to the 90s, making it a good time to make our exit from Mesa, AZ. We were finally able to find a campground on short notice with so many snowbirds leaving the area. We found one in Camp Verde for 3 nights. Finishing our jobs a few days before we had planned was fine with our bosses.  Besides, it was my birthday week, or as I call it, a holiday!


We said our good byes and could not forget Oliver. He is one cool dog that rules the roost next door.

Mike had ordered a small black forest cake for my big 60 day. The bakery made a large, which gave us more than enough to share with friends.
 
Birthdays often make me reflective, making me look back at this life. I am so thankful for every birthday I get to have.  Our lives are made up of the choices we make both good and bad. I feel lucky those choices brought me here and that we are strong and healthy. Too many people we have known didn't get this many.

 Tyler and Kyle had time for a visit and bocce ball during their visit for Spring Training. It is  a joy to spend time with them. They are growing up so much.
While in Mesa, we  had been riding our bikes on mostly flats with some hills this winter. We sure felt it on the hills when we arrived in Oak Creek. It was so good to be back out enjoying some new scenery.

I wasn't sure if I was feeling the Chapel Vortex or just the hill that we had just climbed.

It had been a long time since we had last visited Montezuma's Castle. We stopped on our way back from a hike and geocaching.
 
Montezuma Castle National Monument protects a set of well-preserved dwellings located in Camp Verde, Arizona from between approximately 1100 and 1425 AD. 

 The sycamore trees are so interesting with their varied color of bark.



Montezuma's Well
The constant supply of warm, 74 degree water was the life-blood of the people who made their home here. Over 1.5 million gallons of water flows into the Well every day, a rate that has not fluctuated measurably despite recent droughts throughout the state of Arizona.
 
It is good to be on the road and we have some great plans ahead for this spring and summer. Just slower this year than last.

Until next year friend!

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