username
X
password
register
for free!
help
ArticlesGuidesRoutes
 
Photosets
 
 Comments
triplogs   photosets   labels comments more
Moonhouse - 5 members in 11 triplogs have rated this an average 4.6 ( 1 to 5 best )
11 triplogs
login for filter options
May 17 2021
avatar

 Guides 4
 Routes 27
 Photos 4,621
 Triplogs 975

56 male
 Joined Aug 23 2005
 Pike National Fo
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar May 17 2021
sneakySASQUATCHTriplogs 975
Hiking
Hiking
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Woke up and broke camp. First one to the trailhead. Skipped the 1.2 mile sandy road walk and parked at the trailhead. You could not do this last time I was here. Kids loved the hike. We explored all the dwellings on both sides of the main dwelling. Hiked to the next inlet of the canyon exploring and found nothing but a large dry waterfall with a significant pool. By this time the fine dirt is on the Mesa had made my contacts impossible to wear. Wondering how I backpacked 5 days in the canyon wearing contacts. Pretty much everything was covered in fine red dust. Kids had never really seen or hiked in a canyon so pretty much all the hikes were a treat and apparently they inherited my propensities and interest in cliff dwellings as opposed to my wife’s who up until these hikes just saw piles of rocks. Anyway headed over to Bullet Canyon where the plan was to hike a longer hike to Jailhouse Ruins and Perfect Kiva. Got there early and kids had a blast just exploring around camp.
_____________________
:o
  2 archives
May 12 2021
avatar

 Guides 4
 Routes 52
 Photos 1,303
 Triplogs 75

female
 Joined Feb 04 2017
 Sun City
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar May 12 2021
caragrueyTriplogs 75
Hiking3.30 Miles 410 AEG
Hiking3.30 Miles
410 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
This trip was planned over 2 years ago, canceled once, postponed twice but finally made it. The drive up was pleasant and did a few tourist things. The Forest Gump standing in the road at Monument Valley, the drive up the Moki Dugway etc... and then the bouncy drive to the Moonhouse. They aren't kidding no cell signal!!! I've never been a fan to reverse hike as everything awesome in this area is.. So off we went and made our way down the narrow semi steep trail. (Ignore the tourist cairns I truly don't understand why they feel the need to do that and mislead real hikers) once part way down I peeked around the corner for first glimpse... ahhhh.. spent a few hours exploring and then decided it was time to exit this beautiful place and go check in to my hotel for the next couple of nights....
_____________________
  1 archive
Nov 06 2018
avatar

 Photos 792
 Triplogs 48

64 male
 Joined Nov 29 2009
 Gilbert, AZ
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar Nov 06 2018
JohnnieTriplogs 48
Hiking3.30 Miles 410 AEG
Hiking3.30 Miles
410 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners partners
glutz
drove up to Utah on the first day that permits are not required to visit Moon House. I just didnt have it in me to do the lottery thing after tossing endless 5 dollar bills at "THE WAVE". it was a great time to go only saw a couple of people so we had the ruins to ourselves for most of the time we were there. Yes a little cold at night but daytime hiking was great.Instead of doing another post I thought I would put the "House On Fire" in with this one. I had never been so we weren't gonna be that close without stopping in. Great time good weather and great driving to and from Gilbert. almost forgot a picture taken in goosenecks. state park. don't skip it if your in the neighborhood.
_____________________
 
Apr 10 2018
avatar

 Guides 27
 Routes 61
 Photos 2,620
 Triplogs 700

69 male
 Joined Jan 23 2008
 Phoenix, AZ
Nine Days - Cedar Mesa Comb Ridge (Part 1), UT 
Nine Days - Cedar Mesa Comb Ridge (Part 1), UT
 
Hiking avatar Apr 10 2018
AZWanderingBearTriplogs 700
Hiking17.60 Miles 2,159 AEG
Hiking17.60 Miles
2,159 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   linked  
Partners partners
Steph_and_Blake
Southeastern Utah is a passion of mine with its beauty, geology, remoteness, and ancient sites. Blake and Steph were thinking of a Spring trip centered on Cedar Mesa and Comb Ridge and asked if I wanted to participate in a part of it. The answer was obvious, though MJ had a previous engagement involving her sister, a massive canyon, large river, and a raft. I’d be on my own.

