Handlebars
NAXJA Member #135
- Location
- Albuquerque, NM
The epicenter of an Anasazi culture spread across 30,000 square miles of high desert was located in NE New Mexico. I had read and seen quite a few interpretations of what is there. Almost everything about the Chacoans is debated. Only 2 things are clear- people lived here 1000 years ago and they built some monumental structures. Great houses containing hundreds of rooms, 3 and 4 stories high. Roads that follow straight lines despite geographical barriers. Glyphs and architecture that demonstrate sophisticated understanding of celestial mechanics that could only be learned after decades of careful observation of the sky. All built before the advent of metal tools and draft animals, by a people who left no apparent written language. Every stone, every log, every yard of dirt moved on the bare backs of human labor across dozens of miles. Faithful to an elaborate master plan over a period of hundreds of years. For what purpose? And why did they abandon the product of generations of sweat and blood? Why invest so much effort to create what they did on this particular patch of cold, dry sand? There are many theories but we may never know what really happened here. I hoped that by seeing it for myself I could gain a better understanding of who these people were.
My wife loves a good mystery so she joined me on a weekend investigation. Compared to most trips we take this one was a piece of cake. It was a simple overnighter, a mere 2 ½ hours from home. We threw a few things into the back of the Jeep and headed northwest on a cool June morning. Always looking for navigational challenges I took a more direct route through the Checkerboard Reservation, rather than the recommended route up 550 to Nageezi. We shaved 10 miles off the normal route and got to see some new scenery. Most of the road was paved although there was a strange part of BIA 9 that was alternately paved, then gravel, then paved, back-n-forth at ¼ mile intervals. Herds of sheep, goats, cows & horses and the occasional hitchhiking Navajo were the only other obstacles on the road. The first order of business upon our mid morning arrival was to secure a campsite. The only camping for 20 miles or so is in the park campground at Gallo Wash.
This trip also had me feeling photographically adventurous. I set my camera to monochrome and used nothing but my 50mm lens. Black and white just really seemed to suit the subject matter. The fixed focal length also forced me to really think about what I was going to put in the frame. Looking back at the resulting photos I made the right choice.
The visitor center is currently being remodeled, there is a yurt for a temporary HQ. We paid our entrance fee there and started the one way park loop road. First stop was Hungo Pavi.
That funny looking corrugated part of the canyon wall behind the ruined great house is a stairway on one of the arrow straight Chacoan roads. The cliff was not an obstacle to these people.
Hungo Pavi also has the original interior finish on display in a room that is protected by a roof and a glass door. The walls were plastered and whitewashed.
The floor:
Chetro Ketl's great kiva. The sandstone discs went in the circular holes to serve as foundations for the roof support columns. Each disc weighs a ton, 4 were placed in alternating layers with clay in between the discs under each pillar. Archeologists found a small bag containing offerings underneath everything in one of the holes.
All of the great houses had self-guided trail booklets but we took the opportunity to go for a tour of Pueblo Bonito with Ranger Joe.
The largest of great houses is seen in the background, along with the rock that peeled off the canyon wall in 1941, smashing dozens of rooms. There were stone buttresses holding up the rock indicating that the Chacoans knew that the wall was in danger of falling but built the house in that location despite the threat.
The Chacoans were much shorter than contemporary humans.
The only excavations currently taking place are done by the huge local ants. This tiny bead was found in an ant hill in Pueblo Bonito.
This is the oldest section of Pueblo Bonito, known as Old Bonito. It was started in the 9th century and construction continued until 1150AD. The evolution in masonry techniques is apparent. The foreground wall is the oldest, using lots of mortar and poorly shaped stone. The rear wall displays improving masonry from the bottom towards the top. This was all covered with adobe plaster after construction.
A look at the finely shaped stones that were used in the latest style of masonry at Bonito, known as Type 4.
Pueblo Bonito sprawls across 2 acres, a large building even by modern standards.
My wife loves a good mystery so she joined me on a weekend investigation. Compared to most trips we take this one was a piece of cake. It was a simple overnighter, a mere 2 ½ hours from home. We threw a few things into the back of the Jeep and headed northwest on a cool June morning. Always looking for navigational challenges I took a more direct route through the Checkerboard Reservation, rather than the recommended route up 550 to Nageezi. We shaved 10 miles off the normal route and got to see some new scenery. Most of the road was paved although there was a strange part of BIA 9 that was alternately paved, then gravel, then paved, back-n-forth at ¼ mile intervals. Herds of sheep, goats, cows & horses and the occasional hitchhiking Navajo were the only other obstacles on the road. The first order of business upon our mid morning arrival was to secure a campsite. The only camping for 20 miles or so is in the park campground at Gallo Wash.
This trip also had me feeling photographically adventurous. I set my camera to monochrome and used nothing but my 50mm lens. Black and white just really seemed to suit the subject matter. The fixed focal length also forced me to really think about what I was going to put in the frame. Looking back at the resulting photos I made the right choice.
The visitor center is currently being remodeled, there is a yurt for a temporary HQ. We paid our entrance fee there and started the one way park loop road. First stop was Hungo Pavi.

That funny looking corrugated part of the canyon wall behind the ruined great house is a stairway on one of the arrow straight Chacoan roads. The cliff was not an obstacle to these people.

Hungo Pavi also has the original interior finish on display in a room that is protected by a roof and a glass door. The walls were plastered and whitewashed.

The floor:

Chetro Ketl's great kiva. The sandstone discs went in the circular holes to serve as foundations for the roof support columns. Each disc weighs a ton, 4 were placed in alternating layers with clay in between the discs under each pillar. Archeologists found a small bag containing offerings underneath everything in one of the holes.

All of the great houses had self-guided trail booklets but we took the opportunity to go for a tour of Pueblo Bonito with Ranger Joe.

The largest of great houses is seen in the background, along with the rock that peeled off the canyon wall in 1941, smashing dozens of rooms. There were stone buttresses holding up the rock indicating that the Chacoans knew that the wall was in danger of falling but built the house in that location despite the threat.


The Chacoans were much shorter than contemporary humans.

The only excavations currently taking place are done by the huge local ants. This tiny bead was found in an ant hill in Pueblo Bonito.

This is the oldest section of Pueblo Bonito, known as Old Bonito. It was started in the 9th century and construction continued until 1150AD. The evolution in masonry techniques is apparent. The foreground wall is the oldest, using lots of mortar and poorly shaped stone. The rear wall displays improving masonry from the bottom towards the top. This was all covered with adobe plaster after construction.

A look at the finely shaped stones that were used in the latest style of masonry at Bonito, known as Type 4.

Pueblo Bonito sprawls across 2 acres, a large building even by modern standards.
