On the way to Bayfield CO we passed the Continental Divide. Whoop, whoop. Here is the picture to prove it.
Having grown up in the 50's and 60's I was a huge western fan. The Duke, if you don't know who that is shame on you, was my hero and movies like Eldorado, Gun fight at the OK Corral and Tombstone were what I watched growing up. So I am very excited about this portion of our trip. Well, West world it ain't. Although there are a lot of buildings from that era, time has not stood still, and the streets aren't dirt and gun fights don't break out at high noon, well not in Durango CO anyway. I can say that Tombstone AZ is very cool, but that is a future post.
Now that does not mean that I didn't like Durango, I did. Good restaurants, unique shops and a nice river walk. The people were nice and friendly and the weather was great. I'd go back, but the wild west it isn't.
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Lynn made a friend. |
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Beautiful building built in 1887 and still in use today. |
One of our side trips was to Chimney Rock National Monument. This is the site of Pueblo ruins in a very remote area. We were able to take a guided tour which got us as close to the Chimney as you can get. This is a new national monument created in 2012 and the volunteers give a good talk concerning the ruins and excavations which go back to the year 600.
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The really big Kiva. Note the stairs. The local indians have ceremonies here. |
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The stone work is amazing. |
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Pit house |
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They think the side rooms were for storage. No entry from the pit house itself. |
The climb up to the higher village where the main buildings are goes up about 200' in elevation. So you end up around 7600 feet above sea level. After this little trip I was feeling the effects of altitude sickness. Nothing major but I wasn't feeling all that great for a couple of days.
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But the views were great. |
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I love the colors and twisting of the wood. |
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Spruce Tree House from across the valley. |
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Key hole door way. Very Aztec in design. |
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The ladder leads down into the Kiva. |
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Is this close enough for you? |
Now that you have seen what some consider the lesser ruins let us take a look at Cliff Palace. The ranger that guided us on our tour was a real story teller. He made the site come to life talking about the people, conditions and lifestyle. If the facts weren't known, then he gave us different possibilities of what might of happen. We couldn't thank him enough.
This is part of the trail down to the ruins. Make by CCC, (Civilian Conservation Corps) to make the site accessible to the general public.
The view when we rounded a corner on the way down.
One of the many Kiva's at the site.
They think that the walls and tower went all the way up to the stone roof. Below you can see the upper rooms at the roof line. Not real big so they think it was for storage.
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Lynn couldn't keep the smile off of her face. Then again neither could I. |
These two taken on the way down the trail.
Absolutely beautiful.
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The required selfie. |
Looking back at the whole site. They estimate that 100 people lived here in the 150 rooms and 23 kiva's.
Neighbors across the valley.
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These hand and foot holds date back to around 1190 CE. How many ancient Pueblo peoples put their hands and feet in them not to mention all the tourists and scientists. |
You need to make the time to come visit these ruins. The whole park is beautiful and full of questions about these ancient people. Why live in the cliffs, why did they leave, and where did they go?
Well the next stop is Albuquerque NM. Primarily to have some work done on the RV and have some down time. We were pretty busy here, we need a break.
See you down the road.
I'm confused, we went to Chimney Rock National Historic Site in Gering, NE. Is there another in Colorado because those are pretty spectacular ruins?
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