From the Desert to the Sea

Salome Road in Tonopah, Arizona

Sometimes reality shifts, though the phenomena are likely the result of the shenanigans of someone who is performing a sleight of hand. And so it is that in January 2023, the blog post that used to occupy this slot has been updated. You see, we are on our way to California and are passing Salome Road on Interstate 10, but the original post featured someone in the surf who “represented” the idea of us being in California or on our way. Little did I know 17 years ago that accuracy would matter as long as “future-us” had a general idea of what we were doing on that day. Well, it does matter, and so here I am repairing my sloppiness. The text and the photo that were here until now have been moved to the day where they should have appeared, that is, August 6th, 2006.

The Pacific Ocean near Ventura, California

We were on our way to Goleta, just north of Santa Barbara. Goleta is often considered a part of that city, as the University of Santa Barbara is just down the street. This still being summer and us having left Arizona at midday, allowed us to indulge in this beautiful sunset near Ventura when so often we arrived at our family’s place closer to midnight.

Perfection

Sunset at Seacliff Drive south of Santa Barbara, California

The Pacific is calm, the breeze cool. Santa Barbara just may be the best place to be in all of America right now. Just a week prior to my visit, Santa Barbara was experiencing near 100-degree weather with humidity high enough to make anyone uncomfortable. Now, perfection has returned, and this city on the coast is a dream come true. Eucalyptus scent fills the air which is a warm 78 degrees during the day, while overnight, with windows wide open, the temperature hovers around 68 degrees. If it weren’t for the million-dollar price tags on homes and the lack of well-paying jobs outside of law and medicine, Caroline and I would easily opt for living right here.

Sunset

Another beautiful sunset over Phoenix, Arizona

These sunset photos are not always easy to grab. Usually, when the sky starts to glow or alight with a parade of colors I am driving on a freeway or otherwise unable to find a location that offers horizon minus powerlines, houses, or billboards. To snap this I pulled on to a street that had a slight uphill slope, jumped out of the car, raised the camera above a chainlink fence separating me from the freeway, and shot blindly. As urban sprawl takes over Phoenix there are fewer and fewer scenic locations offering the uninterrupted views that 20 years ago made the city so attractive.

Chaco Culture, New Mexico

On the way to Taos, New Mexico, we made an unscheduled stop at Chaco Culture National Historic Park. This was our fourth time visiting this World Heritage Site. Those first few words are part of the original post I shared back in July 2006, along with one photo, the overhead view of Pueblo Bonito a few photos below this. This acknowledgment is part of an update in January 2023 aiming to share more of the details and more images from our epic 4th of July trek to Texas. As was the case with the previous day, this post was originally fewer than 200 words long, and there are no notes to refer back to that might illuminate what was in our minds over the course of the seven days of this particular vacation. No matter, my goal is to add some kind of context that should Caroline or I read this ten years hence, we’ll be entertained that this writing captured something that rings true with what might have been.

This wouldn’t be the last time we visit Chaco, and though we’ve been here a number of times, we continue returning, looking for something that remains elusive. I equate this search with the same thing I’m looking for in cathedrals, castles, and other historic sites: the echoes of those who preceded us. Some might think I’m looking for ghosts, but that would be silly as I do not believe in phantasms. I do think that humans have a powerful recollection that is able to project into our consciousness what might have filled the space at one time based on things we’ve seen in the past. For example, if you were chased as a child by a dog at a particular corner in the neighborhood you grew up in, you might look for the sign of a dog a decade later when making a visit to that childhood home. In that sense, you have the image of the ghost of that dog in your mind’s eye. I’m looking for those indigenous people I’ve seen elsewhere to be transported here because I wish it to be so. I have no real expectation of experiencing such a thin, but it is that unfulfilled dream scenario that brings me back to finally discovering what I failed to see previously.

Literally, hundreds of people could have occupied this kiva 1,000 years ago, while today, we visitors can only try to imagine the sights, sounds, smells, and nature of the ceremonies, storytelling, or celebration that would have occurred here under a massive roof that once covered the kiva. For me, this is the grand cathedral of the ancestral people that helped shape the culture of the southwest.

