Friday, March 30, 2012

Hovenweep National Monument to Blanding, Utah

Monticello, UT, Library

 

 

    A view to the northeast into Colorado from Hovenweep to Blanding road (mainly UT262).

 

 

 

 

 

 

    A look to the NNW in Utah over the flatter terrain with many mesas.

 

 

 

 

 

    A shot to the west. Most of the green vegetation, even if it's small, is, appropriately enough, a Utah juniper.
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Links:

  • Wikipedia article on the Utah Juniper
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F 30 Mar Actual Route: Hovenweep Natl Monument - Blanding, UT - KamPark RV Park

Sa 31 Mar Actual Route: KamPark RV Park - Blanding - Monticello - La Sal Junction - Moab - Lone Mesa BLM CG

Su 1 Apr Actual Route: Lone Mesa BLM CG

M 2 Apr Actual Route: Lone Mesa BLM CG - Moab - near Cisco

T 3 Apr Route: near Cisco - Thompson Sprs - Green River - Green River State Park

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life, Woodalls, or FreeCampsites.net for including links to their free campground lookups.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Hovenweep National Monument, Utah

Blanding, UT

 

 

    Along the road from Cortez down McElmo Creek toward Hovenweep National Monument the top of Sleeping Ute Mountain is just visible.

 

 

 

 

    The water in McElmo Creek allows ranchers to grow alfalfa and hay for their cattle. [And, no; I didn't see Elmo in a kilt! :-)>]

 

 

 

 

 

    From where I stopped for lunch, a less-impeded view of Sleeping Ute Mountain.

 

 

 

 

    At Hovenweep NM on the rim of Little Ruin Canyon, the Stronghold House & Tower -- or what's left of them.
    The Classic Period, between 1100 and 1300, for Ancestral Puebloans, produced many cliff dwellings such as those at Mesa Verde, Canyon de Chelly, Aztez, and Hovenweep. As the brochure for Hovenweep states,

"Larger numbers of people did not come to the area until after 1100. The final wave of building that created the Howenweep towers began around 1230 as people began moving away from the mesa-top homes....Twin towers: most were constructed after 1230.

 

 

 

The earliest were round or square buildings, but as time went on they became more elaborate -- multi-storied, oval, rectangular, or D-shaped in plan...."

 

 

 

 

    The Eroded Boulder House. Formerly there was a tower on top of the boulder.

 

 

 

 

    Along the rim of the western-most branch of Little Ruin Canyon, what archeologists call a Unit Type House. That is, "it was a basic plan for most of the dwellings in the Southwest: a few living and storage rooms and one kiva--possibly home to a family or a clan. Most larger pueblos expanded by simpling repeating this idea."

 

 

    On the left, the Rimrock House -- just to the right of the towers in the previous photos. [N.B. I shot these photos with one hand while holding my hat to shade the lens in the other; also, my glasses were roughly 400 yds away in my camper.]

 

 

 

    A morning view of Sleeping Ute Mountain in Colorado along with the chain of mountains which extend southward from it.
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Links:

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W 28 Mar Actual Route: Mom & Pop RV Park - Shiprock - Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO

Th 29 Mar Actual Route: Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO - Cortez - Hovenweep Natl Monument

F 30 Mar Actual Route: Hovenweep Natl Monument - Blanding, UT - KamPark RV Park

Sa 31 Mar Route: KamPark RV Park - Blanding - Monticello - La Sal Junction - Ken's Lake BLM CG (near Moab)

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life, Woodalls, or FreeCampsites.net for including links to their free campground lookups.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Farmington, NM to Shiprock to Towaoc, CO

Ute Mtn Casino RV Park, Towaoc, CO

 

 

    A view of Shiprock (elev: 7178') to the southwest from US64 not too far past a rock outcropping [not pictured] called Hogsback.

