photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
ravenoaks | profile | all galleries >> Galleries >> GRAND, ZION, BRYCE, CANYONLAND AND ARCHES. CANYONS ROCK!!!! PART II ZION AND BRYCE NATIONAL PARKS tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

GRAND, ZION, BRYCE, CANYONLAND AND ARCHES. CANYONS ROCK!!!! PART II ZION AND BRYCE NATIONAL PARKS

GRAND, ZION, BRYCE,CANYONLANDS AND ARCHES=CANYONS ROCK!!!! PART II ZION AND BRYCE NATIONAL PARKS

ALL PERSONAL PICTURES AND TEXT ARE COPYRIGHTED BY DON AND SARA SCHULTZ. (ACQUIRED GRAPHICS CREDITED)

Any visit to the Grand Canyon would prompt a desire to see more, but be assured Zion, Bryce, Canyonland and the Arches National Parks could never be described as “more of the same”. Each park is unique in appearance, history and how one explores it. In fact, many visitors find one of these parks along the Grand Staircase of the Colorado Plateau more exciting than the Grand Canyon.

Of the five National Parks in this area we found Bryce to be our favorite but we were thankful we visited all of them. Each park shares a common link, the Colorado River. The Green River which joins the Colorado south of Mohab near Arches and Canyonland, and to a lesser extent, the Freemont and the Dirty Devil rivers, all have had an impact on the geology of the area. Further southwest, the Virgin River which eventually flows to the Colorado was instrumental in the formation of Zion and Bryce.

What follows is a brief description of the history and things to do at each park. Included is how we feel a new visitor could make the most of their visit with “must see” attractions. A few carefully selected pictures of our favorite experiences follow.

ZION NATIONAL PARK

Located approximately 250 miles north and a bit west of the Grand Canyon is Zion National Park. It lies equidistant between the city of Kanab, Utah, from its eastern entrance and St George, Utah, from the western entrance. Don’t make the mistake we did and try to enter the park with a big RV from the east. Vehicles over 37 ft will be sent all the way around (over 120 miles) to the park’s west entrance due to the Mt Carmel Tunnel carved through 1.1 miles of solid rock which is very low and narrow. The little town of Springdale at the west entrance has a great motel and RV park and is within sight of the park’s front gate.

It was the Mormons who requested that the name of the park be changed from Mukuntuweep (a Paiute native peoples word meaning sacred cliffs) to Zion National Monument in 1917. A year later, President Woodrow Wilson declared Zion a National Park. But it was the completion of the famous 1.1 mile Mt. Carmel-Zion Tunnel through solid rock on July 4, 1930 that opened the park to the public. At the time it was the longest highway tunnel in the USA and allowed visitors to travel to Bryce and the Grand Canyon without having to drive out of their way as we did.

While one can travel across the park by auto using the Carmel-Zion Tunnel Road, and it is something every visitor should do just to see this engineering marvel, Zion is a park where you will want to use the shuttle system. In fact, to see the main attractions during the summer, you have to use the shuttle as private vehicles are not allowed on the Zion Canyon Scenic Drive which leads to most of the major attractions.

These free shuttles start at the visitor’s center and run every 7 minutes 6:30 AM to 11 PM from April to October and are the best way to see the park. Among the main attractions at Zion along the Scenic Drive are the Zion Human History Museum, The Great White Throne and Court of the Patriarchs, Zion Lodge and Gift Shop, Weeping Rocks and Hanging Gardens and finally the Narrows.


BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK

Bryce Canyon National Park, the third national park in our climb up the Grand Staircase, is not really a canyon as much as it is a long amphitheatre cut into the edge of the Colorado Plateau. Bryce is not nearly as large or deep as the Grand Canyon and does not have the sky scraping mountain peaks of Zion, but for Sara and me it was our favorite park. At over three miles long, two miles wide and over a thousand feet deep, Bryce’s appeal can be summed up in one word, hoodoos. More about hoodoos later. Also as visitors approach the entrance to the park from the west, they pass through the Red Rock State Park, a must see and are close to Kodachrome Basin State Park 22 miles to the east. We visited both state parks.

Named after an 1870’s Mormon pioneer named Ebenezer Bryce, the park has had many names. Ebenezer and his wife Mary built a farm just below the canyon rim and was reported to have said, “It would be a terrible place to lose a cow!” The Bryces must have lost quite a few cows because they lasted only 5 years. Earlier the Native American tribe, the Paiute, called the canyon several colorful names including Anka-tompi-wawitz-pokitch, which means "many red rocks in a hole" and Anka-ka-was-a-wits which translates to "red painted faces." Perhaps the most fitting, though, translated to "bowl-shaped canyon filled with red rocks standing up like men."

