Arches National Park, Utah

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Hello hello! First,  a few pieces of housekeeping:

  1. I’ve created a new page on the blog called Roadtrip USA so that all of these posts are organized and easily accessible in one place. It even has a fun clickable map like the London page, so you can follow along and watch our trail progress! I’ll be adding posts to the map as they go up, but if you want to see our entire itinerary, you can find it HERE.
  2. I did a little interview feature with a travel community site called Bohemian Birds – check it out here.

Now back to the good stuff!

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

I know I waxed poetic about leaving the desert for the mountains when we entered Colorado, but we had one last desert adventure up our sleeves! After our jaunt through Telluride and a much-needed steam in the hot springs of Ouray, we dipped our toes back into Utah for an afternoon.

Destination? Arches National Park, a “red rock wonderland” outside of Moab and home to over 2000 naturally-formed sandstone arches. It was hot and dry without a cloud in the sky (rhyme – heyo!) and, as was the pattern during this off-season trip, there were very few other visitors in the park with us.

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

We meandered our way (in Kokapelli, of course) along the twisting main road, stopping for quick side walks whenever something struck our fancy.

Though the arches are the namesake and the main draw of the park, the place is home to plenty of other amazing geological features carved into the red sandstone, named imaginatively for more familiar structures they resemble. The National Park Service website has a great explanation of the science behind the formation of arches here.

The Three Gossips (center) and Courthouse Towers (right):

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Balanced Rock:

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

I’m told (by Wikipedia) that the upper rock is about as big as three school buses!

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

The natural sandstone structure is so precarious that, inevitably, it will someday fall (as will all of the arches). There’s something sort of poetic about understanding and accepting how temporary everything in this park is (cheesy but true?).

North and South Window (confession time: I don’t remember which is which):

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Turret Arch:

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

And of course, the main event – Delicate Arch, a.k.a. Cowboy Chaps:

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

There is another hiking trail which will take you right up to the base of Delicate Arch and give you a vantage point to get those epic NatGeo-esque photos (see here), but we had plans to get back across the Colorado border before nightfall (and the sun was pretty blistering), so we had to opt out of that side trek.

We did make a little friend in the Delicate Arch parking lot, though.

“You’re gonna get some hop-ons.”

A photo posted by Julie (@alifeexotic) on

Though there are literally thousands of arches and features to explore throughout the nearly eighty thousand acres of the park, the main impression I got was of vast emptiness.

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

I love the contrast of the flat red plains with snowcapped peaks way off in the distance. The epitome of “wide open spaces,” eh?

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

The last view we had as we approached the exit was of the Fiery Furnace, growing redder as the sun dipped lower.

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

Another win for the NPS, I’d say! Next time, we’re back in Colorado and on to more mountain adventures.

Arches National Park, Utah | A Life Exotic

The Details: $10 entry fee per vehicle | Open year-round | Website HERE

Colorado Mountain Towns: Telluride & Ouray

Entering Colorado definitely marked a new phase of our roadtrip. Goodbye, desert. Helloooo, mountains!

San Juan Mountains, Colorado | A Life Exotic

As I know I’ve said before, I really loved the southwest. Nonetheless, I was jonesing to see blue and green again. As my buddy Bilbo once said, “I want to see mountains again, Gandalf, mountains!” Luckily, this is an area in which Colorado can definitely deliver.

“I want to see mountains again. Mountains, Gandalf!”

A photo posted by Julie Manning (@alifeexotic) on

Our first glimpse of the Centennial State was at the Four Corners, although admittedly it had to share our attention with three of its neighbors. We continued on to Mesa Verde National Park for a taste of Colorado’s history before driving farther north and deeper into the mountains. Pretty soon, I could barely remember what hot sand felt like or why I’d brought three pairs of flip flops.

It was just evergreen-covered hills that slowly grew into snowcapped mountains, always under a completely cloudless blue sky.

San Juan Mountains, Colorado | A Life Exotic

San Juan Mountains, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Being two utter non-skiiers, we naturally decided to take ourselves on a little tour of Colorado’s famous ski resort towns.

First up: Telluride. Nestled in a little basin in the San Juan mountains, it’s basically one of those picture-perfect ceramic Christmas villages. I can only imagine how much more adorable it gets with a fresh blanket of snow.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

We were actually there on the first official weekend of ski season, but as you can probably tell from the photos, it was unseasonably warm with nary a falling flake in sight.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

The winter tourism boom was clearly lagging behind schedule, and we got more than a few puzzled looks from locals who could tell by our hippie van that we were just passing through and seemed to be wondering what could bring us to their town other than black diamonds and fresh pow (<—haha, I have no idea what I’m talking about).

