Mar 042011
 

01 Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x768)

I’m trying to visit a few National Park sites I haven’t seen before on my way to Texas. Even though I live in Arizona there are So many parks I haven’t been to yet.

02 Great House Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x757)

I’ve seen a few Southwest native ruins but nothing built like the “Great House” at Casa Grande National Monument. Almost 1000 years ago the Hohokam people constructed this four story 60 foot long building using subsoil called caliche, a concrete-like mix of sand, clay and calcium carbonate.

03 Closeup of caliche walls Great House Casa Grande NM AZ (768x1024)

It took 3,000 tons of caliche mud piled in successive courses to form walls four feet thick at the base and tapering toward the top. Juniper, pine and fir trees used to form ceiling or floors were carried or floated 60 miles down the Gila River.

04 Holes in walls line up with solsice Great House Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x768)

The walls face the four cardinal points of the compass and a circular hole in the upper west wall aligns with the setting sun at the summer solstice. Other openings also align with specific solar and lunar occurrences.

05 Ruins around Great House compound Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x768)

And the Great House is only part of this 2-acre compound surrounded by what was once a 7 foot high wall that contained houses, work areas, courtyards and storage rooms. Plus this is only one neighborhood in a larger community of compounds that covered nearly a square mile housing possibly 30,000 to 60,000 people. The Hohokam were farmers that built the most extensive irrigation ditches lined with caliche from the Gila River.

06 Great House Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x768)

When Americans began visiting the area in the late 1800s souvenir hunting threatened to destroy the site. In 1892, Casa Grande became the first archeological reserve and then declared a National Monument in 1918. The Great House has been sheltered since early excavations started in 1903.

07 Casa Grande Ruins NM Jr Ranger badge & hat pin (427x1024)

How did I learn all this? Well of course, I became a Junior Ranger.

08 Interp sign Casa Grande NM AZ (1024x640)

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May 312010
 

Mike spent the holiday weekend here at the North Rim. To find out how he liked it check out his post here.

DSCF7261 (1024x1017)

Last night he finally decided to become a Junior Ranger and completed the activities. He’d already attended three of my Ranger programs. And he was so proud.

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Nov 252009
 
Pledging to protect the parks
Because I’m a Ranger I like to earn my Junior Ranger badge while learning about all parks I visit. After our tour of Scotty’s Castle my book was done, yet we still had more exploring to do in the park.

I may get funny looks yet promise to finish all the activities in my book. This made number 13 badge. Hey, I got a late start.
Good point brought up by a reader not from the US so I will explain. Within the National Parks system here, which includes almost 400 sites, a program for kids to learn about the individual park’s cultural and natural history requires completing a certain number of learning activities, by age, to earn a Junior Ranger Badge. Some of the kids I have pledged in have many badges they proudly display on a backpack, jacket, vest or hat. It’s a great way to get kids involved with their parks. Oh yea, I hang mine on a curtain in the living room.
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