Arches National Park is an endless menagerie of rocks and formations that dot the skyline, as far as the eye can see. These particular rocks are in the Windows Section of the park, which is right next to the famous Double Arch.
Getting into Bryce in the late afternoon, I only had a few hours at best before sunset. I checked into my hotel as quick as I could, packed up my gear, bundled up in all my layers to stay warm for the chilly night sub 20 degrees and headed out to Bryce Point. This viewing platform give you a stunning panoramic view of the most popular part of the canyon, that consists of the Queens Garden, Navajo Loop and Peekaboo Trail. These are three of the most popular trails everyone hikes on. Able to get camped out at my spot an hour before sunset, I was able to capture the slow progression of the shadowy darkness eating away at the canyon and its sunlight disappearing ever so slowly into the beyond. Bryce Point, Bryce Canyon National Park, Bryce, UT Google Maps Location video was taken from: https://goo.gl/mPUIvd
All around Kyoto and most parts of Japan, you will find these beautiful lit lanterns, sometimes in the hundreds, bunched together. In the olden days they were used in Buddhist temples to illuminate pathways, like modern day street lamps. But nowadays they are for purely ornamental purposes.