We are fortunate that even this much still exists of the history of these people, and while many artifacts have been preserved, there is a secret life that, though it may echo across time, remains secret and mostly hidden to those of us who’d love to peel back its veil of mystery.

Toddlers maneuvered through these rooms, teens slept here, adults realized lives, and elders shared wisdom with the group that allowed them to exist in an environment that was likely just as remote and severe as it is to us who visit today. What I imagine they did have was a routine that reassured them that this life was the best life and that their version of normal was the glue that held the fabric of their society together.

We may look through the windows and doors of Chaco, but there is nobody on the other side. Everyone is gone, and there are no markers or diagrams to offer us an understanding of anything more than what we might choose to imagine. The hands that toiled to build a dream have fallen silent long gone, and as much as I desire, I cannot pull their sounds from the ether. As in the cathedral, where on occasion I can smell the frankincense or myrrh, I yearn to smell anything that might linger here all of these hundreds of years after the inhabitants left and, as I might also experience in a church, as the choir finishes a hymn and I listen to the reverberations of those voices moving through the cavernous space, I long to hear a native voice, drum, or flute that has remained lost in a corner here over the centuries.

View of Pueblo Bonito from overlook at Chaco Culture in New Mexico

With a cool morning but a blazing sun, we opted to take a hike up the sandstone face near Kin Kletso. A somewhat steep 350-foot (106 meters) scramble up rocks and boulders leading to a narrow crack slicing upwards to the top of the cliff, the Pueblo Alto Trail offers a spectacular view of Pueblo Bonito, featured here as today’s photo of the day.

I now wonder, how could I have left out these ancient sea fossils we found atop the cliffside? Was my curiosity as strong about them and their lives in the millions of years before the indigenous humans arrived, or was I blinded by my desire to better understand the Puebloan inhabitants?

What’s encoded here? I’m going to put forth that this is a packing list and directions for those going on a journey to Mexico to trade chocolate with the people who lived well south of here. Sure, it might mean something altogether different but who cares at the moment one is taking in what one cannot understand?

From the top of the cliffside, looking in the opposite direction of Pueblo Bonito, the view leads into badlands with nothing on the horizon aside from an infinity of space that might go on for eternity.

Now thoroughly sunburned and almost four hours behind schedule, we leave the park, bouncing over 20 miles of rough washboard dirt road to reach a modern ruin, a relic of a gas station in Regina, New Mexico. Good thing we didn’t need what they weren’t selling.

And with the convenience of gasoline in an air-conditioned car, we close the infinity of space in mere minutes, able to travel roads paved for our convenience with nary a thought of ever getting truly lost. As a matter of fact, just how difficult is it these days to be lost, excluding those locked in mental illness? We just keep going, and ultimately, we’ll get where we need to be.

Excuse me while I go out on a limb, but I just wrote about a magmatic dike seen at Shiprock yesterday. I’m guessing this here was a sedimentary dike, also called a clastic dike, where sediments filled a space between other rocks, and then those rocks eroded, leaving this column of red rock.

Like an Eye of Horus or maybe more like the eye of the hawk, this cloud over Antonito, Colorado, is open to interpretation, but when we see symbols and reminders of the life around us, how might these appearances have influenced people to see the spirit of all things in the world around them?

We’ve already passed through Cuba, Coyote, Cebolla, Brazos, and Chama today, and while they obviously leave impressions, the images shared from this day ended up being more important to my memories than the recording of those places that have names.

Only to contradict me in the next paragraph, we stopped here in Manassa, Colorado, to show my age. We are standing outside the birthplace of famous boxing champ Jack Dempsey. Oh, wait, Dempsey fought from 1914 to 1927, and I was just confusing my knowledge of the past with showing my age, but in a sense, I am showing my age as it would seem to me that the current generation has quite a limited knowledge of cultural history beyond about the 1980s.

I point out a lot of things I’m in love with, but have I ever shared my appreciation for heavy clouds in the distance where some small corner of the looming giant bursts and a column of rain blots out the light from behind it, leaving no ambiguity that a torrent of water is falling from the sky over there? And then, if that wasn’t enough, we are treated with a curtain of crepuscular rays peaking out from the heavens above.

