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700 Years Tour - Mesa Verde Tour Experience

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  • Mesa Verde Tour Experience

700 Years Tour

After seeing a negative review of the 700 year tour, we were apprehensive. However, our tour guide, Carolyn, a former NPS ranger, was an expert in all the sites on the tour and really did an excellent of preparing us for the highlight of the trip: the hike down to the Cliff Palace. The $70 price was part of a package with our room at the Far View Lodge and included the $5 Cliff Palace entry fee. I don’t believe we really would have understood and appreciated the history of the Mesa if we had saved a few bucks and simply stopped at sites along the way. Carolyn’s interpretation made the trip well worth the time and price.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We signed up for this tour ss we wanted to have a goid understanding of the Pueblo history. Bus was on time. Our guide was excellent as was the NP Ranger Kevin who took us to Cliff Palace dwelling..requires some agility. Very pleased with the whole experience.

We chose the 1:30pm departure hoping that the sun would warm up the fall air and we were not disappointed. At 8am the temp was in the low 40's but by 1:30pm it was sunny and the high 60s. Most likely in the summer you would want the earlier trip opposed to the heat of the afternoon. The bus was a nice new one with nice leather seats and sat 40 passengers. Our bus was full. There was not a lot of storage so whatever you brought had to be put at your feet or on your lap. We had Ashley as a guide and Grady as our driver. Both were excellent. Ashley was very knowledgeable on all topics. My advice is to stop in the Visitor Center prior to taking this tour as a ranger will let you know what sites this tour will NOT take you to. Then, if you have time you can do those on your own. The guides give you so much more history than just looking at ruins and reading placards. If you are physically able, the Cliff Palace is a must. There are narrow openings and ladders to climb. If you choose not to participate then you have 1 hour at the Cliff Palace overlook. During the entire tour they provided water free of charge and encouraged you to drink it. As others have stated, sit on the right side of the bus (as you are looking out the windshield) as you will have the best view. Buying tickets on tripadvisor saves you money too while giving you and opportunity for advance purchase. This is a must for your trip to Mesa Verde.

Went last Saturday for the Ranger Tour. We went on the 4 hour tour by bus our guide was Pam she was great! She and the driver took us to many sites and gave us the history of the Pueblo’s.It was very interesting but a warm day. Wear comfortable clothes and shoes and drink plenty of water! It was a very educational experience not for young children. My husband went with the ranger to go see the Ruins a lot of walking and stairs and ladders to climb. Not for the elderly or feeble. Glad we were able to see it!

700 years tour mesa verde review

Victoria and Grady were our guides. Very knowledgeable and super friendly. Was an amazing tour. Plenty of photo opportunities. The tour was about 3 hrs long.

We went on a 30 minute trail viewing the mayan villages. The tour guide gave information along the way of the trees, flowers and shrubs including the average life span,propagation cycle etc. Then we saw several progressions of the building of the village, including what and how they prepared food. I took this tour while my daughter & husband did the strenuous tour climbing the 33 step vertical ladder and walking narrow cliffs to see a village up close and personal. We each had different bits of details to share.

Mesa Verde Tour Experience

700 years tour mesa verde review

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700 years tour mesa verde review

700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour

Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order.

Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as waiting time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.

SandyWF

MESA VERDE TOUR EXPERIENCE (Mesa Verde National Park) - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go

700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour

700 years tour mesa verde review

  • Visit cultural landmarks including the Cliff Palace and Balcony House
  • Choose a morning or afternoon tour to fit your schedule
  • Get around the park with ease via air-conditioned coach
  • Benefit from the expert knowledge of a NAI-certified guide
  • See itinerary
  • Transportation by air conditioned coach
  • National Association for Interpretation certified Interpretive Guide
  • Local taxes
  • National Park Entry Fee (paid to the national park service) for Vehicles $30.00
  • Guide Gratuity (optional)
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off
  • National Park Entry Fee (paid to the national park service) for Motorcycles $25.00
  • National Park Entry Fee: for Each Bicyclist and Individual on Non-Commercial Buses Fee: $15.00
  • NOTE: For the National Park Fee, only credit cards will be accepted at this time.
  • Mesa Top Ruins Road, Mesa Top Ruins Rd, MESA VERDE, CO 81330, USA Meet our tour bus outside Far View Terrace Cafe at Mile Marker 15, about 30-45 minutes driving distance from the NPS entrance station at the bottom of the hill.
  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Pushchair accessible
  • Near public transportation
  • Infants must sit on laps
  • Confirmation will be received at time of booking
  • Children must be accompanied by an adult
  • ADA passengers are accommodated by a visit to Spruce Tree House and Chapin Mesa Museum
  • Electric scooters will not fit inside the coach, push behind wheelchairs are accommodated.
  • Dwellings are at 7,000 feet
  • Dress code:casual with comfortable walking shoes
  • Maximum Group Size: 40
  • No heart problems or other serious medical conditions
  • Travellers should have a moderate physical fitness level
  • This tour/activity will have a maximum of 40 travellers
  • For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours in advance of the start date of the experience.

