ZION

angels-landing-zion

EARTHED ANGELS

ZION NATIONAL PARK

21-22 April 2018


ricochet pinecone

cavernwide honeyberry

waterbent keeper

tightrope walker

~ Ayla Nereo, Code of the Flowers

In the thickets, after dawn, there comes a slow rustle… a deer emerges. She appears out of the forest, dappled in shadows, following a river of grass down to its source: the wide, green water of the valley.

I watched that river become a small winding snake below me as we wandered up, up, up along the canyon’s edges, along maple shaded valleys, escaping the rising sun, till we burst forth onto a narrow ridge of stone that hung above the valley. Teetering, a little terrifying, but absolutely awe-inspiring, this was Angel’s Landing. Walking with my heart in my mouth, crouching to touch solid ground, slowly we made our way, inch by inch, along the jagged shard of the Earth till there was only air in front of us. The view was like nothing I have ever seen before.

Afterwards we cooled our feet off in that green river. I remember the silty mud at the riverside, silky soft, and the meandering conversation we had with two newfound friends.

Elsewhere, tucked away in the sides of the cliffs, there are several small emerald pools, their hues ranging from deep green to clear gold. They are still and sparkling at the edges, but near the cliffs a series of rushing waterfalls carve out dark spaces, where the sun’s rays cannot enter. It was hot, at midday, and the cool spray of the falls was so refreshing! We ran through the mist and puddles, laughing a little, on the search for flowers and deer prints.

canyon-overlook-zion-sunset
red-penstemon
angels-landing-hike
angels-landing-view
zion-river
zion-valley
deer-zion-national-park

I SPY:

swallowtail butterflies.

maple and elm leaves.

scarlet penstemon and yellow erysimum flowers.

deer.

teeth marks on an old tree, evidence of a nearby beaver.


zion-canyons
yellow-erysimum
emerald-pool-falls-zion
on-top-of-angels-landing

BRYCE CANYON

bryce-canyon-sunrise

HOODOOS

BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK

20 April 2018


HOODOO

{ noun }

:: from the Southern Paiute “oohdoo” - “to be afraid”

Our world is full of a hundred thousand little deaths. Unseen endings, hidden alleys, steep drop offs and dark voids. To walk behind the veils, beyond and out of all known sight, that is the awesome and terrifying adventure we all must take.

When I was little I feared death just as I feared the scary character from Beetlejuice. I didn’t know what would become of me, when I am turned back to earth and mud, root and bone. I still don’t. But I have formed my own theories, after careful observation of nature’s own ways. For, death is everywhere, clinging and hugging onto life. Life and death. Death and life. Creation and destruction. They are present in the very crust and core of our world.

The canyons of Bryce Canyon were carved by perpetual snow, rains, wind and storms - elements of erosion, destroying and deconstructing the land. Yet, birthed from this act of destruction is a new form - a village of hoodoo houses, home to all manner of trees, plants, animals and insects, humans and any number of ghosts that call the canyon home.

bryce-canyon-red-cliffs

Ponderings & small wonders

a maze like this inspires ideas of exploration -
so many unseen areas, nooks and crannies to be discovered.


the Paiute people have legends of people turned to stone by Coyote.


a long moment spent hugging a Ponderosa pine
the sweet cinnamon smell of it’s bark in my nostrils.


a thought: Earth wants to be seen and loved.


a raven followed me to the van, so inquisitive.


the biting cold, the views, the surreal feeling of the landscape.


watching sunrise, shifting shadows in the hoodoo valley.


crackled mud beds, paint palettes of ochre hues,
formed through ancient sea and desert dunes.


destruction leads to creation.


inside-bryce-canyon
tunnel-in-red-rock

I SPY:

douglas fir

spruce

aspen

bristlecone pine

oak

prairie dogs

stellar’s jays

ravens

ospreys

mule deer

natural bridges

hoodoos

spires

manganese & iron lake silt = pink stone


manzanita-flowers
raven-bryce-canyon
tree-hugger
pinecone
bryce-canyon-pines
bryce-canyon-sunrise-hoodoos
bryce-canyon-hoodoo
watching-sunrise-bryce-canyon
bryce-canyon-hoodoos

MYSTIC HOTSPRINGS

mystic-hot-springs

MISTS AND VAPOuRS

20 April 2018



hot springs, a holy place

a trinity of water-forms

billowing clouds

bubbling pots

and the snow,

laid out in a fine drizzle

upon sodden ground

toes squishing through muddy fields

to an outcrop of mineral mounds

waters wrapped around my body

precisely the way clothing isn’t

a process of sublimation begins

dissolving a little at the edges

I am turned from solid form

into steam,

mists and vapours

I languor a while, lost in a daydream

and then

I drape myself over the cool earth


mystic-hotsprings-winter
outdoor-tub
outdoor-tub-mystic-hotsprings
ollie-cutie
mystic-hot-spring