My first day found us approaching Cedar Mesa from opposite directions. Blake and Steph had snuck off to the Hanksville area a few days earlier to rope down some skinny slot canyons. I don’t do skinny. We’d chosen some potential Cedar Mesa campsites ahead of time. The plan was for them to choose an unoccupied good one and then pass the location to me via our InReach devices since cell phone reception is spotty at best in this area.

I hit Mexican Hat for a fuel top off a little ahead of schedule and sent them a message on the device, expecting a quick reply. Roared up Moki Dugway admiring the views of Valley of the Gods and Monument Valley. No reply. The sites we’d spotted were mostly near Bullet and Sheiks Canyons. I took the road to Bullet but every site was already taken. Hmmm. Checked messages again. Nope. Cut through to Sheiks. Even marginal camps on the cut through trail were occupied. I pushed the accelerator harder hoping to at least find some camp unoccupied. Turned down Sheiks road moving quick with my best site just ahead. Dang, there was a flag flying on a pole at the turn in to the campsite. My heart sank. Had everyone come to Comb Ridge at the same stinking time? Wait, that flag looks a little familiar. Hit the brakes hard and slid into the campsite entrance only to see a sand colored FJ and matching trailer with Steph waving at me. We later figured out our InReach devices work fine. You just have to make sure you send the message to the other device, not to the non-working cell phone.

Day 2 began with a cold morning ( a thin crust of ice in the water bottles), hot coffee and a quick but substantial breakfast. We were in a hurry to get going. The plan was Sheiks Canyon to see Yellow House in the upper canyon and then push to the confluence with Grand Gulch to see the haunting Green Mask. But first we needed permits and a visit to the Kane Gulch Ranger Station for Steph to “get a few questions answered”. That visit became a morning ritual for the rest of our days on Cedar Mesa. Steph had heard that one of the guys volunteering at Kane Gulch had long ago spent some time on Kaiparowits Plateau, a future trip we are working on. He beamed when she asked about Kaiparowits, so remote that it was the last mapped area in the Lower 48. “No one has ever asked me about Kaiparowits, much less said they wanted to go there.” It was a while before we left.

The Sheiks trailhead has been moved about a mile east due to a small washout on the road (but it is actually easily drivable). We road walked to the old trailhead. The upper canyon begins shallow and broad but a pour off soon forces decisions. We’d been advised to hug the north wall and then drop down past Yellow House and double back. Finding a way down took a few minutes and roping down our packs.

Yellow House is relatively small. We didn’t find any glyphs and almost no pottery. But we were in the neighborhood of the Ancients finally. Cameras clicked. Each offered observations and commentary on the construction, possible modern stabilizations or ancient remodeling done to the rooms, the elaborate mortaring of one door. We didn’t dawdle. The mask was calling.

A small granary on the north wall warranted a quick visit. Well built and situated on a very accessible shelf not too far up the canyon side, the granary was peculiar in that it had soot covered interior walls. Granaries are for storage, often high up and somewhat hidden from the canyon floors, usually not easily accessible. This one seemed odd to me, but a possible answer could be it was actually a pottery kiln. The amount of pottery sherds around most sites bespeak a huge pottery production process. But we never find the kilns necessary to fire the clay into a pot. Are we looking in the right places? I know nothing about firing pots, but it was a thought.

Soon we hit a decent pour off, but one easily bypassed. A spring feeds the canyon from here and there were impressive hanging gardens on the walls of the pour off. From this point on there were plenty of pools of water on the canyon bottom. Sheiks gets deep very quickly beyond this point.

At the next large pour off Blake and Steph opted to bypass it high and left, but I friction walked the coarse sandstone along the left edge of the pour off, zig zagging back and forth on tiny ridges between thin layers of stone. At the bottom while sitting in the shade against a boulder waiting on my compatriots, voices echoed up from below. Two men were working up the canyon. I watched to see the route they’d take since there was another large pour off with a massive boulder field between us. Turns out they were part of a 6-person group backpacking Grand Gulch. Camping at the confluence with Sheiks, they’d taken a down day to do some more localized exploring. We all talked routes and sites and then went our ways.

