Day 4, July Escape 2013: Pagosa Springs

Trip Date: July 13, 2013

Wendy and I were both tired after our hike the day before at Ghost Ranch. So we hung around Pagosa Springs on the fourth day of our vacation.

Day 4: PAGOSA SPRINGS AREA

Day 4 Map (click map for slideshow)

Around Town

We had breakfast at the hotel and then drove downtown to walk. The hot springs right off the highway were gurgling away, belching sulfurous fumes which convinced us we did not want to take a soak at one of the indoor or outdoor pools. We saw participants signing in for the town’s “Average Joe Cruise-a-Thong” which has folks riding bikes, then going for a float down the San Juan River, and then walking through town on thongs, the shoewear nowadays more commonly known as flip-flops. It was overcast and chilly, so Wendy and I chose not to try floating down the San Juan.

We walked past the downtown shops and then along the river on the east edge of the town, finding some nice bachelor buttons with honeybees in a planter in front of a motel. I took multiple shots of bees loaded down with pollen.

Honeybee on Bachelor Button

Treasure Falls

Treasure Falls

We drove 20 miles north on US 160 to Treasure Falls. A girl was feeding hungry little Golden-mantled ground squirrels near the parking area.

Ascending up the trail to the Misty Deck for a closer look, Wendy reminded me of Andrew Wyeth’s Christina’s World painting as she gazed at the falls.

We took a side trail to the overlook to gaze at Sheep Mountain to the west. We spotted a butterfly and Wendy admired the wild roses beside the trail.

A German family was scrambling all over the falls area, laughing and taking snapshots. We would hear German on occasion over the next few days, emanating from fellow tourists flocking to Mesa Verde National Park, the Durango-Silverton train, etc.

Wolf Creek Pass

We climbed higher, to the Wolf Creek Pass overlook for a view of the valley of the West Fork of the San Juan, but the altitude was making Wendy’s ears and head ache despite chewing gum and other tricks to alleviate the internal pressure. But she did take time to shoot the weird, or should I say haunting, “Spooky Bunny” graffiti.

We ascended higher up the pass for another view of the valley below, complete with wildflowers. The winding highway brought back to mind C.W. McCall’s Wolf Creek Pass song. I took Wendy on up to the top of the pass and the Continental Divide. At 10,856 feet, we had ascended over 3,700 feet from Pagosa Springs. Her ears were killing her, so we retreated back down to town for lunch.

Wolf Creek Pass

DSP Pizza

That’s a BIG slice

TripAdvisor led us to DSP Pizza, where they served us truly immense slices of pizza and yummy cinnamon sticks. What does DSP stand for? Diorio’s South Pizza, a name given by the orginal owner years ago. The current owners have no idea who this Diorio was or why DSP was named after him, but what has stayed the same is the great pizza. We enjoyed the changing colors of the Christmas lights draped overhead and the wacky wall décor.

The pizza slices were so ridiculously large that we hauled the leftovers back to the refrigerator in our hotel room to enjoy later. It isn’t often that a slice of pizza suffices for two meals.

Ice Cave Ridge

We returned to the hotel to rest, and then made the mistake of driving 16 miles northwest to the Piedra River, where we tried to hike up Ice Cave Ridge. The altitude wore out Wendy too much for this ascent and we turned back, but were rewarded with a gorgeous panorama of clouds above the Piedra River as it wound its way northeast toward the San Juans.

Piedra River Panorama

Recovery

Back at the hotel, we cleaned up and ate leftover pizza in our room off a table I devised out of a lowered ironing board covered by a beach towel. We would enjoy some fine restaurants on the vacation, but that in-room meal had its own charm.

The next day we would return to the Piedra River for a hike before decamping to Durango for a melodrama.

Click here for a slideshow from this day

Day 5 of July Escape 2013 >

< Day 3 of July Escape 2013

Posted in photos, travel | Leave a comment

Day 3, July Escape 2013: Ghost Ranch

Trip Date: July 12, 2013

Wendy had fun ghost-writing the initial version of this post, which I then edited. I thought she captured my style quite well. The trip was a true partnership, with her taking notes each day which she would share with me, these posts mixing in her photographs with my own, and now me revising her first draft into this final post. So, although written in my voice, this post, like our trip, was a true collaboration.

Day 3: SANTA FE PLAZA, GHOST RANCH, & ECHO AMPHITHEATER

Day 3 Map (click map for slideshow)

 

Morning on the Plaza

Santa Fe Plaza

After spending the previous evening strolling about the Plaza in Santa Fe, Wendy and I decided the next morning to walk the few blocks from the Luxx to the Plaza and seek out the historic Plaza Cafe. I had tried to eat there for the last couple of years, only to find it closed by a fire. Happily, it was back in business after a million-dollar renovation. I had the works – pancakes, bacon, scrambled eggs, and sausage, while Wendy had a large order of steaming biscuits and gravy. “This is waaay better than McDonalds!” she quipped. Afterwards, we relaxed on a bench, admiring the many flowers draped about the Plaza.