In 1923 President Harding declared Bryce Canyon a National Monument and finally in 1928, a national park was established. Due to the relative isolation, Bryce does not receive nearly as many visitors per year as Grand or Zion but we loved it. The fact that it was less crowded during our visit surely added to its appeal.

But it is the hoodoos, those magical rock formations so unusal and colorful that they are not really found anywhere else on the entire planet, at least not in equal numbers, that makes Bryce what it is. Running out from the plateau rim are countless, tall, red-stone formations that stand up like sentinels. Some are connected as sharp ridges; others have broken away from the rest and stand alone. Erosion has sculptured these formations into fantastic shapes that resemble the work of a surrealist artist.

The 1000 ft thick walls of Bryce were formed from countless layers of sandstone called the Clarion Formation which was laid down over 50 million years ago. The array of colors within the canyon are created by chemical decay. The rock contains small quantities of iron minerals. When the iron oxidizes by being exposed to the air, it produces the rich red colored mineral, hematite, as seen at the Pink Cliffs. The yellow tint, limonite, is produced by water particles reacting with iron particulates. The blue, purple and lavender colors staining the walls are produced by a minute manganese presence. Pure limestone and dolomite rock create the white color. Now the beautiful, natural sculpture has been painted.

Water seeped into cracks in the rock and dissolved the natural cement that bonds the rock particles together. Later, rains washed away those particles and they rushed down the canyon acting like sandpaper to further erode the rock. During the winter water ran in into cracks in the rock and froze, splitting the stone apart.

Conditions along the rim of a canyon were optimal for the work of erosion. Water racing down the steep slopes found natural fault lines in the rock that widened into gullies. The harder rock on either side of the gullies turned into fins. These fins were then subjected to erosion themselves which turned them into tall sets of connected natural columns. Since the layers of which the rocks were formed vary in hardness, lower portions of the columns eroded faster than upper sections, giving them their strange shapes. A fin will eventually have vertical cracks appear in it that may go completely through the rock to create a window or arch. When the window grows big enough to separate a single pillar from the rest of the fin, a solitary hoodoo is formed. (See diagrams in pictures for explanation of hoodoo and arch formation)

But it is the combination of literally thousands of hoodoos that creates a fairy landscape that will cause the park visitor to utter as we often did, from the rim, “Oh my gosh, this is unbelievable!!!” Almost every imaginable form can be found among the massive maze of hoodoos: castles, towers, dragons, whales, demons and devils, some with names like the Chessmen, Thor's Hammer, Tower Bridge, and the Poodle are all there. Many of the columnar hoodoos with their mushroom like heads and phallic like shape nestled among huge boulders suggest names that cannot be printed here, and one can only wonder what kinds of rituals took place amidst their thrusting presence by ancient inhabitants.

A Bryce Canyon National Park visit can best be accomplished by driving or better yet taking the park shuttle system to Bryce Point (Rainbow) at very end of the road boarding the rim. (See Map) Parking is limited at each of the stops and the shuttle is free. Then work your way back toward the entrance and visitor’s center allowing for at least three days to see all the sights. As the sun shines down on the hoodoos, sunrise, sunset and every moment in between is a new experience. Sunrise is unforgettable. Sunset is less dramatic.

Don’t miss Inspiration Point, Wall of Windows, Thor’s Hammer, Sunrise Point, Wall Street, Queen’s Garden, and especially The Arch. But of all the sights at Bryce, it is the Amphitheater that simply cannot, I repeat, cannot, be missed. This visual virtuosity changes minute by minute, hour by hour and by simply moving ones position a few yards a new view is revealed.

Speaking of different views, a trip to the bottom of the canyon at Queen’s Garden is 1.8 miles and can be done in an hour and a half down easy trail unlike the Grand Canyon which is over 7 miles to the Colorado River and usually is done in two days by most. Walking between the hoodoos is a thrill.

The lodge at Bryce National Park has a noon luncheon Taco buffet that is to die for. Surrounded by the majestic Ponderosa Pine Forest, the dining room is a wonderful place to relax and take in the beauty of Bryce and enjoy dining within huge timbered walls of rustic elegance from the 1930s. And at a very reasonable price.

