![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9JQNnvqLRQXAUoylXRRONZ0AY7mQndH80ouZzRR6Wp1-RivX9a6-G2GCuiyiHzbhMlj0otF0Wowknmeld5jlwWKarSOSp3NllD61LFIxoUXDbFHTh_2vcAmGjyaLTfeqa1pmggnmAelw/s200/thorse.jpg)
We spent just one day in Horse Canyon--a cold, rainy day in April. In some ways Horse Canyon is no different from any of the others that surround it. It has the same low, broken, buttery walls; the same pinyon and juniper shrubs; the occaisonal ponderosa or douglas fir; a dry, sandy, somewhat-cobbly wash; and a few crusty cow pies. But, upon closer inspection, there are a number of interesting things to see. We found a Moqui grainery, a layer of sandstone full of ancient leaf and log imprints, and a camel shaped rock to sit on.
http://picasaweb.google.com/aorlemann/HorseCanyonUT
http://picasaweb.google.com/aorlemann/HorseCanyonUT