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Adventures in the Villa

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Utah

2018-09-03 – WBCCI 2018 Southwest Adventure Caravan – Day 16 – Traveling from Mesa Verde to Utah…

Travel Day.  The Villa is on the move…!

Early mornings, the deer come to visit…

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This is the hill we hiked to yesterday… The photos we took were from the top of the rock…

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The switchback roads we saw from the top are here – we drove down the road this morning on our way out of the park…

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We stopped at the Four Corners Monument: Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado…

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A few other members of the caravan were there, too…

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We continued on, driving through New Mexico and Colorado, until we finally found Utah…

 

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We saw more buttes and mesas and bluffs…

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Our campground is in the small town of Bluff.  Pretty non-descript, but we had water and power.  It will be our jumping off point for Goosenecks Park, Muley Point, the Moki Dugway, Natural Bridges, Valley of the Gods, and Monument Valley.

We also were able to add the 30th State sticker to our maps…

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We had a quiet evening in…

And no Travel Day would be complete without pictures of the grandchildren…

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George on the right, Ian next to him; the others are their 3rd cousins…

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The family out for a walk…

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Ian, George and Roisin (L-R)

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And an enjoyable time was had by all…

2018-09-01 – WBCCI 2018 Southwest Adventure Caravan – Day 14 – Mesa Verde National Park

Today we spent more time exploring Mesa Verde… We started at the Chapin Mesa Museum, adjacent to the park headquarters.  The museum had the usual exhibits about the flora and fauna of the park, plus some history and archaeological data.  And a Gift Shop…  Most interesting were miniature dioramas, or models, of the typical pueblo life during the various periods of occupancy, from 650 to 1300.  These beautiful models were built by the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) during the 1930s…

What interested me more were the buildings at the museum and the park headquarters.  The scale and massing was lovely, and the buildings were clustered as if they composed a small village… They were built with volcanic stone blocks, left un-plastered…

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Did you notice the vigas?  They are done very well.  And they are real!

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They are not simply stuck onto the exterior as decoration.  They form the structure for the floor or roof above, and they extend through the wall as part of the structural connection.  Another thing: they are Juniper.  Juniper is naturally rot and disease-resistant.  While the vigas in the park buildings are 85-90 years old, the vigas in the Pueblo are 500 years old, and very few of them show any evidence of rot…

Except for these…

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Still, not bad for 85-90 years.  Today’s tract houses in Santa Fe use Douglas Fir or Southern Pine for their fake vigas, and they show rot beginning in year one…!

After the museum we set out on a “hike”  We are not generally hikers – we are walkers.  This was a well-marked trail.  It descends into Spruce Canyon, and goes down, and down, and down… About 586 vertical feet.  The loop is almost 3 miles.  But we were up to it.  Being in the canyon is a little surreal, seeing the bushes, trees, rocks, and other feats of nature…

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We did discover this gruesome evidence of wildlife…

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Of course, after we walked down we had to walk up again.  While the descent was gradual, the ascent was very short and steep… And we made it!

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Walking back to the truck we heard thunder all the way.  But there was no rain…

We again admired some of the park buildings… This is the original 1930s restroom building:

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Nice proportions, authentic wood lintel, posts, and capitals, excellent stonework…

Next door they built a new restroom building containing facilities accessible to the disabled…

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Nice proportions, excellent stonework… Nicely proportioned lintels, posts and capitals, but note:  They are steel!  Clearly, this building pays homage to the historical architecture, but it uses modern materials when duplicating the historic materials would compromise the integrity of a modern building.  Well done, Architect, whoever you are…!

As we approached our next destination in the truck it started to rain… We stopped at Park Point, the highest point in the park, at 8,572 feet elevation.  This is about 700 feet above the campground…

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It was lightly raining, but we couldn’t help but notice this white gravel on the ground.  Upon closer inspection, we discovered it was hail!

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Views are amazing, in all directions…

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We could see all the way to Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, plus, of course, Colorado…

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This is “The Sleeping Ute”, a mountaintop in Utah that is supposed to resemble a sleeping Indian…

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This is “Knife Edge mountain, which is our next stop…

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Our next view overlook is called “Knife Edge”…

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So we then headed back to The Villa… And we were in for a surprise:  It had hailed at the campground, too!

