Thursday, April 30, 2009

Trail Canyon

We hiked into Trail Canyon in the Dark canyon wilderness the last two days to lay out a project that we will be doing in June with Wilderness Volunteers. I had not been down Trail Canyon yet into the wilderness. The trail down is an old stock trail that has been blasted out of the slickrock and winds around ledges and drop offs. I don't think I would take a horse down it right now. Just getting to our trailheads can be an adventure this time of year. We ended up sawing out a huge Pondersoa that had fallen into the road and busting through a few snowdrifts. Once you get down into the canyon it feels like you are really out there, which is the best place to be.

I think the elk must use Trail Canyon to access Dark Canyon to winter there as there was sign of elk everywhere.




Sunday, April 26, 2009

Back to the Gothic Nightmare

Toad, Ash and Kell came down this weekend and we went up and explored some unamed canyons that I had not been into yet. The hike makes a loop by climbing out of one canyon into a namphitheatre with some of the most amazingly bizarre towers around, and back down another slot. The towers are so big and narrow and fragile looking that they don't look possible.

Toad hiking through an unnamed canyon in the Cutler Formation

Curtains of fluted mud

Short rappel to get down another canyon. I move so fast the camera can't catch the action.




Climbing out of the canyon on the fixed line





Friday, April 24, 2009

NEMO Found?


The May edition of "National Geographic Adventurer "(which I stopped my subscrpition to several years ago as more than half the pages are glossy marketing ads, outdoor gear marketing is still marketing and I can't stand it in any form, but I digress) contains a story by Dave Roberts where he calims to have found the remains of the patron saint of the Red Rock Wilderness, Everett Ruess.

Through a series of Navajo stories passed down through a family the reamains of a young anglo male were found in a crevice burial high on Comb Ridge, 90 miles from Davis Gulch in the Escalante country where searchers claimed to have found his last camp in 1934.

At first I thought the claim was pretty far fetched and blew it off as nothing but hype for "Adventurers" 10th Anniversary Edition, but after reading it they make a pretty good case. The bones and other artifacts show it was approximatley a 20 year old 5' 8" anglo killed around the time Everett disapeared. DNA results are still pending, which makes me wonder why they published the article before getting them back?

I think more than anything I just don't want Everett to be found, I think of him out there wandering still, maybe someday I will run into him.


Wilderness Song


I have been one who loved the wilderness:
Swaggered and softly crept between the mountain peaks;
I listened long to the seas brave music;
I sang my songs above the shriek of desert winds.
On canyon trails when warm night winds were blowing,
Blowing, and sighing gently through the star-tipped pines,
Musing, I walked behind my placid burro,
While water rushed and broke on pointed rocks below.
I have known a green seas heaving ; I have loved
Red rocks and twisted trees and cloudless turquiose skies,
Slow sunny clouds, and red sand blowing
I have felt the rain and slept behind the waterfall.
In cool sweet grasses I have lain and heard
The ghostly murmur of regretful winds
In aspen glades, where rustling silver leaves
Whisper wild sorrows to the green-gold solitudes
I have watched the shadowed clouds pile high;
Singing I rode to meet the spendid, shouting storm
And fought its fury till the hidden sun
Foundered in darkness, and lightning heard my song
Say that I starved; that I was lost and weary;
that I was burned and blinded by the desert sun;
Footsore, thirsty, sick with strange diseases;
Lonely and wet and cold, but that I kept my dream!
Always I shall be one who loves the wilderness:
Swaggers and softly creeps between the mountain peaks;
I shall listen long to the seas brave music;
I shall sing my song above the shriek of desert winds.

-Everett Ruess

Sunday, April 19, 2009

First Trip Down the River

Mom and Dad and Nate and Miranda drove through the snow to come down for the weekend. Nate brought his boat down, and I pulled big blue out and dusted it off and we went down the river with the kids. The water is still pretty cold but the air temps are getting warm down here, not swimming weather yet but plenty of warm for a float. I put River on the oars for some of the rapids and he did a good job keeping us off the rocks.

