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Category: Bryce Canyon National Park

17 June 2020

Expanding services at Bryce Canyon

Silent City hoodoos amphitheater Rim trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahExpanding services at Bryce Canyon increases visitation, both numbers and locality.  It’s beginning to look more like summer but without tour buses.

late light on Ponderosa Pine thru RV window Bryce Canyon National Park UtahThank goodness we’re not as busy as Zion, and seemingly more organized as I hear from visitors.  However, the number of vehicles entering the park continues to increase with more RVs.  A few weeks ago people I talked to were semi-local (it’s a big circle) from Utah, Arizona, Nevada, and southern California with some from Washington.  Lately, I’m meeting more folks from the Midwest and East coast.  Is COVID19 over?  Many are not wearing masks.  Yet visitation is still lower than last year due to cancelled tours, reservations, vacations, and travel restrictions.

purple Penstemon flowers Rainbow Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahIncreasing temperatures also indicate summer is on the way.  From cold 30°F mornings early last week to an almost balmy 50°F this week the highs are reaching almost 80°F.  Sitting outside in the shade of the visitor center a week ago Monday with high winds chilled me to the bone.  So I moved inside to count people coming in and out to a limit of 40 people in the building.  Late that day one of the popups went flying and now we have to take the tops off if winds are predicted over 20mph.  Even had a few snow flurries that morning.

Mangum fire map progression 2020_06_15-18.That was June 8th, when the Mangum fire started on the Kaibab National Forest at Mangum camp where four historic buildings burned, cause is still being investigated.  High winds quickly pushed the fire northwest through Ponderosa Pine forest and by the 12th covered 12,000 acres and people at Jacob Lake were evacuated.  That amounts to the Inn (where the awesome cookies come from), Forest Service visitor center and campgrounds, and a RV Park.  The North Rim shut down after only seven days open and employees were given an option to evacuate or shelter in place as they were safely south of the fire.  State Route 89A closed from Fredonia to Marble Canyon, Arizona.  We’ve been watching the smoke.  So far the historic Jacob Lake Inn has been spared but the fire jumped the road and as of the 16th covered 40,000 acres.  That’s when the Forever Resort concession employees were evacuated.  And still it burns with more high winds spreading through Juniper/Pinyon woodlands and sagebrush with grasses.

Gaelyn & Colleen Bryce Canyon National Park UtahThe fire didn’t slow down visitation here much averaging 1500 vehicles a day between the 8th to the 14th.  Long-time blog friend and RVer Colleen visited with her grown son, wife, and two children.  We met near the park’s General Store and sat chatting like old friends—though we’d never met—for several hours while waiting for her family to return from hiking among the hoodoos.  Then a fellow Ranger from Grand Canyon who currently works on the South Rim visited for several days and stayed overnight in my truckcamper “guesthouse”.

Somewhere in there I fit in an all day shopping trip to Cedar City with a friend and now won’t have to return for about a month.  We scored because the new Natural Grocers had opened that day making us both very happy and with many sales we bought lots.  Hit many other stores as well, us and some others wearing masks.

hoodoos trees valley Table Cliffs smoke Rim trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahOther than covering the door-count and information area I table-roved for a couple hours near Sunset Point overlooking the hoodoo filled Bryce amphitheater and walked along the rim trail answering visitor questions.

North view trees hoodoos Rainbow Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahNorth view

East view hoodoos valley trees Table Cliffs Rainbow Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahEast view

West view from Yovimpa Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahWest view

Another day I roved at Rainbow and Yovimpa Points at the southern end of the Paunsaugunt Plateau providing long views circling at least 220°.  I talked a little about the Grand Staircase geology within view.

valley White Cliffs Molly's Nipple smoke from Yovimpa Point Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

smoke Mangum fire on North Kaibab Arizona from Yovimpa Point Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

map distance Yovimpa to Jacob Lake But I talked more about fire ecology because the southern view included the smoke from the Mangum fire located about 80 miles away as the Raven flies.

