Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Springerville to Safford, Wilcox and Tucson

Springerville to Safford, Wilcox  and Tucson, Arizona              

September 22-23, 2020:


I leave Springerville, Arizona about noon time heading south on route 191.  

As I arrive in the town of Alpine my GPS directs me to take route 180 and 78 which crosses back into New Mexico and looks on the map to be a much longer route.  It also winds through the rugged mountainous terrain of the Mogollon Mountains.  I stop and refer to my road atlas again which does not help much, there really is no easy route to get between these two points.  Ultimately, I continue on route 191 which is a long 100 mile stretch of paved forest road through the Apache Sitgreaves National Forest with no towns, no services, nothing but winding curvy roads.  If you wish to get away from people and civilization, this is the place, although there are many forest service campgrounds, hiking trails and forest service roads to explore.    


This forest has suffered heavily in recent fires, thousands of acres show burn damage in the last decade or so.   About at the mid point, I come upon a sign indicating no RV’s or trailers over 40 foot beyond this point.  The road was a handful up to that point, but doable with a large RV and I wondered how much more restricted it might get ahead.  The only difference was that there were more steep descents with linked S-turns, seemed like 25 in a row and then another 25 tight 10-15 MPH curves.  At this point, I was thinking I had taken the shorter but way slower route.



Very few large trees survived the fire

A view from the road looking down at the another hairpin curve far below

Near the end are some hoodoo rock formations

Eventually after driving about three hours with few stops I come out of the near old growth protected National Forest and into the enormous Morenci Copper Mine where the mountain sides have been stripped bare.  This is quite an alarming sight from this approach and the road goes directly across the mined area for miles and miles.  It is one of the largest copper mines in the country and the world. One side of my brain is amazed at this technology and what our civilization has accomplished and the other side of my brain is sickened and disgusted with it all.  God should not be happy ?


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morenci_mine


https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/morenci-mine



You come around a corner and BAM, a denuded mountain confronts you

Followed by mountain sides that have been stripped clean

Terraces of dry lifeless rock left behind
 
The road goes directly through the center, I feel like I'm going to hell ?

Soon after the mine I see an old church just off the highway that looks interesting.  I do a quick U-turn, park and walk down this old downtown street.  This is the historic old mining town of Clinton, Arizona with most of the buildings well preserved and unchanged from the early 1900’s.  It appears partially deserted, I see no one around, everything is closed, it's mysterious but then a person exits from one of the doorways.  A mile down the road seems to be a newer part of town where there is a old train depot and an out of service track leading downhill into a tunnel.  I make a mental note to return here on a future trip.
A few days later, in Tucson, I research this and find that people are calling this a ghost town and that a ghost hunter TV program did a segment on it some years ago.  




This photo may be haunted, I straighten it, then import it into this blog and it goes crooked  again ? 

I wonder what this building was with it's large arched openings

This town is considered to be one of the best preserved examples of the Arizona Territorial style 

Still active ?

A very nice decorative iron front

This is a museum, now closed

A vintage 40's Chrysler across from the museum

A downtown parade photo on the museum window

A believe it was a washed out section of track that caused this disaster

The one building on the street that definitely looks open for business

Shortly outside of town the highway widens and climbs steeply uphill for miles into a high desert landscape.  I continue to the City of Safford, Arizona where I decide to stop for the night.  Safford is a ranching and farming area with a pleasant, but uninteresting downtown surrounded by poor neighborhoods, predominantly  Spanish.  Outside of the downtown is the usual sprawling ugly strip mall new business district.  The photos below make the downtown area appear much better than it actually is, it usually goes the other way.  The following morning I walk the main street, nothing is open, no one is on the street, there are few stores of interest and they have this sound system playing pop music.  Not my kind of town, sorry to say.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safford,_Arizona



A very nice welcome mural

There are many Hispanic farm workers here who make up about 40% of Saffords population

The old Safford Theater is under restoration

Brick sales help to fund the restoration

Another nice downtown mural

 In the morning, I get on route 191 south which leads to route 10 west and my final destination of Tucson. It’s a good travel day, I’m in no mood to stop except for the town of Wilcox which is a favorite.  I just love the main street look, the Rex Allen Museum, the park area next to the railroad tracks and the old historic depot.  The depot is one of the few, possibly the only, remaining original depot constructed of Redwood.   


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willcox,_Arizona



I'm a little suspicious of this Creation Station ?

The Bud Light Bullpen ?

