Antelope Canyon and Rafting the Colorado River

file-E92FE048-42A1-4B3E-A214-C75974BF8D4F-3203-0000027EA453D116Moving on, we drove a couple of hours north to Page. On our first trip, we had planned to visit the Grand Canyon and Page but when we rescheduled, we missed these places off with the canyon being closed and went further south to Phoenix and Sedona.

We passed the Vermillion Cliffs and what looked like smoke signals – maybe the Page Pow Wow – oops no it was the power plant!

We’ve rebooked the same tours and first went on Ken’s Antelope Canyon tour.

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Chris went on the photographers tour, in a small group, taking tripods and I went on a general tour. Antelope Camyon is a slot canyon which has to be seen to be believed, formed by erosion from flash floods which bring water and sand rushing through its passages. You cannot see it easily above ground and once inside, it is narrow and twists and turns – imagine being inside a seashell. Even in a group, with youngsters shrieking and taking selfies and parents trying to keep young children under control it was quite magical. The light and the colours and the angles are fabulous for photos, and since a picture was published in National Geographic in the 1990s, this place is firmly on the map. Certainly a highlight of the trip and Chris can’t wait to get some of his photos home to Lightroom, but I’m quite pleased with my Studies in Pink too.

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Here was the exit and a stray dinosaur print too.

When we started looking for our motel, we were amused to see signs for the Old Quarter, as Page only came into existence in 1957 with the building of the Glen Canyon dam.  The street of Little Motels has preserved the original construction workers units and converted them to motels.

We chose Red Rock Motel, where Brady and Pamela made us feel very welcome.

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A visit to Sunshine Laundry provided some clean clothes and we ended the day with fajitas and burritos In the very cute El Tapatio, easily swayed by a margarita and a mariachi!

Today we are rafting the Colorado through Glen Canyon, a tour we booked last time to coincide with our tradition of celebrating our wedding anniversary on the water somehow. This trip, we are here a week early, but we are doing it anyway! We started with a bus ride through the 2 mile access tunnel cut into the side of the canyon, containing windows cut to jettison the waste rubble from the tunnel. We then put on hard hats to walk under the road bridge 700ft above, just in case someone threw something out the car window … which could prove painful! Then we boarded our raft, leaving the dam behind and floated down the Colorado while we wondered at the canyon walls soaring 1000ft above us, with Martin pointing out anything of interest.

We went round Horseshoe Bend, and yelled Hello at the visitors photographing the bend from above and heard an echo, then took a snap of the ‘hill’ that forms the centre of the bend (if this sounds confusing, check out the photo from the viewpoint later on).

Then we motored back, stopping at a small beach for a rest stop, where we saw Rocky sunning himself, and some animals grazing and had a very quick paddle as the water was only 8 deg C.

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The day was a bit grey which didn’t help the photos, but our guide Martin was full of information and jokes and made the trip especially enjoyable, happy to point out the waterfall … aka seepage … aka LEAK and also the bolts holding the dam together!

Afterwards, we visited the the Glen Dam viewpoint to get a different perspective …

Before leaving Page behind, we stopped at a couple more viewpoints … one with a bird’s eye view of Horseshoe Bend, where I had a lovely chat with Christina from Texas while waiting for the light to get better …

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… and the other at Wahweap Marina with views of the huge Lake Powell.

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Now we we go north again, this time to the promised land …!

 

Hovenweep & Mesa Verde

file-60CC066E-85EE-4645-8642-120C17875182-3203-0000027EC82AC676The focus of the next few days is to find out about the Ancestral Pueblo people who started hunting and gathering in the south west 10,000 years ago, and later began to farm the area. Most of the surviving buildings in the area were built in the C13, and then everyone left.

We had a fairly long drive so decided to make it longer, by making a detour to visit Hovenweep, just over the border into our fifth state, Colorado, and 20 miles from anywhere! Hovenweep is a Ute word meaning Deserted Valley, and we spent a couple of hours following the rim trail round Little Ruin Canyon where there are a number of ancestral Puebloan structures.

Many theories attempt to explain the use of the buildings at Hovenweep, particularly the striking towers which might have been celestial observatories, defensive structures, storage facilities, homes or any combination of the above. During our walk, I was surprised by a swift movement on the path and a rattling sound and I don’t know which of us was more surprised – me or the rattlesnake I almost trod on!

