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Painted Desert - 6 members in 26 triplogs have rated this an average 4.2 ( 1 to 5 best )
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26 triplogs
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Jan 27 2018
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 Guides 3
 Routes 202
 Photos 3,513
 Triplogs 530

male
 Joined Jan 24 2016
 Arizona
Devil's Playground - PeFo, AZ 
Devil's Playground - PeFo, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Jan 27 2018
MountainMattTriplogs 530
Backpack12.84 Miles 867 AEG
Backpack12.84 Miles   24 Hrs   38 Mns   2.07 mph
867 ft AEG60 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
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JoelHazelton
Jonnybackpack
A last minute trip with Saturday morning luck snagging the 2nd of only 3 permits the National Park gives out each week for Devils Playground.
After receiving our permit and highly classified intricate map we made our way to the privileged trailhead.

2 gallons of water packed in extra preparation for my first overnighter with the dog with no sources of water for miles on end although we did find a surprising amount of leftover snow in the shadows and quite perphaps the most random two pools of water in the most obscure wide open flat with no shade.

Sounds cheesy but really does feel like another planet out there, the hoodoos, toadstools, and countless cracks and crevices make this an absolute wonderland that I could find myself exploring for months!

Perfect temperatures during the day, no wind and dipped down to the low 20's and high teens at night but not unbearably cold especially with a warm dog to cuddle with.
Slept with my water inside the tent but still ended up freezing but quickly thawed out once the sun rose.

The more I look back at photos and think about this place the more I feel the urge to go back, a truly special section of Arizona!
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  2 archives
Oct 06 2016
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 Guides 4
 Routes 5
 Photos 3,377
 Triplogs 783

55 male
 Joined Aug 20 2009
 Mesa, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Scenic Drive avatar Oct 06 2016
RickVincentTriplogs 783
Scenic Drive
Scenic Drive
 no routes
1st trip
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This was really not my thing. Too many signs telling me where not to go, hand rails, paved trails. And, after seeing what we had just seen over the past few days in Northeatern AZ, I just don't see the beauty. I spent my 20 bucks and at least I can check this 27 mile chunk of driven Arizona highway off my list.
_____________________
This is my gym. I have to travel down a bumpy road to get there. There are no treadmillls, no machines, and no personal trainers. I walk..I run..I breathe the fresh air. I can go any time I want, as much as I want and there is no membership fee.
  2 archives
Feb 24 2014
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 Guides 177
 Routes 249
 Photos 10,213
 Triplogs 2,215

74 male
 Joined Feb 12 2002
 Gold Canyon, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 24 2014
AZLOT69Triplogs 2,215
Hiking4.20 Miles
Hiking4.20 Miles
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
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Remote interesting day.
_____________________
It's best for a man to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to open his mouth and remove all doubt.
--Mark Twain
 
Mar 24 2012
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 Photos 155
 Triplogs 3

52 female
 Joined Mar 22 2012
 Snowflake,Az.
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 24 2012
klodhopper73Triplogs 3
Hiking5.30 Miles
Hiking5.30 Miles   6 Hrs      0.96 mph
      30 Mns Break25 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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: app : :D Still as beautiful as ever~ A bit breezy makes it kind of hard to see much with sand in your eyes but still awesome!
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
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  2 archives
Sep 23 2010
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 Guides 4
 Photos 4,732
 Triplogs 2,607

55 male
 Joined Sep 29 2004
 Small Town USA
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 23 2010
SkyIslander18Triplogs 2,607
Hiking
Hiking
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1st trip
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The last stop on my trip through the Perfified Forest. Parked at the Painted Desert Inn and was greeted at the door by a sign that read "Sorry, Inn closed today due to water problems". Really wanted to see the inside but insted just walked around the Inn and out to the lookout points for awhile. The Painted Desert looked awesome from the points! After getting my pics, I drove back down the long park road to the entrance and back to Eager. Another great annual trip to the PF and I'll be back again next year!
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https://www.instagram.com/skyislander22/
 
Sep 12 2010
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 Guides 9
 Routes 33
 Photos 780
 Triplogs 4,634

44 male
 Joined Nov 25 2008
 Scottsdale, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 12 2010
BoonemanTriplogs 4,634
Hiking1.00 Miles
Hiking1.00 Miles      30 Mns   2.00 mph
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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_____________________
 
