Desert Messenger July 15, 2015 Jul. 2015 | Page 15
ADVENTURES WITH ROCKS™
In the footsteps of the ancients
We’re taking a break from rocks,
gold, and prospecting this month.
Yeah, really. We have been on the
road, traveling, collecting rocks,
finding gold, and generally exploring and having fun. Of all the
things we were fortunate enough
to experience this travel season,
some of the most amazing ones
were the pueblos of New Mexico.
New Mexico isn’t called the
Land of Enchantment for nothing. The ancient history of New
Mexico truly is enchanting. Some
of the pueblos in New Mexico
are ancient cliff dwellings long
abandoned, but some of them,
like Taos Pueblo and Acoma Sky
City are over 1000 years old and
still inhabited. Taos Pueblo and
Acoma Sky City are easily accessible, while some of the others are
more remote.
water here, we have the river.” At
Taos pueblo, some of the people
are craftspersons, while others sell
food made fresh, and sometimes to
order, in their homes.
Off the beaten path north of Santa
Fe is the absolutely gorgeous Bandelier National Monument. Here,
the ruins of pueblos coexist with
cliff dwellings built into natural
crevises in the walls of Frijoles
Canyon called cavates. The oldest structures date from 1150 AD.
Twelve miles from the Frijoles
Canyon area is the Tsankawi section. There are ruins of pueblos
at the top of the mesa, and the
mesa walls are lined with cavates
some with multiple rooms in
them. The most intriguing aspect
of Tsankawi are the ruts, some two
feet deep, of foottrails, steps and
handholds, that wind throughout
the mesa, worn into the soft sandstone by thousands of feet and
hands traversing the same paths
for hundreds of years. It is truly
an experience to travel these same
paths while visiting these ancient
dwellings.
Acoma Sky City Pueblo is located
about 70 miles west of Albuquerque off of I40. At an altitude of
6460 feet, the high desert surrounding Acoma pueblo is a
scenic area full of amazing rock
formations and expansive views. The landscape
is full of towering sandstone bluffs, and it is atop
one of these bluffs, 367 feet above the desert
floor, where the Pueblo of Acoma was built. The
Acoma people have lived at the top of this mesa
since 1150 AD, and several families still live
either full time or part-time, without electricity,
sewer, or running water, in the dwellings there.
Many of the people who live on the mesa top
make their living by creating and selling traditional crafts like pottery.
Taos Pueblo is located just outside the City of
Taos. The oldest buildings in the Pueblo were
built between 1000 and 1450 AD. Approximately 150 people live full-time in the Pueblo. They
live in dwellings without electricity, sewer, or the
modern idea of running water. There is a river
running through the center of Taos Pueblo, and
one of the people said to me, “We have running
Visiting the pueblos is refreshing to
the soul. At the top of the mesa in
Acoma, at the base of the mountain
in Taos, within the bosom of Frijoles canyon it is quiet. It is ancient
and sacred. There is a peace there
that is not found in the modern
world. When walking in the footsteps of the ancients, the stresses
and problems of life fade away, and
the spirit is rejuvenated. The land,
the sky, the rocks, the plants, the
birds and animals all speak to one’s
soul. We need only to slow down
enough to hear what they have to
say. Sit in a cavate and look out
over the desert or the canyon. Find
a quiet spot along the river in Taos
Pueblo and admire the mountain.
Climb down the ancient stairway
from the mesa top at Acoma, holding onto handholds carved by the
ancient ones. As we walk in the
footsteps of the ancients, our spirits will follow. We will find a new
connection to the earth. And after
all, isn’t that why we love rocks?
For more photos and information
on the pueblos and links to their
sites, go to our Blog “Adventures
With Rocks”. Access the Blog
through the Media tab on the
top toolbar of our website www.
RocksInMyHead.com. While you
are there, check out our selection
of books as well as Native American Crafts and artifacts. We will
be open again in Quartzsite in
November at A37 in Rice Ranch,
but until then you can order by
MOUNTAIN QUAIL
CAFE
& Gift Shop
phone or email at 605-376-9875
or [email protected].
Thanks for your business this
winter. Hope you’re having a great
summer. And don’t forget