Showing posts with label Winslow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winslow. Show all posts

5/04/2014

May 2 to 4, 2014 Winslow and Flagstaff

Friday and Saturday

Our last two days in Winslow were hang out, catch up (laundry, clean, shopping), and figure out the next few weeks kind of days.  We actually did make reservations for mid June near Estes Park in Colorado.  I have wanted to spend some time there and in Rocky Mountain National Park but trying to get a space in the NP was all but impossible.  So we will be in Colorado in June (Annie N, will let you know as we get close – Smile)

Sunday, 4th

They were calling for high winds today so we were up early and on the road by 8 AM – on our way to Flagstaff via I-40.

We passed another one of these VORTAC – (Variable Omni-Range, Tactical Air Navigation) sites. They provide bearing/distance information for aircraft and form airway intersections or fixes.

More information here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHF_omnidirectional_range

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These buildings are near Twin Arrows, Arizona.  Some day we are going to explore and find out the real story on this ghost town:

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The mountains in the background are the San Francisco Peaks.  Humphreys Peak is the highest of these mountains and also the highest point in Arizona.  Humphreys Peak is also know to the Navajo as Abalone Shell Mountain, the Sacred Mountain of the West (part of the four sacred peaks of the Navajo).

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The wind picked up as we got closer to Flagstaff.  What amazes us is that you cannot tell how windy it is by the plants/trees along the roadway – they just don’t seem to move no matter how windy it is…

We arrived in Flagstaff too early to check in to the campground so we decided to make a stop at Sam’s Club.  From there we made our way to Greer’s Pine Shadows RV Park for just one night.

After setting up, we went to check out Bonito Campground, a few miles north where we will be going tomorrow.  Nice National Forest Campground – will have more pictures.

We finished this evening at Outback Steakhouse – for our anniversary dinner – Great time!

Note: There is no cell service at Bonita Campground so we will be off the grid for a while. I will try to post when we get into town.  Until then, stay tuned and enjoy today – Smile

Stats for today:

Miles Traveled: 68 miles (with a stop at Sam’s Club)

Routes Traveled:

Arizona:  McHood Park; SR99; SR87; I-40B; I-40; US89

 

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5/02/2014

May 1, 2014 Meteor Crater

Today’s adventure took us 30 miles west to Meteor Crater.  This was also an item on my bucket list even though I had been told it was very touristy.

First some information:

“About 50,000 years ago, a rock fragment broke away from the asteroid belt and hurtled towards earth. The rock, composed of nickel and iron, was about 50 meters across and weighed 300,000 tons. It was travelling at 40000 miles per hour. Upon entering the earth’s atmosphere it became a giant fireball that streaked across the North American sky. When it crashed into the plains of Arizona, it exploded with a force equal to 10 megatons or about 150 times the force of the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.

The violence of the impact vaporized the meteorite leaving little residue, but millions of tons of limestone and sandstone were blasted out covering the ground for a mile in every direction. When the dust settled, what remained was a crater over three quarters of a mile across and 750 feet deep. The impact occurred during the last ice age, a time when the Arizona landscape was cooler and wetter. The area was an open grassland dotted with woodlands inhabited by woolly mammoths and giant ground sloths. The force of the impact leveled the forest for miles around, hurling the mammoths across the plain and killing or severely injuring any animals unfortunate enough to be nearby.

As the landscape recovered, a lake formed in the bottom of the crater, and sediments accumulated until the bowl was only 550 feet deep. When the ice age ended, the climate changed and dried, preserving the crater from further erosion.

The crater has been named the Barringer Crater in honor of Daniel Barringer, who was first to suggest that it was produced by meteorite impact. It is also referred to simply as "Meteor Crater". The crater is located approximately 69 km east of Flagstaff, near Winslow in the northern Arizona desert of the United States. It is the largest impact crater yet discovered in the United States, and one of the best preserved on earth. Today the crater is about 1,200 meters in diameter, some 170 meters deep and is surrounded by a rim that rises 45 meter above the surrounding plains.

The origin of this crater has been a source of controversy for many years. Initially, the scientist community believed that such a crater cannot exist arguing that all natural landforms had been created slowly, over thousands or even millions of years, rather than in a single catastrophic moment.

Barringer, a mining engineer and businessman, was one of the first people to claim that the crater was the result of an impact, contradicting the most eminent scientists of his time. He was convinced that an iron-nickel core over 10 million tons lay beneath the floor of the crater, and in 1928, raised $200,000 from an investor promising a profit of $250 million on a mere half million dollar investment. But when the mine shaft hit nothing but water, an astronomer was consulted for his opinion on the size of the meteorite.