Lodge Bryce Canyon National Park UtahLodge

Sunset Motel Bryce Canyon National Park UtahSunset Motel

Every day something new and many expanding services opening at Bryce Canyon National Park.  On June 15th, lodging through Forever Resorts opened at the Sunset Motel and Deluxe cabins with take-out dining.  The Lodge Gift Shop and Valhalla Pizzeria will remain closed at this time.

Ranger Gaelyn posing VC Bryce Canyon National Park Utah by HaleyThe Natural History Association store and outside the visitor center Ranger information will be open from 8am to 8pm beginning June 21.  Backcountry will open for permits July 1st.

East view from Yovimpa Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahAlthough the 2020 Geology Festival has been cancelled we hope to provide modified geology talks within the park in late June.  The later will depend on limiting group sizes that are committed to physical distancing.

hoodoos valley Table Cliffs smoke Bryce Canyon National Park UtahGetting closer to the park being in full operation yet I believe that won’t happen until Utah is in the green, and right now numbers of COVID19 cases are going up in Utah and Arizona.  So the park will continue expanding services as time goes on, or at least we hope so in a safe manner.

lone pine hoodoos rim trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahLife can be a struggle but once roots are set growth occurs.

I am excited about getting out to present programs and just a little nervous too.  I am REALLY frustrated with my signal problem from home.  I can get a signal almost anywhere in the park on top of the plateau except where I live.  Even with the booster, my phone tethered to the computer shows 4Glte with three bars and it doesn’t work worth shit.  I am ready to SCREAM!  If you don’t hear from me for a while you’ll know why.

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Bryce Canyon National Park, COVID-19, Park Ranger, Places I've been, United States, Utah fire, Park Ranger, summer 19 Comments
09 June 2020

Making adjustments at Bryce Canyon

hoodoos trees Sinking Ship Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahSeems every day something new occurs while making adjustments at Bryce Canyon National Park.  Some adjustments are easier to make than others, require flexibility, and often many logistics.  Such is life.  And then there’s adjusting to the weather.

shuttle bus by Visitor Center Bryce Canyon National Park UtahThree months of planning has paid off for the shuttle service in the park.  Seats had to be removed and only 20 passengers are allowed onboard which is monitored by a National Park Service attendant.  The driver sits in a plexiglass box to ensure distancing.  So far only four shuttles are running and that seems to be enough right now.  They are making rounds at about 15 minute intervals.  Bryce is certainly not as busy as last summer this time mostly due to a lack of tour buses and international visitors who usually make up about 65% of visitation.

trees hoodoos light & shadow Bryce Canyon National Park UtahI easily adjusted to living in the big RV once everything was slowly moved out of the camper.  Well not everything, I have duplicates of most kitchen utensils.  As I slowly put things away I quickly realized, I have too much stuff.  I’m trying to pack up clothes that don’t fit or get worn to eventually donate away.  Heck, I lived almost seven months in the 8×12 foot camper and didn’t really miss anything left in the 5th-wheel.  Yet it sure is nice to have more space.  I’m pretty sure I could adjust to living in something in between the two sizes.  And that brings me to, do I sell one or both?

I’m struggling to adjust to the wonky signal where I live, never consistent but mostly slow and intermittent even with the booster.  Facebook is pissing me off by making it difficult to see what friends are really posting as I have little control over who and what I see on my newsfeed.  Most recent doesn’t really mean a thing when asking to see what ‘friends’ are posting.

hoodoos Pink Cliffs Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahThat, along with still adjusting to a 40-hour work week which really cuts into leisure time.  Don’t get me wrong, I love my job.  But I do get spoiled during winter when I don’t work.  Then I don’t have to think much about what time I get up in the morning or how I’m dressed.