After church we took the kids out to the big dune across from Arches with the "sand" sleds. My Mom bought all of the boys sleds for Christmas but they don't really slide on snow, strangley enough they work great on sand.


Rowan going down face first and full bore as usual

Ridge, just before eating a sand sandwich

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Hell Storm

Photo of yesterdays storm in Moab. The winds kicked up most of Canyonlands park into the air and then brought it over Moab and rained it down on us. The Weather Service listed it as "unknown precipitation". I was on the back side of th La Sals when it hit and could see a huge red cloud coming over the mountain.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Coast

We made a pilgrimage to the edge of the continent last week part work, part fun. I went to the interagency trails planning training that was held on Tomales Bay this year. We spent all week laying out trails in the coastal ranges and hiking different trails looking at trail designs and structures in the Mount Tamalpais area.

Every time I go to the coast it feels like travelling to a different world from the arid Colorado Plateau and Great Basin that I am used to. Everything is so green and humid, and the trees are all so different. Redwoods, huge Coast Live Oaks, Madrones and Bishop Pines.

The ocean itself is such a foreign entity to me. Growing up on the eastern edge of the Great Basin (Wasatch Front) the first time I actually remember seeing the ocean was in Brazil travelling by bus at night, I could see the moon reflected in it and I had no idea what it was. I think I actually asked somebody on the bus what it was.

Even though I realize the Earth is 70% water it still seems unbelievable to look out across that much water always moving and crashing into the land. It doesn't seem right for something that big to be moving. I always forget how loud it is too, out on Point Reyes it was almost deafening. I was reading in National Geographic last month about Native American names in North America and saw that the word "Malibu" (as in that place in southern California)translates something like "that place over there where it is always noisy". Sounds like a pretty good description.

The boys looking out into the wild surf off Point Reyes


I love this photo, it looks like Ryder and myself sitting down amoung the carcasses of dead aliens on the beach

Sculpted Beach


Tule Elk.
This suspecies of Elk that used to live in the marshes and deltas of Californias Central Valley was presumed extinct and then a small population was found and transplanted out to Point Reyes.



21 armed purple sunflower starfish that Alina found in a tidepool, of course River was the only one that dared pick it up.





Backpacking on a Different Tectonic Plate

After spending the week on Tomales Bay, we backpacked into Drakes Bay, named after Sir Francis Drake who landed here in 1579 on his way around the world. We had very windy conditions all week on Tomales Bay as storms passed by to the north, but when we went backpacking we had perfect weather. Alina saw some sort of whale rising out of the water as we were setting up camp the first night. The area we backpacked into is within the Point Reyes National Seashore and the Phillip Burton Wilderness. From a geologic viewpoint the area is also on a different tectonic plate than the rest of the US. The Point Reyes area is on the Pacific plate and is slowly drifting north grinding against the North American plate.

Santa Maria Creek flowing off of Inverness Ridge and into the Pacific.

Coast camp. It actually froze our first night there.

Keeping the packstring moving along. The boys are starting to pack more and more of thier own gear.


Hiking in with packs and hands full



Arch on Sculpted Beach





Saturday, April 11, 2009

Big Trees Sequoia Semprevirens

During our time on the coast last week we made it down to Muir Woods a protected old growth Coast Redwood grove, named after John Muir. I have only been to see the coast redwoods a few times but everytime I walk amoung these big trees it is a spiritual experience. To see and touch something so colossal and old and living is humbling. As humans we feel like we have things pretty well figured out, we feel so secure in our selves and our institutions and technology, but these trees have watched human civilizations come and go and will maybe see ours go as well. Maybe they are the ones that have it all figured out.




Holding up the sky

Boys and Mom in the UN Grove. The United Nations met here in this grove several days after they formed. At the meeting FDR gave a speech outlining that without sustainable use and conservation of natural resources world peace was impossible. That being said the US has cut the old growth coastal redwoods so extensivley that there is only about 6% of the stands left. Not very sustainable.






The Pinchot Tree