SHELTER. @maddiebrenneman and @ngkelley chasing trout and dreams in Southern Colorado. #TrustTheWild | #LiveTheMountainLife Photo: @ngkelley by western_rise
Shots of rural USA, 1978-2001 (c. National Geographic)
ok
Pasta Tossed Inside a Cheese Wheel, [oc][800×1002]
A stunning hike through the Thorpe Creek Valley and Hurwal Divide
Wallowa Mountains
Oregon
1972
Canyonlands National Park in Utah is a showcase of geology. In each of the park’s districts, visitors can see the remarkable effects of time and erosion on a landscape of sedimentary rock. For millions of years, rock was broken down and carried here by wind and water, creating deposits that eventually became distinct rock layers. Many of the rock’s layers were deposited near sea level, but after a long period of uplift, the average elevation is now over 5,000 feet above sea level. As this area gradually rose, rivers that once deposited sediment on the lowlands began to remove it from the emerging plateau. The Green and Colorado rivers carved into the geologic layer cake, exposing buried sediments and creating the canyons and rock spires of Canyonlands that amaze us now. Photo by Randy Smythe (www.sharetheexperience.org). #ICYMI We’re looking back on your favorite posts of 2020. This display of incredible geologic formations really rocked our feeds this year. #Top10of2020
When ur dog eats Cruella Deville
Up on Last Dollar Road, Coloradocolor
Montana
“There is something sweet in this September air. Something familiar but new. Something light and easy. Something good.”
n.c. // september sweetness
Snow on the mountain by William Horton Via Flickr: Snow emphasizes the texture of the Cimarron Mountains as seen from Owl Creek Pass Road near Ridgway, Colorado.
30. she|her|hers. montrose, colorado, or the side of the state no one knows about. originally from washington dc social worker, obsessed with my dog, mountains....
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