Travelogue - Lake Powell

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  • 05-30-2006, 08:02 AM
    walterick
    1 Attachment(s)
    Travelogue - Lake Powell
    I am riding in the back of a Navajo woman’s pickup truck.

    She is driving me through the desert in the northwest corner of the Navajo reservation, near Lake Powell, Arizona.

    Allow me to tell you the rest of the story of how I arrived here.
  • 05-30-2006, 08:06 AM
    walterick
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    This is the beginning of my Lake Powell Travelogue from President's Day weekend this past February. I am posting it here to encourage myself to finish it :) If I know people are waiting it may encourage me to finish writing it :)

    I'll post updates as I write them. It gets a little verbose but I hope someone will stick through and read it :D

    Here's a map so you can follow along:
  • 05-30-2006, 08:25 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    It is overcast this morning. It isn’t often that I awake to cloudy skies in Phoenix, but this morning we are blanketed in grey. Friends from the east coast arrived last evening, expecting sunny skies no doubt. Though we are apologetic for the overcast day, they hear nothing of it. 65 degrees and cloudy beats 25 degrees and sunny where they are from. Occasionally, I am reminded of just how much I love the weather out here.

    We are mid-way through a remodeling project at home. At stake are the futures of two recently-erected stone columns that we have decided to make in our kitchen. 8 feet in height, they reach from floor to ceiling. And you either love them or hate them. I say “stone” columns, what I am referring to is “faux” stone, a kind of concrete molded into shapes that lend themselves easily to home projects, such as this one. Cheaper and easier to install than real stone, they were an easy decision for our newest kitchen upgrade. Whether or not they will be voted down remains to be seen.

    “I just don’t know,” says my partner of the bold pair of custom columns. “We’ll see.” It was not easy building stone columns. If you’ve not been through the hassle of applying mortar mix to the back of concrete stones, slapping them on a frame and praying to god that they don’t slip overnight; grouting the spaces between the stones a day later with grout that may be the wrong color, wiping it from your face and getting it in your hair; don’t. Use the phone book and find someone who knows what they are doing. We have been working on these columns for 2 weeks, and I am ready for a vacation.

    I was hoping for gorgeous weather this morning, the day of my trip up north. But grey skies in Phoenix are not the largest of my concerns. The forecast for Page, Arizona and Lake Powell has turned from sunny and clear to rainy and snow. “What are you going to do?” my partner asks, with a concerned look in her eyes. “It’s only a 40% chance,” I say. “I am still going to go.”

    “You could always go to Joshua Tree,” her friend chimes in. Joshua Tree National Park is an enticement inside the California border. It has been on my To-Do List for years. I admit to myself that Joshua Tree sounds like a feasible option in light of the recent weather development. Her friends are already concerned that they are forcing me out of the house. I am not about to cancel my trip. But I must admit that making the drive west to California has been the backup trip all along in my mind. “No, I want to go,” I say. “If it’s horrible, I’ll just day trip further away from the weather until I get to sunny skies.” This seems to satisfy everyone’s worries. At least on the exterior.

    I pack my pickup truck under the blanket sky and wonder if my girlfriend and her friends are right. The forecast for Joshua Tree National Park in southern California is sunny and clear. Rain and snow await me in northern Arizona. It isn’t too late for me to change my mind.

    I bid my last farewells, hop in the truck and decide to set out for snow and the upper reaches of Arizona state.
    __________________________________________________ ___________________________

    In Flagstaff, it is cold. Windy and cold. I am half way to my destination and the weather has not improved. I don’t want to admit that I was secretly planning to use Flagstaff as a weather barometer for the rest of my trip. I conveniently change my mind about that.

    Lunch is in a Sizzler just off the I40. I haven’t been in a Sizzler since I lived on the east coast. I munch selections from the salad bar and wonder what awaits me further north. Flagstaff is the midway point to the north. It is still rather cool, and I am debating my plans for the day. I want to get to Page before sunset, to catch the setting sun’s rays before the rain rolls in for the weekend. Though ugly here, I hope the weather up north is better.

    I pay the check and pull back onto the highway. It is still 2 to 3 hours to Page and the Lake Powell area. If I am to get there at sunset, I still have 5 hours to go. As I merge into traffic, I am beginning to change my mind. If it’s dark and dreary in Page, I don’t want to hurry up and get there just to sit in a hotel and curse at the weather. If it’s going to be raining there, why not do something fun while I’m here? As I pull onto Interstate 40, I pass a sign for Walnut Canyon. Juggling the options in my mind, I make myself a promise to make it to Page before sunset.

    I pass the exit for Page and continue east toward Walnut Canyon.
  • 05-30-2006, 08:41 AM
    walterick
    3 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    The sky is showing signs of clearing as I descend the steep set of stairs. I pass people on their way up taking pictures and I wonder if they are using their photography as an excuse to catch their breath. I am on the staircase that drops a 180 feet into Walnut Canyon. It is a long way down, but it is a longer way back up by the looks on their faces.

