May 1 2011

Moon House & Upper Johns Canyon | Day 6

The Maze and the Mesa (April 2011)

 

Day 6: Moon House & Upper Johns Canyon

Thursday, April 14, 2011

After another very windy and cold night, Jared and I had some breakfast and headed over to the Kane Gulch Ranger station again. We wanted to make this an easy day since we had done a bunch of hiking all week, so we decided to go check out the Moon House Ruins. We had attempted this hike a few years ago (before the permit system was started) but we were unable to find the way down and across McLoyd Canyon to the ruins, so we wanted to finally reach the ruins this time. We arrived at the ranger station at 8:00am and quickly obtained our permit. Then we were soon on our way down the Snow Flat Road to the trailhead.

This time we did end up reaching Moon House Ruins and spent about 2.5 hours exploring the area. We were lucky and had the place all to ourselves. On our way back across the canyon to the Jeep we did eventually meet two other groups of three who were hiking in to the ruins. I guess we got there at a good time 🙂

Outer Wall
Outer Wall

The outer wall of the main Moon House ruins.

 

Moon Snake
Moon Snake

What looks like a snake pictograph located above the ruins.

 

Behind the Wall
Behind the Wall

A view from behind the outer wall. A very cool and unique place.

 

Painted
Painted

The very unique stripe painted on an interior wall that the Moon House Ruins is known for.

 

Stripe
Stripe

A closer look at the paint on the interior wall.

 

Spiked Snake
Spiked Snake

Here’s a closer look at the snake-like pictograph from inside the outer wall.

 

Three Rooms
Three Rooms

Three structures next to the main Moon House ruins.

 

Moon House Rooms
Moon House Rooms

Many old structures make up the Moon House complex.

 

Striped Roof
Striped Roof

An interesting pattern and smoke-stained ceiling.

 

Round Room
Round Room

A small round structure found a little ways down canyon from the Moon House Ruins, but on the same ledge.

 

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Apr 26 2011

Sheiks Canyon & The Green Mask | Day 5

The Maze and the Mesa (April 2011)

 

Day 5: Sheiks Canyon & The Green Mask

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

We were up before sunrise on Wednesday for a quick breakfast so that we could get a quick hike down into Sheiks Canyon before Dave would have to head back home. First up in Sheiks Canyon was the Yellow House Ruin. The roof beams over part of this ruin still have the yucca lashings with knots tied to the roof beams. It’s a pretty amazing site.

Yellow House
Yellow House

Yellow House Alcove
Yellow House Alcove

Yellow House Roof
Yellow House Roof

A good look at the very cool roof structure still intact.

 

Jared and the Yellow House
Jared and the Yellow House

Jared takes a photo into the Yellow House.

 

A little further down the canyon we came across another small ruin.

Welcome Mat
Welcome Mat

This small structure has a unique step right in front of the doorway.

 

Ruin & Faint Pictographs
Ruin & Faint Pictographs

It also has some faint white pictographs located just above, than you can see in this photo.

 

As we continued down-canyon were a couple of steep talus slopes we needed to descend to get around some big pour-overs.

Sheiks Canyon
Sheiks Canyon

A view into Sheiks Canyon as we near Grand Gulch.

 

Dave and the Gulch
Dave and the Gulch

Dave looking down into Grand Gulch from a viewpoint along our hike.

 

Tucked-Away Granary
Tucked-Away Granary

A small granary we passed by on our way to The Green Mask alcove.

 

Once we got near the confluence with Grand Gulch we spotted the Green Mask alcove with it’s ceiling filled with pictographs.

Ceiling Panels
Ceiling Panels

There were a lot of pictographs located near the ceiling of this alcove and out of reach. There are more in the photo below.

