Ted's Hiking World Slickrock Trail
Canyonlands National Park, Utah

October 16, 2019

Having just done the great little Cave Spring Loop, it still is too early to head for the campsite.  There is another short trail at the end of the park road.

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I have not even bothered to don hiking boots for this occasion, because my street shoes seem to handle slickrock just fine as long as the route isn't rough.

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Starting out

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The little guy won't make it up by himself

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The La Sal Mountains are back there

In fact, that mountain range has been gracing my photographs for the last six days.

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Making their own route

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The Island in the Sky District to the north

This area is chock-full of potholes.  After a good rain, walking around here would be delightful.

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Nothing but rock now

Even more so than over at Jeep Arch, the proliferation of redundant cairns is driving me a bit crazy.  Note that in the following photograph, there are five markers in essentially a straight line, plus a stray off to the left.  At least three of them are superfluous.

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Here's another one:

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Serious overkill

What certain do-gooders haven't figured out is that hikers simply don't need (and don't want) to be nurse-maided every step of the way.  If they cannot figure out, for example, that it is better to walk around an obstacle than over it, then they have no business being out here anyway without supervision.

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This cairn does have some artistic merit

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Bypassing the tricky section on the way back


§: As stated, this hike could be absolutely delightful in the springtime a day or two after a rain.  At this time of year, though, it merely is something to pass the time.

So I did something; I kicked down several dozen cairns — a personal record.  It isn't fun, but somebody has to do it.  If only the public could better appreciate that these areas are not city playgrounds, and that nobody is interested in seeing their misbegotten 'handiwork'.  When needed, route-markers are invaluable, of course; in fact, I utilize them all the time.  But enough are enough.

Scenery *
Difficulty *
Personality *

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