Spurred on by our previous day’s success, we wander further down the canyon, our eyes scanning the alcoves and talus slopes for that familiar shape. As the Sun creeps steadily higher in the limitless sky and the heat of day begins to crackle in the newborn leaves of the cottonwoods, we meander in hushed silence, craning our necks and squinting against the noon–day glare. The fever of exploration and passion of discovery are upon us as we glide along the intermittent stream–bed. We see phantom signs and symbols everywhere we train our eyes. The walls are alive with possibilities. The anticipation of new wonders washes over us in waves of excitement as we relish the last magical hour in the home of an ancient civilization. We are awed by the span of years and respectful of this Pre–Columbian race which squeezed out an existence of art and worship in a harsh and unforgiving land over 800 years ago.
• 1 •
The day before had played out in a slowly unwinding dance of
exploration which had climaxed with the discovery of the ruin. We
had assembled the night before just off the pavement and quickly
went to bed in a driving desert wind. The next morning started with
a drive to an impassable sand–slide at the brink of the canyon. We
set our camp and quickly moved down the slide which would give us
access to the depths of the main canyon. A persistent cold breeze
over–powered the brilliant March sunlight, forcing us huddle into
ourselves as we made our way to a pair of small sidecanyons.
The discovery began early that day. Jim and Jane paused on the way
down the sand–slide to admire a skillfully constructed sand castle.
Jim soon found a curiously whittled stick which had three
depressions the size of your fingertip drilled and burned in a neat
row. Each depression had a small groove cut out that created a
channel that broke the side of each small concave bowl. We never did
come up with a plausible use for this artifact. It didn’t appear
ancient, but who knows? (Further research suggest that it was a
fireboard.)
Just downcanyon we spied a cord hanging from what appeared to be a
cluster of climbers bolts back against the rock wall. We made our
way back to the cord and it was a bolted anchor protecting a nice
open–book finger crack, the cord left behind to set up a top rope.
We found two more bolted anchors along the way. Clearly someone has
found the vertical Wingate walls a friendly place to climb.
Our chosen pair of sidecanyons were lush and verdant. In the first
canyon we were stopped at a wonderful sinuous dryfall and a grove
of trees which tell the story of water in this small side–branch of
a massive canyon system. The walls are festooned by hanging gardens
where seeps of cool–filtered rain water has made it’s way for a
thousand years to trickle out a drop at a time. The heat of the day
had finally reached us in these sheltered canyons and we slowly,
reluctantly removed successive layers and bared our pale skin to the
chill desert breeze.
The second of the pair of canyons ended in a series of twenty–foot
dryfalls which we bypassed at first but finally turned back at a
slanted ramp where we found old bolts in the side wall. These bolts
beckoned the explorer within and inflamed the imagination to wild
flights of fantasy. Speculation ensued. Why would someone go to the
trouble to drill bolts in the wall at head of this nondescript dead–end canyon? Archaeologists climbing to an important ruin? Miners
ascending to the fabled silver mine? The bolts didn’t look like
anything that climbers would put up.
After lunch and a change into shorts, Jane and I made our way down
canyon while Jim wound his way back to camp. The water had
resurfaced in the canyon bottom and we weaved our way to keep our
feet dry. Butterflies fluttered on a warm breeze, in search of
delicious nectar. Canyon wrens sounded their descending chord of
notes, claiming their special plot of boulders. It had become
Springtime once again in the canyons of Southern Utah.
At a particularly wonderful bend of the canyon we paused to admire a
hardy cottonwood which has managed to lodge it’s roots in a crack
and has since sent tendrils seeking water six feet down to the
stream–bed. A strong echo drew our eyes to an alcove on the far side
of the bend where we could just discern the walls of an ancient
ruin. As we made our way up the sandy bank towards the alcove and I
was imagining ancient farmers tilling the soil, Jane sighted a pair
of vivid red twin pictographs on the wall above the shelter. The
talus below the crumbling walls was steep and full of small bones
and bits of coals from a wood fire.
When we topped out we found the
tumbled down walls of perhaps eight tidy little dwellings. The rock
walls have been stacked in a skilled manner and have been mortared
over with the red mud found by the stream side. Corncobs and pottery
sherds were scattered about and each new discovery brought an
exclamation of delight from us. We found grey utilitarian ware with
the finger print indentations of the ancient ones. We found black on
white ornamental ware which must have been the finest this
settlement owned at it’s peak. There were other pictographs on the
walls. Some are reinforced by pecking and must have been
magnificently three dimensional in their time. Hand prints, strange
geometric symbols, warriors and shamen, a woman giving birth and a
couple locked in a passionate embrace. Red, gold, green, white and
black. All the colors of the Anasazi palette. We found an
inscription which tells us a famous archaeologist has been here many
years past. To view the two red pictos requires a tenuous climb up
some weathered moqui steps with your back pressed against the wall.