The boulder field associated with the pour off we named the Rabbit Hole since you have to scoot under a rectangular leaning slab of sandstone about 8 feet thick, 20 feet wide and 30 feet long near the left side. The passage is easy and unnerving. From this point on we stayed high on the right (north) canyon wall following, losing, and finding a trail. A few scrambles on talus fields of loose rock and sand were frustrating, but mostly it was just getting on the right bench layer or some boulder hopping. I was glad to have some experienced rock hoppers with me and we made use of Blake’s rope several times.

Eventually we hit a ledge where Grand Gulch was visible to our right and Sheiks was below our left. The Thumb rock formation looked pretty cool down in the Gulch. We took photos and rested only a bit knowing the Mask was near.

The final approach was easy along a sandy wet canyon bottom with towering cottonwoods providing a bit of shade. Steph checked out a large empty alcove guarded by an huge cottonwood just before we all spotted the first panel of ancient rock art high above. Cameras clicked as lenses zoomed and random “oh, look at that” comments flew. Blake, cameraless, pressed ahead and worked up to the small remaining ruin, calling down for us to join him. “You are going to like this.” We didn’t tary.

The lower, and more recent, panels were a delight. Headless anthropomorphs in dark red paint, hand prints of all sizes, images of birds (perhaps domesticated turkeys), a back wall of a now fallen room painted black with plastered circles where a finger had created the swirling design often associated with the history of a clan's travels, faint white painted ghost figures. There was much to take in, glyphs and pictographs large and small on nearly every flat surface. Steph spotted some pottery sherds in designs none of us had seen before. Blake found a collection of corn cobs partially hidden by a large rock. And finally Steph spotted the Green Mask high and right.

We searched, photographed, and speculated until retreating to the unused alcove for lunch. After eating, I worked up onto a tilted fallen slab of rock directly under the mask. Laying on my back, zooming my little point and shoot camera I took a few half decent shots of the Green Mask. Archeologists digging this site had found a human head, expertly deboned, the face painted with green and yellow lateral stripes, the hair dyed red and a white yucca rope protruding from one side over the top and into the other side. It was identical to the pictograph. There are other mask pictographs like this one, colored differently but with the rope and other real masks have been unearthed in burial sites. Were these a trophy of war, a strong enemy defeated in battle, his head now a symbol of strength and bravery meant to strike fear into the hearts of potential aggressors as its owner yelled and held the mask high above him in warning? Was this a way of honoring a revered relative or clan leader, preserving his image and thus his/her legacy? The mask offered no answers and simply stared into the canyon as it had for over a thousand years.

Two backpackers came up from Grand Gulch asking if there was water. We pointed them to a pool 30 feet away and they set about filtering. Later as we were leaving, and likely hearing some of our conversations, they asked for a brief history lesson on the area saying these were the first rock art they had seen. Sometimes you have to look up I thought. But their presence explained why the panels of rock art were here. This was a crossroads, the marriage of two large dainages, water reliably available. Travelers, migrants, traders for centuries passed by, stopped, camped. The panels were there to communicate, to record passings, the billboards, newspapers, books of their time. And now they had drawn three more travelers to stare up at them. If only we had not lost the ability to read them. I made sure to leave nothing that marked my passing and taking away only their imprint on me.

We began working up canyon and back towards camp. The exit was easier since the riddle of the route was now ours. We only had to backtrack a few times. I was shocked to see the Rabbit Hole so quickly. It had been a long and tiring but great day. A shower made me feel like a new old man. A steak cooked on my little Weber Q tasted great. Steph wanted instruction on making fire with my fire steel, bark from a juniper and an assemblage of small twigs. She did well and we all enjoyed the fire and conversation until the good day caught up with us.

Day two found us all moving a bit slow. Coffee and breakfast preceded the daily visit to the ranger station and yet another round of questions, with one of Steph’s rather informed questions evoking a response of “where did you hear about that? You shouldn’t know about that!” from a female ranger. Blake and I studied the small selection of books and trinkets for sale.

We opted for a visit to the Citadel, a less strenuous hike than the previous day. Blake and Steph had been there before, but not me. The drive out Cigarette Springs road was bumpy but easy. We walked along the south rim of Road Canyon, staring across the abyss to its north wall searching for the numerous dwellings and graineries that dot the canyon. We spotted perhaps a dozen using binoculars and zoom lenses. Road Canyon had been a very busy place in its day.