    I wonder if I was foolish to pack all this photography equipment into the canyon. I get many looks as I descend the stairs. Tripod in hand, a huge photo backpack weighing on my back. I have loaded the Mamiya with black and white film. I have color film too if it proves to be sunny. If it’s going to be flat and colorless, I am going to make the best of it. T-max is my film of choice. Not too punchy, not too flat. As a color landscape photographer I have been ignoring my black and white film for years now. I shoot color almost exclusively, except for the random black and white “conversion” done digitally in my computer. This day will be the beginning of my return to black and white, I have decided. With 2 film backs for the Mamiya I am able to carry both black and white and color film with me on treks. This advantage is one of the reasons I have been using my medium format rig almost exclusively for the last year. Before that, it was all 35mm. My Nikon gear still rides with me in my backpack, but I doubt that it will get any use today. Increasingly, I am focusing on my medium format work and leaving the 35mm for things I cannot do with the 645. I hope someday to rely exclusively on the medium format and have my 35mm system mainly for back-up; and for when Mamiya proves to be too heavy to carry long distances.

    I reach the bottom of the long staircase and turn around to gaze back up at the ledge above me. A sign is planted at the bottom of the staircase facing the opposite direction: “Long way up! Easy does it!” I wonder again if I am a fool for carrying this much gear into the canyon on a cloudy day. I turn around toward the canyon and follow a paved path around a bend. I look up and notice a thin streak of blue in the sky and wonder which direction that is in.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________

    There is something about ruins I find captivating. Archaeological ruins were something not found in the mountains of Virginia. They were “part of the west,” a mystery that I decided someday I would discover. How valuable it must be, to find a set of ruins, to stumble upon a thing of the past!

    As an Arizonan now, I find myself nearly tripping over them on every path I take. It is not quite that they are less special than before. Yet finding them over and over again, how does one set of ruins remain unique? On a trail in Sedona, there are ruins that you stumble upon as you reach the end of a canyon hike. They are not protected by walls or fences, simply a sign in front that reads: “It is a federal crime to destroy any archaeological ruin.” Apparently it works, they are as well preserved given their vulnerability to passersby.

    As I round the first corner of the Walnut Canyon trail, ruins lay before me. They are tucked neatly into the corner of a shelf that makes up one layer of the canyon’s geology. As I turn around and gaze, I see that there are similar ruins tucked into the corners of this layer of history all through the canyon. It seems nary an inch is not taken up by some dwelling or wall. It occurs to me that this was once a city. Full of people, just like our cities are today. They all had jobs to do. They had relationships, had children. They had meaning in life, I presume. Just like we. Or perhaps even more than we? I look up at the stone wall in front of me. How did they do that? I think of our own stone columns at home, and wonder how these indigenous people accomplished this. Did they use mud? What holds these stones in place? We used bags of grout and mortar, made in a factory and shipped to home supply stores where we buy it off a shelf. I look up and see hand prints in their mud, where their mortar mixture was pushed into place. Amazing. Their own mortar and brick work has lasted the ages, out here in the elements resisting the wind and rain, the snow and sun. I wonder if our own stone work will fare as well at home, subject only to grease fires and the occasional knock from a vacuum cleaner. I look at the handprint for a minute. In my mind’s eye I see a hand pushing it there, long lanky muscles wrapped in brown skin and black hair. I imagine he wears a loin cloth and sandles, shaping the wet mud with hands that knew exactly how to do it. I can see around him too, the rest of the village, people working and moving, life happening all around. I wonder if that’s how it was here. I start to have feelings of longing for this past that I have no memory of.

    I continue on the paved path through the canyon. A placard at the next set of ruins shows me that my imagination was accurate about how they dressed. They wore loin clothes around their waists, both men and women. Both sexes wore jewelry. Burial sites were found with human remains showing piercings through the ears and nose. How odd, I think, that they exhibited the same jewelry style as we, the 21st century people so proud of our taste and trends. How old our fashion trends are!

    I pull out the big camera and start setting up to take some shots. The lighting is not great here, nor are the compositions. But I begin firing off a few, mainly to record the time. A couple passes by slowly as I shoot, taking portraits of each other in the middle of my composition. Nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd, I think to myself. I wait patiently as they take their photography.

    “Taking some professional shots I see!” says the man of my professional-looking settup. “You never know!” I say honestly, shrugging my shoulders. “That’s right, isn’t it?!” he laughs, as they move on. One thing I have learned in my photography is never expect the best. The best comes to you when you are not expecting it, in the form of a rainbow, a sunset, or a secret out-of-the-way ruin that has alluded most other hikers. Always prepare for the worst, be it a rainy day, over-exposed rolls of film, or... grey skies on your vacation.
    ________________________________
    The trail takes me through several of the ancient dwellings as well as through the story of the lives of the Sinagua people. These people were given the name “sin aqua” later for the Spanish words for “without water.” Their civilization in this area has been traced back as far as 600 AD when farming families lived on the plateau around the canyon. Around 1100, the volcano we now call Sunset Crater erupted. It is around this time that the plateau inhabitants moved into the cliffs of Walnut Canyon. Their civilization in the canyon dates back to about 1120 AD, with no trace found after 1400 AD.