I thought Telluride was unbelievably charming, though. After a week of full-day tours through national parks, it was actually sort of nice to have a stretch of lots of scenic driving with relatively brief stops along the way. Just a different way to roadtrip.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Telluride was formed as a silver mining camp in the 1800s, despite being named for gold minerals which were only found in other parts of Colorado. Today, ski tourism is its main gig, although it also has an impressive arts scene (life goal: go back for the annual Bluegrass Festival someday!) and a historic district that is classified as a National Historic Landmark by the state.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Because the town is snuggled in the canyon formed by the surrounding mountains, the sun dips out of sight long before it truly starts to set, casting deep shadows over most of the buildings while the mountaintops are still bathed in light. It’s a very unusual but pretty cool effect.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

All told, we didn’t do much. We spent a few hours wandering along the streets, enjoying the chance to stretch our legs after a long stint of driving in Kokapelli. We popped into the post office to send off our latest round of postcards, gave a last farewell look to the lonely-looking ski mountains, and hit the road again.

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Telluride, Colorado | A Life Exotic

At this point, we turned our attention to a rather pressing dilemma. It’s about to get really real here, folks.

Roadtrip confession: we had not showered in six days. It was all in the name of independence, travel, and adventure, and fortunately we are not a smelly people… but it was starting to wear on us.

This is when m’colleague had a most excellent brainwave. We consulted the lore, as always, and she realized that we were not altogether too far from Ouray (pronounced You-ray), another little mining town which happens to have natural hot springs.

It’s also yet another lovely and charming place in itself, but I won’t pretend we didn’t have certain priorities at that point.

Ouray, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Ouray, Colorado | A Life Exotic

We drove into town just as the sun was truly setting, and for the low low price of $9 each, got to shower in a squeaky clean locker room and wallow about in the steamy hot springs pool to our hearts’ content. It was glorious.

We were both glad to feel so fresh and so clean-clean for the next leg of our Colorado adventures… and I’m sure Kokapelli wasn’t complaining, either.

Ouray, Colorado | A Life Exotic

Roadtrip Postcards: Four Corners

Before we delve deeper into our Colorado adventures, let’s back up to the moment we first entered the state.

Our original roadtrip itinerary called for us to head from Arizona into New Mexico and try our hand at the most classic roadtrip drive of them all: Route 66. Of course, Route 66 actually extends all the way from Chicago to Santa Monica, but the stretch through northern New Mexico is the really iconic bit.

However, we were starting to realize the necessity of cutting out long detours in favor of seeing more on the road ahead, so we decided to forego gettin’ our kicks and instead just dip our toes into New Mexico before carrying on to Colorado.

Though the Four Corners of course marks the spot where four different states meet, the entrance is actually in New Mexico (hey, we got a picture of the state sign – yet another one more exciting than Colorado’s – so it counts).

Four Corners, USA | A Life Exotic

It’s also where Skyler came to try and work through her crisis of identity and decide whether or not she could cut and run… but things kept coming up Albuquerque for her (Breaking Bad reference, Mom).

The Four Corners marker is in the middle of a big open pavilion, a little like some of the monuments in DC. During the daytime, there are booths all around the perimeter where (mostly) locals sell Native American art and jewelry as a little extra boost to their economy – the Four Corners is another landmark that sits on land belonging to the Navajo, Hopi, and other tribes. These were all closed when we were there as it was just before sunset, and there were only a couple of other visitors milling around.

This worked to our advantage, since it was a piece of cake to get the coveted “I’m in four states at once” shot! Check out Amity showing off her geographical prowess:

Four Corners, USA | A Life Exotic

After a loop around the pavilion and a few minutes snapping our photos and reading the plaques, we looked at each other for a moment. What now?

The Four Corners is one of those funny spots that doesn’t actually have much significance other than what we’ve attributed to it ourselves. It’s a pretty nondescript patch of desert that happens to be where the land surveyors of old got tired of creating all those wonky wiggly state borders and decided to keep things simple. And for this, all American seventh graders forced to continually take the states quiz until they get it perfect thank them.

Truthfully, there isn’t much to do there other than stand in four states at once. Don’t get me wrong – this is totally worth the draw. It’s a really cool stop, albeit a quick one. Go and fulfill your A Walk to Remember fantasies times two!

And obviously I’m still deeply hurt that TOMS never reposted my #TravelingTOMS photo. Because this is for sure the coolest one out there.

The Details: $5 entry fee per person | Open year-round | Website HERE

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