Adrena and I enjoyed a weekend exploring a bit of Death Valley, including a little adventure helping another couple get unstuck, after which they helped us avoid getting stranded without gas.
Click through for the full gallery:
Some pictures from a backpacking trip with Adrena in Lassen National Park.
These are pictures from a trip to Maui with Adrena, Glenn and Michele.
These collections of images are from a trip I took with REI Adventures to Eastern Africa in December, 1996.
Nairobi & The Road to Tanzania | The Serengeti (Part Two)
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This was a backpacking trip in July with Hoan, Huy, Corey, and Jason into the Kolob Canyons in the northeastern part of the park.
I arrived a few days earlier and so I wandered up the Zion Narrows for a few hours. This incredibly deep and narrow canyon runs for many miles and the river itself is the trail. You spend most of your time wading the river to follow the Narrows through. It’s very much fun. It’s also very difficult to photograph — so I want to go back and try again.
You can arrange to backpack from one end to another and stay overnight at one of several designated spots midway through. I’d love to come back here and backpack the whole length of it someday.
Some views from a couple miles upstream into the Zion Narrows:
These are the grasslands several miles to the northeast of Zion Canyon proper:
One of the many towering walls in Zion Canyon:
Lunch stop in Bear Trap Canyon in the Kolob Canyon area. No bears encountered but this canyon probably could trap one. It ends abruptly in a tight space with a nearly free-falling creek:
This is an album of pictures of miscellaneous outings with Kamay including a trail ride to Devil’s Postpile and Rainbow Falls near Mammoth, a road trip to Sea World in San Diego and Patti’s baptism:
Our Mt. Whitney backpacking trip is posted separately.
Kamay invited me to join her with Patty and Billy on a backpacking trip to summit Mt. Whitney. And here it is, from Mt. Whitney looking down into Owens Valley and the town of Lone Pine from 14,495 feet:
That’s the highest point in the lower forty-eight states, thank you very much!
Hey, plus six feet to my eye-level…
And that’s a marmot, of course!