The region’s best:
from Navajo culture in Monument Valley to the glamour of Palm Springs.
The Totem Pole is one
of Monument Valley's most famous rock formations. This towering spire stands
more than 90 meters tall.
executive summary by darmansjah
executive summary by darmansjah
Monument Valley
Best for the Navajo Nation
Miles into your trip:
575
From Silverton, take a
4½-hour drive along the US-160
There is a point on
the drive from Colorado to Monument Valley in Utah where it becomes clear that
here, the skin of modern America has been rubbed red raw. Every vestige has
been stripped away with such ferocity that nothing remains but the dusty flesh
of the earth. It’s as if the land itself has been turned inside out.
Colour here comes in
the most primal of shades: blood red, sunburnt orange, deep purple. On either
side of the road – the sole reminder that we are not deep in prehistory –
gnarled rock figures disappear into the horizon. Ridges circle their bases like
the rings up to ragged red fingers or sandblasted outcrops silhouetted against
a sky so blue it hurts.
Keep driving and the road begins to straighten up and out, until
there on the horizon stands the trio of monoliths-the East and West Mittens, Merrick Butte-that are the show-stopping
introduction to one of the USA’s definitive landscapes. Monument Valley plays a crucial role in America’s founding myth as
a pioneer nation, topographical short-land for the perculiar bravado bloodlust
and wide-brimmed hats that conquered this immense land. Thanks to any number of
Western movies, and even Forrest Gump,
every director knows that a short of the sun alighting upon these towering
brutes will get the heart of any red-blooded patriot beating faster.
The irony of this is, of course, that Monument Valley is at the centre of the Navajo Nation, the largest
indigenous reservation in the USA. The history here isn’t exactly ‘God Bless
America’ pretty. In 1864, the US Government forced the Navajo from their reservation at gunpoint, an
event know as the Long Walk, They were eventually allowed to return to their
land four years later.
Monument Valley is a place of sacred significance to the Navajo,
but inevitably tourism is the main source of income. It’s almost impossible to
walk along a trail without tripping over a Navajo offering horseback rides,
turquoise-studded jewellery of jeep tours. But the best way to experience the
Navajo lifestyle is by an overnight stay in a Hogan, the mound-like earth huts
that are their traditional home.
Visitors stay in a ‘female’ Hogan, held up by nine wooden
pillars, representing the nine months of pregnancy, with a stove in the centre
emitting smoke through a circular hole in the roof. Lead guide Carlos Mose (who
also doubles as a drummer in a metal band – ‘We sing about Native issues,
broken treaties, things like that,’ he tells me) explains the revitalizing
effects of a night in a Hogan: ‘Each morning, it’s like being reborn out of
your mother’s belly – a fresh start, a new beginning.’
The meaning of different parts of the Hogan are echoed in Monument Valley itself. Carlos points
out the Rain God an Thunderbird Mesas, two table mountains facing the east that
mimic the doorway. ‘And there are the Grandfather Gods, the rocks who receive
our offerings,’ he explains. ‘The life way – how to distinguish right and wrong
– is symbolized in the Hogan and Monument
Valley. We are the stewards of this land, but the land is our protector an
guide too.’
When morning comes, Carlos’s words have a ring of truth. Exiting
a Hogan really does feel like rising
from the earth itself – just for a while, it’s possible to become an integral
part of this primal land too.
To book overnight Hogan stay, see trainhandlertours.com (from US$155).
Visit either the restaurant at The View of Goulding’s Lodge. The
latter is a good option: the steak and eggs certainly hit the spot (from US$12;
gouldings.com).
Opened in 2008, The View Hotel is the only hotel in Monument
Valley. It blends in beautifully with the landscpae, and the spectacle of the
buttes as viewed from its room is incredible (from US$155; monumentvalleyview.com).
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