Arches National Park + a couple other stops
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 3:45 pm
I headed out to Arches last week for 4 days, 2 of which also involved a couple of friends who met me there (girlfriend had to work). It was still very comfortable, around 39F lows and 65-ish for the highs. Put in anywhere from 10-16 miles of hiking a day, armed with my new Nikon. I wasn't really going to post much from Arches since I've already done so in the past, but I felt the Nikon captured everything better than what I've shown before.





The campsites are surrounded by massive rock formations. Very cool campground.













A much less visited portion of the park with a really fun trail to an arch.






I got up bright and early my last day, packed up camp & headed back to Salt Lake. I had a couple of detours along the way, the first of which is was the abandoned Green River Missile Complex. It shut down in the 70s and everything was pretty much just left behind.


Here's the missile assembly building.


I then hopped back on I-70 for a while, then hopped off to take a nice scenic dirt road through some remote canyon country.



My little dirt road turned into a gravel superhighway close to this point. This little turnout is where a very large pictograph panel is. I took a few close-ups, but didn't get a wide shot of the panel because rocks/boulders kept falling nearby (I could hear them, but didn't see them), so I only had a really quick visit. Last thing I need was to have a boulder flatten the Pathfinder in the ass end of nowhere.






The campsites are surrounded by massive rock formations. Very cool campground.













A much less visited portion of the park with a really fun trail to an arch.






I got up bright and early my last day, packed up camp & headed back to Salt Lake. I had a couple of detours along the way, the first of which is was the abandoned Green River Missile Complex. It shut down in the 70s and everything was pretty much just left behind.


Here's the missile assembly building.


I then hopped back on I-70 for a while, then hopped off to take a nice scenic dirt road through some remote canyon country.



My little dirt road turned into a gravel superhighway close to this point. This little turnout is where a very large pictograph panel is. I took a few close-ups, but didn't get a wide shot of the panel because rocks/boulders kept falling nearby (I could hear them, but didn't see them), so I only had a really quick visit. Last thing I need was to have a boulder flatten the Pathfinder in the ass end of nowhere.
