CONCRETE ARROW QUEST : Search for Transcontinental Airway Beacons - Part 11
It's been a while since Cindy and I had a chance to go looking for concrete arrows and while it wasn't really our plan to go looking for any on our way home from our recent trip to Moab, it was kind of hard to pass one up that we had been meaning to find out near the Nevada/Utah border. I mean, who knew when would be the next time we'd be out in this area, right? The only problem was, we only knew the general location of where this transcontinental beacon should be and previous searches on Google Earth turned up a whole lot of nothing. But, being that we were in need of a break and itching to do something other than sit in a Jeep and drive, we pulled up to a hillside that we thought was right and started hiking. After hoofing it for a while and making a few educated guesses, we found what we were looking for or at least, remnants of it anyway.
Here's a few shots of the collapsed beacon tower that found.
Here you can still see traces of the orange and yellow paint that it would have been covered in.
A lock still securing the generator shed door.
Being that the ruins of the tower was situated low in the hills where it would have been hard to see and that that there was no sign of a concrete arrow, footings for the tower or foundation of any kind, we started to think that this may not have been where it originally stood. Taking a guess that it may have stood on higher ground and that maybe it was pushed over or blown down to where it sits today, we decided to start climbing. And, as we neared the top, we encountered this gargoyle standing sentry over the hillside.
At the top of the hill, we found the first of the evidence we were looking for - concrete footings.
Looking down the hill, you can see the tower ruins below.
And, after looking through the brush along the hilltop, we found even more proof of this being the original location of the tower - broken bits of beacon lenses.
View from the top looking east.
And here's a view looking west.
If you'd like to see more concrete arrows and transcontinental airway beacons that we've found over the years, simply click on this link:
CONCRETE ARROW QUEST : Search for Transcontinental Airway Beacons