Jun 30 2010
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 Guides 171
 Routes 253
 Photos 6,100
 Triplogs 1,135

44 male
 Joined Apr 03 2006
 Pocatello, ID
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 30 2010
PaleoRobTriplogs 1,135
Hiking2.50 Miles 350 AEG
Hiking2.50 Miles
350 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   linked  
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The trip was about a month in the prep stage, but prep might not be the best word. The plan was to head out to Ward Terrace to see crazy feces - dinosaur tracks, wild arches, and ruins. The thing was that I'd never done much exploration in the southern section, which was our goal. I'd hiked around a fair bit further north, though, so I wanted to see some more. I explained to the crew the situation, and brought in an old Arizona Highways that highlighted the area. Good enough - we were on for the 30th.
If you have ever hiked with me, you know that planning can be awesome and terrible at the same time. I scouted the road, at least in places, a few weeks ahead of time. I looked at overhead imagery to generally plot out a route. It wasn't until the night before, however, that I figured I should print out a topo map. Since I don't own the apparently awesome National Geographic TOPO program, I resorted to printing out several small TrailDEX maps and taping them together. Not the most field-worthy of maps, but I was primarily concerned with driving navigation. I could use my ancient GPS to get back to the truck if needed. Why I didn't think of maps before, I have no idea, but I stayed up far to late doing laundry and printing maps (no maps and no socks?). I finally sacked out around 11:30-11:45.
So the crew showed up at my place at 4am; my coworker Curtis and our friend Marques's friend Matt, whom I hadn't met before. He was dating another one of my friends though, and seemed cool. No Marques though. A call came in on Curtis's phone - Marques is stuck up in LeChee. no worries. We hop in my rig and head over to LeChee and Marques loads his gear up. It is then down to Maverik for gas and on the highway, heading south by 4:30.
The drive to the Wupatki turnoff was generally long and uneventful. Curtis slept while Marques, Matt, and myself joked around in general. Turning off the Wukoki road on to the Black Falls Crossing road, however, is when everyone started to get into the mood. We crossed the bone-dry LCR; everyone seemed to be pretty amazed that there was no water at all in the riverbed. I was happy. The trip would have been a bit more difficult otherwise.
We made good time to the top of Goat Hill, where we released the soda and took in the incredible view up and down the Red Rock Cliffs, out to the Hopi Buttes, and the San Francisco Volcanic Field. After stretching the legs and consulting the maps we began our first serious navigation on the reservation backroads - a place known only as Pottery Hill.
It became obvious very quickly that Matt had no idea how to read a topo map. He had us going north over ridges while we continued east into wash bottoms. I had marked useful items on my map, such as "house" and "houses" (who's position I had transferred from the overheads) which we constantly were referring to. We found the wash we wanted to, but didn't recognize it. We had to turn around and find the road that led north towards "house", "houses", and eventually a lake. A lake? Yeah, a lake. More on this later.
Rolling down the right road, finally, we were struck by the comparison that Marques pointed out: "Have you ever seen The Hills Have Eyes?" Passing "house", and especially after passing "houses" the comment seemed especially apt.
We found a parking spot off the road and out of the sand. Pottery Hill house have been just to the east, so after we loaded our gear onto our backs we hit the "trail" - sand dunes, shale slopes, and limestone ridges. We crested a low mesa and saw, to our surprise, that there was no pottery. None. Nada. All that we could see was a ruined camp trailer - like someone had driven it off the edge of the cliff. Matt took a seat on a chair that somehow survived the carnage. We were somewhat stumped until Marques came up with the idea of using his Blackberry to get on GoogleMaps. I felt like we were cheating, but since my GPS doesn't have any decent maps on it, and we'd left my homemade topo in the truck (too fragile to put in a pack) we decide to use it. Once we finally get signal, we see a distinctive bend in the wash I recalled from looking at the overheads. We need to head further east.
Despite the feeling of cheating, I am glad we were able to figure it out. Pottery Hill was pretty dang interesting. There was a mound where a prehistoric building had once stood. It had probably been 2 or three stories tall during its heyday, because even now it was a good 20 feet tall. There were other, isolated, structures in the immediate vicinity - probably part of the same complex. Pottery was everywhere. Curtis found parts of about 7 or 8 broken metates and a couple of manos. We dropped into a "slot" formed by arroyo downcutting, then made our way back to the truck.