Someone put tremendous effort into painting those twins and the
moqui steps show that the sacred pictures must have been visited
many times over the centuries.
It’s settled. We must bring Jim back here tomorrow.
An hour in the sheltered alcove had sparked many questions in our
minds and we scanned the walls for additional ruins and art panels
with newly keen eyes as we traveled back upcanyon to camp. We
chance upon a new panel of petroglyphs and quickly decided to save
them for the return trip on the following day.
As we are running out of steam and beginning to seriously imagine a
cool shady spot to stop for lunch, we come upon a sun baked corner
of canyon with a picture perfect alcove situated above us on the top
of a steep slope of jumbled boulders. Jim can clearly see a
petroglyph on the wall to the right of the sheltering overhang. As I
surmount the retaining wall of rough terrain that always seems to
protect the climb to a ruin I envision mortared red walls and
scattered grey pottery. I see the ‘trophy rock’ where enthralled
visitors have displayed bits and pieces of interesting pottery and
flakes of chert. I see the pack rat–chewed remnants of corncobs
which must have rivaled the produce found in a supermarket today. My
heart quickens at the prospect of another wall of ancient paintings,
where I could spend the rest of my life speculating as to the
meaning and never be sure.
Cresting the final wall of loose blocks below the enclosure, I am
now certain I have something. I can see a vague smear on the ceiling
of the cave which was obviously the work of man. It resembles a
scorpion with it’s coiled tail held aloft in a well known threat
posture. The scorpion draws me to that side and I immediately see
some pictographs on a fallen rock which resemble stalks of grass or
grain. There are strange shapes laboriously pecked into the stone
which portray the print of the sole of a moccasin. There are bits of
pottery in the sand everywhere I look. Pieces larger than any that
I’ve seen. I turn them over to reveal the black lines expertly
painted on a pearl white background. Some are painted on the inside
of the curve indicating a bowl. One has the rim still intact.
Another has the stub of a handle still protruding from it’s side.
I make my way to another pile of broken pottery, my camera working
overtime. I climb beyond the cave to the wall with the petroglyph to
see if there are more. Additional glyphs are visible but time has
worn them beyond recognition. I continue up along the wall searching
for more. When I reach the crest I have an amazing view back down to
the canyon bottom and finally another structure tucked against the
wall blending with the background. This small round house once again
exhibits the neat stacking of stone into the existing canyon walls
and a smooth mud plaster which still shows the fingerprints of the
original builders. There are richly decorated potsherds on the
ground and wondrous paintings on the wall. Bighorn sheep, hand
prints and a highly eroded figure in green paint. Just above we find
the deep groove of a metate where countless hours were spent milling
grain. Below the fallen embankment we find another pile of large pot
sherds. One could almost reassemble an Anasazi water jug from all
these pieces.
Another hour in the ruin raises more questions than it answers and
we are off again downcanyon in search of mysteries. This time we
find a magnificent sidecanyon with water flowing out and the
softest sand on earth. We pull off our shoes and traipse upcanyon,
the cold spring water reinvigorating our weary feet. After an
undetermined length of idyllic splashing upstream in the ankle deep
water, we come to a cool green waterfall flowing off an overhung
sandstone wall twenty feet high.
This is Paradise indeed!
Over the next few days we continued to make discoveries that brought
us back one thousand years, when nomadic hunter–gatherers roamed the
vast mesas and peaceful farmers and potters gathered together in
canyon alcoves to weather out another long, hard desert winter
We have seen the corncobs and dreamed of the fields of tall tassels
swaying in the breeze. We pondered upon pieces of broken gourd and
imagined the sprawling vines full of ripening fruit waiting for
harvest. We have seen the metate grooves and imagined the
generations of women toiling to grind the dry seeds and get them
into storage. We have seen the silent art work and formulated tales
of great battles of warriors and chaotic hunts of nimble bighorn
sheep. We have looked out of the now crumbling walls of once
majestic cities and felt the loss of an entire civilization
Wyoming Dave
© 2007 Dave Pimental