Tuesday 11 June 2013

Epilogue

Monday/Tuesday 10th-1th June
Before leaving William, we stopped off at the depot of the William-Grand Canyon Railway.  Here, before the departure of every train, they stage a shoot out between three baddies and the sheriff.  Needless to say, the sheriff won.  We then went South to Oak Tree Canyon, yet another enormous gash in the edge of the Kaibab Plateau.   Reaching Sedona the temperature had climbed to near 1000F, an we had opted for a ride in the desert in some very tasty pink jeeps!  It was hot, slightly dusty and very bumpy but the seating was very soft and comfortable – just hang on!

Onward to Phoenix but first a stop at Montezuma’s Castle, neither a castle nor anything to do with Montezuma, but and old Indian village built into a cliff overhang beside a river, built about 700 AD, abandoned about 1350. 

Finally, the Scottsdale Hilton and time for a quick swim (1040F) before going to a farewell dinner at Rustler’s Roost, a western-themed beer and beef restaurant.  Good Country and Western music and some of the party amazed the group with very 60’s rock and roll.  Time for a stroll around Scottsdale’s historic centre before lunch at the Fashion Mall (Arndale – eat your heart out) and then an additional four hour’s delay at Phoenix Sky Harbor airport.

We covered 3265 miles.  It was  advertised as “Awesome” and there was awe at least three or four times each day.  The whole trip was a delight, made particularly so by a good crowd (no one lost or injured), a smooth and safe driver, Kelly, and a brilliant Tour Manager, Rob.  While we shall be processing photos and videos for weeks to come, the memories will be unforgettable.  



Grand Finale

Sunday 9th June – From Bryce Canyon, we retraced our steps westward through Red Canyon, where we stopped to photograph spectacular examples of hoodoos.


Then we turned south into the Sevier River valley. There were a few farms and ranches here. Mount Carmel was the birthplace in 1875 of Maynard Dixon, an artist who devoted much of his life to depicting western life and landscapes. On we went down the Virgin River valley towards the town of Kanab. This town boasts of being ‘Little Hollywood’ due to the number of Western movies filmed here.  Just south of Kanab we crossed the border into Arizona.  The red sandstones were still with us. This area is known as the Kaibab Plateau and from Lefevre Viewpoint we could see a landscape feature called the Grand Staircase. This comprises a series of cliffs hundreds of miles long stepping down towards the Colorado Plateau. They are, from the end of Bryce Canyon, the Pink Cliffs, the White Cliffs and the Vermilion Cliffs.  There is nothing comparable on this scale in Britain.

We followed the Vermilion Cliffs (a rich reddish brown) to the Colorado River at Marble Canyon. Here, the Navajo Bridge, finished in 1929, opened up the route south as it one of only two bridges for hundreds of miles.  Across the river we drove through a Navajo Indian reservation and on, via Cameron, to Grand Canyon National Park.

Again, the scale of this park is more than one can imagine. It took a good half-hour to drive from the entrance to the rim area. (It was now  3.00 pm, we had gained an hour in Arizona.) The park boasts a village, visitor centre, geology museum and no less than four shuttle bus routes. It covers a strip of land over 100 miles long. The canyon is a mile deep.

 We had a mere 3.5 hours here and managed to take a short bus ride west, walked along the rim for half a mile, bussed back to Bright Angel and had supper. For me the canyon was overwhelming; the rim walk, 6 feet from the edge, hair-raising, say no more! Sunset was at 7,43 pm. We reached our hotel in Williams after 8 pm – a very long day.

Saturday 8 June 2013

We're marching to Zion!

Saturday  8th June – We set out under radiant blue skies for Zion National Park, a journey of about 80 miles. Some of the countryside was lightly forested, with grassland in the river valleys. After 11.00 we entered the east gate to the park and traffic was heavy. It took more than half an hour and a 10-mile drive, including a 1 mile long tunnel and a series of long hairpin bends to get to the floor of the canyon.

