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    • on returning home
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  • Home
  • about ~ wander.essence ~
    • ~ the places i’ve been ~
    • ~ places i’ve been in the u.s.a. ~
  • Travel Destinations
    • America
      • Boston
      • Delaware
      • District of Columbia
        • Washington
      • Georgia
        • Atlanta
      • Maryland
      • New Jersey
        • Cape May
      • New York
        • Adirondacks
        • Buffalo
        • Niagara Falls
      • Pennsylvania
        • Pittsburgh
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
        • Nashville
      • Virginia
    • American Road Trips
      • Canyon & Cactus Road Trip
      • Florida Road Trip
        • Everglades
        • Fort Lauderdale
        • Florida Keys
        • Miami
        • St. Augustine
      • Four Corners Road Trip
        • Arizona
          • Monument Valley
          • Petrified Forest National Park
          • Sunset Crater National Monument
          • Walnut Canyon National Monument
          • Winslow
          • Wupatki National Monument
        • Colorado
          • Colorado National Monument
          • Colorado Towns
          • Great Sand Dunes National Park
          • Grand Junction
        • New Mexico
        • Utah
          • Arches National Park
          • Canyonlands
          • Navajo National Monument
          • Dead Horse Point State Park
          • Hovenweep National Monument
          • Moab
          • Valley of the Gods
          • Natural Bridges National Monument
      • Great Lakes Road Trip
        • Michigan
        • Minnesota
        • Wisconsin
      • Midwestern Triangle
        • Illinois
          • Carbondale
          • Murphysboro
        • Kentucky
          • Covington
          • Lexington
          • Louisville
        • Ohio
          • Cincinnati
      • Road Trip to Nowhere
        • Nebraska
        • North Dakota
        • South Dakota
      • Tex-New Mex Road Trip
        • Texas & New Mexico Road Trip
        • New Mexico
        • Texas
    • International Travel
      • Africa
        • african meanderings {& musings}
        • Egypt
          • Cairo
        • Ethiopia
        • Morocco
      • Asia
        • Cambodia
        • China
          • China Diaries
          • Guangxi Province
        • India
          • Rishikesh
          • Varanasi
        • Japan
          • Kyoto
        • Myanmar
        • Oman
          • a nomad in the land of nizwa
          • Nizwa
        • Singapore
        • South Korea
          • catbird in korea
        • Thailand
        • Turkey
          • Cappadocia
        • Vietnam
      • Central America
        • Costa Rica
        • El Salvador
        • Nicaragua
        • Panama
          • Bocas del Toro
          • Panama City
      • Europe
        • In Search of a Thousand Cafés
        • Croatia
          • Dalmatia
            • Istria
            • Dubrovnik
            • Plitvice Lakes National Park
            • Split
            • Zadar
            • Zagreb
        • Czech Republic
          • Český Krumlov
        • England
        • France
        • Greece
        • Hungary
          • Budapest
          • Esztergom
        • Iceland
        • Italy
          • Bergamo
          • Cinque Terre
          • The Dolomites
          • Florence
          • Rome
          • Tuscany
          • Venice
          • Verona
          • Via Francigena
        • Portugal
        • Spain
          • Camino de Santiago
            • packing list for el camino de santiago 2018
      • North America
        • Canada
          • The Maritimes
            • New Brunswick
            • Nova Scotia
            • Prince Edward Island
          • Ontario
      • South America
        • Colombia
        • Ecuador
          • Cuenca
          • Quito
    • how to make the most of a staycation
      • Coronavirus Coping
  • Imaginings
    • imaginings: the call to place
  • Travel Preparation
    • journeys: anticipation & preparation
  • Travel Creativity
    • on keeping a travel journal
    • on creating art from travels
      • Art Journaling
    • photography inspiration
      • Photography
    • writing prompts: prose
      • Prose
        • Fiction
        • Travel Essay
        • Travelogue
    • writing prompts: poetry
      • Poetry
  • On Journey
    • on journey: taking ourselves from here to there
  • Books & Movies
    • books | international a-z |
    • books & novels | u.s.a. |
    • books | history, spirituality, personal growth & lifestyle |
    • movies | international a-z |
    • movies | u.s.a. |
  • On Returning Home
    • on returning home
  • Annual recap
    • twenty-fifteen
    • twenty-eighteen
    • twenty-nineteen
    • twenty-twenty
    • twenty-twenty-one
    • twenty twenty-two
    • twenty twenty-three
    • twenty twenty-four
    • twenty twenty-five
  • Contact

wander.essence

wander.essence

Home from Morocco & Italy

Home sweet home!May 10, 2019
I'm home from Morocco & Italy. :-)

Italy trip

Traveling to Italy from MoroccoApril 23, 2019
On my way to Italy!

Leaving for Morocco

Casablanca, here I come!April 4, 2019
I'm on my way to Casablanca. :-)

Home from our Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving home from Lexington, KYMarch 6, 2019
Home sweet home from the Midwest. :-)

Leaving for my Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving to IndianaFebruary 24, 2019
Driving to Indiana.

Returning home from Portugal

Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!November 6, 2018
Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!

Leaving Spain for Portugal

A rendezvous in BragaOctober 26, 2018
Rendezvous in Braga, Portgual after walking the Camino de Santiago. :-)

Leaving to walk the Camino de Santiago

Heading to Spain for the CaminoAugust 31, 2018
I'm on my way to walk 790 km across northern Spain on the Camino de Santiago.

Home from my Four Corners Road Trip

Home Sweet Home from the Four CornersMay 25, 2018
Home Sweet Home from the Four Corners. :-)

My Four Corners Road Trip!

Hitting the roadMay 1, 2018
I'm hitting the road today for my Four Corners Road Trip: CO, UT, AZ, & NM!

Recent Posts

  • twenty twenty-five: nicaragua {twice}, mexico & seven months in costa rica {with an excursion to panama} December 31, 2025
  • the december cocktail hour: mike’s surgery, a central highlands road trip & christmas in costa rica December 31, 2025
  • top ten books of 2025 December 28, 2025
  • the november cocktail hour: a trip to panama, a costa rican thanksgiving & a move to lake arenal condos December 1, 2025
  • panama: the caribbean archipelago of bocas del toro November 24, 2025
  • a trip to panama city: el cangrejo, casco viejo & the panama canal November 22, 2025
  • the october cocktail hour: a trip to virginia, a NO KINGS protest, two birthday celebrations, & a cattle auction October 31, 2025
  • the september cocktail hour: a nicoya peninsula getaway, a horseback ride to la piedra del indio waterfalls & a fall bingo card September 30, 2025
  • the august cocktail hour: local gatherings, la fortuna adventures, & a “desfile de caballistas”  September 1, 2025
  • the july cocktail hour: a trip to ometepe, nicaragua; a beach getaway to tamarindo; & homebody activities August 3, 2025
  • the june cocktail hour: our first month in costa rica June 30, 2025
  • a pura vida year in costa rica June 12, 2025
  • the may cocktail hour: final wrap up, a wedding & leaving for costa rica June 2, 2025

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arches in the four corners

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 September 6, 2018

Arches National Park has over 2,000 natural stone arches, but there are other arches elsewhere in Utah.

I’ve already shown you some on various hikes:

Delicate Arch
Delicate Arch
Skyline Arch
Skyline Arch
Landscape Arch
Landscape Arch

We found other arches at various viewpoints where a long hike wasn’t required.

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Tunnel Arch along the Devils Garden Trail

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Pine Tree Arch along Devils Garden Trail

Pine Tree Arch through the opposite side
Pine Tree Arch through the opposite side
Pine Tree Arch
Pine Tree Arch

Sand Dune Arch is well-concealed between two sandstone fins.

