Showing posts with label Nations of the Four Corners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nations of the Four Corners. Show all posts

Sunday, August 25, 2019

Nations of the Four Corners/Nations Natural Bridge/Westwater Ruins Travel Guide.

Nations of the Four Corners is a cultural center honoring those who added to the history of the area: Ute, Navajo, Hispanic, and Pioneer.


Location is within the town of Blanding; 21.1 miles south of Monticello along Hwy 191 right onto West 500 South, go 6/10ths of a mile to access parking area.




Five (5) mile loop hiking trail (maintained gravel/dirt) featuring replicas of Pioneer, Hispanic & Native American home life; an observation tower and Prayer Arch.

There is also a five (5) mile loop trail (dirt/rock) to the overlook of Westwater Ruins aka Five (5) Kiva Pueblo & to the one (1) Natural Bridge.

Open year round; open to school field trips, general public & tourists.

Admission: Free.

An across the canyon view of the Natural Bridge & Westwater Ruins is located on West 1600 South.

Website: https://www.sanjuanfoundationutah.org/

Address: 580 South 650 West, Blanding, UT, 84511

Phone: (435) 678-4000


Nations of the Four Corners/Nations Natural Bridge/Westwater Ruins

Location: From Nations of the Four Corners, go east on 500 South to return to Hwy. 191 (6/10ths of a mile), make right onto Hwy.191 to go south to 1600 South (USU Trucking School on corner) (1.1 mile).  Make right onto 1600 South.  The paved road dead ends at Utah Department building; continue onto dirt/gravel road to the left (CR 232 aka Ruins Rd.).



Nations Natural Bridge



Travel 1.2 miles to a pull-in for Nations Natural Bridge; there will be a sign indicating the Natural Bridge.

Westwater Ruins aka Five Kiva Ruins



Westwater Ruins aka Five Kiva Pueblo is an outstanding example of ancestral architecture of a cliff dwelling that was occupied about 750 BC to 1275 AD.  Although inhabited from Basketmaker to Pueblo III, the current set of ruins is primarily Pueblo III.  The broad flat plaza of the main central area is the location of the kivas; storage and housing rooms are the room blocks seen behind.  A natural spring in the canyon would account for why the ancestral Puebloans chose this area to reside in.

Continue along road to Westwater Ruins aka Five (5) Kiva Ruins; keep an eye on the canyon walls to the right of the road as there are granaries tucked into it.  The road dead ends at an unpaved parking lot (5/10ths of a mile from the natural bridge), Westwater Ruins can be seen across the canyon, facing northward.  There is a steep, yet easy to hike, trail (dirt & rock), downward to the edge of the canyon face where an unobstructed view of the ruins can be seen.

Total mileage from Nations of the Four Corners to Westwater Ruins is 3.4 miles.

Nations of the Four Corners also has picnic areas, so pick up a meal and enjoy the scenery.

Mary Cokenour

Monday, March 17, 2014

Nations of the Four Corners

"Nations of the Four Corners" is a cultural center owned and operated by the San Juan Foundation(http://sanjuanfoundationutah.org); located in Blanding, Utah.  It encompasses the Westwater Canyon area which also includes Five Kiva Pueblo and Nations Natural Bridge and Edge of the Cedars Museum and State Park.  Nations is a self-guided tour park with no admission fee; a minimum five mile hike of the park itself is guaranteed, and there is additional hiking paths into the canyon itself.  Sounds great, but one thing is so wrong with all this...hardly anyone knows about it.  Unless you pick up a travel brochure (Utah - Trail of the Ancients - Nations of the Four Corners) at a welcome center, you don't have any idea of its existence.  Oh, there is a small sign on the corner of Main and 500 South (going westward) in Blanding, and I believe all it says is, "Cultural Center" or "Four Corners Cultural Center", but that's about it.  No huge advertisements to entice visitors to the park;  just another one of those little secrets...until now.

