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Category: Grand Canyon National Park North Rim

28 June 2017

Cliff Spring trail, an intimate side canyon on the North Rim

forest Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaCliff Spring trail leads into an intimate side canyon with several hundred feet drop in elevation in just under half a mile through forest and past upper canyon walls.

Firecracker Penstemon Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaOn a warm June day the Ponderosa Pine offered shade as I started downhill on the Cliff Spring trail.  The forest looked open and park-like with tall grass and lovely firecracker penstemon scattered about the forest floor.

granary Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSeveral large rocks along the trail provided a perfect place for Ancestral Puebloan people to build a granary, or food storage area sort of like our pantry.  Sealed clay pots with winter’s food supply and spring’s seed would have been stored in the protected area.  The Walhalla Plateau where Cliff Spring trail is located has over 400 documented archeological sites from summer occupation 1165 – 820 years ago.

forest cliff Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe trail follows a drainage then flattens out.  Tree tops reach up next to the trail on one side while walking under overhanging cliff faces and hugging the walls at the head of this small canyon.  I see the profile of a wild rock-woman at the bend in the trail.

plant bird nest in hole Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

 

iron patterns Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaCliff walls of sandy limestone with crazy patterns, iron deposits, maidenhair fern growing overhead, and erosion holes where birds nest.  Quiet, yet so full of life.

 

Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

Rounding a corner there is always wind.  Must be the shape of this canyon that somehow funnels whatever breeze to curve along the canyon walls.  Today the motion is a gentle caress yet some days the wind will work against you.

Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaOver ten years visiting Cliff Spring I’ve watched this young pine struggling for enough light to grow tall like the twisted snag that lost the battle further along.

canyon view from Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

 

 

The view is limited in distance yet multi-textured, sculptured, and colorful.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSurface water percolated through porous limestone to a dense shale layer were it seeps between the rocks leaving dark stains and damp areas where plants hang on to life.

rose bush Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe wild roses are the best here, their wonderful aroma greets me before I even see them.

seep spring Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThere is something quiet and special about Cliff Spring.  Frequented mostly by birds and butterflies, I rarely see other people here of which I am glad so that I may enjoy the tranquility.

rose bud Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizonarose bush Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

 

And have time to stop and smell the roses.

 

 

 

 

spring Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

The trail ends at a seep spring, just a shallow pool of water for wildlife, not for swimming.  It may appear the trail continues past the spring, that is what we Rangers call a social trail, unmaintained.  You are welcome to walk it but I don’t imagine you’ll get far before deciding it’s a little sketchy with steep drop offs.

hand print Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaPlease don’t be fooled by the red hand-prints on the rock walls, they are not old.  It seems some folks like to leave their legacy and there’s red soil and water.  Although I don’t like to see this desecration it is better than scratching names in the rock and much easier to remove.  I just don’t get why it has to happen.

 

 

Cliff Spring trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaI sit for a while on a boulder covered with ancient ripple marks, listening to the slow yet constant drip of water.  Then reluctantly leave this special hidden canyon and head to Cape Royal for sunset and the milky way.

 

Parking is found in a wide paved area on a sharp curve across from the trail head about 1/2 mile from the end of the Cape Royal Road.  The trail sign is small and difficult to see, look for a crosswalk.  The trail is .8 mile round trip with 250 feet elevation change, forested and edgy along cliff faces.

Just one of many delightful trails on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park.

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Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, National Parks and Monuments, Places I've been, United States Cape Royal Road, Cliff Spring trail, cliffs, flowers, forest, granary, seep spring, Walhalla Plateau 15 Comments
26 June 2017

Solstice sunrise from Cape Royal

sunset crespuscular rays Wedding site Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaOK, so my summer solstice actually began with sunset and the milky way on the 20th then I actually set the alarm for the solstice sunrise.

sunset crespuscular rays Wedding site Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaI met a friend and fellow photographer at Cape Royal in the afternoon as we’d planned to shoot the milky way.  Using the app PhotoPills, she was able to get an idea where the milky way would be at various different times.  This is an app I plan to download onto my phone in the future.

http://www.photopills.com/

sunset crespuscular rays Wedding site Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaBut first the sunset.  We found a nice bunch of rocks at the rim by the Wedding site and settled in to mostly watched the show.  I did however get out the tripod and made a few shots as the sun set behind trees on the horizon.

