Cedar & Sand

Human-Powered Adventures in the West

Torrey '09

Saturday, September 12, 2009 By TK421 1 Comments
I just can't get enough of Torrey. The Cowboy Cabins on HWY 12 just south of town are almost starting to feel like a second home. My parents joined us this time for the annual trip to Torrey over Labor Day weekend and a good time was had by all.

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Above: the drive to Torrey from Cedar is pretty fantastic as well; just south of Circleville, the wary traveler may spot this well-preserved childhood home of Robert Leroy Parker, a.k.a. "Butch" Cassidy.



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Above: snow comes early on top of Thousand Lake Mountain near Loa.




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Above: green and vibrant Fruita in the heart of Capitol Reef just doesn't seem to quite fit in with the sun-scorched desert surroundings, but that's OK with me.




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Above: pit-weathering along the Cohab Canyon Trail in Capitol Reef.





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Above: a bird's-eye view of Fruita.





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Above: faded and nearly forgotten inscriptions from miners on their way to the San Juan gold rush. These inscriptions, dating from the 1890s, can be found along the now-abandoned wagon route between Torrey and Fruita near Twin Rocks.




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This huge mess of vines, that strangely resemble giant spaghetti hanging from a large cottonwood, are popular with kids.



Below: Zoe tries her best Tarzan impersonation.

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Above: I finally found this lonely grave on the edge of the lifeless Blue Desert east of Capitol Reef. The tombstone reads, "John Richard Crowther, Oct. 28, 1891 - Dec. 21, 1891."




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Above: purple banded hills of Jurassic Morrison Formation make for a colorful scene along Pleasant Creek near Notom. White and pink tilted knobs of Navajo Sandstone comprise the "reef" in the distance.



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Pelycypods (fossil clams) litter the ground where they have weathered out of the Cretaceous-age Dakota Sandstone along the old Notom Road. I think we have a future paleontologist on our hands.


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No trip to Torrey is complete without a good-ol' fashioned exploratory mountain bike ride. The old wagon road, now used mostly by ATVs, between Grover and Boulder is a hidden gem.


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There is something special about Fish Creek Cove, nestled at the foot of Boulder Mountain between Teasdale and Grover. As our resident Fremont-culture expert explained, this was a sacred place to the Indians. The pictographs here are intriguingly cryptic.


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1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice pictures. Looks like you guys had a good time in Torrey. Did you have some pinto bean pie?
-Matt

September 16, 2009 at 3:41 PM

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