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Hiking National Parks Nevada Outdoor Adventures Video

Skiing a Glacier in Great Basin National Park – Nevada

We had plans to stay at a lake between Bryce Canyon & Cedar Breaks that fell through due to lack of Verizon signal, so with a couple of extra days before we needed to be back to Salt Lake for a photography workshop we decided to detour to Great Basin National Park. This had been on our list, but we had thought there wouldn’t be time. Good thing we are nothing but flexible.

When We Visited: July 2014
Ages of Kids: 8, 6, 4
Tips: Fill up on gas & groceries before heading out. This park is in the middle of nowhere on the border of Utah/Nevada and gas is expensive and groceries are hard to find. Local residents of the surrounding little towns drive an hour to two hours to go grocery shopping (crazy!).

When deciding what to do while we were in the park, I really wanted to go hiking. REAL hiking. The kind where you actually sweat and the next day you are sore and tired but you feel awesome because you showed that trail who was boss. Finding a glacier at the top of the mountain we calculated out the distance for a round trip and came up with just close to 5 miles. Next we just had to pitch it to the kids.

“Seriously mom? There’s SNOW up there?” Andrew asked skeptically.
“Yup. All the time. It never really melts,” I answered. “A glacier is a slow moving pile of snow & ice that carves its way down the mountain. You want to go see it? It’ll be the longest hike we’ve ever done.”
“Yes!!” All three kids answered at the same time.

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It was magical. The hike was great, but watching my kids scramble all over this snow in July was exhilerating. Andrew took off by himself, while Cara and Rachel stuck a little closer to Sam & I. Sam managed to step his way up the hill in a way that Cara and I could follow pretty easily in his footsteps. We threw snowballs, the kids slid down on their backsides, and we generally had a good time goofing off. THEN Sam started skiing down the glacier on his feet. Immediately all the kids wanted in on the action and one by one, we helped them know where to put their feet and we slip-slid down the snow together.

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There are a lot of great things about Great Basin National Park. The campground was clean and nice, Lehman Caves were very interesting (we learned about shield formations), the Bristlecone Pines were majestic, the kids earned a Jr. Ranger Badge, we went on an evening hike, and we even had ice cream in their on site cafe. We had a great weekend, but I think all of us will remember Great Basin National Park as the place where we went skiing in July.

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Musings of Sam

The Tenacity of the Bristlecone Pine

The Tenaciy of a Bristlecone Pine Treet

Bristlecone pine trees are among the oldest living species of tree. The hardships in their life can be seen in their twisted forms and stunted growth, having survived droughts, fires, winds, heavy snowbanks, bitter cold, and searing heat. Even when a part of the tree suffers breakage or rot, the tree will continue to grow as long as there is some bit of surviving tissue.

We’ve spent the last few days at Great Basin National Park, situated on the Utah Nevada border just east of Ely, Nevada. We’ve been able to witness some ancient bristlecone pine trees, and have gained a new appreciation for their majesty. We also saw a Bristlecone Pines in Bryce Canyon and in Cedar Break, two of our recent stops although their majesty didn’t quite register there as it has here.  Here at Great Basin National Park, we walked a small interpretive trail on our hike to the glacier. The trail winds through a small grove of these beautiful trees, and we learned much from the informative signs along the trail.

Of the many traits of these trees, the one I think of most often is Tenacity. These trees are tenacious, overcoming challenges year after year to fulfill the full measure of their creation. The results of their work can be seen in the beautiful forms they create as they grow.

Bristlecone Pines are not tall trees, but cannot be viewed as weak. The twisted wood of their trunks and branches can only be viewed as muscular, strong, and stalwart.

If I were a tree, would I have that much tenacity? Would I be able to hold on through think and thin? What of my life now? Am I diligent in striving to reach the full measure of MY creation? I believe that God has a plan for our lives, and that our efforts to follow that plan are rewarded with peace and happiness, both in this life and in the eternities.

I hope that someday, I can look back at my life and see something as majestic as a Bristlecone Pine.