Finally, keep in mind that the hoodoos of Bryce Canyon continue to erode and change. Wind and rain remove the approximate thickness of a sheet of paper each year. In 10,000 years, Bryce Canyon will look significantly different than it does today. Eventually the forces of erosion, which work very slowly, but surely, will wash away the entire attraction. That won't happen for millions of years, That gives you plenty of time to travel to this unique geological region and visit with the hoodoos.
previous pagepages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ALL next page
THIS MAP SHOWS THE SECOND AND THIRD STOPS ON OUR JOURNEY UP THE GRAND STAIRCASE ZION AND BRYCE NATIONAL PARKS
THIS MAP SHOWS THE SECOND AND THIRD STOPS ON OUR JOURNEY UP THE GRAND STAIRCASE ZION AND BRYCE NATIONAL PARKS
THIS IS A MAP OF ZION NATIONAL PARK-ONLY THE ROAD TO THE RIGHT IS OPEN TO PRIVATE VEHICLE TRAFFIC
THIS IS A MAP OF ZION NATIONAL PARK-ONLY THE ROAD TO THE RIGHT IS OPEN TO PRIVATE VEHICLE TRAFFIC
VIEW FROM OUR RV SITE LESS THAN A MILE FROM THE ENTRANCE TO ZION NATIONAL PARK
VIEW FROM OUR RV SITE LESS THAN A MILE FROM THE ENTRANCE TO ZION NATIONAL PARK
EACH SUNSET WE MARVELED AT OUR VIEW-EVER CHANGING AS THE SUN SETS
EACH SUNSET WE MARVELED AT OUR VIEW-EVER CHANGING AS THE SUN SETS
ROCK HOUNDS WOULD LOVE ZION NATIONAL PARK
ROCK HOUNDS WOULD LOVE ZION NATIONAL PARK
ANY VISIT TO A NATION PARK IS BEST STARTED AT THE VISITOR'S CENTER-ZION IS NO EXCEPTION!!!
ANY VISIT TO A NATION PARK IS BEST STARTED AT THE VISITOR'S CENTER-ZION IS NO EXCEPTION!!!
THIS VEHICLE IN THE VISITOR'S CENTER PARKING LOT HAD SOME UNUSUAL TRAVEL SUPPLIES-HOPE IT WAS JUST FOR STORAGE OF CAMPING  STUFF
THIS VEHICLE IN THE VISITOR'S CENTER PARKING LOT HAD SOME UNUSUAL TRAVEL SUPPLIES-HOPE IT WAS JUST FOR STORAGE OF CAMPING STUFF
BIKERS LOVE THE NATIONAL PARKS
BIKERS LOVE THE NATIONAL PARKS
THE PARK'S SHUTTLE SYSTEM IS THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN SEE THE MAIN ATTRACTIONS ALONG SCENIC CANYON TRAIL
THE PARK'S SHUTTLE SYSTEM IS THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN SEE THE MAIN ATTRACTIONS ALONG SCENIC CANYON TRAIL
FIRST STOP ON THE SHUTTLE IS THE ZION PARK MUSEUM
FIRST STOP ON THE SHUTTLE IS THE ZION PARK MUSEUM
THE VIEWS BEHIND THE MUSEUM WERE INCREDIBLE!!!
THE VIEWS BEHIND THE MUSEUM WERE INCREDIBLE!!!
SARA'S EAGLE BIRDING EYE SPOTS A HUMMINGBIRD BEHIND THE MUSEUM
SARA'S EAGLE BIRDING EYE SPOTS A HUMMINGBIRD BEHIND THE MUSEUM
ALTAR OF SACRIFICE MOUNTAIN BEHIND THE MUSEUM-CAN YOU SEE THE BLOOD?
ALTAR OF SACRIFICE MOUNTAIN BEHIND THE MUSEUM-CAN YOU SEE THE BLOOD?
SEE THE BLOOD DRIPPING FROM THE ALTAR!!!
SEE THE BLOOD DRIPPING FROM THE ALTAR!!!
SARA ENJOYS THE PARK INFORMATION PLAQUES
SARA ENJOYS THE PARK INFORMATION PLAQUES
WE FIRST EXPLORED THE CARMEL-ZION TUNNEL ROAD WITH THE CONVERTIBLE...
WE FIRST EXPLORED THE CARMEL-ZION TUNNEL ROAD WITH THE CONVERTIBLE...
AS WE MOVED UP THE TUNNEL ROAD THE VIEWS WERE OUT OF SIGHT