Similar experiences

700 years tour mesa verde review

  • You'll start at Mesa Top Ruins Road Mesa Top Ruins Rd, MESA VERDE, CO 81330, USA Meet our tour bus outside Far View Terrace Cafe at Mile Marker 15, about 30-45 minutes driving distance from the NPS entrance station at the bottom of the hill. See address & details
  • 1 Mesa Verde Tour Experience Stop: 4 hours The tour starts at either 8am or 1:30pm from Far View Terrace, Mile Marker 15, 45 minutes inside Mesa Verde National Park where you will board a comfortable and air conditioned coach. Experience a chronological journey starting with a pithouse village (A.D. 600), the development of pueblos and underground ceremonial rooms called kivas (A.D. 900-1100), to the Classic Pueblo era of cliff dwellings dated from the 13th century. Take amazing photos of Fewkes Canyon Overlooks at Oak Tree House and Fire Temple with a walk around stop at Sun Temple. Learn about the 700 years of Ancestral Puebloan history from our experienced NAI certified Interpretive Guides all while we do the driving and parking. Read more
  • You'll return to the starting point

700 years tour mesa verde review

  • Vacationer760052 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Fabulous tour of Monument Valley Our 3.5 hour tour of Monument Valley with Dineh Bekeyah Tours was amazing. Yvonne was informative, professional, and gave us cultural insights we could not have gotten without a personal tour. Thanks to the Navajo tribe for its precautions in this era of COVID. Although I understand there are complaints about its mask requirements, anyone wary of traveling these days will find the safety measures logical and reassuring. Read more Written 4 October 2021
  • 294rebekahm 0 contributions 3.0 of 5 bubbles Scary road 1.5 hours long We took the Long House tour which was ranger assisted and not guided. The structure was neat BUT it was 1.5 hours from the park entrance on a windy, steep mountain road. 1.5 hours to and 1.5 hours from — for an hour long tour. Read more Written 7 August 2021
  • designmom1976 0 contributions 3.0 of 5 bubbles less than stellar We AGONIZED to get these tickets....didn't make the cut the first attempt, then 2nd attempt we *actually* got tickets!!! We were so fortunate. Now to review the "tour". It was not a "tour". The park ranger makes sure to check your tickets, walks you to the steps (we saw Long House), then leaves. You are left to walk around the site and simply "ask questions". Nobody to tell you ANYTHING unless you ASK questions. Was it worth it? All the suffering and stress to get these tickets? I can't believe I'm saying this: probably not. We were extremely sad that we had to pry information from these national park guides, who were out of work for over a year. What a let down. If the guides had actually been slightly interested in giving information it might have captured my teen kids interest, and mine....but alas. I told the park rangers I didn't know enough to ask questions, so I tried overhearing other folks Q&A, which helped tremendously. I was so excited to visit with my own children, having visited when I was a teenager. I will not be returning, even if I could get a free ticket without the stress. Why on earth would they hold the tickets until 2 weeks prior?! Families plan vacations a YEAR OR MORE in advance so this is extremely unfair. Tour companies seem to magically not have this problem. Read more Written 12 July 2021
  • MikeS533 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Perfect We did the 700 tour. Amazing. Holly was a great tour guide. I like the way we made stops to comprehend the basics. Eventually we got to walk through the largest cliff dwelling. 90% of the people on the tour bus were seniors. It was challenging to climb down and then back up after viewing the dwelling. We all did it and a few people needed a little extra time to rest. Go for it. Read more Written 1 October 2019
  • D3215SBjohnm 0 contributions 4.0 of 5 bubbles 700 Years Tour After seeing a negative review of the 700 year tour, we were apprehensive. However, our tour guide, Carolyn, a former NPS ranger, was an expert in all the sites on the tour and really did an excellent of preparing us for the highlight of the trip: the hike down to the Cliff Palace. The $70 price was part of a package with our room at the Far View Lodge and included the $5 Cliff Palace entry fee. I don’t believe we really would have understood and appreciated the history of the Mesa if we had saved a few bucks and simply stopped at sites along the way. Carolyn’s interpretation made the trip well worth the time and price. Read more Written 30 September 2019
  • 438tammies 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Wonderful Victoria and Grady were our guides. Very knowledgeable and super friendly. Was an amazing tour. Plenty of photo opportunities. The tour was about 3 hrs long. Read more Written 3 September 2019
  • PaulaK394 0 contributions 4.0 of 5 bubbles 700 year tour The tour guide and driver were great and we did learn a number of things we might not have if we hadn’t taken the tour. But the tour price is $70 each and yet all of the places we visited were free with plenty of parking. The Cliff Palace did require a booking with Park ranger and this $5 cost was in the $70. If I ever went there again I would definitely just buy a park guide for the Pueblo’s and visited on our own. Read more Written 21 August 2019