The accessible part of the canyon is over 10 miles long and contains towering cliffs and columns over 300 feet high. It is the gorge of the North Fork Virgin River which flows southward out of a narrow slit in the rocks. Beyond that are many square miles of plateau and canyons which can only be reached by trails. Like Bryce Canyon, this area has many recreational attractions – camping, walking, climbing and river rafting. There are well marked walking  trails along the sides of the canyon and the river. We followed a 2-mile round trip trail up to the Lower Emerald Falls, no mean feat in temperatures of up to 100’F and little shade. 

There are plenty of water bottle stations, conveniences and food and drink outlets. After the walk, we rode up and down the canyon on the free shuttle bus, then had just a peek at "The Narrows" at the very end.

 Despite all these amenities, the area does not appear spoilt. A truly awesome spot.

We left mid-afternoon to return to Ruby’s Inn, and later enjoyed an early dinner and a leisurely evening. Early start again tomorrow!

Another day, another canyon

Friday, 7th June – We left Moab at 9 am (an extra hour in bed after a very long day yesterday).  On a cliff by the Colorado River we saw some petroglyphs, or prehistoric Indian drawings. 

We retraced our steps back up the I91 past huge cliffs of red sandstone with some green layers. Then we turned west along Interstate 70 and across the San Rafael Swell, a domed structure with sharp ridges of rock on the south edge. The rock was Navajo Sandstone, 190 million years old. 

Another 100 miles brought us to Richfield and down on to a green plain of farms, with mountains all around. We passed through Big Rock Candy Mountain (yes, a real place) and Circleville, birthplace of Butch Cassidy. We were still quite high up with great escarpments visible from the roadside. We passed through Red Canyon, with its ‘hoodoos’ in red sandstone, and at 4 pm reached Bryce Canyon National Park.

This is not strictly speaking a canyon, rather a receding plateau rim of rocks in shades of pink, red, orange and grey. The park is 18 miles long and the rim can be accessed by car or shuttle bus in several places. Special to this park are ‘hoodoos’, innumerable pillars of rock of fantastic shapes, left by erosion. 

The area is wooded with pines and lends itself to recreational activities – cycling, trail walking, riding and camping. There was an astronomy festival in progress. We stayed at Ruby’s Inn Hotel, a complex of visitor facilities based on the first lodge for visitors built in 1919 by Reuben (Ruby) Syrett.

Friday 7 June 2013

Canyons and Arches

Thursday 6th June – The weather is warming up now and we head off in bright sunshine. Our destination is Moab in south-east Utah, nearly 250 miles, so we press on with few stops. We drive through the Wasatch Mountains via Price River Canyon. There is coal here, and we are in an area of prominent sedimentary strata, with fewer trees. The vegetation cover is known as PJ forest – pinyon-juniper forest, with lots of sagebrush. From here there are many interesting features to see -  Beckwith Plateau, Book Cliffs, Roan Cliffs and Green River. Rob, our tour manager, has set the scene of the palaeogeography and geology of this area, stretching down to the Colorado Plateau.
By about 2pm we have arrived at our first destination, Canyonlands National Park, and it’s very hot (90 F?). There are several roads through the park leading to viewpoints and notable landforms. We go first to Island in the Sky, a promontory from which there are panoramic views. 

Before us unfolds a land of red sandstone cliffs, weathered slopes, rock pillars and deep canyons. Partway down the succession of strata a white rock layer gives rise to a shelf known as White Rim. We can see the Green River, winding its way south to meet the mighty Colorado. We are mesmerised.
No time to wilt. Our final destination today is Arches National Park, the highlight of our tour – the one park Tony was yearning to see, after several previous visits to the US. It is now 4 pm, and we have got on and off the bus for numerous photo stops, but it is slightly cooler. Although the rocks are similar -  bright red, massive horizontal sandstones – they have weathered into numerous arches and other weird edifices. The arches form at various heights by weathering along a bedding place at the base, and then develop upwards in an arc. We saw Delicate Arch from a distance, 

the Windows,  Balanced Rock (a monolith) and Petrified Dunes. Finally we walked up to Double Arch, where two arches combine – like looking up into the ceiling of a huge cathedral. 

Many of the arches are inaccessible from the road and can only be reached by trails, but Tony was reasonably satisfied by what he saw. The park would benefit from at least a day’s visit.