AS WE MOVED UP THE TUNNEL ROAD THE VIEWS WERE OUT OF SIGHT
THE ROAD TO THE TUNNEL GETS STEEPER
THE ROAD TO THE TUNNEL GETS STEEPER
THIS HUGE AMPHITHEATRE IS ON ONE OF THE LAST SWITCH BACKS BEFORE THE TUNNEL
THIS HUGE AMPHITHEATRE IS ON ONE OF THE LAST SWITCH BACKS BEFORE THE TUNNEL
APPROACHING THE TUNNEL FROM THE WEST-WERE WE GLAD WE DIDN'T HAVE THE RV
APPROACHING THE TUNNEL FROM THE WEST-WERE WE GLAD WE DIDN'T HAVE THE RV
THIS IS THE EASTERN EXIT OF THE CARMEL-ZION TUNNEL
THIS IS THE EASTERN EXIT OF THE CARMEL-ZION TUNNEL
THE FAMOUS CHECKERBOARD EROSION ON THE CLIFFS OF ZION
THE FAMOUS CHECKERBOARD EROSION ON THE CLIFFS OF ZION
THE EASTERN SIDE OF THE PARK IS MUCH DRIER WITH MINIMAL RAINFALL
THE EASTERN SIDE OF THE PARK IS MUCH DRIER WITH MINIMAL RAINFALL
A TREE SILHOUETTE AGAINST THE WESTERN SKY AT SUNSET
A TREE SILHOUETTE AGAINST THE WESTERN SKY AT SUNSET
WE HEADED BACK THROUGH THE TUNNEL TO RETURN
WE HEADED BACK THROUGH THE TUNNEL TO RETURN
THE NEXT DAY WE USED THE PARK SHUTTLE TO EXPLORE THE ZION CANYON SCENIC DR
THE NEXT DAY WE USED THE PARK SHUTTLE TO EXPLORE THE ZION CANYON SCENIC DR
THESE MOUNTAINS ARE NEAR THE FORKS WHERE THE SCENIC ZION CANYON DRIVE BEGINS-BY SHUTTLE ONLY
THESE MOUNTAINS ARE NEAR THE FORKS WHERE THE SCENIC ZION CANYON DRIVE BEGINS-BY SHUTTLE ONLY
THE VIRGIN  IS THE MAIN RIVER RESPONSIBLE FOR THE FORMATION OF ZION NATIONAL PARK
THE VIRGIN IS THE MAIN RIVER RESPONSIBLE FOR THE FORMATION OF ZION NATIONAL PARK
NOTICE HOW GREEN THE WESTERN SIDE OF ZION PARK IS IN COMPARISION TO THE EASTERN SIDE
NOTICE HOW GREEN THE WESTERN SIDE OF ZION PARK IS IN COMPARISION TO THE EASTERN SIDE
THE WILDFLOWERS OF ZION NATIONAL PARK ARE EXQUISITE!!!
THE WILDFLOWERS OF ZION NATIONAL PARK ARE EXQUISITE!!!
THIS IS THE TRAIL UP TO THE HANGING GARDENS NEAR WEEPING ROCK
THIS IS THE TRAIL UP TO THE HANGING GARDENS NEAR WEEPING ROCK
THIS SQUIRREL JOINED US ON THE CLIMB UP TO THE HANGING GARDENS
THIS SQUIRREL JOINED US ON THE CLIMB UP TO THE HANGING GARDENS
WE ENTERED THE OVERHANG OF THE HANGING GARDENS-IT WAS COOL AND MOIST WITH WATER DRIPPING EVERYWHERE
WE ENTERED THE OVERHANG OF THE HANGING GARDENS-IT WAS COOL AND MOIST WITH WATER DRIPPING EVERYWHERE
SOME OF THE PLANTS GROWING IN THE HANGING GARDENS GROW NO WHERE ELSE FOR THOUSANDS OF MILES IN ANY DIRECTION!!!!
SOME OF THE PLANTS GROWING IN THE HANGING GARDENS GROW NO WHERE ELSE FOR THOUSANDS OF MILES IN ANY DIRECTION!!!!
THE WATER COMES FROM RAIN THAT HAS TRICKLED THROUGH THE ROCK UNTIL IT HIT A HARD LAYER AND THEN  MOVED HORIZONTALLY
THE WATER COMES FROM RAIN THAT HAS TRICKLED THROUGH THE ROCK UNTIL IT HIT A HARD LAYER AND THEN MOVED HORIZONTALLY
MORE FLOWERS IN THE GARDENS
MORE FLOWERS IN THE GARDENS
CAN YOU SEE THE DRIPPING WATER?
CAN YOU SEE THE DRIPPING WATER?
THESE FLOWERS WERE RIGHT BELOW THE DRIPPING WATER
THESE FLOWERS WERE RIGHT BELOW THE DRIPPING WATER
THE VIEW FROM THE EDGE OF THE HANGING GARDENS-CAN YOU SEE THE OVERHANG ABOVE?
