Showing posts with label ghosttowns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghosttowns. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2014

Jacob City Mine

I'm so far behind.  I'm just going to take the most recent pictures I have and work backwards from there until I get them all caught up.

Last Saturday we ended up with only Jayme and Sean.  

The Man decided it was high time we pull out the razors and give the kids some "driving lessons" out on the dirt trails.  


Plus, he just likes to find excuses to ride.

Which is okay with me.  I like to have an excuse to hang out with him all day.

West wanted to find the Jacob City loop.  There were old mines and there was supposed to be a ghost town, but being a pretty "public" area, there wasn't much left of actual buildings from people destroying them. Though we did find remnants of mining areas.  



And we found a few entrances for a mine or two.




The mine shafts that went straight down were far too deep of a hole for my liking.  I wouldn't go near them.  It gives my stomach butterflies just looking at this picture.

We let Jayme and Sean have their turn behind the wheel so they can start learning the ropes to driving and also to riding. 

We're usually a desert type folk and when we need to get out and away we usually flee south to Sand Hollow or Moab for the weekend.  Riding in a mountain setting was off our norm but I loved the change of pace and scenery. 



 At one point in the ride I had a little hitch hiker join me.



And she stuck around for a good few minutes, just enjoying the ride and, I'm sure, the company.


 We had a picnic lunch in the shade on some old cement foundation of some sort or other and called it day.

We rode back to the truck, loaded up the machines in the trailer and climbed inside.

I pulled down the visor mirror...


Do I have any dirt on my face?

A sure sign of a good time.

Nailed it.

If you're interested in visiting the Jacob City area you can get there from Stockton.  Head east on Silver Ave. and it will take straight up to the trailhead.  There's a loop trail there, or you can continue up the dirt past the trailhead to where the road forks.  Take the right that inclines down and that will take you to the sites pictured above.  You don't even need four-wheel drive to do it.  Though the road is only wide enough for one vehicle at a time so if you're not on a four wheeler of some sort you may want to park on the dirt road before heading down fork and just hoof it.  It's not that far of a walk from that point.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Roadtripping.

Winter doesn't bode well for our mental state.

We do realize that, as far as that's concerned, we live in the wrong state.

As it is, we found ourselves with a long kidless weekend over the President's Day holiday (which was also attached to the weekend of Valentine's Day) so The Man declared that he needed warmth and sun.  Being as I felt so inclined myself, we planned a trip south to St. George where there was the promise of at least 60 degree weather and sun.

Even if we didn't know what we were going to do down there, we were going, by golly.

I've been toying with a website, roadtrippers.com, for awhile now, and with the plans set to head south I thought I'd plug into that website to see if there were new things that we could see while were on our way down.

Four hours later I had more road trips planned than we'll be able to do in a year, but I also had to road trips planned for our weekend.

One that would take us down to St. George with two stops and one the following day that made a loop, starting and ending again in St. George with four stops.

We invited my parents to tag along on our loop drive.

We headed out mid Saturday morning, having no real agenda to stick to and no plans beyond just following the flow of what we felt like and seeing the stops on our way.

Generally I despise waking up so we didn't set any alarms and let ourselves get the sleep we needed.  We finished packing up our bags and made sure the dogs had plenty of food and water and toys so they wouldn't destroy the house.

And we set out.

The link to this particular road trip (with directions, a map, and description of the stops) can be found here.

Our first stop was the ghost town, Thistle, which was flooded out in the 80's.

We stopped at McD's in Spanish Fork before heading up the canyon to Thistle for breakfast and the mandatory Coke.


At first we couldn't understand why McD's would have a half fence.  And we didn't understand why they would hang a sign up asking if we liked it.  And why would they want us to tell them we like it for a free coupon?

But then we looked just beyond it and realized that the fence was just enough to block the displays of the windows in the adult shop that had been built next door.  Being a happily married couple, we're not against adult shops, but being a family type of folk we completely appreciated McD's efforts at keeping their establishment "family friendly."  So we told them we like their fence.  Because we really did.

And they really did give us a coupon for a free sandwich.

On our way out of McD's parking lot The Man spotted this bad... bug.


Our trip had only just begun and we were already laughing at the adventures that we'd found in just a McDonald's parking lot.

And the pressure was off.

