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Zion National Park, March 2008
Album

Zion National Park, March 2008

 
Zion National Park, March 2008

Page Type: Album

 

Page By: Ed F

Created/Edited: Mar 18, 2008 / Mar 18, 2008

Object ID: 389121

Hits: 2501 

Page Score: 87.27% - 8 Votes 

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Photos from Zion National Park, March 2008


Images


Angel\'s Landing, Zion National Park

Angel's Landing, Zion National Park

The Spearhead, Zion National Park

The Spearhead, Zion National Park

Angel\'s Landing, Zion National Park

Angel's Landing, Zion National Park

Hidden Canyon, Zion National Park

Hidden Canyon, Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Angel\'s Landing, Zion National Park

Angel's Landing, Zion National Park

Zion Canyon, Zion National Park

Zion Canyon, Zion National Park

The Great White Throne, Zion National Park

The Great White Throne, Zion National Park

Zion Canyon, Zion National Park

Zion Canyon, Zion National Park

Waterfall in Heap\'s Canyon, Zion National Park

Waterfall in Heap's Canyon, Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Zion National Park

Middle Emerald Pool, Zion National Park

Middle Emerald Pool, Zion National Park

Red Arch Mountain, Zion National Park

Red Arch Mountain, Zion National Park


[ View Gallery - 6 More Images ]


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""Even after years of intimate contact and search this quality of strangeness in the desert remains undiminished. Transparent and intangible as sunlight, yet always and everywhere present, it lures a man on and on, from the red-walled canyons to the smoke- blue ranges beyond, in a futile but fascinating quest for the great, unimaginable treasure which the desert seems to promise. Once caught by this golden lure you become a prospector for life, condemned, doomed, exalted. One begins to understand why Everett Reuss kept going deeper and deeper into the canyon country, until one day he lost the thread of the labyrinth; why the oldtime prospectors, when they did find the common sort of gold, gambled, drank and whored it away as quickly as possible and returned to the burnt hills and the search. The search for what? They could not have said; neither can I; and would have muttered something about silver, gold, copper -anything as a pretext. And how could they hope to find this treasure which has no name and has never been seen? Hard to say -and yet, when they found it, they could not fail to recognize it. Ask Everett Ruess.""   --Ed Abbey   

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