This Fall we're heading back out west. COVID will be in our thoughts as we plan for adventures while we stay safe! Our plans are to head first to Colorado, then zip over to Utah. Lots of hiking and biking are planned along our route.



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Tuesday, October 22, 2019

And there's more....incredible rocks..

Another day in the Kanab area, and another day hiking to some more mind blowing scenery.

Today we contracted with Dreamland Safari Tours to drive us to the White Pocket formations.  Once again we rode the pavement 40 miles east of Kanab, and then the unpaved road south.  This time, though, we continued past the prior Wirepass trailhead where we hiked through the slot canyons and then Ruthie hiked to the Wave.  We spent another hour on a road that went from a washboard dirt road, to a deeply rutted very sandy drive.
Good thing we had Orion from Dreamland do the driving!

We arrived at another unworldly scenic wonder.  This time the rocks looked like pillows in some places, and swirls of colors and patterns all around.  Orion pointed out that the landscape had similarities to rock formations that were found by the Mars Rovers.








Should we have donned space suits for real out-of-this-world photographs?







Monday, October 21, 2019

The WAVE !

What a geologic masterpiece!

Traveling around the country in our motorhome, we've had the opportunity to complete many top rated, scenic, and just plain pretty awesome hikes.  Many people have asked "What area that you have been to that you like the most?"   It's always been difficult to answer.  They are different.  Each is unique and scenic in its own way.  

But, at last, Ruthie has the answer; resoundingly, its "THE WAVE".  Not such an easy place to get to -- a 6-mile round trip hike from a trail head that is 8 miles down a very rough, dirt road, (40 miles east of Kanab, Utah).  

If that wasn't enough to make it difficult to access, the BLM requires that you must have a permit, obtained online 4 months in advance or at the daily lottery.   Only 20 people total per day are lucky enough to get a permit, over 50,000 apply annually--from all over the world.  Gail and Dan, our hiking buddies (pictured), were lucky enough to get 3 permits.  They called us from the BLM lottery and told us they had one permit...who should go?  Being on Ruthie's bucket list for a very long time, there was no question who should join them.  How lucky to be in the right place at the right time!

Here are the results of the hike!
Upon Ruthie's arrival, her jaw dropped open...and never closed.   At each turn, the color palette, the  smooth swirled shape of the rock, scoured by sand over hundreds of years, the striations, were simply beyond belief.  That this kind of wonder could exist in the desert surrounded by pretty, but common (in Utah)  rock formations and colors was impossible to wrap her head around.  Not an overused word for this hike.....WOW !

Utah Rocks !!!

After having spent five days at Capitol Reef, we drove Utah Scenic Highway 12.  Driving along this ridge road in the 1.9 million acre Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, every view out of our windshield was totally amazing.  The rocks, the colors, the formations....

Along the way, we stopped at Hells Backbone Grill.  How could this restaurant in the middle of this country be so good?!  Almost getting stuck in their parking lot with our motorhome, we were able to extricate ourselves and park.  Being 11am, it was time for brunch...Yum!




Then on to Bryce Canyon National Park, where we arrived around 2pm and secured one of the few campsites still open at Sunset Campground.  The park is renovating North Campground so it was closed, while Sunset had already been renovated with new shorter sites Why?!)....And you would think with the renovation, the sites would be level....no way...
It took us 8 wood boards to get level enough for our motorhome's leveling system to be able to operate.  But, we succeeded in setting up camp.


Then off to check out the Canyon and later we biked with the Feesers along the fun and windy bike path to the entrance of the National Park.  Maybe mid-October is too late to visit; although there were lots of tourists....just cold.  The second night the temperature went down into the low 20s and for the first time, our water pipes froze in the early morning.  No damage, but no fun, so we decided to head south to a lower elevation (Bryce is over 8,000 feet) after first taking a hike into the canyon on the Queens Garden Trail and the Navaho Loop Trail.



Arrived in Kanab, Utah and reconnected with the Zmostnys.  They suggested a slot canyon hike which was a wow.  About 45 minutes out of Kanab including a 12 mile drive on a very unimproved road, we arrived at the trailhead.





Then 5.5 miles of hiking through Wirepass Canyon and then to Buckskin Gulch -- the longest slot canyon in the world.  Incredible views, and even a ladder to keep us in the slot.

Our RV travel buddies, the Feesers left us in Kanab to head to Alabama.....on a mission to purchase a new motorhome and be back in a week to join us in Zion.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Our "new" favorite National Park, Capitol Reef NP ?

Having just spent 5 wonderful days at Capitol Reef, we're thinking that CR is now our favorite.

