Showing posts with label National Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Parks. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2015

Monticello to Hovenweep to Naturita


We left out of Monticello with a bit of plan.  We’d go to Hovenweep National Monument, then through Canyons of the Ancients National Monument toward Cortez.  Then we’d decide where next.

Once off the main road things got a bit interesting.  The smaller roads leading to Hovenweep were narrow, twisty, up and down and full of nasty potholes.  Luckily traffic was sparse and most of the time we could wander across the other lane to avoid the potholes.  The route we took was different than the route I’d taken years ago when I went out to Hovenweep between a training session at Mesa Verde and one in Flagstaff.  I had a whole weekend to get there, so I saw a few things.  This time it was the motorhome, towing the Honda, instead of a Dodge Caravan, so the road conditions made more of an impact.  The distance out to Hovenweep, though, was much like my solo trip – long stretches of lonely road, then a turn and another long stretch of lonely road.

We worried a bit about parking such a long rig, but figured they’d have some kind of warning in the “preparing for your visit” section of the web site, or we’d unhook to turn around, if it came to that.  They do have 3 “oversize vehicle” parking spaces and a separate entrance and exit for the parking lot.  There is a small campground, too.  Some of the sites are big enough for a rig like ours, as long as we unhook and park the motorhome and car separately.  Besides, most are back-in and you can’t back up with a car on a tow bar.  It would damage the car and the tow bar.

Each of the national park units with Anasazi (the preferred term now is “Ancient Puebloan”) ruins is different.  They differ in placement (cliff dwellings, stand-alone structures, above ground, below ground, etc.) and in architectural styles.  It used to be believed that nobody knew where they went.  The truth is Anglo culture didn’t know, but the Pueblo people, and other peoples of the southwest knew all along that modern Pueblo people are their descendants. 

Hovenweep probably has more variety of structures and styles than most places.  All are built on the edge, or down inside a small canyon.  In the time it was occupied, a seep at the head of the canyon provided water.  A series of check dams allowed the people to gather enough water for daily use and to grow enough crops to store the surplus for leaner times.  Over time, though, the seep produced less water, and they had to move on.  One of the most unique of the structures was built using a giant boulder as roof and partial wall, minimizing the amount of actual construction needed.  Other structures are round, square, D shaped, and one is of the “unit construction” seen in some other ruins.  The “unit construction” is a series of square rooms lined up next to each other.  Some connect to each other, some open only to the outside.  One of the Twin Towers still has original door lintels and they dated the logs back to 1277, using the tree rings.  They say the Twin Towers are some of the most carefully constructed structures in the southwest.

Hovenweep allows dogs on the trails (on a leash, of course) so we took Max on the trail along the canyon’s edge.   At a half mile his back leg started kicking out – spasms – so I stayed with him while Tom went on to see two more of the structures.  Then, on the way back to the visitor center, we’d stop and make him sit or lie down for a few minutes at the first “kick”.  Poor guy was pretty tired when we finally landed for the night.  Hours of standing at the front, watching the scenery roll by and a long walk.  Actually, he laid down several times between Hovenweep and Naturita.  He was really tired.  He’s passed 12½ and had several major health issues, so he’s entitled to get tired.

As we planned our route, we would leave Hovenweep by a different route, one that would take us through the southern end of Canyons of the Ancients National Monument.  We expected to see some signs of either ruins or side roads to ruins or sites.  What we did see was interesting terrain, an end to pavement, farms and ranches.  We never saw any indication we had entered or left the Monument, much less any sites or turn-offs to sites.  We couldn’t tell if the road was normally without pavement or partway through an improvement project.  But, it was rough enough to start worrying about things in the motorhome as they banged around.

We knew we were out of the Monument when we entered Cortez.  So much for that exploration.  Now, which way?  Looking at the Colorado map we quickly realized almost any direction would take us over steep passes.  We had talked last fall about seeing the Gateway area in other seasons.  So, toward Gateway it was.  At one point, on a steep (7%) twisty grade, I looked ahead and knew we needed to meet the truck on a straight section.  It was a long low-boy with a heavy load and needed the entire road for some of the turns.  Luckily, we did meet on a short straight section.  I think it was one of the longest low-boy trailers I’ve ever seen.

