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Category: Utah

04 October 2010

Hiking Navajo Loop (downhill) at Bryce Canyon

Mike & Gaelyn Navajo Loop trailhead Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

After spending a day touroning around all the overlooks at Bryce Canyon and looking down on the hoodoos, fins, windows, arches and bridges the next morning we took a trail into the canyon. 

map of Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

The Navajo Loop trail is only 1.3 miles (2 km) long with a 550 foot (167 m) drop in elevation.

Navajo Loop trail thru arch & surrounded by hoodoos from Bryce Point Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

The trail winds under arches of orange and yellow…

Hoodoos & windows along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

…past windows to a blue world…

Thors Hammer & hoodoos along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Thors Hammer

…and below towering hoodoos full of faces.

Switchbacks between fins & hoodoos on Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Then down switchbacks between the fins and into a different world.

Hoodoos above Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Almost eye level with this amazing geology. Hoodoo, a pillar of rock, or, to cast a spell, maybe both.         

Two Bridges just off Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Two Bridges

The oldest gray-brown rock at the bottom was deposited by repeated seaways during the Cretaceous Period between 144 to 65 million years ago.         

 Hoodoos & grotto along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

For the next 25 million years, in the Tertiary Period, rivers and streams flowed into an ancient freshwater lake and deposited iron-rich, limy sediments that became reddish-pink rocks, the Claron Formation, from which the hoodoos are carved.         

Winding between fins & hoodoos on Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

After uplift, the steep slopes along the plateau’s rim allow increased erosion scouring off softer rock, creating gullies with enough soil for pines and firs to reach for the sky.

Hoodoos & fins from Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

…and leaving harder rock as fins…

Hoodoos above Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

…which continue to erode into hoodoos…

Rhino head hoodoo along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

…of the most whimsical shapes.         

Hoodoos from Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Paiutes living in the area when settlers arrived from the east called hoodoos the “Legend People” whom Coyote had turned to stone.         

Hoodoos & beyond from Bryce Point Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Named after Mormon Ebenezer Bryce who built his home and ranch in the Paria Valley in 1875 with the canyons in his back yard.         

Hoodoos above Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

In 1923 President Harding proclaimed part of the area as Bryce Canyon National Monument and in 1928 legislation passed that changed it to a National Park.

Mike between the fins along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

After hiking down .7 miles (1.12 km) we began the assent into Wall Street.

 

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Bryce Canyon National Park, National Parks and Monuments, Utah geology, hiking, hoodoos, Navajo Loop trail 25 Comments
03 October 2010

Scenic Sunday – Hoodoo you think…

a1438 Hoodoo face along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon NP UT (1024x814)

The magic of hoodoos in Bryce Canyon National Park let the imagination soar. I felt an ancient presence of peace surround me.

Hoodoo you see?

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To view more scenes, or to share your own, go to Scenic Sunday by clicking here.

02 Hoodoos along Navajo Loop trail Bryce Canyon NP UT (1024x768)

To view more of the hoodoo magic come back tomorrow for My World Tuesday.

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Bryce Canyon National Park, Scenic Sunday meme, Utah 15 Comments
25 September 2010

Bristlecone Loop trail – Bryce Canyon National Park Day 1

Map of Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

After checking into our room at Bryce Canyon National Park we drove to the end of highway 63 to Rainbow Point above the Pink Cliffs and walked the 1 mile (1.6 km) Bristlecone Loop trail.

View from Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Fir trees dominate the forest here thriving in heavy snow and extreme temperatures.

Young Bristlecone Pine along Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Out on the point, where soil becomes thin and exposure is more severe bristlecone pines survive.

Bristlecone along Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Bristlecone pines are among the oldest living organisms on earth. The oldest living tree called “Methuselah” is 4,765 years old and lives in a secret location in the White Mountain range of eastern California.

Dead Bristlecone, hoodoos, Navajo Mt from Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Bristlecones often die one part at a time. When the roots become exposed they dry out and die as does the tree connected above while the remainder of the tree will continue to live.

Mike by young Bristlecone Pine along Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

The tree is also noteworthy because the needles stay on the limb for over 40 years, unlike most other pines, which shed their needles every few years. This is important, because the tree can go through periods when it does not grow at all.

Grand Staircase to ESE from Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

Besides feeling humbled by these ancient trees, the vast millions of years old landscape made me feel very small.

Solitude quote by Thoreau Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

This quote was posted at the overlook. Thoreau said it well.

Eye-like galleries along cliff face from Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

As the eye-like galleries watched on paying no attention to time.

Dead Bristlecone against sky along Bristlecone Loop trail Bryce Canyon National Park Utah

And the sun shone overhead.

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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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