travel

...now browsing by tag

 
 

Road trip

Monday, June 19th, 2023

After all the stuff that went on in the last year, things has finally freed up for some leisure activities.

After a week long camping trip to Oregon Pipe National Monument in May, this month I also took a 3-week long road trip across the country.

I experienced many insights from this trip, but the overwhelming one is what an amazingly beautiful country we live in. Driving back roads and camping along the way gave me the opportunity to see many places that I hadn’t seen before. So much beauty. This trip also marked my visit to the 49th state in our country. Only Alaska remains.

States I drove through on this trip included: Arizona, New Mexico, Texas (a purposefully small section), Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah. I visited White Sands National Park and Badlands National Park, as well as the Cache La Poudre wilderness in northern Colorado and Bears Ears National Monument and Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park and many great state parks. Some pictures are below.

As I drove across the country, mostly on back roads, I saw many billboards and handmade signs. They said a lot about the mood of our nation. (This struck me as a much more prominent display than I’ve seen in the past. Is this new? Or am I more sensitive to it?) Overall, people seem to be arming themselves, getting high, and praying a lot to hope it all works out in the end. Political signs were everywhere, including strong support for the currently indicted ex-president/presidential candidate and opposition to abortion. I saw these sentiments loudly proclaimed nearly everywhere I went, which was alarming. Next year is going to be a hell of a year.

On a more positive note, development in renewable energy was apparent everywhere. Miles and miles of solar panels and windmill farms. Encouraging.

Another thing I noticed on this trip was that many small to mid-size towns that I’d visited in the past seem to have grown considerably. This included places like Tulsa, Cheyenne, and Grand Junction. Lots of big box stores now, more traffic, miles of sprawl. Not encouraging. I wonder how much of this change is a change in my perception having now lived out of the city for so long versus a change in the actual size and layout of these cities. Probably some of both.

Speaking of which, boy am I glad we didn’t move to Moab as we had considered. I’m all for accessibility of public lands, but the development that’s happened in this area made me sick. Helicopter canyon flyovers, sound and light tours, multi-level condo complexes, ATV culture. (Note that I’ve been reading a lot of counter culture conservation work. Hat tip to Jack Loeffler, Doug Peacock, et al.) It’s reminiscent of seeing beautiful wild animals in a zoo.

As our own Chiricahua National Monument is currently being considered for national park status, I have been thinking a lot about the balance of wilderness with public access. Seeing several large national parks on this trip has made me even more fearful of this for our own area. As far as we are from an airport and any real services, we have not been seriously concerned about this in the past, but now my concern is heightened. Even since COVID, we’ve seen changes. Development like this probably won’t come to our area in my lifetime, but I wonder. I applaud the work of conservation groups on these issues, and I’m stepping up my own commitment to this work.

I fear we are killing our planet, but remember the words of longer term thinkers who say that the planet will go on, it is just life on it that will be extinguished.


Cache La Poudre wilderness

This was a lovely remote area with lots of great camping, rafting, kayaking, hiking, and fishing, and not a lot of people.

Badlands National Park

The most stunning thing about these badlands was the green prairies.

Bears Ears National Monument/Goosenecks State Park

Amazing place to camp and hike and some truly epic storms and the wildest wind I’ve ever camped in.

Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

Road trip

Tuesday, September 4th, 2012

We just got back from a fabulous 8-day road trip, and I want to get some thoughts down here before I get too consumed with everything else I’ve been neglecting over the last week. (I was planning to journal the trip along the way, but the adventures we had were so absorbing that all I did was jot down a few notes on the back of a map. Similarly, I didn’t read any of the book I’d brought along with me.)

We left last Monday (August 27) aiming to reach Albuquerque. We took the normal route of 10 east and then north to Hatch. We had lunch in Hatch, where I learned that sometimes huevos rancheros is served with meat mixed in to it. (I had never before experienced that but will always ask in the future.) Fortunately, I identified the hunks of meat before eating any. Hatch was getting ready for its annual chile festival and looked festive.

This part of the drive was about our only interstate driving. The rest of trip was all scenic back country roads.

From there we drove north of Santa Fe and found a campsite at the Hyde Memorial State Park in the Santa Fe National Forest. It was a very nice campground, and there was also a nice forest campsite just down the road. We got in early enough to go for a hike after setting up camp.

The next morning, we headed north toward Denver where we were going to go to a concert at Red Rocks. On the first of several occasions during this trip, I wasn’t paying attention and got us off our planned course. In this case, as in all the others, this resulted in a lovely and interesting detour, though it did add some time to our drive.

