Hovenweep Road Disappears & Reappears Near Hovenweep National Monument
In late April 2012, I departed Moab, Utah, heading  toward Hovenweep  National Monument, 120 miles southeast. My first 89 miles were on U.S.  Highway 191, transiting through Monticello and Blanding, Utah.  Fifteen miles south of Blanding, my Magellan GPS directed me to turn east on Utah  State Route 262. 
Although Magellan was on course, I was not. Blanding rests at 6000 feet 
in  elevation. As you descent into the desert, each hill begins to look 
like the  last one. Near the bottom of the third long hill, I approached
 the UT-262 East  the turn-off. Making that turn with my travel trailer 
in tow required unusual  discretion. Carrying a speed of 55 MPH over the
 top of the hill meant that I was  doing 65 MPH near the bottom, and all
 without touching the throttle. I applied  the brakes and downshifted 
out of overdrive. Friction creates heat. With my  truck and trailer 
brakes engaged, I hoped that the brakes on my rig would not  fade. 
With
 over five tons of metal accelerating downhill, I downshifted into third
  gear and let the engine roar. While applying my brakes, I dropped the 
shifter  into Second and watched the engine rev up to 4200 RPM. Having 
had the good sense  to preset my trailer brakes for highway speeds, I 
felt them work in unison with  the big disk brakes on my 2006 Nissan Titan.  My rolling rocket ship responded in kind, slowing to about 45 MPH. 
The only problem was that I needed to be below 25 MPH in order to make 
the turn.  At that point, it was “do or die”, so I applied the brakes 
even harder and hoped  for the best. My “bail out” was to release the 
brakes and roll on past the  intersection, but no one wants to hear 
Magellan say, “When possible, make a  legal U-turn”. As I safely made 
the turn, the abundant skid marks and stray  gravel on the road spoke to
 me. They said, “Jim, your successful outcome here  and now is no cause 
for celebration”. 
When
 I found myself facing east on UT-262, I took a deep breath and then 
looked  for a place to pull over. This was at least the third time I had
 traveled from  Moab to Hovenweep  National Monument.
 Unbelievably, this was my best job yet negotiating that  crucial left 
turn. Please remember that your perception of time, distance and  
vertical motion are different in the High Southwest. As Jim Morrison
 so  aptly sang, “Keep your eyes on the road and your hands upon the 
wheel”. Watch  closely for the highway signs and keep your downhill 
speed below the posted  speed limit. Otherwise, you too might miss your 
turn toward Hovenweep. 
Soon, Utah Hwy. 262 began to show its age. Almost from the start, there 
were  almost no shoulders on the sides of the road. For the first nine 
miles, the road  was narrow, harsh and unforgiving. At that point, 
Highway UT-262 turned to the  south, leaving me on old Hovenweep Road, 
which is also designated Indian Route  5099. Although my Magellan GPS 
had performed flawlessly until that point, its  digital mainspring was 
about to uncoil.
Although Hovenweep  National Monument
 is remote from any settlement larger than a trading post,  it is a 
targeted destination for many motorists. With her database in full  
failure mode, Magellan’s siren-sweet voice tried to lead me astray. 
“Turn left  at the next opportunity”, she declared. Such tactics may 
have lured Ulysses onto  an ancient, rocky coastline, but not me. Her 
voice intended to deceive me. “Ha!”  I said, “This is like  déjà vu all over again”. This was my third trip to Hovenweep along this  road. Had I learned anything? 
Slowly, my thoughts came back to me. Long ago, in Navajo land I had  learned to disbelieve Magellan’s driving directions. Just try to drive from Gallup, New Mexico to Chaco Canyon
 with  only Magellan as your guide. Twice in the past, Magellan had 
failed me there.  Smugly, I concluded that no one at Magellan or its 
database creators had ever  traveled these roads. If they had, they 
would not suggest a shortcut that starts  at the washout of Montezuma 
Creek and then winds for miles over rough terrain. 
The
 first algorithmic rule for GPS databases should be, “If there is an  
alternative route over paved-roads, suggest it.” In order to do that, 
one must  know firsthand if a road exists. If so, is paved or gravel? 
Only by placing the  mapmakers’ eyes in the real world will such things 
ever change. Meanwhile, the  Spirit of the Ancients sits around a 
celestial campfire, looking down at us and  having a good laugh. Come 
on, mapmakers; none ever died wishing that they had  spent more time in 
the office.
