The Southwest is a profound surprise for an Easterner. Connecting to such a vast landscape can disorient someone accustomed to looking out from a car or home and seeing forests and trees. Finding the essence of a place—especially one as photographed as Arches—can be a challenge. The sandstone arches risk becoming trite, almost Disneyesque spectacles. Only through effort, exploring the quieter corners of the Park, and returning again and again can offer a careful observer a fresh perspective.

When Ansel Adams visited the Southwest in 1937 he wrote:

“It is all very beautiful and magical here…The skies and land are so enormous, and the details so precise and exquisite that wherever you are you are where everything is sidewise under you and over you, and the clocks stopped long ago.”

Many visits and new imaginings later, I have found images from places apart from the crowds that continue to inspire me to return. Nature remains generous in its spirit. Sometimes just a bit of effort is needed to embrace the sublime and surprising parts of the natural world, those quiet places initially hidden from view.

Where Life Endures in Stone

Arches National Park

click on photos to enlarge

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Spring Among the Red Stone--Capitol Reef National Park

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The Shape of Deep Time--Badlands National Park