Posted on 11/29/2012 12:58:04 PM PST by smokingfrog
Tortilla Flat is a pretty cool little “town”. plus the road there is a crooked as politician.
Around February, a Renaissance festival is held outside Apache Junction, practically in the shadow of the Superstition Mountains, which seem to be an odd backdrop for such an event.
Growing up, I could see Weaver’s Needle from my back yard. There were a lot of very successful mines over the last 150 years. My hometown, Superior had the Magma Mine, the Silver King, Silver Queen, LS&A (Lake Superior and Arizona Mine - thus the name of the town and a great place to play, I thought), and the Belmont (a gold mine). Miami and Globe had almost a dozen different mines.
The Superstitions, at least the part most often searched, don’t really have the geology in which one would expect an ore body. Superior was near Picket Post Mountain, an ancient and now eroded volcanic plug. There were many mineralized areas and several viable ore bodies near it.
The Barnett brothers, Joe and Walt were known to make moonshine in the early 1930’s but I doubt they grew their corn. They reportedly believed that Waltz got his gold from the Apaches in exchange for guns and ammo. Barnett canyon (sp?) was their ranch location and a shallow cave near the foundations of their old house has (or had fifty years ago) the coils and boiler of their still.
I have hiked out in the Supes 20 times this year. Went out June 30th and the next day a guy went out on the same trail we did and ended up dying out there.
The Supes are beautiful but deadly and oh so hot. You get out there in the late spring to early fall time period and run out of water and it’s curtains for you.
Practice safe hiking!
Apple Maps...
I always heard that the Dutchman had stumbled on a cache of stolen ore and never really had a mine. Was always fascinated with the story though.
It's about finding the gold.
The Lost Dutchman mine is bogus. Someone who knows a bare minimum about prospecting looks for gold where there are veins of quartz. And the Superstitions have those.
But otherwise, the Superstitions are completely wrong for gold mining.
Another false lead in the area is Weaver’s needle, a volcanic tower that was the core or a now eroded volcano. Fools prospect around its base, and find nothing, but were they to go further away, and locate its volcanic “skirt”, where the volcanic rock greets the metamorphic or sedimentary rock, there *might* be some gold, but only at depth, not on the surface.
In my 50’s (the first trip to Alaska) I wanted to find an old prospector with a mule and grubstake him for 3 months and the both of us will go gold mining, just working the streams in Alaska and you can find gold. Talked to a couple of permanent residents that go out every week end looking for gold...they find enought to keep them going back...that would be a great vacation...
If you study the legend hard enough, you come to the conclusion that the “mine” is a Mexican legend of hidden treasure.
You are correct that the crystal outcropping is not present.
My dad did some prospecting and dirt biking in the Superstitions in the ‘60’s and got shot at. He and the guy he was with returned fire,and the shooting stopped. He speculated that he was near the Dutchman and was shot at by the Indian tribe charged with guarding the mine.
Funny thing is - I’ve heard similar stories from others who have been in the Superstitions. There’s something strange going on in them there hills and it goes way back. That’s why they’re called the Superstition mountains.
If someone wanted to start camping and searching that area, can you recommend a direct line to the most interesting place?
This topic was posted , thanks smokingfrog.
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