10.11.2009

from the wilderness: life outside of bookbinding

while i continue procrastinating my book-related posts, here's how i've been spending time the past few weeks.

september and october are some of the best times of year for wilderness excursions in utah. leaves are changing color, it's dry, and temperatures are cooler.

all summer, pear, sue, and i have completed a series of planned hikes. summitting mount baldy, on the face of Timpanogos, was our last for the season. the hike began in Pleasant Grove's Battle Creek Canyon where we discovered little paradises of waterfalls, meadows, and forests of firs.



even the top of Baldy was intriguing. we discovered that the north side is wetter and covered in firs, while the south side supports a much dryer climate, boasting only ankle-to-waste-high scrub oak. pear called it "mountain patterned baldness" or something like that.

while hiking across meadows on the face of Timpanogos and getting these views was my favorite part....


....the hike down became the hike from hell. thanks to some woefully misguided trail information, we ended up hiking/sliding/tumbling down the south face of baldy. it was by far the steepest descent i've ever done, and i spent a good deal of it crouched down and sliding on my feet. 2 hours of straight down left the three of us totally physically, mentally, and emotionally exhausted. we felt triumphant for making it, but i look up at baldy now and glare in its general direction.


Nebo Loop: views behind Mount Nebo.
since returning home from Boston, i've been trying to do things here I've never done my whole life growing up here. Driving the Nebo Loop and exploring Payson Canyon is one of those things. The terrain is much different than that behind Timpanogos along the Alpine Loop.



For one thing, the dirt is red! This is "The Devil's Kitchen". It's the Nebo Loop's own tiny Bryce Canyon.


The aspens were changing color right along with the maples. Mixed in with the evergreens they were amazing!!
back slope of Nebo.


Capitol Reef National Park

This was the perfect day to visit this park! Pear and i left provo at 7 am, and 2 hours and 45 minutes later we arrived at one of my favorite places on earth. Temperatures below seventy, dry, sunny, limited crowds. perfect.


View of the waterpocket fold geologic formation from our hike to the Golden Throne.


the Golden Throne. it was perfectly silent here. and along the way we found places that echoed so well off the slot canyon walls that you could hear your whole echo come back to you.





our second trail was the 3.5-mile loop around Chimney Rock.


nope. the camera isn't tilted. it's the natural slant caused thousands of years ago by a ripple and fold in the land.


just one example of the rainbow of colors at capital reef. the strata alternates from red to green to purple to white to yellow. a camera will never, ever do this justice, so just imagine it. or better yet. go there!


(so stay tuned. books will be back as soon as the outdoors is no longer available.)

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

sooo inspiring! You have spent the summer gathering inspiration for the months of cold, hunkering down and creating beauty on a tiny perfect scale--feeling full of the summer of air and nature and trees and glorious sites! What a good life you lead.

Nancy said...

It is it's own type of beauty the southernly way. Crazy how you can live your life around things without being there.

Amanda, Curtis, Ellis, Hugh, Rhys, Graham, Sylvia said...

That Nebo loop seems like a hidden treasure.

I knew when I saw you all that afternoon, after your hike on Baldy, that something had almost gone terribly wrong. Muscles still aching?

It is good to see the beauty all around. It compells us to come out into it. Good for you for following that call.