baniszew: (Default)
[personal profile] baniszew
I just got back last night from a week of vacation. The first few days involved a lot of bumming around the greater San Francisco area, eating delicious food and seeing the sites. Sights seen include the streets of Berkeley (thai food, silly hats, cream puffs, and pretty gardens), Muir Woods (I love redwoods so much), Muir Beach, the Exploratorium (that place turned me into a deliriously happy 7 year old), and Golden Gate Park. It was good to see some people who live on the left cast now.

The next few days were in Arizona. I'm used to thinking of the desert as a bleak place, being previously only familiar with the desert at Burning Man, but the places we went were beautiful (although still too dry for me to want to be there for more than a few days at a time.) First we went to the Grand Canyon. [livejournal.com profile] kilroi accidentally set both her hands on fire but survived with flesh and gloves unscathed. [livejournal.com profile] garnet420 convinced me to hike the whole canyon with him in one day, rim to river to rim (15.4 miles long, with a mile of elevation change each way). We did it in 8.5 hours, and it was awesome, although also totally stupid and I was walking with a limp for the next 3 days. (There's a reason there are signs posted all over the place telling you not to walk the whole canyon in one day. It could very possibly kill someone if they tried it in July or August.)

The Grand Canyon is big. Like, really big. It is hard to comprehend just how big it is even after having stared into it for 2.5 days. We saw lots of stars, and I learned how to find Leo and Gemini. It was beautiful weather for hiking (50s during the day), but really freaking cold at night. Like 15 F. This was definitely the coldest camping trip I have ever done. Thankfully, [livejournal.com profile] davidglasser loaned me his balaclava, since I forgot a hat. The morning after hiking the canyon, I discovered that I'd forgotten to empty the bottom compartment of my backpack, and I'd inadvertently lugged four books, including a rather large guide to caribbean reef fish, all 15.4 miles through the canyon. Oops. I feel I should also mention something about our fifth compatriot, Erin, but she didn't do anything as foolish as the rest of us, so I'm not sure what to say.

After the Grand Canyon we headed south, stopping at some pueblo ruins and at Sunset Crater, which is a volcanic mountain that shot itself up out of the ground about a thousand years ago, and you can still walk past the lava flows. We saw an astonishing number of different environments on the trip. We spent that night in the painted desert and spent the next day wandering short trails in the petrified forest and around some badlands. The petrified forest is surreal. You're walking through a desert, and half the boulders are these strange things that look like chunks of giant trees, since they were 225 million years ago. The other half of the boulders are normal rocks that have been sculpted by erosion in fascinating ways. The painted desert and badlands hills are these colorful layered things that scream, "Geology is cool, see!"

I took about a billion pictures which I will slowly upload to flickr over the course of the week. I will hopefully post some of the better ones here, for those of you who don't want to see all billion of them. I hopefully will also go through them and tag the good ones as Good, so in the future the good ones will be easy to pick out.

Date: 2009-03-31 07:19 am (UTC)
kelkyag: notched triangle signature mark in light blue on yellow (Default)
From: [personal profile] kelkyag
Because it's down and then up, it's very easy for people to vastly underestimate how long it will take them to get back, and be stuck with insufficient supplies.

I'm glad you had fun! I miss the redwoods.

Date: 2009-03-31 11:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] baniszew.livejournal.com
Yeah, I was adamant about making sure we followed the "leave twice as long to go up as you took to get down" rule and making sure we had enough daylight and water to go back up. And we were fine in those areas, but less so in the endurance of my leg muscles.

Date: 2009-03-31 02:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rhean.livejournal.com
Humann's fish book is awesome! but SO INCREDIBLY DENSE. How dense? we got stopped by customs/immigration in the Dutch Antilles because their machine picked up GIANT BLOCK OF DENSENESS.

Date: 2009-03-31 05:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] baniszew.livejournal.com
I got stopped at the airport to have my fishbook inspected, too! The SFO TSA officials dug it out of my bag and were flipping through all the pages to make sure it didn't have anything hidden inside.

Also, yay Dutch Antilles. Your flickr photos are bringing back happy diving memories.

Date: 2009-04-02 05:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kilroi.livejournal.com
I'll have my pictures up soonish, I hope. I did a first pass today, and got it down to about 200.

Erin is [livejournal.com profile] ekoos , by the way

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