THE VIEW FROM THE EDGE OF THE HANGING GARDENS-CAN YOU SEE THE OVERHANG ABOVE?
THERE ARE SIMPLY NO WORDS THAT....
THERE ARE SIMPLY NO WORDS THAT....
CAN ADEQUATELY DESCRIBE THE BEAUTY OF ZION AT SUNSET
CAN ADEQUATELY DESCRIBE THE BEAUTY OF ZION AT SUNSET
WE HATED TO LEAVE THE COOL MOISTURE OF THE GARDENS
WE HATED TO LEAVE THE COOL MOISTURE OF THE GARDENS
THE STEPS LEADING DOWN OUT OF THE HANGING GARDENS WERE STEEP AND SLIPPERY
THE STEPS LEADING DOWN OUT OF THE HANGING GARDENS WERE STEEP AND SLIPPERY
THIS LITTLE CRITTER WAS ENJOYING THE COOLNESS OF THE GARDENS
THIS LITTLE CRITTER WAS ENJOYING THE COOLNESS OF THE GARDENS
FINAL PART OF THE TRAIL DOWN FROM THE HANGING GARDENS TO THE ROAD
FINAL PART OF THE TRAIL DOWN FROM THE HANGING GARDENS TO THE ROAD
WE PICKED UP THE SHUTTLE AGAIN  A FEW DAYS LATER FOR THE TRIP TO THE TEMPLE OF SINAWAVA WHERE  TRAIL TO THE NARROW BEGINS
WE PICKED UP THE SHUTTLE AGAIN A FEW DAYS LATER FOR THE TRIP TO THE TEMPLE OF SINAWAVA WHERE TRAIL TO THE NARROW BEGINS
AT THIS ROUND ABOUT  WE LEFT THE SHUTTLE AND STARTED THE RIVERSIDE WALK TO THE NARROWS OF ZION
AT THIS ROUND ABOUT WE LEFT THE SHUTTLE AND STARTED THE RIVERSIDE WALK TO THE NARROWS OF ZION
THE TRAIL TO THE NARROWS BEGINS RIGHT AT THE SHUTTLE ROUNDABOUT
THE TRAIL TO THE NARROWS BEGINS RIGHT AT THE SHUTTLE ROUNDABOUT
THE WATER LEVEL OF THE VIRGIN RIVER ALONG THE TRAIL WAS HIGH NEAR THE NARROWS
THE WATER LEVEL OF THE VIRGIN RIVER ALONG THE TRAIL WAS HIGH NEAR THE NARROWS
THE RIVER IS QUITE WIDE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE RIVERSIDE TRAIL
THE RIVER IS QUITE WIDE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE RIVERSIDE TRAIL
AS HARD AS IT WAS TO BELIEVE, THERE WERE CACTI BLOOMING ALONG THE TRAIL
AS HARD AS IT WAS TO BELIEVE, THERE WERE CACTI BLOOMING ALONG THE TRAIL
MOST OF THE WALK TO THE NARROWS WAS ABOVE AND ALONG THE RIVER
MOST OF THE WALK TO THE NARROWS WAS ABOVE AND ALONG THE RIVER
THIS SQUIRREL GREETED US AS WE FINALLY NEARED THE END OF THE NARROWS TRAIL
THIS SQUIRREL GREETED US AS WE FINALLY NEARED THE END OF THE NARROWS TRAIL
LOOKING BACK DOWN THE RIVER TOWARD THE TRAIL HEAD AND ROUNDABOUT
LOOKING BACK DOWN THE RIVER TOWARD THE TRAIL HEAD AND ROUNDABOUT
THE WARNINGS FOR HIKERS IN CASE OF A STORM WERE EVERYWHERE-WEDGE YOURSELF IN A CRACK, RIGHT!!
THE WARNINGS FOR HIKERS IN CASE OF A STORM WERE EVERYWHERE-WEDGE YOURSELF IN A CRACK, RIGHT!!
THIS WAS THE END OF THE TRAIL-WHEN THE WATER IS LOW YOU CAN WALK UP THE NARROWS
THIS WAS THE END OF THE TRAIL-WHEN THE WATER IS LOW YOU CAN WALK UP THE NARROWS
BUT WE HAD TO STOP HERE
BUT WE HAD TO STOP HERE
THE CORNER AT THE END OF THE NARROWS TRAIL REVEALED NOTHING BUT FAST WATER
THE CORNER AT THE END OF THE NARROWS TRAIL REVEALED NOTHING BUT FAST WATER
WE HATED TO LEAVE THE FAMOUS NARROWS OF ZION NATIONAL PARK
WE HATED TO LEAVE THE FAMOUS NARROWS OF ZION NATIONAL PARK
OUR LITTLE FRIEND SEEMED TO SAY GOODBYE AS WE NEARED THE SHUTTLE
