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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES OF LONELY TRAILS *** Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Nicolas Hayes and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
TALES OF LONELY TRAILS BY ZANE GREY 1922 Zane Grey Contents

CHAPTER I

CHAPTER II

CHAPTER III

CHAPTER IV

CHAPTER V

List of Illustrations

Zane Grey

Z.G. After Two Months in the Wilds

There Was Something Beyond the White-peaked Ranges

Weird and Wonderful Monuments in Monument Valley

Sunset on the Desert

Cave of the Cliff Dwellers

This Immense Cave Would Hold Trinity Church. In It Lies The Ruined Cliff Dwelling Called Betatakin

The Wind-worn Treacherous Slopes on the Way To Nonnezoshe

First Sight of the Great Natural Bridge

Nonnezoshe

Pack Horses on a Sage Slope in Colorado

The Grassy Uplands, With Whiteley's Peak in The Distance

A Spruce-shaded, Flower-skirted Lake

Looking Down Upon Cloud-filled Valleys

Searching Burned-over Ranges for Game

A Hunter's Cabin on a Frosty Morning

The Troublesome Country, Noted for Grizzly Bears

Under the Shadow of The Flattop Mountains

White Aspen Tree, Showing Marks of Bear Claws

A Black Bear Treed

Crossing the Colorado River at The Bottom of The Grand Canyon

Where Rolls the Colorado

Down the Shinumo Trail of The North River

Camp at the Saddle

Buckskin Forest

Buffalo Jones With Sounder and Ranger

Jones About to Lasso a Mountain Lion

Remains of a Deer Killed by Lions

A Lion Tied

Fighting Weetahs (buffalo Bulls) on Buffalo Jones's Desert Ranch

Treed Lion

Treed Lion

Treed Lion

Hiding

A Drink of Cold Granite Water Under the Rim

Which is the Piute?

Wild Horses Drinking on a Promontory in the Grand Canyon

Jones and Emett Packing Lion on Horse

Jones Climbing up to Lasso Lion

Two Lions in One Tree

Jones, Emett, and the Navajo With The Lions

Billy in Camp

Lion Licking Snowball

Some of Our Menagerie in Buckskin Forest

White Mustang Stallion With his Bunch of Blacks In Snake Gulch

On the Way Home

Riding With a Navajo

The Author and his Men. From Left to Right: Edd Haught; Nielsen; Haught, the Bear Hunter; Al Doyle, Pioneer Arizona Guide; Lewis Pyle; Z.G.; George Haught; Ben Copple; Lee Doyle.

Romer-boy on his Favorite Steed

The Tonto Basin

Listening for the Hounds

Zane Grey on Don Carlos

Wild Turkey

Wild Turkeys

The White Quaking Asps

Skunk, a Frequent and Rather Dangerous Visitor in Camp

On the Rim

Where Elk, Deer, and Turkey Drink

Where Bear Cross the Ridge from One Canyon to Another

Climbing over the Tough Manzanita

Bear in Sight Across Canyon

Z.G.'s Cinnamon Bear

R.C.'s Big Brown Bear

Another Bear

Meat in Camp

Burros Packed for the Trail

The Deadly Cholla, Most Poisonous and Pain Inflicting Of The Cactus

The Colored Calico Mountains

Down the Long Winding Wash to Death Valley

Desolation and Decay. Looking Down over the Denuded Ridges to the Stark Valley of Death

Desert Graves

The Ghastly Sweep of Death Valley

In the Center of The Salt-incrusted Floor Of Death Valley, Three Hundred Feet Below Sea Level

TALES OF LONELY TRAILS
CHAPTER I NONNEZOSHE

John Wetherill, one of the famous Wetherill brothers and trader at Kayenta, Arizona, is the man who discovered Nonnezoshe, which is probably the most beautiful and wonderful natural phenomenon in the world. Wetherill owes the credit to his wife, who, through her influence with the Indians finally after years succeeded in getting the secret of the great bridge.

