This is a stunning hike, but despite the fact that Zion National Park enacts a 50-people-per-day-quota, expect a lot of company.
The beginning of the hike starts well above the sun-sweltered rock and sand of Virgin, mingling between Ponderosa pine and patches of white and red slickrock.
Once into the bottom of Left Fork, you very quickly encounter a few chilling, deep pools of clear water. A couple of these are too deep to touch and are mandatory swims.
These little toads were everywhere and didn'tseem to mind us at all.
After the deep pools, the canyon narrows and presents a few obstacles to negotiate.
Me and Susie in the narrowest and darkest portion of the canyon.
Keyhole falls (above) is normally a short rappel down into a plunge pool, but somebody had rigged up a log making it an easy down-climb. This was typical at many obstacles along the way.
Below Keyhole falls, the water-sculpted "subway" continues for a few hundred yards.
Everyone got a kick out of this little garter snake.
They are a little hard to see in this photo (above), but all of the shadow-filled indentations are tracks of large 3-toed dinosaurs.
The final climb out provided a fantastic view of the Cougar Mtn. Fault. Can you see where it offsets the rock layers?
Click the play button above to see an alternate way down a large cascade.
A big thanks to Millie and her family for letting us tag along!
These little toads were everywhere and didn'tseem to mind us at all.
After the deep pools, the canyon narrows and presents a few obstacles to negotiate.
Me and Susie in the narrowest and darkest portion of the canyon.
Keyhole falls (above) is normally a short rappel down into a plunge pool, but somebody had rigged up a log making it an easy down-climb. This was typical at many obstacles along the way.
Below Keyhole falls, the water-sculpted "subway" continues for a few hundred yards.
Everyone got a kick out of this little garter snake.
They are a little hard to see in this photo (above), but all of the shadow-filled indentations are tracks of large 3-toed dinosaurs.
The final climb out provided a fantastic view of the Cougar Mtn. Fault. Can you see where it offsets the rock layers?
Click the play button above to see an alternate way down a large cascade.
2 comments:
The only hike with that kind of excitement that I have been on was the Green Mile down at the Point of the Mountain. How did you protect your camera? -Eros
We put everything we didn't want to get wet in a drybag that they use for river running. Then I put that in my backpack. there was enough air in the drybag that I could just jump into a deep pool and float.
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