As we continued our Road Trip we were revisiting places
we've seen in the past and looking for new sites to see.
Although the site may be 25,000 years old, if we haven't
seen it, it's new to us... so sometimes old is new...
Here's where we traveled on Day 4 - Aug 17th a new day...
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Stop #1 the Petrified Forest - where we got acquainted with the Giant Logs. These trees died 216 million years ago and then took many years to become petrified. |
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The Park Ranger, told us that most of these trees were conifers ferns and ginko. Remember that 225 million years ago, during the Triassic Period, this was a tropical landscape. |
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We stopped at every site within the park and walked most of the trails. |
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Age and/or mineral content gave everything it's one unique color. |
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Some of these trees had reached at least 200 feet in height. They grew tall with not many side branches except at the upper crown point. |
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Hard to imagine the number of pieces of petrified trees just lying around. |
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Stop #2 The Painted Desert was exactly that... painted. There were 5 of these "Teepees" but I zoomed in tight on this one so you could have an up-close & personal experience. |
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Don pulled over to look for a geocache and there we learned that the only place where the famous Route 66 crosses into a National Monument is here in the Painted Desert. Yes, he found it... |
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The design for the glass ceiling in part of the restored Painted Desert Inn came from pottery shards at Mesa Verde. They were hand painted on glass by the Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC). |
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The Painted Desert Inn is a National Historic Landmark. Don also found a geocache here, where we also found ice cream... which has become our lunch staple!!!! |
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This is just one example of the many photos I took while stopping at a multitude of vista points in the Painted Desert. They go on for miles. |
John Lorenzo Hubbell purchased the trading post in 1878, ten years after
Navajos were allowed to return to their homeland from their
terrible exile at Bosque Redondo, Ft. Sumner, NM.
Hubbell family members operated this trading post until it was sold
to the National Park Service in 1967. The trading post is still active,
and operated by the non-profit organization,
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And for a weaver it is pure heaven to walk into a showroom stacked with piles of Navajo Rugs. |
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After returning home from that trip, all those years ago, I built a Navajo style loom and wove this rug in the "First Phase Chief's Blanket" style, which consists of stripes in red, white, blue & black. |
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On to our final stop of the day Stop #4 |
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Pretty old... |
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This is why it got it's name...surrounded by Bluffs. |
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and our great room at La Posada Pintada... |
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where Don and I enjoyed enjoyed the view (about 600 feet away) while having cocktails on our back patio - AHHHHH |
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