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Sand Dune Arch

Broken Arch Trail winds through open blackbrush and grassland flats.  The arch isn’t really broken, but a crack through the top gives it that appearance.

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Broken Arch

We found Mesa Arch at Canyonlands National Park.

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Mesa Arch at Canyonlands National Park

Wilson Arch, which sits right along the road from Moab to Bluff, Utah, was named after Joe Wilson, a local pioneer who had a cabin nearby in Dry Valley.  This formation is known as Entrada Sandstone.  Over time, the superficial cracks, joints, and folds of these layers were saturated with water.  Ice formed in the fissures, melted under extreme desert heat, and winds cleaned out the loose particles.  A series of free-standing fins remained.  Wind and water attacked these fins until, in some, the cementing material gave way and chunks of rock tumbled out.  Many damaged fins collapsed.  Others, with the right edge of hardness survived despite their missing middles like Wilson Arch.

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Wilson Arch

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looking through Wilson Arch

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The view from inside Wilson Arch

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standing on the edge of Wilson Arch

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Wilson Arch

While arches form from the inside out, some rock formations that look like arches are actually considered bridges. Owachomo Bridge at Natural Bridges National Monument is a bridge that was carved from the outside, by water. Because Owachomo no longer straddles all the streams which carved it, it appears to be an arch.  Flowing water is required to carve a hole through a rock wall to form a bridge, while an arch is freestanding and does not span a water course.

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Owachomo Bridge at Natural Bridges National Monument

*********************

“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20 photos (fewer is better) and to write less than 350-500 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself.

While I’m in Spain walking the Camino de Santiago from August 31 – October 25, and then in Portugal from October 26 – November 6, I kindly request that if you have a photography post you’d like to share, please simply link it to the appropriate post, this one or my next one as soon as it publishes. I will try my best to read your posts while I’m on my journey, but I won’t have a computer or the time or ability to add links to my posts. 

My next scheduled photography post will be on September 20, 2018.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time.

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!  See below in the comments for any additional links.

  • Ulli, of Banactee, photographed abandoned places, and mused about the poetry of such places.
    • Abandoned Dreamings

Thanks to all of you who wrote photography posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

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  • England
  • International Travel
  • On Returning Home

on returning home from england

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 September 3, 2018

On September 14, 1999, my husband and I embarked on our first ever trip to England. This trip was a milestone for me, having never been across the pond to Europe; I had only taken extensive road trips around the USA and Canada, and had been several times to the Bahamas in the Caribbean. It was late in life for me to be traveling abroad for the first time; I was 43 and Mike was 45.  We left behind our children, ages 15, 8 and 6, with their grandparents for the first time.

I remember being afraid to venture to a non-English speaking country, so we chose England to be safe. When I look back on it now, I realize how unadventurous I was in every respect.  I was afraid of flying, afraid to explore unfamiliar cultures, afraid to leave the kids behind.  I wouldn’t even consider traveling until we had wills drawn up in case we should die. I was so cautious then.

I thought England would be much like America, so I was thrilled to find it was surprisingly different. It felt foreign, even exotic! I realized I could travel abroad, and the journey transformed me into a braver and less anxious traveler.  I began almost as soon as I returned home to plan our next trip to France in 2003.

In Bath, we walked around the Roman Baths, at one time the most elegant resort in Britain. We stayed in bed and breakfasts with sumptuous breakfasts; we watched senior citizens lawn bowling.  I ate rarebit.  We went to the Circus and the Royal Crescent. We laughed our heads off at the Bizarre Bath Comedy Walk.  We went to Glastonbury Abbey under gloomy skies.

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Bath

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Royal Crescent

In Wells, we found quintessential British homes and gardens and were moved to tears by evensong sung by a men and boys choir at Wells Cathedral.

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Wells

In the Cotswolds, we had lunch in the Plaisterer’s Arms Pub, and ventured to Sudeley Castle, where we enjoyed boxwoods, topiary, a knot garden and the Queen’s Garden. We bought an Ordnance Map and walked through rolling hills dotted with sheep and pheasants, and traipsed across farms to the remains of a Roman Villa, including a mosaic floor in some woods near Winchcombe. We stopped in charming villages such as Stanton and Chipping Camden, with their thatched roof cottages and well-tended gardens.  We walked from Bourton-on-the-Hill through sheep fields and cow pastures, over stiles, through gates abutting cattle grids, and past the incongruous “Indian Palace” of Sezincote Manor. Rye Farmhouse became the house of my dreams. We drove through picturesque villages such as Upper and Lower Slaughter and the overly touristy Bourton-on-the-Water. We were overwhelmed by the sprawling Blenheim Palace, too grandiose and pretentious for my taste.  We met wax figures at Warwick Castle and imagined horrors in its torture chambers and dungeons.

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Walk to Roman Villa

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Chipping Camden

In Windermere, in the Lake District, we stayed in the boathouse at the gorgeous Langdale Chase Hotel, where Mike got a stomach flu. I picked my way through a million bones in kippers. I took English baths while drinking a pint or two. We visited Dove Cottage, Wordsworth’s early home, in Grasmere. We strolled through Rydal Water in search of Wordsworth, while the confused skies sprinkled, drizzled, poured, and periodically glowed with sunlight. We rode the Steamboat Gondola on Coniston Water. Near Keswick, we took a six-mile hike up Cat Bells and alongside Derwent Water.  The sun popped out to give us magnificent views over the Lake District.  We were awed by the scenery as we drove through Kirkstone Pass amidst rolling mountains, sheep pastures and stone fences, from Ambleside to Glennridding to Ullswater.

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Cat Bells & Derwent Water

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Cat Bells & Derwent Water

We drove east across Yorkshire Dales National Park and stopped in the atmospheric Fountains Abbey, where we found schoolchildren dressed in monk’s habits doing a monk reenactment.

Finally, we ended up in London. Our time in the capital was too short.  We only had time for the Thames, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Hyde Park.  We glimpsed Kensington Palace, stopped by Buckingham Palace, and delved into Westminster Abbey.  We wandered through Notting Hill and the Travel Bookshop — the model for the bookshop in the movie Notting Hill.  We marveled over tiny British cars and double-decker red buses.  We mingled with the pigeons at Trafalgar Square. To top it all off, we enjoyed a play called Quartet at the Albery Theater after a dinner of spicy Indian food.

Buckingham Palace
Buckingham Palace
Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey

This trip marked a turning point in my life.  My once sheltered and constrained life would become increasingly interspersed with travel.  My nomadic side kicked in, and I sprouted an adventurous side. While during the first 43 years of my life I had only traveled to four countries, including my own, I have now, in the last 20 years, traveled to a total of 30, with return trips to several countries (France, China, Japan, Canada, Spain and Portugal).

As 1999 was before the digital days, I spent endless hours putting my photos into a scrapbook. I wrote a villanelle called: schoolchildren at abbey ruins. I also wrote a poem about Evensong at Wells Cathedral, which is scheduled to post on November 2. I loved creating something from our journey that would bring back happy reminders whenever I cared to revisit them.

Most importantly, this was the beginning of a more confident and adventurous me. 🙂

 ************************

“ON RETURNING HOME” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about returning home from one particular destination or, alternately, from a long journey encompassing many stops.  How do you linger over your wanderings and create something from them?  How have you changed? Did the place live up to its hype, or was it disappointing? Feel free to address any aspect of your journey and how it influences you upon your return. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

For some ideas on this, you can check out the original post about this subject: on returning home.

While I’m in Spain walking the Camino de Santiago from August 31 – October 25, and then in Portugal from October 26 – November 6, I kindly request that if you write a “returning home” piece, please simply link it to the appropriate post, this one or my next one as soon as it publishes.  I will try my best to read your posts while I’m on my journey, but I won’t have a computer or the time or ability to add links to my posts.