The plan then was to head north, past Lake To Kla Da Aakee and gain access to the upper section of the Adeii Eechii Cliffs and do some awesome badlands hiking. We found the lake/pond, which none of the Anglos in the car could pronounce correctly, but were disappointed that it was bone dry. We joked around about it - two water tanks gave their name to Two Barrel Beach, and a broad sand dune we dubbed "the launch ramp". We also found a corn field out there! Remarkable. Past the lake, I had marked on my makeshift topo a section of road with the words "possibly bad" - this was the last mile or so that would take us up to the cliffs. Well we quickly found out that the possibility was a reality - sand filled the road. We gave it a good go for another quarter mile, but when we reached a section of hardpan with no tracks, and a sand dune in front of us where the road should have been we got out and scouted. Marques ran along the roadway, while I climbed the dune to the east to see if I could get a better vantage point. The outlook was disappointing. The dune field stretched out to the north, and the road trace was being covered by vegetation. Damn! we turned the rig around and started heading south again. Passing the lake, Marques remarked that it was kind of embarrassing to be relying on his Blackberry, to which I replied that he could just tell his friends that the dumb white guys needed an Indian guide, and he could leave out the Blackberry part. Curtis did one better and said, "Maybe his Indian name should be Blackberry." This would be a constant source of amusement for the rest of the trip - Chief Blackberry.
We got back on the ridge by "houses" and Marques/Chief Blackberry was able to get a signal and download a map. A new plan came up. Head back for Route 7830, drive east, and then take Route 7820 north, towards the badlands. It should be doable, we all agreed, and twenty minutes later we were rolling north along our new route - which also happened to be much better maintained than 7830. Marques and Curtis told us about how this route is a major drug smuggling route on the Rez. I commented that I would not like to be a cop on this beat; too easy to get shot without anyone knowing what ever happened. Approaching Dinnebito Wash, the Red Rock Cliffs began to rise on either side of the road, more distant to the west, only a quarter mile away to the east. They looked like melting red spires, or dripping mud. Someone remarked that it would be neat to go explore them. "What's stopping us?" I asked, and the crew agreed - time to explore some canyons. I found a decent place to pull over and we shouldered our gear again.
The way towards the cliffs was over a series of dunes, but the going was not difficult, and as we approached the mouth of our chosen canyon it became more and more interesting to us. A slot canyon opened up to the north, and we vowed to check it out - but our objective first. We paused at the mouth to observe some striped boulders and some of the insane rock formations. Then we entered the mouth of the beast.
A change of just a couple yards made such a huge impression. The walls towered above, almost (but not quite) slotty. Sculpted spires and hoodoos dominated the skyline. We saw a hanging canyon, which I wanted to get into. We thought that the canyon would end as it made a left, but to our surprise there was a chockstone and then another bend to the right. I made up the north wall for a bit to shoot some pics ands the other three nimbly went up over or around the massive stone. I too bypassed the stone, but we were somewhat saddened to see that the right hand turn housed a pourover that likely went nowhere - we could see the cliffs towering behind it. Curtis remarked that it was always sad to have to turn around, that there was a sense of paradise almost achieved, just waiting for us - perfect springs with lush vegetation. To this image Marques added the Jagermeister girls.
We decided to try for the hanging canyon. Marques and Matt tried to follow a ledge over to its mouth, but almost got cliffed out instead. If they weren't bold, it would have been difficult for them to get back down. I, meanwhile, followed a sand slide up to a low pourover beneath the hanging canyon. As Marques and Matt ascended to my level, I began climbing. I got to the lip of the hanging canyon, standing on slippery slickrock, and peered in. Another basically dead end. It was possible the canyon continued around a bend, but certainly not very far. I was facing a low lip with a fragile foothold, so I decided to back off.
Getting down was slightly more tricky than I had imagined. The slickrock lived up to its name, and in places was covered with fine sand. I almost got cliffed out. If Marques hadn't begun following my footsteps up, it would have been very difficult to get back down. He provided a spot/step, and once over a little ridge I was home free. We all skied down the sand slope and found ourselves in one piece at the bottom of the canyon.
Our next destination was the slot canyon we'd seen on the hike in. We crossed a couple of dry washes and came to a ridge, which we thought would carry us into the slot's mouth. Wrong. A narrow canyon yawned in front of us. Matt was already at the bottom, so he began ascending the sheer cliff opposite us - fortunately made of shale and not sandstone. Marques skidded down an overly steep slope on our side, and then began mimicking Matt's climb. Curtis and myself descended through a short slot section to the bottom. Curtis took another way up, while I followed Matt's route. We soon found that the slot had an overhanging mouth, about 8 feet above our level. Marques began scouting out a route on the east side, while I went up to the west side. It looked promising until I reached an overhanging band that prevented further progress. Meanwhile Marques had