Showing posts with label helinox trekking umbrella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label helinox trekking umbrella. Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2017

Visiting the new Bear's Ears National Monument - Wow! post4

The next day our first outing is to Mule Canyon Towers and its five-odd towers on the rim.

There was excellent ruin spotting and even a nice way to climb down to a few of them below the rim - which we are saving for another trip when the kids are bigger.

riotously vivid yellow/green




bigger below

more
more


more

they're everywhere! 


ruin spotters - that's us!




N hydrating like a pro. yes, that's a Helinox umbrella he's carrying over his shoulder


That was fun.

A few days before, as we drove from Comb Ridge over to the Cedar Mesa area, we got a fleeting glimpse of a ruin right next to the road. The road was almost on top of it but because of the terrain, you could only see it if you were looking in just the right direction at just the right second. So for our day's second outing we decided to go there. Such is the life of a ruin and petroglyph hunter in the Bear's Ears National Monument.

it's hot. have I mentioned that we love our Helinox umbrellas?
we're on the right track

lightly carved creekbed

hell-o little ruin

hello! hello! didn't see this one


Anasazi corn cob

and right around the corner we find this beautiful little petroglyph panel


sheep! it's been so long since we last saw ya...


nice spiral!
had to check out the area upstream
lovely little spring - we dub thee "Fern Ruin and Petroglyph Site"


up up up to a meadow just below the East Bear's Ear

We were actually kind of shocked how lush it was. Down at Comb ridge, 4500 - 5000 feet elevation, it's baking hot. Just above, 5000 - 7000 feet elevation, it's a parched and oddly uniform Juniper forest,   but up at 8500 feet there are pine, aspen (and whatever that scruffy tree is in the photos below) and everything seems almost tropical by comparison. It's alpine (and most welcome relief from the heat and bugs).
relaxing, cool, no bugs!

magical walk


























Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Visiting the new Bear's Ears National Monument - Wow! post3

The bugs drove us to higher terrain. In Spring there are these little tiny biting flies and they don't seem to be put off much by any bug repellant. They're so small that it's really easy to ignore them at first - big mistake. They leave little 8mm (1/4-3/8") red areas around the bite that turn into really itchy welts. Natural sprays were not good. Even our trusty lemon eucalyptus wasn't stopping them.  Picaradin ended up being our best choice. And moving to higher ground.

Note to self: Leave off visiting anything below 7600 feet until the Fall.

Our plan today was to see what was at the end of two spurs off the road to our camp. Both seemed to go to viewpoints so maybe there was a good reason the road went there.

umbrellas were quite appreciated


first road's end: nice view, no ruins spotted
Yucca flowers way past their prime, yawn. but what's this? I don't think I've ever seen the fruit before. Cool!
The next road end was quite mysterious. It ended with no obvious 'there' there. We trooped around a bit...nothing. Circled back...nothing. Stopped for lunch and while the kids ate I took a spin in a new direction...bingo!

we were at the top of a gentle hill but the terrain was odd: it was kind of a network of flat open areas. say, you don't suppose this was once a village... 
pottery shards!
and Jasper
all over the place
you're not supposed to move stuff but pot shards lying on the surface waiting for cattle to trample them, always moves people to try to protect it a little. can't see it mattering on this scale.


we put it right back exactly as we found it...
 It was time to pack up camp and go see a restored kiva right off the main road...

pretty cool: entrance was by tunnels




our new high camp - no no-see-ums, great view