My next “on returning home” post will be on Monday, October 1, 2018.

This will be an ongoing invitation on the first Monday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Atreyee, of Bespoke Traveler, wrote about what makes a place a home.
    • A Candy Home in Cap Ferrat
  • Jim, of Memories & Thoughts, wrote an evocative piece about returning to the places he calls home, Albury and Molong, that hold physical, as well as reflective, memories.
    • Thoughts on Home

Thanks to all of you who wrote “returning home” posts following intentions you set for yourself.  🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Canyonlands
  • Four Corners Road Trip

the mesa arch trail & shafer canyon overlook, topped off with a treat from quesadilla mobilla

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 September 2, 2018

After hiking the Grand View Point Overlook Trail, we headed north out of Canyonlands.  Before leaving, we took a short hike to see Mesa Arch.  We also stopped off at the Shafer Canyon Overlook.  We had a bit of a time constraint, as we wanted to eat at the Quesadilla Mobilla food truck on our last night in Moab. They closed promptly at 5:00, so we needed to hightail it back to Moab so we could have this treat and explore a bit of Moab after dinner.

Mesa Arch is a half-mile hike leading to a cliff-edge arch.  It has stunning views towards the La Sal Mountains.

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Mesa Arch Trail

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Mesa Arch Trail

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Mesa Arch

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Mesa Arch

The walk was a short one, about 0.84 miles, taking us only 25:34 minutes.

Across from the parking lot to the Mesa Arch trail is Aztec Butte.

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Aztec Butte

Before approaching the Visitor Center, we stopped to check out the Shafer Canyon Overlook Trail.  From this overlook, we could see portions of the 100-mile White Rim Road, which loops around and below the Island in the Sky mesa top and provides views of the surrounding area.  Trips on this road usually take two to three days by four-wheel-drive vehicle or three to four days by mountain bike.  A permit is required to drive this road, and you must have a high-clearance, four-wheel-drive vehicle.  This unpaved road reminded me of the treacherous road I drove several times through Wadi Bani Awf in Oman, but scarier: a treacherous drive through wadi bani awf: a near-tragedy, the picturesque village of balad sayt, & a glimpse of the infamous snake canyon.

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Shafer Canyon Overlook

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Shafer Canyon Overlook

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Shafer Canyon Overlook

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Shafer Canyon Overlook

We had to speed back to Moab in hopes of making it to Qesadilla Mobilla on time.  We called ahead and asked if they closed at exactly 5:00, and they replied that yes, they did.  We would be cutting it close, lucky to arrive even at the last minute. However, they urged us to check out the online menu and order ahead, so they could have it ready for us upon arrival. I ordered a New Mexico Identity Crisis (New Mexico green chile chicken layered over a bed of fresh spinach and topped with sauteed artichoke hearts and black olives, all melted together in a blend of cheddar/jack cheese) and Mike a Sweet and Spicy Veggie Quesadilla (a plentiful layer of fresh spinach covered with spicy roasted sweet potatoes, sauteed red bell peppers, black beans and jalapenos, fused together with cheddar/jack cheese).

We arrived at exactly 4:55 and paid for our dinner, after which they promptly closed the food truck.  We were able to sit outside in the shade and enjoy our meals before going back to our Airbnb to shower. The rush back was definitely worth it. 🙂

Quesadilla Mobilla
Quesadilla Mobilla
New Mexico Identity Crisis
New Mexico Identity Crisis

All in all, today we walked 18,848 steps, or 7.99 miles.

*Thursday, May 10, 2018*

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: Osmotherley and Beyond.

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  • Canada
  • Colorful
  • International Travel

*colorful* in niagara falls, ontario

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 30, 2018

The wild & crazy Clifton Hill in Niagara Falls, Ontario, with its carnival spirit and general weirdness, is home to arcades, fun houses, playlands, mini-golf courses, the Niagara SkyWheel, wax museums, and bowling alleys.

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Ripley’s Believe It or Not

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Ripley’s Believe It or Not

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Fudge on Centre Street

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Niagara SkyWheel and Strike! Rock n’ Bowl

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Great Canadian Midway

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Bronto’s Playland

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The Fun House

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Movieland

Since we have an extra (5th) Thursday in August, I’ll participate in the Lens-Artists Photo Challenge – Colorful. I’m also doing an extra photo invitation of my own, on this bonus Thursday. 🙂

*********************

“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20 photos (fewer is better) and to write less than 350-500 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself.

While I’m in Spain walking the Camino de Santiago from August 31 – October 25, and then in Portugal from October 26 – November 6, I kindly request that if you have a photography post you’d like to share, please simply link it to the appropriate post, this one or my next one as soon as it publishes. I will try my best to read your posts while I’m on my journey, but I won’t have a computer or the time or ability to add links to my posts. 

My next scheduled photography post will be on September 6, 2018.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time.

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Jo, of Restless Jo, posted some interesting photos, popping with color and character on a gloomy day, when she visited Ma Shipton’s cave.
    • Jo’s Monday Walk: Ma Shipton’s Cave, Knaresborough
  • Jude, of Travel Words, posted some elegant photos of a boat from the Belle Epoque fleet in Geneva.
    • CGN: Savoie
  • Sue, of WordsVisual, posted some stunning photos of Cordoba’s Mezquita.
    • Cordoba part 1 – Mezquita

Thanks to all of you who wrote photography posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Buffalo
  • New York

things i learned in buffalo, new york

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 28, 2018

I learned, while visiting the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site, that in 1901, Buffalo was the 8th largest city in the U.S.

I learned that the U.S. had just celebrated victory in the Spanish-American War in 1898, three years earlier.

I learned that President William McKinley was shot and critically wounded by an assassin on September 6, 1901, while attending a reception at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York.

I learned that the assassin was 28-year-old anarchist Leon Czolgosz, who was eventually put to death by electric chair.

I learned that then Vice President Theodore Roosevelt rushed from Vermont to Buffalo, only to be assured that President McKinley had rallied after his surgery, although one of the bullets was not recovered.

I learned that VP Roosevelt, after hearing the president’s chances of recovery were excellent, joined his wife and children in the Adirondack Mountains.

I learned that the Vice President was hiking up Mt. Marcy, the highest mountain in New York, when a man approached him on the trail; Roosevelt “instinctively knew he had bad news, the worst news in the world.”

I learned that President McKinley died because of a gangrenous infection from the undiscovered bullet.

I learned that VP Roosevelt traveled long and far to get to Buffalo, arriving on September 14, just after the President had died.

I learned that, after his arduous travels, Roosevelt ate a meal, then went to pay his respects to Mrs. McKinley, who was in such grief, she wouldn’t see him. Only then did he take the oath of office.

I learned that Roosevelt took the oath of office in the library of his friend Ansley Wilcox’s house, but as two reporters there got in a scuffle, they were ousted and no photographs were taken.

I learned that Buffalo became the ad hoc capital of the country for four days.

I learned that many of the problems faced by the country in 1901 are the same problems we face today: issues of racial inequality, low wages and worker abuse, poverty, and the plundering of the environment.

I learned that Roosevelt ushered in the beginning of the progressive era.  He was an activist president who was the first to leave the borders of the U.S. during his presidency (to visit the Panama Canal); he was involved in food and drug inspections and child labor laws, and he set aside lands as National Parks. He also got involved in coal strikes and trust-busting.

I learned that I can be fascinated by history when I learn personal details of a story rather than simply names and dates, as it was taught in school.

