The view starting into the Queens Garden Trail
Bryce Point in the distance
Trail down below
This boulder was held up by the smallest of props
The new Pentax camera has been good for this trip. I could tell it was slightly better with pictures when we were in Wyoming. Now that we have learned how to use it and encountered some better weather, it is really showing what it can do and the pictures are much better than my small Nikon. The Pentax really captures the colors of the rocks and the sky, while being more crisp on all the rock edges. All the pictures in the post came from the Pentax as it totally blew away the Nikon on this part of the hike.
The Queens Garden Trail gets its name from a rock formation near the bottom of the trail. There is a hoodoo that strangely resembles the Queen Victoria statue in London, England. I think the resemblance is pretty easy to see in the pictures, but it was even more striking in person.
The sign at the hoodoo that shows the statue compared to the hoodoo.
Queen Victoria Hoodoo
Queen Victoria Hoodoo
Narrow passage near the bottom of the trail
Queens Garden dumps you out at the bottom of the Navajo Loop where you have three options on how to get back to the rim. You can take Navajo Loop either direction for the same trail we saw this morning, you can backtrack up Queens Garden like we just came down, or you can take the Peekaboo Loop over to Bryce Point. We were feeling good so we decided to go for Peekaboo Loop which was another 3.3 miles to Bryce Point with plenty of climbing to get you back to the overlook. I had seen Peekaboo from Bryce Point the day before and really wanted to get on that trail at some point if possible. It goes into the southern half of the main part of the amphitheater and goes through some very different rocks as compared to Navajo and Queens Garden. We ate lunch on a pine log and then started into Peekaboo. More on that part of the hike in the next post.
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