Only three small scrambles are required to get to the Citadel. Blake led us expertly through them. The “bridge” out to the peninsula of the Citadel had the remains of two defensive walls and lots of water filled potholes. While the ruin is impressive and largely well preserved, the views and the pure uniquely defensive position of the site are the main draws. There is but one way to approach the Citadel and it is easily defended from a sieging force.

Around the fire that night the conversation turned to the weather. A front was coming through with lots of wind and some serious cold according to the InReach weather forecast. This wasn’t unexpected and, at Steph’s insistence, we’d made reservations in Blanding just in case. The wind really picked up during the night making it a rough one for Blake and Steph in their tall tent. We were definitely headed to Blanding. Blake and Steph opted to do a long scenic drive to get there. I wanted another hike and ruin on Cedar so we split up with plans to rendezvous in Blanding.

I selected Moon House, an interesting ruin in McLoyd Canyon that requires a day pass to limit the number of visitors. Off I went to the ranger station. This time alone. The volunteer ranger was totally disappointed that it was just me. The access to Moon House is off Snow Flat Road, part of the original route taken by the famous Hole in the Rock Mormon pioneers who founded Bluff. The first part of the road seemed pretty good, the spur off to the Moon House trailhead definitely required high clearance.

The trail down to Moonhouse is short but very steep with one ledge that uses a precariously stacked pile of rocks to descend or mount. A howling wind made the drop into McLoyd faintly unnerving blowing sand into my face and eyes. Hitting canyon bottom only means a steep 80 foot scramble up the other side to access the Moon House in its protective alcove.

Others were already there. I explored the outer dwellings until they departed, leaving the main rooms for my own solo entry. By entry I mean only that you enter the outer wall into a unique long vestibule which shelters the entrances to the large inner rooms. Peep holes in the outer wall provided protected viewing of points of entry into the site. The vestibule is decorated with a white band about two feet in height running most of the length of the outer wall of rooms. It is further adorned with a row of filled in white circles running above the banner and paired white triangles at intervals below. The rooms have interior plastering and painting as well. The feeling was one of loudly stated ostentatious opulence.

I only saw one pictograph. No one could miss it. On a rock face above the main rooms and clearly visible to anyone approaching the site was a snake figure, thick, over 6 feet long, white slashes above and below every twist in its red outlined body. To me it screamed clan symbol. The entire Moon House complex runs for over a quarter mile extending both ways from this main dwelling. Well built graneries, various dwellings and one set of rooms with five windows are tucked into crannies along the canyon wall. But none are as dramatic as the main house. None have the snake symbol above. Someone important, powerful, lived here and wanted everyone to know it.

Sand was in my eyes, in my mouth, teeth gritty, my nostrils feeling like twin plots of land ready for planting the sacred corn. I abandoned Moon House just as it’s owners had sometime before the 1300s. A gust of wind hit me broadside as I tried to find a decent hand hold to haul up the wobbly stack of rocks. I cursed and lunged and flopped up on the ledge. Hiking was no longer an option until the gale winds left.

Back in the confines of the truck I nibbled a snack and weighed my options. I could exit as I had come in and drive pavement to Blanding. Safe, easy, boring. Or I could channel the Hole in the Rock folks and complete Snow Flat Road coming out into Comb Wash, drive through Bluff and then on to Blanding. Knowing there is a descending section of Snow Flat called The Twist sort of sealed it for me.

Snow Flat turned out to be an easy crossing of the eastern half of Cedar Mesa, mostly easy riding soft sand with some sections on bumpy bedrock. The road follows a ridge separating McLoyd Canyon on the north and Road Canyon on the south. It descends 1500 feet crossing the flood plane created as Road Canyon plays itself out before linking up with Comb Wash. Driven another day, it would have taken twice the time given the number of scenic viewpoints off either side of the truck. The wind, vicious on the ridgeline, kept me mostly inside and moving.

The Twist is an area of ledges and huge boulders that the Mormons laying out the original road had to traverse in a winding corkscrew of a descent. Today it just makes for fun wheeling and good views east towards the Comb.

The sand crossing the lower stretches of Road Canyon was plenty deep enough to need 4 wheel drive and an attempt at keeping steady forward progress. I hadn't aired down and had no desire to accomplish any sort of recovery in the present conditions. Complicating this was every tumbleweed in Utah bouncing down the road at the truck. Wind gusts created waves of sand 30 feet high that crashed over the truck like a tidal surge on a rocky shore dropping visibility to a few feet. Bushes and small trees had been torn from the loose sand and came flying past the truck’s windows like a witch on a bicycle in a cyclone right after she stole your little dog. I tried to stay sort of on the road and kept catching glimpses of Comb Ridge off to my left.

