Sharing photos, videos, vintage images I've discovered, and -- occasionally -- commentary and thoughts from retired life and travels.

February 2012

A very short move.

Post image for A very short move.

February 28, 2012

Our stay at Devils Garden Campground was for three days, but there was still more that we wanted to see in Arches National Park as well as other areas.  On our 2007 trip, we had stayed 3 nights at the KOA southeast of Moab.  This time, we decided to stay there again for four nights, extending our time in the area out to a full week.  Driving distance was just 28.6 miles from Devils Garden to the KOA – the shortest distance between campgrounds we’ve done since September 2009.

Moab is the county seat for Grand County, which takes its name for the original name of the Colorado River, which runs north and west of town.  The town’s population is around 5,000, with an economy largely based on tourism and outdoor adventure activities.


Selected Information Resources:

Arches National Park.

Bureau of Land Management

 

We hadn’t quite reached our furthest distance away from home.  At this point, we still had about a week left in Utah before heading into Arizona.

2011_trip_map_to_moab'

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Park Avenue to Balanced Rock.

February 25, 2012

After Landscape Arch, we went see some of the sights nearer to the entrance to Arches National Park.

It’s 9 miles (14.5 km) from the park entrance to the Balanced Rock parking area. There are four viewpoints along the way for parking, viewing some of the park’s extraordinary and unusual formations  and, at a couple of points, hiking.

  • Balanced Rock, Arches National ParkPark Avenue viewpoint – trail leads downhill through the “Park Avenue” canyon to Courthouse Towers viewpoint.
  • La Sal Mountains viewpoint.
  • Courthouse Towers viewpoint – we hiked up the canyon from this point and back later in our visit.
  • Petrified Dunes viewpoint.

Balanced Rock is one of many popular rock formations in the park. From the parking lot, a short trail leads out to near the base and loops around it.  The height of the pillar and rock on top is about 128 feet (39 m).  The balancing rock is about the size of three school buses, estimated at 3577 tons.  During the winter of ‘75 – ‘76 a smaller companion balanced rock fell.  It had been called “Chip Off The Old Block.”


Selected Information Resources:

Arches National Park.

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The Longest Arch.

Post image for The Longest Arch.

February 22, 2012

Landscape Arch is one of the more popular attractions in Arches National Park.  Located in the Devils Garden area in the northern part of the park, the trailhead was only a short drive from our site in the Devils Garden Campground.  Landscape Arch is 1.5 miles from the trailhead.

It’s the longest arch in the park and according to The Natural Arch and Bridge Society, the longest natural arch in the world, laser measured in 2004 at 290.1 ± 0.8 feet (88.4 m).  Since 1991, three sandstone slabs have fallen from the thinnest section of the arch, resulting in closure of the trail that once passed below it.  Several other arches are accessible in the Devils Garden area.


Selected Information Resources:

Arches National Park.

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Yes, but no.

Napoleon is believed by many to have been a shorty.  Perhaps so by today’s standards, but he was above average height for the period in which he lived.

During the Napoleonic wars, the British Tory press depicted Napoleon as shorter than average.  This perception took hold and persists to this day.  Napoleon complex is a supposed inferiority complex where short people compensate for lack of height with over-aggressive behavior.  The clichéd image of Napoleon in popular culture is of a comically short petty tyrant.

Napoleon

The misunderstanding over Napoleon’s height arose over the differences between the English and French systems of measurement.  The French Revolutionary government established the first legal basis for the metric system in 1795.  Implementation was poorly managed and the system was widely unpopular.

By imperial decree, in 1812, Napoleon instituted a revised system.  Under it, the pied (foot) was 1/3 metre, with 12 pouce (inches) in each pied.

While the French system of metre, pied and pounce were similar in concept to the English Imperial yard, foot and inch, the French units were actually 9.3% larger.

Under the 1812 French units, if Napoleon was about 5 pied (feet), 2 pouce (inches) in height, he would be just under 5 feet, 8 inches by the English system.  The average height of European men at the time was about 5 feet, 3 inches.

Perception misconception.

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Post image for Devils Garden.

Devils Garden.

February 18, 2012

Our three night stay at Arches National Park was in the Devils Garden Campground. Eighteen miles from the park entrance, the campground is located in the middle of red sandstone fins, boulders and rocky hills, Utah juniper and pinion pines, yucca and prickly pear cacti.  The La Sal mountains can be seen in the distance. There are also a few arches nearby. One of them, Skyline Arch, was only a short walk and climb from our campsite, though climbing up into the arch itself was a bit of a stretch.

The nearest town, Moab, is 23 miles away, so there is very little light to pollute the night sky, making the campground a great place to view  the wonders of the night sky.

2011 09 22 160aLike most U.S. national park campgrounds, Devils Garden has no hookups for water, electricity, or sewer.  Facilities do include potable water, picnic tables, and grills, but there are no showers.  There are 50 sites that can be reserved between March 1 and October 31.  This is a very popular campground and, for anyone who would like to camp here,  I would recommend making reservations.

 

 

2011 09 20 a 036


Selected Information Resources:

Arches National Park.

 

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Desert Animal Bronzes

February 15, 2012

After finishing the Delicate Arch hike, we went to the visitor center, near the park entrance.

Dedicated on September 17, 2005,  the Arches National park visitor center includes, outside the front entrance,  Matthew Gray Palmer’s Desert Animal Series sculptures –  a bighorn ram, ewe and lamb, two ravens and two lizards.    These still life animals are popular with visitors (pdf).

The sculptures provide a close-up look at these magnificent animals.  To make the sculptures, the artist first made life-size wax models of the animals. A mold was made from the wax, into which molten bronze was poured. Additional details are worked into the bronze by hand to make the pieces as realistic as possible.

Palmer, a resident of Washington state, is a mixed media sculptor who also draws and paints.  In 1995 he created Parallaxis, “an endeavor dedicated to making a difference in the world by educating people about natural science and conservation through public works of art and multimedia events.”

Raven:

Raven - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Raven:

Raven - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Bighorn sheep ewe:

Big horn sheep ewe -  - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Bighorn sheep ram:

Big horn sheep ram - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Bighorn sheep lamb:

Big horn sheep lamb - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Bighorn sheep ram:

Big horn sheep ram - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

Whiptail lizard:

Whiptail lizard - Arches National Park Desert Animal Series by Matthew Gray Palmer

 


Selected Information Resources:

Arches National Park.

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