OUR LITTLE FRIEND SEEMED TO SAY GOODBYE AS WE NEARED THE SHUTTLE
WE WALKED BACK TO THE TRAIL HEAD AND TOOK THE SHUTTLE HOME
WE WALKED BACK TO THE TRAIL HEAD AND TOOK THE SHUTTLE HOME
THE ENTIRE RIM DRIVE IS A SERIES OF SPECTACULAR SIGHTS BUT START AT THE END AT RAINBOW POINT
THE ENTIRE RIM DRIVE IS A SERIES OF SPECTACULAR SIGHTS BUT START AT THE END AT RAINBOW POINT
OUR FIRST STOP AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK WAS THE VISITOR CENTER-LITTLE DID WE KNOW WHAT WAS AHEAD OF US
OUR FIRST STOP AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK WAS THE VISITOR CENTER-LITTLE DID WE KNOW WHAT WAS AHEAD OF US
THE GIFT SHOP AT THE VISITOR CENTER AT BRYCE WAS WELL STOCKED
THE GIFT SHOP AT THE VISITOR CENTER AT BRYCE WAS WELL STOCKED
THE WEATHER STATION AT THE VISITOR CENTER SHOWED PERFECT CONDITIONS FOR A VISIT TO BRYCE
THE WEATHER STATION AT THE VISITOR CENTER SHOWED PERFECT CONDITIONS FOR A VISIT TO BRYCE
WE SPOTTED THIS MULE DEER ON THE DRIVE OUT TO THE END OF THE RIM TRAIL
WE SPOTTED THIS MULE DEER ON THE DRIVE OUT TO THE END OF THE RIM TRAIL
RAINBOW POINT IS THE PLACE TO START ANY VISIT TO BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK
RAINBOW POINT IS THE PLACE TO START ANY VISIT TO BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK
THIS WAS OUR VERY FIRST LOOK OVER THE RIM
THIS WAS OUR VERY FIRST LOOK OVER THE RIM
IT WAS BREATH TAKING...........
IT WAS BREATH TAKING...........
EVERY TURN REVEALED A NEW AND DIFFERENT VIEW
EVERY TURN REVEALED A NEW AND DIFFERENT VIEW
THEN WE GOT OUR FIRST GOOD LOOK AT THE FAMOUS HOODOOS OF BRYCE CANYON
THEN WE GOT OUR FIRST GOOD LOOK AT THE FAMOUS HOODOOS OF BRYCE CANYON
THIS DIAGRAM SHOWS HOW THE HOODOOS FORM OVER GEOLOGIC TIME
THIS DIAGRAM SHOWS HOW THE HOODOOS FORM OVER GEOLOGIC TIME
MANY HOODOOS ARE LEFT WITH WHITE TOPS DUE TO THE COLOR OF THE FIRST LAYER EXPOSED
MANY HOODOOS ARE LEFT WITH WHITE TOPS DUE TO THE COLOR OF THE FIRST LAYER EXPOSED
SOME HOODOOS ARE YET TO FORM-HOW MANY THOUSANDS OF YEARS OF EROSION WILL IT TAKE?
SOME HOODOOS ARE YET TO FORM-HOW MANY THOUSANDS OF YEARS OF EROSION WILL IT TAKE?
AND SOME HOOBOOS SHOW A MORE UNIFORM COLOR
AND SOME HOOBOOS SHOW A MORE UNIFORM COLOR
THE WILD FLOWERS ALONG THE RIM TRAILS WERE STUNNING
THE WILD FLOWERS ALONG THE RIM TRAILS WERE STUNNING
AS WE WORKED OUR WAY DOWN THE RIM TRAIL BACK TOWARD THE VISITOR CENTER WE WERE AWED AT EVERY STOP
AS WE WORKED OUR WAY DOWN THE RIM TRAIL BACK TOWARD THE VISITOR CENTER WE WERE AWED AT EVERY STOP
NEAR THE NATURAL BRIDGE AREA THE ROCKS TURN A DEEP RED
NEAR THE NATURAL BRIDGE AREA THE ROCKS TURN A DEEP RED
AND SO DO THE HOODOOS.......IT WAS MAGICAL....
AND SO DO THE HOODOOS.......IT WAS MAGICAL....
THIS HOODOO IS CALLED THOR'S HAMMER AND IS QUITE FAMOUS AT BRYCE
THIS HOODOO IS CALLED THOR'S HAMMER AND IS QUITE FAMOUS AT BRYCE
ANOTHER VIEW OF THE HAMMER
ANOTHER VIEW OF THE HAMMER
THIS ROCK FORMATION HAS NOT YET BEEN SEPARATED INTO INDIVIDUAL HOODOOS  BY THE ACTION OF WIND, WATER AND ICE
