Friday, September 19, 2008

1883 Cordes Ranch

Sept 19
Bob and I met at his home in Black Canyon City and went up to Cordes Junction to interview a very interesting fella name Bob Rains. Bob had been with SDOT for 18 years and was about to retire. He is also an accomplished leatherworker.
We had breakfast at the CJ Diner hidden back behind the gas station. What a nice clean and economical place this is hidden back where most people might not find it or even know it is there.
Later we went to interview Cathy Cordes at the 1883 Cordes Ranch 3 miles west of I-17 off Bloody Basin Road which quickly becomes the Crown King Road. What a treat that adventure turned out to be! She manages the original stage stop/general store built in 1883 but burned down in 1910 and rebuilt on the same spot at the junction of the Crown King Road and Antelope Creek Road – the original Black Canyon Highway – the old stage route between Black Canyon City and Mayer. Her great granddad ran the saloon, store and stage stop from 1883. He acquired it after the former owner was stabbed to death by a drunk customer.
Cathy is opening the store on weekends and has an incredible collection of artifacts and antiques. Every vehicle her grandfather owned is in that back yard! And the views and beauty of the landscape is overwhelmingly beautiful. It rained while we were there and the frequent rain this summer has left the hills green and filled with wild flowers. The cattle roam free and have their head to the ground all the time enjoying great grazing.
Cathy’s mom still runs the cattle ranch on the same 160 acres her granddad bought back in 1883.
It’s about 17 miles up the Old Black Canyon Highway from Black Canyon City and I’m told it is good road all the way – graded but dirt. We took the road from Cordes Ranch (called Antelope Creek Road on maps now) to Mayer about 8 miles and it was smooth sailing. It dumps out about where the Dollar Store is on the Highway 69.
In Prescott Valley I had the opportunity to interview Dixie Northcutt author of Trekking Home and a rancher from the Arizona Strip in some of the loneliest land in the northern most part of the state along the north side of the Grand Canyon. It’s almost more a part of Utah than Arizona being separated by that huge canyon. The nearest large town was Kanab Utah. She had interesting stories of ranch life in tough country. Her stories will make a series of articles in the Wild West Gazette.

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