    Many of their dwellings were blown apart by relic hunters dynamiting their walls in the late 1800's. President Woodrow Wilson established the canyon as a national monument in November 1915, thereby ending the destruction by fortune seekers and opening the canyon up to explorers looking for things to do on cloudy days on their way up north to Lake Powell.
    __________________________________________________ __

    I make it around the trail loop and back to the base of the stairs. I glance up at the canyon shelf above me, and again at the growing streak of blue in the sky. That’s north, I think to myself. Maybe this vacation’s weather will work itself out after all. Only 3 hours left to the city of Page. I pass the sign as I begin my ascent back to the ledge. “Long way up! Easy does it!”
  • 05-30-2006, 09:36 AM
    walterick
    3 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    The snow-capped San Francisco Peaks wiz by on my left as I speed north on highway 89. My spirits are lifting as the clouds before me open up to reveal beautiful blue skies and ample sunlight. The sun’s rays passing through the remaining clouds capture my attention as my pickup clips off the miles to Lake Powell.

    My visit to Walnut Canyon has not taken too much time. I will keep my earlier promise to myself to make it to Page before sunset. The map shows me about to pass Sunset Crater which means the city of Page is only 2 hours beyond that. Yes, I will make it on time.

    Sunset Crater. I have not yet had the time to explore the road leading from Sunset Crater through the Wupatki National Monument. At about 20 miles in length, the loop road takes you past another point of interest on the map: Painted Desert Overlook, it says. While I have hiked the area around the volcano, I have not driven the rest of the loop toward Wupatki Monument and Painted Desert.

    The turnoff for Sunset Crater looms closer, and I find myself wondering if I have enough time to make it around the 20 mile loop and still get to Page before sunset. Page could be covered in clouds, after all. Wouldn’t it be a waste not to use this beautiful, clear weather to my advantage? 20 miles doesn’t seem that far, given that I am missing a stretch of 89 by taking the detour. Last minute decision - I wheel the truck into the turn lane and take the loop road past Sunset Crater. Page will still be there when I am done.
    ______________________________________

    Sunset Crater rises 1000 feet above the surrounding plain, teasing the adventurous hiker with walls that are forbidden from being climbed. The volcano erupted last in 1100, sending local residents scurrying for the shelter of Walnut Canyon, several miles to the south. The surrounding land is dappled with the black rock of volcano guts, hard and menacing and unappealing to the photographic eye. The volcano itself however is a thing of beauty, its black walls giving way to the color of life as small trees plant themselves and take hold. The volcano is tall, standing high above the plane; but stands a distant second to the towering San Francisco Peaks only a few miles to the west.

    The road past the volcano is tight and quick, the kind of road they build Lamborghinis for. My pickup handles the curves well enough; I fly through the gears trying to keep pace with the local traffic.

    I come to a stretch of road that leads beautifully in toward the painted desert. This must be the “vista” I saw on the map. I find a pullout at the right location and snap pictures of the road leading off into the desert. The wind howls around me as I wait for the shutter to fire.

    In a few more miles, I come to the Wupatki Monument. Dang, there is no ruin you can see from the road. I will have to pull off to do some exploring. Yet a quick look at the time tells me no - only a few more hours of daylight remain and I am still off track from my Lake Powell destination. My drive around Sunset Crater has been fun, and pretty, but it has cost me in time. Oh when will I stop second guessing my better judgement?! I pass the many entrances to the ruins and finish the scenic loop back to 89 north.

    I will really have to drive now.
  • 05-30-2006, 10:24 PM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    That's it for now. Real verbose, I know :D Congrats to anyone who stuck with it! I actually make it to Lake Powell eventually, believe it or not. I'll post more soon. Just happy to get some of it finally posted :)
  • 05-31-2006, 04:36 AM
    natatbeach
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    It only took you about 40 minutes to write the last one:D

    enjoyed reading...more pics please(love the saturation in the sky pics...)

    will look for the next installment of your journey----

    do you have pic of the columns---set up a survey on here we can all vote....
    still not sure the "path" I painted on our concrete is a winner in the hubby's eyes---since he said the same thing as your g.f. "we'll see"---

    "Ye of little faith" I say to them!!!! It's not our fault they can't see our vision----
    or that our creativity sometimes impairs us from seeing what they see.

    smooches
  • 05-31-2006, 06:51 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Hey Nat

    Actually, I was cutting and pasting from a Word document. But of course, I had to edit as I went!

    The columns are staying - at least for now! I hated the idea, but she wanted stone columns so we built them... now she hates them. Hey, it's a woman's job to change her mind, right?!

    I thought your paint job looked pretty cool! Tell Larry to have some artist love!

    Thanks,
    Rick
  • 05-31-2006, 08:49 AM
    natatbeach
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by walterick
    Hey Nat

    I hated the idea, but she wanted stone columns so we built them... now she hates them.

