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Saturday had been a long day. Good, but long. Sunday morning started quite differently.
Best Western offered a breakfast downstairs in the lobby. I say this not to bore you with details but to set the stage for a later post. We were delighted to find cereal, bagels, pastries, a self serve waffle iron and an automatic pancake maker.
Glad you asked ... The pancake maker was a closed contraption with an "ok" button on the front. Hit it once, two pancakes were dispensed from inside to your waiting plate in about minute, hit the button twice and out came four. Genius. Except that most of the guests were foreign and the number of times they repeatedly hit "ok" and failed to place a plate under the exit hole, was astounding - and amusing! As for the waffle iron; You pour a pre-measured amount of batter into the iron, close it, flip it, and wait for the beep before opening and removing a perfect waffle. Not rocket science by any means but Mark and I (the control freaks that we are) took pleasure in making our own waffles.
With full bellies and the plan to visit Paria Canyon, we gathered a few snacks and some water and sped out of town in our Mazda 6. Stopping at an information board we did the next best thing to actually having a map and took a picture of this one on our cell phones. It was here we also saw a gorgeous photograph of a narrow canyon... Buckskin Gulch the caption read.
At 11:55 am, parked at the Buckskin gulch trail head, we paid the $6/person fee and signed the hikers register. It was a 4.5 mile one way hike through the gulch to the intersection of Wire Pass. Not knowing how fast the hike would be and being sure that I would slow us down with a thousand photos, we set a time to turn around. Two hours in.... Meant two hours out. We aimed for being back at the car by 4 pm, with the notion that a sunset flight would be ideal too.
The trail followed a river bed, dry now, but with obvious signs that it was recently and violently flowing. Wild flowers were abundant and in the quietness that only the "middle of nowhere" offers, we occasionally saw critters and birds too. Around every bend we were convinced we would stumble upon the narrow part of Buckskin that would lead to dozens of stunning pictures. Alas, no.
It was warm and dry out here and snacks were calling. A quick check of the time revealed it was already 2:35 pm. How could that be? We both agreed that it didn't feel like we had been hiking over 2.5 hours, but cell phones don't lie... Right?
Perplexed and looking for a reason that we had lost track of time so badly, we used the hike back to the trail head to do the math, using time zones and the weirdness of Arizona's lack of daylight savings time as possible excuses.
Fact: We were pretty close to the Arizona-Utah border.
Fact: Denver, Arizona and Utah were all in the same time zone.
Fact: Utah was on daylight savings time, Arizona was not.
Questionable: Whether the hike, which began in Utah, was still in Utah when we checked the time.
Questionable: Where our cell phones (all 3 of them, from 3 different service providers) got their time/date information from.
Questionable: Whether we were more dehydrated than originally thought.
To be completely honest, if you had run into us on the return hike, you would have seen two incredible confused individuals. Unable to tell you the time, unsure of how long they had been hiking out here and completely baffled as to how they, normally intelligent and sensible people, had become so disoriented.
At this point we thought we had run out of time for a sunset flight, plus I felt I lacked the wits needed to operate an aircraft safely. That plan was put on hold until we knew the time and had freed up the brain space needed.
Back at the car we realized we had our hour back! Somewhere along the trail, the cell phones had gone back in time once again and it was looking more and more like a daylight savings time issue.
Arriving in Page, it became a priority to figure out exactly where the daylight savings time ended and how reliable our phones were. After all, we had a booking for a tour tomorrow at 1pm and needed to be sure exactly when 1pm was!
So... Here is what we figured out.
1. Yes, Utah has daylight savings time.
2. No, Arizona does not observe daylight savings time.
3. Our hike was definitely in Utah, but close to the Arizona border.
4. Navajo Nation spans both Arizona and Utah, and does observe daylight savings time... even in AZ.
5. Page AZ sits just outside Navajo Nation.
6. Our cell phones get their time data not from GPS, but from cell towers.
7. If you Google the current time in Page AZ, you get two different answers!!!!
Conclusion:
We left Page on mountain time and arrived at the trail head with phones still showing mountain time, despite us having traveled into Utah. We were still using a cell tower located in AZ.
Part of the way into the hike, the cell phones changed towers and picked up Utah time... Mountain Daylight Time. The clocks went forward an hour.
They returned to mountain time as we neared the trail head again. And remained on mountain time as we crossed back into Arizona.
As for Navajo Nation... Well that time warp didn't affect us today, but could be a real problem tomorrow, depending on where our pick up for the Antelope Canyon tour was. Pick in Page at 1pm = Pick up at Antelope Canyon/Navajo Nation at 2pm. Good to know!
Once all this was figured out, we opted for an early night followed by an even earlier morning tomorrow. New plan: Get up at 5:30 am, wheels up by 6 am and watch the sunrise over Monument Valley.