The astronomer F. R. Moulton calculated that the size of the meteorite to be 300,000 tons, or only 3% of the amount claimed by Barringer, and too small to justify any further drilling. In addition, Moulton argued that the energy of the impact would have resulted in the total vaporization of the meteorite itself.

Work on the mine was halted. Barringer lost nearly all of his own fortune, along with hundreds of thousands entrusted to him by his investors. Devastated by the loss, Daniel Barringer died of a massive heart attack on November 30, 1929.

It was not until 1960 that later research by Eugene Merle Shoemaker confirmed Barringer's hypothesis. The key discovery was the presence in the crater of the minerals coesite and stishovite, rare forms of silica found only where quartz-bearing rocks have been severely shocked by an instantaneous overpressure. It cannot be created by volcanic action; the only known mechanism of creating it is through an impact event.

Shoemaker's discovery is considered the first definitive proof of an extraterrestrial impact on the Earth's surface. Since then, numerous impact craters have been identified around the world, though Meteor Crater remains one of the most visually impressive owing to its size, young age, and lack of vegetative cover.

Meteor Crater is today a popular tourist attraction privately owned by the Barringer family through the Barringer Crater Company. There is a Visitor Center on the north rim that features interactive exhibits and displays about meteorites and asteroids, space, the solar system and comets. It also features a 1,406 pound meteorite found in the area, and meteorite specimens from Meteor Crater that can be touched. “

Barringer Crater official website

These photos were from the website.

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Photo credit

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I know… lots of information but I do have my own pictures – Smile.

When we arrived we went to see the 10 minute movie “Impact” – for an overview of what happened at Meteor Crater.  We wanted to go on the guided hike at 11:15 so we just hung out at the museum until the hike started.

The guided hike takes about an hour and the hike is on the rim of the crater.  The hike is 1 mile overall with various stops along the way.  Our guide told us of the history of the crater and the land that surrounds it plus all the geology involved – it was great!

Our guide was part Navajo and part Apache and one of the questions asked was “Were there any oral histories or stories about the crater in the Native cultures?”.  Apparently there is not BUT there is no sign of the Native Americans in this area.  Yet there is a lot of evidence about 20 miles in each direction.  Our guide believes that the Natives considered this an evil place, therefore, did not talk about it nor come near it.   Very interesting.

Okay, so here are some pictures.

The trail – only accessible with a guide:

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Meteor Crater:

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This was originally Barringer’s House and then the first visitor center:

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We first thought this was a mine but it was actually a storage shelter:

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The meteor caused a great overturning of the soils/rocks. The red rocks are the youngest rocks and should be on top of the others:

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According to our guide, the rock layers of this part of Arizona lay on top of each other.  In this picture you can see how the rocks are “pushed” upwards.  (I really wish I knew more about geology!)

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Guess who?

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This is called house rock because of it’s size (Big as a house – Smile):

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See the white spot?  This is the tail of a Cessna 150.  On August 8, 1964, a pair of commercial pilots flew low over the crater. After crossing the rim, they could not maintain level flight. The pilot attempted to build up speed by circling in the crater to climb over the rim. During the attempted climb out, the aircraft stalled, crashed, and caught fire. Both occupants were severely injured but survived their ordeal.  Part of the plane remained and the rest was put down the mine shaft.

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Some of Barringer’s mine shafts.  If you can enlarge the photo, you can see the entrance by the tailings:

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This is the bottom of the Crater.  On the far right there is one of the mine shafts.  The two black “things” on the left are the steam boiler and a winch.

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Can you see it?

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Another tour on the rim:

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There are three overlooks by the Visitor Center.  Here are some views from those overlooks:

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And a panoramic video too:

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What we found interesting is that many small fragments of the meteor were found scattered beyond the Crater:

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More interesting tidbits:

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If you are in this area, I would recommend a stop BUT… make sure you take the guided tour and see the two movies.  We learned so much from our guide.  (Also Google for a coupon – there is always a $2.00 on the web – Smile)  We were told this was a tourist trap and it can be without the guided tour and movies.

Another interesting day – Smile

Enjoy today!

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5/01/2014

April 30, 2014 La Posada and Winslow

During our travels over the last few years, I was fascinated with what Fred Harvey did for the railroad and especially for his Harvey girls.  In doing some of my research, I had read about the La Posada Hotel and put that on my bucket list.  Well, today, we decided to tour and have lunch at the hotel.

