Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Arches: Double Arch

Distance: 0.5 mile round trip
Elevation: 5,103 ft - 5,169 ft
Elevation Gain:  66 ft
Date HIked: 27 April 2012
Bathroom at the Trailhead: Yes (located up the stairs and closer to the Windows)
Water at the Trailhead: No

The approach to Double Arch is accessible to almost everyone
Double Arch is one of the short hikes in Arches National Park that can easily be combined with the Window Loop located across the street.  The route is well-defined, traveling across loose sand and some flat rock surfaces.  Once you get to the arch, you can scramble upwards and climb right up into the arch area itself.  With my large camera in hand, I was not able to scramble up to look through the arch but a fellow hiker did and said it was a straight drop off on the other side.  From deep inside the arch, though you can gaze back out at the Windows Section of the park, which is a pleasant way to view that area.

The back side of this arch is a shear drop off
Looking straight up at the span
You will not be alone on this trail and it is suggested you get there early because the parking is limited.  Morning is the best time to photograph this arch, but I found that the shadows were still deep so "morning" is relative.  The downside of a morning photo shoot is that the Windows are better photographed in the afternoon, which is inconvenient if that is important to you.

Looking out at the Windows Section of the park from inside Double Arch
Double Arch is an example of downward water erosion from atop the sandstone, rather than from side-to-side water erosion like most of the arches in the park.  When taken together they form the third largest arch in the Park.  The actual measurement of the larger of the two arches is 144 ft x 112 ft while the smaller arch measures 67 ft x 86 ft.   Double Arch is called "Double" because its legs share the same stone foundation.

This Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher (Polioptila caerulea) was singing from a shrub oak along the short trail.
If you only have a short time in the park, this trail should be on your list.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Arches: Devil's Garden ... Primitive Trail Loop

Distance: 7.6 mile loop
Elevation: 5,146 ft at trailhead
Elevation Gain: 1,247 ft cumulative by Dark Angel, 2,194 ft by return
Date Hiked: 26 April 2012
Bathroom at Trailhead: Yes
Water at Trailhead: Yes
Dogs: Not allowed, National Park

The Double-O Arch is one of the highlights of the Devil's Garden Loop in Arches National Park
Double-O Arch
The Devil's Garden area of Arches National Park contains the landmark Landscape Arch, Double-O Arch, and Dark Angel.  You can do this trail as an out and back or make it a loop by taking the Primitive Trail either before (at Landscape Arch) or after (at Double-O Arch).  When I talked to the ranger at the visitor's center, he suggested taking the Primitive Trail first because it gets you away from people right away and you go UP the rock scrambles (e.g. slickrock fins) and not DOWN them.  I decided to take his advice, which had both pros and cons.  The pro was a serene journey through a secluded Sagebrush and red sand prairie early in the morning when the birds were so vocal it made my ears hurt.  There was so much evidence of other animal life that I felt like I was walking Bourbon Street the day after Mardi Gra.  You could not see the people (or critters in this case) but you sure knew they had been there.  The downside of this choice was that climbing slickrock faces with a heavy pack proved to be severely unnerving.  While not as psychologically damaging as Devil's Causeway in Colorado, it still made me wonder what I had gotten myself into.  Bottom line is that I am not sure I agree that going UP is easier.  Taking the Primitive Trail last (at Double-O Arch) is certainly the advertised way of doing it.

The first 0.8 miles  of the Devil's Garden Trail is manicured and accessible to casual hikers.  At 0.3 miles is the junction with the Pine Tree and Tunnel Arch trails.  These short spurs lead to two attractive arches.  I particularly liked Pine Tree Arch because of the large Utah Junipers that graced the middle of it adding both a sense of scale and floral contrast.  Take this side trip and you will return to the junction at 0.8 miles.

