Bryce to the Great Basin – Day 1

Coral Pink Sand Dunes in Utah

We’ve been by the Coral Pink Sand Dunes before when the bright sun of the middle of the day helps them live up to their name. Here in the early morning dawn, they may seem a bit lackluster, but don’t let that keep you away.

Southern Utah

Just as the sun is about to creep over the mountains, we hit a patch of fog, making for some fairly nice god rays.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Bryce National Park in Utah

Today’s first major destination is Bryce Canyon National Park for a hike into a canyon.

Bryce National Park in Utah

The Queen’s Garden / Navajo Loop trail is a 2.9-mile round trip and offers some of the best views of Bryce Canyon, which looks totally different from below than from above.

Bryce National Park in Utah

Like all places we’ve been to the view changes dramatically when you change the location from which you are doing your gazing.

Bryce National Park in Utah

I cannot describe the depth, smell, and feel of the air and its temperature on my skin. I’ll never be able to adequately explain how the colors and contrast between blue and red challenged my eyes to find as much detail as I could. This photo is a weak reminder, albeit an important one, as it brings me back to the day, but I had to be here in person to create a sense of firsthand knowledge. While I would like to encourage everyone to get out and see the land where they live, I also have to be thankful that the majority are satisfied with the television view of our reality from the comfort of their own homes.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Nevada State Sign

Our second national park of the day requires us to change states and make our way to Nevada. It’s only a few hours away, so it’s well worth the minor effort.

Great Basin National Park in Nevada

We are at Great Basin National Park, driving up into the mountains.

Great Basin National Park in Nevada

This is the reason we are here today: the bristlecone pine tree. These trees can live up to 5,000 years and survive the worst conditions in the worst soils. When a tree dies, it is often that only a part of it will fall dead while the other half continues growing for centuries. The part that has died can dry into a wood that is often harder than steel. To get to these incredible trees, you’ll have to head to the trailhead at 10,000 feet and then climb another 800 feet to the trees.

Great Basin National Park in Nevada

Just the idea that these trees were standing vigil high in the mountains watching countless generations of humans come and go while we entered the Bronze Age, built the pyramids, learned to sail across oceans, ushered in the Renaissance, learned to fly, and built weapons that could destroy most life on Earth. Prior to today, I don’t believe I ever thought that I’d reach out and touch a living thing that was thousands of years old.

Caroline Wise at Silver Jack Motel in Baker, Nevada

We’re gonna hang out in Baker, Nevada tonight as we didn’t have time to visit the caves up in the Great Basin and have decided to pay them their due in the morning.

For Alka’s Upcoming Wedding Reception

We received a special request from Sonal’s sister Anju, “Would we be willing to share our photos to make some inspirational images that could be hung at Alka’s upcoming reception following her wedding?”

I let them know that I’d be thrilled to share something and put them together, but I wasn’t sure my photos would give them the effect they were looking for. While Caroline and I love our travel photos, we can’t be sure that our bias is that we’ve been there and seen these places firsthand, thus making us more attracted to them.

So from the Oregon coast to Crater Lake also in Oregon, a trail in the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, Santa Monica beach in California, Multnomah Falls off the Columbia River in Oregon, a trail in Big Cypress National Preserve in Florida, a Magnolia flower in Savanah, Georgia, and back to the Teton Range for a view over the Oxbow of the Snake River, I felt I had some passable photos for the messages they wanted to present.

We were still months away from them using the images, which was okay because they were going to India to be printed on wood.

When they were finished, I was impressed that these were, in fact taken by Caroline and me while out exploring places that had been new to our eyes and would soon be tied into the beginning of a marriage between two young adults.

Looking at these, I knew I’d like them all to hang in our house, but of course, they were part of Alka’s and Hitesh’s wedding, so instead, I asked if it were possible to have one of them as a keepsake after the events.

It’s quite the honor to have been asked to share something that Caroline and I share in love with the hope that love comes through not only the image but the beautiful texts that Anju had chosen.

This has given me an idea for Caroline’s upcoming birthday; let’s see if I can create something “relatively” similar for her.