Pavement felt pretty good when I finally found it. I slowed down to see what was happening in Bluff, but they were buttoned up tight. Rolling into the parking lot at the Super 8 in Blanding I found a sand colored FJ and matching trailer maneuvering into a parking spot. Jeeps and other rigs kept pulling in. Campers of all sorts were abandoning the mesas and ridges as the temperatures plummeted. I felt sorry for all the backpackers and hoped they’d find an alcove out of the wind to ride out the storm. The dust and a few clouds to the west created an eerie metallic gray glow as the sun got lower.

We unpacked what we thought we’d need. My first priority was a shower. The sand poured off and out of me leaving a dune in the bottom of the tub. It felt glorious to be clean again, though I’d find hidden pockets of grit in various personal orifices for the next 48 hours.

In Sandstone Spine, David Roberts refers to Blanding as the most gustorially challenged town in Utah. The three of us perused the extremely short list of restaurants in town and their decidedly limited offerings. We opted to pull out our precooked and vacuumed sealed meals from the coolers and microwave up some dinner as the wind howled outside our modern pueblo.
_____________________
All you have is your fire...
And the place you need to reach
  7 archives
May 23 2016
avatar

 Guides 44
 Routes 162
 Photos 24,784
 Triplogs 2,417

75 male
 Joined May 04 2004
 Mesa, AZ
Moon House Ruins - Cedar Mesa, UT 
Moon House Ruins - Cedar Mesa, UT
 
Hiking avatar May 23 2016
CannondaleKidTriplogs 2,417
Hiking1.70 Miles 578 AEG
Hiking1.70 Miles   1 Hour   28 Mns   1.16 mph
578 ft AEG25 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners partners
trixiec
Although this ruin site is limited to a maximum of 20 visitors per day, we made sure to get an early start.
(We did NOT want a scenario like our Flame House visit 2 years ago, where two photographers pretty much hogged the ruin site for hours and thus preventing others from clear shots of the site.)

But this time it worked out great! :y:
This site is pretty extensive so we took our time. The only part allowing visitors inside was through one doorway into a long hallway, from which we could peer into the inner rooms. Although there was some evidence of visitors stepping into one of the outer rooms, my camera would be all that reaching into the rooms.

Information provided in an ammo box at the site mentioned the holes in the walls which provided the residents a view of all the possibly approach/attack routes, so I took the time to take photos through each and every one.

We had the site to ourselves for enough time that we had driven a few miles back out before encountering the beginning of the rush. Within the next mile we met another 4 vehicles so those folks would all be sharing the ruin site.
_____________________
CannondaleKid
 
May 08 2016
avatar

 Guides 177
 Routes 249
 Photos 10,213
 Triplogs 2,215

74 male
 Joined Feb 12 2002
 Gold Canyon, AZ
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar May 08 2016
AZLOT69Triplogs 2,215
Hiking4.50 Miles 425 AEG
Hiking4.50 Miles
425 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Great day exploring this and surrounding ruins.
_____________________
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
 
Apr 26 2015
avatar

 Routes 26
 Photos 1,288
 Triplogs 124

66 male
 Joined Oct 28 2003
 Andover, NJ
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Backpack avatar Apr 26 2015
big_loadTriplogs 124
Backpack18.00 Miles 600 AEG
Backpack18.00 Miles2 Days         
600 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
When I applied for the permit, I told the rangers I couldn't get my rental car close enough to do this as a dayhike and asked how I could do it within regulations as a backpack. They said I could camp on the Mesa (above the rim) at any established site, of which there weren't many.

On Saturday afternoon, I tested how far I could get the car, which was only a couple miles in from the highway. After a late breakfast and some more recon the next day, I stashed the car before the first bad section of road and started started hoofing it under cloudy skies, light drizzle, plummeting temps and steady rain, sleet and snow, then blazing sun. There were only a few well-used camping spots on the way, and none very close, so I went all the way to the rim. Everything in the area was marked "no camping", so I slogged back 1.5 miles to well-used site a few hundred yards south of the drill pad (old parking area).

