Showing posts with label Goosenecks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goosenecks. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

John’s Canyon Rim Trail

John’s Canyon is tributary to the San Juan River downstream of the Goosenecks State Park in southeast Utah. The access is along County Road 244, a north turn off of Utah Route 316, the paved road that leads to the State Park. The access road passes below the Muley Point Lookout point on the southwest side of the Cedar Mesa area.


I drove 15 miles along County Road 244 to a flowing creek crossing and started hiking there. The road is drivable in a Subaru, but gets a little rougher the further you go. There is a metal gate to open and close after 7.0 miles. It took me about 1:00 hour to travel the 15 miles. I hiked west along the same road along the north rim of the inner canyon. It looks like a hiker could also hike down into the inner canyon or hike up canyon.

The attraction of the north rim is the several petroglyph panels along the way. John’s Canyon, in this area, has some massive sandstone cliffs sitting of softer eroded layers. The level area has Mormon Tea, another desert shrub that I think is Blackbrush, Prickly Pear cactus, a few scattered Juniper trees, and some desert grasses. There are cottonwood trees near the flowing creek.


After about 1:00 hour of hiking there is a boulder with some petroglyph figures on the south and west faces. The south face had some sheep figures and the west face had what I thought were lion tracks.


The second panel that I saw arrived after 1:25 hours of hiking. The trail makes a curvy descent and the upright boulder is where the route straightens out. This panel has an assortment of figures. I didn’t see any ruins near these panels, but there are some possible rock shelter areas among these boulders.


Ten minutes past this site, practically within sight, is another boulder with art work on at least two faces, the most on the west face.


 All of these boulders were close to and easy to spot from the trail.


These petroglyph sites are along the edge of the gradually deepening inner canyon. Down below there is some flowing water, but it doesn’t look like these is any easy access to the bottom. Directly across the canyon, the road into the area is visible.


I turned around after this third site. My return hike took 1:30 hours for a total hike of 3:40 hours for 7 or 8 miles. It was a 60 F degree early November day and I carried 3 liters of water. On the return drive I noticed another panel along the road a short distance west of the metal gate.






Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Goosenecks of the San Juan River

Along the rim of the Goosenecks of the San Juan River is a small State Park offering a spectacular view of the entrenched meanders, a thousand feet below the rim.

The San Juan River flows out of the San Juan Mountains in southwest Colorado and flows through the desert areas of the Four Corners area flowing west to meet with the waters of the Colorado River in Lake Powell.

Here the San Juan River has cut itself into a twisty course through layers of sandstone and shales of the Honaker Trail Formation and the limestone layers of the Paradox Formation. These are deeper layers of rock than are usually visible in the region.
There were some rafters visible way down there as I gazed over the edge. There is a one day raft trip from Bluff, Utah to Mexican Hat, but if you go past there, into the Goosenecks it is five days before you can get out.
 There is room in the park for some short hikes along the rim, gazing at the meanders from different angles. The terrain is treeless and probably has some desert wildflowers in season. There was a Navajo couple selling jewelry on the day I visited, a common sight in this region.