Between Boulder City and Escalante, Utah the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument includes the middle watershed of the Escalante River’s 90-mile run from the confluence of Birch Creek and Upper Valley Creek on the eastern slopes of the Escalante Mountains to Lake Powell. Here the great petrified dunes of Navajo Sandstone play out to the redrock canyons that line the Colorado River. Among the great dunes that skirt the lower reaches of Boulder Mountain, Calf Creek runs its course in preparation to join the river. Not the spires and hoodoos of the Red Rock here, but the rounded sculpturing of cream and tan that often weather like giant checkerboards. It is a beautiful part of the great diversity of the Grand Staircase-Escalante.

A focal length of 300mm gave me the narrowed angle-of-view that isolated a small section of the giant dunes with the lower shoulder of the mountain in the background and a textured sky above. An aperture of f/22 provided depth-of-field and a shutter speed of 1/30th second at ISO 100 gave me an overall medium exposure.

The Escalante region is a powerful statement about the importance and diversity of our amazing public lands. Their great beauty reminds us of our obligation to preserve and protect the inheritance we have been given.