The Wilcox Historic Theater

Welcome to Wilcox which really was a cattle capital in the early 1900's

Nice antique and collectables store in Wilcox

A very interesting Museum even if you don't like cowboy singers


I go in an antique store with lots of great old signs, old advertising signs attract me, but are super pricey.  I end up buying a few postcards, but the woman there tips me off about the pioneer cemetery a mile or so away.  It is old, but is sadly vandalized and abandoned to the elements with many fallen and broken headstones.  It appears that at one time someone maintained the cemetery and had made wooden markers to identify the graves.  For whatever reason, that ended years ago, most of the wooden ones are now fallen over, faded or broken and the dead are now forgotten.



The cemetery entrance is plenty cowboy !

The gate is slowly coming unhinged, I expect it makes some spooky sounds at night ?

The welded steel sign seems to be a tribute to one of the notorious Earp
clan made famous at Tombstone, Arizona  

Slowly disintegrating into the Earth

The broken stones are sad like broken Indian  pots

One of the nicest stones in the cemetery and she lived to a ripe old age


I arrive home in Tucson about 2 PM where it’s really hot, close to 100 degrees, but I'm happy to be back and I have a lot of catching up to do.    


This summer trip is a hard one to asses as it’s been such a weird year. Many of my favorite activities; live music shows, concerts, festivals, museums, libraries and going to restaurants and bars were lacking due to the pandemic.  It was also stressful going into these small rural towns where Covid-19 precautions were very lax.  In spite of that I learned of and saw many wondrous sights.


Sunday, October 11, 2020

Durango to Gallup, NM to Springerville, CO


Durango, CO to Gallup, NM to Springerville, Arizona;  

September 21-22  , 2020:


I take route 160 to route 550 to Aztec, New Mexico and then route 516 to Farmington where I stop to take a ride on Main Street. It was painful to ride through Aztec without stopping at the incredible Aztec Ruins National Monument, but I've seen it a few times and I need to keep moving.  I've also been to Farmington, but decide to at least check out Main Street.  Much to my surprise they are completely redoing Main Street, an ambitious project involving a complete renewal of the street, the utilities, curbing, sidewalks, and landscaping.  It should be beautiful when completed. 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farmington,_New_Mexico



The streets of Farmington was being totally redone

A very ambitious plan

I like the way they did it with rounded flowing corners, very nice

Another downtown view

Happy Days at the Three River Tap and Game Room 

Several nice historic buildings in Farmington

I then take route 64 west through the Navajo Reservation to Shiprock where I take route 491 south to Gallup, New Mexico.  They are also redoing route 491 and it needs it very badly.  The road is like a roller coaster in places, I hit one bump, more like a jump, where I believe all four wheels of the van were off the roadway for an instant.


Interesting mural in Shiprock, NM

Navajo Covid-19 sign

I love these old Highway bridges

A view of Shiprock from route 491


It started to rain intermittently on route 491 with some gusty wind, but nothing serious became of it.  I headed straight to the Red Rocks State Park outside of Gallup in hopes that the weather would clear and I could take a hike to Church Rock.  It looked promising briefly, then the dark clouds rolled back in.  


I then head to the downtown Gallup, NM which I always find very interesting.  It’s a beautiful, colorful downtown with much public art work, murals and signs on virtually every block and corner.  Also tons of Navajo jewelry, beads, rugs and art work.  You will have poor Indian street people approaching you for money, most are polite and harmless, but probably not a good place to wander around alone at night.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallup,_New_Mexico



I thought the sign was funny but equally sad

There is a vibrant arts scene in Gallup

A long train mural is appropriate

Very artistic trash receptacles

Street construction in Gallup in front of beautiful Navajo rug mural


There is a series of patriotic murals around town, I thought this one
was especially good

This is half of the mural showing the coming of the railroad in Gallup

The other half of the mural showing the ancestral puebloan culture

McKinley Court House built in 1938-39

Great bicycle sculpture

Many great Navajo shops in town

 In the morning under bright sunny conditions I return to Red Rock State Park where I hike the Church Rock loop Trail.  This is a great trail of moderate difficulty with great views, well marked with rock cairns and steps cut into the rock on steep inclines.  Also great wildflowers and weeds (I love the weeds equally) in the wash coming down from Church Rock.


The Navajo tribe has a great convention center, museum, rodeo arena and campground here

Wildflowers were blooming especially well


Carvings in the rock, some old, some new

The sandstone here is beautifully colored, textured and shaped  

Someone went to extremes in cutting these steps in the trail  

Getting closer to Church Rock

The trail seemed to disappear about here, but I remember getting closer to the top
on a previous hike

Layers of sand hardened to stone over the millennia 

On completing this hike, I get on the road heading for Eagar, Arizona taking a more direct, but slower route on country roads.   I take route 602 south to route 53 west, but then come upon a sign saying that the road will close ahead with only resident Zuni tribe members allowed access through.  I am disappointed, I had hoped to see more of Zuni, but not surprised as the Indian tribes take these viruses very seriously as they should.  The landscape views in this area are exceptionally beautiful. 