THIS ROCK FORMATION HAS NOT YET BEEN SEPARATED INTO INDIVIDUAL HOODOOS BY THE ACTION OF WIND, WATER AND ICE
ONE OF THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED LANDSCAPES AT BRYCE-NATURAL BRIDGE
ONE OF THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED LANDSCAPES AT BRYCE-NATURAL BRIDGE
THE FLOWERS NEAR NATURAL BRIDGE WERE GATHERING THE MORNING SUN
THE FLOWERS NEAR NATURAL BRIDGE WERE GATHERING THE MORNING SUN
MANY OF THE RIDGES AND HOODOOS OF BRYCE CANYON ARE TOPPED WITH A FROSTING OF WHITE LIMESTONE
MANY OF THE RIDGES AND HOODOOS OF BRYCE CANYON ARE TOPPED WITH A FROSTING OF WHITE LIMESTONE
HOW CAN ONE GET SICK OF SIGHTS LIKE THIS?  WE RETURNED TO THE RIM OVER AND OVER-SOMETIMES TWICE A DAY
HOW CAN ONE GET SICK OF SIGHTS LIKE THIS? WE RETURNED TO THE RIM OVER AND OVER-SOMETIMES TWICE A DAY
WOW-A PICTURE FITTING FOR ANY LIVING ROOM WALL
WOW-A PICTURE FITTING FOR ANY LIVING ROOM WALL
HOW DOES THIS TREE SURVIVE ON SHEER ROCK....
HOW DOES THIS TREE SURVIVE ON SHEER ROCK....
MANY TREES DO NOT SURVIVE BUT ADD TO THE TEXTURE OF BRYCE
MANY TREES DO NOT SURVIVE BUT ADD TO THE TEXTURE OF BRYCE
SARA WAS CONSTANTLY ON THE LOOKOUT FOR NEW BIRDS AT BRYCE CANYON
SARA WAS CONSTANTLY ON THE LOOKOUT FOR NEW BIRDS AT BRYCE CANYON
THE LODGE AT BRYCE CANYON IS HUGE AND HAS AN EXCELLENT RESTAURANT
THE LODGE AT BRYCE CANYON IS HUGE AND HAS AN EXCELLENT RESTAURANT
THE BACK PATIO OF THE LODGE IN THE MORNING SUN
THE BACK PATIO OF THE LODGE IN THE MORNING SUN
THERE WERE WILDFLOWERS  IN ABUNDANCE NEAR THE LODGE
THERE WERE WILDFLOWERS IN ABUNDANCE NEAR THE LODGE
SARA SPOTTED THIS WESTERN BLUE BIRD ON THE SIGN POST NEAR THE LODGE
SARA SPOTTED THIS WESTERN BLUE BIRD ON THE SIGN POST NEAR THE LODGE
AFTER THE NOON LUNCHEON WE WENT BACK TO THE RIM FOR ANOTHER LOOK
AFTER THE NOON LUNCHEON WE WENT BACK TO THE RIM FOR ANOTHER LOOK
THE STORM CLOUDS ADDED CONTRAST TO THE SKIES ABOVE THE RIM
THE STORM CLOUDS ADDED CONTRAST TO THE SKIES ABOVE THE RIM
WOW........
WOW........
THESE HOODOOS WERE FRAMED BETWEEN TWO CLIFFS
THESE HOODOOS WERE FRAMED BETWEEN TWO CLIFFS
THE COLORS ARE FANTASTIC........
THE COLORS ARE FANTASTIC........
SARA NEVER GOT SICK OF THE VIEWS AND NEITHER DID I
SARA NEVER GOT SICK OF THE VIEWS AND NEITHER DID I
MORE WILDFLOWERS ON THE RIM
MORE WILDFLOWERS ON THE RIM
ON A CLEAR DAY IT IS SAID THAT YOU CAN SEE FOR MORE THAN A HUNDRED MILES FROM THE RIM OF BRYCE CANYON
ON A CLEAR DAY IT IS SAID THAT YOU CAN SEE FOR MORE THAN A HUNDRED MILES FROM THE RIM OF BRYCE CANYON
ONE LAST LOOK AS OUR DAYS AT BRYCE WERE COMING TO AN END
ONE LAST LOOK AS OUR DAYS AT BRYCE WERE COMING TO AN END
AND JUST ONE MORE......
AND JUST ONE MORE......
A GROUND SQUIRREL GREETED US THE MORNING WE VISITED THE GRANDEST VIEW OF ALL AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK
A GROUND SQUIRREL GREETED US THE MORNING WE VISITED THE GRANDEST VIEW OF ALL AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK
THE VIEW FROM INSPIRATION POINT-BEST OF BRYCE
THE VIEW FROM INSPIRATION POINT-BEST OF BRYCE
AS WE GAZED ACROSS THE ABYSS..
AS WE GAZED ACROSS THE ABYSS..
WE COULD SEE SOME OF THE CAVES OF THE UPPER LAYERS OF THE CLIFFS...
WE COULD SEE SOME OF THE CAVES OF THE UPPER LAYERS OF THE CLIFFS...
A CLOSE UP OF THE CAVES AND HOODOOS
A CLOSE UP OF THE CAVES AND HOODOOS
AND THEN OFF IN THE DISTANCE WE SAW WHAT LOOKED LIKE A FOREST..
AND THEN OFF IN THE DISTANCE WE SAW WHAT LOOKED LIKE A FOREST..
SARA SPOTTED A HUGE RAVEN GLIDING ON THE THERMALS
SARA SPOTTED A HUGE RAVEN GLIDING ON THE THERMALS
THIS SINGLE SIGHT IS WORTH A TRIP TO BRYCE CANYON NATION PARK IN SOUTHERN UTAH
THIS SINGLE SIGHT IS WORTH A TRIP TO BRYCE CANYON NATION PARK IN SOUTHERN UTAH
A FOREST OF HOODOOS.......THIS IS THE MOST FAMOUS SITE IN ALL OF BRYCE...WE WILL NEVER FORGET IT...
A FOREST OF HOODOOS.......THIS IS THE MOST FAMOUS SITE IN ALL OF BRYCE...WE WILL NEVER FORGET IT...
THIS PICTURE  GIVES YOU AN IDEA OF THE SHEER SIZE OF THIS HOODOO FOREST
THIS PICTURE GIVES YOU AN IDEA OF THE SHEER SIZE OF THIS HOODOO FOREST
THE NEXT FRAME IS A CLOSE UP OF THE AREA OF THE HOODO FOREST CIRCLED HERE
THE NEXT FRAME IS A CLOSE UP OF THE AREA OF THE HOODO FOREST CIRCLED HERE
A CLOSEUP OF THE HOODOO FOREST OF INSPIRATION POINT REVEALS ITS INTIMATE DETAIL
A CLOSEUP OF THE HOODOO FOREST OF INSPIRATION POINT REVEALS ITS INTIMATE DETAIL
ANY VISIT TO BRYCE NATIONAL PARK SHOULD INCLUDE A TRIP TO TWO NEARBY STATE PARKS KODACHROME BASIN AND REDROCK
ANY VISIT TO BRYCE NATIONAL PARK SHOULD INCLUDE A TRIP TO TWO NEARBY STATE PARKS KODACHROME BASIN AND REDROCK
RED ROCK STATE PARK HAS ITS OWN HOODOOS
RED ROCK STATE PARK HAS ITS OWN HOODOOS
AND A HIGHWAY TUNNEL
AND A HIGHWAY TUNNEL
FOLLOW HIGHWAY 12  TOWARD CANNONVILLE
FOLLOW HIGHWAY 12 TOWARD CANNONVILLE
SARA AND CHARLIE TAKE A POTTY BREAK
SARA AND CHARLIE TAKE A POTTY BREAK
KODACHROME BASIN PARK IS THE SITE OF MANY WESTERN MOVIES AND THIS TREE ON A ROCK NEAR THE ENTRANCE CAUGHT OUR EYES
KODACHROME BASIN PARK IS THE SITE OF MANY WESTERN MOVIES AND THIS TREE ON A ROCK NEAR THE ENTRANCE CAUGHT OUR EYES
KODACHROME STATE PARK HAS CACTI FLOWERS WORTH THE DRIVE..
KODACHROME STATE PARK HAS CACTI FLOWERS WORTH THE DRIVE..
AND MANY UNUSUAL ROCK FORMATIONS...THIS ONE WAS CALLED CHIMNEY ROCK-ANY DOUBT WHY?
AND MANY UNUSUAL ROCK FORMATIONS...THIS ONE WAS CALLED CHIMNEY ROCK-ANY DOUBT WHY?
BUT NONE MORE UNQIUE THAN THIS ONE....GUESS WHAT THIS WAS CALLED BY THE LOCALS?
BUT NONE MORE UNQIUE THAN THIS ONE....GUESS WHAT THIS WAS CALLED BY THE LOCALS?
OUR LAST MORNING AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK WE RETURNED TO THE HOODOO FOREST AT INSPIRATION POINT FOR ONE LAST LOOK...UNFORGETTABLE
OUR LAST MORNING AT BRYCE NATIONAL PARK WE RETURNED TO THE HOODOO FOREST AT INSPIRATION POINT FOR ONE LAST LOOK...UNFORGETTABLE
previous pagepages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ALL next page