worked his way just to the side of the canyon, but a small ridge stopped him. Instead of giving up, he pulled a bold (foolish?) maneuver where he swung around on one foot and leaped. he grabbed the ledge and basically hauled himself forward into the canyon. He was in! Considering our remote location, the short length of the canyon, and the lack of a casually easy way into the canyon, we were all pretty sure that no other person had been in the slot before. I was ready to try to get in myself, but Marques said that the canyon didn't continue beyond what we could see. I was satisfied with my perch then. After some more fancy footwork Marques was back out of the canyon. I scrambled back down as well. Matt and Marques headed back down the way they'd come up, while I wanted to see the canyon Curtis had ascended. I'm glad I did!
When I got into the slot and began chimneying down, I noticed Curtis was hunched over something. "Dude, its that bird we were hearing earlier!" I came down as fast as practicable, and squatted in the sand beside Curtis. Sure enough, there was a fledgling Kestrel (I misidentified it as a Peregrine Falcon on the trip - it wasn't until posting pics here on HAZ I found out what it was), laying belly up in the bright sun. Bummer! He didn't appear to be doing good (considering he was on his back) but nothing appeared broken. We could hear his mom every once in a while, so we rolled him over with a stick to the shade of a rock where he wouldn't be baking. An immediate difference! As soon as he touched that cool ground, he began screaming for his mom and trying to claw us with his feet! Awesome! And a few moments later he got to his feet and walked a little further under the rock, away from our prying eyes. I think that we helped him out, by getting him to shade, and he'll (she'll?) do fine in the future.
Back at the truck we again headed north, crossing Dinnebito Wash. The road rose up the Adeii Eechii Cliffs, and we spotted Rock Head with its attendant badlands. Unfortunately the storm that had been brewing over the peaks all day was moving in our direction and we still had a long way to go to get to pavement. We sadly had to bypass a hike to Rock Head. Next time! Crossing over the Sand Spring Hills, though, we did have time to stop at one lonely windmill with a giant dead Cottonwood and about a dozen ravens. I climbed the windmill tower, but all I could see in every direction was more sand hills. Curtis and Marques both remarked that this was the middle of nowhere, even for the Rez. I was inclined to agree - but then again, they'd never been to Pueblo Pintado. Being from the Rez, however, they did speak with an air of authority.
We passed Gold Springs, which I remarked seemed neither golden nor had any growth to suggest a spring. Matt suggested that the entire area was like gold to the residents. We found the idea laughable. We hit the highway at Coalmine Canyon, and we talked about going to Coalmine Canyon itself to hike and take in the view. Again we decided against it - instead we headed off towards Tuba City.
Tuba City was just as bleak and depressing as always. The Hopi side, however, had opened a brand new, shiny, hotel. Marques wanted to stop there, but not that day, so we headed down towards Moenkopi Wash and 89. As we headed down the slope I said, "Hey, you all want to go get lied to at the dinosaur track site?"
"Hell yeah!" came the response from Marques, who thought it was a great idea. Matt had never been, so the plan was sealed. We pulled off and as soon as the "guide" saw another sucker heading in, he waved us all in. I think he was a bit surprised to see two Navajos get out of the truck, because he didn't quote us a price as others have done in the past. He started out strong, showing us a trackway and saying it had been made in a mudflat probably by Dilophosaurus, a meat eater with two crests on its head. It went downhill from there though. He identified Dilophosaurus as a raptor, and then showed us a collection of random marks that someone had scratched around, calling it a "T. rex". Someone had also scratched T-REX into the rock nearby. He took us to another even larger but equally fake "track", part being raised, part being sunken. He showed us a "triceratops" which he outlined with water. I could not believe he was really doing so - drawing in parts because the random lumps looked vaguely like a skeleton. It was terrible! There was the usual "Dilophosaurus skeleton" and "raptor claw", and another new wrinkle - a "skull" - made of a lump of rock with a hole in it.
We got back to the truck and both Marques and Curtis expressed their displeasure at the site being ran that way. The land belongs to the Navajo Nation, not the people living at Moenave. The locals are making money off of land they do not have a right to (unless they have the grazing leases there), and the tribe is not only not getting anything for it, but it is casting them in a bad light. We tried to shake off the feeling, but couldn't. Instead we headed for Cameron for Navajo Tacos, then back to Page. 300 miles of driving, mostly before noon, to see sights few others have. An awesome trip - I need to get back out there, and especially hit the badlands around Rock Head. I think I'll wait until the weather cools off some though!
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  American Kestrel
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
_____________________
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
 
