“The desert is a reliquary, its dryness and gradual pace preserving most of what people deposited on their way through. When the Anasazi walked away from this region some seven hundred years ago, they left it like a made house, everything in its place.”
— Craig Childs, House of Rain: Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest
“Perhaps among the ashes, sherds, and crumbling walls we may find a strange and unexpected sort of wisdom.”
— Richard W. Lang, from an informational sign at the Anasazi Heritage Museum
For the next part of our road trip, my sister-in-law and I traveled to the southwest corner of Colorado to explore Anasazi (Ancestral Pueblo) culture. After reading about guided tours in the Ute Mountain Tribal Park in the April 2011 issue of National Geographic Traveler, I was very interested in experiencing this “off the beaten track” access to the remnants of Anasazi life. (You can link to the article here: http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/ute-mountain-tribal-park-traveler/.) The Ute Mountain Tribal Park promised to be something special because National Geographic Traveler had designated the it as one of “80 World Destinations for Travel in the 21st Century,” and it is one of only nine U.S. destinations to be selected for the list.
We signed up for a half-day tour. There were five of us, plus our driver and a Ute guide. We stopped at several rock art and ruin sites in the Mancos Valley in hot, dry mesa country. The ground at all of these sites was littered with pottery sherds representative of the black-on-white pottery characteristic of Anasazi culture. We were free to pick them up and handle them, as long as we put them back as we found them. This is so different from Mesa Verde National Park, where all remnants have been removed and cataloged, and the sites are cleaned up.

The sherds would have come from black-on-white pottery like these artifacts, which I photographed at the Anasazi Heritage Museum in Dolores, CO.
We saw a couple of ruins of the cliff dwellings typical of Anasazi architecture, but the rock art was the highlight of the tour. Some of the petroglyphs reflected the Anasazi interest in celestial alignments apparent during the solstice and equinox, or in predictions of other astronomical events. The painted pictographs of the Ute, from 1600 – 1930, depicted more “modern” images — horses, cowboys, etc.