And now, to our last Mountains and Valleys feature, one of the great ones, Zion Canyon, the heart of Zion National Park. I had the privilege of visiting Zion just this month (while my first week of posts were on auto-pilot!), not for the first time and I hope not for the last time.
Some basic info:
Zion Canyon was carved by the Virgin River. But the history of this desert canyon is water all the way back. The spectacular red cliffs are sandstone--laid down by an ancient sea. The canyon bottom is around 4000', with cliffs of 2000' or more leading up. And at the head of Zion Canyon, you enter the Virgin River Narrows, a slot canyon where you can see on any day the power of water--and a reminded to stay out of there when thunderstorms are in the region!
The park is located about 40 miles east of St. George, Utah, and was named by early Mormon pioneers. If it had been Norwegians, it would be Valhalla Canyon, because it's just that sort of place--it makes you figure it must be the home of the gods.
Without further ado, because a picture is worth a thousand words:
Overlooking Zion Canyon from the West Rim area (off Kolob Terrace Road). |
Zion Canyon from the Observation Point trail. |
Zion Trails are often not for the faint of heart. This is one of the more unnerving parts of the famous Angels Landing Trail. |
Hiking the Narrows. The water is very cold feeling in the morning, and deliciously cool by noon on a June day! You can see why you don't want to be here during a flash flood. |
©Rebecca M. Douglass, 2015
Awesome place, well doen getting to Z
ReplyDeleteThanks! I totally tanked on visits, but that's what the Road Trip is for, right? And I have a bunch of great book reviews queued up, but I'll be back with more photos, too.
DeleteSo beautiful. My father-in-law has been there many times--he can't say enough about it.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favorite places on earth. Though I admit I have a lot of those :)
DeleteZion Canyon - impressive place! It looks like a refreshing walk in the waters of the Narrows.
ReplyDeleteCongrats Rebecca - you made it!
Refreshing when the air heated up! We started up those waters at about 6:30 a.m. and it was cold! Especially for the boys, who were still short then. At one point water was up nearly to their chests. It took some talking to get them past that.
DeleteThat's absolutely gorgeous! What a great place to finish. Well done for completing, and I didn't notice any fudging, even when you absconded for a week :) And I haven't visited nearly enough people, either. I haven't even revisited the people I wanted to revisit as much as I'd like. There's still the rest of the year, of course!
ReplyDeleteWell, X is always a bit of a cheat, but since I invented Xavier Xanthum, I always have a fall-back :)
DeleteYou've done a much better job of keeping up with people than I have. This week has been especially bad for me. I'm spending all my time either at work, or sorting books for the library book sale, or lying on the couch moaning about how my feet hurt (should be visiting then, but my brain is pretty well shut off too, so solitaire and a book on tape seems easier....).
Zion canyon has such a unique landscape! I love the water-carved gorges (not so much the fear of a flash flood...). This is on my list when I get around to visiting Utah!
ReplyDeleteCongrats of making it to Z. :)
Oh, yeah. Can't visit Utah without it! Arches and Zion...A to Z :)
DeleteBreathtaking photos on this wonderful Z Day post.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on completing the A to Z challenge for 2015.
We made it! (I did 5 blogs this year for the series - all on different topics. Whew.)
Thanks for stopping by at
The Mane Point: A Haven for Horse Lovers . Hope you will visit again.
Thanks! We did, indeed make it...though I'm still back on Z when we've moved on to May 1st...almost 2nd :) I can't believe you do 5 blogs--just the one took all the spare time I had.
DeleteI love this park. I have a beautiful photograph that I bought at an art fair years ago that inspired my trip to the canyon.
ReplyDeleteThose canyon walls just inspire great art! In fact, if I'm recalling correctly what they said on the bus up the canyon, art also inspired the creation of the park, though some early painters weren't believed--folks back east thought they were making it up.
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