I got up at dawn and rushed back to the canyon to beat the crowds. The ruin itself was everything I expected and more, with several more sites up-canyon and down, which I explored most thoroughly. I'm fairly certain I found at least one viable route in from the North Rim. That might have been quite convenient 700 years ago, but not so much today.

I spent a little more time going back and forth to compare building techniques between the ruins. After a little too long soaking it all in, the hordes arrived just as I was ready to leave. The first handful were some (other) wiry old guys, but progress was stalled by two visitors (wearing sandals) who freaked out at the step-down on the slickrock and were too scared to move up or down. Their guide got them down after 20 minutes, and I was back in business. They were part of a large group, of which there were now 15 people at the ruin, so I was glad to have started so early. Although the traffic jam at the step-off tried my patience, it did allow one of wiry old guys to catch up to me earlier on the long road-walk back, and he graciously offered me a bumpy ride back to my car, which I shamelessly accepted.

I'm really glad I finally visited Moonhouse, but I wish I had done so before it became viewed as just a quick jaunt from the parking area.

ETA: The photoset is a little disjointed. I was going back and forth like a crazy man, thinking maybe I missed something, or wanting to get a preview to think about before I took a closer look. I tried to resequence it a bit, but left in some of the manic switching.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
_____________________
  1 archive
Feb 26 2014
avatar

 Guides 177
 Routes 249
 Photos 10,213
 Triplogs 2,215

74 male
 Joined Feb 12 2002
 Gold Canyon, AZ
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar Feb 26 2014
AZLOT69Triplogs 2,215
Hiking4.50 Miles 375 AEG
Hiking4.50 Miles
375 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Outstanding. Saw no one else on the trail or on the mesa for that matter.
_____________________
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
 
Jun 20 2012
avatar

 Guides 4
 Routes 27
 Photos 4,621
 Triplogs 975

56 male
 Joined Aug 23 2005
 Pike National Fo
Keet Seel etc, AZ 
Keet Seel etc, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jun 20 2012
sneakySASQUATCHTriplogs 975
Hiking30.39 Miles 3,440 AEG
Hiking30.39 Miles
3,440 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Partners none no partners
WHAT A RIDE!

As usual lately I got a small window of time to hike with a large # of goals. Found out that the alcove was open at Keet Seel and this has been on my list since I went in 2000 or 2001 and came back to realize when I developed my ex's film that only one picture had been taken of the dwelling from the campsite. :o
I knew I needed to either go to the orientation the day before or the morning of the hike. Forecast was for 96 degrees and I wanted nothing of getting a 9:00 am start for that day to do this as a day hike. :tt: I also wanted to use that day efficiently since I was already up there.

HATCHED A PLAN! :D Talked Keet Seel rangers into letting me do the orientation at 8:00am the day before and then drive up to Grand Gulch/Cedar Mesa to check out a couple of other places on my list.

1:30AM Up on my way out the door for Navajo National Monument. 3 hrs. of sleep less than Ideal, but excited for the next couple of days.
7:30 Arrive at Navajo NM early hike out to Betatakin overlook (sandal trail?)for a view while waiting for office to open. Permit in hand and out the door by 8:45 for Grand Gulch Cedar Mesa.

