Moab, Ut
May 10, 2018
Hunter Canyon is one of those special places Joe and I love this time of year. This amazing 3 mile out and back trail offers a bit of everything...a twisting canyon, towering sandstone cliffs, burbling water, gnarly cottonwood trees, and lots of wildflowers in May. It is mostly flat with lots of creek crossings and a little rock scrambling over fallen boulders. Cottonwood trees and towering canyon walls provide lots of shade.
This day we were on trail at 8:00am just as the sun was filtering into the canyon.
Hunter Canyon Arch is barely visible...
...look for it about 1/2 mile into the canyon.
Fairy Trumpet Flowers |
Prickly Pear Cactus |
Yellow Salsify |
Desert Mallow |
Tamarisk |
Aster |
And we saw our first Sego Lily for the year. It is Utah's state flower. |
Female Cottonwood trees produce tiny red blooms that are followed by masses of seeds with a cottony covering. |
A lot of the Cottonwood trees in the canyon are very old, knotty, and gnarly. Do you see the lizard ? |
Some of the cliff walls had seeping water and gardens. The trail hugged the walls for awhile. |
HAPPY TRAILS !
What a lovely hike! All those flowers and the water too...icing on the cake!
ReplyDeleteYES! And it’s shady too Lisa!
DeleteA wonderful looking hike and excellent pictures as well. What a fun day.
ReplyDeleteThank you George and Susie!
DeleteNice!
ReplyDeleteLife is good Mark!
DeleteI don't recall ever being in the West in the spring to experience green and blooms.
ReplyDeleteIt’s wonderful Larry...you should definitely give it a try!
DeleteThis is always an enjoyable hike. I love that there is water at various spots along the trail. How sweet that you had so many flowers blooming!
ReplyDeleteThere were sooooo many flowers Pam, I couldn’t post them all!
DeleteGreat to see that Spring has come to your desert!
ReplyDeleteIt’s so pretty here Jeff! May in Moab is awesome!
DeleteBeautiful blooms on a perfect trail. Every photo is a treat! Love the Desert Mallow over the cactus. Good eye catching that little lizard. The hotter it gets here in Arizona, the fewer we see.
ReplyDelete