 

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Apr 24 2011

From the Maze to the Mesa | Day 4

The Maze and the Mesa (April 2011)

 

Day 4: From the Maze to the Mesa

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

On our forth day Under the Ledge, we awoke to an awesome sunrise. The colors in the sky were just amazing! I quickly hopped out of my tent and grabed my camera for a photo. When I got my shot composed, I realized that I had taken the battery out the previous night to charge in the Jeep…and hadn’t replaced it! I ran back to the Jeep and grabbed the fully charged battery, but missed the best colors of the sunrise in the process. Here’s the shot I managed to get before all of the colors disappeared.

Color Over the La Sals
Color Over the La Sals

After the colors over the La Sal Mountains were gone, I turned around and took a few more early morning shots.

Standing Rock on Fire
Standing Rock on Fire

Standing Rock bathed in golden early morning sunlight on our last day in the Land of Standing Rocks.

 

Lizard and The Plug
Lizard and The Plug

Lizard Rock and The Plug glowing in the early morning sunlight.

 

First Light
First Light

The first light of the day strikes Ekker Butte and the rims of the canyons that make up The Maze.

 

After sunrise we had some breakfast and packed up camp so that we could move on. We would have a long and full day ahead of us, since we would be leaving The Maze and heading to Cedar Mesa…but there would be plenty of stops along the way.

Before leaving The Maze we parked near Mother and Child Rock so that we could hike a little way into into Ernie’s country. We dropped down into Range Canyon so that we could visit Cedar Bark Ruin and Lou’s Spring.

Cedar Bark Ruin
Cedar Bark Ruin

There has been some disagreement as to how old this ruin actually is, however, after seeing it in person, in my opinion, the ruin itself looks pretty old and not recently made, but the roof certainly looks newer, like someone may have added it. I’m no expert and these are just my impressions from my visit to the site.

 

Lous Spring Pictographs
Lous Spring Pictographs

These very faint pictographs found on the ceiling of the alcove that contains Lou’s Spring kind of remind me of the one’s located across the Colorado River in Cave Spring in the Needles District.

 

After reaching the Jeeps again, we finally started to head out around Teapot Canyon. Along the rough road we met some of Canyonland’s rangers in 4×4 training. We had to wait for a few minutes to let them pass. They were driving the roughest stretch of road in the park’s 4-door Jeep Rubicon Wrangler.

Leaving the Maze
Leaving the Maze

Just a photo of my Jeep as we head out of The Maze.

 

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Apr 22 2011

The Doll House & Tibbett Arch | Day 3

The Maze and the Mesa (April 2011)

 

Day 3: The Doll House & Tibbett Arch

Monday, April 11, 2011

During our second night camping at Chimney Rock there was much less wind, so I slept a lot better. When we woke up in the morning it was also a bit warmer and the wind had completely disappeared. I, of course, grabbed my camera and took a few photos as the sun was coming up.

Ekker Butte at Sunrise
Ekker Butte at Sunrise

The sun rising in the east over the La Sal Mountains lights up Ekker Butte.

 

Layers in Blue
Layers in Blue

Early morning light looking towards the La Sal Mountains casts a blue hue over all the different layers of the landscape.

 

Chocolate Bars
Chocolate Bars

Known to most as The Chocolate Drops because they are misnamed on current maps. They really look more like Chocolate Bars to me, anyway. The Maze Overlook is located right behind them from this angle.

 

Chimney Rock Camp
Chimney Rock Camp 2

Our campsite near Chimney Rock before packing up and leaving.

 

Since our permit for the Chimney Rock camp was only for two nights, we packed up camp after some breakfast so that we could move on, and then headed to The Doll House.

Our first hike in The Doll House area was the Granary Loop, which gave us a nice view of Surprise Valley on our way to visit a few hidden ruins.

The Doll House
The Doll House

View of The Doll House while hiking The Granary Trail.

 

Photos in the Slot
Photos in the Slot

On our way to the granaries, we passed through this small slot. Jared takes my photo as I take his.

 

Checking Out Suprise Valley
Checking Out Suprise Valley

Dave and Jared check out Surprise Valley from above. Look closely and you can see the Colorado River.

 

Three Granaries
Three Granaries

Three of the four small granaries lined up on one side of the alcove.