Jun 17 2010
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 Guides 171
 Routes 253
 Photos 6,100
 Triplogs 1,135

44 male
 Joined Apr 03 2006
 Pocatello, ID
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 17 2010
PaleoRobTriplogs 1,135
Hiking0.10 Miles
Hiking0.10 Miles   1 Hour      0.10 mph
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Poking around out in the desert...
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Sinagua Dwelling
_____________________
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
 
Jun 15 2010
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 Guides 16
 Routes 81
 Photos 1,269
 Triplogs 1,144

51 male
 Joined Apr 30 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 15 2010
azdesertfatherTriplogs 1,144
Hiking4.78 Miles 682 AEG
Hiking4.78 Miles   1 Hour   54 Mns   2.52 mph
682 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Did some exploring in the Little Painted Desert. Very interesting, otherworld-like. Became quite hot.

The park itself one the top is not being maintained at all. Very run down, restrooms eternally "Closed for Repairs," beer bottles everywhere.
_____________________
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
  1 archive
Jan 05 2010
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 Guides 22
 Routes 6
 Photos 512
 Triplogs 466

34 male
 Joined May 17 2007
 CA
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 05 2010
rally_toadTriplogs 466
Hiking8.00 Miles 800 AEG
Hiking8.00 Miles
800 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Started at Kachina Point, went out to Zuni Well via the Litho and explored that area for a bit. Climbed a few hills and enjoyed the views and the solitude.
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"Who are you guys??!!" -Farnsworth
 
Dec 12 2009
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 Routes 37
 Photos 2,160
 Triplogs 627

43 female
 Joined Mar 01 2010
 Phoenix, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 12 2009
juliachaosTriplogs 627
Hiking
Hiking
 no routes
1st trip
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It's mostly just a bunch of petrified wood and sand, but hey it's neat to look at and explore so here's some pictures. =)
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Apr 04 2009
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 Routes 2
 Photos 26
 Triplogs 33

55 female
 Joined Sep 30 2008
 Flagstaff, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 04 2009
bbscoutTriplogs 33
Hiking8.00 Miles 550 AEG
Hiking8.00 Miles   5 Hrs      1.60 mph
550 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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_____________________
"Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly."
- Robert F. Kennedy
 
Mar 28 2009
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 Guides 25
 Routes 36
 Photos 2,890
 Triplogs 658

39 male
 Joined May 30 2008
 Peoria, AZ
Coal Mine CanyonNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 28 2009
hippiepunkpirateTriplogs 658
Hiking2.50 Miles 200 AEG
Hiking2.50 Miles
200 ft AEG
 no routes
Partners none no partners
This was a fieldtrip for GLG 102 - Historical Geology at NAU. It consisted of four stops, the grand finale being Coal Mine Canyon. The first stop was just south of Cameron at an outcrop of the Moenkopi Formation, with a veneer of Chinle Formation (mostly Sinarump Conglomerate) above it. The second stop was north of Cameron to look at the famed petrified wood of the Chinle Formation. The third stop was at the Moenave dinosaur tracks west of Tuba City. Coal Mine Canyon itself was spectacular, and definitely a future destination for a non-fieldtrip hiking excursion.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Coal Mine Canyon
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My blog: Mountain Tripper
My book: Arizona: A Photographic Journey
 
