When Tamar's parents kindly offered
to spend four days indulging Aurora, Sophia and Tova in L.A., we eagerly
threw Zadie into the backseat and drove seven hours to some of the
world's most beautiful rocks: Bryce Canyon, Zion, and Valley of Fire in Utah and Nevada. We
had a wondrous time, hiking 13 trails which filled our minds with
soaring granite slabs, squat redrock beehives, swollen matcha-green
rivers and snow-flanked orange hoodoos.
It was a bit funny
traveling with a single child. We got to relive the new-parent
experience of maudlin strangers grabbing you by the arm and emotionally
saying, "Your life just changed...forever!" or "It will get better...I
promise!" It's a bit awkward to explain that no, you've just foisted
your other three girls off on their obliging grandparents, so we'd
mostly just blush and murmur something vague. Zadie is an exemplary
hiking companion: she can sleep for miles in the wrap, often up to five
hours. She was frustrated, though, by having to sleep in an oversized
red beret (which continually slid down over her eyes, not to mention
made her look exactly like a dictator) in below-freezing weather in a
tent.
The National Parks were in a tizzy as usual,
especially Zion. America's great Parks have gotten much busier in recent
years: campsites are booked out six months in advance (really, who
plans that far ahead??) and popular trails are streaming with tourists.
And 'tourists' is unfortunately the word: lumbering out of their 40' RVs
to ride the shuttle bus back and forth, briefly disembarking to pose
for dozens of selfies in front of canyon views before "getting a beer
and watching the game". Our campsite was full, yet empty: nearly
everyone was shut up in their RV watching TV, while Nevada's stars shone
down on unused fire pits and picnic tables. We are nonetheless
impressed, though, that lifetime NP passes are only $10 for seniors - this country has enough lovely trails to fill years of happy retirement.
Anyway,
none of this detracted in the least from the stunning beauty of Zion,
Bryce and Valley of Fires. There can't be many lovelier places on the
planet. We first visited Bryce: a remote canyon of the deepest red, with
snow-covered pillars and columns jutting up as far as the eye can see.
We also met up with Bert and Marta, two old friends from the American
Discovery Trail who put us up on their farm in Utah's outback ten years
ago - it was so wonderful to see them again and just as if no time had
passed at all! Zion NP gave us cricks in the neck from gawking up at the
massive looming canyon walls; the highlight was surely Angels Landing, a
relentless climb up switchbacks to a perfect view of the canyon, and to
an insanely dangerous rock climb, where a wobbly chain (which was also
numbingly cold) and two-inch ledge were all that kept Jakob from a sheer
1,000-foot drop into Refrigerator Canyon. He didn't make it to the top,
but neither is he dead like all the others, so let's call
it even. On the return drive, we spent half a day exploring the Road
Runner-esque redrock fantasies of Valley of the Fire: Tamar got to run
10km down a wash, past purple, maroon and green striped boulders, and
through a slot canyon to an abandoned film site (Westerns and Star Trek
alike are filmed here, to give you an idea of the scenery)
Friday we leave for a camping trip in Joshua Tree (our fifth National Park
this trip, not bad America!) then on to British Columbia after
celebrating Passover with family here in L.A.
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Getting up an hour before sunrise was so worth it for this light |
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Bryce Canyon's Fairyland Trail is well-named, and was virtually deserted |
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The Bristlecone Trail was totally snowed over, but our Expert Naturalist (Marta) spotted a tree which was possibly a bristlecone! |
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Navigating the twists of the Prospector Trail in Valley of Fire SP |
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Look, that angry prisoner from Alcatraz has escaped to the wilderness! |
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A most scenic feed |
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Zion National Park |
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Tamar's bulging baby made passing hikers double-take every time. Overhead couple: "Is she pregnant?" "Uh, I assume so" |
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World's cutest dictator |
I know dictators aren't usually elected, but Zadie's got my vote! Those photos and the description of your travel are amazing. I want to go there now!! To all of it. Say...I should lend you my family's National Park Monopoly.
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