Trailhead
The first part of the trail squeezes through two fins
Heading out into the prairie
It is a short distance to Landscape Arch, one of the iconic arches in the park.  At 290.1 ft, it is one of the longest arches in the country and also one of the thinnest.  Arches have lifespans (in geologic time of course) since they are caused by weathering, which never ends.  Landscape Arch is considered a mature arch, which means it gave up beer binges a few thousand years ago and now is interested in conservative politics and medicare supplement plans.  It sure looks like it could collapse at any moment.  Before you get to the Landscape Arch viewing area, the Primitive Trail  (at 1.35 miles) leads off to the right.  I took this trail and immediately left the manicured trail for red desert sand.

Tunnel Arch
Pine Tree Arch
Approaching Landscape Arch
The ranger was right.  I left the people behind immediately and for the next hour at least did not see a soul.  The birds were rather chatty, flitting from shrub to shrub and calling to each other in raucous tones.  I had put ice cubes in my Nalgeen bottles and was annoyed that the racket that the ice made was drowning out the birds.  Fortunately, there were so many fascinating animal tracks in the sand that I frequently had to stop and admire them.  That let me capture a few birds on "film" as well as a Gopher Snake, which had me enraptured for several minutes.  The Sagebrush,  Mormon Tea, and Utah Junipers dominated the landscape and smelled fresh and alive in the early morning air.  I was in love with the solitude and in love with Arches at this point.  Around 2.2 miles in, however the trail left the prairie and descended down into a dry wash similar to but more narrow than the Park Ave Trail. The trail followed this wash up into a long formation of fins.  I was quite confounded when the trail deadened into a crenelation of this formation until I realized I need to climb UP and OVER the fin.

Looking back down the trail towards the La Sal Mountains
Just a small sample of the tracks that appeared on the trail
Gopher Snake (Pituophis catenifer deserticola) is a habitual denzin of Arches National Park
I came across this Gopher Snake (Pituophis catenifer deserticola) crossing the trail.  It may be a male since they are active in the spring looking for mates.  Fortunately, he was not interested in me.  
While not too dangerous, the fin (at 2.6 miles) was probably only 30 feet in height, it was slick being made out of slickrock after all.  There were no hand or foot holds and after trying to leap up the first five feet I realized a new strategy was required.  I took off my heavy pack, which was pulling me backwards, and shoved it upwards.  I then turned around and bootie scooted upwards using the souls of my shoes to provide the leverage.  This got me up the first pitch.  The rest of the route was a eerily sloping rock face with nothing to grab on to.  I kept my pack off and held it in one hand so I could lean into the rock face with the other.  It was of course on this perilous maneuver that I ran into my first human.

Fins along the trail
Interesting rocks
This Black-throate Sparrow (Amphispiza bilineata) was photographed on the Devil's Garden Trail in Arches National Park.
The Black-throated Sparrow (Amphispiza bilineata) was one of the many birds in the area. 
The nimble youngster (in geologic terms of course) that came bounding down the the cliff face at me was overly nice.  He mentioned this was the worst part of the trail, what a lovely day it was, and clearly thought that it was great that modern nursing homes were allowing their residents to go climbing fins all alone.  I growled in annoyance as he whisked past and was about to lurch forward in one last suicidal push when I ran into my second human.  What was the luck?  Here I was out in the middle of NOWHERE trying to pretend that I was a buff hiker and I had the local paparazzi watching me flail up the scariest part of the route.  This second human was less than patient with me even though it took me only two cardiac arrests to throw up self upwards past him.  He blundered past and I collapsed at the top under the thin pretext of taking a picture of a interesting plant.

Heading down into the wash
This is the nefarious fin.  The rock cairn is the only clue you need to climb over it.  It looks easier than it really is.  The rock is sloped and you have to take it at an angle. 
After the fin the trail heads back into the brush.
After this point the route traversed a few more fins with only one more slightly onerous pitch up another sloping but not precipitous chunk of rock.  Ok, so was it really my pack that was pulling me backwards on these auditions for Cirque du Soleil or was it my middle-aged buttocks, which lost all pretensions to "buns of steel" about twenty years ago.  To be fair, my pack was heavy, being loaded with lots of extra water (very heavy), a VW-bus sized first-aid kit with very sharp knife (a la "127-hours"), tons of layers, and one very large camera.

