Sunday, May 15, 2011

Cedar Mesa trip

We got back yesterday from spending a week on Cedar Mesa, west of Blanding. We really like it up there, not a lot of people on the top and you can see a lot of things from the canyon rims that you might not see from the canyon floors, like these ruins nestled under a big rock on top of a peninsula:




Or these ledge ruins, which I thought were not possible to get to but maybe they crawled along the ledge from an access around the corner of the rock to the left:




We stumbled upon this metate on the mesa, notice the grinding stone is a river rock probably carried there from many miles away:





Once of the amazing things about the desert is how you can usually find water if you know what to look for. The cow trails led us to this pothole on a ledge:



I thought it was interesting how the roots of this old juniper lifted up the rocks when it fell over:


Some of the Claret cup cacti were blooming:




We moved after 4 days to White Canyon west of Fry Canyon. There are a few crossings along the highway, we parked at Soldier Crossing. You can ride a little more than 4 miles upstream, and at least 7 miles downstream from this point. We only turned around as it was getting late. I don't think this canyon sees much horse use, but it was actually pretty nice, about 50/50 sand and cobble stone, nothing very scary. The only real downfall of this canyon from what we saw is that it is close to the highway, which runs along it's southern edge, and you do hear cars from time to time. There were several interesting side canyons and slots, this one is in Long Canyon:




This was interesting, not sure how it happened (natural or human placed?):



A big piece of petrified wood:



A big log balanced on a rock:






It was a nice trip, not as long as we wanted but the weather changed. Today at home it snowed all morning! Hard to believe a few days ago I was having lunch on a big rock in the sun :)

1 comment:

Jackie said...

sounds and looks like a fantastic trip! I'm an avid hiker around here in Southern California, and what I wouldn't give to be able to do it on horseback!