Showing posts with label balancing stones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label balancing stones. Show all posts

Sunday

Friends of Cave Creek Canyon and National Public Lands Day

The Friends of Cave Creek Canyon celebrated National Public Lands Day by completing the next phase of the public gardens at the Cave Creek Canyon visitors center.  Eighteen friends showed up for a morning of moving rock and material to create walking paths and planting areas next to the visitors center.  The work went rapidly and within several hours the job was done.  The new garden area has a swale allowing water flow across the garden, several benches, and a picnic table for visitors.  Native plants and vegetation will surround the area and the Cottonwood trees provide shade.  Of course it was impossible to move all the rock without building a couple of balancing stone sculptures.

New garden area next to the Cave Creek Canyon visitors center.



Inuksuk

Balancing Stones

Balancing Stone Metates

Another balancing stone sculpture but with a slightly different twist.  As opposed to interpreting the view with a balanced stone sculpture, see this post, this one utilizes manos and metates.  Evidence of former inhabitants are found along drainage's throughout the valley.  This piece incorporates early stone tools found locally into something new  The top metate is a double sided basin metate and the lower one is a single sided type 1 metate with no evidence of shaping or modification, just a convenient flat stone used for grinding.  A single stone bell was also added to balance the view.

Balancing stone tools

Balancing Stone Bowls

In response to a friends creation of a balancing sculpture with a mining theme, the balancing stone bowl sculpture was created as a return gesture.  It is representation of a business theme - that no matter how hard it seems and whatever life throws at you, you can always always bang 2 rocks together and make something.  An alternative viewpoint would be the balanced rounded stones represent a desert snowman.  Since snow generally falls only in the mountains during the winter those of us in the valley are forced to use rocks to make traditional winter snowmen.  Like those cultures which inhabited the area long before us, stone is still a useful tool.  It is possible to find dry stacked stone walls around Portal and Rodeo, large boulders which mark business locations, and stone houses around the area. The use of local material (whatever is at hand) for any construction project has a long history in the San Simon Valley.  For another example see this photograph.


Balanced Stone Bowls

Thursday

A Finished Balancing Stone Image

Below is a final finished image of the single balancing stone from the stream bed in South Fork of Cave Creek Canyon.  As with all the other photography, the camera was a Canon SX110 digital IS. The original image was processed by reducing the input light level (across all colors) by about 10%, increasing contrast by about 10%, and adding a tilt shift effect.  The composition uses the sunlight reflected off the steam to highlight the balancing stone increasing apparent depth.  Click on the photograph to enlarge.

Balancing Stone in South Fork of Cave Creek Canyon.

Monday

Balancing Stones in the Chiricahua Mountains

The placing of stones to mark special places is a tradition in many cultures including ours.  We place stones at important sites like the Washington Monument at the seat of government and to mark burials .  Historically, standing stones and the megalithic sites are found around the world and the result of many cultural traditions dating back as far as 5000 BCE.  Whether a burial site, astronomical site, or other ceremonial use the common thread through all of these examples of rock placement is the recognition of a special place marked by a piece of the landscape in a manner that is recognizable to other members of the species.  In other words, someone at some time placed a rock(s) to mark, what they considered, a special spot and that location is easily recognizable to later visitors.

The Chiricahua Mountains were known as the "land of standing up rocks" by the Apache Indians who inhabited the area in reference to the unique naturally occurring pillar formations found in the Chiricahua National Monument.  But there are many other special places in the Chiricahua Mountains and the South Fork Zoological and Botanical Area of Cave Creek Canyon is just such place.  This richly diverse riparian area is flanked by high walls of volcanic tuff and is a favorite retreat for many visitors.  In acknowledgement of the uniqueness of South Fork a proof of concept balancing rock project was created.  At several points along the stream bed, where views of the canyon wall are visible, smooth rocks from the stream bed were balanced to recapitulate the view from that location.  At 4 locations balancing rocks were erected starting at the bench on east side of the parking area with one downstream and 2 upstream.  The balancing rock sculptures were comprised to 2 to 5 rocks, and only material within arms reach was utilized.  The works are unobtrusive and may easily be missed by the casual observer to the area.  In addition the works are all transitory, the next high wind or rise in the stream will obliterate all evidence of the balancing rocks and their locations.

These works illistrate several concepts:

First.  A marker of an special place.  A hiker coming around a corner of the trail frequently encounters unexpected views of the canyon in South Fork.  A balancing stone sculpture at these locations highlights these locations and acts as a marker for a special view.  Rather than signage or other methods of permanently marking locations frequently encountered, a sculpture invites the visitor to stop and figure out what is going on and enjoy the view.

Second:  The transitory nature of individuals.  The balanced rocks are not designed to be permanent additions to the landscape but rather something to be viewed, analyzed, and appreciated, then melt back into the landscape with time just like individuals.


Third:  Time. The use of eroded cobbles from the stream bed indicates that while even the mountains are not permanent fixtures of the landscape, in a geological sense, the time scale of change is beyond our capacity to observe.


Vertical panorama of Balancing Stones reproducing the 3 outcrops visible from this location.




Recapitulation of 2 outcrops with the taller on the right.

A single spire reproduced with Balancing Stones

A single balancing stone in the South Fork of  Cave Creek Canyon.