Some photos from our walk in the Zilker Botanical Garden this morning:
Sunday, May 14, 2017
Monday, March 20, 2017
Three Rivers Petroglyph Site
The single biggest surprise during our trip to White Sands
and Alamogordo, NM was the Three Rivers Petroglyph Site. We posted a couple of
pictures from Three Rivers in our last post, but we wanted to share more.
It is believed that these petroglyphs were made between
about 900 and 1400 AD by a people that were probably assimilated into, but have no known relationship to, surviving
Native American cultures. The glyphs were made by using rocks to chip the black
surface off of larger rocks. By the time that the Spanish arrived here, the
site had been abandoned for at least 100 years and their culture no longer existed.
There are believed to be about 21,000 individual glyphs here, on about 50 acres.
There are two marked trails: One into the fields of rocks, and another to the ruins
of the tiny village where these people lived. The trails were easy, but when
the heat of the day arrived (even in March) we were reminded that in the desert
one needs to be very careful about exposure.
There are a few picnic tables and campsites and a restroom
at the parking lot, but this is a primitive area in the middle of nowhere and
with no staff on site. One just wanders about and finds what one finds. What
they might mean is open for discussion.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
2017 Spring Break
For our Spring Break trip, we drove out to Balmorhea State
Park, swam, spent the night, and then drove on to Oliver Lee Memorial State
Park in Alamogordo, NM. Using that as our base, we made day trips into Las
Cruces, Cloudcroft, Sunspot, and Carrizozo, NM. Those trips included drives
along some beautiful scenic drives and several other parks and campgrounds –
most notably White Sands National Monument and the Three Rivers Petroglyph
Site. It has been a full and fun week. And, as of this writing, we still have
two days left.
Balmorhea is a spring-fed pool oasis in west Texas near the
Davis Mountains. We stop there often and have posted some photos from there
before, but here is one more.
Oliver Lee was at the very edge of the Tularosa Basin and
the cliffs of the Sacramento Mountains just southeast of Alamogordo – probably
about 600 feet higher than the basin floor. This is still the Chihuahuan
Desert, so it looks and feels much like Big Bend National Park. But one
difference is that the basin floor is about 2000 higher. Another is that the mountains are about 3000 to 6000 feet higher.
These pictures are from the drive to Las Cruces and the
White Sands National Monument.
And these are from the visit to the Sacramento Mountains
including Cloudcroft and several stops along the road to Sunspot.
And these are from the Three Rivers Petroglyphs Site and
Carrizozo, NM. We will probably post more pictures from the Petroglyphs after
we are back home. Various sources say there are between 20,000 and 21,000
glyphs. We only saw dozens, and they were still amazing.
It has been a great trip so far – more posts soon.
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