If you didn't know it was there, it would be easy to miss!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Utahtea
We've traveled though Tuba City many times over the years and we've even traveled between Tuba City and Hubbell Trading Post on Hwy 264 twice but didn't know about Coal Mine Canyon.
Utahtea
I drove AZ 264 any number of times before I first discovered Coal Mine Canyon. Back in 2016, I was off on a week-long road trip, driving some of the routes that I planned to use in my book. That was the fun part of the research, and I was going a little crazy, taking tons of photographs. My friend and I were in Wupatki National Monument, shooting the ruin from various angles, when I ran into an old guy who was also taking pictures. We got to talking, as old guys tend to do, and he asked me if I'd ever been to Bryce Canyon.
"Of course," I replied. "That's one of my favorite places."
"Well," he went on, "what if I told you there was a spot not far from here that's like Bryce Canyon and the Grand Canyon combined?"
"Where's that?"
"Coal Mine Canyon. It's about 15 miles east of Tuba City, just off Highway 264. There's no sign or anything. You've got to look for a windmill. That's where you turn."
We were going that way anyhow, headed for Second Mesa to visit my friends at the Tsakurshovi Trading Post, so when we spotted the windmill, we pulled in, and we were very pleasantly surprised. When you're driving through that area, it's mostly flat, with no obvious sign of the colorful gorge that's no more than a quarter of a mile from the paved highway. If you look at the area from above, using Google satellite view, it's not exactly subtle:
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...oads/Map-1.jpg
The windmill is between mileposts 336 and 337. There are several forks off the dirt road, and nothing is marked, so you just keep to the right. You'll pass the well and the stock tank on your left, and you stop when you see the picnic tables.
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...ads/Map2-1.jpg
I'd known about Coal Mine Canyon for decades, but I'd always assumed it was somewhere remote, tough to access. Barry Goldwater, the long-time Senator from Arizona, was quite well known as a photographer, his work frequently appearing in the prestigious Arizona Highways Magazine. The very first picture he sold to that magazine, way back in 1939, was this one, which was titled simply, "Coal Mine Canyon."
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...MineCanyon.jpg
It looks pretty classy in black and white, but when a place is as colorful as this, I honestly prefer a color image. This is taken from a viewpoint very close to where the Senator took his famous photo. A mere 80 years later!
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...6-DSC05275.jpg
Rick