Friday, December 19, 2014

Coal Canyon or Coal Mine Canyon, Arizona

Coal Canyon or Coal Mine Canyon, Arizona is a canyon southeast of Tuba City on the Navajo Reservation. Some friends from Tuba City took me out there one day. They referred to it as Coal Canyon, which is what I have always called it until I looked it up on the internet, and found Coal Mine Canyon. It's the same place.

Coal Canyon is located about 15 miles southeast from Tuba City on Az Highway 264. The canyon is on the northeast side of the highway. The turnoff is unmarked. It is a beautiful little canyon, much like Bryce only smaller with streaks of black coal here and there, hence the name. The photos were all taken on 35mm film, I'm not sure what brand. They were then scanned on a plustek 35mm film scanner. The photos were all taken on one winter afternoon in 1991. They were all shot looking north.
































































This area has an enormous amount of color and shapes in a rather small area. Hope you enjoyed the photos.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Halloween 2014--a Bit Late

Here are the Halloween goings on at our manse this year. A few days late, but as my 3 1/2 year old granddaughter says,  I'm old and rusty.

Below are two shots of the front of the scary place. As you walk up the sidewalk you pass between Montague, rising from the grave on the left, and a skeleton coming out of the cauldron on the right. You can also get a glimpse of some dancing ghosties. There were two groups of dancing ghosties, one group on either side of the sidewalk.






Once you get by the skeleton and the rising corpse, you reach the front porch. Two scary sights on the porch, some guy in costume as the Old White Haired Guy and almost as scary Doctor Death, the Venetian Plague Doctor. Scary music was also being played.




Some did manage to make it up to the front porch, where a treat awaited.

This is my two year old grandson who wouldn't get any closer than this.





This next one got fairly close, with encouragement from mom and grandma.





The little one above is not at all sure he wants any part of this deal.




The next series of photos are of some of the kids who came down the street and dared to come up to our house.












The Tin Man and the good witch managed to make it from Oz.




This little kid in the red wagon had a portable DVD player and I don't know what other creature comforts with him. A great way to go trick or treating.


Below is a really scary werewolf.



The two blue guys below were way cool.

Below is a mad scientist. He was the only person who knew that the Venetian Plague Doctor was a Venetian Plague Doctor. Must've been the long red hair.







Saturday, October 25, 2014

Salmon Ruins, New Mexico

Salmon Ruins is what is left of an Anasazi great house, found just west of Bloomfield, New Mexico on US Highway 64. The Salmon family homesteaded at this site in 1877, hence the name. Its structure is very similar to the Chaco Canyon great houses as well as the ruins at Aztec, New Mexico, just north of Farmington. Below is a map of the site. The great house is an E shape, with a major kiva(Tower Kiva) in the center and a great kiva in the plaza The back wall is on the East-West axis and is 400 feet long. The original construction was between about 1090 to 1095 AD. It had between 275 and 300 rooms and the highest portion was three stories tall.  Beginning about 1120 Middle San Juan people moved in. It was abandoned in about 1280 and deliberately burned.


The photo below  is taken from the south side of the Great Kiva looking north to the Tower Kiva in the center. This view encompasses virtually all of the great house.


The first photo below looks across the Great Kiva to the east end of the great house. The second photo shows the west end of the great house.







Below is a photo from the top of  Tower Kiva looking due east.





The next photo is of the east wall of Tower Kiva. Notice how the room walls abutting the kiva wall act like flying buttresses.


The photo below shows a small kiva. These small kivas probably belonged to individual families or clans.







The next three photos show some construction details. The stones in most cases were worked to fit in their location, particular the veneer stones. Rubble or unfitted stones were used in the interior of walls.




The Tower Kiva is shown in the two photos below. This kiva would have been entered through the roof. The ladder shown here is a modern addition.



The  small kivas shown below are two of the 20 small kivas found in this great house.



The photo below shows some construction detail of one wall. Notice in particular the small stones. The construction at Salmon is mortar and stone, not dry stone work. The mortar was basically local mud. The interior and exterior walls were plastered over, most of which is long gone.



In the photo below there is a long red and white appearing rock in the left-center of the photo. Above this rock a couple of courses of rock thee is some remnant of white and red, and also to the right upper center. This is all that is left of an Anasazi mural(?) that was on this wall until just a few years ago. Vandals ripped it off this wall. Very sad.


The rooms below show some of the construction techniques, with holes for vigas(timbers) and the wall dividing the room with its rubble filled core and exterior veneers.


Like with any house or building that has been around for awhile new occupants bring new ideas of how they want their house to be. In the first photo below the new owners have converted a square room to a round kiva. In the second photo they have also blocked off a door. Has anybody ever bought an older place and not done anything to it?







These are pot shards were inside the great house. We left them alone, taking only this picture.


The Salmon homestead buildings, built in 1897, are still on the property and are part of the museum. They are supposed to be some of the few remaining San Juan area homesteads.

The first three photos below are of the house. Notice how the outside walls seem to be trying to fall outward, distorting the two windows on the west end of the house.







The structure below was used as a root cellar.


Just east of the house are these buildings which were used as a bunkhouse for the ranch hands.







I've chased a lot of cattle but fortunately never had to stay in one of these.

Other posts by the author on Anasazi ruins include:

Aztec Ruins National Monument 7/19/2014
Betatakin Ruin 6/22/14
Hovenweep National Monument 5/26/14
Mesa Verde 5/25/12
Canyon de Chelly 11/16/11
Chaco Canyon 11/20/10

A note on the photographs: These photos are from three different trips to Salmon, Aztec and Chaco. The last trip was about 10 days ago and the lighting was fair to lousy, but I did get some things I had not paid close enough attention to before. Gnorbert accompanied us this time, and he would like to say thanks for looking.