  • Lisa P 0 contributions 2.0 of 5 bubbles NOT worth the money! We did the 4 hour 700 year history tour. The highlight of the tour is getting to see the Cliff Palace which takes just a little over an hour and is led by a park ranger (not the guide that’s on the bus tour). Tickets for this event by itself are $5!! This is the best thing on the tour. You see a couple other kivas which you could easily see on your own and just read the signs. The other couple things are just stopping by the side of the road to take photos. Just do the Cliff Palace by itself and do the rest on your own. Read more Written 10 August 2019
  • lolaSD 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles 700 year tour Our Bus tour was excellent. We learned so much from our guide. Then we stopped at Cliff Palace where our Guide Rising Buffalo did a wonderful tour of the largest cliff dwelling in North America. It was so spiritual and uplifting. He was the best! Read more Written 7 August 2019
  • brucestalker1 0 contributions 4.0 of 5 bubbles Enjoyable visit, worth doing This was a well organised tour, covering a significant number of the Park’s key sites. Comfortable coach, good commentary, very cheery guide and coach driver as well as reasonable time at stops. A good overview of the Park if you are time limited. Read more Written 2 August 2019
  • Newbyrver 0 contributions 4.0 of 5 bubbles Balcony House Tour We did the Balcony House Tour at Mesa Verde National Park. Steep decent by stairs, then tall ladder up to it. Also, along a cliff! Narrow 12 ft tunnel to crawl through to exit, then a climb up over the cliff ,using only foot hold in the rock and chain "handrail". Scary, but what an awesome sight! Our guide, Teresa, was very knowledgeable, however, pushed her political views at the end of the tour...which soured the experience. Read more Written 1 July 2019
  • Cowslower 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles A true national gem in all facets We stayed in Durango, and then headed to Mesa Verde in mid morning, and then treated ourselves to an utterly compelling visit rooted in history, once-in-a-lifetime sites, great hiking and an experience not soon forgotten. Deciding on a guided tour of Cliff House (the only way to access the largest actual cliff dwelling in the massive Mesa Verde footprint), we purchased tickets at the visitor center in Durango the day before for the shocking price of $5 per person. There is a $25 entry fee to get into the national park itself, but there isn't a price you can put on this chance to step way back in time. Some guidepost thoughts for others: Stop at the welcome center to get a real sense of the Pueblo people, and to get a sense of some of the less-well-known visitor spots within the gargantuan park; don't hesitate to hit overlook spots coming in or leaving the park, a few of them provide vistas you just won't find anywhere else; be prepared for a nearly one-hour drive to get from the visitor center down to the southern tips of the park where the more-frequented tourist sites are located; be prepared to see incredible swaths of land that remain completely barren - save the darkened shadows of stark pinyon and juniper trees - because of horrific fires over the last 30 years; the guided tours can be a mixed bag because of large groups, which, inevitably, include a few people that just can't behave themselves in a sacrosanct, pristine setting; a challenging foray out of Cliff House that includes several ladders and a very tight fit in a vertical rock formation. Cliff House, Balcony House and several of the other main waypoints are just incredible, both as reminders of the ingenuity and engineering skill of the Pueblos (not Anasazi, as they're offered referred) and as incongruous visual points of reference under massive granite and sandstone overhangs. Couple of sidenotes: The museum at Chapin Mesa is free, but very dated and not terribly interesting; Wetherill Mesa, and it's accompanying driving loop, are FAR less crowded and hold a huge appeal all their own; take water with you everywhere, as it's in high demand once you get out into the park. I'm an unabashed, fervent fan of the national parks, and this one stands out for its uniqueness, beauty and lessons in history. Bonus points for a welcoming, friendly and helpful set of rangers, both in facilities and for our guided tour. Read more Written 6 June 2019
  • Boisenb 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles A Great National Park Plan on spending a couple of days in this park to experience it properly. The driving distance once you get to the visitors center is at least 45 minutes to each guided tour. Stop at the visitor's and purchase your tickets. The tours fill up fast. The thing to remember is that the "movie" about the area is not located at the visitor's center, like most other parks, but up the mountain at the museum. We stayed at the Far View Lodge. We had a very nice dinner that night and the buffet breakfast in the morning. Not cheap but worth staying in the park. Read more Written 3 June 2019
  • Jennifer L 0 contributions 4.0 of 5 bubbles Mesa Verde We went up to see Mesa Verde...very nice place. Lots to see and do in the park. Beautiful views on a great family outing! Read more Written 2 June 2019
  • Bill M 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Mesa Verde is an awesome place to spend a day. Mesa Verde has many extremely interesting stops to see, plan to spend at least 6 hours here. The guided tour to the Palace is a must do. Read more Written 30 May 2019

Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order.

Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as waiting time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.