    I thought your paint job looked pretty cool! Tell Larry to have some artist love!

    go figure it was her idea...that's funny---I guess it is our jobs to change our minds often---and your jobs to just love us anyway:rolleyes: :D
  • 05-31-2006, 08:56 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Yes... if you ever want practice in love and patience try dating a woman while remodeling her house for her :D We're about 6 months into picking a paint color for the planter wall out back and about 1 month into picking a bathroom color :rolleyes:
  • 05-31-2006, 10:25 AM
    natatbeach
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by walterick
    if you ever want practice in love and patience try ....

    leaving Natalie alone at home with all the tools unpacked and a brcik patio she hates:idea:

    I am about half way done ripping out one section of a brick patio that the idiot that lived here lay down on dirt without anything under it...then in the spots where he decided to change the jack on jack pattern (not a real pattern in my opinion) he didn't cut smaller pieces to fit in instead he --used get this---white gravel with a mix of sand and dirt to fill---duh!!!!! :mad2:

    So I have been pulling up and hauling off bricks for two hours and every third or fourth brick the bricks are either falling appart or not brick just this gravel crap....

    I call Larry up because I took a piece of wood that was still in good condition from another ugly project he put together and he's freasking out a little bit ---he he he... anyway it's going to look nice when I'm done...----I'll stop chiut chatting on your thread don't want to break the continuity of it...sorry...
  • 05-31-2006, 10:43 AM
    ken1953
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Great story rick!!! and fond memories!!!! You wouldn't believe how many times I've travelled those roads, wishing I'd had a camera!!!! I have a sister that was born in Page (Wah Weap, actually...) hehe...she now lives in "Alaska" brr....go figure! hehe...
    I look forward to the continuing saga!!! hehe
    Ken
  • 05-31-2006, 11:11 AM
    another view
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Ahh, the solo road trip. A thing of beauty... Keep up with the writing, I'm ready for more!

    But Sizzler? Now that you're culinarily inspired, I'm waiting to see what happens on the next road trip. :biggrin5:
  • 05-31-2006, 12:06 PM
    Liz
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Wow! You're really quite the traveler. I enjoyed reading your travel essay. I found it good and quite interesting. I read all of it, some parts faster than others. The pictures are good too, Rick, but not enough of them. I'm waiting for more.

    Liz
  • 05-31-2006, 12:20 PM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by natatbeach
    ----I'll stop chit chatting on your thread don't want to break the continuity of it...sorry...

    I bated you with that "love and patience" line don't worry :)

    Hurry up and get all your projects done before the new wears off! In another year or so you'll be dreading working on that place!
  • 05-31-2006, 12:25 PM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Thanks guys! Glad a few people made it through :)

    Liz, you're right, I should be putting more pictures in there. Seeing as I don't have many more, I should stop typing so much to make it seem like there are more photos :)

    Ken, it is beautiful country up there! I can't wait to go back. As you'll (eventually) read, the real estate up there is in the dirt. I saw a fixer-upper for sale for $60,000 :D Would love to buy a condo in Page for renting and vacations.

    Steve - I know I committed a cardinal sin by going to Sizzler. But it was so tempting as I hand't seen one in years. Next time, something local, I promise :D
  • 05-31-2006, 12:39 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    I am not reading that much, so put more image in it .
  • 06-01-2006, 05:11 AM
    greghalliday
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Walnut Canyon was surprisingly cool to me the first time I went there. Basically it was a side trip on my way back home from an ACLS class in Flagstaff. The ruins on the main trail are nice, but I hear that if you can get permission to do some bushwhacking around in the canyon, there are many more spectacular ruins to be seen. Also, if you like ruins, try Grand Gulch in SE Utah. It has kind of been "discovered" as of the past few years and I think that now you need a permit to enter the area, but nowhere else is there such a concentration of well preserved Ancestral Puebloan ruins to be found anywhere in the U.S.

    Look on a map. Take a few years to explore the San Rafael Swell area of Utah (basically everything from east of I-15 to the LaSals and south of I-70 to the Grand Canyon. It is my second favorite place on Earth (the Wasatch mountains being first of course). This is high desert REMOTE wandering at it absolute best.
  • 06-01-2006, 05:15 AM
    greghalliday
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Oh, I forgot. As soon as I can get my old scanner hooked up, I will post a picture of an area near my current residence (notice I don't call it "home") called Three Turkey Ruins. Everyone has seen the pictures of White House Ruins in Canyon de Chelly. Let me promise you that Three Turkey is better preserved, larger, and in a much more spectacular setting. And it will likely remain unspoiled given the fact that it is in absolute B.F.E. If you want to go see it, let me know.
  • 06-01-2006, 06:57 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Greg, thanks for the recommendations. I would love to find some new spots to play in. And when you get that picture scanned, send it to me I'd love to see it :)

    Thanks
    Rick
  • 06-04-2006, 07:56 AM
    brianc
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    An old fashion Travelogue, Nice! Travelogues were my introduction to photography. When I was a kid my grandfather would take me to the high school to see the travelogues that the rotory club put on. we'd sit on old wood chairs and watch the slide show from far off places and listen to the tales of history and adventure.

    thanks for reviving this memory. and I eagerly await the rest of your story.
  • 06-04-2006, 07:58 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Thanks Brian. That's a nice story you just shared.