Female Park Ranger uniformsActually, wearing a uniform is a no brainer.  Just take the next one out of the closet and make sure they’re clean.  But sizes keep changing.  Is it me?  Plus the uniform style is even finally changing a bit, not quite so military looking, which is what the uniform has been based on for 100 years.  Last major design change was in the 1970s so it’s past time.  Starting to be more comfortable with durable fabrics.  Still the “green and gray” with some practical diversity in hats, though we still wear the iconic ‘flat-top’.

moon rise Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

light & shadow hoodoos valley Earth Shadow moon Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahI endeavor to adjust the PhotoPills app for photographing the sun and moon as they rise and set, time and direction.  The night before actual full moon I walked down a ways on the Two Bridges side of the Navajo Loop trail.  Timing would be moon rise just after sunset, and that way it’s light enough not to use a tripod.  Sadly, the app was way out of calibration and I missed the moon at the horizon while looking too far north.

bride & groom hoodoos Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahI was also distracted by a bride and groom photoshoot.  They walked down several switchbacks with her in 2” heels.  I held my breath but she did fine.

Part of working means weekends for weekly chores when I try to adjust to shopping in more than the local, not quite adequate, tiny towns.  I see an hour and a half drive to Cedar City happening this week.  Even though an exhausting, to me, all day affair, I won’t have to shop like that again for another month.  I’m not keen on shopping or big towns.

Ranger Gaelyn Bryce Canyon National Park UtahAnd I’m really glad not to be the boss who’s been busting butt making adjustments on schedules, sometimes more than once per pay period (two weeks), to accommodate changes and safely put us in the field doing programs.  I’ve roved along the rim being available to the few visitors I see.  One day I hung out near Sunset Point with a view down the Wall Street side of the Navajo Loop trail, behind tables answering questions and giving several 5-minute abbreviated hoodoo geology talks.  We aren’t advertising Ranger talks, yet.

We spend a couple hours at a time just outside the visitor center staffing an information area surrounded by tables.  Plus we track entry and exit into the building with a limitation of 40 people using restrooms or (hopefully) making purchases from our partner history association.  We’d rather be outside than in, unless the weather is nasty.

light & shadow hoodoos Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahIt’s been darn near impossible making adjustments to the changing weather in the last week.  Hot in the 80s isn’t normal for early June at 8000 feet.  Neither is rain almost like monsoon season which typically doesn’t begin until July.  Then spring wind brought bitter cold from the northwest with a couple nights below freezing.  I had to turn the water off so the hose wouldn’t freeze.  And one morning it snowed a little, just flurries at the visitor center but visitors spoke of rain, sleet, and snow getting here.

Pink Cliffs valley Earth Shadow moon Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahEveryone here is making adjustments at Bryce Canyon National Park including visitors as there is still no food services except snacks at the general store, no overnight accommodations except the recently opened Sunset campground by reservation only, and no backcountry permits issued.

last light Table Cliff Plateau Earth Shadow sunset clouds Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park UtahYet with all the current COVID19 restrictions and adjustments by everyone, I spoke with three young people in one day who want to be Park Rangers.  A young man who is studying biology, a young woman who is working on an entomology project in southern Utah, and another young woman who will start college in the fall and wanted to know how to become a Ranger.  How cool is that?

15 UT COVID19 risk gauge-low-1

Garfield County, Utah, where most of Bryce is located, is currently in the yellow, was orange when I arrived last month.  Although all reports read differently it seems numbers are up.  I’ll just keep wearing that awful mask.          https://coronavirus-download.utah.gov/business/Yellow/Utahs_Low_Risk_Phase_Flyer_English.pdf

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02 June 2020

Officially in uniform at Bryce Canyon

masked Ranger Gaelyn Sunset Point Bryce Canyon National Park UtahLast Monday I went to work officially in uniform at Bryce Canyon and I was glad to start at the end of the holiday weekend when the crowds were thinning.  After working two days I had three days off to take care of my own business.