Rio Grande Gorge...one of the many things we wouldn't have seen if I had paid more attention to the map

We eventually arrived in Evergreen, CO, where we checked into a small mountain inn where we stayed for two nights. The next day we drove to Estes Park at the base of Rocky Mountain National Park. Here we saw our only elk of the trip.

Our plan was to make a trip up to a lake in the park, which I wanted to photograph for the Wikipedia lake project that I contribute to. A series of circumstances (road closure, longer that expected hike required, and some work that Brad needed to do before the concert that night) prompted us to decide not to go all the way to the lake, but we enjoyed this drive anyway.

Wednesday night was the concert at Red Rocks, which was simply incredible. Definitely one of the premiere concert venues in the U.S.

before 10,000 people arrived

Thursday morning we headed to the Black Canyon at the Gunnison, somewhere I’ve always wanted to go. The park was a good ways past the town of Gunnison, and when we got there, we had two choices of campgrounds: a larger one at the rim and a smaller one down on the river. We chose the latter and followed a steep 16% grade road down to it. The campsites were very nice, and as a very light rain fell, we set up camp and then went on a hike down the river.

The next morning we took a scenic drive along the rim. It was magnificent. The canyon is very sheer and relatively narrow, making it unique among canyons.

Black Canyon at Gunnison (from the southern rim)

As we were getting ready to head to Mesa Verde (also in Colorado, near the Four Corners areas), I discovered that we apparently had a mouse in the car. This prompted us to pull over and empty out the entire truck. (We never actually saw the mouse, but over time, it seemed that it must have made its exit. Good mouse.)

We arrived at Mesa Verde late on Friday and got a campsite for two nights. We were surprised by both free showers and an all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast at the campground, both of which we enjoyed.

We had several nearby activities we wanted to explore, as well as Mesa Verde itself, so on Saturday morning, we set an alarm for 6:45am. (I would normally never set an alarm on vacation, but there was so much we wanted to do, and I knew I’d never get up early otherwise.) After pancakes, we headed to the visitor center to get tickets for one of the tours of the ancient cliff dwellings. We were lucky to get tickets for a special twilight tour that night of Cliff Palace done by a ranger portraying a historic figure. These tours are limited to just 20 people.

Tickets secured, we headed out of this park to the nearby Hovenweep National Monument, which had been recommended by my dad as a site not to miss. We planned to see that and then go on to Four Corners and Monument Valley. We were so mesmerized by Hovenweep though, that we decided to spend most of the day there. The ancient structures and surrounding beauty were a true highlight of the trip.

By mid-afternoon, we headed back to Mesa Verde. We went to the museum and saw Spruce House first. Then a little before 6, it began to rain. Our twilight tour was “rain or shine” so we headed to the trailhead, while it rained harder. The tour guide said that we would proceed despite the rain and despite the ladders and stone staircases that led to Cliff Palace.

Cliff Palace at Mesa Verde

This tour was really amazing. Our guide portrayed Jesse Logan Nusbaum, the park superintendent from the mid-1940s. It was a very special night. With the continuing rain, darkness came early. By the time we were done, it was cold and dark with a hard rain. We ran the last part of the way back to our car.

At our campsite, our gear was pretty wet, so we decided to sleep in the truck. I hoped the mouse was gone and was happy to neither see nor hear evidence to the contrary.

The next morning, Sunday, we headed to Chaco Canyon. It was another very hot day. We were again very impressed by the structures in this park. This is a place we’d like to return to explore in more depth.

The drive out of the park was not as bad as we feared and along the way we encountered a herd of cows. One little one came up to our truck and began vigorously licking first the headlamp and then the front bumper. I got out of the truck and was happy to find that, unlike the cows at our house, these were happy to let me pet them. Sweet.

We’d planned to spend our last night at the Petrified Forest and the Painted Desert, but being a bit tired and seeing rain to the west, we decided to head south instead. We found a lovely campground just north of Alpine, AZ in the Apache National Forest. Despite the fact that it was Labor Day weekend, the campground had just a few people in it.

It was a beautiful clear night, and so after a fire and dinner, we slept under the stars in the truck bed. We were rewarded by being awoken in the middle of the night by a loud and magical sound — elk bugeling. One party (presumably the male) had a deep and loud call. The other sounded like a magic singing flute. It was really incredible.

On Monday (Labor Day), we drove down through AZ and NM toward home, stopping in Silver City for lunch and groceries.

This was an awesome trip. Themes for the week included incredible ancient civilizations and structures (believe it or not, I even got a few ideas for the new house), great back roads (and I no longer believe that America’s infrastructure is crumbling — we saw literally tens of millions of dollars worth of road work being done), and unbelievable scenery. We live in a truly amazing country.

We visited many places that we will definitely plan to spend more time at again in the future.

(At some point, I’ll post more photos and video, but not today.:)