Gaelyn Cape Royal sunset North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona by Rebecca WilksPhoto curtesy of Rebecca Wilks

Then before the milky way would rise we enjoyed a grand dinner of strawberries on brownies, angel food cake for me with heavy cream.  Very fortifying.  I mean, how can one go wrong with fruit and chocolate.

stars Angels Window Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaI am rather new to night photography so had to take a few test shots to determine what I was pointing at.  Auto focus is impossible after dark and I have difficulty using manual focus.  But with the ISO at 1600, a 20 second exposure, f-stop as wide as possible at 3.5 with my 18-200mm lens, tripod, and 2-second delay I managed to get a few shots.

stars milky way Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaI was surprised to actually see the red glow from the Boundary Fire burning on Kendrick Peak not far north of Flagstaff.

crescent moon Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaAfter being awake until almost 11pm I wasn’t sure I’d make it in the morning for the solstice sunrise.  When the alarm went off at 4am I reset it for an extra 25 minutes, then got up, made coffee, grabbed gear, and headed down the Cape Royal trail for the solstice sunrise.  I was surprised to see a small crescent of the moon as the sun lit the smoke on the horizon.

sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaA few other photographers were already out, including my friend who I didn’t see until later.  And of course, first one up gets the premier location.  I moved down the trail to find my own view.

sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSlowly, the red ball of fiery sun slowly rose above the distant Echo Cliffs creating a soft glow on the wisps of clouds.

soltice sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaMore light revealed the layers of plateaus across the canyon.

solstice sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

solstice sunrise Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaUntil finally the glow was almost too bright to look at.

first light Wotans Throne Cape Royal North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSo I moved to the west side of the point for the soft glow of first light on Wotan’s Throne and the canyon walls.

crepuscular rays Brady Peak Mount Hayden Saddle Mountain from Roosevelt Point North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThen took a slow drive home with a stop along the way at Roosevelt Point.

Geraniums Ken Patrick trail Cape Royal Road North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaPlus a geranium lined invitation to the Ken Patrick trail along the Cape Royal Road.

Colorado columbine Cape Royal Road North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaAnd one of the few places to see Colorado Columbine in bloom along the Cape Royal Road.

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Arizona, Cape Royal, Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, National Parks and Monuments, Places I've been, United States crepuscular rays, flowers, milk way, stars, sunrise, sunset 18 Comments
21 June 2017

Hiking to the rim Cape Final trail

June 7, 2017

lupine Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaWhen a friend who likes to get outdoors shows up at the canyon and I have a day off we decide to go hiking on the Cape Final trail.  One of my many favorite trails on the North Rim, 4.2 miles round trip over relatively gentle terrain through one of the best examples of a Ponderosa pine forest and to amazing views at the rocky rim.

lupine Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

There’s been just enough fire in this area to make for a healthy forest, open, park-like, grassy, and covered with lupines.  It’s not nasty or charcoaled.  A Ponderosa pine forest should experience fire every 3-8 years to thin out the small saplings and burn off the down material.

spider web burn ponderosa pine Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaYet humans suppressed fire for so long, we altered natural ecosystems for our own selfish reasons.  I, like you, don’t visit public lands to see char but I believe we have a better understanding of the important role fire plays in forest ecology.  So there is evidence of burn along the trail.

Horned lizard Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

Motion from a tiny Horned Lizard caught our attention.  These docile creatures blend in well with the forest floor.

Little Colorado River from Cape Final North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe forest opens to a canyon view looking almost due east to the mouth of the Little Colorado River, not the river itself.

Little Colorado River from Cape Final North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThis is the area that has been proposed by a Scottsdale-based developer to build a tram that could potentially move up to 10,000 visitors a day to the bottom of the canyon on the Navajo Reservation.  The Grand Canyon Escalade development would also feature hotel, restaurant, and other resort attractions.  The proposal at the confluence seems to go on and off the table regularly.  I don’t think most of the Navajo and Hopi people want it so near sacred land. The Park Service certainly doesn’t support the idea.  It would be quite visible from several overlooks along the Cape Royal Road including the Cape Final trail.  Many people and organizations want to Save the Confluence.

canyon view Southeast Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaWe sat in one of the two campsites for lunch.  Yes, you can get a permit to camp on the rim at Cape Final.

canyon Colorado River Cape Final trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThen we walked a bit further for another canyon view and a piece of the Colorado River.

blue butterfly on ragweed Cape Royal trail North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaWe had lollygagged out to the rim taking about two hours but then booked back in an hour as we’d been invited to a neighbor’s BBQ.

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Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Places I've been, United States Cape Final Trail, hike, lupine, Ponderosa Pine 21 Comments
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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

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