Donna J

700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour provided by Mesa Verde Tour Experience

As They Are: Exploring the National Parks

Mesa verde national park: 700 years tour.

700 years tour mesa verde review

For more than 700 years—nearly triple the age of the United States—Ancestral Pueblo people inhabited what we now call Mesa Verde, a cuesta rising above the Colorado Plateau. Beginning in the mid-500s and lasting through the late 1200s, Mesa Verde was constantly inhabited, first by small assemblages of family units in modest pithouses on the mesa top, and ultimately by complex villages climaxing in the dramatic, world-famous cliff dwellings, including the largest cliff dwelling in the American Southwest, Cliff Palace. Then by the end of the 1280s, Mesa Verde was abandoned completely as the Ancestral Pueblo people migrated en masse to the Pueblos along the Rio Grande in what is now New Mexico or to Hopi lands in Arizona.

Sean and I had budgeted 2.5 days to explore Mesa Verde in a series of four tours. While tickets for ranger-led tours into the cliff dwellings are only available two weeks in advance, bus tours operated by concessionaire Aramark were available to book months ahead of time. Usually we’re much more interested in ranger-led options than in those handled by private companies, but we figured that the 700 Years Tour would be a good introduction to the Park on our first morning. And it concluded with a ranger-led tour of Cliff Palace. As we booked the tour in early April, we weren’t necessarily certain we’d be comfortable riding a tour bus with some 30 other people, but we’d cross that bridge if we had to. As it happened, the Delta variant was not yet raging in Colorado when we were there, and everyone was required to be masked, so we felt comfortable. Unfortunately, the Cliff Palace tour was a no-go because road work in the Park made it completely inaccessible in the summer of 2021.

And so on Friday, August 27 we began our exploration of Mesa Verde.

700 years tour mesa verde review

I woke with my alarm at 6am. The tour began at 8am, so that gave me a bit of time to do a little work on the balcony of our room at the lodge. This would be a theme.

700 years tour mesa verde review

But the view was so incredible that it was nice to sip a coffee and work a bit as the sun rose.

Sean woke up, and we both showered and dressed for our morning tour.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We checked in for the tour at the nearby Far View Terrace complex, which contained the concessionaire-operated gift shop, cafeteria, and tour hub.

700 years tour mesa verde review

After checking in, we grabbed breakfast sandwiches and yogurt to eat outside while we waited to board the bus.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Tour guide Lee and bus driver Grady welcomed the twenty or so of us onto the tour bus and oriented us to what was in store over the next several hours. As we pulled out of the parking area and drove up to Park Point, our first stop, Lee shared some of the history of Mesa Verde National Park, which had been established in 1906. At only 52,000 acres, it is relatively small. But it contains at least 5,000 archaeological sites and 600 cliff dwellings.

700 years tour mesa verde review

At Park Point, the highest point on Mesa Verde, we were treated to huge views into four states: Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. Beginning the tour at Park Point helped to place Mesa Verde into its geographical context.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Beyond the table land of the Mesa Verde cuesta there are major geological markers in almost every direction: the Chuska Mountains to the southwest and the San Juan Mountains to the northeast, Sleeping Ute Mountain immediately to the west, Shiprock in the distance to the south. Even the Bears Ears are visible to the northwest on clear days.

700 years tour mesa verde review

A woman of a certain age remarked to me that this was the first truly clear day that they’d had in weeks. She noted that Shiprock would not have been visible otherwise.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Sean and I were lucky that while we were at Mesa Verde we had very little visibility impact from the wildfires raging in California.

700 years tour mesa verde review

After orienting us to the vista and landmarks, Lee called our attention to the Montezuma Valley north of and below Mesa Verde. Today the valley holds the towns of Mancos and Cortez, Colorado, combined populations around 10,000 people. In the time of the Ancestral Pueblo people, the valley was home to 30,000 people, triple the population.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Lee pointed out the roof of a Walmart in the valley and noted that it was nearly adjacent to one of the most important dwellings found there. It was a reminder that for all of the drama of Mesa Verde and the cliff dwellings, it was only a very small part of a larger Ancestral Puebloan world. The population of Mesa Verde proper was likely never more than 5,000 people, dwarfed by the population even of the adjacent valley.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The Mesa Verde area was the northern extent of an Ancestral Puebloan homeland that encompassed what is now the Four Corners region. From roughly 900 to 1150, the center of Ancestral Puebloan culture was the city at Chaco Canyon, 100 miles or so to the south. Chaco and other urbanized areas of the Southwest—such as the Hohokam culture and their canal-supported city at what is now Phoenix—were themselves the northern extent of an urban-oriented Mesoamerican tradition that reached its climax with the great city of Teotihuacan (~1-500 CE) near what is now Mexico City.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The people of Chaco and Mesa Verde were connected to the people of what is now Mexico by established trade routes. Macaw feathers from tropical forests and shells from the Sea of Cortez are among the artifacts found at Ancestral Puebloan sites.

