ARCHIVE - Landscapes of Change: Dry Falls » Hanging Canyon http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls Writing & Mapping the Future Mon, 11 Feb 2013 22:36:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.2 ARCHIVE - Daytrippers’ Hanging Canyon Collage Essay http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/25/daytrippers-hanging-canyon-collage-essay/ http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/25/daytrippers-hanging-canyon-collage-essay/#comments Thu, 25 Oct 2012 20:47:26 +0000 http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/?p=2483 Continue reading ]]> Here before us is “the big picture,” or at least a part of it. The breadth of this canyon, the nested oasis it contains, the plants we see here that do not show their thirsty faces elsewhere; all these combine and conjoin, spilling out from the base of the talus in a premeditated jumble.

We marvel at our species’ capacity for knowledge and our feats of engineering, but before us is a jumbo-sized puzzle no human could complete or improve upon by placing a corner-piece in one place or a bit of sky in the other. Yet someone has tried to build onto this puzzle, to tame the land here. The crumpled piles of barbed wire and bleached cow skulls say this place would not go easily.

Apart from the artifacts of defeat, here are some of the things which make this cliff-side canyon a place defined on its own terms, resilient to man:

  • A pair of eagles swooping down, searching for food or shelter after a long day’s flight.
  • Breezes and gusts split from the prevailing wind and sent swerving around basalt obelisks that rise from the flat grassland.
  • The sweetly surprising softness of soggy ground in low places.
  • Frail trees holding talus slopes in place against gravity’s anxious call.
  • Water that once flowed 300 feet above the escarpments.
  • The neon-glow of the lichen scattershot across the eastern cliff-face.

This hanging canyon is a home, a refuge, a restaurant, a pasture. For us it will be subject to a few hour’s study. It will not change (much) before our eyes, yet our sense of what it is will expand exponentially in the finite time we have.

When we leave, this place will have changed within us more than we will have changed within this place. It has seven billion years left, in theory. The land will change, species evolve and life be renewed for another eon. We each have only our lifetime, our small pieces of the puzzle to wander around and wonder at and interpret. So far there are only smudges of humanity’s fingerprints here, leaving the view clear. Sadly it is hard to believe that our species – enfant terrible to the worldwill not break this piece to fit the others tossed in a pile nearby.

]]>
http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/25/daytrippers-hanging-canyon-collage-essay/feed/ 0 47.5962105 -119.3252563
ARCHIVE - Daytrippers’ Hanging Canyon Map http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-map/ http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-map/#comments Wed, 24 Oct 2012 22:52:57 +0000 http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/?p=1823 Hanging Canyon

]]>
http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-map/feed/ 0 47.5962105 -119.3252563
ARCHIVE - Daytrippers’ Hanging Canyon Field Notes http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/the-canyon-field-notes/ http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/the-canyon-field-notes/#comments Wed, 24 Oct 2012 22:38:30 +0000 http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/?p=1468 Continue reading ]]> The hanging canyon at Dry Falls was the second stop for the Daytrippers

The canyon is about 2/3 mile in length, and about 1/10 mile wide.  The canyon runs west for about 1/4 mile, then south until the mouth opens to the cliff with a 150 ft drop to Deep Lake.  The cliffs of the canyon are about 180 ft tall, with talus slopes leading to the base.

At the northwestern corner of the canyon (at the bend), there was a cave in the cliff where the cliff and the talus slope meet.  From the cave, the entire canyon is visible.  In the gave is a ring of rocks, evidence of human activity in the canyon.  Further evidence that points to human activity includes barbed wire, a cattle skull, hoof prints, and cow patties, all evidence of grazing practices.

Along with the human activity, wild deer and rodents have used this canyon as a place to eat, and possibly take shelter.  We had multiple sightings of deer and rodent feces, as well as deer tracks.

The floor of the canyon is littered with granite eratics.  The floor of he canyon is covered primarily by sagegrass.  Other grasses, including cheatgrass, bunchgrass, bentgrass, and basin wildrye have populated the canyon as well.

]]>
http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/the-canyon-field-notes/feed/ 0 47.5962105 -119.3252563
ARCHIVE - Daytrippers’ Hanging Canyon Gallery http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-gallery/ http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-gallery/#comments Wed, 24 Oct 2012 22:21:57 +0000 http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/?p=1785 [slideshow id=19]

]]>
http://blogs.evergreen.edu/dryfalls/2012/10/24/hanging-canyon-gallery/feed/ 0 47.5962105 -119.3252563