Hiking Home to Zion
The Right Fork of North Creek
By Golden Webb
Water-carved walls under a cobalt-blue sky; rills
and freshets and springs; the pure waters of a desert stream, falling
in twin braids over fluted sandstone into a cold emerald pool. When my
grandfather closes his eyes for the final time, he wants God to open them
again to a scene like this.
It's January, cold as Dante's Ninth Circle of Hell,
and the landscape of Zion looks more like the Khumbu icefall than the
sun-kissed desert wonderland of the postcards. For some reason I'm up
to my waist in the plunge pool of Double Falls, deep in the Great West
Canyon of North Creek. I've slogged six miles through a frozen canyon
to stand in this half-frozen pool, with two sprained ankles, tendonitis
in my right knee, and a mild case of hypothermia to show for the effort.
Of course, if I'm cold, wet and aching all over in a desert canyon, I
must be happier than a pig in & well, you get the idea.
Sure enough, whether it's the hypothermic buzz or
just the galvanic sensory overload of getting up close and personal with
a desert waterfall, I find myself thinking all kinds of happy thoughts,
mostly about the power of place. Particularly this place, the Kolob Terrace
section of Zion National Park, where my Grandpa Webb wants to go when
he dies. And this stream, North Creek, where he experienced the fondest
moments of his life - as a young boy, swimming its pools; and as a father
and husband with a young family, trying and failing to make a go of ranching
its unforgiving flood plain.
The forms and landscapes of the Colorado Plateau have
always fired the imagination of man, inspiring awe, belles letters
and a peculiar kind of piety. As Jared Farmer writes, "George Stevens,
director of The Greatest Story Ever Told, wanted a backdrop with
biblical feel. He found the perfect location: Glen Canyon in southern
Utah. 'Not scenery like that of the Holy Land,' remarked Charlton Heston,
who played the Baptist, 'but more as the Holy Land should be, with the
fingerprints of God still on it.'" The plateau's numinous qualities are
reflected in the names it bears: a strange mixture of Athabascan, Uto-Aztecan
and Semitic terms - names like Moab, Paunsaugunt, Agathla; mythic names
for a mythically proportioned landscape, plucked directly from the holy
traditions of ancient desert tribes.
Zion National Park encompasses a high desert plateau-land
of vertical walls, finger canyons, and water-sculpted pinnacles and domes:
sandstone palisades cut to a god-like scale. The Parrusits, a Paiute subtribe
who occupied the Virgin River Valley for many centuries, held Zion in
special reverence. Legend has it they considered the inner reaches of
Mukuntuweap and Parunuweap canyons and the North and East forks of the
Virgin too spiritually potent to farm or hunt. Nor was the majesty of
this landscape lost on white explorers and settlers when they arrived
in the 1860s, who paid the ultimate compliment by reaching into their
religion to name what they saw. Court of the Patriarchs; Tabernacle Dome;
Altar of Sacrifice: in any other place such names would be ill fitting,
but here they fit.
"There is an eloquence to their forms which stirs
the imagination with a singular power and kindles in the mind & a
glowing response," wrote Clarence Dutton, the geologist-poet who accompanied
John Wesley Powell on his second survey of the Colorado Plateau. "Nothing
can exceed the wondrous beauty of Zion. In coming time (Zion) will, I
believe, take rank with a very small number of spectacles each of which
will, in its own way, be regarded as the most exquisite of its kind which
the world discloses."
My grandfather first encountered Zion as a boy living
in Virgin during the Great Depression. His memories of North Creek, which
drains the highlands of the Kolob Plateau on Zion's western border, nourish
his soul the way the blood in his veins used to nourish his strong, once
muscular body, now frail and sick, ravaged by leukemia these last 15 years.
He cherishes his memories of that magical ranch, which he acquired from
his uncles Rube and Joad, built right along the creek under the shadow
of Cougar Mountain and South Guardian Angel, and recollections of his
cousins Ray and Allan, with whom he spent halcyon summer days hoeing corn,
herding cows and exploring, all to themselves, the waterfalls and slots
of the Right and Left forks. "I never tired of watching the changing shades
and shadows of the red-black hills and sand dunes," he has written, "never
tired of listening to the goodnight song of the white crowned sparrows
as they settled in for the night in the wild roses. Never tired of walking
the mesas, or lying on my belly, pulling fish from under rocks up on North
Creek & I went to bed hungry many times & but even now, I can
literally feast on the exquisiteness of a warm, star-bright evening in
the never-never-land that is (Zion)." If his recollection of that time
has taken on a quasi-religious quality, you can hardly blame him: He was,
after all, country before country was cool, an intrepid canyoneer long
before such a term existed, who encountered awesome spectacles like the
Subway long before such places had even been named.
North Creek is the source of much that is good in
my grandpa's life: His faith in God, his sense of manhood, his love of
fishing and wild waters - the very things that will stay alive in his
children and grandchildren long after he's gone to glory. If the power
of a place like North Creek could have so infused his soul, then maybe
it got into his blood. And if the sand of North Creek flows in my grandpa's
blood, then maybe a few of those grains found their way into my blood,
too.
On a midafternoon in January, the day has become mild,
even warm; a sense of perpetual spring hangs in the rarefied air of the
canyon's upper reaches. I make my way up the watercourse, negotiating
a series of mossy boulder-falls and immense chokestone slabs. Hidden waters
pour through every nook and hollow, filling the canyon with a white roar;
plunge-pools shimmer and froth under glittering cascades. After a time,
the canyon heads: A round amphitheater, cut out of the living rock; a
clear green pool; and the spring-fed trickle of a stream, issuing out
of the golden chamber of the Grand Alcove to fall like a curtain over
a mound of sandstone: Barrier Falls. This is where it all begins, and
where it all began, for my grandpa, and for me.
If you go:
The Right Fork of North Creek is accessed via the
paved Kolob Reservoir Road, which heads north from the town of Virgin
and SR 9, 14 miles (22.6 km) west of the Zion South Entrance. The parking
area for the hike, a small, marked but unimproved clearing tucked into
juniper forest on the right side of the road, is located 6.9 miles north
of Virgin and .4 mile past the Kolob Terrace Section sign at the park
boundary.
Hike .2 mile along a well-beaten path southeast to
the lava cliffs overlooking North Creek. After dropping down to the watercourse,
hike .5 mile north to the confluence of Left and Right forks. From there
it's 5.9 miles to Barrier Falls, one way (look for the high, brushy path
around Double Falls on the south side of the creek). Expect numerous stream
crossings and a couple of waist-deep pools. A backcountry permit is required
if you plan on camping in Right Fork. No permit is required for day hikes.
Maps: Zion National Park Topographic Map (Zion Natural
History Association); The Guardian Angels.
Guidebooks: Thomas Brereton and James Dunaway, Exploring
The Backcountry Of Zion National Park, Zion Natural History Association;
Erik Molvar and Tamara Martin, Hiking Zion & Bryce Canyon National
Parks, Falcon Publishing.
Contact Information: Phone: (801) 772-3256; web site:
www.nps.gov/zion.
GPS:
Trailhead: 37 16.250 N , 113 deg 6.186 W; elevation 4545
Bottom of canyon entry/exit point: 37 deg 16.056 N, 113 deg 5.739 W; elevation
4147
Double Falls: 37 deg 16.839 N, 113 deg 1.435 W; elevation 4462
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