Arches National Park, Utah, USA in 4K Ultra HD
Arches National Park - US National Park near Moab, Utah, famous for its natural sandstone arches and other amazing rock formations.
Locations in the video: Sunrise through South Window Arch (0:07), Balanced Rock (0:13, 3:55), North Window and South Window Arches (0:39), North Window Arch and Turret Arch (0:57), Double Arch (1:39), Fiery Furnace (2:31), Sand Dune Arch (2:52), Broken Arch (3:15), Skyline Arch (3:27), Pinetree Arch (3:36), Tunnel Arch (3:50), Park Avenue (4:17), Twisted Doughnut Arch (5:33), Delicate Arch (5:42), Devil's Golf Ball (8:29), Landscape Arch (9:05), Partition Arch (9:25), Navajo Arch (9:41), Double O Arch (10:08).
Recorded October 2016 in 4K Ultra HD with Sony AX100.
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Intersonic Subformation - Into the Void - 04 - The Longest Orbit
intersonicsubformation.bandcamp.com
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Arches National Park: Delicate Arch & Devils Garden
Recorded June 8 & 10, 2010.
Delicate Arch and Devil's Garden in Utah's Arches National Park. Devil's Garden includes Landscape Arch, Tunnel Arch and Pine Tree Arch.
Watch my complete video of this 2010 western roadtrip @
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TimeWarp of the Devils Garden Trail in Arches National Park Utah
Big Crazy John here with Big Crazy Outdoor Adventures we hiked Devil's Garden Trail on September 3rd 2019 in Arches National Park. This is a TimeWarp video which is a highly stabilized timelapse video on the Go Pro Hero 7 Black.
Good Description of the Hike Per
The Adventure of a Lifetime - Adventure waits for sightseers, hikers, and thrill-seekers in Devils Garden – one of the premier locations in the park. Here you’ll find arches, spires, and a large concentration of narrow rock walls called “fins.” Fins form when rainwater erodes parallel fractures caused by the uplift of salt deposits below the surface. Fins eventually erode and give way to the formation of arches like Landscape Arch, the crown jewel of Devils Garden.
Landscape Arch is the longest arch in North America with a light opening of 306 feet (93.3 meters). This awe-inspiring expanse is only 6 feet (1.8 meters) in diameter at its narrowest. Large segments of the arch came crashing down in the 1990s – proof that the park’s landscape can change dramatically in a instant. Although other arches have fallen, Landscape Arch still hangs on by a very thin thread.
Devils Garden offers breathtaking views, camping, backpacking, stargazing, and hiking of all skill levels. There is truly something for everyone in this popular area of the park.
Devils Garden is located at the very end of the park road, 18 miles north of Arches Visitor Center. The drive time from the visitor center is approximately 45 minutes. Parking lots can be very busy during peak season and during holiday weekends.
Landscape Arch – This easy segment of the Devils Garden trail (1.9 mi/3.1 km roundtrip) is relatively flat with hard packed surfaces to walk on. There is no significant elevation gain, only moderate hills, up and down. The trail meanders through tall fins to a spectacular view of Landscape Arch.
Optional: Two easy spur trails to Pine Tree Arch and Tunnel Arch are located between the trailhead and Landscape Arch.
The hike becomes difficult beyond Landscape Arch toward Double O Arch. Turn around at this point to avoid the challenging remainder of the hike.
Difficult Trails
Double O Arch – This trail to Double O Arch is difficult as it steeply climbs up and on the sandstone fins. Footing is rocky; there are narrow ledges with steep drop-offs. Hikers must use their hands and feet to scramble and climb. Though strenuous, the out-and-back hike to Double O Arch (4.2 mi/6.8 km roundtrip) is popular and offers incredible views.
Optional: Two short spur trails to Navajo Arch and Partition Arch are located one third of the way between Landscape Arch and Double O Arch.
#TimelapseTuesday #timelapse #timeWarp
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Arches National Park
A winter trip to Arches National Park near Moab, Utah
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Arches National Park - Pine Arch
Navajo Arch - Arches National Park
My photos and write-up:
Arches National Park Utah
Come explore the magnificent arches at Arches National Park in Moab, Utah.
