These Ancient Peoples lived in pueblos built into the canyon walls and farmed the fertile land of the canyon floor. And today, the Navajo care for the land in much the same way the ancestors did, although with a little help from technology.
Canyon de Chelly is something like a 4 or 5 hour drive from Santa Fe (we don’t keep track of hours, although Garmin does). We stopped for a few minutes to check out downtown Albuquerque and the sculpture park, but were back on the road shortly.
Sculpture park in Albuquerque, NM
Greg helping to push the cart
Cathedral downtown in the main square of Albuquerque
We had wanted to see ancient Pueblo Indian ruins, but had trouble deciding which ruins site to visit. There are several sites near Santa Fe, but none in the direction we needed to drive (and so all would have been out of the way). We decided to drive to Canyon de Chelly National Monument, a park kept up by both the US Government and the Navajo Nation. Canyon de Chelly is near Chinle, Arizona, which was only slightly out of the way.
We arrived late in the afternoon and quickly found a place to stay in a hogan in a campground located in the park. A hogan is a residence made of wood and clay/mud (see photos). The hogan was furnished with a futon, a wood burning stove, an oil lamp, a desk, some shelves, and a couple of chairs. Not bad for camping.
Our home sweet hogan
Our hogan's furnishings
After we got settled in our hogan, we went out to explore some of the vista points. The first two stops offered beautiful views of the canyon and the farmland below.
At the third, we spotted two different pueblo villages perched up in the canyon walls.
Can you see the pueblo?
This is the same pueblo village only further away
We made several other stops at various vista points.
The canyon in the background
We should have had binoculars! The pueblos were incredible. I had the Canon and put the zoom lens to good use. I spent much of the time looking at the pueblo villages through the LCD screen of the camera. One view after another. Each was better than the last.
We finally arrived at the White House Ruin vista point.
White House Ruins - Can you see the tiny horizontal gash in the canyon wall?
Greg resting on the hike down
Getting closer to the ruins...
It was the hike back that was difficult. I’ll make excuses for myself being so easily winded by saying that we were at a much higher altitude than I’m used to. Seeing the ruins were incredibly cool.
White House Ruins - stunning, aren't they?
It is hard to see from this angle, but at the very back of the pueblo village, there exists a whitewashed house after which this ruin site was named.
This photo shows the "white" house up close. Notice the antique graffiti (J.W. Conway, Santa Fe, Sept. 24, 1873). I did a little research to see if I could find out if the dates were real. According to at least one website, the graffiti dated as far back as the Spanish Conquistadores.
I’m not sure there are words to describe what it was like to be standing there looking at the homes of people a thousand years ago.
We finally huffed and puffed our way to the top and back to the car. We drove back to the campground and ended our day with a light dinner by oil lamp light.
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