Monday,
March 19th, 2018 to Monday, 26th March; South Rim, Grand
Canyon.
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|
Looking
west from Mather Point. |
|
Bright
Angel Fault & North Rim. |
|
North
Rim Lodge 10 miles distant, to the left of the fault. |
|
Pyramid
of Cheops.
The green colour is the Bright Angel Shale,
although there is a bit
of contributing vegetation.
|
|
View
east from Mather Point. |
Monday
was clear and cloudless, so I went to the Geology Museum at Yavapai Point,
learned a lot about the Geology of the Grand Canyon, and listened to a most
interesting talk. I also began to get a
handle on some of the mesas, buttes and geological features in the Canyon. This knowledge was built upon over the next
few days as I observed the Canyon from the various sections of the Rim that I
visited. One of the best walks was from
the Bright Angel Trailhead along past the Geology Museum to Mather Overlook,
but especially that part from Verkamps Visitors Center to the Geology Museum. Along that section are a number of very good
explanatory signs, and a series of rock examples from most of the rock strata
in the Canyon. The only improvement I
could think of would be some signs pointing out the various named buttes, mesas
and other features that one sees; that would help confirm the identifications
I've been making. I ended that walk near
Sundown just short of the Geology Museum, where I watched and photographed the
lengthening shadows at day`s end. That
night I left the Park to find a campsite in the Kaibab National Forest. This was found 5.3 miles in on forest road
302, east of Tusayan.
|
Give
us a kiss, then (Rock Squirrels at Mather Point). |
|
Aw
… you scared her off. |
|
Good
Tail, eh? |
|
Well,
maybe I’ll take five. |
|
Looking
coy amongst the rocks. |
|
And
I do have claws, you know. |
|
Shiva
Temple ... behind and to left of Isis Temple. |
|
Indian
Garden … 3000’ below; note diverging trail. |
|
I
spotted one of these ... so far below I thought it was a Raven. |
|
Examples
of … |
|
…
Rock exhibits … |
|
…
along the Rim Trail … |
|
…
and of the information signs, too. |
On
Wednesday the 20th, I took the South Kaibab Trail down into the
Canyon to get a different perspective, and to get a feel for these trails. I only dropped about a thousand feet, and
about a mile along the trail, but it was worth the effort. A couple of mule trains passed me, going up
as I descended. I think they were
resupply trains for whatever camps are down there; I should have asked. That night I was back on forest road 302, but
only two miles in this time, in a very good spot, where I stayed for the next
three nights, spending my days, painting and taking hikes through the Ponderosa
Pine forest.
|
Mule
train coming … |
|
…
along the South Kaibab Trail. |
|
The
knob of rock on the white platform is called Duck on a Rock. |
I
came out on Sunday the 25th, and started out on the Desert View
Drive, towards the east entrance. I
continued my identifications of the Canyon`s features; seeing them from
different angles was a great help. Back
into the National Forest, this time on forest road 310 turning on to 307 about
a mile in from the Desert View Drive. On
307 I had to go through a barbed wire gate, which was lying open as the old
gate post was broken. This gave me a
chance to use my hand forged Swedish axe, that was a Christmas present from my
siblings. I found a downed tree that had
a section about the correct thickness of the damaged post, lopped off the
branches, and cut it off about the necessary length. The next morning as I drove out, I did a
cursory gate repair; it was far from perfect as the wires needed some sorting
out, and I do not have a fencing pliers, but at least I was able to close the
gate, as the sign on it requested. That
should take care of it until the Rangers can get to it. The day was one of passing snow showers,
which made Canyon photography very interesting, and provided a perfect coda to
my Grand Canyon experience.
|
Thomas
Moran … an Artist I admire. |
|
Snow
shower over the Sinking Ship … |
|
…
and further Snow Showers … |
|
…
throughout the day … |
|
… ah, very Moran-esque. |
I
left the eastern entrance to the Park and several miles down Highway 64, I
turned onto the eastern end of forest road 307, the same road I had camped on
the previous night, but about 20 miles to the east and a thousand feet or more
lower, thus out of the Ponderosa zone and into the Pinions and Junipers, with
the Coconino Rim beetling above me to the south. Supper was cooked during a brief snow shower
as the Sun was setting below the edge of the snow cloud to the west. While this
is in the Juniper/Pinion zone, in the morning I noticed pockets of Ponderosas up
on the Rim in shallow canyons. These
were reminiscent of the micro-climates within the South Rim of the Grand Canyon
that shelter Douglas Firs, but this time the micro-climates were sheltering
Ponderosas.
|
They
farmed down there a thousand years ago. |
|
Looking
north towards Vermillion Cliffs (on the horizon), 46 miles away, from Desert
View. |
|
Looking
east towards Cedar Butte. |
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