Arches National Park - Hiking the Devils Garden - Utah - LeAw in the USA //Ep.33
We are living the American dream driving the Historic Route 66 from Chicago to Santa Monica but we are doing some detours to visit some places we like.
In this 33rd episode, we visit Arches National Park and hike the Devil's Garden Trail. Enjoy the ride with us! ;)
Arches National Park is a national park in eastern Utah, United States. The park is adjacent to the Colorado River, 4 miles (6 km) north of Moab, Utah. More than 2,000 natural sandstone arches are located in the park, including the well-known Delicate Arch, as well as a variety of unique geological resources and formations. The park contains the highest density of natural arches in the world.
The park consists of 76,679 acres (119.811 sq mi; 31,031 ha; 310.31 km2) of high desert located on the Colorado Plateau. The highest elevation in the park is 5,653 feet (1,723 m) at Elephant Butte, and the lowest elevation is 4,085 feet (1,245 m) at the visitor center. The park receives an average of less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rain annually.
Administered by the National Park Service, the area was originally named a national monument on April 12, 1929, and was redesignated as a national park on November 12, 1971. The park is expected to receive 1.8 million visitors in 2018.
The Devil’s Garden Trail is the longest and most difficult maintained trail in Arches National Park – and it’s also one of the most fun. Once you get past the early sections you’ll be scrambling up and overlong, narrow sandstone fins (future arches!), ducking under and crawling through existing arches, and trekking through ruggedly beautiful backcountry that few of the more casual tourists in Arches will ever get to see.
The trail begins at the end of Devil’s Garden Road, which is literally the end of the paved road in Arches National Park.
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Arches National park Utah
Arches National park ? Guess where this hidden gem is
Arches National Park, Utah, USA 2017
Arches National Park lies north of Moab in the state of Utah. Bordered by the Colorado River in the southeast, it’s known as the site of more than 2,000 natural sandstone arches, such as the massive, red-hued Delicate Arch in the east. Long, thin Landscape Arch stands in Devils Garden to the north. Other geological formations include Balanced Rock, towering over the desert landscape in the middle of the park.
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Broken Arch
Slideshow of the Broken Arch hike in Arches National Park.
American Southwest (#18): Arches National Park, Utah
Arches National Park ... water and ice, extreme temperatures, and underground salt movement are responsible for the sculptured rock scenery of Arches National Park. On clear days with blue skies, it is hard to imagine such violent forces, or the 100 million years of erosion, that created this land that boasts the greatest density of natural arches in the world. More than 2,000 cataloged arches range in size from a three-foot opening, the minimum considered an arch, to the longest one, Landscape Arch, which measures 306 feet from base to base.
Today, new arches are being formed and old ones are being destroyed. Erosion and weathering are relatively slow but are relentlessly creating dynamic landforms that gradually change through time. Occasionally change occurs more dramatically. In 1991 a slab of rock about 60 feet long, 11 feet wide, and four feet thick fell from the underside of Landscape Arch, leaving behind an even thinner ribbon of rock. Delicate Arch, an isolated remnant of a bygone fin, stands on the brink of a canyon, with the dramatic La Sal Mountains for a backdrop. Towering spires, pinnacles, and balanced rocks perched atop seemingly inadequate bases vie with the arches as scenic spectacles.
American Indians used the area for thousands of years. Archaic people, and later ancestral Puebloan, Fremont, and Utes searched the arid desert for game animals, wild plant foods, and stone for tools and weapons. They also left evidence of their passing on a few pictograph and petroglyph panels. The first white explorers came looking for wealth in the form of minerals.
Ranchers found wealth in the grasses for their cattle and sheep. John Wesley Wolfe, a disabled Civil War veteran, and his son, Fred, settled here in the late 1400s. A weathered log cabin, root cellar, and a corral remain as evidence of the primitive ranch they operated for more than 20 years.
