Combine Fish and Owl canyons for a leisurely backpacking trip or strenuous day hike on Cedar Mesa!
- Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Game
- Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Video
- Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Worksheet
The personality test is combined of 5 negotiating style that are named after animals: turtle, fox, teddy bear, shark, and owl. The turtle aims at a style which involves avoidance. Operation Eagle Claw, known as Operation Tabas (Persian: عملیات طبس ) in Iran, was a United States Armed Forces operation ordered by U.S. President Jimmy Carter to attempt to end the Iran hostage crisis by rescuing 52 embassy staff held captive at the Embassy of the United States, Tehran on 24 April 1980.

- CONFLICT RESOLUTION STYLES. Shark (Competing). Turtle (Avoiding). Fox (Compromising). Teddy-bear (Accommodating). Owl (Collaborating) 45. CONFLICT RESOLUTION STYLES FOR NEGOTIATORS 46. CONFLICT MANAGEMENT GUIDING PRINCIPLES – TIPS AND TECHNIQUES FOR NEGOTIATORS 47.
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Trail description
Cedar Mesa, which includes Fish and Owl canyons, is known for its concentration of archaeological sites. Throughout your hike, watch for cliff dwellings high on the canyon walls. If you visit any of these special places, please remember to leave all artifacts in place, don’t enter rooms, and avoid touching rock art.
You can hike this loop in either direction, but this description details the route going down Fish Creek and up Owl Creek. The trail to Fish Creek starts at the north side of the parking area near a brown trail sign. Continue northeast, cutting across a piñon and juniper forest for about 1.5 miles to the canyon rim.
Dropping into Fish
A cairn marks the beginning of your descent into a tributary that leads to Fish Canyon. After making a few switchbacks, you drop down to a flat bench. Follow cairns across patches of slickrock and cryptobiotic soil to the crux — a 15-foot downclimb. Bring a rope to lower packs, and scramble down the crack.
Past this point, the trail is hard to follow. Cairns mark an approximate route down a very steep slope. Dirt, scree, and loose rocks are like ball bearings beneath your feet, so be careful not to lose your footing. By 2 miles, you reach the tributary floor.
Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Game

Skirt a pouroff on the right side of the canyon, and continue to burrow your way through willows, Gambel oaks, and horsetails. Fish Creek comes in from the left in a half mile, and you keep making your way past periodic pools, junipers, and cottonwood trees.
Eventually the gravel wash gives way to slickrock, and you enjoy easy walking for about a mile. The canyon walls display interesting indentations, pinnacles, and knobs. Around 6.8 miles, look for an arch about two-thirds of the way up the left canyon wall. It blends into the rock wall behind it and can be easy to miss.
Beyond the arch, you find a few good campsites along the flat creek banks. The canyon walls diminish as you near the confluence, and at around 9 miles you meet Owl Canyon. There is a good campsite just downcanyon on a rock bench shaded with cottonwood trees.
Note: If you camp at the confluence, consider walking about 1.5 miles downcanyon to see several archaeological sites near the mouth of McCloyd Canyon (first tributary on your right).
Up Owl
Otherwise, head northwest up Owl Canyon. The gravel wash bottom makes for slow hiking, so look for a path that cuts across the right bank. Similar to Fish Canyon, piñons and junipers creep up the canyon walls while tamarisk and rubber rabbitbrush line the creekbed. Two miles past the confluence you arrive at Nevills Arch, a prominent feature in a skyline of pinnacles.
Continuing north, the canyon becomes messy with flood debris and boulders. The rest of the hike follows this pattern: rock hop along the canyon floor, climb partway up the canyon wall to avoid a pouroff, get thrashed by thicket, arrive at the top of a pouroff, and do it all again. Three times to be exact.
To skirt the first obstacle, follow a cairned route on the left to avoid a small pouroff. Good campsites soon follow on the right bank near a grove of Gambel oak and juniper trees.
The second bypass route branches off from the canyon floor a ways before you can see the pouroff. Try not to curse the thick brush, steep trail, and seemingly unnecessary detour. When you get to the top and see the huge plunge pool below, you’ll be happy you avoided backtracking. Walk northeast upcanyon, and where Owl Canyon splits, veer right towards the north fork. Continue negotiating your way around boulders and ledges.

As you approach the final pouroff, the trail cuts into a side canyon on the right. Boulder hop up the steep drainage, climb up the west wall, and turn back towards the main canyon at the small trail sign. The trail curves around an exposed ledge on the canyon wall, placing you at the top of a beautifully sculpted pouroff in Owl Canyon.
Around 14.5 miles, the north fork of Owl Canyon branches again. Switchback up the middle but eventually swing into the right fork. The final ascent up to the canyon rim involves steep climbs up slickrock; cairns mark the way. Look for an alcove on your left that protects an archaeological site of four structures. You will find interpretation materials and information on the site in an ammo can.
Zigzag up a chute formed by terraced ledges of sandstone. Stay to the right of huge boulders, and reach the canyon rim around 15.25 miles. Continue north on patches of slickrock, veering to the left on a well-worn trail. Reach the trailhead in about a quarter mile.
Directions
From the junction of UT 95 and UT 261, drive south on UT 261 for about four miles. Stop at the Kane Gulch Ranger Station (open seasonally) on your right to get current weather reports, road conditions, and permits. Continue another mile south, and turn left on the dirt road signed for Fish and Owl Creek. Drive to the road’s end (about 5 miles) and reach the trailhead. Park near the information boards and self-pay station.
Have you ever thought about how you handle conflict?
In our 40 hour mediation class, our students do a learning exercise to better understand their approaches to conflict. What surprises most of them is that they use a variety of ways, based on the situation or person they are dealing with.
Here is a fun way to think about your approaches to conflict resolution – taken from the animal kingdom.
TURTLE – THE AVOIDER
A turtle tucks its head in its shell to avoid conflict … that way, it can hide and ignore the conflict all together. Some conflicts go away by themselves, so this tactic may work in those instances. But major conflicts will deepen when
TEDDY BEAR – THE ACCOMODATOR
Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Video
A teddy bear just wants to give you a big hug. This approach means that the bear neglects his own self interests and allows the other person’s interest to take precedence. That way … there are no waves.
SHARK – THE COMPETER
Sharks confront others and try to satisfy their own interests at the expense of the other person’s. They aren’t very cooperative and come across as very assertive.
FOX – THE COMPROMISER
Foxes are good communicators who are willing to find solutions that work for both sides – a middle ground. They are cooperative and attempt to satisfy everyone’s needs.
OWL – THE COLLABORATOR
The owl is looks at conflict as problems to be solved. They value relationships and look for ways to reduce conflict tension. They are always in search of the path to resolution and are willing to make concessions.
Can you see a bit of yourself in more than one of these approaches? I’m guessing … you have more than one style. I know I do.
Teddy Bear And Owl Negotiation Worksheet
Jeanette