I look at this photo with what might be considered a sense of dread. As a modern human, I cannot know what it is to look at a horizon and have the understanding that there is just much more of the same ahead. How long would I have needed to walk 35,000 years ago to reach an end, a sea, or an impassable chasm? In another age, how much time might I have been able to afford a long walk under the sky with no sense of purpose or responsibility other than to myself to find food and water along the way and fend off animals that might want to eat me?

I’d imagine that the family that stopped here along their path in life had something similar in mind about going out for a walk in the middle of nowhere when they found this isolated corner; they felt it worthwhile to drag what they’d need out here to make a living and build a house. Things must have been tough out here as even to this day, only a few people seem to have figured out how to survive. Even the tenacity of indigenous people must have understood that you do not build permanent camps out here, only use this land during the seasons compatible with nomadism.

Now, as it grows late in the day, we need to stop this daydreaming and go connect with where we’ll take refuge for the night. Our destination is down in Taos, New Mexico, where we already have a reservation at the Indian Hills Inn near Taos Plaza for only $78, while dinner was at Antonio’s – The Taste of Mexico.

Fire at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon

Antelope Island at the Great Salt Lake in Utah

Attention: This post, like so many travel entries I made in the earliest days of blogging, was a mere one photo. Here in late 2022, I’ve been repairing them.

Something like this makes the 43-year-old version of me feel like a hundred lifetimes ago; where did the boundless energy come from that allowed us to push so hard? When we left Salt Lake City yesterday, we didn’t head south to bring us closer to home; we went north to better position ourselves for this trip out to Antelope Island. At this point, we are 731 miles (1,176km) from home, but no need to worry; we’ve done worse.

Antelope Island at the Great Salt Lake in Utah

Fielding Garr Ranch on the island was hosting a bunch of guys about this man’s age demonstrating engines that might have been in use when they were children. Not that any of them are over 100 years of age, like one of the engines that dates back to the 1890s, but you can see they’ve accumulated some years.

Antelope Island at the Great Salt Lake in Utah

The lake is disappearing, just as we should expect. When you consider that this is the last remaining puddle compared to what created it, it’s surprising that we still have the lake as it is. Not long ago, on planetary terms, Lake Bonneville filled this basin from Nevada to Idaho and down a good 200 miles with nearly 1,000 feet of water.

Caroline Wise in The Great Salt Lake in Utah

When the last ice age ended about 11,500 years ago, the waters of Lake Bonneville started to recede and evaporate, and the ground that Caroline was standing on started springing upward as the weight of the vast lake was disappearing.

Antelope Island at the Great Salt Lake in Utah

That’s Fremont Island out there.

Great Salt Lake in Utah

Those mountains and ones further south in Salt Lake City all show evidence of the old shoreline in the form of shelves and benches that were carved by the shore lapping at the base of the mountain range.

Sinclair Gas Station Elberta, Utah

Here we are at the intersections of state routes 68 and 6 because freeways are for people in a hurry. And while we still have 600 miles home from this point, there was still time to visit the old Sinclair Gas Station in Elberta, Utah, that will sell gas no more.

Porter Rockwell Cabin in Eureka, Utah

And if we are going to be out sightseeing, might as well go for broke and follow whatever interesting thing pops up on the map, such as this old Porter Rockwell Cabin in Eureka, Utah.

Porter Rockwell Cabin in Eureka, Utah

While not its original location, it is the original cabin of this pioneer and man with some claim to fame. You see, Porter was once bodyguard to both Joseph Smith and Brigham Young, though he already had the nickname “Destroying Angel.” How does one earn that name? It was said that Porter killed more outlaws than Wyatt Earp, Doc Holladay, Tom Horn, and Bat Masterson combined. You should Google the guy as he strikes an interesting impression considering he did cut his beard or hair for many years.

Sevier River in Delta, Utah

The Sevier River appears to have quite a bit of sediment running in it today.

Fort Deseret in Delta, Utah

Fort Deseret in Delta, Utah, is quickly returning to earth. Not much remains of its construction, having been built as a defensive structure in 1865 during the Utah Black Hawk War.

State Route 257 between Milford and Delta, Utah

We’re somewhere in Utah and will be for some time yet.