Our drive to Cortez took a further hour or so and we are staying at another hand-picked independent motel called Aneth Lodge for three nights. The decor is a little dated, but it’s clean, convenient and friendly! What’s more, it’s right in the centre of town so we can walk to dinner in the evening – to a brewery, a casita and The Farm Bistro for a return visit, where we’ve had the best meal of our trip so far!

Today we are heading to Mesa Verde, which is Spanish for green table, and sits between the Mancos and Montezuma valleys.

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Driving into the park, the Point Lookout looms above.

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We started with the Chaplin Mesa visitor centre which showed an excellent film about the history of those who lived here, their lifestyle and architecture. The museum contained discover artefacts such as pottery and tools and included some dioramas built in the 1930s showing the development of the buildings here.

The most elaborate groups of ruins are the cliff dwellings, built in alcoves with the mesa top above them, dating from C12-13.  Spruce Tree House …

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… and Cliff Palace were closed for conservation works, but we were able to see them from overlooks … looking remarkably like dioramas without the people!

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They contain a variety of buildings used for living and storage together with round kivas set into the floor, which would have been covered by a roof giving a flat courtyard above. These kivas were used as communal living spaces and for ceremonial functions and would have been accessed by a ladder down through the roof. With no written records, much is guesswork with some ideas based on present day Pueblo people who still use kivas for ceremonies.

Next we took a tour of Balcony House, billed as the most adventurous tour, which involved some interesting access arrangements, up ladders, and through small gaps and a tunnel.

All was worth it to see the ruins up close, especially when you consider that the builders had no metal tools and shaped the sandstone blocks with tools made from harder stones.

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Next day we visited Wetherill Mesa, down an even longer and more windy road! We walked to the Step House first, named for the boulder steps to access the dwellings from above (looking rather like a load of rubble to me). There were several pit houses dating from 600 AD, together with one with a reconstructed roof, and it is possible to see how it was these structures that developed into the kiva once houses started to be built above ground.

Later buildings were built at the right of the alcove, similar to what we saw yesterday.

We also went on a ranger led tour of Long House, which contained much the same features we had already seen, but we got to walk round and see them up close.

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There had been much made of why these people ‘suddenly’ chose to build in these alcoves here at Mesa Verde, but ranger Cindy pointed out there were similar buildings all over the mesa top as well – but with water soluble mortar made from mud, these houses have not survived. Maybe with an increase in population, the land on the mesa top was more valuable for planting crops, or maybe they just liked the view, either way, only around 20% of the population lived in these cliff dwellings. As to why they left, the most likely cause was the 20 year drought and over a number of years, the people of Mesa Verde joined thousands of other Ancestral Pueblo people who moved south to New Mexico and Arizona. Today the Hopi of Arizona among many other tribes consider themselves descendants of the builders of Mesa Verde.

Wouldn’t want to miss out the plants and critters … especially as we saw a tarantula today, and this rabbitbrush is everywhere, although most of it has finished flowering so I was lucky to notice this bit.

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Finally, we didn’t need to go to Vegas to see neon lights, as there are a collection here in Cortez.

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Tomorrow we leave Colorado and head into Arizona … and to the Grand Canyon.

Chris & Elaine’s National Parks Bonanza 2016

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In 2013 we set off on our Utah Trail, looking forward to visiting 7 National Parks in 26 days! Our plans were scuppered by the Federal Shutdown which closed all the National Parks for most of our visit, so we ended up rescheduling and seeing other wonders that we would have missed, but no National Parks. So we thought we would have another go … this time doing a loop from Salt Lake City rather than Las Vegas, which enables us to take in Yellowstone and Grand Teton as well as Arches, Canyonlands, Mesa Verde, Grand Canyon, Zion and Bryce. So get your walking boots on and join us …!

Journal Entries

Driving through Idaho

Yellowstone – Canyon

Yellowstone – Old Faithful

Grand Teton

The Road to Bear Lake

Mirror Lake and the Top of Utah

Arches and Canyonlands

Hovenweep & Mesa Verde

Grand Canyon

Antelope Canyon and Rafting the Colorado River

Zion – Utah’s Most Visited Park

Bryce Canyon – Hiking in the Hoodoos

Provo and the Halloween Anniversary Cruise

Salt Lake City and Temple Square

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Ute Mountain Tribal Park … Best Bit Rained Off

D9B2671B-B74F-42D5-8C28-65A6C39373F5The original plan was to visit Mesa Verde NP, but it is too far from Cortez to even photograph the sign! Instead we had an early start and made our way to the Ute Mountain Tribal Park. A bit chilly here in Cortez, at some 6,200ft, and will probably be the coldest day of our trip. We had a nice chat on the bus with Faith and Nancy who come from Sante Fe and were staying next door to us in the motel.