Mar 22 2009
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 Guides 5
 Photos 1,229
 Triplogs 181

female
 Joined Mar 18 2008
 Flagstaff, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 22 2009
fotogirl53Triplogs 181
Hiking2.00 Miles
Hiking2.00 Miles   4 Hrs      0.50 mph
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Headed back out to Petrified Forest to work on pix of petrified wood--the photo from the last trip was wrong layout for this site! The wind was gusting a little in Flagstaff about noon; out at Petrified Forest at 2:00 and down the trail the wind started to pick up. I hung out at the photo site for about 2 hours, waiting for the right light. Then the wind started to howl down in that canyon. I gave up on getting the shot when I was being pelted by stones continuously. The trek out of the canyon was perilous at the top--with 60+ mph gusts on the top of the ridge (no railing and a 200+ foot drop).I stopped at some of the glyph sites on the way out. The drive home on I-40 was work, with semi tractor/trailors laying on their sides due to the 65mph winds. I'll have to try this again when the weather cooperates. Note to self: take off the polarized sunglasses when shooting--I didn't see the spots on the lens or the sunspots.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Petrified Forest National Park
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Allergic to cities.
 
Mar 18 2009
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 Guides 5
 Photos 1,229
 Triplogs 181

female
 Joined Mar 18 2008
 Flagstaff, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 18 2009
fotogirl53Triplogs 181
Hiking7.00 Miles 629 AEG
Hiking7.00 Miles   5 Hrs      1.40 mph
629 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
With great directions (thanks), I made it to Pottery Hill, albeit from the north side up the drainage that leads to the coyote glyph. This place is packed with all types of pottery--like the potter had a temper tantrum! I didn't find the ladle :cry: but there is alot of area to explore. The GPS said 6 miles, once I made it back to the car at MP 24. There is an area at about 23.5 miles that cars pull off and park, even though it isn't paved. If I go again, this is where I'll park. I then did the Blue Mesa trail, but the shadows were deep. The area I wanted to photograph needs to be seen in the AM.
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Allergic to cities.
 
Nov 09 2008
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 Guides 16
 Routes 81
 Photos 1,269
 Triplogs 1,144

51 male
 Joined Apr 30 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 09 2008
azdesertfatherTriplogs 1,144
Hiking3.50 Miles 1,577 AEG
Hiking3.50 Miles      50 Mns   4.20 mph
1,577 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Checked out pretty much all tourist areas on the north and central parts of the park. These include:

  • Tawa & Kachina points: 1.3 mi.
  • Puerco Pueblo: 0.5 mi.
  • Newspaper Rock: 0.1 mi.
  • Blue Mesa: 1.0 mi.
  • Agate Bridge: 0.2 mi.
  • Jasper Forest: 0.1 mi.
  • Crystal Forest: 0.3 mi. (didn't finish trail)


Blue Mesa was a particularly interesting hike, as it takes you down into the area to hike a short loop.

Hope to finish the sites on the south end sometime down the road...
 Geology
 Geology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Chinle Formation
_____________________
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
 
Nov 09 2008
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 Guides 20
 Routes 13
 Photos 3,189
 Triplogs 451

female
 Joined Mar 31 2002
 Chandler, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Backpack avatar Nov 09 2008
desertgirlTriplogs 451
Backpack4.00 Miles
Backpack4.00 Miles
 no routesno photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Hike out to an area near FlatTops to camp overnight and explore the area. Incredible collection of pottery sherds were seen - many different styles in a sibgle location. Left wondering what brought them all together in a single area - perhaps an ancient trading post or potters market ? Also had the opportunity to see some great examples of petroglyphs. Threating rainclouds made us cut short the exploration and head to the ashphalt back to our vehicles. Rob provided some great insight into what and why ....a fun weekend.
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Nov 08 2008
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 Guides 20
 Routes 13
 Photos 3,189
 Triplogs 451

female
 Joined Mar 31 2002
 Chandler, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 08 2008
desertgirlTriplogs 451
Hiking7.20 Miles
Hiking7.20 Miles
 no routesno photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners partners
erock
PaleoRob
Randal_Schulhauser
Explored are of Petrified Nation Forest refered to as Mountain Lion Mesa. Great scramble looking for petroglyphs.
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Nov 08 2008
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 Guides 171
 Routes 253
 Photos 6,100
 Triplogs 1,135

