The next morning we made our way into Zion National Park with the temperature rising. The park has very limited access by car so we choose to use their shuttle. It would have been a better experience had there not been mobs of people and 110 degree weather.
After reading through the Jr. Ranger booklet our 'hike' consisted of a mile walk on a paved trail from the visitor center to the Jr. Ranger building to see a ranger program. This wasn't what we had in mind for a hike since we were told there were water falls and rivers in parts of the park but due to the heat we changed our mission to:
"Let's get the kids their $%#@! ranger badges and get the heck out of here!"
The ranger was great with the kids (he's a history teacher during the year) and his enthusiasm helped our moods considerably. After the program we dragged ourselves back to the visitor center to catch the shuttle. We noticed that we had to take a shuttle to ALL of the stops in order for Jack to get his Jr. Ranger Badge (Harper's was easier) so we were trying to get the answers any way we could in order to shorten our stops.
After completing the booklet (with a little help from the parents) we noticed a road block on our exit route which ended up being a rock slide.
The good news: We made it to the park before it was shut down for a couple of days due to the slide.
The bad news: We had to drive 3 HOURS around in order to get back to our trailer. Jack also wanted me to mention he lost his favorite Yellowstone National Park hat on the shuttle which was a major bummer.
In a nutshell, we didn't get to experience the full beauty of Zion and it's diverse terrain, but once we FINALLY made it back to camp we had a very happy homecoming with Rosie girl!
Next up: The GRAND Canyon
The carved mile long tunnel into Zion |
The terrain was definitely different from Bryce but beautiful just the same. |
A 'peak a boo' window within the tunnel |
Our 'hike'. Harper asked mom to pour water on her head and down her back as you can see here. |
Jr. Ranger Program: Grinding corn like the early Puebloean's |
A nice 'Ranger in Training' from Ohio State. |
Mission Complete! |
No comments:
Post a Comment