A peaceful, beautiful morning gazing in awe at the formations of the upper Paria River canyon. Watching water flow from rocks and little minnows swim into tiny caves. Slot canyon sirens and white towering cliffs with Ponderosa and Douglas-fir. Petroglyphs. Signs of PNW outdoor enthusiasts in registers. Road walking. BLM visitors center in Cannonville with … Continue reading From the red canyon of the Paria to Red Ledges Inn
Category: Hayduke
A day of many colors
Red walls in early morning. Peach, gold, and gray walls in late morning. Yellow, orange and coral slick rock for lunch. Purple, pink, mauve, red stripped hills for the afternoon. Red mudstone for the evening. More to come from walking down Hackberry Canyon, up and over Yellow Rock, and up the Paria River. Day 29: … Continue reading A day of many colors
Pepper Flake and Hackberry
Cache day. Round Valley Draw slot canyon day. CDT friend day. Beautiful Hackberry Canyon day. (More notes to get filled in. But I have been given a curfew. Hiking on tomorrow and marmots are better walkers with rest.) Day 28: 17.7 miles; 420.0 miles total. Camp by Cottonwood tank to bend of Hackberry Canyon south … Continue reading Pepper Flake and Hackberry
From Paradise to an ancient redwood
We started the day on the edge of Paradise (Canyon) and road walked to Cottonwood tank. Such a pretty canyon, golden sandstone walls and cliffs with ledges of pinyon, juniper, and oak. Verdant green hanging gardens under shelves. Red tail hawk pairs and swallows flying about, canyon wrens trilling. (Cowpies and all.) As we hiked … Continue reading From Paradise to an ancient redwood
Slip slidin away
Two songs kept going through my head today. As we'd dip our bottles into Last Chance Creek and its alkaline waters: "Drink it like you mean it" by Corb Lund. Drink it like you mean it, like the serious people doIf you're down and broken hearted and you've got good reason toDrink it like you … Continue reading Slip slidin away
Canyon challenge course
A day entirely comprised of canyon travel, feeling like some of the most out there terrain of the Hayduke. Down Monday Canyon to join Rogers Canyon to join Croton Canyon then turn up Navajo Canyon. Every canyon had its own nature and even the character of each changed by the mile. We'd heard from others … Continue reading Canyon challenge course
A delightful puppy and wildflower day
It is very convenient to stroll out of Escalante and take care of pre-hike errands. We checked out of The Prospector, walked over to the Outfitters for coffee and an egg-in-a-basket (in honor of Bubbles and DNR!), and dropped off our package and postcards at the post office all before 8:00 am. The postmistress was … Continue reading A delightful puppy and wildflower day
One more day…
We hadn't planned on it, but we stayed in Escalante for a second zero day (no miles hiked). Woke up this morning and assessed how our bodies felt: still tired. Rest more please? So we are. One of the many wonderful things about the Hayduke, it's only 800-1,000+ miles. Around two months if one goes … Continue reading One more day…
The charms of Escalante
Getting ready to catch up on blog posts and rest the feet for the afternoon. We're in Escalante for a zero day. This is my favorite town in southern Utah! Every one we meet is incredibly nice. And it's easy to settle into all sorts of interesting conversations. Escalante also has a small community of … Continue reading The charms of Escalante
From Stevens Canyon to Escalante
When I hike long trails I often marvel about where I started my day and where I finish. This morning we woke up on a giant bench of red Kayenta formation in Stevens Canyon, a wild, remote feeling place. Tonight we are at The Prospector in Escalante. Running low on food (~1.5 days worth) and … Continue reading From Stevens Canyon to Escalante