MOONHOUSE! AMAZING! Had wanted to visit these since the Grand Gulch trip last year and Alex told me about this dwelling as we were driving past the access road on the way home from the backpacking trip. It wasn't until this year that I came across Rob and Randall's photosets which I somehow missed when they went. They did not disappoint.
Got my day permit at the Kiosk after running rob del desierto off the road. :sl: (Ok he was nice enough to pull over as I passed him on the way to the TH. I didn't know it was him at the time, but thought as I drove by, the truck looked an awful lot like his HAZ ride.) :sl: It was probably 11:30 by this time and hot.
I explored up and down from the main complex of dwellings and found quite a bit of evidence of habitation. First time using the new camera and could not tell if I was getting the dwellings with them shaded by the overhang, but they turned out better than I thought. Also, found a pictograph of a red figure up canyon, but it came out blurry due to user error. :cry: Of course the less interesting ones came out clear. I really found this place amazing and spent way more time here and had to adjust my schedule accordingly. I didn't have time to hit one of my destinations and explored the canyon farther up snowflat rd. I will be back to do a section of this canyon in the future.
SOUTH FORK OF MULE CANYON/MULE CANYON RUINS: The latter was a roadside stop. The former was the only place I saw people as I dropped in there was a large group of kids with a couple of adults camping. It was 7:00 pm by the time I started this and I was hoping to get the last sun on the ruins before it went below the canyon. Not as good as I hoped, but worth the visit. When I first got to the ruins the light wasn't that good so I hiked further up the canyon and climbed to a high point to search for habitation and get a view of the last rays of the sun disappearing and to eat! Was so impressed with Moon house I lost track of time and realized I had only had a couple pieces of beef jerky and a cliff bar all day. Went back to the dwellings took some more pictures and tested the camera on some low light flower pictures. Got to the truck 9:30 pm.
DRIVE BACK TO NAVAJO NM: Most adrenaline pumping action of the trip! Before Mexican Hat in a dark desolate section of the highway I saw something beyond my headlights and immediately slammed on the breaks stopping just short of two very unconcerned horses blocking both lanes. :o Later, between Kayenta and my destination once again I saw something beyond my headlights identified a cow and swerved as there was no other traffic at 12:50am. I got to my campsite which I scoped out after orientation because of the two trees at 1:00AM and was tucked into my hammock by 1:15. Woke up at 6:00am packed up cooked breakfast and on my way to Keet Seel by 7:00-7:15. I went light and brought the go lite umbrella to do my best Mary Poppins impersonation once the sun got out for the forecasted scorcher. I had good shade in the canyon until about 30 min. before getting to the dwelling. I found that this hike is not nearly as difficult when you aren't carrying your water and the person you bribed to come alongs water as well. Even with Tibber picture taking the hike in took about 2.5 hours. Unlike Joe, I was in heaven upon arrival and Cassandra Parrish took me on the tour. I spent 2 hours there and she learned me more than a few things and pointed out some other things that weren't pointed out to me during the previous tour I took. Awesome! It took about 3 hrs to hike out probably because I took less pictures. It was hot on the way out 96 in the canyon and surprisingly on the climb out my watch said 109 :o I thought it was a mistake and took it off during a break in the shade and it still said 109. I hate steep uphills in sand and was thankful for the switchbacks. :D The sand was so hot I could feel it through my shoes and socks and found myself doing the lizard dance when I stopped on a couple breaks standing on one foot at a time. My feet are pretty heat insensitive after wearing the vff's for so long so I know the sand was hot. I had the entire canyon to myself. :y: I guess the two other scheduled day hikers and three campers decided not to go.
I made it home back to Mesa before 7pm. Great trip and I don't even like hiking when it's hot.
8)
Waterfall at Keet Seel was flowing nicely. http://youtu.be/dQN61PLb2Zw
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Bee Spiderflower
_____________________
:o
 
May 17 2008
avatar

 Guides 71
 Routes 98
 Photos 9,967
 Triplogs 1,009

65 male
 Joined May 14 2003
 Ahwatukee, AZ
Cedar Mesa, UT 
Cedar Mesa, UT
 
Hiking avatar May 17 2008
Randal_SchulhauserTriplogs 1,009
Hiking4.33 Miles 1,000 AEG
Hiking4.33 Miles   6 Hrs      0.72 mph
1,000 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Day 1 - Comb Ridge, see http://hikearizona.com/photocodeZOOM.php?ID=5467

Day 2 - Saturday May 17th - Paul and I got up before sunrise (and 40 degree temperatures - brrr!) to get an early start to launch the paraglider from CR262 near the Fishmouth Cave Ruins trail head. The 4WD road was flat and relatively obstacle free here and the land to the immediate east could serve as an alternate take-off and landing area. It was too early in the morning to stir Mike and Steve (besides, they were on breakfast duty charged with having it ready when we returned from our aerial assault). Take-off one from the roadway was aborted, so we moved onto the bench lands to the immediate east. Take-off two was smooth and the paraglider soared towards Fishmouth Cave. Paul made several circuits towards the west and the precipice of Comb Ridge, but reported that the thermal turbulence was too hazardous to get any closer. The plan was for Paul to complete an initial assessment of crosswinds, turbulence, etc. and then touchdown to pick me up for a tandem ride and to hopefully snap off a few aerial pics. Let's just say it didn't happen because the landing resulted in a cracked carbon fiber propeller. I can report that no human was harmed during the making of these pictures...