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Theodore Roosevelt National Historic Site

All about commerce
All about commerce
Pan American Exposition
Pan American Exposition
Rare Delights
Rare Delights
Grand Carnival of Nations
Grand Carnival of Nations
Buffalo, New York
Buffalo, New York
the dining room where Roosevelt ate before being sworn in
the dining room where Roosevelt ate before being sworn in
Newspaper of the day
Newspaper of the day
Newspaper of the day
Newspaper of the day
Libary where Roosevelt was sworn in
Libary where Roosevelt was sworn in
Issues of the day
Issues of the day
Living room at the Wilcox House
Living room at the Wilcox House

I learned that Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) designed a Prairie house complex, the Darwin D. Martin House, for wealthy Buffalo businessman Darwin D. Martin and his family between 1903-1905.

I learned that the house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1986.

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Darwin D. Martin House

I learned that the house represents the Prairie House ideal: strong horizontal lines and planes, deeply overhanging eaves, a central hearth, a prominent foundation, a sheltering, cantilevered roof, and designed art glass. The design is meant to blend with nature.

I learned that by far, the best known art glass pattern is the “Tree of Life” window.

I learned that Roman bricks, used to build the house, are long, horizontal, thin bricks.

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Roman bricks

I learned that the house has a long pergola with a statue of Venus at the end.

Darwin D. Martin House with pergola
Darwin D. Martin House with pergola
the outside of the pergola
the outside of the pergola
inside the pergola
inside the pergola
statue of Venus
statue of Venus
statue of Venus
statue of Venus

I learned that the Darwin House Complex is an anomaly in a neighborhood of mostly European-influenced homes.

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Episcopal Church of the Good Shepard across from the Martin House

I learned that I share with Frank Lloyd Wright a fascination with the art and culture of Japan.

I learned that Frank Lloyd Wright was rigid in the design of his homes and the arrangement of furniture. It wasn’t about the client, but about him, and he always got his way.

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Darwin D. Martin House

And I learned that when I plan a trip properly, I can add new stickers and stamps to my National Parks passport!

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Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site (with a Niagara Falls sticker added for good fun!)

*June 26, 2018*

**********************

“PROSE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 500-750 word post on your own blog about a recently visited particular destination (not journeys in general). Concentrate on any intention you set for your prose.  In this case, one of my intentions for my trip to Buffalo, New York and Niagara Falls, was to write a “things I learned” list each day.

It doesn’t matter whether you write fiction or non-fiction for this invitation.  You can either set your own writing intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: prose & poetry.  (This page is a work in process.) You can also include photos, of course.

While I’m in Spain walking the Camino de Santiago from August 31 – October 25, and then in Portugal from October 26 – November 6, I kindly request that if you write a prose piece, please simply link it to the appropriate post, this one or my next one as soon as it publishes.  I will try my best to read your posts while I’m on my journey, but I won’t have a computer or the time or ability to add links to my posts.

My next scheduled prose post will be on Tuesday, September 11. If you do have a link before August 31, I can add your link to my next post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, every second and fourth Tuesday. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Jude, of Travel Words, immerses us in blooms and people-watching and water shenanigans on the shores of Lake Geneva in Montreux.
    • Postcard from Montreux
  • Tish, of Tish Farrell: Writer on the Edge, wrote an evocative and nostalgic post about her time at Hunter’s Lodge at Kiboko in Kenya.
    • Once in Africa ~ Everyday Moments at Hunter’s Lodge… Until the Crocodile
  • Toby, of Travels with Toby, spent some time in my neck of the woods, visiting some of Washington’s finest sights.
    • Washington, D.C. revisited

Thanks to all of you who wrote prosaic posts following intentions you set for yourself.  🙂

 

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  • American Road Trips
  • Canyonlands
  • Four Corners Road Trip

the grand view overlook trail in canyonlands

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 26, 2018

After leaving the Upheaval Dome and Whale Rock, we drive south through Canyonlands, stopping at several overlooks.

We make a quick stop at the Holman Spring Canyon Overlook.

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Holman Spring Canyon Overlook

Island in the Sky sits atop a mesa overlooking two great rivers that come together, the Green River and the Colorado River. We stop at the Green River Overlook and look west over the Green River.

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the trail to the Green River Overlook

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Green River Overlook

We then stop for a view of the Colorado River to the east from the Buck Canyon Overlook.

Buck Canyon Overlook
Buck Canyon Overlook
Buck Canyon Overlook
Buck Canyon Overlook

The Buck Canyon Overlook also offers views of the La Sal Mountains in the distance.

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Buck Canyon Overlook

Further south still, we stop briefly at the Orange Cliffs Overlook.

Orange Cliffs Overlook
Orange Cliffs Overlook
Orange Cliffs Overlook
Orange Cliffs Overlook
Orange Cliffs Overlook
Orange Cliffs Overlook
me with Mike at the Orange Cliffs Overlook
me with Mike at the Orange Cliffs Overlook

Finally, we reach the southernmost point at Island in the Sky, Grand View Point Overlook.  It is quite hot today, but we hike a mile out and a mile back along the top of the canyon edge.  The Grand View encompasses the confluence of the Colorado and the Green Rivers in the distance; in the foreground, we see Meander Canyon and The Loop of the Colorado River.

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Grand View Point Overlook

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Grand View Point Overlook

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Mormon Tea at the Grand View Point Overlook

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Grand View Point Overlook

The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail
The Grand View Point Overlook trail

On our way back from the end point of the trail, I change my lens, using a wide-angle to capture our last views of the canyon.

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The Grand View Overlook trail

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Grand View Point Overlook trail

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Grand View Point Overlook trail

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Grand View Point Overlook trail

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Grand View Point Overlook trail

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Grand View Point Overlook trail

All in all, we walk 2.19 miles over 1:16 hours.

*Thursday, May 10, 2018*

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: Ma Shipton’s Cave, Knaresborough.

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  • Anticipation
  • Books
  • Camino de Santiago

anticipation & preparation: the camino de santiago

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 24, 2018

Don’t overthink. Remember, it’s YOUR Camino. The Camino will provide. You will be fine! Buen Camino! This is some of the advice and encouragement I hear repeatedly from pilgrims who have completed the Camino de Santiago across northern Spain.  On the various Facebook pages, books, and online Camino websites and forums, there seems a limitless amount of advice, often contradictory.  So, if it’s to be MY Camino, I am picking and choosing which advice I will heed, and which I will toss out.  What else is there to do?  🙂

I’m not good at following advice telling me not to overthink. My husband says if there is a bell curve of people planning to walk the Camino, I would be on the far extreme of over-preparation.  Though he might be right in some regards, I don’t agree with him totally. Physically, I’m afraid I’m under-prepared.

The Camino hasn’t been far from my mind over this entire year. In mid-July, I dreamed I was in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port and everywhere I looked were impossibly tall mountains, bursting with flowers and tropical trees.  Paths wound their way up all of them.  I was quite overwhelmed and wondered which of the paths I should follow.  My first impulse was to pull out my camera to photograph the stunning scene. Suddenly I realized I had forgotten my camera, so I called my husband in a panic, asking him to mail it to me. Of course, it would take days to get to me.  I was devastated to have forgotten my camera and berated myself mercilessly for my forgetfulness!

