Tuesday,
March 27th, 2018 to Wednesday, 4th April; Vermillion
Cliffs & beyond.
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From
Desert View Overlook in the Grand Canyon, Vermillion Cliffs National Monument
can be seen 46 miles to the north, although farther by road. This is where I now headed (Tuesday, 27th
March), on US 89 and 89A. To the east
loomed the long escarpments of Hamblin Ridge and Echo Cliffs, high above
me. Crossing the Colorado on Navajo
Bridge at Marble Canyon, I turned right to Lee’s Ferry, the official beginning
of the 277 mile long Grand Canyon. I
spent less than an hour here, noting a few features in the landscape, and
historical sites that I had read about in a small book last July at my friend
Martin's house. There was also a group
of rafters preparing to head into that Canyon.
From Lee's Ferry I rejoined 89A and about 10 miles along I found my
campsite for the night, a mile in from the highway. Here I was kept busy until after sundown
photographing the flaming light on both the Echo Cliffs, across the valley to
the east, and the Vermillion Cliffs looming above me, although much of the
latter were in evening shadow. In the
morning it was all about the rising Sun on Vermillion
Cliffs.
Vermillion Cliffs from the East |
Colorado
River from the Navajo Bridge
The following are at Lee's Ferry, 5 mles up from Navajo Bridge.
Late afternoon, Vermillion Cliffs and on Echo Cliffs, to the east. And then evening glow on Echo Cliffs.
Next morning Rosie-fingered Dawn comes upon Vermillion Cliffs.
A
house, ruinous now, built around a boulder! It was just by the roadside & I know nothing about it.
Something
took a bite from
this cactus on
the way down into the arroyo.
Echo Cliffs from about 20 miles |
Twenty-something
miles down the road I turned north onto House Rock Road, a wash-board of a
gravel road, and a couple miles along had lunch at the Condor Viewing
Site. And there were Condors, at least a
pair, soaring around the clifftops, a couple miles away and 2000 feet above,
near the original 1996 release site.
From this distance even through my binoculars they looked sparrow sized,
and the odd Raven that was occasionally worrying them even smaller. You wouldn't have thought they have a wing
spread of nine feet! There were about a
dozen other people spotting them with their scopes. My view of the Condor I spotted in the Grand
Canyon was better, being closer, but this was interesting to see them soaring
and flapping their wings even at this distance.
I took a couple of photos with the zoom fully extended at 1200mm.
Southwestern Vermillion Cliffs … |
… here be Condors |
And
so on to the White Pocket on the Paria Plateau, which is on top of the Vermillion
Cliffs. Back in October 2013 I attempted
to find this feature with very sketchy information and failed, ending up
driving thirty miles in 4-wheel through sand.
I managed a painting and got a feel for the Plateau, but did not achieve
the original objective. This time I had
better information and got the right road, at the fork where I went wrong last
time. Here I met a couple coming out who
gave me an heads-up on the conditions of the road ahead, and also a basic chart
of the forest roads. I think I would
have got there without it, but having it was a comfort nonetheless. Did I have a shovel, they asked, and I told
them I did, and an axe, a bow-saw, chains, water food, etc. You’ll be alright they said, especially after
I told them about my adventure of 2013.
They warned me to keep an eye out for vehicles coming out as there were
about half a dozen cars up there. From
here it was about ten miles of sometimes deep sand, single tracked, and with
the very occasional passing place.
Although it was hairy at times, and I met five vehicles coming out, I
made it okay, but anyone who travels there needs a 4-wheel drive and high
clearance vehicle. My SUV is high
clearance, but even so the bottom of it would scrape the mounted sand between
the tire tracks at times. I developed
the method of driving in Automatic 4-wheel drive, which is really 2-wheel drive
that goes into 4-wheel drive automatically in slippery conditions, and then
would put it into actual 4-wheel drive when necessary. This saved me having to turn the knob two
clicks, from normal 2-wheel to Automatic 4-wheel to 4-wheel. Being in Automatic 4-wheel much of the time,
and 4-wheel drive only when necessary also helped to save on petrol consumption.
