Summer 2008 Trip: Day 24 – Frisco, UT and Zion National Park

The plan initially was to hit the road at 8am, but due to our really late night thanks to the traffic jam on the way back from Salt Lake last night, we decided to put it off until 9am, which turned out to be 10am in the end.

No matter though, we hit the road, our first stop was the old mining town (now a ghost town) of Frisco, UT. The mine at Frisco pulled over $60 million in minerals out of the ground and boasted a population of 4,800. The town died in the early 1900s when the mine caved in. All that remains now are several kilns, a cemetery and a few ruins.

Then it was on the road to Zion, we popped into the parks for a few minutes in order to find a spot for a sunrise photo, after coming back out and doing a bit of research on the internet, we think we’ve found a spot called Towers of the Virgin.

Day 24 - Hill AFB to Frisco, UT to Zion National Park

Travel Distance: 397 miles

Summer 2008 Trip: Day 23 – Hill AFB Aerospace Museum, The Bayou and Keys on Main

After a couple hard days, it was nice to sleep in a little bit – until 10am anyways. Not a particularly busy day really, I spent quite a bit of the day working on processing photos from Arches National Park (I’m actually almost done…). Around 3:30pm, I realized that the Hill AFB Aerospace Museum closed at 4:30, so if my dad and I were going to make it, we had to head there ASAP. We ended up with about half an hour to poke around, and we’ll probably be heading back for some more photos on Monday when we get back from Zion and Bryce.

In the evening, we headed to The Bayou, a cajun restaurant with an absolutely amazing beverage selection. Their beverage menu had over 250 different options on it in fact. We wrapped up our evening by heading to Keys on Main, a piano bar. It was my first time in a piano bar, and I will say that it was nice. The singing wasn’t that great and the “dueling” was non-existent, but it was still fun.

Well, the evening was fun until we got on I-15N from Salt Lake back to Hill AFB. Then we set in a traffic jam for an hour and a half as the road was closed from 10:30pm-6am daily. So, the great state of Utah, instead of simply closing off one or two of the lanes at a time, closes the entire road. At one point we timed it, and covered 3/10 of a mile in half an hour. Just another reason to wonder what the people running this state are thinking.

Summer 2008 Trip: Day 22 – Arches, Canyonlands, Roosters

Last night’s post was really lame, but I was incredibly tired, so I forgive myself.

This morning my dad and I woke up at a quarter to 5 in order to get out to Arches National Park and hike up to our vantage point overlooking Delicate Arch. And, as the sun started to rise, the bane of my enjoyment of national parks appears. No less than 15 people are swarming over the arch I wanted to shoot before the sun is even over the horizon. Standing around it, laying underneath it, sitting down and leaning against it. Of course, I was well out of earshot from them, seeing as I was using a telephoto for the shot. So, we waited, and waited. We were there for a good two hours and I never could get the shot I wanted. The few decent shots I may have gotten occurred when people would wander “behind” the arch (at least from my perspective they were behind it), hiding their bright white or yellow t-shirts from my lens.

And to be honest, they weren’t the worst folks that I encountered at Arches (and several of the other national parks). At one point, we stumbled upon a tour group of 50 sitting and laying around under one of the more popular arches, only moving once a fellow photographer approached them and asked them to (after having waited 20 minutes for them to move off on their own). Then there’s the couple who couldn’t walk half a mile without needing to stop at the end of the short hike (again, directly underneath a very popular arch) and consume their bag of Cheetos for half an hour. (I never did get my shot at that location.) The lack of etiquette and common sense at how to avoid ruining a visit for other people is just astounding. And it isn’t just at Arches; when I was in Rocky Mountain National Park, a man felt the need to approach to within five feet of a trio of big horn sheep in order to get a nice up close picture of them, much to the annoyance of a group of 30 tourists he stepped in front of and myself, since he happened to fill most of the frame in my viewfinder.

Oh well though, enough ranting. After Arches this morning, we headed to the Needles district of Canyonlands National Park, having been to the Islands in the Sky district on Tuesday afternoon. It was a completely different environment than we’d seen then. Well, not completely different, it was still a desert with rock formations. But the formations were totally different. Islands of the Sky was mesas and buttes, Needles was mostly spires and mushroom looking formations. Very cool and unworldly.

About 2pm, we hopped back in the car for our trip back north to Hill AFB, meeting my brother, his wife and a couple of his friends at Rooster’s for a little food and some time hanging out.

Tomorrow, picture processing and hopefully, Hill’s Air and Space Museum.

Day 20 - Moab, UT and Canyonlands National Park

Travel Distance: 409 miles

Summer 2008 Trip: Day 21 – Arches National Park

Started the morning at 5am and hit the road to Arches National Park (about 5 miles up the road) in order to get some sunrise photos. Turned out to be a gorgeous sunrise and it looks like I got some great shots. My Dad and I came back to the hotel and showered while my mom got ready. We were actually in the park at a fairly reasonable time and walked… I don’t even know how far. At one point the thermometer in the Jeep hit 103, but as they say, at least it was a dry heat.

After somewhere around 250 pictures, 15 hours and 3 liters of water, we have retreated to a hotel room so we can get up again tomorrow and take some more pictures.

Summer 2008 Trip: Day 20 – Canyonlands National Park

The plan was to hit the road at 9am this morning headed to Arches and Canyonland National Parks. Well, when you’re traveling with my mom, 10am isn’t too bad. Though she was up late ironing for some reason. (Who irons on vacation?)

311 miles later or so, we pulled into Canyonlands National Park for a gorgeous afternoon of shooting pictures. Due to the failure of my voice activated lightstand (and my failure to bring along one of the regular type) I didn’t get a photo of myself standing on the rim of a canyon, but, c’est la vie. Definitely a gorgeous park.

Sunset was spectacular, though we missed shooting in it because we were on our way to Arches National Park in what was left of the light trying to figure out where we wanted to be for sunrise. We’ve got a decent place scoped out, so hopefully that pans out. And now… definitely bedtime.

Day 20 - Moab, UT and Canyonlands National Park

Travel Distance: 402 miles