The earliest Anglo archeologists from the northeastern United States saw this connection clearly in the early years following the Mexican American War (1846-1848). Montezuma Valley is named for Motecuhzoma, the final leader of the Triple Alliance, or Aztec Empire, executed by Hernán Cortés in 1520. An important Ancestral Puebloan archaeological site between Mesa Verde and Chaco is known as Aztec Ruins. While these Anglo-bestowed place names in the Southwest are not properly attributable to the Triple Alliance, they recognize the southward orientation of peoples of the region and the irrelevance of an international border that didn’t exist until the middle of the nineteenth century.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Even as American archaeologists in the latter part of the nineteenth century celebrated the existence of “antiquities of our own” in the recently conquered territory that had been northern Mexico, they also participated in a deliberate attempt to minimize the presence, sophistication, and accomplishments of the Native Peoples of the Americas. For example in 1866, Lewis Henry Morgan, father of American Anthropology, argued that Motecuhzoma was not an emperor but merely a warlord. (This assessment would likely have shocked Cortés).

This minimization of the population, cultures, and accomplishments of the Native Peoples of the Americas continues into the twenty-first century. Quite simply, the more sophisticated the Indigenous societies of the Americas, the more monstrous the genocide. Minimizing the cohesion of Indigenous polities makes the invasion seem benign.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Names and narratives are deeply part of the Mesa Verde story in the twenty-first century. The people of Mesa Verde, Chaco, Aztec Ruins, and thousands of other sites the Southwest were known throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as the “Anasazi.” I was curious whether Lee would address the name issue. He did early in the tour and quite well. “Anasazi” is a Navajo word. The Navajo and Utes inhabited the region after the departure of the Ancestral Pueblo people. And so it was in a Navajo context that the cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde were originally defined. Anasazi means “ancient people” or “ancient enemy,” and has a negative connotation. In the 1990s, the modern Pueblo people requested that the National Park Service (and others) cease using the term Anasazi to refer to the peoples of Chaco, Mesa Verde, and elsewhere. Because no one knows how these people referred to themselves, the preferred name is “Ancestral Pueblo.”

“Ancestral Pueblo” is important also because it underscores that the people of Mesa Verde are the direct ancestors of the modern Pueblo people. Pervasive narratives around the “mysterious vanishing” of the people of Mesa Verde purposefully ignore that, while we may not fully understand why the Ancestral Pueblo people migrated from the Four Corners to the Rio Grande, we certainly know they didn’t vanish into thin air. They simply moved to Taos Pueblo, Laguna Pueblo, and the dozens of other Pueblo communities.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The Hopi, who trace their ancestors to the Ancestral Pueblo, call Mesa Verde “The Place of Songs.”

700 years tour mesa verde review

We climbed back on the bus and descended from Park Point down the gradual slope of the cuesta. As we headed south on Chapin Mesa, we passed through an area that was extensively burned in 2002. Much of the surface of Mesa Verde has seen wildland fire damage in the previous fifty years. The National Park Service at this Park has to walk a careful balance in fire management. Although occasional fire is part of the ecosystem, it can endanger the archaeological sites that are the Park’s priority to protect.

700 years tour mesa verde review

On Chapin Mesa, we stopped at the site of a pithouse from early in the era when the Ancestral Pueblo people inhabited Mesa Verde.

This is the site of a pithouse, one of the earliest permanent dwellings on Mesa Verde. The family that lived here was not isolated, but was part of a community. Their neighbors lived in at least seven pithouses nearby, and small fields or gardens were probably located close to the homes, wherever growing conditions were good. They raised corn, beans, and squash, hunted animals, and gathered an impressive array of wild plants. – National Park Service sign

700 years tour mesa verde review

Our tour disembarked the bus, entered the corrugated metal enclosure protecting the pithouse, and spread out around it.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Architectural details, such as the holes that would have held the posts supporting the roof, were still present.

700 years tour mesa verde review

As was part of a low, dividing wall.

700 years tour mesa verde review

In this 1,400-year-old pithouse, we could see some of the elements that would come to much fuller fruition in later Ancestral Puebloan architecture: the slight submersion, the central hearth, the cluster of community dwellings.

700 years tour mesa verde review

After our brief visit to the pithouse, we climbed back onto the bus for a short drive to Square Tower House.

700 years tour mesa verde review

As we approached, an NPS law enforcement vehicle passed us with siren blaring. It stopped at the parking area for Square Tower House. The bus pulled over and we disembarked, intending to walk out to the cliff dwelling’s overlook.

700 years tour mesa verde review

There were multiple Park Rangers onsite. Lee asked one what the situation was. Apparently there was some sort of emergency with a visitor on that morning’s tour to the cliff dwelling. The ranger asked Lee to keep our tour group away so that they would have room for whatever emergency procedure might be necessary.

