At Mesa Verde, ancient history is cool

There’s no time to be nervous. The children charge ahead up the 32-foot ladder, squeezing through a narrow, 12-foot tunnel, walking in toeholds carved into dusty sandstone.

Imagine if you could only get into your office or house via toeholds carved into rock. Imagine cooking by tossing a hot rock into a waterproofed basket filled with stew fixings and grinding corn with a rock. Imagine living with your family in small stone rooms. Imagine no TV or video games to entertain the children — just stories passed down from generation to generation.

We’re all trying to get our heads around what family life must have been like for the Ancient Puebloan families who lived in these astonishing cliff dwellings in southwest Colorado’s Mesa Verde National Park, the nation’s largest archeological preserve offering some 4,000 known archeological sites, including 600 cliff dwellings.

“This is a different kind of national park,” Ranger Allison Langston tells our group. “Many national parks preserve national resources. Here we are preserving cultural resources.”

Who states ancient history is boring? Our gang, which includes children from kindergartners to college sophomores and grandparents, is fascinated to learn that this ancient culture continues this day through modern-day Pueblo nations who return here several times a year for special ceremonies.

Local ranchers first discovered these cliff dwellings in the late 1800s and Mesa Verde National Park was created in 1906 to preserve them. The Ancient Puebloans made this place home from about 550 AD to 1300 AD when they abandoned the area, archeologists believe, after years of drought and because the land that had supported them for so long could no longer sustain enough crops for their growing numbers. The dwellings are spectacularly well preserved.

Sadly, most of the 400,000 tourists who visit do not spend enough time here to really appreciate all this park has to offer — a hands-on introduction to this ancient culture, hiking a petroglyph trail, the chance to teach children about modern Native American life nearby and a first-rate restaurant, the Metate Room, where ingredients the ancient Puebloans used, like beans, squash, corn and wild game, are given a decidedly modern and delicious twist ( http://www.visitmesaverde.com).

We’d been exploring southwestern Colorado in an RV when we pulled into the Morefield Campground here — our favorite yet — where my two young cousins, 5-year-old Hannah Sitzman and her 7-year-old brother, Ethan, were out playing baseball within five minutes of our arrival with some of our “neighbors,” who were visiting from Massachusetts.

They stop in their tracks when they see a mama deer and her fawn race by into the woods. Incidentally, you can arrange for a campsite with a steel-framed tent and cots so you can have the camping experience without lugging all the gear. Rangers offer evening programs at the campground, as well as at Far View Lodge where some of our gang is happily ensconced in rooms designed to highlight Native American culture.

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We’re inadvertently a trendy group, I discover. Camping and RV vacations are growing in popularity. Aramark Parks and Destinations, the concessionaire at this park, reports that bookings here at Morefield Campground are up 22 percent this year, as are multigenerational trips everywhere, according to the newly released YPartnership/Harrison Group survey entitled “2010 Portrait of American Travelers.” Twenty percent of today’s family travelers are grandparents and two-thirds state they took at least one vacation with their grandchildren last year.

Anyone who has ever tried to arrange a multi-generation trip knows it is not always simple to satisfy everyone at the same time, but I’m pleased that Mesa Verde does the job. The Park Service has partnered with Aramark and the non-profit Mesa Verde Institute for a range of programs to suit all ages and physical capabilities from ranger-guided tours of the cliff dwellings (you must buy $3 tickets) bus tours, rigorous ranger-led hiking tours and even a twilight hike to Cliff Palace, the park’s most famous cliff dwelling where historic characters in costume give their own perspective of Mesa Verde.

Because there are 14 of us, we have arranged for a private tour with retired National Park Service veteran Alan Whalon who takes us to two of the cliff dwellings that children like to most explore the most — Balcony House and Long House — because there are ladders to climb, toeholds to try and the opportunity to “grind” corn and peer into the ancient ceremonial Kivas. “We’re on an adventure!” declares Hannah Sitzman, as she holds Whalon’s hand.

There are also plenty of self-guided activities. You can drive the Wetherill Mesa Road or hike the Badger House Community Trail, which will take you through four mesa top sites. You can see Spruce Tree House (130 little rooms!) or tour the Chapin Mesa Museum, which depicts ancestral Puebloan life.

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National Parks Service educational specialist Sandy Groves is working hard to make the park even more interesting for families with a newly designed Junior Ranger booklet that introduces a girl named Gentle Rain who lived here with her family 750 years ago. You can borrow a discovery pack complete with kids’ field guide, binoculars and hand lens and those children staying in the campground can become Junior Naturalists. (Stop and listen, the children are encouraged. Close your eyes. What do you hear? What do you think you would have heard 800 years ago?) Look for more children’s activities next year, suggests Aramark spokesman Judi Swain.

Groves’ Tip: Allow yourselves enough time. It can take an hour just to get from the park entrance to the visitor’s center.

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Submited at Saturday, September 4th, 2010 at 6:00 am on Family by jessica
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