Friday, February 25, 2011

Seminole Canyon State Historical Park

I'm the one in shorts.
I headed to the desert this past weekend.  We camped in Seminole Canyon State Historical Park on Friday night and headed for the park's overnight tour of Pressa Canyon early Saturday morning.  Yes, we were very close to the border, so a police officer accompanied us on our hike.  I think the media greatly exaggerates the risk for ratings, but it probably wasn't a bad idea to have him along.  We only had to carry a daypack with our lunch and water.  Our tents, sleeping bags, stoves, and other gear was transported on a trailor to our campsite.  It's my understanding that firewood would have been provided if there wasn't a burn ban in effect.  They even had a portable toilet set up.  It was a system that utilizes bags which you dispose of after use, so there was not the normal odor associated with port-a-potties. 


We didn't find the chupacabra, but did we find one of his victims?

It was 6 miles each way, scrambling over rocks, walking across the 45-degree slope of the lower canyon wall, and dodging branches full of sharp thorns.  It wasn't an extremely difficult walk, but not for those who only want to walk well-maintained, groomed trails.  You must be reasonably fit.



Click to enlarge for a closer look at the art.
We climbed up to several shelters where the ancients once lived.  There was some amazing art on those canyon walls.  It was difficult to choose which photos to post here.  There are many more pictures on Starting Over's public FB fanpage.  The link is in the sidebar if you'd like to view them.


We stopped here for lunch on the hike out.
 The Pressa Canyon Camp Overnight is just one of the tours offered at the park.  The Fate Bell Tour (included in the Pressa Canyon trip) has the best pictographs.  If you only have time to see one thing - choose the Fate Bell.  View the list of park events here.

9 comments:

Anita said...

All the hiking and camping you do makes me wonder how it all started...as a kid, an adult?

Awesome photos!

Oilfield Trash said...

Awesome. It looks like you had fun.

Brian Miller said...

oh wow...some great views and very cool wall art....know that was a lit of fun!

Kelly said...

Looks like a great hike!

Maybe some reports have been exaggerated, but my church has recently stopped sending mission teams across the border. (we'd fly to McAllen or Harlingen then cross over to Rio Bravo)

Tempo said...

Love to see there ancient canyons, we see pics all the time but never get the chance to see the real places

sage said...

Beautiful places... Glad you are able to get outside.

Rachel Cotterill said...

Looks ace. But for those of us who don't get your media - what are the (supposed) risks?

Jen said...

@Anita: I didn't start any of the marathoning, camping, or running until a couple of years ago...but I've always been active. Dancing and gymnastics when I was a kid...martial arts in my 30's...now this.

@Rachel: The drug trafficers are getting more and more violent...

Anti-Supermom said...

This look amazing, I'm jealous (says the girl with all this snow!)

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