Where Canyons Touch the Sky

Lens-Artists Challenge #388: Your Journey in 5-10 Images

A wide-angle landscape photograph of a black Jeep Wrangler driving on a winding dirt road in a vast, arid desert plain. The road leads towards several imposing, multi-layered brown mountains under a blue sky with light, wispy clouds. The foreground is filled with dry, low-lying brush.
Overlanding Through Big Bend Ranch: The Road to the Mountains.

Anne-Christine asked us to consider these questions for this week’s challenge about a trip we took: “What were the highlights, what are the memories that will stay with me forever? Maybe the big surprises? The animals, the people, the culture, the landscapes?” You can see her gorgeous photos from Zimbabwe and South Africa here. As for my take on the challenge, I’ll take the easy way out and focus on my last journey.

If you’ve seen my recent posts, you know I have just returned from a week away at Big Bend Ranch State Park. I’ve been to that park several times, and this was the right time to go back. I was more prepared to venture off-road. My Jeep Wrangler — aptly named Onyx — finally traded the pavement for the prehistoric dust of Big Bend Ranch State Park. In the featured photo, Onyx appears on the lower left, already covered in dust in only the first ten miles of the journey.

The moment I crossed into the park boundaries, the scale of the landscape took my breath away. Seeing those towering, multi-layered peaks rising above the desert floor from behind the wheel of Onyx felt like a true homecoming. I was home, out in the wide-open skies.

A panoramic landscape view looking down into a dry, rocky canyon system in a vast desert. The scene features layered rock formations, hillsides covered in sun-bleached grasses and small shrubs, and distant mesa tops. In the foreground, sotol plants are prominent among dry brush and ocotillo. The sky is blue with scattered, wispy clouds.
Desert Vista: The Layered Canyons and Mesas.

I went chasing trails and canyons. I didn’t just stick to the dirt roads; I took my hiking shoes to explore the park’s rugged interior, such as at Cinco Tinajas. Standing above the canyon, I marveled at how the ancient “rock basins” have carved their way through the desert over millennia.

A medium shot of a prominent, rounded volcanic mountain peak with rugged, textured rock faces, under a bright blue sky with streaks of white cirrus clouds. A healthy agave plant with sharp, pointed leaves is in the foreground, partially obscuring other dry desert brush. The ground is dark, rocky earth.
Desert Sentinel: The Volcanic Peak and Yucca.

The Puerta Chilicote Loop was a hike that offered sweeping vistas of volcanic peaks and spiked yuccas standing like desert sentinels. Nature presented itself in every careful step I took. Being the only human being along that trail — as it happens in most hikes inside the park — I felt in complete harmony with Nature and her gifts.

A low-angle, close-up photograph looking through the narrow opening of a slot canyon. The canyon walls are dark, textured rock, in deep shadow. In the center, sunlight illuminates a small, jagged section of the far canyon wall, making it glow with warm, golden, and reddish hues, contrasting sharply with the dark foreground.
Golden Light: A Glimpse into Closed Canyon.

At Closed Canyon, perhaps the most intimate experience of the trip, I was squeezing through the narrow, cool shadows of the slot canyon where the walls glow like molten gold when the light hits just right. It’s an unforgettable hike that I repeat every time I visit this park. Each time, there is a new discovery.

A high-angle, panoramic landscape view of the Rio Grande River winding through a vast canyon system with massive, rugged, dark-grey and brown rock cliffs. In the foreground, a prominent agave stalk with yellow-white flowers stands among dry brush and large boulders. The sky is bright blue with light clouds.
Lifeblood of the Desert: A Vista of the Rio Grande.

No trip to this region is complete without driving FM 170, also known as the “River Road.” Stretching between Presidio and Lajitas (50 miles / 80 km), it is arguably the most scenic drive in Texas. Onyx handled the hairpin turns and steep grades with ease, offering me a front-row seat to the Colorado Canyon. Looking down at the green ribbon of the Rio Grande snaking through the dark volcanic rock, you realize just how vast and untamed this border country remains.

A dramatic landscape photograph taken at dusk, featuring a sky filled with vibrant red, orange, and yellow clouds stretching across the horizon. The sun is below the horizon, silhouetting a mountain range on the far left and several distant buildings on a dark plain. The foreground is dark and unlit.
West Texas Fire: A Radiant Desert Sunset.

After the dust settled each evening, I retreated to the Sauceda Bunkhouse. There is no better way to end a desert day than sitting on that porch, watching the sky ignite. The sunsets here aren’t just colors; they are an event. Seeing the horizon turn a fiery, bruised purple against the silhouette of the mountains was the perfect “welcome to the family” moment for Onyx. The Big Bend back country is tough, beautiful, and unforgiving—the perfect place for a Jeep to find its soul.

I am grateful for the beautiful images you share week after week, such as the ones for John’s Shadowed challenge last week. I hope you will join this challenge, too. Please don’t forget to use the “lens-artists” hashtag in your posts to help people find your wonderful challenge entries.

Next week, Anne will feature a new challenge. It will go live at noon EST in the USA. Tune in to find out more about the challenge then. Please see this page for more information about the Lens-Artists Challenge and its history. If you don’t want to miss any future challenges, please consider subscribing to the team members’ websites. Here they are:

That is the story behind the shots. If you liked this post, you may also be interested in others featuring Big Bend Ranch SP, Cinco Tinajas, Closed Canyon, Colorado Canyon, FM 170, Landscapes, Lens-Artists, Parks, Puerta Chilicote Loop, Rio Grande, River Road, Sauceda Bunkhouse, Sunset, Texas. Until the next time, keep clicking and capturing the beauty your eyes find.


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  1. Anita
    | Reply

    What an extraordinary journey, Egídio!! Your images capture both the vast drama of Big Bend Ranch and the quiet, intimate moments along the way. From the dust on Onyx to the golden glow in Closed Canyon, and the river winding like a lifeline through the rock. I really love how you bring us along through your magnificent photos and your emotionally rich storytelling. A truly memorable take on the challenge.
    Your post even stirred a longing in me to travel again after nearly five years without leaving Cyprus.

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