Nine Mile Canyon VI: Big, Big Sheep

Udink

Still right here.
Joined
Jan 17, 2012
Messages
1,734
On Sunday, February 1st, I met up with Randy (@IntrepidXJ) and Diane in Wellington and we drove to Nine Mile Canyon to revisit some rock art sites and look for new ones. I'd already been to the first place we hiked to, though I noticed a few things I hadn't before.


I'd seen this petroglyph panel before but didn't notice how this one wraps around the corner
IMG_1438.JPG


Sheep and canine
IMG_1443.JPG


My Grand Cherokee and Diane's Edge
IMG_1446.JPG



We drove some more along the Nine Mile road and stopped occasionally whenever Diane spotted something worth stopping for--since Randy and I were both driving, Diane had the luxury of keeping her eyes peeled for rock art. We saw a very interesting Ute petroglyph panel that, according to Tom McCourt in his book The Split Sky, may represent a meeting between Ute Indians and General William Ashley and company in 1825. We saw other random roadside rock art and a few high-up petroglyphs that will be worth returning for to get a closer look.


Death Star
IMG_1447.JPG


Ute petroglyph
IMG_1450.JPG


W.L. Camp 1890
IMG_1452.JPG


Ute petroglyphs
IMG_1455.JPG


A great, high-up petroglyph panel that I need to climb up to someday
IMG_1489.JPG


Badly weathered Fremont figure
IMG_1490.JPG



To end our day we planned to visit some petroglyphs that Alan and I had visited last year. On our way there we unexpectedly saw and stopped to talk to Celia, a Facebook friend of both Randy's and mine that neither of us had previously met in person. We gave her directions to some rock art she was looking for, and in exchange she told us about a site that I hadn't been to. Randy, Diane, and I continued to our final destination and visited some really good bighorn sheep petroglyphs. When Alan and I had found them last year, we were actually looking for some bighorn petroglyphs that were described to Alan as being four feet tall, but we never did find anything fitting that description. I mentioned that to Randy and he was game for searching for the larger sheep. We did some scrambling and climbing up a steep hillside and eventually I spotted what we were after. The petroglyphs were two cliff bands above us, and we had to find a way up one cliff band and then traverse a steep slope below the second set of cliffs until we were directly underneath the panel. The big, big bighorn sheep were indeed several feet tall--easily the largest I've ever seen. We hiked back down to the vehicles and parted ways there. Randy and Diane drove ahead on their way home while I slowly made my way out of the canyon, stopping often to scan the hillsides and ridgelines for ruins.


Randy below the big, big sheep
IMG_1515.JPG


Big, big sheep panel
IMG_1518.JPG


Big, big sheep panel detail
IMG_1520.JPG



Photo Gallery: Nine Mile Canyon VI: Big, Big Sheep
 

Don't like ads? Become a BCP Supporting Member and kiss them all goodbye. Click here for more info.

Back
Top