12.30.2009

Cable Mountain - Zion National Park

Zion National Park is a fantastically beautiful place.  We find ourselves there at least once a year to hike, climb and photograph like crazy.  Zion is characterized by colorful sandstone cliffs in reds, oranges, yellows and even purple.  On our honeymoon trip to the park, we decided to try a few new hikes off the usual beaten paths, which led us to Cable Mountain.  Back in the early 1900s, a sawmill was operated on the rim, and a cable car was built atop Cable Mountain to transport the lumber down to the canyon floor.  The original cable system was hit by lightning and burned down in 1911, only to be rebuilt and operated until about 1930, when it was abandoned due to a lack of lumber supply.  The ruins of the cable structure still stand on the top of Cable Mountain today.

The view across the canyon on the way up to Cable Mountain, seen on the left.
Cable Mountain, Zion National Park

The ruins of the cable system still stand precariously on the very edge of the canyon rim.
Cable Mountain ruins

Red maple leaf

Hope everyone had a very merry Christmas!

12.21.2009

Horseshoe Bend

Horseshoe Bend is a horseshoe-shaped meander in the Colorado River near the Arizona-Utah border. We stopped by on a rainy travel day from the Grand Canyon up to Zion. It's a short hike from Highway 89 up sandy slopes and sandstone to the lookout point, and well worth it!




Happy Monday, folks!

12.16.2009

We're moving!

You may have noticed a few changes here on the blog. Since we got married back in October, and I'm no longer Erin Lang, I'm now doing all the paperwork and account updating to change everything to my new name, Erin Filliater.  It's not all set up yet, but starting very soon, I'll have separate sites for weddings and fine art photography, and my blog is moving to http://www.erinfilliater.blogspot.com.

In the meantime, check out my new wedding site, Wedded Bliss Images:


Happy Wednesday!

12.10.2009

Winter at the Grand Canyon

On our way out of the Grand Canyon, it snowed, rained, and sleeted.  For most people, this means staying inside and curling up on the sofa with a good book or at least a good DVD.  For me, it means moody, interesting photographs, and of course, a lot of running around in the rain and snow.  Many props to my driver/assistant/wonderful husband, who makes last-minute left-hand turns, carries gear, and shelters me and my camera while I change filters and lenses-- you're the best!





12.08.2009

Bright Angel Trail and Plateau Point

The Bright Angel Trail is one of two main thoroughfares into the Grand Canyon from the South Rim Village. The trail itself is wide, nicely graded and well-maintained, and sees hundreds of visitors and a couple mule trains each day, even in the off-season. It passes through colorful cliff bands, ranging in hue from white and grey to pink, coral, orange, and purple. Along the way, there are two rest houses and a campground. The Indian Garden Campground, at 4.5 miles from the top, is the day hike turn-around point for most people, though we decided to go a bit further out to Plateau Point, where you can finally see the Colorado River meandering through the Inner Gorge.

The trail picks its way through cliff bands, then down to the bottom of the Garden Creek Canyon.



Bamboo grows alongside Garden Creek.



12.04.2009

Grand Canyon

When I was 16 years old, my parents took me and my four siblings on the summer vacation that I like to call the "Whirlwind Tour of the West." Seven of us packed ourselves into the old Chevy Astro van, hitched up the little pop-up camper, and spent two weeks driving across the western US. We stopped at national parks along the way, managed to somehow find a preserved sod house off the highway in Iowa (which also featured an anatomically-correct buffalo sculptured from barbed wire), and ended up at the end of the first week at the Grand Canyon. We did the usual tourist attractions in the South Rim Village, and then one day, we hiked a little way down the Bright Angel Trail into the canyon. And that's when I was hooked. The ranger told us the trail kept going, all the way to the bottom of the canyon, and I just knew I had to get there.

Ten years later, my husband and I bought a tent, sleeping bags and enough freeze-dried food to feed a small army and took up backpacking for the simple reason that I had to camp at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. And we did, at the Bright Angel Campground, for two nights. We had such a good time, that we decided to go back on our honeymoon, where we learned a lot of new things about backpacking in the canyon... Especially in regards to water. But enough reminiscing, here's the photos!



 This was the view from our very-briefly-occupied campsite as the sun went down.



After we came back up from our backpack, we took a rest day and walked the Rim Trail, where the bighorn sheep like to eat in the winter. This one wasn't bothered by the camera at all.


More from the Bright Angel Trail on Monday! Happy weekend!

12.03.2009

Back from Vacationland

Well, we're back from our fantastic adventure-filled honeymoon, and now I have tons of photos to sort through! Our travels took us to the Grand Canyon, up through southeastern Utah, and then, unexpectedly, back over to Death Valley (we just couldn't stay away!).

Here's a teaser from the Grand Canyon-- more photos to come as I get through them.  Enjoy!