    I look forward to writing the rest of it :)
  • 06-05-2006, 07:22 PM
    mjs1973
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    I finally made the time to sit down and read your travelogue Rick, and I'm glad I did. It makes me want to do it myself. One day this spring I went and sat next to a pond and waited for the sun to come up. Then entire time I was sitting there, I was thinking about how I would describe, in writing, what I was seeing and feeling. I had the enitre story written in my head. When I got home, I started typing it out with the intention of creating a thread like this. It just wasn't the same as it was while I was sitting next to the pond. I never did finish it, and those vivid memories are now all but gone. Oh, I still remember the day, but the sounds, sights and most importantly, the things that were going through my mind at that time that made it such a great moment for me, are now all but gone. Next time I get the idea to do that, I'll take a notebook or a small tape recorder with me. :)

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us in this format. It's an inspiration for me to make an effort to do it in the future.

    Ready for more now! :D
  • 06-05-2006, 11:16 PM
    ladybugamanda
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Great story, great pictures!!! I grew up in Payson - Hwy 87 - between Phx and Payson is very scenic. We are planning a road trip to Payson, the Grand Canyon and points in between this summer.
  • 06-05-2006, 11:25 PM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Mike,

    I'm glad you found the time to sit and read it. I like even better that it inspired you :) Believe you me, I was writing it in my head as it was happening too. And it took lots of effort to get myself to sit down and write it out after the trip. It can be very difficult to put thoughts into similar-feeling words on paper. Your idea of carrying a recorder is a good one. I may borrow that idea next trip.

    I took that trip in February, and 4 months later I haven't even gotten to Lake Powell yet :D
  • 06-05-2006, 11:27 PM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Thanks Amanda!

    I've made it up to Payson a few times. Beautiful country up there. One of the best kept secrets in Arizona, I believe. Not many folks think "green" when they think of this state!

    I would love to read a travelogue of your trip this summer!

    Rick
  • 06-06-2006, 12:34 PM
    walterick
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Your guys' encouragement has inspired me to keep writing. Guess what?! I actually make it to the lake in this one :D
    ___________________________________

    The miles race by as I tear north on highway 89. It is going to be close. I am trying to make it to the lakeside by sunset. I fear this sunny afternoon will be my last chance to take good photography for the whole weekend. There is a front moving in bringing rain and snow with it.

    In the dashboard, the miles roll by.

    I enter the Navajo Reservation. I am astounded by the simple beauty of their land. In many places the highway is hugged on either side by funny-shaped rocks smooth in appearance and colorful in pallet. Very photogenic, I think, whizzing by at speed. I would have time to stop and photograph them if only I hadn’t driven that loop!

    Reaching the northern bounds of the state, the small colorful rocks suddenly become the Echo Cliffs. Astounded I am, leaning over the steering wheel and gaping up at these beautiful cliffs of stone. If only I had time to play in them! But the sun is dropping dangerously low in the sky, pushing me forward in fear of arriving at night. I leave the cliffs staring, unphotographed, down at my truck as I push toward Page. But my, they are worth the look.

    Where alternative route 89A branches off from its main artery, 89 makes a sharp turn east and starts climbing. I am aware that I am climbing the same cliffs that had captured my attention over the last 30 miles. Antelope pass takes me through a wall of red rock and I come out on the other side on the Kaibito Plateau. From here, the layout of the land is apparent. I see the Colorado River winding far below me in a canyon that cuts through green pasture. I also can see the sun’s proximity to the horizon - it is starting to set on me.

    25 miles to go. 89 travels down at this point, and I can see my first glimpses of water as I make my descent. Three huge smoke stacks loom on the horizon and I see a layer of yellow in the sky that turns me off. Why build a power plant in such a beautiful area?

    The traffic is moving too slow, and the sun is dipping too fast. Yet somehow, I come to the outskirts of Page. I wrestle my state atlas from the back and open it on the seat next to me. Lake Powell, it tells me, is across a bridge just north of the city. I cruise into the town trying to keep it near the 35 mph speed limit but I am anxious to get to the lake before the sun sets. Having never been to this town before I have no idea where the “spots” are. First lake turnoff, I say to myself. That’s my best bet rather than driving around searching for the perfect spot.

    Sunset is very close. I pass the turn for downtown Page and in a moment I am upon the bridge, the dam, and Lake Powell. I gaze toward the Lake as I crawl across the bridge at mandated 25 mph. It is beautiful! Sunset on the rocks, reflecting in the water. I’ve made it!

    Now, where to go? I have only minutes to find my spot. I have a real aversion to making photographic decisions on the fly like this. But, better to get something before the snow comes in. I come to the first turn that goes down to the Lake. Wahweap Marina, it says. Sounds good to me! I turn off 89 and blow through a pay station, slowing down just enough to make sure it is unattended. There, just past the entrance station is a small parking lot with a view of the rocks and the marina. The sun’s final rays are glowing off a huge rock sitting in the harbor, spilling its color all across the bay. Here is my spot.