The weather was cool with a slight breeze as we wandered around, pacing by the silver and turquoise jewelry the merchants were busy displaying on blankets on the veranda in front of the Palace of the Governors.

Ghost Ranch

After building up our energy, we headed up US 84 to hike at Ghost Ranch near Abiquiu, New Mexico. I loved hiking there last year and was eager to share the experience with Wendy. We checked in at the Welcome Center and, returning to the car for our packs and sunscreen, we heard thunder in the distance as a storm approached from the west.

My iPad’s RadarUS app showed the storm would likely pass just south of us. The high temperature and threat of lightning led me to abandon a hike to Chimney Rock, opting instead to head as far up the Box Canyon Trail as possible, bearing in mind the weather in case of a flash flood. We would end up hiking four miles.

Ghost Ranch

 

To the Camposanto

Burros

We walked past the various buildings, including the old Ghost House, with its characteristic cow skull. After an arduous trek up a red hillside toward the Box Canyon Trail, we were covered in sweat and stopped to rest in one of the little hogans.  Farther along the road were some cute burros, which Wendy enjoyed petting.

As we headed up the road toward the Camposanto, the cloud cover increased and the wind cooled off.  The panorama was spectacular, with gray clouds over Cerro Pedernal and an impressive cloud bank beyond Chimney Rock. Near the memorials were cholla cacti with hot pink blooms. We trod past the high wall of the Camposanto, onward to the Rito Del Yeso arroyo.

Cholla Bloom

 

Box Canyon Trail

We followed the Rito Del Yeso up the box canyon, with the lower portion of the little stream drained dry by the water collection system. Wendy examined the clay layers in the eroded walls of streambed.

Above the collection dam, we began crossing and re-crossing the stream along the bumpy and demanding trail. The overcast sky made for less-than-ideal photo opportunities, but thankfully kept us cool. I kept my eye on the sky, alert for pathways to higher ground if it began to rain.

We reached the side stream, stopping for a photograph.

Rito Del Yeso side stream

Encountering many colors in the streambed, we squished through muddy crossings on the trail. Wendy discovered a black inky substance coming up through the mud, and I stopped to take a video of the foul-smelling fluid as it bubbled up from under her shoe.

By this point, in my mind I hear Wendy protesting, “They are going to be sick of seeing photos of me. Put one in there of you.” So I’ll throw in a pose she had me strike on one of the canyon rocks. I’m surprised the picture isn’t blurry from her laughter as she took it.

The Box Canyon Trail is a fun hike of varied terrain. Our waterproof hiking boots served us well. We developed a habit of stepping gingerly upon large stones, making our way across the stream.  This careful balancing act worked fine until we reached a cleft where the trail climbs over a large steeply tilted rock slab. Last year, a rope helped one up the slab, but it was gone. The only other way to continue along the trail was to go across a long tree trunk, which lay across the trickling stream.  Intimidated at the thought of trying to walk across the log like Olympians on a balance beam, Wendy and I decided to scoot our way across, crawdad-style. We were braver on the return, however, carefully stepping along the log to cross.

We finally reached the end of the box canyon, surrounded by the high cliff walls of the mesa above and beyond. We relaxed on a stone slab, enjoying pistachios and Paydays. Red water seeps high up on the walls created trails of moss, and the textures and colors of the varied rock surrounding us were intriguing.

Finally we clambered over the large boulders to retrace our steps to our car, pausing by a pool to capture a reflection of Kitchen Mesa, with clearing skies over Cerro Pedernal in the distance. A posted trail map renewed my determination to some day hike the Kitchen Mesa trail, but it was time to head onward.

Kitchen Mesa

 

Echo Amphitheater

After a break for ice cream and wi-fi in the Ghost Ranch Welcome Center, we headed north a few miles to the Echo Amphitheater. Its colorful layer cake geology is fantastic

Echo Amphitheater bluffs

Wendy laid back on the ground to capture her shot. She also took a great shot of the desert varnish streaming down the walls of the bowl.

We clambered up the slope, feeling the effort after the tiring hike at Ghost Ranch. Rain wash had covered portions of the trail with sand. We briefly created our own echoes until a group of college-age kids came along, prompting us to head onward toward Pagosa Springs, Colorado.

Colorado

As we crossed the border into Colorado, Wendy shared my enjoyment of the change in biome, with us coming up over a hill to see layers upon layers of blue mountains in the distance, the sort of shot you’d expect in a Windows desktop background. It was a magic moment for her, with the Simple Minds song playing in the background proclaiming, “…rain keeps fallin’, rain keeps fallin’ down, down, down, down…” The cool nearby rain had made our afternoon hike feasible, and cool rain would return in a couple of days along our train ride through the San Juan Mountains.

We had dinner at the Pagosa Springs Brewing Company. Service was very slow, and I made the mistake of ordering fish and chips; I should have just ordered chips. But Wendy enjoyed her “Colorado Cuban” sandwich. After a somewhat arduous day, the spacious hotel room at the Pagosa Springs Inn and Suites was a welcome relief. It would recharge us just enough to make it through the next day around and about town.

