Bryce and Beyond...

Red Rocks, Pink Cliffs, and Endless Vistas... That's Bryce's tagline. The photos can't do it justice.

This was a repeat visit for Steve and me, a first for the kiddos. Over two million visitors come to experience the otherworldly magic of Bryce Canyon National Park each year. We only had one day so we made the most of it.
Bryce is not a single canyon, but a series of natural amphitheaters or bowls, carved into the edge of a high plateau. Walking the Rim Trail allowed us to spend time marveling at its viewpoints.
Hoodoos (irregular columns of rock) exist on every continent, but here is the largest concentration found anywhere on Earth. Situated along a high plateau at the top of the Grand Staircase, the park's high elevations include numerous life communities, fantastic dark skies, and geological wonders that defy description.



A coffee pause was had at the iconic Bryce Canyon Lodge, a historic, National Historic Landmark-designated hotel located within Bryce Canyon National Park. Built between 1924 and 1925, it was designed by renowned architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood to serve as a central visitor hub for the Grand Circle Tour, initiated by the Union Pacific Railroad's Utah Parks Company.
The Union Pacific Railroad’s "Grand Circle" is a historic tourist route, developed in the 1920s to promote rail travel to the natural wonders of Southern Utah and Northern Arizona, specifically connecting Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon, Cedar Breaks National Monument, and the North Rim of the Grand Canyon.
Mr. Underwood helped pioneer the National Park Service rustic style. Here at Bryce and at many other western national parks, his artistry, vision, and utilization of local timber and stone created structures that nestled harmoniously into the natural landscape. The lodge’s roof is notable. Its green color was chosen to blend in with the Ponderosa pines, and the shingle pattern creates a wave-like movement, mimicking pine boughs blowing in the wind. This is the last remaining original “Grand Circle Tour” lodge.
The two-story lodge features a massive stone fireplace in the lobby, a dining room, and an auditorium. It was originally surrounded by 67 standard cabins and 15 deluxe cabins. It is absolutely gorgeous, especially in its setting.

What makes this Lodge extra special to me is that 60 years ago, my dear friend Suzanne, fresh out of college, was a Harvey Girl here. These special women will discussed in a future post.
Because we wanted to actually be IN the spectacular red sandstone spires and formations we stopped at the Red Canyon Visitor Center. This area has been called the "most photographed place in Utah". It is easy to see why, with the brilliant red soil contrasting with the green pines, blue skies and white clouds. Spectacular indeed



Our home for the night was along the very vast Lake Powell shoreline.


Sunrise was spectacular from our campsite.
Our day started off here at Horseshoe Bend, a breathtaking, 1,000-foot-deep horseshoe-shaped meander of the Colorado River located near Page, Arizona. Accessible via a 1.5-mile round-trip walk, it offered us a stunning view of red-hued sandstone cliffs.


Before checking into our campsite, we headed to Tusayan for a visually stunning introduction to the Grand Canyon via the Rivers of Time. "In just 34 minutes of air-conditioned comfort at the National Geographic Visitor Center, you will discover a Grand Canyon that would normally take a lifetime to experience. The Grand Canyon IMAX movie opens with the beginning of man’s fragile kinship with the twisting 277-mile Grand Canyon. It then takes you through time, showing you glimpses of human history."
The next two nights will be spent in the Grand Canyon. Tomorrow will be a full day of seeing all we can possibly see.
Our home is Mather Campground, the largest campground in the National Park Service system, with 327 campsites, including seven large group sites and two equine sites.
"The Grand Canyon is carven deep by the master hand;
it is the gulf of silence, widened in the desert;
it is all time inscribing the naked rock;
it is the book of earth."
~Donald Culross Peatti

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The Road to Bryce National Park...

I have deemed this trip an Appetizer Adventure. We are getting small bites of each place giving us the opportunity to know if we'd like to return for the full meal. So far, everything has been exceptionally delicious.

Zion National Park was fully booked when I planned this trip so we only had the opportunity to drive through it. A pause or two was all we needed to commit to a longer stay... next time.
Much anticipation formed as we had to wait our turn to go through the Zion-Mt. Carmel Tunnel. It is 1.1 miles (5,613 feet) long, 22 feet wide and 16 feet high.
Due to the tunnel's narrow, historic design and winding, unlit interior, strict size restrictions are in place to allow safe passage for vehicles.
Construction of the Tunnel began in the late 1920s and was completed in 1930. At the time that the tunnel was dedicated, on July 4, 1930, it was the longest tunnel of its type in the United States. The Zion-Mount Carmel Tunnel (and the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway) provides direct access for travel between Bryce Canyon, Grand Canyon, and Zion National Parks.
Interstingly, as of June 7, 2026, our RV will no longer be able to go through this historic tunnel. Who knew this was our last opportunity. Wild thought.
This is the view from one of the tunnel windows. The engineering feat of this is mindboggling, especially for its time.
We were all in awe of Checkerboard Mesa. The descriptive name stems from the cliff's distinctive multitudinous check lines in cross-bedded white sandstone which give the impression of a checkerboard. The horizontal lines are caused by cross-bedding, a remnant of ancient sand dunes. The vertical and sub-vertical lines formed by the contraction and expansion of the sandstone caused by temperature changes, freezing and thawing cycles.





We arrived in Bryce with just enough time to set up camp, explore the Visitor Center, and then have a barbecue. Our day tomorrow will be one of discovery!

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Camping in the Valley of Fire...

After picking up our rental trailer we headed for our first night of family RVing in the most picturesque Atlatl Campground at the Valley of Fire State Park.

World-renowned for its 40,000 acres of bright red Aztec sandstone outcrops nestled in gray and tan limestone, Valley of Fire State Park contains ancient, petrified trees and petroglyphs dating back more than 2,000 years. While our stay was brief, we were able experience so much. Wow.

The sandstone is from the Jurassic period and is the remnant of the sand left behind by the wind after inland seas subsided and the land rose.






Our home for the nigth, spot #1, was idyllic. Shade came early and our neighbors were spectacular cliffs.

After a peaceful sleep, we awoke early to explore before moving on.


By 8 AM the temperatures were heading towards 90°. We began our day early at Atlatl Rock, an easy hike with amazing examples of prehistoric petroglyphs. An atlatl is a tool used to launch a spear, and ancient Native Americans of the Pueblo culture carved symbols of the atlatl, and so much more, here in the sandstone.





This was the closest we've come to these ancient artifacts.
Our other departing explore was a stroll on the Petrified Log Loop. The petrified logs in Valley of Fire State Park are ancient pine tree fossils estimated to be approximately 150 million years old, dating back to the Age of Reptiles. These logs, which are often reddish-brown in color, were transported to their current locations by floods and later buried under mineral-rich sediment, replacing the wood material with silica, manganese, and iron oxides.





Located only an hour away from Las Vegas but truly a world apart, Valley of Fire was the perfect place in which to begin our amazing adventure.

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