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Monument Valley

After leaving the Painted Desert, we began our journey northward. Next stop: Monument Valley, a Navajo Tribal Park on the border of Arizona and Utah. This place is home to some spectacular rock formations, very different from Painted Desert. We stayed with Celia and Steven, a Navajo couple with a home just outside the Tribal Park, for a couple days.

Wanda2 parked at Celia’s in the Navajo Tribal Park. Three other visitors are sharing the space with us.
We took a walk with Gracie into the desert bordering Celia’s homestead. This is looking back at the campground and the surrounding scene.

The second day of our stay we toured the park with Shawn Holiday, a tour leader with Mitten View Tours.

We didn’t understand the significance of the “Mitten View” name until we began the tour and spent some time viewing the Mittens formation that has become a symbol of this park. The two mesas have eroded spires that look like (very slender) thumbs on a pair of mittens.

A nice view of the Mittens as we rode by in our tour truck
West, or Left, Mitten
Our tour guide enjoyed playing with pano shots on my phone’s camera

Moving further into the park, we encountered this formation, known as the Three Sisters. Or, as “W” for “Welcome”!

Monument Valley has been used as a setting for more movies than probably any location, for many decades. Famous movie personalities such as John Ford and John Wayne have locations named for them in the park.

Here we are on John Ford Point, standing on the edge of an outcropping admiring the surrounding scenery.

This dinosaur bone is embedded in the surface of the rock at John Ford Point.

There are so many formations in this park that look like something else.

A submarine surfacing
A pile of clamshells
This one is just known as The Hub
Another submarine, this one is diving perhaps?
A pair of aristocratic heads surveying the scene
The Thumb.
The Thumb from another angle becomes John Wayne’s Boot.

Caves abound in the area too. Here is one that was used for shelter by the early Anasazi.

Another that made a great spot to hide and set up an ambush.

As we made our way further into the park we came to a couple of really large caves that were more like amphitheaters. Gracie experimented with the echo that her barking produced in there, until we had to bring her out.

Standing inside the first amphitheater
The second amphitheater, called the Eye of the Sun, has a hole shaped like an eye in its roof.
There is an anvil-shaped rock standing outside the entrance.
Inside there are petroglyphs on the walls.
There are also pottery fragments and stone tools on the floor.
Our guide explaining that the clay used to make pottery was harvested all over the valley floor.

Near these caves was a wall absolutely covered in a wonderful mural of petroglyphs.

This one was my favorite!
I also liked this frog.

Toward the end of our tour, we came to a formation known as the North Window. It creates a frame around a beautiful distant scene.

Of course it was also a good subject for photographic humor.

Monument Valley is another not-to-be-missed experience as you travel through the desert in Arizona. Of course, the Grand Canyon is the star attraction in the state, and it is a breathtaking. Don’t miss it! But also don’t pass up these lesser-known but unique natural wonders along the way.

After we finished our tour of the park with Shawn, he dropped us off at Celia’s. She prepared us a meal of Navajo tacos, which are made with Navajo fry bread in place of tortillas. Delicious! And then we got some sleep in preparation for our trip to Glen Canyon the next day.

One response to “Monument Valley”

  1. I’m loving your posts Sue, each more spectacular, and Monument Valley looks just extraordinary. What an awesome voyage you are all having. Thank you for bringing us along, and finding the time to write!

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