    I park the truck, grab the camera bag and run into the scene. Turning knobs and eyeing compositions as I run, I come to the edge of a small shelf and plunk my tripod down in the sand. I quickly begin firing off shots, just happy for being able to do so.

    I am not getting the kinds of shots I wanted. But a part of me doesn’t care. It might take days of touring this area to find the perfect composition. I am happy to have seen the sun set on Lake Powell.
    ______________________________________________

    Back at the truck, I shut myself in and take a deep breath. It has been a long day. The pressure is gone. I’ve accomplished my goal. I say “thank you” to the travel gods for having given me a safe journey up here. I open my atlas again and see what else there is to do in this area. It says there’s a restaurant and water access ahead. I let my breath out, put the truck in gear and, more slowly this time, continue down the road.

    The sun has gone down. It is a little-known phenomenon in nature that after the sun sets, the shadow of the earth is cast upon its own atmosphere out in space, causing a dark shadow of blue to rise slowly in the east as the sun sinks further in the west. I think maybe I have time to capture this unique light. Pulling into what looks like a small resort area, I pull my camera gear out for one more spin. Here’s my chance to take my time and get it right.

    I wander around the buildings, passing a few people here and there, but largely it is deserted. I suppose not many people use the lake in the winter time. Though, it is beautiful.

    I round a corner and come upon a view of the marina. Wow, I think to myself. This is what I have been looking for. Out in the marina, a huge rock sits in the middle of pink sunset colors and house boats as the earth’s shadow looms low on the horizon. This is it. If I get these shots, my trip here is done.

    I set up my camera and begin taking pictures.
  • 06-06-2006, 12:45 PM
    walterick
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    A couple more shots.

    Edit: not uploading correctly will try again later.
  • 06-07-2006, 06:56 PM
    mjs1973
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Woohoo!!!! :thumbsup: You made it! I have been to Lake Powell twice now, but never came home with shots like this. When I think about Lake Powell, it always makes me wonder what we're missing. What spectacular landscapes are burried under all that water? :eek6:

    I wanna hear more. Where did you go next?
  • 06-08-2006, 07:54 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Well next I went...

    Oh, you almost got me! HA, you'll have to wait!

    ... and wait...

    That's a really interesting comment about the underwater landscapes. Maybe we chould petition to drain the lake and find out :D
  • 06-08-2006, 07:26 PM
    mjs1973
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by walterick
    That's a really interesting comment about the underwater landscapes. Maybe we chould petition to drain the lake and find out :D

    Wouldn't that be something!! After a couple trips to the desert SW and a bunch of Edward Abbey books later, it really makes me wonder what we have lost in the name of progress. Glen Canyon is always the first place that pops into my mind when I think about stuff like that. Don't get me wrong, I think the lake is beautiful, but I would rather be hiking in the canyon, than water skiing across the lake. Then again, maybe that's just because I don't have a boat! :rolleyes5:

    I have read and seen some images from some areas of the canyon that are becoming visible again as the water level in the lake drops do to drought. Some very beautiful places under all that water.
  • 06-30-2006, 07:48 AM
    walterick
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Well, believe it or not, I actually took the time last week to finish my story. Here it is, all the way to the end!

    Thanks to those who read and took the time to comment. I can't tell you how much I appreciate the support!

    Rick
  • 06-30-2006, 07:52 AM
    walterick
    3 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    The small, bedside alarm says 7:30 am. I stare out the hotel window from my position in bed. Can’t see much.

    I wonder if it snowed. Or if it’s raining. It looks overcast. Is that snow in the tree branches? How lucky I am to have gotten in my photography when I had the chance. Last evening may have been my final shot at decent lighting this whole weekend. I wonder what I will do for the next 2 days.

    I roll myself out of bed and crack my neck from side to side. Let’s see what the weather is doing out there. If it’s not too bad, maybe I could drive around town. My four wheel drive should be able to handle whatever snow has fallen. I creak up to the window to peer out.

    Just in time to see the sun rising on a gorgeous red mountain chain across the valley. No rain, no snow. No grey clouds. Just the sunrise on another beautiful Arizona day. I’ve been duped! I flip on the weather channel. Sunny, is the forecast. I feel a little sheepish for not having gotten up to see the sunrise now. Well, yipee!
    ______________________________

    It’s cold at Lake Powell. This isn’t the Phoenix weather I am used to. As I stand beside my camera on its tripod, waiting for the self timer to tick down, I shove my hands into my pockets. Twenty degrees! This is blasphemy!

    I have driven back to the marina to catch what’s left of the early morning light. I feel better for having missed the actual sunrise. I couldn’t have taken this cold. I adjust the aperture wheel on the Nikon and push the self timer button again. I bounce in place while waiting for the shutter to fire. Damn, it’s cold out here. I manage to fire off several frames of the lake in morning light before my tolerance for cold wears out. Well, it looks like sunny weather! The trade-off, it seems, will be the cold.
  • 06-30-2006, 08:05 AM
    walterick
    2 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    The Horseshoe Bend of the Colorado River is a place I have never been. I have seen it in photographs, marveled at its beauty, but had no idea where it was. Turns out, it’s here. Right here in Page.

