Monday 16th May. I bought all my supplies today and will start packing and loading tommorrow AM. Will arrive on Little Wildhorse Creek on Wednesday afternoon after interviewing an elderly land owner in the morning who I've already contacted by phone. Seems across the highway and down a ravine in Little Wildhorse there are three stone walls measuring about 3ft. high and forming a triangular structure 12 ft. across at the back and 40 ft. long. He says it was a cellar for a house that was washed away in a flood when he was a young man.
Tommorrow i will ask him if he personally witnessed the "entire" structure go up from the ground up? My reason is, the wall closest to the Creek appears to me to be made from heavier darker colored stones. Some weighing in excess of 200 lbs. Could the ravine itself (forming two sides of a perfect triangle) have been an earlier excavation? I think it's possible whoever built a house in such a precarious place, may have done so because he was taking advantage of a pre-existing structure. The same geography that led to the house being swept away, also precludes this original wall from being a defensive position. Shooting down into the ravine at the wall from ontop the caprock would have been like shooting "fish in a barrel". Not a good place to be trapped in. 50-75 yrds from the Creek, below the caprock in a ravine, surrounded by Comanche Indians.
Which brings me to another theory. The original wall and the walls of the excavated ravine forming a tringle were deliberately hidden below the cap rock. It could well be an obvious treasure sign. Something as simple as an arrow marker pointing towards the head of the Little Wildhorse Creek less than 2 miles away. Not my theory, one put forth by a relative who served in IRAQ. He says a triangle on the ground is used in linear navigation by soldiers and has been used as such for hundreds of years. Spaniards ? I hope so, because the Conquestadores were no fools. They wouldn't have wasted their time creating such a marker over a few particles of gold found in a creek somewhere.