Let me begin by saying this is a longer than usual post because I have a bunch of photos that I absolutely love and need to post on here. It was the last day of our road trip, and we finally made it to the park that I was most excited about — Arches National Park.
Let’s back up a little. We hit a deer the night before and stayed in a motel in the middle of nowhere. After we woke up, we headed towards the closest town (around 15 miles away), got some breakfast, stocked up at a grocery store, and was on our way to Arches in no time. Below are a few photos from our drive (also my favorite photos from this trip), when we passed through some of the most beautiful sceneries I had, and probably will ever see in my life. My friend even joked about buying some land, building a mansion, so he can retire here in the future. To be honest — who wouldn’t want to live here?
One sideview mirror less but still going strong.




The drive was around two and a half hours if I remember correctly, but I guarantee you it is more than tolerable because it is by far the most scenic drive during this trip. By the time we reached Arches, we had driven so far that we were only less than an hour away from Colorado.
After the ticket booth, we drove past the visitor’s center, picked up a map, and found a huge piece of rock with a good view. Sometime during that process which only lasted 10 minutes or so, I was so excited that I waved my arms or something and my BRAND NEW phone flew out and cracked on the pebbled ground. As if hitting a deer wasn’t enough. I was completely heartbroken (especially because my “friends” wouldn’t stop laughing at my stupidity) but thank god the rest of the day made up for that little tragic incident.


Here’s Arches at first sight — no stone arches yet, just giant rock monuments scattered across endless amounts of land. Thanks to the rain, a huge puddle formed at just the perfect location to catch the reflection a rock that kind of looks like a glove.



Moving on, we stopped at the Balanced Rock, which was shockingly magnificent. I can’t help but wonder if it’s about to fall apart sometime soon. The photo looks super cinematic thanks to the blob of cloud behind it. I swear it wasn’t just the effect of my fisheye lens; the dark clouds were actually hovering above the area, circling around the miraculous creation.


Despite being the most dysfunctional group of people at the park (as shown in the selfie), we made it to the Double Arch to see what we’ve came so far for: massive stone aches. It would have been impressive if someone had carved holes in these rocky mountains to create these arches, but the fact that they are entirely natural make them even more majestic.



We managed to climb up some rocks to sit on an elevated area underneath an arch. It felt great. It’s as if we were sitting on god’s windowsill, hence the name of the area — The Windows Section. On one side, we had an astonishing view of the entire cave created the arches, and the other side was nothing but stunning amounts of land.
When we asked a photographer-looking tourist to take a photo for us, he ran towards the other side of the cave, pretty damn far away, and snapped this shot of us. We look like ants in the photo but hey it’s prove that we visited the legendary stone arches!

Unfortunately, we didn’t get to see the famous Delicate Arch due to flash floods triggered by the rain. But we did drive until the very end of the road, where Devil’s Garden is located. It was only a few miles away from where we were, and the road is surrounded by weird (but cool) looking rock statues.


At this point, we were already getting pretty exhausted (especially from the sun), but I insisted that we hike the Devils Garden trail. Did my friends whine the entire way? Of course, but the walk was by no means difficult and we even spotted some desert bunnies!



This is the Landscape Arch, which stretches elegantly across two rocky mountains. It looks like a mini version of the Island in The Sky Arch at Canyonlands. Sadly, we couldn’t get any closer to the arch, so we just stared at it from a distance before we followed the same trail back. The sun was about to set, which meant it was time to get on the road again.


We watched the sun set on our drive towards Cedar City, which was more than 200 miles away on I-70. It was an interesting drive: we drove for 120 miles without passing a single exit, gas station, or car. There were no streetlights, no signs, and no service on our phones. That section of the interstate has been named “the loneliest freeway in the U.S.” I can’t even imagine what it would be like to drive that road alone.
Well, that was pretty much it. The next day, we drove from Cedar City all the way back to LA. 6-hours of driving but it wasn’t too bad.
1900 miles, 4 states, 4 days.
It’s a road trip that’s gonna be really hard to beat.
xx
– Vivian




































