We
are beach camping again! Lone Rock Beach Campground is located on beautiful Lake
Powell in the Glen Canyon National Recreational Area. It’s an interesting
campground. There are no designated campsites, you just pick a spot on the
beach or in the dunes and call it home. Right now the lake is low so there are
acres of beachfront property and we have staked our claim to a front row seat.
For $14 a night, the National Park Service provides a dump station, potable
water, garbage dumpsters, and vault toilets. Oh, and water access and scenery
to die for. I consider that a bargain!
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The lone rock at Lone Rock Beach. :) |
We
pulled in on Wednesday, 4/17 (thanks to all my peeps who caught me time
traveling in the last blog post) and snagged a spot on the beach above the lake.
The area where you can camp is HUGE. I’m always a little nervous about running
the rig off road, especially on a surface as treacherous as sand. We scouted
first in the Acadia since there were several well-traveled paths from the paved
parking area to the beach, but some were definitely more big-rig friendly than
others. We've been here several days now and watching people get stuck in the sand has become daily entertainment - everything from motorhomes to jeeps! Folks are friendly and the guys with the monster 4WD pickup trucks usually lend a hand. Rog even helped one van rental get unstuck.
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Off road and onto the beach! |
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Home is where you park it. |
The temps have been in the 70's and 80's - perfect! As Rog sat relaxing on the patio he sighed and said, "This is what we left Seattle for." In
addition to lots of water play with Riley, our first priority of course, this
is another area with a million things to see and do. You’re probably going to get multiple blog posts since there is no way I
can cram all the pictures I want to share into one post.
Speaking of water
play, the beach has some shallow areas but directly in front of our site it
drops off sharply. Riley loves to chase his ball into the water, but he isn’t
much for swimming after it if it gets too far out. The lake is a frigid 54°,
and Rog swam nearly to the buoys on a ball retrieval mission while Riley waited
patiently on shore. So it seems Riley does understand “fetch”, he’s just
confused about who should be doing it. Lol.
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Riley was here. |
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Rog and Riley play fetch. Not sure this is how it's supposed to work. Lol. |
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Riley waiting patiently for his ball. |
We’ve
enjoyed watching the light change on the bluffs and mesas around the lake.
We’ve had some spectacular golden hours, moonrises, sunsets and sunrises.
Disconnect from the ever-present screens and mother nature steps in to awe and
entertain you.
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Golden hour with a full moon rising. |
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A huge flock of pelicans comes in at dusk. |
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Moonlight reflected on the lake. |
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Beautiful night for a campfire! |
On
Thursday, we explored the nearby town of Page and stopped in at the Carl Hayden
Visitor Center adjacent to the Glen Canyon Dam. The dam is 710 feet tall, 1,560
feet across, and 25 feet wide at the top. Preparation for construction began in
1956, 4,901 cubic yards of concrete was poured over three years, and the dam was
completed in 1966. Rog likes to learn about the history of local figures and the places we visit – there is so much that we never learned in school and a lot
that we did that is either extremely biased or completely misleading. Right now Rog is reading about the the history of the water wars in the west, fascinating
stuff.
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Dam. That's big! |
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The Carl Hayden Visitor Center is perched above the dam. |
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Views above and below the dam. |
Horseshoe
Bend is another favorite tourist stop just a few miles from our campsite. The
Colorado river forms a 270° curve in an entrenched
meander in Glen Canyon. Looking down from the view point, the water was a gorgeous
clear aquamarine. Those tiny boats pulled up on the beach are part of the Glen
Canyon float trip. Spoiler alert, guess what we’ll be doing. 😊
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Horseshoe Bend. |
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The sinuous Colorado. |
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Intricate cairns dot the viewing area. |
Saturday,
4/20, was an interesting day. The weather has been fickle, but what could go
wrong on a day that started off with a stunning sunrise like this?
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Sunrise over Lake Powell. |
We
loaded Riley up and set out to explore. Our first stop was the Toadstool hike.
Toadstools form when softer rock erodes leaving a spire with a boulder perched
on top. The hike was only a mile or so long, but it was mostly in the sun. Riley
showed his lack of enthusiasm by laying down wherever he found some shade and
only moving reluctantly when we made him.
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Toadstools! |
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Not just toadstools, there were lots of cool erosion patterns in the stone. |
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Riley's hike for the day - he said one was enough. |
We
had planned to do another 2-mile hike to the Nautilus formation and stopped by
the visitor’s center to get some additional information. We mentioned Riley’s
preference for water hikes and they suggested White House Canyon where he could
play in the Paria River. We went there first and, given the hangdog looks we
were getting, gave up on the Nautilus hike. Compromises must be made to keep
everyone happy.
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The Paria River - looks more like a muddy creek to me! |
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Interesting colors and swirls. |
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Different sandstone formations in White House Canyon- white rock instead of red. |
Instead we opted for a drive down Cottonwood Road – a gravel road that winds through a portion of Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument. Riley got to ride in the air-conditioned car and we got to see some new country. We found a few boondocking spots, but nothing that would tempt us to leave the lake.
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Mesa with badlands formations. |
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Grand Staircase Escalate has amazingly diverse geology. |
It
was getting past lunchtime, so we stopped under a huge old cottonwood to have a
snack and stretch our legs. We’d noticed range cows in the area but didn’t give
it a second thought. Apparently, lunch at the cottonwood was by invitation only
and we were clearly not on the guest list. At first the white-faced cow just
gave us the stink eye. Then he and his buddy started moving in our direction.
No worries, I said, they don’t have horns. Ahem. No sooner had I said that than
they were joined by their longhorn buddy. Really? The three of them just kept getting closer. Then
they’d stop and stare. Then walk a little closer. Riley was concentrating so
hard on our lunch, he was totally oblivious.
By then they were only about 30 feet away and still moving closer. Maybe they
were just curious, but that was too much for me – all I could imagine was a
combined half ton of angry cow charging. It probably didn’t help that we were
having beef jerky for lunch. Lol. We tried honking the car horn to scare them
off, but that only caught the attention of several more cows. Rog finally got
them to back off by waving a blanket and shouting. That lunch spot won’t be
getting a positive Yelp review. 😊
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The gang is moving in. |
After
lunch we headed back to the RV, only to find that we’d missed a pretty
spectacular wind storm. Ah, the winds….
let’s talk about those. This is a beach. There is sand. The wind blows the
sand. The sand gets into EVERYTHING. Seriously. EVERY THING. Twice the wind has
whipped so hard the sand infiltrated our closed
windows. This time it tore our Magnashade sun screen off the windshield which
is held in place by extremely strong rare earth magnets, it’s never even budged
before! We had little drifts of sand inside the coach and it buried our patio
mat. I spent a solid hour vacuuming, which had its own set of challenges. The
air is so dry and full of static that I kept getting shocked when I ran the
sweeper over the carpet. It was so bad I was convinced I had a short in the
vacuum cleaner! Wow, who knew vacuuming should qualify for hazardous duty pay.
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What a difference an hour can make when the wind kicks up! |
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Check out the tiny rocks suspended in midair after the winds scoured the beach. |
Despite
being accosted by cows and the crazy winds, we are loving the Lake Powell area.
We decided to add a few more days to our stay and signed up for three tours –
Lower Antelope Canyon, the half-day Glen Canyon Float, and a boat trip to
Rainbow Bridge National Monument. More
on those to come!
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