Resources

There are multitudes of books you can read about the Camino, either personal accounts, advice on packing, guidebooks, or history books.  These are some that I have read or am in the process of reading.  The Brierley guidebook I will take along with me, tearing out the pages for that day’s walk and disposing of them after walking, lightening my load each day. 🙂

  • Camino de Santiago
    • Guidebooks:
      • A Pilgrim’s Guide to the Camino de Santiago: St. Jean * Roncesvalles * Santiago by John Brierley
      • Camino de Santiago: The ancient Way of St. James pilgrimage route from the French Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela by Sergi Ramis
    • Personal accounts:
      • In Movement There is Peace (Anxiety Treatment Alternatives) by Elaine Orabona Foster (Kindle) ****
      • The Road to Santiago by Kathryn Harrison *****
      • Sunrises to Santiago: Searching for Purpose on the Camino de Santiago by Gabriel Schirm ****
      • Steps Out of Time: One Woman’s Journey on the Camino by Katherine B. Soper (Kindle) ****
      • On Pilgrimage by Jennifer Lash (mostly in France, but ending in Santiago de Compostela)*****
      • The Camino: A Journey of the Spirit by Shirley MacLaine
      • I’m Off Then: Losing and Finding Myself on the Camino de Santiago by Hape Kerkeling
      • The Way, My Way by Bill Bennett (Kindle)
      • Off the Road: A Modern-Day Walk Down the Pilgrim’s Route Into Spain by Jack Hitt (Kindle)
      • The Way is Made by Walking: A Pilgrimage Along the Camino de Santiago by Arthur Paul Boers
    • Packing advice:
      • To Walk Far, Carry Less by Jean-Christie Ashmore ****
      • Pilgrim Tips & Packing List Camino de Santiago by S. Yates
    • History & Culture
      • The Pilgrimage Road to Santiago: The Complete Cultural Handbook by David M. Gitllitz and Linda Kay Davidson
  • Spain in general (I have other books listed on my page: (books | international a-z |)
    • The Vineyard by María Dueñas
    • Travelers’ Tales Spain: True Stories, Ed. Lucy McCauley
guidebooks & packing books
guidebooks & packing books
personal accounts and history and general tales of Spain
personal accounts and history and general tales of Spain

There are numerous online resources as well.

  • Facebook pages
    • Camino de Santiago
    • American Pilgrims on the Camino (APOC)
    • Hiking Camino de Santiago and the World
    • Mid-Atlantic Chapter: American Pilgrims on the Camino
    • Hikers of the World: 50+ Age Group
  • Other online resources (I’m sure there are MANY more!)
    • The Confraternity of Saint James: Step by Step to Santiago
    • American Pilgrims on the Camino
    • American Pilgrims: Mid-Atlantic (Washington, DC – Baltimore, Maryland) Chapter

American Pilgrims on the Camino & Training:

Let the Camino train you. It’s just walking. Just put one foot in front of the other. Walk into your pack weight. Walk two days straight for 10-12 miles carrying your full pack. I’ve encountered this advice while preparing for the Camino.

In early December of 2017, on a 7.7 mile hike around Burke Lake, I met a great lady named Susan who walked the Camino. She introduced me to a group called the American Pilgrims on the Camino – Mid-Atlantic Chapter. The group is for anyone who has ever done the Camino or who wants to do the Camino.  After I met her, I signed up immediately for newsletters from this group.  Outside of the group, Susan and I have been in touch regularly and have walked together numerous times. She’s been one of my most valuable sources of information and encouragement.

To immerse myself in the Camino experience, I shared Spanish tapas with pilgrims and wanna-be pilgrims at a potluck for American Pilgrims on the Camino in early February.  I chatted with a lot of folks who were full of good advice.

I accompanied the Mid-Atlantic Pilgrims for a 10-mile walk in March starting from Arlington National Cemetery, past the Martin Luther King Memorial, up the National Mall and around the back of the U.S. Capitol, and then back down the Mall again to the Lincoln Memorial. I got a taste of what it’s like walking a long distance with other pilgrims walking at different paces. One man was especially helpful in telling me what a typical day on the Camino was like.  Another lady told me, as I carried a 5-lb backpack, that I should be walking into my pack weight.  In other words, I should carry the entire 15-lb from the beginning and then slowly increase my distance.  I didn’t follow this advice, although it might have been a good thing to do.

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Martin Luther King Memorial on our 10-mile walk in D.C.

On June 9, I attended a shell ceremony with the group, where the leader read aloud an inspirational piece about the Camino and then bestowed blessings on us pilgrims, placing shells around our necks to accompany us on our journey.

me with my shell :-)
me with my shell 🙂
the group at the shell ceremony
the group at the shell ceremony

Training: I was gung-ho in the early months.  I wonder if I should have just decided to do the Camino two months before doing it, instead of spending so many months training. Below are some photos of walks I did in June and July.

Manassas National Battlefirst - First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – First Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst - Second Manassas Trail
Manassas National Battlefirst – Second Manassas Trail
Turkey Run
Turkey Run
Turkey Run
Turkey Run
Burke Lake
Burke Lake
The Fairfax Cross-County Trail
The Fairfax Cross-County Trail
The Fairfax Cross-County Trail
The Fairfax Cross-County Trail

Below I’ve outlined my progress: “dedicated walking” means I went out for a purposeful walk aiming to cover a certain distance. Sometimes I carried an 11-lb pack; more often I didn’t.  The FitBit simply measured distance by how many steps I took over the course of each day. At least once a week, sometimes twice, I went to the gym to do upper body and lower body weights, from February to April. You can see how my training has slacked off, mainly due to right knee pain, caused by bursitis and osteoarthritis, that curtailed my training:

Month                                          “Dedicated” miles                        Fitbit miles

  • February:                                             68                                                 100
  • March:                                                103                                                 139
  • April:                                                     73                                                 114
  • May:                                                       71                                                157*
  • June:                                                      67                                                123**
  • July:                                                       62                                                 103
  • August:                                                 27                                                   58

*In May, I was in the Four Corners where the GPS on MapMyWalk didn’t always work.

** In June, I often carried an 11 lb. backpack and my right knee started causing me pain.

Overall, I’ve walked 471 miles in “dedicated” walking since February.  That’s less than the distance of the entire Camino’s 490 miles.  My Fitbit miles are higher, at 793 miles.  However, this walking is spread out over 7 months!  That’s quite different than compacting that same distance into 52 days.  As it turns out, I never did two days in a row of 10-12 miles carrying my full pack.

After I started having knee pain in June, I finally found a good orthopedic doctor in early August who administered a cortisone injection in my right knee, prescribed biweekly physical therapy sessions, and gave me the NSAID (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug) Diclofenac, which is just a heavy dose of time-released ibuprofen.  Between all of this, my knee has been getting stronger, but I haven’t wanted to push it by training too much.  I’d rather be pain-free to start out, and simply Let the Camino train me!

So, now I either walk 3-5 miles OR ride the indoor bike for 30 minutes OR go to physical therapy.  I have to do sets of PT exercises 2x/day and ice 2x/day for 10 minutes. While I’m icing my knees for 10 minutes, I study a bit of Spanish using Spanish in 10 minutes a day by Kristine K. Kershul.  Yo quiero un vaso de vino!

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Butterfly at Manasssas National Battlefield – First Manassas Trail

Packing and gear

Packing and gear – my packing list is too long and complicated to list here, so I created a separate page: packing list for el camino 2018.  I will revise it over the next week as I try to reduce my pack weight from 16 lb to 14 lb.  The general rule of thumb is that pilgrims should carry no more than 10% of their body weight. When I return, I’ll update it, after I know what I didn’t use and what I wished I’d had.

Hair

As my hair is so often the bane of my existence, and since I’ve heard there are no hair dryers provided in albergues, or pilgrim hostels, I got my hair cut shorter and will have it straightened before I leave.  It will still look like hell without a hair dryer, but I’m carrying a hat to mitigate the horrid mess it will be.