44 male
 Joined Apr 03 2006
 Pocatello, ID
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Backpack avatar Nov 08 2008
PaleoRobTriplogs 1,135
Backpack9.00 Miles
Backpack9.00 Miles2 Days         
 no routes
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HAZ - Event
Randal_Schulhauser
The Third Semi-annual Painted Painted Desert Rendezvous
What a trip! I joined the group late at the southern Visitor's Center - I had gotten away from Page about 15 minutes late, and took a shortcut through Hopi that added 30 minutes to my drive time. Ugh. But I pulled up into the parking lot and everyone was there - Randal ready to shake my hand, Ambika and Jason gearing up and Eric nearby. Good to see everyone there and not too pissed about my delay. Without further delay it's into the VC to get our permit and then we're on the road to the trailhead. Unloading and reloading gear in the parking area under the wary gaze of passing tourists in rental RVs and Uhauls towing boats, and then we're on our way towards our dayhike destination - Mountain Lion Mesa.

Following some vague directions and slightly better map information, we headed towards MLM via possibly the most convoluted route possible. No matter, the name of the game is exploration. Down caliche slopes, across sandy badlands, past eroding fossil logs and dessicated dung, onward over hills and wash bottoms. Detour at a prominent butte to scout for 'glyphs; success. Eric's first glyphs, and they're not half-bad either - snake, lizards, and a woman on a nicely varnished south-facing slope. A little bit of a scramble to get up to them, but that's the Painted Desert for you. Scrounging around on top yields more clues about the ancients; scraper, more 'glyphs, and a commanding view.

Back down the steepest possible route. No broken ankles/tibiae/fibulae/femora. I'll call that good enough. Back to the wash bottom, back to the trek. Past the Gateway to Mordor, and up yet another nameless caliche draw onto the sandy mesa. Randal spots a "fossilized" mushroom. Mushrooms? Out here? Soon others are located - apparently not as uncommon as I thought. We cross a drainage basin where all different colors of pebbles have collected, the water leaching through the sand, leaving the rocks it carried behind. No two alike, save in size. Almost uniformly the size of your thumbnail.

The sandy mesa top stretches on forever until we reach the End of the World, sandstone caprock giving way to thin air. Another maze of dry stream courses, and in the distance a low boulder-studded ridge. "My gut tells me that's the place," I announce, pointing to the line of rock across the basin. "And what does your head say?" Randall asks. I shrug and reply, "I can only say that it looks similar to pictures I've seen. But my gut says this is the place."

Indeed it is. The low outcropping is covered with rock art, and the southern edge is also speckled with potsherds. The designs increase in numbers and complexity as we continue along the escarpment, each causing a cry of excitement from our party members. "Wow! Look at that!" "Wild!" "Intense!" The walkabout reaches a peak at the Starvation Man boulder. Overseen by the Megaface perched on the cliff, the room-sized boulder at the base of the cliff is entirely covered with all kinds of 'glyphs, from abstract lines to detailed figures like the skeletal Ogre Kachina, Rabbit Kokopelli, and the Hand Stick. Amazing designs and so much packed into one small space. Lots of time spent poking around this area, especially as the light gets "nice" as the afternoon progresses. Then its back along the opposite face of the mesa, spotting a mountain lion 'glyph. Very appropriate. Then its back down to the vehicles by a different route, intersecting the road just before our vehicles. Drinks and snacks, and we bid adieu to Randal and Eric. Ambika, Jason, and myself make a quick bathroom break at the Visitor's Center, and we're back on the trail, this time with our overnight gear on our backs, just as the sun begins setting. More of the same up-and-down from the morning, except this time with decreasing light. Down around the point, skirting mesas, buttes, and arroyos alike, we arrive in the idylic basin that the 2nd SAPDR first located last fall. With light from the 3/4 moon we set up camp and sat down to dinner; lasagna all around. The temperature began to drop rapidly, and not long after dinner is finished we retire to our tents under a cloudless, starry sky.

We wake to a cloudy sky with building winds. From a nearby pass I can see clouds to the southwest moving in rapidly, some trailing rain. And the Chinle is no fun to hike in if it's raining. After a brief breakfast we pack up our gear. The plan - head to Pottery Hill, do a little scouting, and loop back to the road.

The drainage on the side of Pottery Hill whets whistles, sherds of corrugated, black-on-white, black-on-red, and even polychromes laying about. And the size and frequency increases the closer we get to the hill. Huge sherds, larger than my palm, bits of mano. Then we come to crowning piece - Mike's Ladle, the ladle that Mike found the previous year is still there, still in the same spot.

