This past summer I lived in Park City, Utah, lying at 7000 ft elevation east of Salt Lake City. Known mostly as a winter skiing center, in summer it attracts outdoor adventurers, including mountain bikers, climbers, and hikers. Both my brothers visited to share with me some of the great mountain scenery and trails of the Wasatch and Uintas ranges. I tried to capture the amazing landscape in some of my photos, but often the Idaho, Oregon, and California wildfires obscured the view. At times hiking in the smoke was so unpleasant that I retreated indoors to my reading chair or to the local sports club to swim.
Ultimately, the real stars of my photography this past summer were the amazing diversity of wild flowers. A few were captured with my Panasonic Lumix, but most were taken with my Samsung Galaxy camera phone. This blog highlights 38 of the 81 flowers I identified with the help of the PlantNet app as well as some websites and flower guides. A few landscape photos are interspersed amongst the flora, and some fauna shots provide a coda. Enjoy!
While flowers were the primary inspiration for my photography this past summer, I managed a few (less than stellar) photos of fauna to complement all the flora.
For those interested, about 45 wildflowers I identified can be downloaded as a pdf here.
Currently I am back in St. George Utah, spending much of the time hiking in this amazing place. I have not taken many photos as I lived here for a couple of years and have become somewhat jaded. In any event, it is a wonderful change to simply enjoy the moment rather than trying to capture it for some future time.
As international travel opens back up, as you may imagine I am making future plans. While I will spend most of the winter in the desert southwest (New Mexico and California) and hope to post a couple blogs from those places, in November I will be returning to Ecuador for some unfinished business climbing mountains. Back in December 2015 I had attempted three major peaks, with only one summit (the lower of the two summits on Chimborazo) to show for an otherwise amazing trip due to weather events (a hail storm blew us off Cayambe at 5000m and a volcano eruption closed Cotapaxi). As Ecuadorian food and lodging on my upcoming trip will be superb, it will also serve to provide a good test to decide whether I want to continue alpine mountaineering in the coming years. Trekking is a separate matter and I have already booked a Traverse of the Jotunheimen in Norway for late June. More on that trip and my other summer 2022 plans in a future blog post. Meanwhile, continue to enjoy the outdoors wherever you happen to be.
The Vagabond Hiker