Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Horseshoe Canyon: Rock Art Rocks, 2

Continuing our hike up Horseshoe Canyon and visit to its four great rock art sites...
And then, another quarter mile or so, the Alcove Site
















Mostly hands, in positive
















Thus
















And then another two miles or so walking up the canyon,
crossing the stream, scanning for cairns (as if you could get
lost...), studying the ground and walls for more paintings,
artifacts


















When it rains here, it pours, the flash floods are horrific, and
lots of stuff washes up. and down

















Plus you always either in blinding sunlight or deep shadow
















Panoramic view, near the junction with Water Canyon






And then you see the Great Gallery
















Up closer; the entire panel is about 200 feet long; the human
figures are all life-sized or larger; the so-called Holy Spirit is
more than seven feet tall


















Another view
















Far left side; over the millenia, some of the rock has fallen,
and some of the figures have been lost

















The main grouping, with the Holy Spirit
















Outliers




















Another grouping
















And another
















Almost like a fashion show...
















Thus, up closer















Horseshoe Canyon: Rock Art Rocks, 1

According to our 1924 Baedeker guide to Utah, the greatest, or at least most extensive, collection of pre-historic rock art in North America is in Horseshoe Canyon, the lesser known fourth unit of Canyonlands National Park. The Horseshoe Canyon unit, which is miles apart from the Park itself, was brought under NPS administration precisely to protect the four large and very distinctive panels thought to have been done by the Archaic peoples, that is, the North American natives well prior to the Anasazi and later Pueblo peoples who are more or less “historic.” The age of the art, according to our guide book, and in more recent stuff we have read, is thought to be in the 2,000-8,000 year range.  NPS puts it at 1,000-2,000 BC. Anyhow, that would put them in the same range as the rock art we saw extensively in Scandinavia six years ago, although those were primarily rock-engravings. The art at Horseshoe Canyon is incised, but interestingly and intricately painted. And spooky, too. Of course, all this pales in comparison with the paleolithic rock art one sees in France and Spain, which is much older and much more advanced, artistically. But still, we wanted to get our boots on the ground in one of these canyons, and the allure of very old rock art brought us to Horseshoe.
En route to Horseshoe Canyon: from Island in the Sky you go
east some miles, then north some miles on route 191 to I-70,
then  west some miles, then south some miles on Utah route 24,
then  east again some 32 miles on a gravel road, then south a
few miles on another gravel road, and then, bingo, you're there;
but getting there is only a part of the fun; above is the great
Green River as it passes through Green River, Utah; I have
always suspected that the Green is to the Colorado as the
Missouri is to the Mississippi: greater river to lesser river with
better PR department...























On the other hand, the fair city of Green River has placed a raw
sewage pumping station right on the river and directly adjacent
to a popular restaurant; what would John Wesley Powell have
thought?


















Whatever; so now we are leaving the pavement and heading
for the canyon

















Despite all the helpful warning signs




















Especially this one; if you are a GPS user, you must read this,
and laugh...click to enlarge

















Finally, we have arrived at the primitive campground and are at
the trailhead kiosk, studying all the signage

















Thus; despite all the cautions and warnings, it's really not all
that bad...the 32 miles off pavement was some of the best gravel
road we have driven, and the hike itself, although in ideal
weather, was only moderate in difficulty, if that


















Sunset sky the night before
















The first mile or so of the hike takes you 600-700 feet down
into the canyon, much of it on petrified sand dunes

















Thus
















More interesting signage
















Ditto




















Looking across the canyon at a 1920s "road" built for oil and
gas exploration

















Finally, you're on the floor of the canyon, which is never more
than a hundred yards wide

















In or just above the wash...the trail crossed the stream many
times, but the stream was never a problem

















And then, half a mile or so up the canyon, you see the first
installation, the so-called Horseshoe Shelter

















Thus...

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Canyonlands' Island In The Sky, 2

We awoke at Willow Flats CG to a dusting of snow and temperatures in the lower 30s. But the day's forecast promised sunshine and temps in the 40s, good walking weather (good, not optimum), and so we headed off to more sights and short hikes in Canyonlands' Island in the Sky unit.
Thus
















And thus
















And now we are walking along the rim at Grand View Point
Overlook, 6,000 feet, a mile walk out to the Point for more
views of the Green River canyons


















A different part of the White Rim
















With its own needles and such
















Marching along, enjoying great light
















More sights
















Our little hike done, we are now over on the other side of this
arm of the mesa, looking out to the Colorado River basin

















Part of the Buck Canyon overlook
















Thus
















And thus
















And now we are on the short walk to Mesa Arch, one of
Canyonlands' many arches

















Closer up
















The view
















Mesa Arch flies right over the cliff...no pix from the other side!

















Saturday, November 7, 2015

Canyonlands' Island In The Sky, 1

Omnia Gallia in tres partes divisa est. Caesar would have said the same of Canyonlands National Park, identifying its three units as the aptly named Island in the Sky, the Needles, and the Maze. There are three distinct units of the Park because the place is so remote and inaccessible that you can't really get from one to another. There are 4WD roads here and there, and that is how most travel occurs in this place. We spent a couple days sightseeing in Island in the Sky--atop a huge mesa jutting into the Park--the one unit fairly accessible to normal autos and RVs. Oh yes, there is actually a fourth unit of the Park, Horseshoe Canyon, which Caesar didn't know about, and that's where we really got our feet on the ground. I'll post on it in a few days.
From the Green River overlook; yes, that Green River, which
we more often associate with Wyoming and the Wind River
Range


















It's out there in the distance, a thousand feet below the White
Rim, which is a thousand or so feet below Island in the Sky
and its overlook; the Green and the Colorado  finally merge
a bit south of here, deep in Canyonlands


















Panning around
















Thus
















Ditto
















At Upheaval Dome, now thought to be a meteorite crater; it's
in the mid-40s, I am shivering, and a storm is moving in; and
"Heat Kills"


















Need to find higher ground as one of these approaches
















From The Neck, Shafer Canyon the other side
















Shafer Canyon
















Street scene
















At length, we camped at the Willow Flat campground, near the
Green River Overlook; note covered picnic table