700 years tour mesa verde review

This was Friday morning, and Sean and I had tickets for the tour into the cliff dwelling for Sunday morning. The woman of a certain age who had commented on how clear the skies were earlier pointed out the access ladders for the cliff dwelling. They were attached to the cliff face opposite. She noted that the ladders followed the same access route that the Ancestral Puebloans had used to reach Square Tower House. She said that particularly when we descended the lower ladder on our tour, we should look for the hand and foot holds hewn into the cliff.

700 years tour mesa verde review

I wasn’t thrilled at the prospect of the ladders and rope access. But that was a reserve of bravery to find on another day. Meanwhile, it was back on the bus for our next stop.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Up next was another mesa top site. This time a series of three subsequent villages—from 900, 1100, and 1075 successively—each built upon the foundation of the others. This tradition of abandonment, return, and reuse was widespread at Ancestral Puebloan sites.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The third and final village was built around 1075, just before construction of the cliff dwellings began. While the village’s foundations and subterranean architecture are very well preserved, there was little stone rubble found at the site. It is quite possible that the stones used for this village were repurposed in the nearby cliff dwellings.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Ancestral Puebloan kivas likely developed from earlier pithouses. Kivas, however, were likely public spaces—religious, ceremonial, or political. Like the earlier pithouses, they featured a central hearth. Platform benches encircle the space. Depressions for foot drumming highlight the floor.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Post-excavation, it was easy to see how the newer kiva (left, above) had replaced and partly filled the older kiva.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We climbed back into the bus for the short drive to the intersection of Fewkes Canyon and Cliff Canyon, where multiple cliff dwellings, including the most famous, Cliff Palace, were visible. After not being able to see Square Tower House because of the emergency earlier, we’d waited all morning to see a cliff dwelling. Now, here they were.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Even at a distance, the size of Cliff Palace dwarfed the other cliff dwellings near it.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The evocative names—Cliff Palace, Mummy House, Fire Temple—have nothing to do with what the Ancestral Pueblo people would have called these places. Some of the names we have for the cliff dwellings are romantic (Cliff Palace, Fire Temple) while others are merely descriptive (Balcony House, Long House). Others are named for something found there (Mug House, Mummy House).

700 years tour mesa verde review

As our eyes became accustomed to seeing the dwellings, we began to notice more structures along the peripheries.

700 years tour mesa verde review

What led the Ancestral Pueblo people of Mesa Verde to move down into the cliff alcoves after some 600 years of living on the surface of the cuesta? We don’t know for certain, and the way that the National Park Service has discussed it has evolved over time (more on that in a subsequent post). But we do know that the construction of the cliff dwellings was something of a climax event. A segment of people on Mesa Verde or in the region moved into cliff dwellings during a period of roughly a century between the collapse of the the power center at Chaco Canyon and the complete emptying of the people of the Mesa Verde region.

Intriguingly, the structure known as Sun Temple (above) was built so late in the Mesa Verde era that it was unfinished at the time of the depeopling. It is similar in style to the structures at Chaco, and some archaeologists suspect it may have been a late, last-ditch effort to assert the power of Chaco at a Mesa Verde being abandoned.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Whatever the reason, there were many advantages to living in the cliff alcoves rather than in the canyon bottoms or on the mesa top. The dwellings were cool in summer and warm in winter. They were defensible. They were closer to water, both seeps in the cliff walls and springs and creeks in the canyons. However, even as the people moved into the cliff dwellings, they continued to tend agricultural fields on the mesa top.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Even from across Fewkes Canyon, we could see the remains of pigment on what had been interior walls of a structure in Fire Temple.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Our fellow tourists were mostly older than we were (although there was a family with two kids). I most enjoyed the woman of a certain age who knew a lot about the flora and fauna of the region and who pointed things out to us. We were a little baffled by the folks who didn’t know whether you could enter the cliff dwellings. How do you make it to the Park and onto a tour without having absorbed how to visit one of the dwellings? Lee patiently explained that there were tours led by National Park Rangers and that one cliff dwelling on Long Mesa was accessible without a tour.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We hopped back onto the bus and headed to the other side of Fewkes Canyon to Sun Temple.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The name Sun Temple didn’t come from any particular cosmological alignment, but from a decorative stone at one edge of the structure.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Whoever had been building Sun Temple before the work was abandoned, it was clearly intended to be impressive.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Near Sun Temple, we had a better view of Cliff Palace, the largest cliff dwelling in the Southwest.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Normally, Cliff Palace would be bustling with tours, including ours. But the road construction above it had cut it off, allowing for relatively rare photos of it without any visitors.

700 years tour mesa verde review

After everyone got their photos of Cliff Palace, we boarded the bus and drove to our last stop, the Chapin Mesa Historical District.