We weren't racing to a destination to attend some event and trying to get somewhere as fast as we could to start our trip, for once, the journey really was what it was all about it.

It was relaxed and freeing.

Our GPS dude (The Man downloaded a skeleton hand and a creepy voice for me.  He likes to say things like, "Have you seen my spider?  It was crawling around here just a minute ago..." and, "You're driving like your life depends on it.  I like that," and, "Ignore the noises coming from the trunk.") led us straight to a submerged house that used to be part of Thistle.

It was surreal, to try and think that someone had lived there in my lifetime and the events that had taken place, leaving them with no home.







We stopped at an abandoned barn/work shop structure which was full of garbage and then parked on the shoulder and hiked uphill in the mud to another abandoned home that was affected by the flood.






You can almost feel the stories as you look these places, like the history is still tangible all around it.

There were other stops we could have seen on our way down to St. George, but I felt those stops would be better in the summertime we so we drove back to I-15 and headed south.

We detoured in Leeds to see the stop of Silver Reef which is an old mining town, now set up as a museum.  The only place where silver has been found in sandstone.






My favorite part is seeing the old foundations from the original homes that were in the area.

Then we drove around Leeds and looked at the seriously posh houses in the area.

We finished our way to St. George where we met up with my parents for dinner and then crashed on their couch for the night.  We'd invited them on our road trip the following day and I was super excited for it.

Our second trip can be found in full here.

The agenda called for a stop in Pipe Spring National Monument in Arizona, The Old Frontier Town which I found out through googling is actually a museum called Little Hollywood, the Moqui Cave, and then the ghost town town of Grafton.

Our first stop was Pipe Springs which is a national monument ("Free this weekend for President's day!" Score!)  Where we learned about Pioneers and Indians and Mexicans all rolled up into one settlement area.








We had the option to wait for a tour inside the "castle", but as it was off-season, the tours were only held at specific times and only if they knew you wanted to take it.  We never really told them we wanted to, and we didn't feel like sticking around to wait for one, so we decided to skip that part and head on to our next destination.

I was especially excited for the next two stops, the Little Hollywood museum where they had the sets from the filming of old western's and the Moqui Cave which used to be a hidden speakeasy during prohibition, but is now an open to public store.  Though they still have the bar set up in it for people to see.

I'll tell you now that if you follow our roadtrippers.com map for this trip, it's slightly wrong.  Little Hollywood (Old Frontier Town) came before the cave did, and the cave is actually on the same road, you don't have to turn off for it.

But what we found is both the museum and the cave were closed for off-season.

I was so disappointed!

We stopped at Carmel Mountain Junction, where we were to make a left turn, for lunch at the Thunderbird Restaurant, home of the ho-made pies, where we didn't get any pie, but we did buy my dad a t-shirt, and would have bought one for The Man but they didn't have his size in the color he was hoping for.


Turns out that the simple story of that is when the restaurant first started, it was sitting out in the middle of no-where on dirt roads and the owner just simply didn't have room to write out the full "Home Made Pies", so he shortened it to fit best he could.  Only recently has it created some controversy, so doing the only thing they could do, they made merchandise and kept running with it.

I'm an open minded person and feel that the reason for their claim for ho-made pies is simple enough, so we supported it with buying t-shirts.

I knew our trip was going to take us near Zion National Park, but what I didn't realize was that it was going to take us straight through it.  Which was a happy surprise and added bonus, so be prepared to pay the park day fee ("Not this weekend!  It's free for President's Day!"  Double score!)

I was happy to recognize Checkerboard Mesa when it loomed up before us, a spot on roadtrippers I had seen and thought would be fun to visit.


That place is just beautiful.  We'd been there before and done some of the hikes (here) but I'd never driven through the whole park like that before.

The tunnels were awesome, one being so long that they had to cut windows into the side of the mountain to give it some light here and there, but it was still mostly dark and very closed in.


We ended our trip with a stop at the ghost town Grafton which is near Zion's.

I fell in love with the history of that place.





Apparently people back then didn't need much head clearance?










We had so much fun on this trip, that we're planning to do it again with The Circus.  Only this time we're going to do it when Little Hollywood and the Moqui Cave will be open.

Do you use roadtrippers?  Let me know, I would love to swap road trip maps!



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