View allAll Photos Tagged bryce
Thank you all for your visits, favs and comments. I greatly appreciate it and enjoy reading every one!
The sun breaks over Table Cliff Plateau above Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah. HDR processed with Lightroom, Photoshop and Topaz filters.
Clef de Peau - Bryce skin
[TWC]- - Wrecked body tattoo
NEON - STAPLED SHUT scars
s h y b i r d// - Lucas Chain
REDZ3N - Tattoo & Applier 19UN. 0709 - 99
[Gild] - Momochi playstyle
(Milk Motion) - Ancient bathing pool backdrop
TMD
Detail of the rocky landscape of Bryce Canyon, photographed many years ago from Bryce Point in the morning.
Another image of this beautiful sunrise at Bryce Canyon.
The glow on the stones was so nice.
Thanks so much for your favs and comments, much appreciated
Looking out across the Bryce Amphitheater on New Year's Day 2020. One could not have fortold the events of the coming year, the isolation, the social distancing, the uncertainty, the emotional strife, the political drama.
Were I to travel there again, this winter, I'm sure the sight would be similar, and there's some comfort in that. These formations have weathered far more tension, disruption and change than any one of us could know in 100 lifetimes.. Surviving change and being resilient is what has made these places so special...and, I think it is what makes individuals special too.
Congrats on Explore!
Another photo from the spring showing the hoodoos of Bryce Canyon. I thought the snow really highlighted the colour of the hoodoos nicely. Hoodoos are weirdly shaped rock spires that look similar to totem poles, and are carved by water in arid environments.
Bryce Canyon National Park, a sprawling reserve in southern Utah, is known for crimson-colored hoodoos, which are spire-shaped rock formations. The park’s main road leads past the expansive Bryce Amphitheater, a hoodoo-filled depression lying below the Rim Trail hiking path. It has overlooks at Sunrise Point, Sunset Point, Inspiration Point and Bryce Point. Prime viewing times are around sunup and sundown.
Bryce Canyon NP. The Queen’s Garden Trail is a short, 0.9-mile route that drops about 320 feet below the canyon rim. Although the trail is not a loop, hikers can loop back up to the rim by combining a connecting trail with either branch of the Navajo Loop. Interesting rock formations along this popular path include Gulliver’s Castle, the Queen’s Castle, and Queen Elizabeth herself, an interesting rock formation that rises 50 feet west of the junction at the end of the trail.
Bryce Canyon National Park, a sprawling reserve in southern Utah, is known for crimson-colored hoodoos, which are spire-shaped rock formations. The park’s main road leads past the expansive Bryce Amphitheater, a hoodoo-filled depression lying below the Rim Trail hiking path. It has overlooks at Sunrise Point, Sunset Point, Inspiration Point and Bryce Point. Prime viewing times are around sunup and sundown.
PS: with the people on the left