After
300 yards you come to the White Pocket
This
gnarly journey was well worth it, as The White Pocket on the Paria Plateau is
yet another astonishing landscape, and as you know, I have seen many
astonishing landscapes over the past year.
It lies three hundred yards to the west of the parking area, and covers
an area of several hundred square yards.
It is made up of 190 million year old multicoloured, petrified,
cross-bedded sand dunes, eroded into some amazing contorted shapes. I entered the White Pocket at 17:00, and the
combination of late afternoon shadows and multicoloured layers made for some
great photo-ops. I spent the next three
hours wandering around and taking in the sunset as well, which meant supper
preparation in the dark … well, by Moonlight.
The next morning I went back in for another 2-1/2 hours, this time
concentrating on the southern part of the Pocket. Here I spotted my first blossom of the
Spring; a Manzanita … loads of Manzanita in Oregon … and I was surprised to see
it here and also down on the Mogollon Rim … but it is my first flower of the
year. I only met two vehicles coming in
towards the end of the sandy track, as I was coming out.
I
call this one the Petrified Breaking Wave.
Pool on fire. |
As
I descended off the Plateau back into the House Rock Valley, I checked out a
couple of possible future campsites on the way. In one I met a German couple,
Jessica and Lucca .. or is it Luke, pronounced wither final “e" as in the
German “bitte?” … apologies for the misspelling if you happen to read this
Lucca/Luke. Anyway, they had a 4-wheel,
of the lower clearance type of SUV, and I warned them that could be a problem,
especially with no shovel or other tools to help them get out, should they get
stuck. I would have been more forceful
if there were no other people visiting the White Pocket, but since it seems
there are more than in 2013, I figured that help of some sort would be
available … if you happen to read this, email me, Lucca/Luke and tell me how it
turned out … hope you made it … I warned you.
Walnut
Whip anyone? (That
reference is for the Brits).
Those
are Manzanita shrubs in the foreground …
with
my first blossoms of the year.
The Petrified Breaker in the morning light. |
Ten
miles of this each way, and this is the easy bit!
Camp
that night was made but a few miles away off forest road 1025 on Buckskin
Mountain across House Rock Valley from Paria Plateau. I remained in a couple of sites on this
mountain for several days catching up on much needed paperwork, with a supply
run into Kanab, Utah in between campsites.
Incidentally, I highly recommend Big Al's hamburger place, next to the
local McDonalds … the prices are reasonable and the ambiance takes you back to
the sixties … fish and chips here too, and the Buffalo Burger was excellent!
Back on Buckskin Mountain, I am tucked into the
Pinyons and Junipers on pretty stony ground, which makes digging one's daily
ablutions hole a bit of an ordeal, but perseverance is the key. This morning, as I write this, the bird-life
is much in evidence … some days are like this … several days with few
sightings, and then a morning when everybody comes by; Scrub Jays, Mountain
Chickadees, Oregon Juncos, some sort of Woodpecker (probably a Downy … stayed
but a few seconds), and one of those pesky yellowish warblers that never stay
put long enough to be positively ID'd, but possibly a Burton’s Vireo; I have
not marked it down as a sighting since I couldn`t confirm it.
Someone
must have dragged this in years ago … the tree it’s leaning on is holding it
up.
Saw or heard not a vehicle for the
five days I was here.
Found
a couple of these lairs, about the size of a quarter … wonder who they belong
to.
Well
… time to excavate a hole my own self, and then paperwork, and when it warms a bit more
a self-inflicted haircut, followed by study of the Geology along the Cottonwood
Road in the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, which begins a few
miles from here and is my next route, probably tomorrow, April 5th.
Here I go.
Well, that was a bitch of a hole to dig … loads o’ rocks … still,
everything worked out OK.
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