Landscape Arch - Arches National Park
I love Moab and Arches National Park so much! All of my photos of the region can be seen here:
Arches National Park - Tunnel Arch
Arches National Park - Tunnel Arch
Arches National Park (Utah) - In Another Minute (Week 365) [4K]
- - Arches National Park in Utah is a sight to behold... it is leaving me pretty speechless even now as I'm trying to write a quick post about it. It's definitely a must-see... and for me personally, it's a place to visit again and again. The first time I saw this US National Park 15 years ago during a trip to Moab, I had the feeling that I had finally arrived in America - and that after living in Florida and Brooklyn for 1o years. I consciously chose this second visit to Arches for my last In Another Minute video and my birthday.
I hope my 1-minute video will give you an idea why I think Arches National Park is so great... and also why I think it's worth visiting again and again.
Have you noticed how drastically different the color of the rocks looks in the various light conditions throughout the day? The video loosely follows the light change from morning to Golden Hour and then sunset. I wish I could have had several Golden Hours and sunsets to experience and capture more places at that time.
Arches National Park lies in the high desert just north of Moab and is part of the Colorado Plateau. It features 2,000 sandstone arches. We saw only about a dozen. See, another reason to return. The park covers 76,679 acres (310.31 km2) with its highest elevation is at 5,653 feet (1,723 m).
Arches first became a National Monument in 1929 and then a National Park in 1971. The dramatic, serpentine road into the park was paved in the 1950s. I'm fascinated with the fact that they chose this as an entrance, instead of an easy access road near the Salt Valley. I guess it's all about the visual drama.
My favorite arch was probably Pinetree Arch... although the fact that Scott and I got to visit it alone, while all the more famous arches were a tad bit overcrowded, might have had something to do with it. That arch can be found in Devil's Garden. I'm so glad we took the time to drive up to the most northern part of the park and went for a short hike to see it. It's great that the main sights of Arches National Park are so easily accessible by car - making it a perfect place to visit for less mobile people. But it can quickly feel like an amusement park or just a place with specific photo ops, unless you get out and walk around a bit where there are less people.
Talking about Devil's Garden; it naturally reminded us of Garden of the Gods in Colorado. And it struck me how at Garden of the Gods every pebble seems to have a name, while at Arches many rock formations appeared to remain nameless. Clearly, this one should be called The Sphinx, that one The Rhinoceros and how about Showering Elephant for that one? Of course, lots of them look like male anatomy...
The music in this video is the instrumental version of the song “Once Tomorrow” by Josh Woodward. This song is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 US License. Josh, I cannot thank you enough for all the beautiful music you have made available to all of us and the soundtrack you have provided for a majority of my American Western videos.
Over the next few days, I will be publishing photos from Arches National Park on my photography website LuciWest.com, my blog, Facebook, Google+ and Flickr. I will try to identify all the rock formations by their official name - or, if there doesn't seem to be one, with my own inventions.
I will also publish photos of the other amazing places we visited on this birthday road trip: Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Blue Mesa Reservoir, Cisco (ghost town), Dinosaur Diamond Scenic Byway along the Colorado River, Canyonlands National Park (!!!), Canyon Pintado and Dinosaur National Monument.
However, I will not publish any 1-minute videos about these places... because next week I will publish my last regular weekly In A Minute video... and I already have something else planned for next Thursday. That's right: after exactly 7 years (since May 7, 2010) of publishing a new 1-minute video every single week, I'm finally bringing this project to a close next week. There is a good chance that I will still occasionally publish Moving Postcard videos - but they will be of the irregular and extended kind. I still have lots of footage to share with you... and I'm not done traveling and filming!
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Tunnel Arch - Arches National Park
Spring break 2019 at the Double Arch in Arches National Park in Moab Utah
Double Arch is an incredible formation of arches within the Windows area of Arches National Park, an area with the largest concentration of natural arches in the entire world. Double Arch takes its name because of it consists of two arches that share the same stone as a foundation for both of their outer legs. Double Arch was formed by downward water erosion from atop the sandstone, rather than from side-to-side water erosion.
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