Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Inaccessible House Trail

Inaccessible House is located below the east rim of Navajo Canyon in Ute Mountain Tribal Park in southwest Colorado. It is rarely visited, but is included on a special tour along with the nearby Casa Colorado ruins site. The trail head is in the area south of the Mesa Top Tour at the south end of Mesa Verde National Park. This hike has been offered once per year since 2009.

The trail runs south along the Navajo Canyon east rim to an unnamed side canyon where the Casa Colorado ruins sits at the side canyon head. A rough trail descends into the side canyon and turns back toward the main canyon and runs under the rim. The Inaccessible House site is above the trail at a somewhat awkward viewing angle, and seems to be very well preserved.

At the canyon junction a short distance before the site there are some historic inscriptions from some of the early visitors to the area. The 2009 hike was guided by one of the experts in the history of Mesa Verde and there was a good discussion of who the inscribers were and what their roles were in the early history of the area. There are several inscriptions on the canyon walls here.

The trail continues past the Inaccessible House site to another alcove that has only rubble piles remaining but also has a small reddish pictograph panel.

The wrecked nature of this alcove site was attributed to rough use during the pot hunter era of the early 1900s. This second site has several grinding and sharpening sites also.

Beyond the second alcove there is a small granary site. The trail along here was reasonably good despite not much maintenance over the years. The Ute Mountain Tribal Park has mostly left these sites in the state that they were found. Pottery shards are visible and remain in place as all hikes here are guided. I noticed a second granary site on the return hike near the inscription rock, so there are three intact ruins in this area plus the pictograph alcove.

Inaccessible House doesn’t appear to be a place that anyone would have resided in, maybe it is a special use site. It is hard even to see it.

The quality of the stonework seems to be particularly fine here. The stones that are visible seem to be very well shaped.
There isn’t any room to step back and get a good view. Our tour group visited this site and those with enough energy left continued on to nearby but harder to get to Casa Colorado. On the 2011 hike the order of the visits was reversed. Casa Colorado was visited first. Casa Colorado is an easier site to view but the trail to Inaccessible House has more features.

On the 2011 return hike, there is a view point for Inaccessible House from the rim. The total tour in 2009 took about 6:30 hours with about half the time spent at each of the two sites. The 2011 tour took about 5:00 hours, with less time spent on Casa Colorado. The distance covered was about 3 miles but the route was somewhat difficult and required some scrambling up and dwn in the rocky environment.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Casa Colorado Trail

Casa Colorado is a rarely visited Ancestral Pueblo cliff dweller ruins site in Ute Mountain Tribal Park in southwest Colorado. Ute Mountain Tribal Park offers guided full day and half day tours and a few special tours such as this hike to Casa Colorado and Inaccessible House. The 2009 summer season was the first year this hike was offered and it was offered once also in 2010 and 2011.


The trail head area for Casa Colorado is accessed at the south end of Mesa Verde National Park in the vicinity of the Mesa Top Pit House to Pueblo self guided tour. This is the same beginning area for the Pool Canyon Trail, another of the rarely offered Ute Mountain tours. After a short drive across the park boundary the hike begins along the east rim of Navajo Canyon.

The popular Spruce Tree Canyon area is a side canyon to the north of this section of larger Navajo Canyon. The hike along the rim is about 0.5 miles to an unnamed side canyon with Casa Colorado at the head of this short side canyon.

There were at least 3 ruins sites visible across the Navajo Canyon the west side. One of them we thought was named Casa Blanca and there also appears to be a tower visible. You would need binoculars to see these distant sites very well. At the canyon bottom there appears to be an old road.

There is an old 1930s era trail just below the rim heading east to toward the ruins site but it is unmaintained and wasn’t obvious on the outward leg. In 2009, most of our group made their way slowly through the Pinon Pine and Juniper forest but mostly not on any trail. The route was somewhat difficult and there was some scrambling through and over the jumbled rocks. The distance was only about 0.3 miles and the ruins site was visible most of the way.

On the 2011 hike to Casa Colorado, the tour stayed on the north rim of the side canyon and circled around the canyon head, then approached the Casa Colorado site from the south side. Those who wanted could try to descend down to the next ledge and view the site from the right side.

Casa Colorado is difficult to approach no matter which way you try. The 2011 approach involved some tricky climbing.

The trail approaches from the left side. It was possible, though not easy, on the 2009 hike, to approach the Casa Colorado closely from the right side by descending to the canyon bottom and climbing up the other side. It looked like the right side would have been the main entrance.

In 2009, a few of our active group chose to climb to the canyon rim from this right side of the site, going out over the top of the ruin, but most returned back the way we came. In 2011 the right side climb was the guided way in. The return trip was a little easier, and was mostly on the old trail below the rim.

The total hike to Casa Colorado and nearby Inaccessible House was about 6:30 hours with about half the time spent at each site. The total distance was only about 3 miles but the going wasn’t easy and there was a lot of lingering at each site.





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