Travel Insurance

I don’t always buy trip insurance when I travel, but in this case, I figured it might be wise because of my knee and because of the daily physical exertion and strain.  However, I hemmed and hawed and took my sweet time about it.  When I finally decided to go for it, it was more than two weeks after I bought my plane ticket, and I had seen a doctor about my knee in the interim.  I was told my knee is now considered a pre-existing condition and thus any knee-related problem would not be covered.  It would have been okay if I’d bought it less than two weeks after my ticket.  So after hemming and hawing some more, I went ahead, because it covers any medical emergency that isn’t related to my right knee – sickness, a broken bone, a death in the family, etc.  Because of the duration of my trip, it was quite expensive: $289!  This seemed like highway robbery, but the dirty deed is done now.

Getting to St. Jean-Pied-de-Port – It’s part of the journey…

Since Mike will meet me in Portugal on October 26 and we’ll fly back home together from Lisbon on November 6, it made sense for me to get a round trip ticket to Lisbon.  This is not the usual starting point for most people doing the Camino Frances.  I wasn’t sure how I would get from Lisbon to St. Jean Pied-de-Port (SJPP) in France, so I posted the question on the Facebook Camino page, an invaluable resource.  A Portuguese man suggested I take the overnight train (with sleeping compartments) from Lisbon to Hendaye on the French border.  Then, I’m to take another train to Bayonne, and then another to St. Jean.  I’ve booked the TrenHotel from Lisbon, leaving at 9:30 pm on September 1; the man assured me I’d be able to get the next stage tickets at the Hendaye station.  I hope he’s right.  I have to trust that the Camino will provide!  It will be a very long day for me in Lisbon, because I arrive at 10:30 a.m. and the train doesn’t leave until 9:30 p.m.  I guess I won’t be able to sleep until I get on that train!

I’m booked to stay in Beilari when I finally reach SJPP on September 2.  I’ll stay two nights and embark on my walk on September 4.  I have reserved a bed at Refuge Orisson about 1/3 of the way over the Pyrenees for that night, so I have to wait that extra day in SJPP.

After that, until I meet Mike in Braga on October 26, nothing else is planned except walking, washing my clothes, eating, sleeping.  Repeat, repeatedly.  One step, one day at a time.

You carry your fears. It is said that the bigger your backpack, the more fears you are carrying.  I admit I do have some fears.  Since I’ve been reading so much, I’ve heard of so many things that can go wrong.  Here are my biggest fears and how I hope to deal with them:

  • Dogs.  I’m carrying a whistle and my hiking poles, and will try my best to remain calm if I encounter any vicious dogs.
  • Being a woman alone. Being harassed by anyone or being the victim of a crime.  I’ve heard any problems are rare. I just need to be vigilant and pay attention.  And I have my whistle.
  • Bed bugs. Spray my sleeping bag and backpack with Permethrin.  Deal with them if I encounter them.
  • Thunderstorms with laser-sharp lightning strikes.  Get down low and hope it passes quickly.
  • Not finding a bed at the end of the day.  Hire a taxi and go to the next town.
  • Having an accident on the trail and being unable to get help. Be careful, slow and steady and pay attention.
  • Getting lost. Again, go slow and pay attention.

Flexibility & Faith

Overall, I must have faith that all will be okay.  Flexibility is key. If I’m in pain or feel I need a rest day, I’ll take one. If I can’t complete the whole thing, I’ll complete what I can.  If I’m close, but not quite able to complete it, I can always take a bus to Sarria and complete the last 100km to get the Compostela, or the certificate of completion.

Journal and intentions

I have no intention of writing any kind of memoir on my pilgrimage for two reasons:

  1. There are already multitudes of personal pilgrimage accounts out there, so unless I have something truly inspirational or earth-shattering to share, I don’t plan to add my story.
  2. I have too many other unfinished projects.

However, I have set some intentions for myself.

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my creative intentions

Journal & guidebook
Journal & guidebook
the Camino Frances
the Camino Frances

 

Instagram:

I won’t be blogging during my pilgrimage, but I aim to post photos and tidbits along the way on Instagram: cathybirdsong

************************

“ANTICIPATION & PREPARATION” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about anticipation & preparation for a particular destination (not journeys in general). If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, August 30 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  If you link after August 30, I will not be able to include your link in my next post, so please feel free to add your link to that post as soon as it publishes (since I’m leaving for the Camino on August 31).

My next anticipation & preparation post is scheduled to post on Friday, September 28.  If you’d like, you can use the hashtag #wanderessence.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the 4th Friday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂  If you’d like to read more about the topic, see: journeys: anticipation & preparation.

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

 

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  • Camino de Santiago
  • challenge: a call to place
  • destinations

the call to place: the camino de santiago

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 23, 2018

The Camino de Santiago began to ease its way into my consciousness beginning with my early upbringing in the Catholic Church. My mother, a devoted Catholic, insisted on raising us as Catholics despite my father’s Baptist leanings; while his beliefs devolved into agnosticism, my mother remained a fervent believer throughout her life. She dressed my two sisters and me in scratchy crinoline dresses, lace doilies perched atop our heads, and dragged us to church. Masses in my youngest years were in Latin, so I didn’t understand what was happening, yet the ritual held a mystique for me.  My mother took us to confession weekly.  As I was a relatively good girl (until my rebellious teen years), I found it difficult to dredge up any sins to confess to the priest in that little booth.  I counted my rosary beads while whispering my Hail Marys as penance, just as I was told.

Most of all, I was fascinated by the sacrament, the Latin words, the music and the incense.  An enthusiastic Catholic child, I set up chairs in rows and instructed my little siblings to sit down and listen as I performed a mass. I would read from a Latin prayer book and serve up grape juice and flattened bread, cut in circles around upside-down glasses, to my “parishioners.” “The body of Christ, the blood of Christ,” I’d say, repeating what the priest said on Sundays.  I don’t know why I was so caught up in this; sometimes I wonder if I just wanted to be in charge of my siblings. I admit I was a pretty bossy sister.

To this day, the swinging of incense still has the power to bring me to tears. One of my strongest hopes is to be able to experience the botafumeiro at the pilgrim’s mass at the Cathedral in Santiago. Since I won’t be arriving in Santiago during any special liturgical celebrations, my only hope is that it will have been formally requested by a pilgrimage group.

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Barcelona Catedral

Later, I went through a falling out with the church, in increments. First our local priest refused to let our high school, across the street from the church, borrow its BBQ grills for an event; they had lent them in the past but refused the year I was charged with asking.  I felt it was hypocritical when our priest so often talked of sharing.  Later, as I became aware of social issues, I became a strong believer in a woman’s right to choose, antithetical to Catholic beliefs.  In my early years, I dreamed I might like to be a priest, but never a nun; that avenue would always be closed off to me as a woman.

In my early twenties, I went to premarital counseling with my fiancé, also a Catholic who had attended Bishop Ireton High School, at that time an all-boys Catholic school in Arlington, Virginia. After several sessions, I said to the priest, “What if I don’t believe in the Church’s stand on abortion?  And what if I believe priests should be allowed to marry and women should be able to be priests?”  He told me if I didn’t accept the basic beliefs of the church, then he wouldn’t be able to marry us.  We ended up getting married at the College of William & Mary in the Wren Chapel by an ecumenical chaplain.

Fast forward 8 1/2 years.  My first husband and I separated after 7 1/2 years, and I met my current husband, who, though brought up Episcopalian, had been attending Catholic Church with his first wife, who had died of breast cancer less than a year before I met him.  I accompanied him to Catholic masses, and we talked to the priest about my getting a divorce from my first husband.  When I told him we hadn’t been married in the Church, he told me the church couldn’t recognize my divorce as it didn’t recognize my marriage.  It was performed outside the church, after all. I had never been married, in the eyes of the Church, despite being with my first husband for over seven years and having a daughter with him.  So many rules and regulations!  So much rigidity!

