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The Search
"Do you
think we'll find it tomorrow? What's your prediction? Are you thinking a 90
percent chance?" the Lady asked as we descended the highpoint above our
campsite.
"Oh
no," I answered. "I'm thinking around a 60 percent chance of
success."
"What
does that mean?" the Lady asked.
"It
means, if we find it, I'll be really happy, and I wouldn't be surprised if we
don't find it."
We had
looked for this ancient site one time before. All the information I had on it
was only a few paragraphs of text in an obscure research paper. But those few
paragraphs were more than enough to ignite a desire to find this place.
Certainly it was well worth a second try to look for it.
We left home
late afternoon on Thursday. Rolling through Walker, California on highway 395
we saw that Walker Burger had opened for the season but was already closed for
the evening. A quick side trip up along the Little Walker River took us to a nice
spot to spend the night - and also a tremendous spot to awake early the next morning.
We headed
east over to the Nevada side of the White Mountains. A series of narrow dirt
roads took us near to our hoped for camping spot. The last section was a steep
crawl up loose rock. The Lady didn't like it. We walked it to look at it in
detail to map out a line and also to see if it led to a usable campsite. We
both were satisfied and continued the drive in. The camp spot was perfect, with
an incredible view, and a huge dose of our desired solitude.
After set up
we climbed the highpoint above to survey the area.
As I said,
this camp spot was perfect.
I was not
too pleased to find a feral horse dirt wallow right next to camp.
I lack the
romantic notion of the majestic wild mustang. I would much rather see native
wild species flourishing without the impacts and competition from a large
invasive animal. The Lady does not take quite
a hard nosed line as I do as we'll see later in this story.
Our survey
from the highpoint gave us many clues for our search - water, cottonwoods, old
paths, pinyon pines.
It is always
a joy for us to watch the shadows lengthen across the landscape with the coming
night at a secluded campsite.
Our hopes
were high the next morning as we started on our search.
We were following an ancient trail down to the flowing creek. It had been taken over by
horses, well used now, and pounded into dust by hooves.
"Why do
you think this is an old trail and not a trail put in by the horses to get to
water?" the Lady asked as we worked our way down.
"I
suspect that horses are nowhere near smart enough to put in switchbacks on a
steep side hill. The switchbacks on this trail answer the question."
Stream
courses in the arid west are usually choked with vegetation, especially in full
sunlight. This small stream was a good example of this. Exploring and moving through this area
would be daunting. This is why we headed to the cottonwoods. Their shade blocks
sunlight, preventing thick plant grown beneath them, and offers the only easy
place to reach water.
This area
was excellent for our search. Old trails dropped down from the ridge tops on both
sides. The cottonwoods and rocks offered shelter. There was water. The canyon
opened up to the east.
Besides the
horses, there were signs of many other wild creatures using the resources here.
We spread
out and searched about a square half mile of ground. Obsidian flakes from tool
making were common but the only habitation site was an old cowboy camp. These
was a large rock fire ring, old cans, and other cast offs. I enjoyed the pieces
of a wooden box with classic box joints.
The Lady
discovered a homemade bucket..............
...............and
loved the Hills Bros. coffee can.
The old Arab
gentleman (Ethiopian really), known as "The Taster" brought back
memories from our childhoods. Product history such as Hills Bros. Coffee can
help date an archeology site. Hills Bros. was the first company to vacuum pack
ground coffee in cans and brought out "The Taster" trademark in 1906.
Reptiles
were abundant. The Lady loves horned lizards - Horny Toads! One large gopher
snake remained still as we passed.
The Lady was
convinced of the possibility that patterns on Indian baskets - like the Miwok
baskets we saw a couple of weeks ago at Indian Grinding Rock - reflect the
patterns found on snakes.
The Lady
loves her "Little Dinosaurs".
There was
one species of lizard we encountered I have not been able to identify. Most
interesting is it appears in a light and dark phase. It may be a Long-nosed Leopard Lizard subspecies where the cross stripes are more dominate than the
leopard spots.
We turned
back up canyon to continue our search. It was a workout with the impenetrable
vegetation and steep side hills. No trails led through the area. We did find several stacked rock hunting blinds at
strategic locations.
The canyon
narrowed into a tight gorge.
The Lady
wanted to press on.
Press on we
did. We have the cuts, bruises, and rips in our clothes to prove it. We finally
reached a point where we called it quits. One option to return to camp was to
climb out straight up the canyon wall. The other was to backtrack back through
the mess we had come up canyon through. We took a break and relaxed and decided
the devil we knew was better than the devil we didn't know. We backtracked down
canyon and climbed out of the canyon at a very doable spot. Camp was waiting
for us to return.
We relaxed
in our chairs and contemplated the reality of my estimated 40 percent chance of
not finding what we were looking for. As the Lady always says, "We now
know lots more places where it is not!" We discussed moving to a different
spot for the night, but postponed the decision until after we relaxed a bit
more. My Dad's wisdom was echoing in the back of my head as we gazed across the
wondrous expanse before us - "Never leave a good camp spot to find a good
camp spot."
And then I spotted the
horses.
"Horses
are moving down a far hillside across the canyon. It looks like they may be
heading for that old trail to take them down to water," I said to the Lady
as she fussed inside the camper. She was instantly in her chair beside me with
her see mores.
"Look,
there's three foals! Look at the little ones kick up their heels and play! Their
moms are letting them run ahead! Let's stay and watch the horses."
It was
pointless for me to offer up the information that feral horse and burro numbers on our public lands are now 4 times the number that our agencies deem a
"manageable level". And, how
people rail against cows grazing on public lands but then go gaga over horses.
"Special federal law prohibits eating horses. At least we can eat cows" -
the Lady has heard this from me over and over. "The West would never have
been "tamed" if Lewis & Clark, Fremont, and all the others hadn't survived by eating horses. There's a part of the romantic West that not being
preserved." Once again it was no use. Cute, prancing little ones were
across the canyon.
"Aren't
you going to get the camera?" she asked.
Just like
us, the horses headed for the cottonwoods. What mare belonged to each foal was
easy to see. The big grayish mare was the group's leader.
Although one
band of horses, five adults stayed together with the three foals and was followed by three other adults.
We watched
them for hours as they watered, grazed, relaxed, and the little ones pranced, played,
nursed, and slept.
They slowly
moved down canyon and around a bend out of sight. It was time for evening
chores and dinner. And then the Lady was back on the point, glassing the area
with her see mores.
"Keep an eye out for our horses!" she directed.
"We may get to see them again. I hope so!"
The Lady
climbed into the camper to put on warmer clothes as the evening's chill came. I
picked up the see mores from her empty chair.
"The
horses are on our side of the canyon climbing the hillside below us." I
passed on to the Lady. She was instantly beside me. "Let's go climb that
highpoint out on the ridge," she directed and I followed her pointing
finger. "Let's watch our horses from there! Grab the camera!"
It was a
beautiful evening as we watched "our horses" move below us. The
skies darkened as we rambled back to camp.
The poorwill's
call danced through our dreams as we slept. But also, deep in our dreams was
the lingering question - would we find what we were looking for tomorrow?
Our
adventure continues in Part Two - please Click Here