Tuesday, November 3, 2015

La Sal Loop

The Manti-La Sal Loop takes you from the Colorado River, east of Moab, through canyonland country and up into the snow-crested La Sal Mountains, a spur of the Colorado Rockies; then back down again to Spanish Valley and Moab. The altitude gain is about 4,000 feet, but the variety of terrain you can see in an hour is pretty neat.












































































Fisher Towers

Exactly 21 miles up the Colorado River from Moab is the short road to Fisher Towers, a place of spectacular southwestern scenery and also a hub of rock-climbing activity. We hiked the Towers back to The Titan and then drove the Lasal Loop, up into the mountains and then back down to Moab, all on Monday.
Environs, Fisher Valley
















Some of the Towers, from the trailhead
















Proceeding on




















Way up there




















At least two parties on this one
















Way up there
















Posing
















Lunch break, with cup-holder
















The Titan, the big one we came to see...900 feet above the
valley





















Fixed ladder on the trail
















Towers all over




















And a last look

Arches National Park, V: Fiery Furnace

The Fiery Furnace is one of those clumps of fins, those long up-right rock features that sometimes erode away to become arches. Arches National Park has several such clumps, obviously, the most famous of which is the so-called Fiery Furnace. So-called because of its fiery appearance in certain sunsets, not because of any thermal properties. Anyhow, I signed up for a ranger-led hike in the Fiery Furnace Saturday. Vicki demurred since the hike involved a variety of scrambling moves that might well have over-taxed her artificial knee. I found the hike challenging, not because of any of the moves required, but because of my vestibular disability. But I did it, and I don't think anyone noticed I was doing it on a rocking and rolling vessel.
Google Earth view of the Fiery Furnace, 3 miles up; how do
those little cars get so high?















Ranger Glenn explains fins and arches, and salt domes, using
a sponge model; I've been going on NPS ranger hikes since
1970; scores of them, many scores; this was one of the best






















A pot-hole arch, small
















Another, larger
















Another, small; in order to qualify, according to the NPS, a
span has to be at least 3 feet, admit light, and be natural

















Looking up, occasionally
















But mostly down, to see where you're going




















Ranger-led hikes typically take you places you cannot or should
not go by yourself; and there's generally far more talk than
walk--in 3 and 1/2 hours we walked maybe a mile and 1/2--but
the talk is the great thing, something you'd not get any other
way



















Nice double arch; alas, I don't recall many of the arches' names
















A pot hole; it rained a few days back; but swimming in this
pot hole and others are tiny Fairy Shrimp; one of those
organisms that seems to survive almost anything; speaking
of which, check out Tardigrades...inter-galactic travelers?


















Again, looking up
















Executing the "slide on your butt" maneuver; we'd already done
some chimneying

















Another medium-sized arch, the Kissing Turtles
















Many readers have asked why I don't post more pictures of
coyote scat; OK, so here is some coyote scat

















Erosion
















More arches
















Fin-land
















One final arch, the best of them
















Thus
















Great place, great hike

Arches National Park, IV: Still More Arches

Arches NP has more than 2,000 arches, the world's greatest concentration of these things. Most, I think, are within the various sizeable clumps of fins, like the "Fiery Furnace," (next post), and are thus not particularly accessible. We took a number of hikes in the park and saw a dozen or more of the best known arches, a few of which are below.
Tunnel Arch
















Pine Tree Arch
















Fins...wherefrom arches come...
















Sand Dune Arch, within the fins above
















Broken Arch 
















Delicate Arch
















Skyline Arch
















Sunset view from our "campsite" in the desert

Arches National Park, III: Landscape Arch

The most impressive of Arches NP's arches, I think, is Landscape Arch, not only its great size and length but also its position and delicate nature. At 290 feet, it is the world's longest natural stone span.
For much of our time in the Arches/Moab/Canyonlands area, we camped like 
regular Red Rock troopers, out on the desert, in the dispersed camping area along 
Willow Springs road, off route 191


















Moon sighting along the trail to Landscape Arch
















Us, with Landscape Arch behind us
















Closer up
















Standard view; almost the length of a football field
















The trail not taken: a "primitive" trail went on beyond Landscape Arch

















Neither of us felt like the trail's exposure...
















Environs
















The Double O arch, near Landscape