That first day off started as a clusterfuck.  In the morning while I was thinking about all that had to be done to unpack the small camper and where I should go to grocery shop—30 mins, 1 1/2 or 2 hours away from Bryce Canyon—my boss called needing me to sign a teleworking agreement, that should have been done weeks ago, or I wouldn’t get paid.  So I rushed to admin to take care of that.  When I returned home I noticed water dripping from under the front of the 5th-wheel.  Turned out the washer hook up in the closet was leaking.  Fortunately it hadn’t been for long so the carpeting on the floor was only damp.  I turned off the water outside, opened the faucets, took the cap off and added teflon tape.  That seems to have done the trick.  In the process I was in the storage basement looking for a turn-off valve to that source, and there isn’t one even at the T-junction I found under the bathroom sink.  That turned into moving a lot of things around in the basement that basically wasn’t organized from last falls move when many people were helping me get packed.  Then that lead to finally hooking up the sewer hose.  And when I took the cap off to put on the hose, gray water jettisoned in my face as I struggled to get the hose on.  Seems the valves were left open.  My bad for not looking.  Thank goodness it wasn’t the black water.  Yet still not the best water for a morning shower, which is what I did next but with clean hot clean water.

The Big Fish restaurant Panguitch UtahThe second day off proved much better even if I had to drive to Panguitch, only 30 minutes away.  I finally got a haircut!  Lost about eight inches and feel a whole lot better.  Went to lunch at the Big Fish, a hairdresser recommendation, and enjoyed a huge plate of fish and chips.  Tables were at a more than acceptable 10 feet apart.  They sometimes serve catfish on Friday’s so I’d like to go back.  Picked up a RV water pressure valve as I think the city water at Bryce Canyon is way over pressured and may be causing problems.  Then groceries at the little-too-tiny store to get everything on my list.

Sierra cat on desk Bryce Canyon National Park UtahThird day off I did more chores and moved more stuff out of the little camper.  I’m still not quite done and need to vacuum it something terrible.  Everything is fuzzy with Sierra cat hair.  Really need to come up with a small vacuum that can handle both our hair.

plaza info tables Bryce Canyon National Park UtahReturning to work, my Monday on Saturday, the schedule had me roving at Sunset Point, an overlook in Bryce Canyon.  Except right now we are table roving in order to keep physical distance which means setting up folding tables to create a barrier.  Enjoyed two hours of hanging out, answering questions, and gave four condensed 5-minute hoodoo geology talks.  Made contact with 102 visitors and only had to ask one to step back out of my space.

plaza Natural History Association sales area Bryce Canyon National Park UtahAfter lunch I returned to the visitor center to cover for others’ lunch in the outdoor plaza and was still there when a huge monsoon-like storm kicked up causing a quick shut down of outdoor activities.  Yet we still had to limit people in the visitor center to 40.  That proved interesting because of course, everybody wanted in out of the rain.  Lightning and thunder were within three to 10 miles for a couple hours.  Being set up outside for information means setting tables, covers, and maps under popup canopies every morning and taking them down every night.  Plus the History Association offers products both outside and in and we try to help them with set up and break down also.

The next day I helped open our info station and staffed it for several hours.  Although all us Rangers are glad to be at Bryce Canyon and working, we all miss being in the field, roving for real, answering questions, and presenting programs about the park.  I did take advantage of some afternoon office time to rework my Grand Staircase geology talk, and hope that I can give that 20 minute talk in the future.

buck Mule deer through RV window Bryce Canyon National Park UtahNot taking many photos, other than the phone, because I’m not getting out much other than the visitor center.  But I did have a visitor nearby the RV worthy of a few pictures, munching away about 30 feet from my door.

Changes continue to occur daily in Bryce.  Monday afternoon the shuttle buses started running the amphitheater overlooks loop.  They are limited to 20 passengers with an attendant onboard and the driver is in a plexiglass box.  It was a pretty quiet day and the parking lots didn’t fill so was good practice.  I am happy it’s not overly busy but it does feel good to be officially in uniform at Bryce Canyon.

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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.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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