Experiencing Seven Mile Canyon Petroglyphs with Author and Naturalist Craig Childs
On October 15, 2008, I was up early enough in the 
morning to see the full moon, as it descended behind the Moab Rim.  In 
anticipation of my first day at "Confluence – A Celebration of Reading 
and Writing in Moab", I drove to the Moab Arts and Recreation Center.  Unlike the many public activities at Confluence, the intensive writing seminar was limited to only twenty-four individuals.
Moments after finding my group of seven fellow writers, we loaded ourselves into a passenger van provided by the Canyonlands Field Institute.  None of us knew our destination for a day of hiking and writing.  Having renowned author and expert on the desert southwest, Craig Childs as our personal guide for the day made those prospects even more exciting.
Heading north on U.S. Highway 191, we crossed the Colorado River, then drove through the notch of the Moab Fault, a deep gorge that features the main entrance to Arches National Park.  Five more miles up the road, we turned west on State Highway 313, which leads to Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point, a Utah State Park.
Only a mile or two from that junction, our van 
slowed and then our driver turned on to an unmarked road-stub.  We all 
piled out of the van, and then surveyed the surrounding area.  Knowing 
that Craig Childs had spent many months of his life hiking in and around
 the Moab area, we were curious why he would choose what appeared to be 
such an undistinguished spot to start our day.
Not knowing what to expect, we crossed the highway 
and walked west toward a canyon wall, where the sunshine had begun to 
warm the morning air.  Once we reached a suitable place for our group to
 sit and listen, we quieted down and Craig Childs, the master of the 
canyons, spoke.
After cautiously placing myself into Craig’s 
perceptual landscape, it became easier to see the uniqueness of that 
place, which was one of an infinite number of potential stops along that
 road.  Having driven Highway 313 many times before, I knew that the 
landscape along that road was itself a paradox.  On one hand, the 
highway meets our human needs to get somewhere.  After passing photo 
spots of drama and beauty, the road ends at the equally dramatic Dead 
Horse Point.  No one would dispute the beauty of the famous visual attractions
 near the end of the road.  Yet, if one stops along the lower portion of
 the road, he or she will also find an abundance of unique and beautiful
 micro-environments.
After completing our first small writing exercise, 
Craig stood and invited us to follow him around the far side of a large 
boulder.  There, only a few yards away, were many examples of Native American rock art
 incised into the desert varnish of the canyon walls.  Unlike many of 
the pictographs and petroglyphs that are visible from local roads, this 
great art had remained untouched since its creation.  According to the 
style of that rock art, members of the Fremont Culture
 created it sometime between 600 and 1250 CE.  If one needed a better 
example of Craig Child’s contention that there is unimaginable beauty 
available throughout the Canyonlands area, this art gallery, created by 
grand and ancient masters humbled me into recognition and belief.
Soon, it was time to start our trek up the broad, 
flat wash of Seven Mile Canyon.  Again crossing the road, we gathered 
beneath a cottonwood tree.  Although Seven Mile Canyon is open to both 
hikers and motorized vehicles, that morning we saw no one other than our
 group for the first two hours of our hike.  With non-native bulrushes 
partially overgrowing the entrance to the canyon, the driver of a 
full-sized vehicle would scrape off a lot of paint in order to run that 
gauntlet and pass through into the canyon itself.
While walking up-canyon, we began to feel the warmth
 and dryness of the desert environment.  Frequent breaks for water 
helped facilitate our passage along the soft sands of the canyon 
bottom.  Stopping in the shade of a cottonwood grove, Craig asked us to 
take off our shoes and feel the canyon sands beneath our feet.  Once 
barefoot, each of us took off in our own direction.  Our assignment was 
to find a place to sit and write about the feeling of being in touch 
with the canyon on that bright October morning.
When seasonal rains visit, the spot where we stood 
becomes a waterfall and receiving pool of a size and power that would 
drive any human back to a safe distance.  On this day, there was no 
water pitching over the precipice and the receiving pool was dry.
As with our previous stop, we found one wall of our secret canyon alcove covered with both Fremont Culture and Archaic Era rock art.  Once 
again, we found no sign that anyone had visited this sacred spot since 
the last of the pre-Puebloan Indians chipped and painted their artwork into these walls.
 covered with both Fremont Culture and Archaic Era rock art.  Once 
again, we found no sign that anyone had visited this sacred spot since 
the last of the pre-Puebloan Indians chipped and painted their artwork into these walls.
If you were to take the stone-age tools available to
 the ancients and attempt to make your own mark upon these walls, it is 
likely that you would quit before you created anything of note.  Scientists estimate
 that each incised figure might take several weeks to complete.  For 
that reason, the defacement of more accessible rock art is often in the 
form of bullet holes or surface scratches across the face of the 
artwork.  How and why did members of these ancient cultures take the 
time and put forth the incredible effort necessary to decorate their 
home canyons?
Our theory is that before European contact, there were times of lush abundance in the Canyonlands. 
 Being efficient hunters and gatherers, good years allowed the ancients 
to fill their granaries with enough food to take them through the 
harshest of winters.  In the best of years, their larders might be full 
by summer’s end, leaving leisure time sufficient for the ancients to 
pursue an activity that motivates almost every human culture.  That is a
 desire to tell their story to other humans and other cultures who might
 later visit these canyons.  
On a beautiful fall day, not unlike the one we spent
 among their galleries, the ancients may have carved and painted the 
story of their lives, their hunts and their spirit guides into these 
sacred canyon walls.  To me, it felt like they had just been there, 
suspending their chipping and carving as we approached.  Hearing our 
voices, had they retreated to be with their ancestors, waiting patiently
 for us to leave before returning to their timeless work? 
Thank you to Craig Childs and the Confluence 
Organization for transporting our group to a special place, where our 
contemporary world and the Canyonlands of our pre-Puebloan Indian 
ancestors converge.  As with so many lessons in human life, we found 
that the similarities between them and us are far greater than the 
differences we so easily perceive.

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