Pages

March 17, 2013

Red Nub

Our second day in the San Rafael Desert began with golden light shining on a sturdy corral, our horses' accommodations for the night.
An antelope trotted past on a nearby hillside. 
After alfalfa cubes and oats for the horses, oatmeal and hot chocolate for the humans, and a scoop of dog food for Daisy, we drove to Granary Springs.
There, we saddled up and rode to Red Nub.  Red Nub is aptly named, being red and kind of short and rounded.  Names in the area came from cowboys or outlaws and tend to be simple and descriptive.  Long Draw is ... well, long.  Deadman Hill is where an unfortunate horse thief died of acute lead poisoning.  Big Spring is big, at least for that part of the country.  North Spring is to the north.  Etc.
We headed across the red desert sand on an old ghost road, barely visible as a path through the pinyon-junipers.  
As we reached Horseshoe Canyon, we had a view of the Henry Mountains rising above sandstone domes.  The country is dry, rugged, and forbidding, but the amazing views keep us coming back year after year.

17 comments:

  1. Wow - those are magnificent views indeed!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Unfamiliar with this type of climate and terrain it would be forbidding to me thats for sure...:)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for comment on headboards. very nice scenario and you are doing horse driving

    ReplyDelete
  4. Fantastic views. I am greeting

    ReplyDelete
  5. I feel in love with Utah's landscape when we were there in 2011, and very much want to get back. I agree that Red Nub is an appropriate name for the rock formation.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love the stories of the Old West, Outlaws, Pioneers, Cowhands, but I have never visited any of the places you show. Beautiful and strange looking!

    Jo

    ReplyDelete
  7. Blogger ate my comment... Grrrrr....

    Hi Janie, Red Nub certainly is an appropriate name for that big red rock formation... We love that area and hope to go back there sometime.. You are so lucky to be able to ride in that area. Gorgeous!!!

    Hugs,
    Betsy

    ReplyDelete
  8. Wow, I'm glad you are back blogging. You guys really are extreme.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Great posts Janie, so good to see you posting. I enjoyed reading your other one too. Thank you also for stopping by and wishing Gregg a happy birthday. He got a big kick out of reading it and wanted to thank you for your kindness. Have a great day!

    ReplyDelete
  10. ӏ have been findіng ѕtrep at leаѕt once а 12 months due
    to the fаct Ι had been а baby and I'm 33 now. About five or or so a long time ago, I bought it 7 moments in a single 12 months alone. I'ѵe taken
    аntibiοtics abоut 85% in the time and also the instances I failed to, it went away on it is really have. I don't know that there's any definitive answer as to whether getting them or not is ideal or wrong... as far as I'm able to tell, it depends around the person. I just experienced it yet again per week back and as usual I get the swelling, pain and white spots but that's it... I under no circumstances truly feel sick' or get a fever anymore (not due to the fact I had been a teenager). I took Tylenol for the pain, as I commonly do when it is too painful, and it began emotion greater inside some times and now it can be gone. I wish I had had my tonsils out when i was younger mainly because following the many research I've done as far as acquiring them out now, it seems that following 18 several years of age, it is really an extremely painful surgery and just not worthy of it in my opinion. At this time, it really is just anything I've learned to live with and soon after getting taken so a lot of antibiotics, I'm just over it and have no plans on taking them again except if at some level it doesn't go away on its individual or receives worse. This is not a suggestion for anyone else, simply a place of view from someone who has been working with strep for at least 20 years. I wish everyone the best of luck with this due to the fact I know how frustrating it may possibly be!

    Have a look at my webpage; how to cure a sore throat naturally

    ReplyDelete
  11. It is beautiful country, a great place to ride.

    ReplyDelete
  12. your trails sometime make me jealous...its not right that I live in a concrete city and you enjoy such great outdoors!!


    lovely images of the landscape.... :)

    http://www.myunfinishedlife.com/

    ReplyDelete
  13. "Janie and Steve, Utah Trails" has been included in the A Sunday Drive for this week. Be assured that I hope this helps to point even more new visitors in your direction.

    http://asthecrackerheadcrumbles.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-sunday-drive_24.html

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hi!
    The single names for all the places seem so apt and poignant. Your trail today looks dry...hope you brought lots of water. It's been great visiting again.
    CHeers!
    Ron and Sophie

    ReplyDelete
  15. I love that view down the ghost road, and such beautiful light on the corral!

    ReplyDelete