We were lucky to have several springs and a running creek in the canyon. It’s a rare thing in the West, which is suffering from a horrible drought. The water ran cool and clear. Read More
Category: Learn Indigenous Knowledge
The Canyon Hike Series, Part 7
This blog entry is really a photo essay of rebirth in the canyon. You may recognize the locations in the first pictures…or maybe you don’t. They were very badly burned and are pictured at the beginning of the hike, back in August of 2006. Slowly, they began to come alive with new grasses and flowers. Read More
The Canyon Hike Series, Part 6
As spring approached, it became clear that the canyon was going to be even more beautiful than before the fire, something we had never imagined to be possible. Buttes that had been invisible could now be seen. And along with them, new grass and wildflowers. The contrast between the green of the new grass and Read More
The Canyon Hike Series, Part 5
There was an interesting weather phenomenon called freezing fog that happened in the canyon after the wildfire. Fog moved in during the winter and because it was cold, it froze on many things in the canyon. Many times, because of the way fog moves, it would freeze on one half of something (a tree or Read More
The Canyon Hike Series, Part 4
With all of this devastation, you might think that nothing could grow back or that if it did, it took a very long time, perhaps waiting until the next spring. We did still have black hillsides even a year after the fire. But, amazingly, within one week of the fire, we had new growth Read More