Saturday had been a long day. Good, but long. Sunday morning started quite differently.
Best Western offered a breakfast downstairs in the lobby. I say this not to bore you with details but to set the stage for a later post. We were delighted to find cereal, bagels, pastries, a self serve waffle iron and an automatic pancake maker.
Glad you asked ... The pancake maker was a closed contraption with an "ok" button on the front. Hit it once, two pancakes were dispensed from inside to your waiting plate in about minute, hit the button twice and out came four. Genius. Except that most of the guests were foreign and the number of times they repeatedly hit "ok" and failed to place a plate under the exit hole, was astounding - and amusing! As for the waffle iron; You pour a pre-measured amount of batter into the iron, close it, flip it, and wait for the beep before opening and removing a perfect waffle. Not rocket science by any means but Mark and I (the control freaks that we are) took pleasure in making our own waffles.
With full bellies and the plan to visit Paria Canyon, we gathered a few snacks and some water and sped out of town in our Mazda 6. Stopping at an information board we did the next best thing to actually having a map and took a picture of this one on our cell phones. It was here we also saw a gorgeous photograph of a narrow canyon... Buckskin Gulch the caption read.
At 11:55 am, parked at the Buckskin gulch trail head, we paid the $6/person fee and signed the hikers register. It was a 4.5 mile one way hike through the gulch to the intersection of Wire Pass. Not knowing how fast the hike would be and being sure that I would slow us down with a thousand photos, we set a time to turn around. Two hours in.... Meant two hours out. We aimed for being back at the car by 4 pm, with the notion that a sunset flight would be ideal too.
The trail followed a river bed, dry now, but with obvious signs that it was recently and violently flowing. Wild flowers were abundant and in the quietness that only the "middle of nowhere" offers, we occasionally saw critters and birds too. Around every bend we were convinced we would stumble upon the narrow part of Buckskin that would lead to dozens of stunning pictures. Alas, no.
Perplexed and looking for a reason that we had lost track of time so badly, we used the hike back to the trail head to do the math, using time zones and the weirdness of Arizona's lack of daylight savings time as possible excuses.
Fact: We were pretty close to the Arizona-Utah border.
Fact: Denver, Arizona and Utah were all in the same time zone.
Fact: Utah was on daylight savings time, Arizona was not.
Questionable: Whether the hike, which began in Utah, was still in Utah when we checked the time.
Questionable: Where our cell phones (all 3 of them, from 3 different service providers) got their time/date information from.
Questionable: Whether we were more dehydrated than originally thought.
To be completely honest, if you had run into us on the return hike, you would have seen two incredible confused individuals. Unable to tell you the time, unsure of how long they had been hiking out here and completely baffled as to how they, normally intelligent and sensible people, had become so disoriented.
At this point we thought we had run out of time for a sunset flight, plus I felt I lacked the wits needed to operate an aircraft safely. That plan was put on hold until we knew the time and had freed up the brain space needed.
Back at the car we realized we had our hour back! Somewhere along the trail, the cell phones had gone back in time once again and it was looking more and more like a daylight savings time issue.
Arriving in Page, it became a priority to figure out exactly where the daylight savings time ended and how reliable our phones were. After all, we had a booking for a tour tomorrow at 1pm and needed to be sure exactly when 1pm was!
So... Here is what we figured out.
1. Yes, Utah has daylight savings time.
2. No, Arizona does not observe daylight savings time.
3. Our hike was definitely in Utah, but close to the Arizona border.
4. Navajo Nation spans both Arizona and Utah, and does observe daylight savings time... even in AZ.
5. Page AZ sits just outside Navajo Nation.
6. Our cell phones get their time data not from GPS, but from cell towers.
7. If you Google the current time in Page AZ, you get two different answers!!!!
www.google.com shows Page AZ using daylight savings time |
www.timetemperature.com has the correct time. No observance of daylight savings. |
We left Page on mountain time and arrived at the trail head with phones still showing mountain time, despite us having traveled into Utah. We were still using a cell tower located in AZ.
Part of the way into the hike, the cell phones changed towers and picked up Utah time... Mountain Daylight Time. The clocks went forward an hour.
They returned to mountain time as we neared the trail head again. And remained on mountain time as we crossed back into Arizona.
As for Navajo Nation... Well that time warp didn't affect us today, but could be a real problem tomorrow, depending on where our pick up for the Antelope Canyon tour was. Pick in Page at 1pm = Pick up at Antelope Canyon/Navajo Nation at 2pm. Good to know!
Once all this was figured out, we opted for an early night followed by an even earlier morning tomorrow. New plan: Get up at 5:30 am, wheels up by 6 am and watch the sunrise over Monument Valley.
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