I just had to pull over for this view

There were several stops

So I turn around, and take route 36 south to Fence Lake which looks like a place frozen in time with many old log cabins, a few trailers, a small community center, but no store or gas station in sight. I then continue on Route 36 south to Quemado, New Mexico.  This entire route 36 has been about as desolate and remote as anywhere I’ve driven, no travel services, no towns or houses.   It is mainly all cattle ranches and range land with just the big ranch sign on the roadway.  

Quemado has the look and feel of an old Mexican settlement, but I find little evidence of that.  It was settled in 1880 by Jose Antonio Padilla who brought sheep in and started a sheep raising industry.  The Sacred  Heart Catholic Church appears old but the parish was started in 1952, although the graveyard looks really ancient.  The town is small but at least it has a gas station and a store.  I then turn onto route 60 west towards Eagar, Arizona.  


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quemado,_New_Mexico



About 100 miles of this


Definitely a Spanish feel here


The Sacred Heart Church

Pioneer graveyard

Downtown Quemado, NM

On my road map Eagar was in bold type while Springerville was not, making me think that Eagar was the prominent area town, but all road signs listed the next town as Springerville, confusing me a bit.  Route 60 took me into Springerville first and I was impressed, there was a small historic area, a museum, several motels and restaurants, even a McDonalds.  As I pass the Casa Malpais Museum, I see a sign about tour registration and find that there is a daily tour at 9 AM of the pueblo ruins and that no self guided touring is allowed.  I sign up for the pueblo tour and then tour the museum.  The museum is great with very interesting local history, well done exhibits and recovered articles from the Casa Malpais ruins.




Coronado Expedition mural on a wall outside the museum building

Springerville was a terminus of the the Coronado Trail

Chief Alchesay was a prominent leader

The original stage curtain from the Apache Theater, now the El Rio Theater, built in 1913.  It is 
the oldest movie theater in Arizona. 

Why have we not heard of Perry Owens before ?

A colorful wild west character

An artist depiction of Casa Malpais

A bowl recovered for room 14

Other objects recovered set before an artistic rendering of a pueblo room interior

I then take a walking tour of Springerville, it's a small downtown area, nothing very exciting, but clean and wholesome.  A very notable thing about Springerville is that the Springerville volcanic field contains over 400 volcanoes within a 50 mile radius making it the 3rd largest volcanic field in the continental United States.  Springerville was established in 1879 as Henry Springer's Trading Post. 



The Springerville welcome sign


A couple of the Springerville's empty historic buildings

The famous Madonna of the trail statue installed in 1928, there were 12 
of them installed at various western locations

Nearby is another memorial to the 1950's car


The El Paso Theater originally called the Apache Theater was built in 1913 and is
the oldest theater in Arizona.  The original construction is adobe and plank.    


I then take a short ride to Eagar.  It is separate town but directly connected to Springerville. It has a small shopping center and a small downtown area but doesn't have the tourist amenities, motels and restaurants like Springerville.  What it does have however is quite remarkable and possibly ridiculous. The Eagan high school football stadium, the "Round Valley Enshere" is the 8th largest geodesic dome in the world ???!!!! 


In the morning I do the Casa Malpais tour with a group of six other seniors, all educated tourists with similar interests.  The tour guide was excellent, made it as interesting as possible and was full of information.  

This is a unique pueblo as it was built on five volcanic terraces.  It was inhabited by the Mogollon people from 1260 to 1400 and then deserted.  There is a unusually large Kiva which suggests that this was an important site.  Also there is a solar calendars used to aid crop planting using celestial events.  Only a few rooms have been excavated, but many artifacts were uncovered from them.  The remaining rooms, by agreement with area indigenous tribes are to be left undisturbed.  The Hopi and Zuni tribes consider this a sacred place. 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casa_Malpa%C3%ADs



I don't know why, but this sign indicates different occupation dates ?

The tour heading uphill into ruins

Looking down at an area that appears to have been a cleared field for crops

There are a few petroglyphs in the rocks


A partial view of the Kiva from ground level

A view of the large Kiva from above

It is far easier to visualize the pueblo compound from above

The view at ground level

A couple of rooms with reconstructed walls

After the tour, I'm off at noon for either Wilcox or Safford, Arizona.