So, here we are in Blanding, on Route 191 (Main Street) again; going westward on 500 South will bring you to "Nations", but if you happen to make a turn going eastward, well then you'll just end up at Three Kiva Pueblo.  Win-win situation if you ask me.  Take 500 South westward until you reach the park; there will be a very small parking area just to the right, but a much larger one to the left.  There will be an informational board there also, but the map...yeah, better make sure you have one of those brochures I mentioned; you're going to need it.




If you look in the upper left of the map, there is a mention of Five Kiva Pueblo and Nations Natural Bridge; aren't you glad I did that write up yesterday and how to get to it!  Now it's about a five mile hike to and from the Pueblo and Bridge, but it's about the same mileage if you just stay in the main section of the park.  It took us two and a half hours to complete it; that included the sites, going into the hogans and buildings, taking photos and enjoying the most beautiful scenery ever.  No wonder we were so exhausted, we drove to 1600 South to get to the other sites; no way we were doing another five miles!


Roy and I began the adventure from the far end of the parking area near the Navajo Hogan; yeah, we aren't ones for following directions too well, so bypassed that star at the entrance.  Even though the hogan was constructed as an exhibit for the park, it was still fascinating; all that mud plastered over the hand-hewn beams.  Outside the hogan is a pioneer's wagon with beams and a picnic table under a wooden beamed awning (just one of several in the park). 










Now follow that gravel path to the Pioneer Site, to see how they lived back in the 1800's. I don't know about you, but I won't be giving up my indoor plumbing or electricity any time soon.




 
 
 
 Follow another gravel path to the Hispanic Site; this is even more sparse than the Pioneer Site!  There is a corral to the side rear of the building.


 
 
Hope you enjoyed those nicely graded gravel paths; now we're going full primitive trail: dirt, rocks, potholes and lots of unevenness.  The map indicates that the Observation Tower (center site) can be reached from basically every other site in the park, so we left that part for last.  Instead we trekked over the primitive trail to the Dine Site which has a male Hogan (pointed roof), female Hogan (rounded roof), an earthen oven and a sweat lodge.  You definitely have the feeling of going back in time in this area; it's almost a magical atmosphere surrounding you.

Female Hogan

Male Hogan

Earthen Oven

Sweat Lodge
 
 
We bypassed all the trails that lead out to the far canyon area and kept going around the edge; sometimes the trail is not well marked, so you'll have to wing it.  Our main goal was to find Prayer Arch and the scenery along the primitive trail was well worth all the rough walking.

 
 
The trail to Prayer Arch is rough; it also leads you out of the park to the Blanding campus of Utah State University.  Of course you would have to walk the residential streets back to the "Nations" parking lot where you left your vehicle, and what fun it that.  Anyway, even though the trail is rough, the scenery is beautiful; about 1/4 of a mile along the way, look across the canyon and you'll see a small cliff dwelling.




 
 
 
At the entrance to Prayer Arch, the trail gets sandier and ascends; you're looking around for the arch, suddenly you see it and it's a "Wow!" moment.  The arch itself is actually separated from the back wall; there are several small samples of "rock art" on this wall, near the upper right section.  The algae on the wall, however, makes it difficult to see, and to discern if it is actual primitive art, or more modern scratchings.
 
                                                                                                                       Prayer Arch


 
Backtracking the half mile to the Observation Tower and spectacular views of, not just the park sites, but the surrounding areas.  Nearby are the "Marriage Trees"; a tradition that dates back to numerous ancient cultures and continues to this day.  After a couple marries and moves to their new home, a pair of trees is planted, so as the relationship between the couple grows and matures, so do the trees.  By the way, you'll be back on those nicely graded gravel trails again.

 
 
By this time we were physically exhausted and all we had on our mind was getting back to the SUV and getting a well deserved meal.  There you have it though, "Nations of the Four Corners" and another of those secrets you should NOT miss out on.
 
Mary Cokenour