The Historic Milford Hotel in Milford, Utah

The Historic Milford Hotel in Milford, Utah, seemed to be slated for renovation, but as of 2022, when I’m adding this, I can find nothing to confirm that.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Cedar Breaks National Monument in Brian Head, Utah

Heck yeah, we’ll dip into a national monument.

Cedar Breaks National Monument in Brian Head, Utah

1937 Log Cabin was initially built to serve as a ranger office and visitor contact point for bus tour passengers stopping at Point Supreme here at Cedar Breaks National Monument.

Cedar Breaks National Monument in Brian Head, Utah

Cedar because early settlers thought the nearby juniper trees were cedars, and Breaks because of the abrupt change in topography where the land just drops off to severe injury or death should you find yourself tumbling over the cliffside.

Navajo Lake in Kane County, Utah

Navajo Lake near Cedar City is fed by springs and is even better looking in person.

Fire at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon

What the hell is burning out there?

Fire at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon

Holy cow, it’s the tiny fire on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon we saw on Friday night.

North Rim of the Grand Canyon on fire in Arizona, view from the Bitter Springs Overlook on the road to Page

Two days later that small fire has become an 18,000-acre monster. On our way south going back home today, we stopped at the Bitter Springs overlook on the road out of Page along with a hundred other spectators to gawk at this extraordinary and tragic sight.

Salt Lake City

Coral Pink Sand Dunes near Kanab, Utah

Attention: This post, like so many travel entries I made in the earliest days of blogging, was a mere one photo. Here in late 2022, I’ve been repairing them.

Left Kanab, Utah, as the sun crept over the horizon, with it just visible, we were passing the Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park at the start of a beautiful day.

Maisy the Donkey from Glendale, Utah

Woah, this is Maisy the Donkey, who we just met last year during winter and was a juvenile; her coat was much darker. As a young lady donkey, she’s shed that thick hair, and her ears sprouted right up. We are passing through Glendale, Utah.

Man sitting under a bunch of balloons near Panguitch, Utah

This is John Ninomiya flying his cluster balloons near Panguitch, Utah, at their annual balloon rally.

Somewhere along Utah Route 89

While I can tell you that we are on state route 89, I can’t tell you anything else here other than I loved the reflection.

Courthouse Inn in Junction, Utah

Courthouse Inn in Junction, Utah, is for rent for people who might need eight bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms for that larger family reunion they’ve been planning.

On the way to Salt Lake City in Utah

Many of the photos I take are for the future should the day come when we can’t explore these areas, and we need the reminder of what the landscape looked like when we were able to travel and stop wherever and whenever we felt like it.

On the way to Salt Lake City in Utah

Driving by free-flowing water always demands an extra moment when you understand that so little of America’s waterways are still flowing and not dammed.

On the way to Salt Lake City in Utah

It may feel like summer at home, but the green and the snowcapped mountains remind us that spring is just giving way to summer in other parts of the states.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah

I could tell you we went to see a performance of A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor today at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah, but no one we know has heard of this National Public Radio show. Linda Ronstadt and Ann Savoy performed, as did Ramblin’ Jack Elliot.

Prairie Home Companion being performed at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah

Ramblin’ Jack Elliot is a bit of a legend having studied under Woody Guthrie and subsequently using that influence to help Guthrie’s son Arlo learn the craft.

Prairie Home Companion being performed at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah

We’ve heard their voices a hundred times, that is, Fred Newman (left), Tim Russell (middle),  and Sue Scott (right), who live on from their performances in Guy Noir, The Lives of the Cowboys, and of course the messages from the Catchup Advisory Board.

Prairie Home Companion being performed at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah

It was a great show for those of us oldies who like that kind of thing.

Salt Lake Temple in Salt Lake City, Utah

After the show, we took a walking tour of the downtown area, visiting Temple Square and admiring the people walking around a bustling downtown area with open restaurants and cafes.

Downtown Salt Lake City, Utah

The UTA light rail system moving people around actually had riders late in the day – take that, Phoenix.

Bountiful Lake in Woods Cross, Utah

Our day ended at Bountiful Lake, pictured above, near the Great Salt Lake and Ogden. Lodging was at the Alana Motel in Clearfield, Utah.