We figured we’d stop at the first likely looking boondocking area (didn’t see any) or the first RV park.  As it turns out, there is ONE RV park between Grand Junction and Cortez.  The owner if a former Marine (flying the flag at the office was the first clue; his ramrod straight walk is another) who just recently purchased the place.  He’s really nice and helpful.

When Tom suggested we try to find a place to eat, instead of cooking, we headed out.  There’s a cafĂ© in Naturita.  Good prices, large portions, decent quality.  We fed Max leftover chicken strips and a couple bites of chicken fried steak, saving the leftover baked potato for our breakfast.  Then supplemented the leftovers with pulled pork and brown rice.

The big trucks and the birds start early in Naturita.  By 5 am there were a series of trucks, birds and assorted sounds working on ending sleepy time.

Where to today?  To be continued . . .


 

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Canyonlands National Park - the Needles District

When I first went to Moab for a training class I really wanted to see the Needles District of Canyonlands National Park.  But, I had a dinner date with a friend and soon realized there just wasn't enough time to do both, so I turned around and went back to Moab after a brief visit at Newspaper Rock.  That was 2002, I think.

On this trip when plans to visit friends in Montrose fell through due to illness, we decided to take the river route toward Moab.  We planned to find a campsite along the river, but when we started looking, we were close enough to Moab they were all full.  Perhaps the ones 20+ miles out were full, too.  And as we rolled through Moab we saw all the RV parks were full.  As we recalled they were very expensive.  As recent retirees, we don't like expensive.

So, on we rolled.  We figured out that we weren't going to boondock (just stop and stay without an official campground, services, etc.) south of Moab.  On we rolled.  In Monticello we found a nice little family RV park.  The family lives there, has their horses, goat, dogs, chickens and whatever else.  They sell real eggs (farm fresh) with really orange yolks and great flavor.  We'll pick up some more before we leave here.

So, finally I got to see the Needles District.  It is spectacular!  It's a long day drive, but well worth it.  We stopped a lot to take photos and videos.  The air was pretty hazy, so my camera had trouble with the autofocus.  But the eyes can cut through some of the haze and see the colors and patterns in the rocks.  We probably drove over 150 miles today, making a loop with some backtracking.  It's a long way from Hwy 191 out to the park boundary.  But it's a beautiful drive.  We took a picnic lunch with us since we were pretty sure there would be no place to buy a lunch.


Our campground owner had suggested we take an alternate route to the Needles that leaves out of town and goes through the mountains.  There were a couple of primitive campgrounds on the route.  The first one would work for us, the second one only had one, possibly two sites that could work.  The road met the "official" road into the district before the Newspaper Rock State Recreation Area.

Newspaper Rock is a sandstone bluff covered with ancient (and a few not so ancient) petroglyphs. (Petroglyphs are chipped into the rock, pictographs are painted on the rock).  The difference in color between the old desert varnish and the "newly" exposed rock beneath makes the pictures show up well.

After Newspaper Rock the road goes on for several miles, through BLM land.  The flat bottom country is green this time of year (at least this spring it is) and there are a few ranches.  There are lots of roads heading off to interesting sounding destinations, but they're not roads we'd take the motorhome on.  Eventually, you come to the boundary between the BLM land and the park.  The formations become more spire like and less wall like.  Everywhere you turn there are spires, canyons, rocks the will someday be "balanced rocks".  The colors are spectacular with layers of reds and whites, with the occasional darker layer in between.
Long view at Dutch Shoe Arch pullout

Dutch Shoe Arch

 

One of the rocks at the Confluence Overlook

After driving to all the places we could reasonably drive to in a Honda, we headed out to the highway so we could drive a few miles north, then take a 22 mile road to the Needles Overlook.  Too bad the air was so hazy.  It may be hard to pick out any details.
Just in the lower edge of the are some tall formations on the valley floor below us.  In the distant haze are the Needles that give the District its name. 
 
I'll post more photos, when I can, on my Flickr account www.flickr.com/photos/mooseduds