Southwest day 11-14: Hovenweep and Bears Ears

May 21-May 24

When we decided to go to El Malpais and El Morro we also decided to skip Petrified Forest NP (we saw many petrified trees on previous days) and head north from Farmington to Utah instead. We made a small detour to “Four Corners” and drove through four states in an hour: NM, AZ, CO and UT. We arrived at ☞ Hovenweep NM early enough to walk 2-mile loop around small canyon dotted with ruins of Ancient Puebloan villages (towers) on top of the cliffs. These ruins are from later period, 1200-1300 AD. Next morning we were ready to visit more historical sites along Hwy 95: ☞ Butler Wash (short walk to ruin overlook), ☞ House on Fire (3-mile walk), ☞ Cave Towers (short, very bumpy unmarked drive behind closed but unlocked gate and 2-mile walk) and ☞ Mule Canyon Roadside Kiva (ruins just off the highway). There are many more scattered ruins and hiking trails everywhere in ☞ Bears Ears NM. House on Fire was the highlight, as you can walk close to the houses and peek inside. Topography is also very interesting because pueblos were build in or above canyons, close to seasonal water. We saw many spring flowers and some animals (e.g. 2 large snakes). Hovenweep had surprisingly many people, but other sites very few.

We made it to dispersed camping at Muley Point (Glen Canyon NRA) on top of Cedar Mesa in time for good evening views of San Juan River Canyon, just at our feet, and Monument Valley on the horizon. This was the best camping spot so far, there were 2 other families camping in the area, but very far from us. Views were amazing. It became quite windy in late evening. We were glad we parked behind some bushes and not on the windy canyon edge. We enjoyed more great views from nearby Muley Point next morning after breakfast.

San Juan River Canyon from Muley Point

From top of Cedar Mesa (250 million year old permian sandstone) we dropped 400 m down snaking ☞ Moki Dugway (Rt 261) to Valley of the Gods – 17-mile unpaved loop meandering between interesting rock formations carved in the mesa. We drove slowly and stopped a few times to walk around the base of Rudolf and Santa Clause and up above the road near Castle Butte. Valley of the Gods is like a miniature Monument Valley, but the word about it is out and it is becoming popular – there were quite a few cars around. We then stopped for lunch at boat launch picnic site in Mexican Hat and drove by Monument Valley NM (we already visited it many years ago).

Valley of the Gods from Rudolf and Santa Clause

We found nice campsite at CanyonView Campground in ☞ Navajo NM, with panoramic views of the canyons from flat sandstone platform just a few steps away. One of the best organized campgrounds, and it was free! Next morning, we walked a couple of miles on three short trails: Aspen (towards canyon floor), Sandal (to Betatakin Cliff Dwellings overlook) and Canyon View (to historic ranger station). The rest of the day was just driving to Cliff Dwellers Lodge in Marble Canyon. We started on unpaved and sandy shortcut via Shonto (fun test driving) and later stopped at Navajo Bridge (Colorado River). We spent afternoon preparing for the hike next day and had good dinner on the eve of Piotr’s birthday.

Southwest day 9-10: Ah-shi-sle-pah and Bisti/De-na-zin Wilderness

May 19-May 20

Resources

☞ Ah-shi-sle-pah Wilderness BLM map
☞ Bisti/De-na-zin Wilderness BLM map
☞ NM Area 1 Northwest BLM map

Choosing dirt roads even to travel short distance between local destination was of concern. Is our car’s clearance sufficient? Can we cross washes without getting stuck in deep sand? Running water was not an issue because of the drought. We carried car recovery kit on this trip, but did not have to use it. A shortcut between Chaco Canyon and ☞ Ah-shi-sle-pah Wilderness did not look too good (although we later concluded it was probably also passable) so we decided to add miles just to stay on more used dirt roads (7950-7980-57-7870). We crossed Escavada Wash three times, skidding quite a bit in the sand in one spot (nothing our car could not handle) and later over new bridge in a spot that could be otherwise problematic. Last couple of miles from Rd 7870 to the Valey of Dreams trailhead were on a sandy path rather than road. We checked out different options and followed what looked passable by eye. We parked our car at one of the “parking lots” near the trail, pretty much in the middle of nowhere, but with good view of our hiking destination.

We started exploration of rock formations and Joanna’s favorite finds: petrified trees. Ah-shi-sle-pah Wilderness has a feel of remote sandy desert with little vegetation. Wind gusts kicking-up dirt/sand amplified the impression (there was a dust storm in the afternoon). We followed mapped trails most of the time, but also explored different corners of “rock gardens” in Valley of Dreams (late morning) and along Ah-shi-sle-pah Trail (late afternoon). Hoodoos are fantastic, really like from a fairy tale or a dream and there is a sense of discovery there – we met only one hiker. Each walk was about 3.5 “slow” miles. The trailheads are 6 miles apart, the latter just off Rd 57.

Ah-shi-sle-pah Wilderness

We then drove on “main” dirt roads (57-7610-7500) to ☞ Bisti/De-na-zin Wilderness and looked around for camp site – decided to stay near trailhead for our hiking destination next morning.

Our first hike of the day was 6.5 mile semi-loop in De-na-zin Wilderness. We started towards Yellow Hoodoo in the general direction (counterclockwise) of mapped loop, but quickly started wandering around and exploring the site on our own. At some point the trail disappeared in narrow passages with what looked like a small rock scramble. At this point we decided to walk back a bit and down to the main wash, and continue exploration from there (we did not close the entire loop, but were very close). De-na-zin feels also quite remote with few visitors. We then drove around to Bisti (Rds 7500-371-7297). After lunch, we just started walking across flat area along Bisti Wash towards Bisti Arch, Rock Garden and Valley of Bones, and then continued towards Cracked Eggs and Petrified Wood. We zig-zagged 5-mile loop – we liked the second part better. Wind gusts were getting quite strong as we were walking back to the trailhead against the wind in a dust “storm” wearing masks. Bisti is much more developed with many more visitors, but it is also the largest with a sense of vast open space. There are many more rock formations and petrified forests there that we did not get to because we were tired of blowing dust. We liked Ah-shi-sle-pah the most, then De-na-zin, partially because of novelty of seeing fantastic rock shapes, mostly because of remoteness and emptiness, but also because of the weather – in Bisti colors were washed out and views obscured by the dust storm.

We stayed for the night in motel in Farmington. Shower, laundry and resupply time.