The Trail |

Wire Pass starts with a few small walls and tight spaces, then opens on to this plaza with the first big arch catching the earliest rays. |

This father-son pair were 2 of only 15 people I saw both days, and the only ones going my direction. Without people for scale, it's hard to relate the immensity of these walls. |

High in the air, a jammed log shows the height of past water levels. The path alternates between hard pack, deep sand and big rocks.
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Every turn reveals another distinctive geologic oddity |

Backpacking in Buckskin Gulch, near Wire Pass, Vermilion Cliffs/Paria Canyon Wilderness, June 2011
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The walls grow high and insurmountable. |

Before the sun reaches in, the lower canyon walls struggle to unveil color. |

There are moments when I feel like I've stepped onto an alien world devoid of human existence.
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There are moments when these subterranean skylit chambers feel mystic and sacred. |

In places, jammed debris from past deluges hangs from above |

This is a rare section where the path is straight for several hundred yards. |

Every few miles, the walls part and you enter broad courtyards.
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Another arch, this one almost 100 feet tall. I almost wished a person would intrude - just to show the scale. |

Black sinister walls. All the stone that fell from these arches was crushed to sand and washed away. |

Sun, stone and sand in Buckskin Gulch. |

After a few miles, the canyon leaves Utah and enters Arizona, which has a different time zone because it doesn't use Daylight Savings Time. (I learn this from some other hikers) |

Hour after hour, mile after mile of transcendantly luminous colors and grotesquely distorted shapes. |

Giant open courtyards appear, then funnel back in to narrow tunnels where you can touch both walls simultaneously. |

Some hikers pass in the opposite direction, providing a rare opportunity to show the scale of this place. |

Each bend offers a new vista more intriguing than the last. |

A big log stranded 35 feet in the air. |
 Imagine how much water it would take to carve this canyon. |

Bigger openings usually have enough sunshine to allow trees and plants to thrive. |

Almost the entire 13 miles, the path seems exquisitely crafted to suit the scale of humans, too small at times for horses or deer. |

Miles from anywhere, deep in the ground, I can imagine an ancient wanderer seeing ethereal faces of the spirits here, of which legends are born. |
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A few more hikers returning from an overnight trip to the confluence, which is my destination also. |

This section of immense, towering red walls, hundreds of feet high, made me feel Lilliputian. |

I have a passing thought this canyon may be as deep below the sand path as it is above - and maybe there is yawning chasm waiting to swallow up some unfortunate adventurer! |

Mystic, eerie, enchanting - a secret silent passageway filled with light and shadows under the earth |

I find that there are no mammals here, no rodents, no bats, no reptiles, not even insects. |

At times I can hear birds singing high above but otherwise it's just the echoes of my footsteps. |

Flood born debris lodged high on the walls. |

Peculiar formations protrude from above. |

From time to time, there is debris to climb over, and rockfalls to maneuver around. |

The Escape Route is a steep, exposed climb up a crevice, marked only by a cairn at the time. You'd have to look back over your shoulder to see it. Only this lower part is visible - it's 150' or more to the top. |

A towering monolith at the end of an open courtyard guards the tiny entrance to continue. |

The deep shadows and brilliant light make photography a challenge. |

Across the open spaces, a small doorway offers more. |

After 9+ hours out, I must be close to the confluence, verified when I meet this trio who camped there, out for an after dinner hike. |

As clouds move across the sky, light and shadows flicker through Buckskin Gulch.
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Fantasy formations in the final mile before the Paria River
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I wonder how many years it took to create these shapes. |

More scoured and tortured rock reminded me of faces. Closer to the confluence, puddles and rivulets of water appear in the path. |

Approaching the large bend near the confluence. There are several good campsites atop mounds on either side of the the gulch
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Beyond the campsites towards the confluence.
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The Confluence of Paria canyon and Buckskin Gulch, which intersects the river at a bend.The Paria flows from northwest (left) to southeast (right). 15 miles downstream, it intersects with the Colorado River at Lee's Ferry, the beginning of the Grand Canyon. This panorama is 4 assembled pictures. |

Looking back at the big bend area from the distant point in the previous picture. |
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Day 2 |
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Early the next morning, I turn north on the Paria River, which is mostly a slowly moving channel of muddy water. The path is the river bed. |
As the sun comes up, color begins to return to Paria Canyon. It's only 8 miles from the confluence to my car at White House campground. |

North of the confluence, the canyon slowly changes, growing wider and greener. The high walls give way to more flowing hills of stone. |

In places, the river has gone underground and there is only mud. |

As I proceed north, the river begins to flow stronger. I give up trying to keep my feet dry and end up crossing it dozens of times. |

Unique mounds along the Paria |

3 miles south of the White House campground, the Paria has carved unique "Hobbit houses" into the sandstone on both sides of the river. |

Bizarre and amusing hydraulically-formed formations invite exploration. |

Alien habitats on the Paria River near White House campground, Vermilion Cliffs-Paria Canyon National Wilderness, Utah and Arizona. |

It's an interesting place to seek shelter from the hot sun. |

Both sides of the river hold these unusual formations |

A couple in the distance explores the Hobbit houses on a dayhike from the campground. |

The river flow has increased dramatically here, while downstream it's sluggish and muddy, obviously channeled underground. Another mile and my Paria adventure is over. |