At what other park can you have incredible views, great hikes, wonderful bike rides, a really nice campground, great evening Ranger programs, orchards to pick fresh fruit......and the Gifford House where you can purchase just baked fruit pies, apple, peach, cherry, strawberry rhubarb?  YUM!

The pioneer town of Fruita where the campground is located (and its namesake) is located along the banks of the Fremont River, one of the few perennial rivers in this part of Utah.  The Mormons settled here in the late 1880s, and planted fruit orchards, using the river for irrigation.  An oasis in the desert environment where less than eight inches of rain fall each year.


The incredible plateaus, the sandstone formations, and the deep canyons are eye
candy.  We took a number of hikes, many with our friends, including the Rim Overlook, the Grand Wash, and the Old Wagon Trail.  For two of these hikes we climbed over 1,000 feet to incredible views.  All of the hikes explored part of the Water Pocket Fold, a geological formation that runs over 80 miles as a backbone.


Saturday, October 12, 2019

Dead Horse State Park, Utah

We wanted to get back to Canyonlands, although this time up on the plateau overlooking the Colorado and Green Rivers.  We camped at Dead Horse SP where horses used to be corralled at the plateau's point with only a narrow neck to the balance of the plateau.  A very short fence is all it took to keep the horses on premises....although a few decided to try a way off the plateau...thus "Dead Horse Point."  We enjoyed this nice campground, but didn't get too close to the edge!


Having biked the White Rim Trail, 1,000 feet into the canyon, we wanted to gaze down from the top, so we biked along the park's road.  We kept stopping as we biked out to Grand View along Canyonland's "Island in the Sky" section of the National Park, and saying....."wow, we were down there...."  Deep in the canyon, biking around the canyon edge, and along the rivers.

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Arches National Park

First having visited this National Park back in 1985 when our youngest child was still getting a ride on our kiddie backpack, then in 2004 when we camped in a tent, and this time we camped at Devils Garden Campground at Arches in our motorhome.  The campground was totally refurbished a couple of years ago, and we found it fabulous.  Great sites set in the rocks, with views out of all of our windows.

We even met Lila, the camp host for the past 16 years, who knew all of the inside scoops.   We even discovered that Lila was from Iowa and it just happened that University of Michigan was playing Iowa on Saturday, so we were invited to watch the football game on her DirectTV in her very own park service cabin at the entrance of the campground.
{Secret:  Verizon data and phone service from site 21!}

Now that we were camped deep inside Arches NP, we took hikes to see a few of the over 1,000 arches.  We even tried a bike ride down a gravel road through Salt Valley to Tower Arch...but just too rough for us and our E-Bikes, so we had to turn back.  All of the surrounding landscape was magnificent and we realized that our five days at the park just didn't allow us enough time.

Arches National Park is a place that we will be coming back to....
Landscape Arch

Friday, October 4, 2019

Utah's White Rim Trail -- We biked it !

On many visits to Moab, Utah and its surrounding national parks,  Ruthie has looked down into the deep  canyons of Canyonlands National Park and has longed to bike the off road trail, known as the White Rim Trail that is 1,000 feet deep in the canyon.  So this year as part of our RV travels, we decided to book a supported mountain bike tour.  We contracted with Escape Adventures, based on their online literature.

Our bike adventure began with a steep descent down the Shafer Trail.  After a very brief explanation of how to operate our Specialized Stumpjumper trail bike, we headed down the 1,000 feet of switchbacks that wound the way down to the lower plateau.  By the time we arrived at the White Rim Trail, our hands ached from braking all of the way down....but we were excited to bike in the lower  parts of Canyonlands.

With 11 other bikers and our two guides we biked 71 of the 84 miles on our four day trip.  The tour was described as suitable for "families with young children", we found otherwise.  There were a number of 18 percent and higher grades where we weren't embarrassed to walk our bikes.  So we did ask for the promised support of riding in the "sag wagon" over the more grueling parts of the trail.


Although there were a number of steep climbs and drops, rough rock strewn segments, and areas of soft sand, we had an awesome and wonderful ride through Canyonlands.  Biking along the mesa tops, following along the Colorado and then the Green Rivers, camping out under the Milky Way, and as we became more comfortable with our bike riding abilities, we got into cruising down the hills and gliding over the slick rock and small boulders.  The suspension on the Stumpjumpers was quite amazing....just had to trust it.

Back from our four grueling, but awesome days, we got back to our RV parked at the Moab Cyclery bike shop.  Rest time for the next few days before our next adventure.