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The hail was small – no damage to The Villa.  It lasted about an hour on the ground…  Later that evening we had another “Fandango” to meet other caravaners.  We were hosts, so we had 8 people inside the Villa…

And an enjoyable time was had by all…

A pause in the Blog… August 31, 2018

 

We are headed off into the wilderness of Mesa Verde and Southern Utah National Parks… We will have limited internet access for the next several days, so you will not be hearing from us for a while…

Stay tuned!

Phil and Lynda…

2018-08-16 – Traveling East – Day 1

Our departure to rendezvous with the 2018 Southwest Adventure Caravan came early today – we rolled out of Redlands at 5:00 am. It has been a busy few months and we are looking forward to two months of un-interrupted Airstreaming.

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Since we moved to Redlands in early May we have been living in the constant chaos of construction and remodeling and rehabbing and repair.  We are finally able to put two cars in the garage, the wine is secure and protected against the ravages of 110 degree temperatures, John’s lift is installed and the automatic opening gate is automaticly opening just fine.  John has a raft of very nice and capable caretakers (more than he needs, according to him…).  But the deck isn’t finished, the construction clutter has not been hauled away, and the garage still needs to be reorganized.  And my workbench and tools need to be cleaned up, sorted through, and alphabetized, organized, and categorized…  But all that can either happen while we are gone or when we return.

We are heading to Albuquerque to meet up with other members of the Airstream Club for the Southwest Adventure Caravan. We will leave from Albuquerque, NM, travel for 6 weeks through New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Arizona, until we reach our final destination of Albuquerque, NM.  In between, we will see Sante Fe, Moab, Mesa Verde, Zion, Bryce, and many other National Parks and historic and scenic Indian sites.  The grand finale will be the Balloon Fiesta in Albuquerque.

So we are off…

Our first excitement of the day happened as we exited the 10 at Desert center, as we attempted to drive north on Hwy 177 towards Needles:

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Apparently Hwy 177 is closed.  The officer didn’t tell be why it was closed, only that it was going to closed for a long time… Our only choice was to continue east on the 10 to Blythe, where we turned north on Hwy 95.  After checking on the internet we found that Hwy 177 was closed to an accident – an overturned truck carrying many crushed cars…

Not that this area along Hwy 177 doesn’t have interesting features…

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And this convenience has all the essentials:

 

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So onward we go.  The 10 east towards Blythe.  Attention!  All people who think Bend and Eastern Oregon, or Spokane and Eastern Washington, are “deserts”… You are wrong…

THIS is a desert:

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At Blythe we turn north…  Hwy 95 parallels the Colorado River, and it runs through a watershed for the river. Thus the road has many ups and downs as the various washes allow water to make its way to the river.  It must have rained recently, because there was standing water alongside the road and there were road maintenance workers with heavy equipment clearing mud and debris off the road.  But the road was smooth and there was NO traffic, and we had a lovely drive through the Mojave dessert. And the scenery is beautiful…

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As we approached the 40, my GPS led us off Hwy 95 onto a very small road for about 1 1/2 miles.  Just before the on-ramp to the 40 we saw a roadside attraction that begged us to stop.

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We found that we had been travelling on a short portion of “The Mother Road”…

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The maps and descriptions of the area were very interesting.  I had traveled Route 66 along with my family in 1961, when I was 10 years old, from Arcadia to Oklahoma City…

We headed east on the 40.  My GPS tells us our exit, in Williams, AZ, in 156 miles away…  We stopped about halfway there to stretch our legs…

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It’s amazing how green this area is.  We are at about 4,000 feet elevation, and we are going higher.  It really is beautiful, despite the horrible condition of the Arizona roads.

And so we arrived in Williams, AZ, elevation 6,766 ft.  This is another remnant of Route 66, and I’m sure we drove through here in 1961.  Not much has changed,  except that what once was essential services for weary travelers is now very touristy and “nostalgic”.  But is is fun to see an historic place still being active and prosperous…

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We parked The Villa in the local RV park, and walked the town.  We stopped into the Red Raven for a quick and early dinner…

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We even enjoyed a nice bottle of Arizona wine…

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We returned to The Villa.  Despite the threatening skies, it did not rain.  And so an enjoyable time was had by all…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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