Hike #5 - Butler Wash Ruins (0.83 miles) - After a hearty breakfast courtesy of Mr. Mattes, we broke camp and continued north along CR262 until the junction with Hwy 95. We had planned this as a rest stop and took advantage of the facilities. We also decided to make the short trek to see the ruins and the natural bridge. Maybe next time will continue further north up the wash to explore the 3 sets of "Ballroom" ruins...

Hike #6 - Comb Wash Rock Art (0.25 miles) - We passed through the dynamited rock cut allowing Hwy 95 to pierce through Comb Ridge and descend the 500-750 feet into Comb Wash. It was decision time - continue west along Hwy 95 to seek out "House-on-Fire" Ruins within Mule Canyon and the "Cave Towers" Ruins within Cave Towers Canyon? Or push on south along Comb Wash and up onto Cedar Mesa? We chose the latter, sticking to the loose plan of taking advantage of having two 4WD vehicles to explore the more remote ruins. We turned south off of Hwy 95 onto Comb Wash Road (CR235 on topo maps) on the west side of Comb Ridge. Check out p.203 of the 4WD bible "UTAH Backcountry Adventures" by Peter Massey and Jeanne Wilson (I'm sure most of us have their ARIZONA book). The side canyons of Comb Wash are also reported to be riddled with numerous cliff dwellings, petroglyphs, and other ancient artifacts. As we continued south along the Sandstone Spine, we could se numerous boulders with flat surfaces covered with desert varnish - essentially an Anasazi canvas for rock art. We stopped to investigate, and yes many of these surfaces contained petroglyphs and pictographs...

Hike #7 - Moon House Ruins (3.25 miles) - After traveling about 15 miles south on Comb Wash Road (CR235), we came to the unsigned junction with Snow Flat Road (CR237). This is the old Mormon Emigrant Trail (aka "Hole-in-Rock" Trail) connecting Escalante to Bluff. After traveling about ¼ mile along Snow Flat Road, we encountered a BLM Fee Kiosk. Cedar Mesa is a fee area - $2 per person per day. This is also your overnight, trail head camping fee (overnight canyon backpacking requires a special permit). We ascended "The Twist", a series of short switchbacks blasted into the slickrock allowing us to climb onto Cedar Mesa. Much to our surprise, the Jeep thermometer crossed the 100 degree mark - how could this be with the forecast of mid-80's temperatures... We found our 4WD spur leading to the Moon House Ruins trail head. Although we were the only ones there, we decided to scope out the primo camp site and deposited some equipment to declare our intentions. We readied our packs and prepared to locate the ruins. I had a reference photo showing 2 large balanced rocks acting like sentries guarding Moon House Ruins located on a mid-band ledge on the north side of the canyon. As we approached the canyon rim, we could easily pick out the guarding sentries and distinctive ruins lying in the shadows next to them! The Bear's Ears could be seen on the horizon. Cairns guided our route towards a slickrock pour-off with some exposure. This was the toughest section of the hike. Having negotiated the pour-off, the trail follows the canyon ledge at the same level as Moon House Ruins located on the opposite side of the canyon. Once we scrambled down into canyon bottom and back up to the ledge containing the ruins - WOW! Truly an amazing set of ruins... After exploring the outer sets of ruins and granaries to the east along the same ledge, we could see the sun was starting to get low in the sky. Time to head back to our trail head camp and some superb steaks grilled up by Chef Paul!

Day 2 total mileage = 4.33 miles

Day 2 campsite at Moon House Ruins trail head...

Day 3 - see Valley of the Gods http://hikearizona.com/photocodeZOOM.php?ID=5503
_____________________
  7 archives
May 28 2007
avatar

 Guides 171
 Routes 253
 Photos 6,100
 Triplogs 1,135

44 male
 Joined Apr 03 2006
 Pocatello, ID
MoonhouseSoutheast, UT
Southeast, UT
Hiking avatar May 28 2007
PaleoRobTriplogs 1,135
Hiking3.30 Miles 375 AEG
Hiking3.30 Miles   4 Hrs      0.83 mph
375 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Beth, Ben, Ely, and myself made the trek back up to Moonhouse up on Cedar Mesa.
 Geology
 Geology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Cross-bedding
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
  4 archives
average hiking speed 0.9 mph

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.

helpcommentissue

end of page marker