Narraguinnep Fort

San Juan National Forest


(map link)

I missed Narraguinnep Fort because I had some thought that there would be a turnout along the road past the intersection, but the intersection is the optimal place to stop. A road continues to the fort if you want to deal with the gate and can handle sufficiently rough road. It really isn't far to the walk instead. I pulled over where the road was wide and I was sure I could get out again and made my way down.

00: good roads and double tracks
At this intersection of improved gravel roads, the two dirt tracks lead off to the fort.

As above, there were lots of flowers. I immediately found many, some of which I hadn't seen yet in the day's walks. It's a different elevation and a different environment.

02: small mats of purple
A short penstemon makes small spots of blue.

02: some flowers
Irises grow enthusiastically where it is wet, particularly by the stream.

03: irises from above
A closer look at the irises, which are actually quite small, only a few inches across.

Now there is only a sign marking the fort. The "fort" was built in 1885 and the sign placed in 1942 (then part of Montezuma National Forest), which makes the sign more historic now than the fort was then. When it was placed, there were still one-two layers of the three layers of roughly three foot logs that were felled and stacked to create a defensive position around Narraguinnep Spring. I hoped to see some little bit of remnants of these logs, but everything rotting away today looks like it was never so large. It looks like it would be hard to build another with what's growing today, too.

04: sign to mark the fort
The sign that marks Narraguinnep Fort.

The fort's short history started with the Beaver Creek Massacre, the last major conflict between whites and Native Americans in Colorado. White cattlemen came upon a hunting party of Ute Mountains Utes and killed them. The hunting party had the legal right and likely necessity to be there. Following this, a homestead was attacked, likely in retaliation. Cattlemen banded together and came here to build a fort for defence. As I said, the walls where three big pine logs high. They chopped out port holes between the first and second logs all the way around. They roofed it over with smaller logs and dirt. Then they cowered there for a couple weeks before going on home, unchallenged. I'm not entirely sure what is meant to be commemorated here. White mans' fear seems to be the actuality.

05: peaks through the valley from the back of the sign
A view to cower by?

And while I would like to know how you get such large logs stacked up on top of each other in 1885, Colorado Magazine basically reprinting a press release from Montezuma National Forest in 1942 (my resource) doesn't get into that. So I turned to find the rest of the road as mapped by now San Juan National Forest. I'd found a blog trying to record hiking opportunities around the four corners area, which admitted that this particular area had absolutely no trails to hike, but was willing to grasp as a few straws. One of those was taking three miles or so down this road. I couldn't find the road immediately, but could see it on the other side of the creek. I found a place to cross over and followed the road down the canyon for a while.

06: flower and beetle
Little flowers with tiny beetles.

07: wide space
The canyon ahead.

08: small purple trumpets
Delicate purple flowers.

09: white flowers
Tangled up in a lupin that hasn't yet budded.

10: yellow and pea like
The yellow sweet peas are here too.

11: thin petals all over
Owl's claws.

12: white flowers
And other daisies. A fleabane?

I didn't find the spring while I was at the fort and the creek was dry where I crossed it, but there are spots with water lower down. Maybe the first one marks the spring.

13: small pool of dirty water
A little water along the way.

14: hills ahead
Passing by blooming buckeye along this 4x4 road.

15: white flowers and blue sky
Serviceberries against the sky.

16: tiny yellow flowers
A yellow yarrow.

17: fading flowers
Fading flowers on a gooseberry.

19: spines all over
Another little monster! I mean, horned lizard.

20: yellow flowering bush
Yellow flowering bushes.

I stopped on a log in the shade about a mile down. It is a nice enough stroll and perhaps it gets into some interesting country by three miles, but I was about done. I had some lunch before heading back the way I'd come.

22: purple flowers
The little purple violets are fading.

23: lamp shades of yellow
A fun bit of dangling yellow.

24: white onion flowers
A little white onion.

25: yellow flower in the middle of a road
Back along this road where the mules ears grow down the middle.

27: purple onions too
Also little purple onions. Or a blue dick relative. I get uncertain without consulting iNaturalist.

28: chipmunk
The largest creature of the day, a chipmunk.

The road, of course, had been rerouted and joined up with the main road without crossing the creek. Fords do have an ecological impact and are best avoided.

*photo album*




©2022 Valerie Norton
Written 24 Jun 2022


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Comments

Anonymous said…
Very nice variety of blooms for such a short route!

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