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Stomping the Desert. Again.   

Posted by Xeric - Jul 22, 2012 - 8:05am
My friend Dan and I know the quote through Edward Abbey, and Abbey apparently rather Biblified the language, but it was, it turns out, Friedrich Nietzsche who said that "if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you."  Neither Dan nor I have ever been much at resisting that temptation:

Desert12 01
Desert12 01

Oh, we found an abyss, all right, a wonderful one, new to us both, a fantastic introduction (way better, than, say, Dan's luggage going on walkabout on the way to Montana) to our latest desert stompings.  This is . . . you know, I'm not going to tell you.  If you'd really like to know, ask.  No sense blabbing it to the riffraff.  It's somewhere in Utah.  It is, in any case, a delightful spectacular uncrowded spot, and a great place for the obligatory self-portrait-in-shadow-(with-rainbow) shot:

Desert12 03
Desert12 03

We stayed there two nights—two long, silent nights, one of the magical things about this place being that it is, somehow, unbelievably, miraculously, NOT under a commercial jet flight path.  Such silence.  Such blissful silence.  Then on down the road, southward, to a different sort of rock:

Desert12 13
Desert12 13

The next morning, Dan inspects the local scenery (see him out there?) and finds it to be quite large:

Desert12 17
Desert12 17

Then down the road again, this time to the Hole in the Rock road, across the Grand Staircase-Escalante (or Grand Staircase Grand Staircase, according to Dan's translation of the Spanish) National Monument.  Gus discovered that treed lizards will stay treed forever as long as you don't blink,

Desert12 19
Desert12 19

we abandoned one campsite for excessive numbers of ants and cow pies but blundered in the dark into an excellent alternative

Desert12 20
Desert12 20

in vast, vast country.  How vast?  See two giant white Ford diesel pickups in this shot?  They're in there. You might have to click through to the larger version:

Desert12 21
Desert12 21

At the end of the Hole in the Rock Road (57 miles of good gravel, bad gravel, good dirt, bad dirt, and occasionally pretty damned bad dirt, in that order, from the highway at Escalante, Utah) is, duh, Hole in the Rock.  A testament to Mormon perseverance and ingenuity, or to full-blown religion-driven insanity, or both, this is a crack in the rock which Mormon "pioneers" "improved" (blasting, carving steps, setting timbers) to the point at which they could (successfully! miraculously!) get 80+ wagons, many people, and a lot of cows and horses down to and across the river and over to Bluff.  What remains is one amazing, challenging hike, with a lovely swim in "Lake" Powell at the cool and easy end and a shadeless sunblasted white-rock furnace at the hot and difficult one.  So well worth it.  Gus did incredibly well.  Photo credit to Dan.  Dan is an excellent photographer and can no more capture the verticality of a shot like this than can anybody else.  It's freaking steep.

Hole In Rock Dan
Hole In Rock Dan

(And this is out of order, but I have to put this photo in: Gus, altogether amazing—"the best dog everrrrr," according to Dan—did have one episode in which his feet just got too hot to walk anymore.  So I carried him . . .)

Desert12 44
Desert12 44

And, in fact, with that interruption in the such-as-it-was narrative, I'm going to call this entry long enough.  There are a bunch more photos in a set on Flickr, and I'll be happy to explain/excuse/exaggerate as you might like on any of those photos if you post requests for same here.

For almost twenty years my good friend Dan and I have stomped our good desert.  All parties concerned are older, somewhat the worse for wear, and damned fine, thank you!

No, wait.  One more.  Gus, the Lizard King:

Desert12 30
Desert12 30


15 comments on this journal entry.    [ add yours ]
hobiejoe
Oh Lord above, send down a dove; With wings as sharp as razors; To cut the throats of them mean blokes; That sells bad beer to sailors.
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Location: Still in the tunnel, looking for the light.


Posted: Aug 6, 2012 - 1:10pm

It is.
 
And yes, it does.
Rod
On safari
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Location: Santa Barbara, CA


Posted: Aug 2, 2012 - 11:50pm

We didn't get out to Hole in the Rock, but we just got home yesterday from 2-1/2 weeks out on the Colorado Plateau. Grand Cyn, Cyn de Chelly, Bandelier, Santa Fe, Ghost Ranch, Durango, Capitol Reef. We also camped a few nights above Escalante in our favorite little secret, and spent a beautiful night in Bluff too. Witnessed a few awesome thunder storms and some amazing starry nights too!

Thanks for sharing the beautiful photos and your trip!
dave_porter
Everybody's got to have a dream to help them make it down the stream
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Posted: Jul 26, 2012 - 2:50am

Outstanding. {#Clap}

Love the pics, and yay for Gus!
Alexandra

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Location: PNW


Posted: Jul 24, 2012 - 9:13pm

Oh I do so look forward to your photo-journals of your excursions.
 
Utah just effin' ROCKS (no pun intended), and I hope to see way more of it, now that I live out west again. Glad you have a hiking buddy of 20+ years to share it with.
kurtster
Ignore the kitteh behind the kurtain
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Location: Back in Ohiya, for now ...


Posted: Jul 23, 2012 - 7:50pm

Thanks for sharing !

Great pics and info about the trip.
BlueHeronDruid

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Posted: Jul 23, 2012 - 1:16am

Gus is one lucky dawg. Wonderful!
MrsHobieJoe
Make tea, not war.
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Location: somewhere in Europe


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 9:15pm

To use my son's favourite word, awesome.
Beanie
Treat every day of your life like a precious gift.
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Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 5:23pm

Thank you for carrying Gus.  He's such a good boy, and I always worry about paw pads on our good friends when things get hot.  (Thanks goodness my furry friends have woods for their necessary time...)

Always appreciate accompanying you on your trips. 
Coaxial
SHINE ON
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Location: 543 miles west of Paradis,1491 miles east of Paradise


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 10:04am

You did not sit Gus in a tree...{#Snooty}

As always, as E posted, thanks for taking us along. Really good to see Gus enjoying himself. Beautiful shots of a beautiful slice of the world. {#Meditate}
justlistening
Did you hear that?
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Location: So. California


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:36am

Very nice shots and thanks for the narrative.  Just beautiful scenary.


Antigone

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Location: A house, in a Virginian Valley


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:29am

Thank you, thank you, as always, for taking us along.

I *heart* Gus.
Xeric
Oh! This!
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Location: Montana


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:29am

That's about as far from a beehive as you can get, OV!  You're seeing two ammo cans.  They contain what river people call "the groover."  Groovers were named before the ammo can came to be lined with a plastic tank, and—more to the point—before a toilet seat was mounted to the top of the can.  More than enough said, I suspect!  {#Wink}
oldviolin
ab origine
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Location: Esse Quam Videri


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:26am

great journal. Love seeing ol' Gus. That one camp pic looks like you brought your bee hive with you.{#Lol}
appy_monkey

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Location: between here and there


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:24am

Awesome.  Utah is magical.  Great photos!

—OCDHG
ditty
moving through the cosmos
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Location: trying to be in my head


Posted: Jul 22, 2012 - 8:18am

excellent!