After Magellan suggested a hard left turn up a steep and curving gravel 
road, I  stopped to consult my trusty DeLorme Utah Atlas & 
Gazetteer. Later, while looking at Google Maps, I could  see why 
Magellan got it wrong. From Hatch Trading Post to Hovenweep on paved 
roads requires a roundabout tour to  the south, via Reservation Road 
2416 and San Juan County Road 413. Just south of  Hatch Trading Post, 
that paved route crosses Montezuma Creek on a contemporary  highway 
bridge. Just south of that bridge is where Magellan suggested a make a  
hard left turn. 
Had I taken that route, it would have soon connected me with a graveled extension of  “Hovenweep Road”, also called San Juan County Road 212. If one follows that  gravel road, it is indeed the original and shorter route to Hovenweep National  Monument.
 With its “Hovenweep Road” moniker, that gravel route is only ten  miles
 long, but takes thirty-eight minutes. The paved route to the south is  
longer, but takes only twenty-nine minutes.
If you are familiar with Google Street View, you know that Google camera
 cars  have traversed almost every paved road in America. Magellan, for 
its part, has  outsourced its database to either the incompetent or the 
knowledgeable. The Navajo Nation is the  largest Native American tribe in the U.S. Although their reservation abuts the Four Corners
 on three  sides, Magellan treats it like a no-man’s land. Rich with 
cultural heritage, it  behooves Magellan to provide accurate directions 
throughout the region.  Magellan’s users need to know that they can 
follow paved roads to such treasures  as Hovenweep National Monument.
Once
 I got past the Magellan database errors, I had a pleasant ride to  
Hovenweep. To the sides of the road I saw occasional Navajo dwellings. 
Whether  any one of them was occupied or abandoned, I could not say. 
Were these empty  houses awaiting their owner’s return or were they the 
abandoned relics of a time  before the Dine’ (Navajo) moved to the 
cities. Other major features on the land  consisted of natural gas wells
 and occasional water wells. The gas wells  utilized propane fuel to 
spin their flywheels, while the water wells featured Aermotor windmill
  pumps. Although windmills usually indicate that cattle will be grazing
 nearby,  the only wildlife in view that day consisted of wild horses.
Even in April, the desert was extremely dry. Little water ran in the 
major  watercourses and there were no waterholes visible on the mesa. 
For the wild  horses, finding sufficient forage and water defines their 
constant battle for  life over death. Few of the horses looked well fed 
or well watered. In order to  conserve energy or to beg a meal, many 
untamed horses stay close to the road.  Although they were clearly wild,
 most of the horses barely moved when I stopped  to photograph them. 
 One
 exception that day was a palomino stallion that I startled as he 
crossed the  landscape. In order to photograph the horse, I had to make a
 U-turn and then  stop on the gravel apron of a desolate crossroad. With
 all of the noise and  commotion that I had caused, the palomino caught 
wind of me. As he galloped  across an arroyo, I had time to capture only
 one image of the horse. As I later  zoomed in on that image, I realized
 that his ribs were showing, indicating  severe environmental stress. If
 I could rewind and redo my actions that day, I  would not have pursued 
and further stressed that beautiful animal with my  vehicle or on foot.
One
 exception that day was a palomino stallion that I startled as he 
crossed the  landscape. In order to photograph the horse, I had to make a
 U-turn and then  stop on the gravel apron of a desolate crossroad. With
 all of the noise and  commotion that I had caused, the palomino caught 
wind of me. As he galloped  across an arroyo, I had time to capture only
 one image of the horse. As I later  zoomed in on that image, I realized
 that his ribs were showing, indicating  severe environmental stress. If
 I could rewind and redo my actions that day, I  would not have pursued 
and further stressed that beautiful animal with my  vehicle or on foot.
As I approached Little Ruin  Canyon at Hovenweep National Monument, the grand  Sleeping Ute Mountain
 appeared to the east. Although many of the place names  throughout the 
High Southwest are fanciful in their origins, Sleeping Ute  Mountain 
lives up to its name. With his head in the north and his feet in the  
south, the ancient spirit of the mountain appears to be at rest. As I 
approached  the campground at Hovenweep National Monument near sundown, I
 held my breath,  hoping to find an open campsite large enough to 
accommodate my rig.
         
By James McGillis at 06:52 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

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