Good points, Robbie and Thomas. Point taken and something learned!
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Good points, Robbie and Thomas. Point taken and something learned!
Rain clouds massing over the Dee estuary on the Wirral UK.
[IMG]http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8001/7...0370a8f4_c.jpg Storm over sailboats by Marvin d martian100, on Flickr[/IMG]
Shen Hao TZ45IIB
180mm Nikkor
Adox 25
Red Filter
Are really two Chimney Rocks in SW Colorado? I was not aware of that. I'd like to know. See this map of where the Anasazi one is. Also the Ute reservation is full of Anasazi ruins. Chimney Rock is one of the furtherest north Chaco Outliers (Lowry and Escalante are actually further north):
http://www.chimneyrockco.org/images/map.gif
Hi Kirk and Erik,
This Chimney Rock is further north and west, on Owl Creek Pass, which connects Ridgeway with Cimarron (East of Montrose). See here: http://www.myfjcruiser.org/2061/owl-creek-pass/
It is a magnificent road for fall colors, as is the Last Dollar Road from Ridgeway to Telluride.
The climate here is too harsh to sustain rain-fed corn agriculture. Utes migrated into Colorado's mountainous regions and adapted with hunter-gatherer lifestyles. They also migrated further south, where they adapted to the horse and Spanish-Puebloan culture. Hunting parties would collect bison for exchange at Taos' trade fairs. I read somewhere that Taosenos remember a battle in which they trapped the Utes on the plain outside their Pueblo, and then forced them over the cliff, into the Rio Grande.
When mining in CO intensified, the Utes were progressively pushed out of the mountains, into SE Colorado, where their reservations, and some amazing Ancestral Puebloan sites, are today.
As for the Anasazi Chimney Rock, I sure would love to photograph that someday. I don't know what kind of access you can get.
Not sure of this is really a landscape but I would love your comments and suggestions.
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7122/7...6c744a93_b.jpg
Porch Chairs by JBelthoff, on Flickr
Thanks,
--JB
Nice feeling of light, well done. Don't know if you noticed that the chair on the left is in dire need of a front end alignment.
When in doubt.. use search ;)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landscape_art
So nope, it isnt landscape.
The Chimney Rock in your photos, Kirk, is the one located off of SR 151 (13 miles west of Pagosa Springs) about 5 miles south of US 160 . As I have traveled around the west I find that Chimney Rocks, names and formations, are pretty common.
Yes, Peter, the Anasazi one is open to guided tours. They keep hours throughout the summer and some in fall and spring. It is a healthy uphill hike from the parking area. For additional information try the Chimney Rock Interpretive Association. Pagosa Springs office is 970 731-6278 and the Arboles office is 970 883-5359.