Bob, lots of Turkey Creeks, several in Arizona. This one flows into Aravaipa. The one in New Mexico is on the bucket list. I've got topos, write ups and have viewed the satellite images. Got the 4x4. You make it sound like a great place.
Nudewalker, next week, unless I do something this week, I'll publish the Muleshoe Ranch trip. Muleshoe is more wild, less friendly, but water trickles with sound, birds sing.
I haven't been to the NYC cathedral, just visited many in Europe. I suppose that they are the same-ish. Sound carries and it amplified against canyon walls. This canyon did that at times, even that echo acoustic, but there was mostly stark silence. Lots of trees and carpets of brush and grass do that there, like filling up an empty house. We were mostly in reverent, observant, mindful silence, as we often are in nature. Five toe shoes are more like moccasins, soft and quiet. A brush on a river rock, or a wobbly one cracking against another.
I read that many of the cathedrals in Europe were built over the Druid tall oak groves, on the hills. I forget where the source was. The vaulted arches are like huge trees of stone with a meadow in between filled with seating. I wonder what the sound was like in a tall oak grove. Maybe there are some back east. One day, I'll return back east and make a point of one. I seem to remember something of echoes around trees, but it has been too long since I was around thick hardwoods. The only oak grove that I have been in was a circle of them along the creek in Sedona. They weren't so big, maybe a tiny twenty feet inside the circle, no sound effect, but the vortex was certainly there. I'm wandering here, but can anyone clue me in, refresh my memory, of sound and silence in a thick tall woods? Snow produces stark quiet in a forest.
Jbee