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Volume 7, November 2005 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Red Canyons and Fall Foliage |
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Since we would be riding in a national monument, she stressed that we could take photographs, but not fossils, petrified wood, or pottery shards. Due to the difficulty of the terrain, we would be covering only ten miles daily, even though we would ride five to seven hours each day. Hondoo uses ranch raised Quarter Horses, as well as Paints, Appaloosas and mustangs. The horses are well trained and carefully matched to the ability of each rider. Brian would be mounted on Sawdust, a buckskin Quarter Horse. Our friends from Ohio were assigned Appaloosas and a Morgan. Smokey, the BLM mustang I would be riding, turned out to be very responsive and surefooted, which was important since the terrain we would be covering was difficult. After breakfast the following morning, we met at Hondoo’s headquarters and loaded up our gear, horses and saddle bags. After a short drive, the horses were unloaded at the Roundup Flat trailhead. The 100 mile vistas at this high elevation were breathtaking and the yellow leaves on the aspen trees were just reaching peak color. Ice topped puddles crunched underfoot as we adjusted our gear and saddlebags. After an instructional talk about the tack and horses, we mounted up and began our descent towards camp.
Lamanite Arch Natural Bridge was the destination of the next day’s ride. One of Pat’s crew stayed with the horses while we walked along a stream issuing from a secluded pool at the end of a canyon. It was a tough 45 minute hike through heavy overgrowth, but the resulting view of the arch and the pool was worth the effort. The orange and red of the sheer rock walls was perfectly reflected in the still water. Not many people will ever see this impressive sight, since Pat discovered the pool, and not many know its location
One of our fellow riders had been to Africa, and said that The Flats looked exactly like the Serengeti. The temperature that day was very hot, while earlier in the week we had ridden in snow flurries. During lunch I startled a pygmy rattler that was basking in the sun. It’s fairly unusual to see a snake because they usually try to avoid people. Before the snake uncoiled and moved away, the braver riders among us came over to take pictures. Another day, as we rode, Pat pointed out numerous shards of 800 to 1000 year old pottery scattered on the ground. Many shards were painted with colors that had remained amazingly vivid despite their age. At night, the stars overhead were an incredible sight, as were the morning views from camp, when the tops of the surrounding mountains seemed to be set on fire by the rising sun. Unfortunately the week ended much too soon. After
breaking camp, our last day ended with a ride through Water Canyon towards our
rendezvous point with the trailers on Burr Trail road. The desert had burst into
life along the streambed which ran through the canyon bottom, and animal tracks
and greenery were abundant. We followed the stream through dense stands of
willow, weaving our way among the orange canyon walls. The sight of a
spectacular waterfall cascading over the red rocks into the water below was the
perfect end to our canyon land adventure. The trail ended when we reached Burr
Trail road and saw the crew from Hondoo waiting with the trailers. As Smokey was
loaded up I told him goodbye, and thanked him for giving me such a wonderful
ride.
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