Moab, Utah 2022

Today’s post will be short and sweet on words—I’ll let the pictures do most of the work!

Last week we vacationed to Moab, Utah. Since we live in Nebraska it made sense to do kind of a circle through Colorado, hit up Moab (which is near the western border of Colorado) and then drive the southern highway of Colorado on the way home. By doing this we were able to change up the scenery a bit on the way there and back.

Welcome to our road trip:

Entering the Rocky Mountains (Colorado)
Lake Dillon in Colorado
First scenic stop in Utah
Hiking at Hidden Valley Ranch…
we never did find the bottle of ranch😉
On the drive to some arches
Hiking up to Corona Arch, no worries we just had to cross the tracks, not follow them😅
Bowtie Arch
Bowtie Arch
Corona Arch
Pinto Arch
Arches National Park
Delicate Arch
(this is Moab’s signature arch)
Ice cream break in Moab
Driving back to Colorado
Colorado—cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde

***The cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde are some of the most notable and best preserved in North America. Sometime during the late 1190s, after primarily living on the mesa tops for 600 years, many Ancestral Pueblo people began moving into pueblos they built into natural cliff alcoves. The structures ranged in size from one-room granaries to villages of more than 150 rooms. While still farming the mesa tops, they lived in cliff dwellings, repairing, remodeling, and constructing new rooms for nearly a century. In the mid-1200s, the population began migrating to the south, into present-day New Mexico and Arizona. By the end of the 1200s, most everyone had migrated away. ***Info noted at nps.gov

Cliff Palace
Petroglyphs!!
Square Tower House Overlook A.D. 1200-1300
Oaktree House A.D. 1250
Fire House Cliff
Long House Overlook
Nordenskiold Overlook
On the drive
Treasure Falls in CO
Our cabin in South Fork, CO
The Clay Mine
Creede, CO
Hiking in Creede, Colorado

Looking through these pictures I’m reminded all over again that we have an amazingly, creative God! He didn’t have to bless us with an array of color as he paints the sunrises and sunsets each day, or allow us the challenge of climbing and hiking his self-made obstacle courses through rigid mountains.

Landscapes aren’t in short supply, God has perfectly placed them all over the world and we get the opportunity to explore and praise Him because of this. We can see evidence of Him in the beauty of His creations! Nothing to be taken for granted.

The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands. —Psalms 19:1

Northeast of Moab, UT

Where is, or has been, one of your favorite places to visit, seeing God’s handprint throughout? Maybe it’s even your own backyard…

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