700 years tour mesa verde review

The Historical District was the original hub of visitor activity at Mesa Verde National Park and boasts a suite of buildings from the first half of the twentieth century constructed in a rustic Southwest architectural style. The area was developed under the guidance of one of the National Park’s earliest superintendents, Jesse Nusbaum, who had been hand-picked by legendary National Park Service founder, Stephen Mather, to improve the visitor experience, interpretation, and educational programs at Mesa Verde National Park.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Here on a veranda overlooking Spruce Tree House, Lee wrapped up our morning’s tour.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Spruce Tree House was also closed to visitors (and will be for the foreseeable future) after the Park Service discovered that the immense slab of rock forming the alcove’s ceiling is unstable. The Park Service continues to work on ways to stabilize it so that it doesn’t suddenly collapse and destroy Spruce Tree House.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We boarded the bus one last time to return to Far View Terrace. We tipped Lee and thanked him as we exited the bus. Although it was a concessionaire-operated tour, I thought Lee did a really fine job.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We grabbed a lunch of paninis and salad to go from the cafe at Far View Terrace and took it back to our room. There we sat on our little balcony and enjoyed the privacy and view while we ate.

700 years tour mesa verde review

I remarked that I could just sit and watch the view all day. But we had more adventures ahead of us that afternoon. We had tickets for the 3pm tour into Long House. After our morning of viewing them from the mesa top, we were excited to actually get to enter a cliff dwelling.

700 years tour mesa verde review

Juan, taking care of Elsa back in Chicago, posted an update to Instagram.

Further Reading:

Grant Noble, David, ed., The Mesa Verde World: Explorations in Ancestral Pueblo Archaeology, School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, NM, 2006.

Lekson, Stephen H., A History of the Ancient Southwest, School for Advanced Research Press, Santa Fe, NM, 2008.

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700 years tour mesa verde review

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Lodge & 700 Years Tour Package

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Lodge & 700 Years Tour

Same price as last year!

Discover Mesa Verde National Park with an exciting package that invites you to experience the culture, activities, and history of the World Heritage Site. 

Package Details

  • 2-nights lodging at Far View Lodge
  • Tickets for 2 people on the 700-Year Tour
  • Valid May 1 - October 23, 2024

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700 Years Tour - Mesa Verde Tour Experience

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700 Years Tour

After seeing a negative review of the 700 year tour, we were apprehensive. However, our tour guide, Carolyn, a former NPS ranger, was an expert in all the sites on the tour and really did an excellent of preparing us for the highlight of the trip: the hike down to the Cliff Palace. The $70 price was part of a package with our room at the Far View Lodge and included the $5 Cliff Palace entry fee. I don’t believe we really would have understood and appreciated the history of the Mesa if we had saved a few bucks and simply stopped at sites along the way. Carolyn’s interpretation made the trip well worth the time and price.

700 years tour mesa verde review

We signed up for this tour ss we wanted to have a goid understanding of the Pueblo history. Bus was on time. Our guide was excellent as was the NP Ranger Kevin who took us to Cliff Palace dwelling..requires some agility. Very pleased with the whole experience.

We chose the 1:30pm departure hoping that the sun would warm up the fall air and we were not disappointed. At 8am the temp was in the low 40's but by 1:30pm it was sunny and the high 60s. Most likely in the summer you would want the earlier trip opposed to the heat of the afternoon. The bus was a nice new one with nice leather seats and sat 40 passengers. Our bus was full. There was not a lot of storage so whatever you brought had to be put at your feet or on your lap. We had Ashley as a guide and Grady as our driver. Both were excellent. Ashley was very knowledgeable on all topics. My advice is to stop in the Visitor Center prior to taking this tour as a ranger will let you know what sites this tour will NOT take you to. Then, if you have time you can do those on your own. The guides give you so much more history than just looking at ruins and reading placards. If you are physically able, the Cliff Palace is a must. There are narrow openings and ladders to climb. If you choose not to participate then you have 1 hour at the Cliff Palace overlook. During the entire tour they provided water free of charge and encouraged you to drink it. As others have stated, sit on the right side of the bus (as you are looking out the windshield) as you will have the best view. Buying tickets on tripadvisor saves you money too while giving you and opportunity for advance purchase. This is a must for your trip to Mesa Verde.

Went last Saturday for the Ranger Tour. We went on the 4 hour tour by bus our guide was Pam she was great! She and the driver took us to many sites and gave us the history of the Pueblo’s.It was very interesting but a warm day. Wear comfortable clothes and shoes and drink plenty of water! It was a very educational experience not for young children. My husband went with the ranger to go see the Ruins a lot of walking and stairs and ladders to climb. Not for the elderly or feeble. Glad we were able to see it!

700 years tour mesa verde review

Victoria and Grady were our guides. Very knowledgeable and super friendly. Was an amazing tour. Plenty of photo opportunities. The tour was about 3 hrs long.

We went on a 30 minute trail viewing the mayan villages. The tour guide gave information along the way of the trees, flowers and shrubs including the average life span,propagation cycle etc. Then we saw several progressions of the building of the village, including what and how they prepared food. I took this tour while my daughter & husband did the strenuous tour climbing the 33 step vertical ladder and walking narrow cliffs to see a village up close and personal. We each had different bits of details to share.