 

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Jan 27 2011

Cave 7

Sunday, January 23, 2011

 

Ninety-seven skeletons were taken from this cave. Many of the men showed evidences of having been killed, as spearpoints were found between the ribs and arrowpoints in the backbones. One case where the hip bones were pinned together wtih a huge obsidian spearpoint shows that no small amount of force was used to bury a point of that size into two inches of bone.

– Richard Wetherill, 1896

 

Pastel Alcove Ruin, near Cave 7
Pastel Alcove Ruin

On Saturday while I was in Moab, I got a message from my friend Rick. He wanted to get out of the house on Sunday and wanted to know if I wanted to tag along. He told me that he was interested in visiting Cave 7 in the winter, so I jumped at the opportunity and told him I would definitely go with! Bright and early on Sunday morning I picked him up and headed towards Blanding, topped off the fuel tank and made our way to Cave 7.

*      *      *

On November 29, 1893, Richard Wetherill led the Hyde Exploring Expedition out of Mancos, CO on their way to Grand Gulch. After a stop in Bluff, UT for supplies they headed north on December 11. In a letter written six days later, addressed from “First Valley Cottonwood Creek 30 miles North Bluff City,” Richard Wetherill wrote:

Our success has surpassed all expectations….In the cave we are now working we have taken 28 skeletons and two more in sight and curious to tell, and a thing that will surprise the archaeologists of the country is the fact of our finding them at a depth of five and six feet in a cave in which there are cliff dwellings and we find the bodies under the ruins, three feet below any cliff dweller sign. They are a different race from anything I have ever seen. They had feather cloth and baskets, no pottery–six of the bodies had stone spear heads in them.

*      *      *

Cave 7 Ruin
Cave 7 Ruin

Most of what we know about the route the Hyde Exploring Expedition took and which alcoves they explored is because of the Weatherhill–Grand Gulch Research Project using reverse archeology to figure it out. Some of the alcoves in the area still have legible historic inscriptions that are dated and were used to help retrace the route they took. At the time of the Basketmaker Symposium in May 1990 the location of Cave 7 was still unknown, but by the end of May the team was close to locating it. The final piece of the puzzle that helped them actually find it didn’t fall into place until three months later when they received some new photographs from the Wetherill expeditions from the Museum of Anthropology and Archeology of the University of Pennsylvania. Using those photos and the information of the route they had already figure out, they were finally able to re-located Cave 7 again in September of 1990….almost a century after Richard Wetherill had made his Basketmaker discovery there.

*      *      *

After driving to the proper drainage and hiking over a mile through snow, mud and frozen creek crossings we soon reached the box canyon that contained Cave 7. We started out by hiking to the end of the canyon and taking some photos of Box Canyon Ruin (Pastel Alcove Ruin). This was an interesting ruin perched high up in an alcove with part of an outer wall still standing next to it. This ruin was briefly mentioned by Richard Wetherill in some of his notes, and helped verify that this small box canyon was the correct location of Cave 7.

Box Canyon Ruin

After spending some time at the ruin, we headed back and climbed up to Cave 7. There wasn’t much here, aside from one small wall, but the historical aspect of this site was certainly enough for me.

Cave 7

The line of boulders on the floor had not fallen yet in the photos I have seen from the late 1800’s and even from the Wetherill–Grand Gulch team in the early 1990s.

The remaining wall in Cave 7

This small ruin is right above Cave 7 in a smaller alcove

Before heading back we climbed up the slickrock on the other side of the canyon to a few alcoves. One of the shallow alcoves was lined with metate grooves

After we finished exploring around Cave 7 and looking for historic inscriptions we started our hike back to the Jeep in the snow. The drive back to the pavement was a bit slick with all the melting snow, but we made it out fine. It was a long drive for a day-trip, but well worth it. We even managed to make it home before dark.

 

If you are interested in finding out more about the Rediscovery of Cave 7 and Basketmaker Archeology, I highly recommend the book Cowboys & Cave Dwellers by Fred Blackburn and Ray Williamson.