 

 

 

    Shiprock as seen from the road to the First Wash Assembly of God Church (Pastor Lee officiating) off of US491 north of the town of Shiprock, which, incidentally, is in the Navajo Nation [Reservation].

 

 

    I drove south on US491 and took this photo of Shiprock from the ESE.
    It's my opinion that Shiprock is to New Mexico as Half Dome is to California. (Of course, some natives of the New Mexico might complain that I have not seen all of its state's mountains.)

 

    A final look at Shiprock from the Navajo Nation road #18 to Red Valley, AZ, and Lukachuka in the Chuska Mountains. David Brower, one-time head of the Sierra Club, and others climbed Shiprock in 1939. [See Wikipedia article link below.] Of course, if the Navajo Nation Police catch you climbing on Shiprock, they just might stake you out in the desert sun -- with water just out of your reach. :-)>

 

    Crossing the NN road I took a photo of the mesa and two mountains to the SSE. One of the mountains may be Beautiful Mountain (elev: 9388'), for they are 3 or 4 times further away than Shiprock.

 

    As I approached the junction of US491 and US160 I saw the other side of this "interesting rock formation." And since I crossed a wash called Chimney Rock Wash, this must be one of the many Chimney Rocks in the U.S. (It looks like two adjacent chimneys from the south.)
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Links:

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T 27 Mar Route: Ruins RV Park - Farmington - Mom & Pop RV Park

W 28 Mar Actual Route: Mom & Pop RV Park - Shiprock - Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO

Th 29 Mar Actual Route: Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO - Cortez - Hovenweep Natl Monument

F 29 Mar Route: Hovenweep Natl Monument - Blanding, UT - KampPark RV Park

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life, Woodalls, or FreeCampsites.net for including links to their free campground lookups.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Aztec Ruins National Mounument, NM

Farmington Library, NM

    First, an explanation of the word Aztec. It's obviously in error, but I've seen several explanations. One was that Europeans arriving in northwest New Mexico in the 1870s felt the pueblos they found were like those in Mexico built by Aztecs.
    Not so! The Southwestern-U.S. dwellings were built by the Anasazi, which translates to "ancestral puebloans."

 

 

 

    Panning right.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Panning right again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Panning right yet again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    One more time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    The Great Kiva, the common meeting place of the community.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    A veiw of the remaining wall on the west side of the monument.

 

 

 

 

 

    A different type of dwelling consisting of three concentric circles and containing 22 rooms. It's fairly unique in the pueblos of the SW.

 

 

 

 

 

    The signs were right: duck as you enter the doors. While I hit my head, my old felt backpacking/fishing hat cushioned the blow.

 

 

 

 

 

    Mano and metate (for grinding corn).

 

 

 

 

 

    The timbers you see date back to pre-1300 A.D., yet they're still in fairly good shape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    A few of the doors are T-shaped.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Floor of the Great Kiva, which was rebuilt.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    One final shot of the Aztec Ruins National Monument.
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Links:

  • National Park Service website for Aztec Ruins Natl Monument
  • Wikipedia article on Aztec Ruins Natl Monument
  • More photos & text of & on other Anasazi Ruins by Jack Sanders-Reed
  • Wikipedia article on Farmington, NM
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Su 25 Mar Actual Route: Towaoc - Cortez - Mesa Verdi Natl Park - Mancos - Durango RV Park

M 26 Mar Actual Route: Durango RV Pk - Cedar Hill - Aztec Runins Natl Mon - Aztec Library - Ruins RV Park

T 27 Mar Route: Ruins RV Park - Farmington - Mom & Pop RV Park

W 28 Mar Actual Route: Mom & Pop RV Park - Shiprock - Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO

Th 29 Mar Route: Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO - Cortez - Hovenweep Natl Monument

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life, Woodalls, or FreeCampsites.net for including links to their free campground lookups.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Four Corners to Mesa Verde National Park

Aztec, New Mexico, Library

    Because I was too tight-fisted to pay the $3 fee to enter the Navajo Nation's Four Corners Monument I took a couple of photos outside of their gate and from US160 just past Four Corners.
    This photo looks to the southwest into Arizona

 

 

 

 

 

    And this photo is along US160 into Colorado.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    About a mile up US160 from Four Corners I stopped and shot this view into Utah to the northwest.

