My first night hike – sorta. Ok, ok…my first night hike without first being struck by lightning (Mt Audubon) 🙁
Flew to Salt Lake Saturday morning and spent a completely spontaneous weekend with Kimberly. Attended four hours of piano recitals, followed by dinner at Mazza (Middle Eastern grub), then my first planned night hike.
After first layering up, we drove Big Cottonwood Canyon in search of a hike.
First stop, Brighton Ski Resort. Too early in the season for skiing, but still a mighty nice locale for hiking. ALSO, appears we arrived in time for a late season Halloween party in the woods (it was that or a zombie apocalypse – LOL>) We chose an alternate route which ran us under the chair lift and provided an amazing view of the stars. However 15 minutes in, wham! – on our backsides…the day’s sun had created a landscape of ice.
Back to the parking lot, posed by a pre-season Christmas tree and off to Solitude. More Christmas trees – but no hike. Argh. Down the canyon and just off the S-curve, we found our trail – Lake Blanche.
https://www.utahoutdooractivities.com/lakeblanch.html
Can’t say Lake Blanche Trail was my most challenging hike of the year – but I did fall in love with NIGHT HIKING.
NIGHT HIKING is kinda magical and spooky all at the same time. Thousands of stars, rushing water, trail drop-offs, eery silence & unexplained night noises. PLUS I got to wear a (borrowed) headlamp! Two or 3 miles into our hike, sat riverside, stared skyward and talked for hours. 11:28pm when we returned to the car. Super fun night.
Fast forward 2 days:
REI took advantage of my new ‘night hike’ passion and sold me a new Black Diamond Headlamp. LOVE LOVE LOVE it!
- layering up before my first night hike
- first stop, Brighton Ski Resort
- snowy trail, then wham! – ice!
- preseason Christmas pose
- just past the S-curve, we found our hike
- my new passion: NIGHT HIKING & headlamps
- who says I can’t stay up past 10pm?
- impromptu Sunday morning Tabernacle visit
- Christus on Fast Sunday
- ho hum…spontaneous Utah trip over
My friend Kimberly chose Millcreek Canyon – no more than 15 minutes from Salt Lake.
This week’s hike was sandwiched between baptisms at Salt Lake Temple and ‘Luz de las Naciones: Sus Promesas’ (cultural event) at the Convention Center. Non stop, jam-packed weekend plans!
Desolation Trail to Salt Lake Overlook (Overlook Trail, Trail 019)-(4.8 miles round trip). Trail is accessed from the Desolation trailhead located just east of Millcreek Inn on the south side of the canyon. This a moderately strenuous hike that leads to a fantastic view of the Salt Lake Valley. The Overlook Trail is also a popular snowshoe trail in winter.
Lucky for me there was plenty of snow (’cause I LOVE SNOW)! Snow has a way of transforming even ordinary hikes into uber scenic panoramas. Warming afternoon temps caused heavy snowfall melt from the canyon’s tall pine branches – creating steady droplets against the stunning white backdrop & piercing sun. Beautiful hike day!
Church on Sunday, then a quick drive to ‘This is the Place’ Heritage Park before my return flight to Colorado.
Go big or go home, zero regrets! Taking in all of life’s moments.
(p.s. Many many thanks to Kimberly’s Aunt Carma & Uncle Don for lodging & guest room accommodations.)
Millcreek Canyon (snowmelt clip)
- beautiful hike day: snow, sun & 40-degree temps
- from ordinary to extraordinary
- quick drive by after church
- ‘This is the Place’ Monument
- last pic before Colorado flight home
Hike # 4-0…woo-hoo!
A few weeks ago, new hiking buddy Annmarie asked: are you more about the journey or the end destination? After summiting 6 14ers and 3 13ers this summer, honestly I had to say I was completely 100% destination-driven.
Today – this hike – was all about the journey.
Started the morning at my friend Kimberly’s family’s cabin in Fairview UT. The plan was to leave early (Fairview is an hour closer to Moab than Salt Lake) but when I woke at 6am, I hadn’t thought thru the obvious….mountain cabin location. Hadn’t planned on waking to a majestic mountain panorama — viewed thru a mammoth window, in a room with 15-20 foot ceilings. Hadn’t planned on crashing on a comfy couch by a blazing pellet stove…with outside morning temps in the 30’s. Yep…just gets better and better 🙂
Woke Kimberly and went on a short walk while her family was starting their morning. Beautiful day!
Didn’t actually hit the road ‘til 8:30 – took one wrong turn (typical…argh) so enjoyed a scenic, yet completely unexpected, drive through Scofield State Park. From there it was smooth sailing to Arches (except for one police stop just south of Price :().
The landscape from Price to Moab was dry, desert-like, pixelated by tall rock-wall canyons. Quick stop at the Visitors Center (changed from fleece to t-shirt), then off to Delicate Arch (depicted on Utah’s license plate).
The 3-mile hike to Delicate certainly wasn’t challenging but the journey, the landscape, the amazing canvas of all that is Moab – certainly was hike-worthy. Completely lost track of time watching the late afternoon sun.
Perfect weather, perfect company, perfect day.
(Ro will be back next week. National parks do not allow dogs – so little guy spent the weekend at Camp Bow Wow.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YB_p3jjER6c
- the 3 Gossips
- all smiles at trailhead
- desert landscape (ice water is a good thing)
- colorful sandy vista
- Delicate Arch
- hike SUCCESS!






























