RHH's photos with the keyword: carlsbad caverns

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
20 Aug 2020 16 2 79
These are some of the unusual formations in Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico. We had been there years ago but had forgotten how extensive the caverns are and how beautiful.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
20 Aug 2020 17 9 149
These are a few more photos from Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico. We visited the caverns on a cold and rainy day instead of hiking in the Guadalupe Mountains south of the caverns.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
20 Aug 2020 10 4 100
These are some of the amazing formations in Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico. Photography was difficult and I was not as prepared as I should have been. Most of these photos as a result were taken with my phone.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
20 Aug 2020 9 6 120
Many of the formations in Carlsbad Caverns are lighted but very dimly. Too much light and algae begins to grow on them and ruin them.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
19 Aug 2020 21 13 137
When we visited Carlsbad Caverns National Park I took an equal number of photos with phone and camera. I should have had a tripod with me but did not and without a tripod the phone seemed to do a better job of dealing with the lack of light. In any case the caverns are the most beautiful we have ever been in and we've visited Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, Wind and Jewel Caves in South Dakota and others. It was a perfect day for being in the cave since it was wet and cold (freezing rain) outdoors. We had planned to spend the day in the Guadalupe Mountains but changed our plans on account of the weather.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
19 Aug 2020 13 3 82
These are some of the formations in Carlsbad Caverns but no photo that I have taken or seen can show the immensity of these caverns and the beauty of the formations.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
19 Aug 2020 11 2 84
Carlsbad Caverns can be entered by an elevator from the visitors' center or on foot. We chose to go on foot and this is the walkway into the cave.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
19 Aug 2020 7 2 81
This is the entrance to Carlsbad Caverns when one chooses to enter the cave on foot. There is also an elevator in the visitors' center, but we chose to walk.

Iced Cactus

RHH
18 Aug 2020 31 16 140
After leaving Big Bend National Park we drove to the Texas-New Mexico border intending to hike in the Guadalupe Mountains, but when we arrived there the weather was so lousy that we decided instead to go to Carlsbad Caverns and spend the day exploring the cave where at least we would be under cover. Driving up to the visitors' center, which is over a mile in elevation (1700 m) it was raining and just cold enough that there was a covering of ice on everything including the cacti. We stopped and took a few photos in the rain and then made a dash for the caves. This Cholla cactus was one of the things we photographed since it seemed very odd to see cacti covered in ice.

Ice

RHH
18 Aug 2020 14 3 80
These grasses covered in ice were photographed near the visitors' center in Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico. We had intended to hike in the Guadalupe Mountains the day this was taken but ended up exploring the caverns instead since the weather was so poor.

Iced Yucca

RHH
18 Aug 2020 10 2 100
This Yucca plant, its fibers covered with ice, was photographed near the visitors' center in Carlsbad Caverns National Park.

Carlsbad Caverns

RHH
23 Feb 2020 36 20 270
This was one of the many photos I took of Carlsbad Caverns when we were there. I learned a lot about taking photos in a cave but by that time most of the tour was finished. Carlsbad makes all other caves look like mere holes in the ground. We've been to Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, Wind and Jewel Caves in South Dakota, and others as well, but none of them even come close to Carlsbad. Our walk through the cave was nearly three miles and some of the rooms are huge. The Big Room is nearly a mile around and the size of five football fields. The formations are magnificent and varied and the cave leaves one feeling awed. We are in the city of Carlsbad tonight. After driving up from Big Bend National Park on Friday we encountered freezing temperatures in lower New Mexico (there was ice on the cacti) and spent the rest of that day at the caverns, a great place to shelter from the cold and rain. Yesterday we drove back into Texas and spent the day hiking the McKittrick Canyon trail in Guadalupe Mountains National Park. We were there overnight and this morning and went on to Lincoln National Forest and Sitting Bull Falls today. We decided after living rough for the past week to get a motel tonight and will spend a quiet day tomorrow before continuing our travels.