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Tips4theTrip: Here’s what the screen-saver view of Monument Valley misses

You can tell the locals in Monument Valley -- they're the ones hauling hay and water for their animals.

You can tell the locals in Monument Valley -- they’re the ones hauling hay and water for their animals.

(Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
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In Monument Valley, along the Arizona-Utah borderlands, priorities are important. The weather is harsh, and there isn’t a lot of infrastructure — this is a Navajo park, not a national park. So if you live there, it’s doubly important to have water and food for your animals before you worry about entertaining tourists.

Fortunately, if you are a tourist, the views are staggering. If your suspension is up to it, there’s a 17-mile unpaved road that loops around the valley’s iconically jutting rock formations. And if you want more insight to go with your scenery, there are plenty of guides handy. Here’s a story I did on the valley in 2013.

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You can always count on travel to teach you something — but what? Travel is the substitute teacher who didn’t get the lesson plan, the adjunct lecturer who goes off on Bukowski, the grad assistant who trashes your poetry, then hands out red velvet cupcakes. If only you’d had a clue what was coming, right?

I’m building this gallery from new and old adventures in the West and the world beyond. The photos are all mine. As for the attempted wisdom, it’s all dead serious, except for that which isn’t.

christopher.reynolds@latimes.com

Twitter: @mrcsreynolds

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