COMMENTS

  1. 700 year tour

    Ask vac1017 about 700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour. 1 Thank vac1017 . This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards.

  2. 700 Years Tours

    The 700 year tour was super due to the enthusiasm of the guide and ranger. I've been to Mesa Verde before but the 700 year tour made it the ultimate trip. - Guest Testimonial The 700 year tour was exceptional beyond description and the guide was truly well informed in every way. - Guest Testimonial

  3. 700 Years Tour

    Mesa Verde Tour Experience: 700 Years Tour - See 381 traveler reviews, 315 candid photos, and great deals for Mesa Verde National Park, CO, at Tripadvisor.

  4. Mesa Verde Tour Experience

    Tours and Tickets by Mesa Verde Tour Experience. Revenue impacts the experiences featured on this page, learn more. 700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour. 55. Walking Tours. 4 hours. Learn about the history of the Mesa Verde National Park's Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings on this half-day cultural tour…. Free cancellation.

  5. 700 Year Tour

    Review. Trips Alerts Sign in. Basket. Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde National Park Tourism ...

  6. 700 Year Tour

    Half-day Tours in Durango: Check out 157 reviews and photos of Viator's 700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour. a Tripadvisor company. en / INR ₹ Top Durango activities. Explore by category ... Mesa Verde Review. Ray_T, Aug 2022. Views and history of Mesa Verde were amazing and spectacular. Would certainly recommend this to friends ...

  7. 700 Year Tour

    See the UNESCO World Heritage-listed sites of Mesa Verde National Park on a tour of the park's Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings. A guide provides insight into the history, architecture, and spiritual features of these ancient homes and how they were lived in hundreds of years ago. Please note, this tour starts inside the park; you must already be in the park after paying your own national ...

  8. Mesa Verde National Park: 700 Years Tour

    For more than 700 years—nearly triple the age of the United States—Ancestral Pueblo people inhabited what we now call Mesa Verde, a cuesta rising above the Colorado Plateau. Beginning in the mid-500s and lasting through the late 1200s, Mesa Verde was constantly inhabited, first by small assemblages of family units in modest pithouses on the….

  9. Mesa Verde Tour Experience

    Apr 18, 2024 - National Association for Interpretation Certified (NAI) professional guides make the history of Mesa Verde come alive with captivating storytelling of a people who evolved from hunter-gatherers int...

  10. Lodge & 700 Years Tour

    Same price as last year! Discover Mesa Verde National Park with an exciting package that invites you to experience the culture, activities, and history of the World Heritage Site. Package Details. 2-nights lodging at Far View Lodge; Tickets for 2 people on the 700-Year Tour ; Valid May 1 - October 23, 2024

  11. 700 Year Tour

    Review of Mesa Verde Tour Experience. Reviewed June 5, 2015. We took the 700-Year tour in early June 2015. It was with every penny - a delight! There are a couple of things to consider before going (bear in mind this comes from a 68-year old): - If you want to view Mesa Verde up close, be in good shape. Those overweight, heart or lung problems ...

  12. 700 Year Tour

    Half-day Tours in Durango: Check out 126 reviews and photos of Viator's 700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour. a Tripadvisor company. en £ GBP. Help. Bookings. Account. Top activities in Durango. Top Durango landmarks ... Mesa Verde Review. Ray_T, Aug 2022.

  13. Self-Guided Tours

    Auto Tour - 700 Years of Mesa Verde History The Mesa Top Loop Road is a 6-mile (10 km) drive that is a tour through time. Along the road, you'll find short, easily-accessible paved trails to view twelve ancestral sites, including surface sites and overlooks of cliff dwellings—the ancient homes and villages of the Ancestral Pueblo people who ...

  14. 700 Years Tour

    Mesa Verde Tour Experience: 700 Years Tour - See 381 traveler reviews, 315 candid photos, and great deals for Mesa Verde National Park, CO, at Tripadvisor.

  15. 700 Year Tour

    See the UNESCO World Heritage-listed sites of Mesa Verde National Park on a tour of the park's Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings. A guide provides insight into the history, architecture, and spiritual features of these ancient homes and how they were lived in hundreds of years ago. Please note, this tour starts inside the park; you must already be in the park after paying your own national ...

  16. 2024 Little Cottonwood Tour provided by Elevated Excursions Utah

    These reviews are the subjective opinions of Tripadvisor members and not of Tripadvisor LLC. ... Day Tour from Guangzhou 12 Days Best of Turkey Tour Martha Brae Rafting and Luminous Lagoon from Montego Bay and Falmouth 700 Year Tour - Half Day Mesa Verde Cultural Tour Luxury Ride Trip to Famous Car Meet-up Spot in Daikoku Madame Tussauds NYC ...