Lost and hungry scouts: A Mormon Christmas story

Lost and hungry scouts: A Mormon Christmas story

In 1879, four men navigated the treacherous canyons of Utah to establish Bluff
Looking southeast from the top of Cedar Mesa, Comb Ridge stretches off to the south as a formidable barrier to the Hole-in-the-Rock Expedition, which had to cross the sandstone ridge to start a village settlement at Bluff, Utah.
On a cold winter day, Mule Canyon looks like a formidable adversary to any kind of travel by horse or wagon. Settlers from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints had to find a way through these Cedar Mesa canyons to arrive at the San Juan River.
Near Christmas in 1879, lost and hungry Mormon scouts tried to find a way across the sandstone canyons of the Bears Ears region to get to the San Juan River to start a new town and settlement. George Hobbs, one of the scouts, spent a cold night without food in this Ancestral Puebloan ruin that now bears his name.
Scout George Hobbs had been to Montezuma Creek and the San Juan River once before, so he knew the importance of the Abajo, or Blue, Mountains as a local landmark. As he climbed up and out of the piñons and junipers on Cedar Mesa and he could see the Abajos, he knew generally where he was and where to lead the Mormon settlers.
A historic photo of the canyons near Bears Ears shows the difficulty of any sort of travel by horse or wagon.
The Bears Ears region contains long and deep sandstone canyons that pioneers had to traverse.

Lost and hungry scouts: A Mormon Christmas story

Looking southeast from the top of Cedar Mesa, Comb Ridge stretches off to the south as a formidable barrier to the Hole-in-the-Rock Expedition, which had to cross the sandstone ridge to start a village settlement at Bluff, Utah.
On a cold winter day, Mule Canyon looks like a formidable adversary to any kind of travel by horse or wagon. Settlers from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints had to find a way through these Cedar Mesa canyons to arrive at the San Juan River.
Near Christmas in 1879, lost and hungry Mormon scouts tried to find a way across the sandstone canyons of the Bears Ears region to get to the San Juan River to start a new town and settlement. George Hobbs, one of the scouts, spent a cold night without food in this Ancestral Puebloan ruin that now bears his name.
Scout George Hobbs had been to Montezuma Creek and the San Juan River once before, so he knew the importance of the Abajo, or Blue, Mountains as a local landmark. As he climbed up and out of the piñons and junipers on Cedar Mesa and he could see the Abajos, he knew generally where he was and where to lead the Mormon settlers.
A historic photo of the canyons near Bears Ears shows the difficulty of any sort of travel by horse or wagon.
The Bears Ears region contains long and deep sandstone canyons that pioneers had to traverse.
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