Painted Rock – Solo

Painted Rock Petroglyph Site in Dateland, Arizona

How long does it take to replace an engine in a VW? A damn long time since it has to be shipped in from Germany, apparently. So, I’ll just keep going out with the loaner to check out the places we normally don’t include on our itineraries. These stops are a bit gratuitous as we were well aware of the extra expense to our lease while collecting too many miles. Today’s stop is southeast of home at the Painted Rock Petroglyph Site.

Painted Rock Petroglyph Site in Dateland, Arizona

Not sure if this was about all there was to see, as finding information about Painted Rocks was scant. Like nearly all locations, this one, too would benefit from some context.

Stanton – Solo

Lake Pleasant, Arizona

Lake Pleasant is hardly that in my memories as it was a party place for people disaffected by the demands of modernity and so they retreated to the corners of the Phoenix area where they could meet up with other malcontents. This is likely the root of my underlying hostility towards beer and pickup trucks.

Stanton, Arizona

Stanton, Arizona, is effectively a ghost town. While RV’s still set up out here, the town if it could have ever been called that, is a dilapidated shell of an old mining camp.

Stanton, Arizona

You’ll travel a dusty old dirt road from out near Congress, Arizona, to get here. Pleasant enough and quiet; not much changes out in Stanton.

Stanton, Arizona

While it kind of looks like a prop in a staged ghost town, this old bathhouse seems legit with its hot water boiler there on the left. Wish I’d run into someone else out here who could have told me if there were some trails or other historic areas in the vicinity that would have made a return visit worth my while.

Sedona to Jerome – Solo

Sedona, Arizona

Everyone needs a break, even those who travel a lot. For the first time in nearly a week, it felt like it was a good day for a drive, and so, with it being officially in the depths of summer, meaning it is incredibly hot in Phoenix, I pointed the car north this morning for some sightseeing. Headed into Sedona and wasn’t much feeling it, so I continued over to Jerome.

Jerome, Arizona

Jerome is a nice little getaway with great bed and breakfasts like this one here that is dirt cheap.

Jerome, Arizona

Should you need to fill up your 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air, Jerome still has a functioning pump serving up leaded gas. Just kidding, there is no gas station in Jerome.

Crown King to Montezuma Well – Solo

Road to Crown King, Arizona

Up into the mountains, it should be cooler there. This exit to Bumble Bee and Crown King is about an hour north of us and is one of the nearby areas we’ve never explored.

Road to Crown King, Arizona

The drive to Crown King is about 28 miles of dirt road that leads into the Bradshaw Mountains. Along the way, I pass abandoned buildings and mining equipment.

Crown King, Arizona

After a lot of dust and a few switchbacks, I arrive on this sky island up at about 5,700 feet of elevation. It’s certainly cooler up here, but there’s nothing to do. Don’t need anything from the general store, not going to the saloon, who needs a gift, and I don’t have a quad to go exploring the local forest. While Crown King is certainly beautiful, I think this will be my first and last visit.

Grasshopper at Montezuma Well in Rimrock, Arizona

Hmmm, maybe our car dying was a part of the apocalypse because it seems the locusts are starting to take over. Then again, I am prone to looking for drama.

Montezuma Well in Rimrock, Arizona

While I first visited Montezuma Castle back in the early 1980’s I’ve never been to Montezuma Well. The Sinagua that took this as their home grabbed some prime real estate here on the cliffside, as right below them is a small lake.

Montezuma Well in Rimrock, Arizona

Actually, this “small lake” is a natural spring that is fed by a 1,500,000-gallon underground supply.

Butterfly at Montezuma Well in Rimrock, Arizona

And butterflies, too. Alright, I’ve seen enough to know I have to bring Caroline back to Montezuma Well. The day trip is over; time to head back to Phoenix.

White Tanks – Solo

White Tanks Phoenix, Arizona

Yesterday, on the way to Caroline’s office, our VW Beetle called it quits. We’ve only had it for about 18 months, but in that time, we’ve put about 107,000 miles (172,000 km) on it. The bad news is that this car was leased for three years, and we were only supposed to put 36,000 miles on it. The really bad news is that the engine “spun,” thus destroying it, and we now need a new one. The horrible news is that this is going to cost about $7000. The good thing is that the dealer has given us a loaner, and I’m determined to get as much use out of it as I can. Because I’m still recovering from this tragedy, I’m not well planned yet on where I should go, and hence, I’m just on the other side of Phoenix at the White Tank Mountains.

Gila Monster at the White Tanks Phoenix, Arizona

This rather large lizard seemed pretty content with my approach and never flinched once as it pulled within a few inches to snap this closeup.

Grasshopper in the White Tanks Phoenix, Arizona

I wonder how the grasshopper’s worldview is altered with only one antenna.

White Tanks Phoenix, Arizona

Petroglyphs were my inspiration for heading out here. Sadly, many of them are damaged, and it’s obviously from other humans, not the lizards and grasshoppers. It’s also getting quite hot the further out on the trail I went. I think I’ll have to consider points north for my next solo trip out.

New Mexico Missions to Bandelier – Day 2

For everything modernity has wrought and all of our technological convenience, humanity will never improve upon the sunrise and sunset. We may excel on the small scale and even one day destroy on a larger scale, but nature is the true master of that which boggles the senses with the profound.

Bandelier National Monument is our first stop today on our exploration weekend of all things Native American. Many of the dwellings here were carved out of the relatively soft tuft. The area was ultimately abandoned around 1600 AD, with the inhabitants moving towards the Rio Grande, joining the Pueblo communities of Cochiti and San Ildefonso.

I don’t think I’m wrong, but I do believe this will be the first time Caroline or I have ever been able to visit a reconstructed Kiva.

Our imaginations will have to fill the gaps of what the environment may have been like when Kachina ceremonies were being observed. What were the sounds, language, smells, shadows, ceremonial clothing, masks, and paint that all came together to tell the story of the moment?

This northwest corner of New Mexico is a diverse one with many contrasts.

San José de Los Jémez Mission is not far from Bandelier and was more or less on our way to Albuquerque, where we had one more historic Native American visit to make.

It’s our goal to snap a photo of us in front of as many National Park and Monument signs as we can; often, they are not worth sharing on the blog here, but we have them. As we age, we’ll have these at our disposal to prove to ourselves that, at one time, we really did go to all the places we claim or have forgotten.

We are on the edge of Albuquerque, and literally down the hill, we can see a newer subdivision of homes that crawls ever closer to displacing more Native American history. Fortunately, for now sites like this under the protection of the National Park Service offer some chance for survival.

Sites such as this Giant Tee Pee in Lupton, Arizona, could be disappearing as travel demographics and the desire for these novelties wane. Maybe nostalgia will help them hold on, but from our recent encounter with neglect and abandonment, as we’d seen in Bowie, Arizona, there’s little hope that these one-time icons will survive.

That’s Flagstaff in the distance, which, if you know your geography, means that we are on Interstate 40 driving west and that most likely, either there or maybe in Holbrook, we’ll turn left and head south back towards Phoenix.