July 14, 2013
We have left Monument Valley and we are now in Tucson. But the last day we were in Monument Valley we took a tour back into areas of the valley we had not seen before. We had a Navajo guide and we saw arches and rock formations not on the self-guided road access. We also saw petroglyphs.
The picture on the left is a Navajo woman who was sitting in a tradition hogan demonstrating rug weaving and preparation of the wool into yarn for weaving the highly prized authentic Navajo rugs. She spoke Navajo and it was translated by our guide. The wool for the rugs is from the sheep they still raise on their land.
At the visitor's center we enjoyed watching a couple of dancers decked out in colorful ceremonial garb dancing to Navajo music.
The dancer's costumes had little metal pieces sewn into them and when they danced they create a jangle matching the beat of the music. The beautiful background of monument valley, the dancers and traditional Navajo music, all helped create a very special sunset.
This last picture is taken at a placed called John Ford Point. He was the director of the famous John Wayne westerns filmed in Monument Valley. They say he would go out to the point every morning to sit and overlook the valley and think about the day ahead and how he would shoot the scenes for the movie that day. Today there is almost always a Navajo man on a horse who goes out and sits on the point for photographs - $2.00 to take his picture.
We will be in Tucson for a week or so to visit with Scott and have some fine tuning done to our motor home. It's a little warm here, but I like Tucson. We're going to check out a photographic museum on the campus of U of A tomorrow.
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Sunday, July 7, 2013
MONUMENT VALLEY
We're staying in this area for four days.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
ARCHES AND CANYONS
July 6: Today we drove into Canyonlands National Park. This is a view down into an area of the canyons where you can drive down into it. Notice the car driving on the dirt road in the photograph. It is over 1600 feet down a sheer cliff if you don't pay attention and drive off the road. (Not a good time to be text messaging.) You can see the road at the bottom of the canyon as well. We didn't take this road because our little car doesn't have four wheel drive or a very high clearance.
Scenic drive, Canyonlands National Park |
This is a picture from a point where you can see the Green River that helped carve out this area of the park. The Green River meets up with the Colorado River within the park and is a popular place for whitewater rating because at the confluence the rivers create a lot of turbulence. You can see a dirt road along the white rim of the canyon. The road stretches 100 miles along the rim and takes about 2-3 days to traverse. The area is really awe inspiring because it is just so vast and extreme.
Green River Overlook, Canyonlands National Park |
Tomorrow we will leave the Moab area and travel south to Monument Valley.
Friday, July 5, 2013
4TH OF JULY
Parade participant |
July 4, 2013
Yesterday was the 4th of July. We're in the small town of Moab, Utah. So we decided to take in the small town atmosphere and go to the local parade. The parade circled around the little city park just off the main street. It was a slice of Americana. After the parade, there was a band playing patriotic marches in the gazebo while children played in the grass or ate snow cones and cotton candy. There was a watermelon seed spitting contest, a dunk tank and pony rides.
In the evening we went back to Arches National Park to hike up to a view point and see the show piece of the park, Delicate Arch. It was 100 degrees during the day and it was still pretty warm for the hike up. It was only a mile and a half, but it was a climb. We made it there for sunset along with lots of other folks. A photograph doesn't really do the scene justice because it's hard to get a perspective of how large the arch is or how precipitous its perch is on the edge of a sandstone cliff.
In this picture I used a wide-angle lens so you can see the people around the arch and get an idea of how large the arch is. One day, this arch will fall as wind and rain continue to erode the sandstone. There are many other arches in the park in various stages of development and deterioration.
Tomorrow evening we'll go back to Arches and explore the "Devil's Garden" area of the park.
Thursday, July 4, 2013
SUNRISE AND SUNSET ON THE ROCKS
Canyon Lands National Park is known as "Utah's Grand Canyon." This picture was taken at a famous location known as Dead Horse Point. Legend has it that cowboys back in the 1800's used the point to catch wild horses. With sheer cliffs on all sides and an access on 30 yards wide, it was a perfect place to herd wild horses. The drop from the top of the cliff where we were standing, to the bottom is 2,000 feet. At the bottom you can see the Colorado River as it turns the bend. It was a beautiful place to watch the sunset last night.
Sunset at Dead Horse Point, Canyon Lands National Park |
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