 

 

 

    A shot to the southeast into New Mexico; note the large rock in the center of the photo. It's called Shiprock, and is visible for a long distance from every direction except from the west in Arizona, where the Chuska Mountains block the view.

 

 

 

 

    An interesting rock formation just west of the junction of US160 and US491.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    A photo to the northeast from the junction of US160 & US491.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    From a corner near the Cortez Library, a photo of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

 

 

    The previous photos were taken on the way to Cortez, CO. The remainder were taken within Mesa Verdi National Park, which is about 9 miles from Cortez.
    A plaque at Park Point, the highest point in Mesa Verdi at 8,572 ft, explains the importance of the lookout atop Park Point, which was built in 1939 by the Civilian Conservation Corps and can help spot smoke from a fire at distances up to 100 miles.

 

 

    From Park Point a look to the southwest at the Chuska Mountains, which lie across the New Mexico/Arizona border.

 

 

 

 

    Now it's clear why many of the U.S. Forest Service Colorado campgrounds don't open until April or May -- after the snow melts.

 

 

 

 

 

    Agricultural land north of Cortez, including Totten Lake, and mountains in the southeast corner of Utah in the the distance.

 

 

 

 

    Mountains in the southwestern corner of Colorado, with the tallest being Sleeping Ute Mountain (elev: 9964') on the Ute Mountain Indian Reservation.

 

 

 

 

 

    A plaque outlining the "grand view" to the SSE -- including the major landmark of NW New Mexico, Shiprock (elev:7178').

 

 

 

 

 

    Unfortunately, the clouds obscure a view of Shiprock in the center of this photo.

 

 

 

 

    Unfortunately, one can no longer enlarge these photos by clicking on them once or twice because of a change at Blogger about two months ago; this plaque is beneficial in that it gives the elevations of many of the mountains visible from Park Point.

 

 

 

    Another shot of the Cortez to Dolores area with a complete view of McPhee Reservoir -- which explains why many of the Cortez residents have boats.

 

 

 

 

 

    A look back up to the Park Point Lookout.

 

    A plaque on the best-preserved cliff dwelling at Mesa Verdi: the Spruce Tree House. Here's the text.
    "These people [Puebloan, apparent ancestors of the Pueblo and Hopi Indians] lived on Mesa Verdi for 700 years. They built large cliff dwelling only during their last 100 years; then they gradually left.
    The pit house may have gradually evolved into the kiva or ceremonial chamber.
    Spruce Tree House was discovered in 1888. It has 114 rooms and 8 kivas. About 100 to 150 people lived here at its height."

    Spruce Tree House. Because of poor "map recon" on my part (it was a 40-mile round-trip from the entrance kiosk to the Spruce Tree Museum), I was unable to take more photos. [Just made it out to the only gas station in Mancos with the fuel level almost to the left of "E."]
    Plan to return the Mesa Verdi next year.
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Links:

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Sa 24 Mar Actual Route: c8 mi east of Red Mesa (boon-dock) - Four Corners - Towaoc, CO - Cortez Lib - Towaoc (Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk)

Su 25 Mar Actual Route: Towaoc - Cortez - Mesa Verdi Natl Park - Mancos - Durango RV Park

M 26 Mar Actual Route: Durango RV Pk - Cedar Hill - Aztec Runins Natl Mon - Aztec Library - Ruins RV Park

T 27 Mar Route: Ruins RV Park - Farmington - Mom & Pop RV Park

W 28 Mar Route: Mom & Pop RV Park - Shiprock - Ute Mtn Casino RV Pk, CO

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life, Woodalls, or FreeCampsites.net for including links to their free campground lookups.