The road from Escalante, Scenic Byway 12, goes through Boulder and continues on to Capitol Reef National Park. There was rain. A lot of rain. Like... a ton of rain. We even had to stop a few times as the windshield wipers couldn't handle and I just couldn't see anything going around hairpin turns down a mountain. Good times.
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A cow on the Open Range between Boulder and Torrey, Utah as the rain comes down. A lot of rain. |
You might think Capitol Reef is an odd name for a landlocked National Park, and you'd be right!! But the
Capitol part of the name refers to the white Navajo Sandstone domes that (with some imagination) look like the domes often placed on "capitol" buildings and the
Reef part of the name is a local word to describe any rocky barrier to land travel, like cliffs or canyons, just as coral reefs are barriers to ships on the sea. Capitol Reef was established as a National Monument in 1937 but didn't open to the public till 1950 with roads coming in the 60s. In 1971 it was designated a National Park. It protects the area's colorful canyons, buttes, cliffs and monoliths. It's crowning jewel is the Waterpocket Fold, a weird warp in the earths crust that has been dated as old as 65 million years. This fold is the largest of it's kind in North America and shows dozens of layers of earth stacked on top of each other in the most beautiful and colorful fashion. The Waterpocket Fold runs North to South for over 100 miles and has few roads that have managed to cross it.
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LOOK WHAT I FOUND!!! ALL DRESSED CHIPS!!! In Utah!!!
Seriously. So excited.
Chuck Wagon General Store, Torrey, Utah |