We take the hillside up and poke around the other side of Pottery Hill - more sherds, more flakes, more manos, more 'glyphs. Amazing. We head along the side of the mesa and drop into another drainage. More 'glyphs, including a life-sized man, possibly relieving himself. Unique. Then it's back to the road, then Holbrook for lunch at the excellent Maestra's. Nix the Chavez Pass Pueblo plan for today, and we go our separate ways. I'm already looking forward to the spring and the 4th Semi-Annual Painted Desert Rendezvous!
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"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
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  1 archive
Nov 08 2008
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 Guides 71
 Routes 98
 Photos 9,967
 Triplogs 1,009

65 male
 Joined May 14 2003
 Ahwatukee, AZ
Painted DesertNortheast, AZ
Northeast, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 08 2008
Randal_SchulhauserTriplogs 1,009
Hiking7.25 Miles 250 AEG
Hiking7.25 Miles   7 Hrs      1.04 mph
250 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners partners
HAZ - Event
PaleoRob
Painted Desert Rendezvous 2008

Eric (aka Erock)
Ambika (aka desertgirl)
Jason (aka ???)
Rob (aka PageRob)
Randal
6.34 miles in ~ 6 hrs
1 mile of Rainbow Forest Loop waiting for Rob


viewtopic.php?f=4&t=3551

Finally hit the road Friday evening by 7pm to meet my daughter in Flagstaff for a late dinner at Oregano's and delivery of a requisite "care package" from home. Arrived at the Wigwam Motel base camp in Holbrook after midnight and just had to check out all the Route 66 memorabilia and 50's kitsch before hitting the sack.

SIDE NOTE: Know there's some controversy about this motel's "recommendation", but for $50 a night and half the price of the local Holiday Inn Express, it's clean, it's functional, there's heat, and the showers work. In a world dominated by corporate cookie-cutter McDonald's, Starbucks, et al, I know I'll always appreciate an original...

After a hearty breakfast at Joe and Aggie's Café, made my way to the PEFO South Visitor's Center to meet up with Eric (aka Erock), Ambika (aka desertgirl), Jason (aka ???), and Rob (PageRob). With Rainbow Forest Unit permits in hand, we parked are vehicles at mile marker 24 in the Flattops and began our trek to Mountain Lion Mesa.

Our group pours over the ledge and into a dry wash following a generally northerly path. We pass fanciful rock formations with a palette of colours worthy of the name "painted desert". As my GPS indicates we are approaching the 1 mile mark and we've yet to locate our first sherd or rock art example, Rob points out a small flattop mesa to our immediate east capped with flat rock and desert varnish. We scramble up the scree slopes to a promising group of boulders and voila - our first rock art examples of the day...

We soon find other rock art examples and then an ancient cutting tool complete with hand grip and tell-tale worked edges. Rob gives us the historical low down on how we're following an ancient north-south trade route between the White Mountains and the LCR Salt Trail as well as an east-west trade route between the Rio Grande and LCR Salt Trail. We all speculate on the rock art meaning...

We surf the scree down from the small flattop and into a large wash heading north towards Mountain Lion Mesa. Rob picks out some fossilized phytosaur vertebrae bones from the wash and shares with us the true paleontologist method for determining fossils from plain old rock - the lick test... If it sticks to your tongue, it's a fossil, if it doesn't, it's just a rock!

At Mountain Lion Mesa archeology survey markers offer great clues to the location of the many rock art panels. We circle the mesa and make our way back to the PEFO roadway. Back at the vehicles snacks and beverages await us while the shadows grow long and an orange glowing sunset punctuates the end of the day.

Thanks Rob for setting this up - looking forward to another one. Great time meeting Eric and Jason. Ambika - would like to do that Friends of Arizona Highways photo hike of Canyon de Chelly some time soon...


PS. Rob, page 56 of "Tapamveni - Rock Art Galleries of Petrified Forest and Beyond" by McCreery and Malotki indicates;

...a multiroom site atop Mountain Lion Mesa...

.
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 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Coyote
 Geology
 Geology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Chinle Formation
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WARNING! Hiking and outdoor related sports can be dangerous. Be responsible and prepare for the trip. Study the area you are entering and plan accordingly. Dress for the current and unexpected weather changes. Take plenty of water. Never go alone. Make an itinerary with your plan(s), route(s), destination(s) and expected return time. Give your itinerary to trusted family and/or friends.

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