    This is the next stop on my morning commute. After packing for the day and grabbing a “continental breakfast” in the hotel lobby on my way through the door, I find myself sitting in the parking lot of Horseshoe Bend. I am excited to finally see this elusive place. I am bringing all my camera gear, and plenty of warm clothes with me on this hike. Only a half mile to the view, but still cold enough to warrant layers.

    A half mile later, most of my layers have come off. As the sun rises higher in the sky, the temperature begins climbing rapidly. I am shedding layers like bad habits.

    The rock formations here remind me of the pictures of Zion I have seen. Thin layers of earth turned sideways staring into the sun. I snap a few of the earth as I make my way to the edge of the river overlook. A gaggle of giggles from the rise just behind me tells me others are on their way. I move on quickly. The edge is right here.

    Not much can prepare you for the view into the Horseshoe Bend. If you have been to Grand Canyon, you may feel a similar sensation here. After all, this is the same river that carves Grand Canyon only a few miles to the south. I tiptoe to the edge of the cliff and let a hoot into the canyon. It is beautiful!

    The sun is still low enough in the sky to cast deep shadows into the canyon. I snap a few pictures of the Bend before a small group of tourists come to the rim.
  • 06-30-2006, 08:23 AM
    walterick
    2 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Lake Powell, at sunset.
    Lake Powell, again, at sunrise.
    The elusive, and newly discovered (to me) Horseshoe Bend.
    What else to do?

    I am living on borrowed time, in a weekend full of great weather and greater discoveries. In what should have been a snowy, rainy mess of a vacation, I am having a great time. Driving, exploring, and photographing. What more could I do?

    I am back in my truck, turning off 89 again and this time heading east. Monument Valley is ahead, on the border of Utah and Arizona. I’ve never been to the Tribal Park, only the free part known as the Valley of the Gods. Which, consequently, was nothing to sneeze at. My atlas shows it at about 2 hours. I think this would be a great way to finish out the day, hiking and photographing in that great Navajo land.

    Lakes, rivers, and mountains. All in a day. What more could I ask for?

    As I settle into my chair and prepare for the long drive east, a sign catches my eye as I whiz by at speed. Antelope Canyon? Out here? I knew it was in the area, I didn’t think it was open. I knew the Park Service wasn’t giving tours at this time of year. The parking lot sure did look open though. Hmm... I wonder.

    I wheel the truck around and head back toward the sign. Well, it wouldn’t hurt to look, would it?
    ___________________________

    <img src="http://forums.photographyreview.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=27183&stc=1&d=11489990 99">

    Carol is the name of the Navajo lady whose family runs tours to Antelope Canyon out of the parking lot, year round. Had I known this in Phoenix, I would have planned this trip into my itinerary. But, you can’t always believe all information is to be found on the internet. And sometimes, the best things are left to discovery.

    Carol’s four wheel drive pickup churns through the desert sand as we make our way to the mouth of the canyon. I am ecstatic. Only a few minutes ago I was headed down the highway to Utah. Now, I am being chauffeured through the desert to a place I didn’t think I would get to see.

    Amazing, how things work out.

    I caught her just as I was pulling into the parking lot. Another few minutes, and I would have missed my opportunity to be given a guided tour of the canyon by a Navajo guide. This is the biggest blessing of my trip so far. I begin writing this travelogue in my mind as I sit, grinning, in the back of her pickup. Surely, this is the stuff of fantasy!

    Slowly, the truck pulls to a stop.
    __________________________________________________ _______

    Antelope Canyon is divided into two sections: Upper Antelope and Lower Antelope. It is the Upper canyon that I am in today. The Navajo call this Tse’ bighanilini, or “the place where water runs through rocks.” It is the powerful force of erosion that has shaped this beautiful canyon.

    The canyon’s face continues to evolve to this day. Carol, my guide, tells us that the canyon is prone to flash floods at any time. Several people have lost their lives in this canyon, caught without warning in a flood. She goes on to tell me that the smaller floods actually raise the canyon floor, leaving behind sediment. The larger floods, however, can wipe out several feet of canyon floor at once. Had this weekend’s weather turned out any different, the canyon may have been impassable.

    Carol’s people still use the canyon for ceremony. I can’t imagine the impact of this tourism on their religious practices. She is kind in showing us around the canyon and telling us its stories. At one point, I ask when the best time for colors is. She informs me that right now, in the back of the canyon, there is a particularly colorful display going on. She allows me to scoot off by myself to photograph. I thank her, and move on take some more photos.

    I must admit, so excited was I to be photographing this place, I shot an entire “roll” of film empty in the Mamiya. Let it be a testament to the beauty of the place that I didn’t care. I was happy to be there.

