Bisti Badlands - First Dead End
by Debra Martz
Title
Bisti Badlands - First Dead End
Artist
Debra Martz
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Bisti Badlands - First Dead End by Debra Martz After we made it to the Red Hill Saddletop, rounded the right side and saw a long line of charcoal black hills with tumbling rocks. We saw some footprints and followed but they soon disappeared and we soon hit our first dead end. We tried a number of different ways in and each ended the same. No way through and too fragile of a landscape to go over the top. Time to reevaluate!
I ran across the Bisti Badlands/De-Na-Zin Wilderness a few years ago while searching for new places to see in New Mexico. Finally the time came that we would make the trip there. The closest lodging and RV parks are in Farmington and we arrived just before the visitors center closed. Oddly enough they only had one printed letter size paper with some latitude/longitude directions with a few very small pictures. The lady I spoke with knew the badlands existed but having lived there 14 years had never gone to see this unearthly type of beauty.....because, she said, "there are no restrooms." What? Oh well.... I picked up the Farmington Vacation Guide and found a little more info in it. And I quote, "If you want high-priced, slickly manufactured entertainment, go to Disneyland; if you want a cinematic prism through which to have a multi-dimentional experience, consider the Badlands of the Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness. That fact there are no marked trails in Bisti leads to a freeform style of wandering, where the paths you choose are entirely up to you and your instincts. These are badlands, meaning you will be exposed to the elements and there are no water sources, so it is important to prepare accordingly." And as the lady said, "No facilities!"
As for the free-form style of wandering, it is important to find the taller land-forms as markers....they even disappear as you wander so make some cairns when possible. Just when you think you know where you are going, its a dead end and you turn around and select another route. It is a maze out there and I quickly discovered how someone could easily get lost...as my husband and I didn't agree on each and every turn we needed to make!
Uploaded
October 13th, 2017
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Viewed 723 Times - Last Visitor from Tempe, AZ on 04/23/2024 at 4:29 AM
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