Private Arch
This specimum of Desert Paintbrush (Castilleja chromosa) was found on the Devil's Garden Trail in Arches National Park
Desert Paintbrush (Castilleja chromosa)
After Private Arch, the trail heads back out into the Prairie.
After the fins, the trail returned to a series of intra-fin interludes that included a short side trip to Primitive Arch (junction at 3.2 miles, arch at 3.5 miles).  It was there that I ran into a couple from North Carolina that were taking the Primitive Trail in the same direction that I was.  Were you scared back there they asked me with eyes as big as pizzas.

Heading out towards Dark Angel
Dark Angel
In Arches National Park
Returning to Double-O Arch
After Primitive Arch, the trail begins to leave the fins and return to more Sagebrush Prairie.   I came upon the Double-O Arch rather unexpectedly (at 4.2 miles).  The trail to Dark Angel, a tall spire of rock, begins at the Arch, you will see it off to your right.  Head that way first and you will reach Dark Angel at 4.7 miles.  Then retrace your steps to Double-O Arch.

After Double-O Arch you have to climb over another fin and head upwards.  This was actually difficult to find.
A shot of the narrow fin between Double-O Arch and Landscape Arch.  There is a lot of exposure on this section with the fin becoming narrow and fatter in turn.  When I crossed, the wind was practically picking me off my feet, which made it less fun.
View from the fin
After the trip to Dark Angel, there were several of us trying to find the main trail around Double-O Arch.  It turns out you have to climb over another fin and follow it upwards to get to the trailhead.  It is really only a mile back to Landscape Arch, but it seems longer.  There is a long "stroll" across the top of a very exposed fin that reminded me too much of Devil's Causeway.  I happened to cross at the peak of a thunderstorm when the winds were practically lifting me off my feet.  I stopped a few times on the wider areas to crouch down until the gusts died down.  Others hikers coming towards me were less intimidated but they did not have packs on to catch the wind.

After the fin there is a sign pointing to the trailhead.
Landscape Arch is just below.  This section was not obvious despite the cairns. 
Coming down this fin it was not obvious how to get down.  Turns out there is a series of switchbacks that make it easy.
After this section the trail follows more slickrock until it descends sharply between two upright fins.  Had there not been people coming up from below I might have thought I had taken a wrong turn.  The descent is very steep and you can not see the bottom of the fin while on it.  I was concerned about getting cliffed out so I was approaching this pitch cautiously.  It turns out that in the pitch hidden from view there are a couple of switch backs in the rock that make the decent rather easy.  After this spot it is only a 100 yards or so to Landscape Arch (at 6.7 miles).  I returned to the trailhead for a 7.6 miles total distance.   Somehow I missed the turn off to Navajo and Partition Arches, which is why my calculated mileage is slightly less than others.

Returning to Landscape Arch
Returning to the trailhead provides a final view of the La Sal Mountains.
Arches is not known for long hikes, so if you really like to be out all day, the Devil's Garden/Primitive Loop will fill the bill.  Its early solitude and exposure to the plants and animals of the area will please the naturalist in all of us.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Snowy Egret

The Snowy Egret (Egretta thula) with its lovely white plumage and expressive eyes
The Snowy Egret (Egretta thula) is a showy bird that was once almost hunted to extinction so that fashionable ladies on the East Coast could have a feather in their hat.  Fortunately, enlightened conservationists in the early 1900's stopped the slaughter around the same time that National Parks were coming into existence.  It can identified by its yellow feet and yellow patch around its eyes.  At  24 inches is small by heron standards being dwarfed by the Great Blue Heron, which also calls the state home. 

Lunging forward for the kill
The Snowy Egret feeds on fish, frogs, and crustaceans in shallow ponds and swampy areas.  They actually stalk their prey and as one of the pictures in this post will attest, their long bill looks like a jet fighter about to swoop in for the kill.  Woe to the frog negligently croaking within sight of the Snowy Egret.


