When mountains beckon

Bell Canyon Reservoir_Little Cottonwood Canyon

I grew up at the feet of a soaring mountain range, granite-topped peaks that often retained snow year-round melted into forested skirts sweeping down towards my small little town. Mountains ground me, they keep me centered, and are my true heart-home. I mean, LOOK AT THEM! Snowy peaks, springy-green trees that show no trace of the browned, brittle wild-fire dryness of July and August.

Bell Canyon Reservoir_Little Cottonwood Canyon

I have been in Salt Lake this week for work, and I have made the most of the daylight hours after leaving the office by getting into the mountains and soaking in the gorgeous views, the nature-y noise, and fresh pine-y smells.

Bell Canyon Trail_Little Cottonwood Canyon

The melting snow has turned the creeks and rivers into white thunder, storming down the mountains and smashing into rocks and trees. This cold, terrifying sound is like a lullaby to me. I mean, I don’t want to go wading or anything, but I could listen to spring runoff rush down the canyon for hours and hours.

Bell Canyon Waterfall_Little Cottonwood Canyon

A friend and I hiked up Little Cottonwood Canyon to the Bell Canyon waterfall and reservoir (photos above) and while the climb was brutal for my suburban, lower-altitude legs and lungs, it made my heart so, so happy.

Living Room_Wasatch Front

The mountains are so close to the Salt Lake valley, truly you can be immersed in Nature in under 20 minutes. Watching the sun set over the Great Salt Lake, painting the sky in coral and orange and purple, and feeling the chill of the mountains, talking with friends about things important and trivial…all of this soothed my ragged soul and was a balm to my anxious heart.

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Hiking Wheeler Peak, Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Great Basin National Park in eastern Nevada is full of ancient Bristlecone Pine trees, a couple of grueling hikes, and gazillions of stars. In late summer a friend and I packed up our camping things and drove across hundreds of miles of nothingness to reach the park; we had our sights set on the tippy top of Wheeler Peak, tallest mountain in Nevada at 13,065 feet.

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

We woke up ridiculously early and were on the trail with that giant rocky peak towering above us. We hiked for a couple of hours on a relatively easy trail, nothing too steep, nothing too exposed, a little lake…

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Then suddenly we were above the tree line, the trail was going nearly straight up the side of the mountain, the wind was ferocious and unforgiving.

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Honestly, the switchbacks were so narrow and tight you were essentially ladder-climbing and scrambling up a hunk of loose rock for nearly 2 miles. That picture up there shows the trail disappearing into the steepness of the mountain, but this was before it was super windy or super scrambly.

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

After a lot of stopping and wheezing in the thin air we reached the summit and were able to look out onto dozens of tall, rocky peaks, just like the one we were standing on.

Great Basin National Park, NevadaGreat Basin National Park, Nevada

A kind soul had built a little round fort-type thing up on the top out of loose rocks that gave some blessed shelter from the wind. We stopped for lunch, chatted with hikers as they reached the summit, and tried to psych ourselves up for the descent. It took us about 5.5 hours to reach the top, but we cruised down and were back at our car two hours later.

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

I had pretty low expectations for Great Basin National Park, but was completely bowled over by the brutal natural beauty and the incredible stars at night. GBNP has one of the darkest skies anywhere on earth, the number of stars we saw was completely outrageous, including the International Space Station crossing the sky, lots of shooting stars and meteors, and layers and layers and layers of pinprick constellations. The other thing Great Basin is famous for is groves of ancient Bristlecone Pine trees, some 5,000 years old! The thing about Bristlecones is they have no natural killer; the cause of death of most of these great trees is their roots are exposed and the tree eventually topples. What that means is the mountain they are growing on erodes faster than the tree dies…these trees are literally older than mountains!

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Their bark shows scars of hundreds and hundreds of years of rain and wind and snow. I probably could look at and pet tree bark all day long and not get bored, it’s just so fascinating. (Yes, I know my nerd is showing, just bear with me, okay?)

Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Great Basin is also famous for the Lehman Caves, vast underground caverns with all sorts of formations. However, the tours were completely sold out by the time we got there, so if you have plans to go, be sure to buy cave tickets in advance. And, if you are the photography type, take a tripod to get some shots of the night sky. And then send them to me so I can swoon all over again at the number of stars!

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