The Latest Rave is your resource for Utah Canyoneering know-how. From Utah canyon condition reports to narratives of mind-bending epics to wildflower sightings, you will find all the beta you need from Tom and his team on The Rave.
Some canyons opened for business 9-24-2020 and I decided to make a quick dash through Pine Creek on the next day, Friday 9-25.
I had unfinished anchor business in there. The winter before last, the large boulder at the end of the narrows section moved down 6 feet, restoring the rappel that used to be here, since climbing under was no longer possible. The glue-in bolt Mr. Cabe …
My buddy Jonathan Zambella made a connection with a UK boot maker a couple years ago, and has been using their boots in his Rental Program since. It’s complicated, so stay with me here. The goal is to bring a USA version “Chameleon” of the European boot “Aquator” to the USA starting Spring 2021 - might have a few Nov 1, 2020.
Out onto Dominey Reservoir for another splendid September trip. The weather was bomber - blue sky, not much wind - but a bit on the hot side, so early starts were called for, and many of our approach hikes were long and took a lot out of me, who does not do that well in the heat. Especially after hiding in my basement all summer…
I don’t take enough pictures to tell the tale of A canyon, and it is Lake Powell, so we don’t anyway. Powell is a special place, a reserve of adventure canyoneering.
Ramoo was doing a prodigious (as usual) May trip, on which I was invited but, c'mon, this is my time to make hay, as in dough, so alas... But it was INSISTED I participate on one particular project, where certain chunks of metal were inserted in backcountry holes, rather unnecessarily, with our job to remove them and patch carefully with epoxy. Yes, dear friends, nothing like a little bolt removal to get ME motivated.
It was the last day of a 10 day trip for me. The previous days had been fantastic and today's agenda was to drop into a canyon Ram had heard rumors of. The story was that a pair of bolts were sitting near a tree at the end of the canyon but as to what was between where we would drop in and the final drop was pretty unclear.
Zion Park re-opened on a limited basis and I needed some exercise. Trail-hiking allowed, off trail not so much. Tim Hoover came up from Springdale which allowed us to do a 2-car route to Observation Point. The Cross-Echo version starts from the Stave Springs Trailhead, crosses Echo Canyon, hits O Pt, then exits via the East Mesa Trail. The simple East Mesa to OPt and back just seemed too little punishment for our sixty-year-old plus bodies…
I took along my “medium” camera to take pics of flowers (and perhaps scenery), and the results were …
Home confinement was driving me nuts. Doing a straightforward canyon with a small well-selected crew seemed like a reasonable and safe/conservative thing to do. No local contact required. Separate cooking and sleeping / social distancing. We chose a place to camp where we expected no one else to camp, even on a beautiful weekend as was finally coming up after a slow spring. In this case, we was Sara Morger, Melissa Webb and myself. Thanks for inviting me.
I had done the South Fork of Ticaboo Creek route several years ago with Ryan Cornia after a 10 hour drive from Mt Carmel on a HUUUGE thunderstorm day. Thus we got the canyon full of fresh water. We had a good day, but I was not particularly impressed by the canyon. Three hours of sleep the night before might have had something to do with that.
The weather was beautiful, we did the canyon, it was brilliant.
S Fork is an odd canyon. A couple big rappels, a chain of potholes, and arch or two. Not very Ticaboo-like, no skinny stuff.
I consider a slot canyon a canyon where you can touch both sides at the same time. There are many slot sections of canyon in Zion, but most are part of technical canyons. Where can a person enjoy a slot canyon experience without ropes and helmets and permits and all that jazz? In Zion, there are not many options, but there are a few.
The BEST - Middle Echo from the Bottom
"From the bottom" means entering the canyon at some point and then moving UP canyon as far as you can or want to, and then coming back to where you started.
Seven days after President Trump’s inauguration, the country’s airports and courthouses were clogged with protesters fighting to protect immigrants facing deportation due to the administration’s “Muslim ban” policy. It was to be the opening salvo of a relentless attack on civil liberties—and a tsunami of lawsuits waged against the Trump administration.
“You wanna hear a story about why me & this bitch here fell out? It’s kind of long but full of suspense.”
Zola meets Stefani at a restaurant where Zola waitresses, and the two immediately click over pole dancing. Only a day after they exchange numbers, Stefani invites Zola on a cross-country road trip, where the goal is to make as much money as possible dancing in Florida strip clubs. Zola agrees, and suddenly she is trapped in the craziest, most unexpected trip of her life.
Blurb: “Taylor Swift is a global icon who repeatedly tops the charts, fills stadium tours with rapturous fans, and continues to challenge herself both professionally and personally while remaining steadfast in her vision as an artist. Few have achieved as much as Swift, or have had their personal lives open to such public scrutiny, but in Miss Americana, she finds herself at a watershed moment in her career, using her platform not only as a singer-songwriter, but as a woman fearlessly harnessing the full power of her voice.”
The film is excellent. The story is Americana in spades. Talent. Ambition. Success. Drive. Success. Earned… Oh, wait. I did not win ALL the awards this year! I’m very disappointed, but the next album must be so so so much better!!!
Blurb: “No one at Camp Jened could’ve imagined that those summers in the woods together would be the beginnings of a revolution. Just down the road from Woodstock, Camp Jened was a camp for disabled teens. Directors Nicole Newnham and Jim LeBrecht (a former Jened camper himself) deliver a rousing film about a group of campers turned activists who shaped the future of the disability-rights movement and changed accessibility legislation for everyone.”
We were looking for something to do, not too long, not too short. Not too icy, not too wet. A sunny but cold day expected, thankfully with minimal wind. I suggested the south-facing Spry, the greatest anticipated difficulty being negotiating the extremely shaded first rappel area. Some of us grabbed microspikes, one of us grabbed a wetsuit (me) and off we went, somewhat delayed by Cassy’s morning staff meeting; thus we squeaked out a crack of 10:30 start. The “we” being TreC Kwan from Vegas, Cassy Brown from Sdale and myself.
Heaps is closed. Hopefully opening soon - I hear they are working on the Kayenta Trail. In the meantime, here is a pictorial for the Canyon, from pics over many trips and from several sources. Enjoy.
There is a long tradition of Pie and Beer Day in Utah — our second 4th of July! Coming on a Wednesday this year, we HAD to take the day off but… the madness of Zion these days, and the maddening heat finally here, the standard canyons inside the Park just did not seem like a good idea. Shirlz suggested a romp through Benson Creek up by Parowan / Brian Head. Splashing water, a couple nice raps, not too long, someone else driving… Previously it had seemed a long way to go for a short canyon (1-1/2 hours from Mount Carmel), but it sure seemed like a good idea on this day.
One concept I have been working on putting into words is the idea of Stewardship, both personal on my part, and moreover the stewardship the community and visitors take on, to keep the canyons clean, friendly and in as natural a state as possible. Keeping the canyons “natural” requires active management, as contradictory as that sounds, and producing a guidebook spurns the steward in me to take action, and deal with problems that have festered for a while.
I have some bruised ribs, so I am not up for much right now, but I could not resist getting out to my closest Zion trail to shoot some flowers. It rained last month, almost every day. Now we have had a week or two of hot weather, so the flowers are out something FANTASTIC! All shots here at near the East Entrance trailhead to the East Rim Trail… and actually within 100 yards of the parking lot. SO many blooms out. No mosquitoes. Hot hot hot though…