With that task attended to, we headed out to visit Bryce
Canyon, about 12 miles from our park. It
was sunny with big puffy clouds in the sky and the air was clear, although
cool. We stopped at the visitor center
for a bit of orientation before heading in. We arrived just in time for a short
film about Bryce.
We learned that the canyon is really a plateau, part of a
huge uprising of land covering Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico in
prehistoric times. The ebb and flow of water and the pressure of different
layers of sand and rock over the centuries resulted in rock formations that are
still evolving today.
The national park is a long tract of land with about 20
miles of road from north to south and a rise of 1,200 feet of elevation. At this
time of year, people use their per-sonal vehicles in the park, but in the busy
season, shuttle buses reduce the traffic somewhat.
It’s hard to put into words the breathtaking vistas we saw
today. Even photos fail to impart the sense
of grandeur and massive scope of the turrets, crevices, colours, sculpted
ridges, hoodoos, cliffs and overlooks we stopped at. Snow laced the tops of many of the textured
forma-tions today, adding white to the many colours of strata before us.
I was glad of the scarf I’d tied around my neck this morning
and my layered clothing as the wind whistled about at the high altitudes. Both Val and I had to catch our breath a few
times, an effect of being at eight or nine thousand feet of elevation. We took one of the trails down into the
canyon at Sunset Point, a steep descent that zig-zagged past rust-coloured
walls, grooved by centuries of rains and snows.
Of course, that meant we had to climb up again, hence the pounding heart
and panting! We were not alone; we could hear other visitors huffing and
puffing as well. But it was well worth it.
At each site along the route, different for-mations awaited. One
had a huge stone arch. Another had turrets
like a fairy castle. A third presented a pa-norama that stretched below us to a
distant horizon of blue moun-tains where high clouds sifted down wisps of snow. We
were en-chanted.
“Life Elevated” is the motto on many Utah licence plates. We
know exactly what that means.
1 comment:
Still enjoying your descriptive travel blogs but we are now a tad disappointed that our spirits are not being lifted as much by the knowledge that you are not describing weather much warmer than ours; instead, we are reading of snow and cool weather much like here.
Ches Somers
Post a Comment