and i'm planning on hiking a volcano in april.
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i went to Utah with good friends. nice, warm camping, fine foods and little fires. there were about 36 hours when we were in the Canyonlands, we hiked for miles and looked out over more and more miles of canyons - we hardly saw any people the whole time. people always wander what it must have been like for the first settlers to stumble upon these canyons for the first time? and i feel like i can almost imagine what it was like because when i looked over my first desert canyon (no, my family did not vacation at the Grand Canyon in the late eighties) and i saw amazing shades of red on the canyon walls that seemed to go on forever and boulders the size of small houses and crevises and dry, crooked creeks, orange delicate arches and just the entire landscape, nature in one of its rawest states, yeah, i was overwhelmed - in awe of the unsuspecting, desert canvas - a lot i feel like the first desert pilgrims may have felt.
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2 comments:
But, if you are from the desert, where the red sand is stuck between your toes and when you think of a river you think of a brown, muddy flow, where you can't see the bottome...then you like the green places, but not to stay there. No, you want to move back to the red rock and the cactus, the hot sun and the good chili peppers...perhaps it is all just a longing for our home...
I'm glad you got to enjoy the desert beauty.
ahh, well said, ian. you offer such a fresh and healthy perspective on things, you know like deserts and life and the longing for home. bueno.
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