First some information:

"Posada embodies the visions of both Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter, the hotel’s renowned architect, and Allan Affeldt, its current owner. But the story really begins with Fred Harvey, who “civilized the west” by introducing linen, silverware, china, crystal, and impeccable service to railroad travel. (He was so legendary that MGM made a movie called The Harvey Girls starring Judy Garland.) Harvey developed and ran all the hotels and restaurants of the Santa Fe Railway, eventually controlling a hospitality empire that spanned the continent.

In the 1920s, Harvey decided to build a major hotel in the center of northern Arizona. “La Posada”—the Resting Place—was to be the finest in the Southwest. Construction costs alone exceeded $1 million in 1929. Total budget with grounds and furnishings was rumored at $2 million (about $40 million in today’s dollars). They chose Winslow, then (as now) the Arizona headquarters for the Santa Fe Railway. Winslow was ideally situated for a resort hotel since everything to see and do in northern Arizona is a comfortable day’s drive. They asked Colter to design the new hotel.

Colter worked for the Fred Harvey Company from 1905 until her retirement in the 1950s. Although famous for her magnificent buildings at the Grand Canyon, she considered La Posada her masterpiece. Here she was able to design or select everything from the structures to the landscape, furniture, maids’ costumes, and dinner china. Many people consider this the most important and most beautiful building in the Southwest.

La Posada opened May 15, 1930, just after the stock market crash of 1929, and remained open for just 27 years. In 1957, the hotel closed to the public. The museum-quality furnishings were auctioned off in 1959. In the early 1960s, much of the building was gutted and transformed into offices for the Santa Fe Railway. Several times over the ensuing 40 years, the building was nearly demolished, as recently as 1994 when the railway announced its plans to move out for good.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation found out about La Posada’s peril and added it to their endangered list — where it came to the attention of Allan Affeldt. But La Posada was never for sale. Allan Affeldt purchased it from the Santa Fe Railway after learning that the property was in danger. He visited the hotel in 1994 and decided to help local preservationists save it. This daunting task entailed negotiating for 3 years with the railroad and resolving various legal, environmental, and financial obstacles. He established La Posada LLC to take on the enormous risk and complexity of the estimated $12 million restoration. Allan and his wife Tina Mion moved in April 1, 1997. Daniel Lutzick became the third partner and General Manager.

Although none of the partners is a hotelier by training, they have accomplished what once seemed impossible—transforming a forgotten but magical place into a living museum.”

More information can be found here:

http://www.laposada.org/hotel_history.html

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The entrance:

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Everything was so elegant.  This is one of the sitting rooms.  On the right is a hallway with history of the hotel.  Notice the chess set on the table to the right.

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The TV room:

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The hallway from the first picture:

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One of the stairways to the rooms:

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The Turquoise Room where we had lunch:

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I was impressed when the waiter showed up as we sat and put the cloth napkins in our laps.  When Andy took the last sip of his soda, our waiter was right there with another glass.  WOW!  Our lunch was very good.

From there we continued our tour – this is another sitting room – library, fireplace, piano.  Another WOW!

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I took a quick picture of one of the rooms they were cleaning – how nice.  I can just imagine what it was like back in the thirties!

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The lobby and gift shop:

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From there we took a walk along the back of the hotel and watched the trains go by:

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The new owners story:

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What a wonderful visit!

From there we took a walk thru town – so many murals:

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And these cute signs all thru the town – reminiscent of traveling Route 66:

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The town has taken a six block area and is making a heritage area.  This is one of the exhibits:

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One of the original churches:

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We also found a nice surprise – one of Peter Toth’s Whispering Giants.

“Peter Wolf Toth arrived in Winslow in 1979, intent on adding one of his art works to the city’s landscape. When he left about four months later, he had turned a single ponderosa pine log into a 30-foot tall Indian head, and he left it there for posterity. The work was one in Toth’s series of giant heads that he carved in every state and four Canadian provinces. He called the effort “The Trail of the Whispering Giants,” and dedicated it to what he considered the mistreatment of Native Americans by early settlers and the federal government.”

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Another nice surprise was finding this 9-11 memorial with beams from the World Trade Center:

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Our last stop was the Winslow Elks Lodge where we met some great local folks and had a great time.

Another wonderful day!

We will continue our adventures tomorrow so stay tuned and enjoy today.

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