Steens Road is 22.7 miles from the the intersection of Main and Center Streets in Monticello, heading north on Route 191; after you go down a small dip in the road and cross over an arroyo, you'll see a sign and the road to your right. To the left though is another road which is Old Highway 191 and can also handle ATVs and 4-wheel drive vehicles; it takes you all the way up to Wilson Arch on Route 191.
The staging area for Hook and Ladder is 1.2 miles up Steens Road; at the informational board is a box which holds free maps. Sometimes the box is empty and the local welcome center might not have any either; go to the SPEAR (San Juan Public Entry & Access Rights) site at: http://www.Spear4All.com , click on Maps (http://www.spear4all.com/maps.htm) , choose the route(s) you want and print it(them) out.
Dwarf Evening Primrose scattered throughout the staging area. |
At 2.5 miles you reach Red Rock; this formation can be seen from Lisbon Valley Road and looks like a castle or gothic mansion. From Steens Road, it looks like a sleeping stegosaurus from one angle or an elephant's head between its front feet from another angle. Stop though and take in the scenery of the road you just traveled up; isn't that beautiful?
At mile mark 5.1, the road splits off; straight ahead CR 114 continues down into a canyon and beyond; it becomes very rough riding and is best for ATVs or specialized 4-wheel drive vehicles. There are several other trails that lead to closed off areas due to poisonous gas from the pipelines throughout.
Canaigre Dock (Buckwheat family) grows throughout the riverbed |
So there's Steens Road for you; Hook and Ladder I hope to explore at another time, but wait, this adventure tale is not over yet. Doing my research about Steens Road, I saw mention of "Macomb Arch" and two posted photos of it; only problem, no substantial information about it. Online map sites listed it as "Name Unrecognized", or a little ballon vaguely positioned between East Canyon Road (CR 105) and Lisbon Valley Road. I couldn't even find out why it was named as such online or in any of my San Juan County books; probably some rancher named Macomb who lived or still lives out there is my best guess.
Anyway, heading back south on Route 191, I made the turn onto East Canyon Road (CR 105) to see if I could find this arch; a photocopy along to help me recognize the landscape. At mile mark 2.7, a shaft of sunlight going through the arch helped me find the location; unfortunately, a road at mile mark 4.7 ends at a closed gate, so that wasn't getting me out there. These photos are the best I could do with my zoom lens, until I can finally find the correct road out to it. It looks to be part of Deer Neck Mesa, so I've got a pretty good idea of two possible ways.
Macomb Arch |
Deer Neck Mesa |
...and that's that for this write up.
Mary Cokenour