For many years after Mike and I were married in the Episcopal Church, we attended services, similar in ritual to Catholic masses, at that same church.  I found the Episcopal Church more open and flexible.  We had a woman priest. We didn’t have to go to confession. We had an openly gay priest and I volunteered to work with AIDS patients. Anyone attending services was welcome to take communion.

Eventually, my interest in attending church services dwindled and I stopped going to church.  I started reading about Buddhism and meditation.  I traveled to Asia and became enamored of Buddhist teachings. I lived in Oman and learned to love the rhythm of the call to prayer five times a day.

Today, I would call myself a spiritual seeker, open to connection with a higher power, whether Christ, God, Allah, Buddha, nature, or the universe.  It’s an amorphous belief, one ever-changing.  What I seek most is faith in, and a deep sense of connection to, a higher power.  I believe there is a cosmic consciousness that underlies all religions and nature.

I heard about the Camino de Santiago, and became fascinated by the idea of pilgrimage.  I’ve read numerous books about prayer, pilgrimage and meditation.  A regular practice of a prayer life in my life is lacking, however, and I dream of spending more time in meditation and prayer. I know that when I do it, I am more serene, more trusting.

Still.  I am fascinated by glorious places of worship. I have stood within sacred spaces such as mosques, Buddhist temples and European churches, and been awestruck.  When I was in Spain (Barcelona, Toledo, and Andalucia in 2013), I was fascinated by the Catholic churches – the Romanesque murals, frontal altars, and cloisters. I love how they reach to heaven, although I know many of these churches were built to glorify the power and wealth of the church itself. I love ancient murals in churches and have always been fascinated by altarpieces.  I have a collection of triptychs and crosses, as well as Buddhas, from around the world.

Sagrada de Familia
Sagrada de Familia
Sagrada de Familia
Sagrada de Familia
Stained glass at Sagrada de Familia
Stained glass at Sagrada de Familia
inside Sagrada de Familia
inside Sagrada de Familia
Sagrada de Familia
Sagrada de Familia
Altar in Spanish church
Altar in Spanish church
Catedral de Toledo
Catedral de Toledo
cloister at San Juan de los Reyes
cloister at San Juan de los Reyes
Seville Cathedral
Seville Cathedral

At the College of William & Mary, as an English major in the late 1970s, I was introduced to Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, a collection of 24 stories written in Middle English between 1387 and 1400.  The tales are part of a story-telling contest by a group of pilgrims as they travel together on a journey from London to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral. Although this pilgrimage story wasn’t about El Camino, I found some of the pilgrim’s tales strange and intriguing.  I began to wonder about the idea of pilgrimage, and wanted to explore it further.

In 2012, I watched the 2010 movie, The Way.  In the movie, a father, played by Martin Sheen, goes to Spain to recover the body of his estranged son who died while walking the Camino.  He decides to make the pilgrimage himself and the movie follows his journey.  This was the first time I’d been introduced to the pilgrimage in a visual form.  Before, it had only been an idea.

Later, I watched the 2013 documentary, Walking the Camino: Six Ways to Santiago. It follows pilgrims from different nationalities as they make the arduous trek.

Over the years, I also read several books about pilgrimage, including:

  • The Art of Pilgrimage: The Seeker’s Guide to Making Travel Sacred by Phil Cousineau
  • The Way of the Traveler: Making Every Trip a Journey of Self-Discovery by Joseph Dispenza
  • The Mindful Traveler: A Guide to Journaling and Transformative Travel by Jim Currie

I fell in love with the Spanish countryside during my visit in July 2013, and thought I would love to take a long walk through the amazing landscape and villages of Spain.

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Montserrat

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me at Montserrat

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views of Toledo

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views of Toledo

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Consuegra

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Consuegra 2013

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view from Ronda

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Spanish countryside near Ronda

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Ronda

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modern Spanish windmills

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El Torcal Nature Reserve

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view from El Torcal Nature Reserve

Who doesn’t love Spanish bars and food, including tapas and churros?

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colorful Spanish bars and festive spirit

Risotto in Barcelona
Risotto in Barcelona
churros & chocolate in Granada
churros & chocolate in Granada
sardines in Malaga
sardines in Malaga
potatoes in Malaga
potatoes in Malaga
a cheese platter with tomato jam and fried eggplant drizzled with honey in Barcelona
a cheese platter with tomato jam and fried eggplant drizzled with honey in Barcelona
Spanish potato omelette in Granada
Spanish potato omelette in Granada
churros & chocolate in Granada
churros & chocolate in Granada
eating paella at a beachside cafe in Nerja
eating paella at a beachside cafe in Nerja

There is a mystique about Spain’s Moorish history that draws me in. The Moors occupied areas of Spain from 711 until Granada fell in 1492, and their 700+ years there left a mark — in music, art, life view and architecture.  After living two years in Oman, and after having traveled to Egypt, Jordan, Turkey and UAE, I find myself in awe of Moorish architecture, with its Arabic calligraphy and symbols, its arches and exquisite tilework.

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Seville’s intriguing Alcázar

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Saint Bartholomew Chapel in Cordoba

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Cordoba’s Mezquita

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the maksura in the Mezquita

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Generalife at the Alhambra

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The Alhambra

After being both a runner and a swimmer in my earlier days, I now prefer walking as my mode of exercise.  Walking can done in silent meditation, or while listening to music or audiobooks. I always prefer to walk outdoors as opposed to on a treadmill, which I find excruciatingly boring.

For a period of time, I was enamored of walking labyrinths, a common practice in Episcopal churches. The labyrinth is a calming, circuitous path that you do in silence, whereas the Camino is a point-to-point walk and you encounter others on the path, although you can find silence and solitude as well. I believe the Camino can address the same spiritual needs as a labyrinth: a deepening spirituality, access to intuition and creativity, simplicity, intimacy and community, and integration of body and spirit.

According to the book Exploring the Labyrinth, by Melissa Gayle, “The labyrinth holds up a mirror – reflects back the light on our selves but also what restrains us from shining forth.” She goes on: “What remains for the labyrinth walker is simply the deeply meditative and symbolic discipline of setting one foot in front of the other, of honoring the journey itself and what it has to teach.”  I believe this applies to the Camino as well.

So what do I hope for my Camino? I’d like to be awakened to what kind of being I’m meant to be in this world.  I want to find inner strength and faith – especially when it comes to my adult children and to the political situation in the world – and to believe that not only my children, but the world at large, will find its way to fulfillment, joy, love and justice. I want to learn where I fit into the puzzle of life. 🙂

***

According to Camino de Santiago |The Way of St. James,  El Camino de Santiago, in English “The Way of St. James,” is a network of routes across Spain and Europe which all lead to Santiago de Compostela, in northwest Spain. In the Middle Ages, these routes were walked as a pilgrimage to the tomb of the apostle St. James.

Millions of people from all over the world have traveled the Camino for over 1,000 years.  According to the Confraternity of Saint James, in 2017 alone, over 301,036 people attempted the arduous trek – each one a seeker of something: sport, culture, religion, nature, adventure, etc.  El Camino de Santiago has been declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and the First European Cultural Itinerary.

There are many routes to Santiago de Compostela, but my intention is to walk The French Way, or the Camino Francés (780km, or 490 miles). It begins on the French side of the Pyrenees at Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, and meanders across northern Spain as far as Santiago de Compostela in Galicia.  This is the most famous and most traveled route.

~ in search of a thousand cafés: spain ~

********************

“THE CALL TO PLACE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about what enticed you to choose a particular destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.  If your destination is a place you love and keep returning to, feel free to write about that.  If you want to see the original post about the subject, you can check it out here: imaginings: the call to place.

Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, August 30 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  If you link after August 30, I will not be able to include your link in my next post, so please feel free to add your link to that post as soon as it publishes (since I’m leaving for the Camino on August 31).

My next “call to place” post is scheduled to post on Thursday, September 27.  If you’d like, you can use the hashtag #wanderessence.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the fourth Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Ulli, of BANACTEE, wrote about his call to Tunisia, a place to which he has often returned, and of the scarcity of water in that arid land.
    • WATER AMBITIONS OF TUNISIA

Thanks to all of you who wrote posts about “the call to place.” 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Canyonlands
  • Four Corners Road Trip

the upheaval dome hike in canyonlands

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 19, 2018

This May morning, we’re on our way to Canyonlands National Park from Moab.  Heading south on UT 313, we drive past Navajo Rocks Mountain Bike Trails: Ramblin’ Big Mesa and Middle Earth, with biker access for Coney Islands and Rocky Tops. We drive through open range and rugged vistas.

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along the drive to Canyonlands

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open range on the way to Canyonlands

Canyonlands National Park preserves some 337,598 acres of colorful canyons, mesas, buttes, fins, arches and spires in the heart of Utah’s desert. There are two main areas in Canyonlands (along with two less accessible ones). Island in the Sky is closest to Moab, a drive 10 miles north and 22 miles south; it rests on sheer sandstone cliffs over 1,000 feet above the surrounding terrain. Unfortunately, this is the only area we have time to visit while in Utah.

The Needles, which is accessed through an entrance 40 miles south of Moab, and another 35 miles west, is named for the colorful spires of Cedar Mesa Sandstone that dominate the area.

Today, we take the 34-mile round-trip scenic drive along the mesa top, stopping at the various viewpoints and taking several hikes along the way.

Our first hike is to Upheaval Dome.  The trail leads to two scenic overlooks along the rim of a three-mile wide 1,000-foot deep crater.

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starting the Upheaval Dome Hike

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Upheaval Dome hike

We stop at the first overlook at Upheaval Dome, which has mysterious origins.  It was possibly caused by a meteorite that created a big splash of minerals when it hit or a salt dome that originated from within the earth.

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Upheaval Dome

One theory of Upheaval Dome’s origins, the salt dome theory, surmises that an inland sea covered the area 300 million years ago.  Climate change caused the water to evaporate, leaving a thick salt deposit behind. Layers of sediment built up over the salt and hardened into sandstone, pushing down on the salt until a bulge formed in the salt layer.  An upheaval dome appeared on the surface, which eventually eroded. If this theory is true, Upheaval Dome would earn the distinction of being the most deeply eroded salt structure on earth.

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Upheaval Dome

The meteorite theory surmises that a meteorite with a diameter of approximately one-third of a mile crashed into this spot 60 million years ago. The impact created a large explosion, sending dust and debris high into the atmosphere.  The crater left behind was initially unstable and some areas collapsed while other spaces filled from below by rock and salt moving up into the sudden opening in the earth.  Erosion since the impact has washed away any meteorite debris, and now provides a glimpse into the interior of the impact crater, exposing rock layers once buried thousands of feet underground.

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Upheaval Dome

Was it a great upheaval or a meteorite crashing into earth that caused the crater? Scientists are now fairly certain Upheaval Dome was created by a meteor.

We continue our hike past the first overlook to the second overlook, where we can see some of Upheaval Canyon to the west.  Much of this hike is up and down over slickrock.  A churlish wind is blowing red dust into our faces, eyes and mouths. I have to rinse out my mouth and spit out the water-sand mixture. It’s hot today, 85 degrees F, and I’m covered in a layer of sweat and my skin is sticky and gritty.

Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike
Upheaval Dome Hike

The Upheaval Dome Hike is about 1.8 miles round trip and takes us about an hour.

We pass Whale Rock as we leave this northwestern point in the park. This long sandstone formation looks like a giant beached whale that came ashore on the Island in the Sky.

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Whale Rock

Of course, I had to get my sticker and cancellation stamp for Canyonlands National Park. 🙂

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Cancellation stamp for Canyonlands National Park

*Thursday, May 10, 2018*

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: Cotherstone and the Teesdale Way.

 

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  • American Road Trips
  • Arches National Park
  • Cappadocia

of hoodoos & badlands

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 August 16, 2018

My strange collection of hoodoos and badlands is growing. I encountered my first hoodoos, called fairy chimneys, in Cappadocia, Turkey in 2010.  In the Four Corners area, I encountered both hoodoos and badlands in Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. I still haven’t seen some of the most iconic hoodoos at Bryce National Park or elsewhere in the world.

What exactly is a hoodoo?  I’m no scientist, but it seems hoodoos also go by the names of tent rocks, fairy chimneys or earth pyramids.  They’re tall thin pillars of rock that protrude usually from the bottom of an arid basin or badland, most often in desert areas. The pillar normally consists of soft rock topped by harder, less easily eroded stone that protects the column from the elements. Hoodoos have a variable thickness, and are often described as having a totem-pole shaped body.

Badlands are a dry terrain where softer sedimentary rocks and clay-rich soils have been eroded extensively by wind and water. They are characterized by steep slopes and minimal vegetation; they commonly include canyons, ravines, gullies, buttes, mesas and hoodoos.  They are often difficult to navigate by foot.

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Devrent Imagination Valley in Cappadocia

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Fairy Chimneys in Cappadocia

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Fairy Chimneys in Cappadocia

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Cappadocia

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ballooning through Cappadocia

Arches National Park is mostly known for its fabulous arches, but it also has its share of hoodoos.

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Hoodoos at Arches National Park

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Hoodoos at Arches National Park

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Hoodoos at Arches

In Coal Mine Canyon near Tuba City, Arizona, I encountered a whole canyon full of rust-and-white striped hoodoos.

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hoodoos in Coal Mine Canyon, Arizona

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Coal Mine Canyon, AZ

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Coal Mine Canyon

Blue Mesa at Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona is badlands area.  Badlands are found around the world, usually in arid regions where poorly consolidated rock undergoes infrequent but torrential rain. The soft rock funnels quantities of water down rills, gullies and washes, the water carrying loads of sediment away. Bentonite clay within the formation can swell up with moisture, shrinking and cracking as it dries, creating an “elephant-skin surface.” Beneath the surface, an intricate maze of natural pipes and spaces form within the badlands. Clues to this hidden natural plumbing manifests on the face of the badlands as dimples in the ground, sinks, slumps and seeps. As erosion continues, caves and natural bridges can form as the spaces are exposed. Erosion creates new features every year.

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Blue Mesa

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Blue Mesa

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Blue Mesa

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Blue Mesa

Finally, The Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness in New Mexico is a rolling landscape of badlands. Time and natural elements have etched a fantasy world of strange rock formations. The weathering of the sandstone forms hoodoos – weathered rock in the form of pinnacles, spires, cap rocks, and other unusual forms.

Crossing the Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
Crossing the Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
parched ground at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
parched ground at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
Badlands at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
Badlands at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
Badlands at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
Badlands at Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness

Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness Translated from the Navajo language, Bisti (Bis-tie) means “a large area of shale hills.” De-Na-Zin (Deh-nah-zin) takes its name from the Navajo words for “cranes.”

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Hoodoos at Bisti

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Hoodoos at Bisti

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Hoodoos at Bisti

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Hoodoos at Bisti

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“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20 photos (fewer is better) and to write less than 350-500 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, August 30 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my scheduled post in response to this challenge on Thursday, September 6, I’ll include your links in that post. If you link after August 30, I will not be able to include your link in my next post, so please feel free to add your link to that post as soon as it publishes (since I’m leaving for the Camino on August 31).

This will be an ongoing invitation, every first and third Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

 

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