Showing posts with label Arches NP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arches NP. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Back in Moab

Gopher Flats
Aug 9 - Sept 2. 2018
Moan, UT

I haven't finished posting our trip to the Olympic Peninsula in July, but wanted to do a "real time" post on what we have been doing .  Since our refuge to the Olympic Penninsula, it has been hot here, but the temps are creeping back into the 80s and soon we will relish in the fall weather we love. 

So what have we been up to?

Lets begin at home...

Life at Gopher Flats can be quite lazy and peaceful.  Early mornings and puppy play time go hand in hand.   

Some mornings, Dover rides to town with Joe to do errands.  She loves riding...anywhere...anytime !

Evenings are spent relaxing and sometimes enjoying colorful sunsets.  One evening, though, we had the most delightful visitors...hummingbird moths.  Sometimes referred to as hawk moths, these unique insects hover in midair, hum and drink nectar from the same flowers just like hummingbirds.


A couple of weekends ago, our friends Jeff and Susan who live a couple of houses down the street were out of town.  Guess what I did?
The rooster is black and white.
I fed the chickens !  I've never fed chickens before.  What a funny bunch they are.  One of Susan's chickens turned out to be a rooster.  In the mornings when I let them out of the hen house,  he immediately announced to the world "get the day started". 








  



Next up, trails...

Life in Moab can be exhilarating and adventurous.  In between appointments here and in Grand Junction, we have managed to get in 6 trails which includes a sunset run on Hells Revenge.  Friends from Saskatchewan arrived the second week in August.  We first met these enthusiastic and relentless trail warriors in Aug 2017 and are already looking forward to their return in 2019.
Dee followed by Marc and Janelle, Kelsie and Scott, and us.
Joe and WileE have some "flexy" going on in The Pickle.

Janelle snapped a photo of us climbing out of the Gravy Boat on Mashed Potatoes Trail. 
Dee caught us climbing Escalator on Hells Revenge.  Thank you Rory for the spot!


Sunset on Hells Revenge

And last, the area...

The area around Moab offers lots of opportunities for exploring.  I love exploring !  One morning Scott and Chris invited us to follow along to scout out the Abajo Mountains...locally known as the Blue Mountains.  It's a small mountain range west of Monticello and north of Blanding.  The highest point is Abajo Peak at 11,362 ft was our destination.   We hooked up to a trail in Monticello rode the peak and came out in Blanding...a very delightful 55 to 60 miles.  It was a wonderfully clear day with blue skies and  a good 10 to 15 degrees cooler than Moab.









One morning on the way to City Market, we took the long way through Arches NP.  It's such a nice drive...one we never tire of.












Moab Friends For Wheeling planned a rock art tour for Labor Day.  Our first stop was The Grotto.  The Moab Grotto Pictographs are a collection of rock art hidden inside a slot canyon.  
Melissa, Joe and Ginny in The Grotto


Grotto pictographs

It is a short walk from the parking area to The Grotto.  On the way back we stopped at another panel located nearby.  The art is on the under side of an overhang.






Ginny and Dee






 We took Rainbow Terrace back to Hwy 313. 


There are a lot of manganese outcroppings on Rainbow Terrace.  Due to wind and rain, the desert sand shifts to expose these tubes.  






Most manganese ores come from extensive manganese-rich sediment rocks that formed in ancient oceans.  So cool !





We also saw a section of a cliff wall that recently had rocks sheared off.  


 Back on Hwy 313, we made a quick stop to see Intestine Man.


I see a story of a man mauled by a bear and dies...notice the wings.  The bottom picture shows a large bear claw.





















Next, we made a turn off Hwy 313 into a canyon.  We stopped at a few more sites.  


At the bottom of the pour off is a panel of petroglyphs.














At another stop, there was a really clear and well preserved pictograph under an overhang...


 ...along with some others that were more faded.

Melissa points out a very skinny animal (we think a dog) next to a rather round figure.

There were a couple more panels in the canyon... each had a single figure.    

This turned out to be a longer post than I had planned.  I didn't realize we have been so busy.  So, until next time...








HAPPY TRAILS ! 




Wednesday, July 1, 2015

The Windows at Sunset

Portal RV Resort
Moab, UT
June, 21, 2015

Our last adventure with Joe III and Jena was another sunset ride...this time on Willow Springs Road taking the backway into Arches NP. Willow Springs Road is our favorite way to enter the park (especially this year as the lines to get in have been very long and slow at the main gate) unless we have an early morning hike planned.  



Our first stop was to check out the dinosaur tracks a few miles into the road. It's fascinating to think about the tracks found at various places in and around Moab. 













These particular tracks were believed to be made by the Utahraptor...the largest raptor that ever lived weighing in at 1,000 to 2,000 pounds. 








Dozens of different kinds of dinosaurs have been discovered in Utah. The Utahraptor fossil type was discovered in 1991. 










Willow Springs Road ends almost at the foot of Balanced Rock. What an amazing rock formation...the total height is 128 feet. The balanced rock rises 55 feet above the base. 

Our next stop was The Windows section in Arches NP. When we pulled into our parking space, the picture below was what we saw but it wasn't quite dark yet. So we scrambled up to Turrent Arch.
  





 By the time we walked up to Turrent Arch, the sky was a blaze with color...


 
This was the prettiest sunset we have seen in a long, long time!







What an awesome week we had with Joe III and Jena. They have returned to South Carolina. Joe is busy with work and Jena is involved with a summer theater production. We miss you, and are looking forward to another visit when you can get away.

Let the good times roll...  


HAPPY TRAILS!