The Ancestral Pueblo arrived in the Mancos Valley about 500 AD and hunted and farmed, building stone dwellings with stone tools and life was good for many centuries until for no certain reason they left. By the end of the 13th century, the canyons and mesas were empty of human life, and later the Ute Weeminuche came to the valley to hunt and spend winters.

Today Ute Mountain is homeland to the Weeminuche and we were hoping to visit four Pueblo canyon cliff dwellings, accessed by ladders, but the rain made the area inaccessible. Instead we had to make do with a shorter tour. Our guide was half Ute and half Cheyenne and when he said his name was Ricky Hayes, Chris introduced himself as a long lost relative, which got a laugh from the group.

Ricky told us about both the Pueblo and Ute peoples, and showed us a granary, pot shards, a solstice marker that works a bit like a sundial, various rock art and remains of a Pueblo kiva or ritual meeting room … all in all not nearly as exciting as we had expected, or of course Mesa Verde would have been!BD55CA2C-5005-4FF2-901F-0108A8B0CD23767CCC38-069F-4E20-9EE4-2329F4E451E9D9B2671B-B74F-42D5-8C28-65A6C39373F5

 

The high point was a tune on his pink recorder! F1608223-0D1A-46CB-BD7A-263B3FAA8C4AWe took a quick look at Four Corners Monument, as it was quite close, and is the only place in the USA where four states meet … Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico … so now our tally of visited states is up to 5!

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The sunset was lovely at the White Eagle Inn, then we went off for a fabulous meal at the Farm Bistro in town.   186F791B-9D3E-47DB-8612-75508E4104F2208F0B08-B767-444F-91CB-71D4094DCF3BBreakfast was at the Silver Bean, an Airstream which was bought from a pawn shop and converted 14 years ago into a coffee shop. The girls are known locally as The Bean Girls, and we had marvellous coffee and breakfast burritos.

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Next we are returning to Utah …

Chris & Elaine’s Utah Trail 2013

AE543A32-9F2D-4B6D-8F3E-D72416E12A39Our Utah Trail began with a series on PBS called “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea” which made us want to visit for ourselves, to see the stunning scenery and the wilderness and hike some trails.

As we were planning, we found that in 26 days we could take in 7 National Parks, 4 states, 3 State Parks and 2 National Monuments and just hope this is not too ambitious! To top it all a stopover in Las Vegas struck us as the most amazing contrast so we can add several casinos, a bet or two, a show and plenty of glitz to the tally as a fitting end to our trip.

Our trip did not go quite according to plan. We arrived in Springdale, just outside Zion NP on September 30th at 6pm as the park closed, planning to visit in the morning and buy our America the Beautiful Park Pass … only to find in the morning that President Obama had closed all the national parks till further notice as part of the Federal Shutdown as the government had been unable to agree the budget.

Instead, we did all we could to make the most of our trip, and while we were disappointed, we saw other wonders that we would have missed! Our final tally was 5 states (Nevada, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona), 5 State Parks (Kodachrome, Dead Horse Point, Gooseneck, Goblin Valley, Riordan Mansion), 4 National Forests (Dixie, Fishlake, Tonto, Coconino), 3 National Parks – a peek only (Zion, Bryce, Capital Reef), 2 Tribal Lands (Ute, Navajo), 2 National Monuments (Grand Staircase-Escalante, Natural Bridges) … and everything has been wonderful!

Journal Entries

Las Vegas … Bright Lights in the Desert

Zion … The Promised Land Only Glimpsed

Bryce Canyon … Just a Peek … Red Canyon Better

Scenic Byway 12 … Bryce to Torrey

Capitol Reef … A Drive-by and on to Goblin

Moab … Marvellous without the National Parks

Ute Mountain Tribal Park … Best Bit Rained Off

Goosenecks … Natural Bridges … Monument Valley

Phoenix … Dolly Steamboat and Taliesin West

Sedona … Woo Woo Red Rocks

Flagstaff … Zane Grey was here!

Las Vegas … Full of Surprises

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