Showing posts with label Dellenbaugh Tunnel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dellenbaugh Tunnel. Show all posts

Friday, April 26, 2019

An Alien, An Underground Arch, A Secret and Best of all...Friends !

Gopher Flats
Moab, Ut
April 25, 2019

One of the really cool things about being in Moab in the spring is the weather making it a great destination to off-road, hike, and enjoy the desert scenery before the summer heats up.  But the very best part of this time year is that friends pass through heading north or east.  (P.S., fall is  beautiful too!) Such is the case this week.  Friends Sue and Dave pulled into town and we wasted no time making plans for an off-road adventure.  Our destination was on the north side of town in the Dubinky Wells Rd area.  There is so much to see, I wasn't sure we would be able to check everything off the list.  We did though with the exception of the overlook at the end of Spring Canyon Point Rd.  It was a beautiful day with bright blue skies and most of the time a nice breeze.  So, what did we see?

Bartlett Rock Art Panel:  
Bartlett Rock Art Panel is located in a humongous alcove.






The rock art is of "alien" looking figures and are pictographs.  These pictographs (painted, not etched) are of the Barrier Style and thousands of years old.  




It amazes me that pictographs can even be seen after thousands of years.  


There is a decent parking area and a short slick rock and sandy trail leading up to the alcove.  

Dubinky Well:   
Dubinky Well and Windmill were built in 1937 by the CCC to provide water for grazing livestock.  
The oversized 16 ft diameter windmill was necessary for the 500 ft deep well which was last used in the 1980s.  In 1996, the windmill was moved and selected as the site to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Grazing Service which became part of the BLM in 1946.
The wooden watering troughs are thought be original although repairs have been made over the years.
The rock and cement open storage tank were added in 1939.  The outside wall is made of large stones cemented together.  From the outside it looks like a straight wall.  
 But the inside wall has a slant...I guess for strength.  The design is said to be a "CCC trademark".
 After the well, we back tracked 0.2 of a mile and made a right turn onto Spring Canyon Point Trail.  




Whenever we are in this area, Tombstone Rock is a great landmark. 



The off-highway trail is in front of Tombstone Rock on the left.  The trail difficulty is rated moderate in Charles A. Wells guide.  It is a combination of dirt, sand and slick rock with and a few ledges.  The spur trail off Spring Point Canyon Rd is 3.6 miles roundtrip (out and back). With careful and expert driving skills, Dave managed the entire trail without scuffing his stock JKU on 32" tires !  Way to go Dave !
Rocky goes up...




and down...

and sometimes up, and around and down!

Dellenbaugh Tunnel:
Dellenbaugh Tunnel is believed to be named after Frederick S. Dellenbaugh who was a member of the Powell expedition.  The tunnel isn't really a tunnel.  It is formed from a wash that flows under an elongated arch which I read was an underground arch.











 From the parking spot, it is a bit of a scramble over slick rock and down some ledges to get to the entrance of the tunnel.  





There is a nice area on the canyon side of the tunnel to take in views of Spring Canyon...





and enjoy the gnarly old juniper trees and birds.
It's a great spot for lunch!
Secret Spire: 
Secret Spire is one of those rock formations that definitely defies gravity. 








The spire, or hoodoo, sits majestically atop a dome of sandstone.  (The tunnel and the spire are on opposite sides of Spring Canyon.)

The bottom of the spire...


and looking up.




















This is a nice view of a pour off beside the dome that the spire is on. It still had a little water from the last rains.  I can only imagine how beautiful it must be during a heavy rain. 








And here is another humongous view of Spring Canyon from the opposite side of the canyon.  
A close up of those swirling designs on the rocks...amazing !
Secret Spire was the end of our adventure.  From there it was back to Spring Canyon Point Rd and on to Dubinky Well Rd.  It was so much fun exploring with Sue and Dave and Joe and I are looking forward to more adventures with them !

I will close for now with a few more pictures...

These tiny flowers were no more that a couple of inches tall...

















We passed by Juniper Arch.

















Rocky climbing slick rock with Tombstone Rock in the background.
















These purple beauties lined the wash.


Pearl and Rocky got to know each other while we explored the tunnel.
 So until next time, 
Headed home under bright blue skies with Tombstone Rock and The Sleeping Princess in the forefront with those beautiful LaSal Mountains in the background.  Life is good! 



















HAPPY TRAILS !

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Secret Spire

Gopher Flats
April 2, 2017
Moab, UT
Golly gees, its been a long time since I sat at the computer to do a blog post.  We have been busy, we have been lazy, most importantly, we have been enjoying our first few weeks back in Moab.

The apple trees are budding/blooming at Gopher Flats.


 Red rock and the La Sals heading out to Kens' Lake.
Low clouds on Moab Rim...our view to the west from Gopher Flats.



An important activity we have added to our schedule is working out...  

Moab Recreation and Aquatic Center is a beautiful, well equipped  center for getting/staying healthy.  Both of us are working on body strength as well as cardio.

Sunday, Moab Friends For Wheeling (MFFW) did a mellow, easy trail ride to Secret Spire with a side trail to Dellenbaugh Tunnel.  




Our group had 10 vehicles which included our leader, Carole Hahn.  





Carole did an awesome job guiding us as we rode along the mesa top between two of the Green River's large tributary canyons, Hellroaring and Spring Canyons.

The clouds sure added to the scenery shots... 

Landmarks play such an important part in the vistas here.  Below is Tombstone Rock. 
Our first stop was to check out the pools where water rushes into Spring Canyon from the mesa.  


 Then is was off for a lunch stop at Dellenbaugh Tunnel.  The tunnel is a watercourse that has cut through the Navajo Sandstone.  It's about 100 feet long and so worth the heebie-jeebies to go through because the other side offers spectacular views of Spring Canyon.


Looking east...
 and west.  Of course it's more impressive in person !

You can't see Secret Spire from the main trail.  We took a right hand turn onto a loop that lead us right to the spire made of Navajo Sandstone standing all alone on a dome like base. 

 If you look closely, you will see Ginny standing at the base of the spire on the right hand side.  
 With all the cracks and holes, it's amazing it stands at all !


 The up shot from the base...
And the view from the base...





Secret Spire is rated a 3 by Red Rock 4-Wheelers.  It is not listed in the Charles Wells Guide to Moab Backroads & 4-Wheel-Drive Trails.  The trail itself features sand, slick rock and a sandy wash which any stock jeep can do. 
Parked on the slick rock to explore the pools.


Dee getting photos of the pools.  The designs in the sand was so pretty.

Some of the group standing on the edge of the cliff as I came out of the tunnel.

Susan and her puppy Cinder heading towards the spire while Joe (not my Joe) and Ginny (top left) explore on top of another mound of slick rock. 


It was a fun day.  Thanks again Carole ! 
Until next time, take care and...





HAPPY TRAILS !