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Feb 28 2009

Queen’s Garden/Navajo Loop Trail, Bryce Canyon National Park

Published by betchai at 5:45 pm under National Park, Utah, desert, travel Edit This

Bryce Canyon Amphitheater

First, let me point out one major change I made in this blog that may not be very obvious. The title is no longer “San Diego Backroads”, but instead, it is now, “At the Backroads”. It is not that I am tired of San Diego, I love this city that I now call home. San Diego is probably one of the very few places on Earth which offers a remarkable geological diversity for a given area. It is amazing to me that I do not have to leave the city to enjoy the wilderness a lot of the times, I just have to hide in its many rugged coastal canyons and mesas and boulder strewn foothills and I felt like I have escaped civilization in a matter of minutes. In as much as I love San Diego’s sparkling blue waters in the Pacific Ocean, yet I still go to its oak and pine clad mountains, and spend time with the surreal beauty of its desert. I am glad to be experiencing all these 3 environments within San Diego County. However, talking about the desert, I must say my favorite part of the desert region of the West lies outside of San Diego, and outside of California. I am a big fan of the desert landscape in Utah and Arizona. And this is why I decide to change my title. To be able to share the wonders of other places. And for my first post outside of San Diego, I am sharing the magical hoodos of Bryce Canyon National Park, in Utah.

Hiker Gazing at the Hoodos Lining the Trail to Queen’s Garden

The hoodoos are pillars of rock left by erosion. Hoodoo means to cast a spell. The fantastic shapes of these rocks are accurately known to cast a spell on every visitor, drawing them to come back, to hunger for more discovery of hoodoos. Seeing these magical hoodos for the first time transformed this poor lady to a giddy little girl. For me, Utah rocks rock, the hoodos rock me with their spells.

Hoodos @ Queen’s Garden Trail

There are very few hotels nearby Bryce Canyon National Park. When planning to visit, try to make some reservations first especially during summer, or you may end up 20 to 30 miles away from the park. One of the very few places near Bryce Canyon National Park to have a comfortable stay is at Bryce Canyon Lodge.

 

Bryce Canyon Lodge is the only hotel inside Bryce Canyon National Park and is also 18 miles from Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, another amazing natural park that Utah offers.  

Though a lot of tourists are already amazed looking down at the hoodos from the rim of Bryce Canyon, saying “aahs” and “oohs”, but I must say the experience is different when you experience the hoodos much closer when you hike down the canyon. And there are several easy to moderate hikes in Bryce Canyon. One of these hikes is the Queen’s Garden/Navajo Loop Trail. It is only an approximate 3 miles loop hike with approximately 600 ft elevation loss/gain. Since this is a loop, one can start at Sunrise Point going down to Queen’s Garden and climbed up at Navajo Trail to Sunset Point or vice versa. We started our hike at Sunrise Point taking the Queen’s Garden trail first. The trail winds down through colored pinnacles and sculpted spires,

Queen’s Garden Trail

Amongst the Hoodos at Queen’s Garden Trail

Hiker @ Queen’s Garden Trail

Hiker Looking Down at Queen’s Garden Trail

passing through tunnels,

Hiker Passing through the Arch Tunnel @ Queen’s Garden Trail

where each step seemed to bring another set of amazingly sculpted magical hoodos. It is hard to walk fast in this trail, as I kept on gazing at each hoodo in front of me. It was hard to leave a spot, but I just kept on telling myself to move for there are more hoodos to reward me.

The end of the Queen’s Garden Trail is of course, the Queen’s Garden. There is a short trail that leads to the formation known as Queen Victoria.

Queen Victoria in Her Natural Majesty

It is amazing that this lightly colored rock, sculpted by the forces of nature, has some resemblance to the many statues of Queen Victoria found in Europe. From Queen’s Victoria Garden, instead of returning to Sunrise Point, we continued on the trail that will bring us to Navajo Loop. This part of trail follows the Bryce Creek where the trail is now lined with bristlecone pines. Interesting to find a lot of pines down the canyon after the hoodos. But this trail is not all pines, mixed with the pines are still some intresting rock formations of various colors.

A Colorful Hoodoo down the Bryce Creek

The trail comes to a junction with Peek-a-Boo trail, but we chose the one going to Navajo Loop trail. Some of the popular hoodoo formations in the Navajo Trail are: 1. The Silent City ,

The Silent City @ Navajo Trail

Hikers at The Silent City

2. The Wall Street, these narrow canyon was named after Wall Street due its resemblance of NYC streets and skyscrapers.

 

Navajo Loop Trail to Wall Street

3. The Thor’s Hammer.

Thor’s Hammer

The trail from Wall Street to Sunset Point at the rim ascends 521 ft on steep switchbacks.

Hikers traversing the Switchbacks on Navajo Loop Trail

What is amazing about this hike is that for a short 3 mile distance, you get to see a lot of different characters. It seems to me that Bryce Canyon National Park is a community of stone characters, and what character they represent depends on one’s imagination. What is magical about this is that they were carved and shaped by the natural forces of the Earth. Millions of years of wind, water and geologic mayhem shaped and etched the pink cliffs at Bryce, which isn’t actually a canyon but the eastern slope of the Paunsaguant Plateau. Water erodes rock mechanically and chemically. Scouring, abrading, and gullying occur at these iron-rich reddish-pink rocks from which the hoodoos are carved making it so uniquely and fancifully Bryce Canyon National Park. I really could not think of any right word to describe the enchantedness of this park, truly, this is one of the world’s geologic masterpieces. It is a place where we can be giddy as a child again, and marvel at the magical hoodos which seem to bring ENCHANTMENT!

We are making plans to spend spring vacation at Utah again, I am not sure if we will visit this Park again, as Utah’s sculpted and painted desert really has so much to offer. It is nice to take a break once a while from the blue waters of the ocean and the woods in the mountains to experience the amazing works of nature in the desert.

For more information about Bryce Canyon National Park,  please visit http://www.nps.gov/brca/

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15 Responses to “Queen’s Garden/Navajo Loop Trail, Bryce Canyon National Park”

  1. betchaion 01 Mar 2009 at 11:41 pm edit this

    thanks a lot, everyone.

    yes, Bryce really has an amazing landscape, actually, if you put it all together, this region if Utah really has an amazing landscape, different. I hope to be sharing more of Utah’s beauty.

    @ Mark Alan Meader, thank you so much if you will feature Antelope Canyon in your blog. Yes, we are planning to go there this spring, and I am making plans actually and in the lookout for Navajo service. Any tips you can share would be so highly appreciated. I do not know if I will be able to take good pictures there since I do not have much exposure to slot canyons ( just practicing and photography is a hobby but i still have so much to learn) , but I am excited to visit that area.

  2. jodapoeton 02 Mar 2009 at 5:43 pm edit this

    The new blog looks fantastic. What beautiful rock formations and carvings. Wow, I’d love to be standing right out there with you.

  3. betchaion 05 Mar 2009 at 9:53 pm edit this

    Thanks again, everyone.

    Gem, I believe most of them are really in orange hues, but also depends on what time of day you took the picture. sometimes, the color you may have seen maybe were taken at mid-day when the sun is so strong so the colors become flatter, whereas, if you take it closer to sunset or sunrise, the colors are in shade and shadows and becomes more intense. However, in this instance, there was actually on and off rain, we were entirely wet after completing this hike, whenever it rained, we just took shelter from the hoodos. That being wet, and overcast, I believe made the colors much more intense. Just like a clay, the color is kind of different when wet and dry. No, did not use any filter here, just a protective glass for the lens.

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