    After spending my hour in the canyon and getting shuttled back to the parking lot, I thank Carol for her guidance and take her business card. I now know that there is no need to go through the park service to take tours of this canyon. I think Carol will be getting a call from me the next time I come to Page.
  • 06-30-2006, 08:38 AM
    walterick
    2 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    I find myself racing again.

    Racing the sunset as I speed through Navajo land on my way to Monument Valley. How does this keep happening?

    My high from Antelope Canyon has not worn off. But the chance of driving several hours across the state just to get there after dark is daunting to me. The scenery here is beautiful, and I mentally try to make landmarks of where I should come back for night photography tonight. The tall mountains of elegantly shaped stone would look great silhouetted against a sky of swirling stars. Still, I press on, hoping I can make it to Monument Valley before sunset. Wasn’t I in this same predicament only yesterday?!

    It is nearing sunset as I make the final turnoff onto the road to Monument Valley. Just in time, and I am happy. I cruise up the road, looking still at the amazing mountains around me. Surely, it is heaven to live on land like this!

    I pull up to the entrance to the park. Locked! I’ve come all this way for nothing. My mouth agape, I pull off the road into a camp ground. My luck, it seems, has finally run out. The entrance gate is closed, though the exit gate is still open for visitors to leave. No, I’ve come to far not to go on. I pull the truck back onto the road and drive around the gate.

    Inside, a Navajo tour guide meets me.
    “Hi, did you pay?”
    “No, there was no one there,” I say honestly.
    “Oh, well, if there’s no one there, I guess you’re okay.” He begins to walk away, but I catch him.
    “Are there tours going on?” I ask him. He tells me there aren’t, it’s too late for that. But he tells me it is okay for me to stay here, at the welcome center, and take pictures.

    That was all I needed to hear.
  • 06-30-2006, 08:42 AM
    walterick
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Finally getting kicked out of the Tribal Park afer sunset, I spend the next few minutes driving around the nearby town of Oljato. I marvel at the rock formations here. I look around for a place to take night pictures. Up the road aways, I find a rock formation that looks like it would make a good silhouette. Feeling fairly conspicuous, I pull the truck off the road and set the tripod up on the shoulder. Locking the shutter open on the Mamiya, I spend the next 30 minutes sitting inside the truck eating cashews and listening to crackling pop stations on the trucks radio. Outside, the camera records the movement of the night sky.
  • 06-30-2006, 08:56 AM
    walterick
    3 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    ************************************************** ***
    I awake the next morning feeling pretty complete. I’ve managed to cram just about everything possible into a two day weekend. Though originally scheduled to stay another night, I feel ready to go. I call home and tell them I’m on my way. I’ll crash the slumber party with pics and stories of the Lake Powell area.

    The only things I have missed on this trip were hiking and seeing the town of Page. I eat breakfast at a Denny’s and then drive around town, checking out local real estate for a feel on the prices here. I am happy to find the real estate here is cheap, and plentiful. I consider the possibility of buying a condo to renovate and use for getaways to Lake Powell, and its surrounding areas. How nice it would be to spend a getaway weekend here!

    Somewhere in my journey around town I come across a small hiking path. I get to take my hike while taking in new views of the lake. I bump into a few locals along the path. They seem very friendly. I have had the constant impression of how quiet it is here. And dark, at night. I wonder if the peace of the land somehow communicates itself to the people. Surely, the site of that lake every morning must imbue a sense of peace!

    I am all packed up, and checked out of my hotel. I consider driving north, to the Grand Staircase Escalante in Utah to do some hiking. But a large cloud bank to the north tells me that the weather front is finally on its way. My weekend of grace is done. It’s time to leave.

    I drive over the dam one last time, to the top of the hill overlooking the lake. I take in a few last moments and snap a few last shots. I make a promise to the lake to return.
  • 06-30-2006, 09:07 AM
    walterick
    4 Attachment(s)
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    In the interest keeping this burgeoning travelogue short, I will not detail my trip back home. I did stop at several more interesting places along the way. And, a few that weren't so along the way. I won't give any descriptions, but I'll tell you what they are so that you can find them on your own if you want...

    1) Marble Canyon
    2) Vermillion Cliffs
    3) Navajo Reservation off 89A
    4) Navajo Reservation north of Flagstaff

    And thanks for looking!
  • 07-03-2006, 07:03 PM
    mjs1973
    Re: Travelogue - Lake Powell
    Hey Rick,

    I'm glad you finally finished your travelouge!! I'm just now finding time to read it and I really enjoyed it, and the images as well. I'm glad you got to see Horseshoe Bend and Antilope Canyon. I wish I would have been into photography when I went to Antilope Canyon 10 years ago. (Wow, has it been that long already?) A tip for your next trip there, get everything set up just like you did for your photos, then grab a handfull or two of sand & dust from the floor, and throw it into the air in the area where your going to take your pic. Let the majority of it settle, then take your pic. That's what people do to get the "beam" of light in their photos like this one here. Never tried it myself, but that's how I heard it's done. :)

    I did sit down one day and finished writing the story that was going thru my mind from this spring. Perhaps one day it will end up as a thread here for all to read.

    Thanks again for finishing and sharing your story with us.