After three trips to Marsh Pass and Kayenta with my old guide, Al Doyle of Flagstaff, I finally succeeded in getting Wetherill to take me in to Nonnezoshe. This was in the spring of 1913 and my party was the second one, not scientific, to make the trip. Later this same year Wetherill took in the Roosevelt party and after that the Kolb brothers. It is a safe thing to say that this trip is one of the most beautiful in the West. It is a hard one and not for everybody. There is no guide except Wetherill, who knows how to get there. And after Doyle and I came out we admitted that we would not care to try to return over our back trail. We doubted if we could find the way. This is the only place I have ever visited which I am not sure I could find again alone.

My trip to Nonnezoshe gave me the opportunity to see also Monument Valley, and the mysterious and labyrinthine Canyon Segi with its great prehistoric cliff-dwellings.

The desert beyond Kayenta spread out impressively, bare red flats and plains of sage leading to the rugged vividly-colored and wind-sculptured sandstone heights typical of the Painted Desert of Arizona. Laguna Creek, at that season, became flooded after every thunderstorm; and it was a treacherous red-mired quicksand where I convinced myself we would have stuck forever had it not been for Wetherill's Navajos.

We rode all day, for the most part closed in by ridges and bluffs, so that no extended view was possible. It was hot, too, and the sand blew and the dust rose. Travel in northern Arizona is never easy, and this grew harder and steeper. There was one long slope of heavy sand that I made sure would prove too much for Wetherill's pack mules. But they surmounted it apparently less breathless than I was. Toward sunset a storm gathered ahead of us to the north with a promise of cooling and sultry air.

At length we turned into a long canyon with straight rugged red walls, and a sandy floor with quite a perceptible ascent. It appeared endless. Far ahead I could see the black storm-clouds; and by and bye began to hear the rumble of thunder. Darkness had overtaken us by the time we had reached the head of this canyon; and my first sight of Monument Valley came with a dazzling flash of lightning. It revealed a vast valley, a strange world of colossal shafts and buttes of rock, magnificently sculptored, standing isolated and aloof, dark, weird, lonely. When the sheet lightning flared across the sky showing the monuments silhouetted black against that strange horizon the effect was marvelously beautiful. I watched until the storm died away.

Z. G. After Two Months in the Wilds

Dawn, with the desert sunrise, changed Monument Valley, bereft it of its night gloom and weird shadow, and showed it in another aspect of beauty. It was hard for me to realize that those monuments were not the works of man. The great valley must once have been a plateau of red rock from which the softer strata had eroded, leaving the gentle league-long slopes marked here and there by upstanding pillars and columns of singular shape and beauty. I rode down the sweet-scented sage-slopes under the shadow of the lofty Mittens, and around and across the valley, and back again to the height of land. And when I had completed the ride a story had woven itself into my mind; and the spot where I stood was to be the place where Lin Slone taught Lucy Bostil to ride the great stallion Wildfire.

There Was Something Beyond the White-peaked Ranges

Two days' ride took us across country to the Segi. With this wonderful canyon I was familiar, that is, as familiar as several visits could make a man with such a bewildering place. In fact I had named it Deception Pass. The Segi had innumerable branches, all more or less the same size, and sometimes it was difficult to tell the main canyon from one of its tributaries. The walls were rugged and crumbling, of a red or yellow hue, upward of a thousand feet in height, and indented by spruce-sided notches.

There were a number of ruined cliff-dwellings, the most accessible of which was Keet Seel. I could imagine no more picturesque spot. A huge wind-worn cavern with a vast slanted stained wall held upon a projecting ledge or shelf the long line of cliff-dwellings. These silent little stone houses with their vacant black eye-like windows had strange power to make me ponder, and then dream.

Next day, upon resuming our journey, it pleased me to try to find the trail to Betatakin, the most noted, and surely the most wonderful and beautiful ruin in all the West. In many places there was no trail at all, and I encountered difficulties, but in the end without much loss of time I entered the narrow rugged entrance of the canyon I had named Surprise Valley. Sight of the great dark cave thrilled me as I thought it might have thrilled Bess and Venters, who had lived for me their imagined lives of loneliness here in this wild spot. With the sight of those lofty walls and the scent of the dry sweet sage there rushed over me a strange feeling that "Riders of the Purple Sage" was true. My dream people of romance had really lived there once upon a time. I climbed high upon the huge stones, and along the smooth red

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