I caught site of this specimen along Dry Creek in Westminster while out for a bike ride.  Since it was the first one I had seen in the state, I almost crashed into a large Cottonwood in my haste to dismount and lunge, dare I say it, Snowy Egret-like after the shot.  I stood around for quite a bit while it gracefully strolled around in the mud, only to reach forward in staccato bursts after some tasty morsel. 

Gee, no dinosaur like qualities here!  Beware the bill!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Arches National Park: Park Ave

Distance: 2 miles round trip
Elevation: 4,680 ft - 5,000 ft
Elevation Gain: 320 ft
Date Hiked: 25 April 2012
Bathroom at Trailhead: No
Water at Trailhead: No
Dogs: Not allowed

The Park Ave Trail from the Park Ave parking lot.  The thin like rock formations are called fins.  You will see a lot more of them as this sequence continues.
Park Avenue is one of the loveliest hikes in the Arches National Park.  The towering fins and megalithic rocks that line the sides of the trail surround the hiker with their phenomenal majesty.  I would learn later that fins are the key to arch development,  but on this, my first hike in the park, they seemed so very strange compared to the canyons and volcanic remnants I am used to seeing.

The trail from Courthouse Towers begins on the other side of the road and heads down a path bordered by rocks.
The passage of many touristas has removed the dust from the route to reveal the smooth stone beneath.
The trail is named Park Avenue because the towering walls reminded early explorers of the skyscrapers in New York City.  Instead of high-end stores, bustling people, and continuous cacophony, I was greeted by shrubbery in bloom and a pleasantly cool breeze blowing down the canyon.  I saw only a couple of hikers. 

On the sides of the route you can see the many layers of sandstone the water cut through.
The route follows the barren stream bed and is easy to follow.
You can hike this trail as a shuttle for a one mile journey or do it as an out and back for a two mile trip.  I recommend the latter because the views are totally different each way.  If you start at the first trailhead as you enter the park, you'll hike down first and up last.  If you start at the Courthouse Towers viewpoint you will do the opposite.  This was the route I chose so that I was hiking down hill on the last pitch.

Our destination is the slot between the rocks straight ahead
Stone steps lead up to the parking lot.  This section is the steepest.
What I like best about this hike was that the route followed an old stream bed and the evidence of flowing water was everywhere.  The soft rock had been carved into curvaceous patterns in the center while the many layers of sediment along the edges were jagged and exposed.  The overall affect was poignant.  Water was everywhere and nowhere.

Standing at the viewpoint looking at the fins
At a distance, the skeleton of a Utah Juniper dwarfs the megalithic rocks behind it.
I hiked this trail around 6pm in the evening after a long drive from Denver.  It is was short and close to the entrance and was a great way to get oriented to the park as well as stretch my travel weary legs.

Approaching the trailhead, the hiker gets a glimpse of the rock formations deeper into the park.
The rock formation on the left is called the 3 Gossips.  The rocks in the foreground are the side of cars.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Arches National Park: Trip Preview

Driving into the heart of Arches National Park
I went on the road last week to hike every trail in Arches National Park in Utah.  This fulfilled a lifelong bucket list item for me. 

What I found was that Arches was more than hikes to cool geological features.  It was really a journey through an amazing and vibrant landscape filled with chattering birds, amazing wildflowers, wild weather, and  those cool geological features.  Of course, the geology is a journey itself, back into deep time when the "lizards" where a lot bigger than today and this part of the world was the shoreline of giant inland sea. For most people though a visit to the park is really a scenic drive with lots of short hikes.   As such a visit to Arches will also be a journey taken with many of your fellow humans.  There are a few stops where solitude can be found, but not many. 

Blooming cactus
Over the next sequence of posts, I will blog each trail to give you a feel for the park and toss in information about some of the unique flora and fauna you will experience if you ever make the journey yourself. You will be able to find links to each of these posts in a special index found elsewhere on this blog and also in the list below (updated as they appear):


North Rock Creek Snowshoe

Distance: 4 miles round trip Elevation: 9,180 ft to 9,780 ft Elevation Gain: 600 ft Dogs: Off leash until the wilderness boundary North...