It was nearly 7 pm before we reached our hotel in Moab, a busy town surrounded by huge red cliffs. It is a beautiful hot evening and we have a good meal and welcome beer at a restaurant and brewery, Eddie McStiff’s.

Salt Lakes

Wednesday 5th June – over half way now.  We left Jackson in early morning sunshine (promising) and followed the Snake River south-west and then south along the western edge of Wyoming. Many of the valleys in this area are so large, that they all have an underlying fault structure, not carved out by rivers alone; they mainly trend north-south.  We stopped at Afton midmorning , the main street crossed by an arch of elk antlers.

  We then turned south-west again and moved briefly into Idaho. We climbed Snake Pass and after this it was downhill all the way (literally). We moved into another wide north-south valley, Star Valley. The ground was put down mainly to ranching of horses and cattle. In this area we crossed the Oregon Trail again – that’s a whole story on its own.

To the south of this valley, Bear Lake stretches into Utah. There are many shorefront properties and small settlements along the eastern shore and the lake was very blue. At Garden City we drove to a view point above the lake from where we could see for many miles, as far as the Uinta Mountains in north-eastern Utah.


The descent from here was quite rapid and we were soon approaching Great Salt Lake. We were soon in the built-up area, but did not glimpse a view of the lake. By 4 pm we arrived in Salt Lake City. There was an hour to spare in Temple Square, the Mormon centre of the city where the Tabernacle is situated. Tony and I chose to visit the Family History Library, an impressive facility run by the Church of Latter Day Saints. After checking into our hotel, a group of us had dinner at the Lion House, formerly the home of Brigham Young, and a tour of the Beehive House, his original office. The centre of the city has been developed on a grand scale by the church, with wide streets and large administrative buildings. Fifty per cent of the city’s population are Mormons.

Wednesday 5 June 2013

Yellowstone and Tetons

June 3rd-4th: We set out from West Yellowstone at 9 am with a qualified guide, Annie, on board with us. We were to tour the lower circle of the park to see the most features of interest.
We saw numerous elks during the tour, and several herds of bison. The mothers have calves with them currently, called ‘red dogs’, same size as cattle calves. The male bison tend to keep to themselves. An occasional bighorn sheep was seen plus a  few small mammals such as pika and a few birds. 

  There are several waterfalls in the park, e.g. Gibbon Falls, and Lower & Upper Falls on the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone.


 Our lunch stop was at Canyon Village, where there was an excellent museum and visitor centre explaining the geology of the park. The area is the site of previous huge volcanic eruptions in the last 3 million years. The last, 650,000 years ago formed the caldera that is today the Yellowstone plateau. There is a large magma chamber at depth which causes the ground to uplift, and generates the geothermal features.  Our day was planned around seeing Old Faithful erupt, which occurred around 3.15 (every 90 minutes for about 3-4 minutes). It was well worth seeing.


After that we visited Lower Geyser Basin to see hot springs, mud pools and steam vents.  The weather was cool, with cold winds and the occasional snow flurry. We drove over 100 miles.

Tuesday was an early start but promising with bright sunshine.  We retraced our steps into Yellowstone, turning south to see The Great Prismatic Spring in the Midway Geyser Basin.  On this route we crossed the Continental Divide twice – this is the watershed dividing waters draining into the Pacific Ocean from those draining to the Atlantic – not always as straightforward as you might think! Then we headed some miles south towards Snake River, Jackson Lake and into Grand Teton National Park.

 This is a sight I will never forget. The mountains  (Grand Teton 13,770 feet) have been uplifted and have jagged outlines like the Alps of Europe, with evident features of glaciation. They rise up from Jackson Hole in a straight line for several miles with no foothills, along a fault line marking their eastern margin. The views are mesmerising. Again, there were good facilities for information and for refreshments along the way.

We reached Jackson mid-afternoon. It is a pleasant tourist town, playground of the rich and famous, especially for skiing. After a brief recce, we were off again for a Western-themed evening – a wagon ride to a camp cookout and dinner, followed by musical entertainment. The stars of the show were the horses – two to each of the nine wagons, each carrying about 20 people. It is a family business, well organised, and made for a memorable evening.