Click here for a slideshow from this day

Day 4 of July Escape 2013 >

< Day 2 of July Escape 2013

Posted in day hike, photos, travel | 1 Comment

Day 2, July Escape 2013: Palo Duro Canyon & Santa Fe

Trip Date: July 11, 2013

This year Wendy Kemp joined me for my traditional vacation from the hot and sweltering Oklahoma summer. I’ve already posted about Day 1, our first visit to Palo Duro Canyon for the Texas! musical.

DAY 2: PALO DURO CANYON & SANTA FE

Day 2 Map (click map for slideshow)

We arose to drive eastward once again to Palo Duro Canyon, this time to admire the scenery along the loop road through the park. Near the visitor center, I shot a panorama and then a closer shot with the Spanish Skirts formations visible to the right of center. The eroding folded bulge of colored layers in the canyon wall resemble the clothing in question.

Palo Duro Canyon

Wildflowers

Wendy and I posed for a self-portrait and along the drive she had me pull over so we could shoot a stream seeming to wind its way from one of the peaks. I like the composition of her shot better than mine. She noticed little fish babies in the water and prompted me to shoot some of the park’s wildflowers.

The road wound past beautiful canyon walls and peaks, and we clambered out of the car every so often to gawk. As it typical of me, I wandered off to search for vistas to shoot, zooming in slightly at times, while Wendy took the time to admire details close up.

We had lunch at Blue Sky burgers in Amarillo and drove on toward Santa Fe, with I-40 paralleling old US 66. Tucumcari was a pit stop, featuring a closed welcome center with a bum sitting out in front. Farther along, Wendy took a shot of the beautiful clouds above a bank of windmills, as well as rain showers seen from the otherwise featureless and rather lonely US 265 cutoff to Santa Fe.

We arrived at the Luxx in Santa Fe, where we had to park a block away on the street overnight to avoid a parking charge, and I took Wendy to La Plazuela at La Fonda. She had her first taste of polenta, with pork carnitas drizzled with orange sauce and grilled jalapeño relish. I had my typical fajita fare, accompanied by hominy and a yummy sopapilla.

A Night on the Plaza

With a crescent moon above us, we strolled around the historic Plaza, where I took a shot of Archbishop Lamy‘s statue out in front of the cathedral. It meant more to me now, since I recently read Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop.

We also window shopped, with a nifty polymer clay lizard sculpture by Jon Anderson catching my eye. Wendy loved the setting and declared we should spend a week in Santa Fe next summer. That appeals to me, especially if we time our trip with the International Folk Art Market.

The next day we would enjoy a morning on the Santa Fe Plaza and then drive north for a nice hike at Ghost Ranch.

Click here for photos from this day

Day 3 of July Escape 2013 >

< Day 1 of July Escape 2013

Posted in day hike, photos, travel | Leave a comment

Day 1, July Escape 2013: Canyon, Texas

Trip Date: July 10, 2013

This year Wendy Kemp joined me for my traditional vacation from the hot and sweltering Oklahoma summer. We’ve taken “trips” together before, but she said this was our first “vacation” since we vacated the state for cooler climes for an extended period. We spent nine days out west in the Texas panhandle, northern New Mexico, southwestern Colorado, and across southern Kansas. The weather cooperated, with us often enjoying rain and temperatures which were sometimes 30 degrees or more cooler than back home.

DAY 1: OKC & PALO DURO CANYON

Day 1 Map (click map for slideshow)

I planned the vacation to focus on some of my familiar haunts in southwestern Colorado, but I knew better than to ask my companion to endure a 10-hour drive, plus pit stops, to reach Santa Fe in one day. Plus, I’d been advised by Facebook friends to visit Palo Duro Canyon, located just south of Amarillo, Texas in the middle of the fairly desolate Texas panhandle.

Tech Support in OKC and the Death of Latitude

So we first drove down to Tulsa and took the Turner Turnpike to Oklahoma City to drop in for lunch with my parents. My visits usually include some parental tech support, and this time I had to set up their secure WiFi network again after a power glitch wiped out the router settings.  I also spent an inordinate amount of time trying to get their Google Latitude account working again, since they use it to track my movements during my trips.  It never seemed to sync right, so we abandoned that effort for a nice lunch at El Chico, and then Wendy and I headed west on I-40 towards Amarillo, Texas.

That evening my mother reported her Latitude service was syncing again so she could track us easily, but Google announced it was killing the free service in a month. I must hope that someone will develop a suitable replacement at a reasonable price; I am not at all pleased with how Google deploys a free service, destroying the competitive market, and then abandons loyal and frequent users of that service.  It makes me distrust other Google services I rely upon, such as Google Sites and Google Drive. I hope I can find a better alternative than Google’s suggestion of using location tracking via Google+; Facebook and my blog are enough social services for me, so I have refused to develop my Google+ account beyond the bare essentials. I will see what develops in the next few weeks.

All that is left is dirt and tears…and arroyos

The Texas Panhandle

The drive to Amarillo was long and hot, with the temperature spiking above 100 degrees Fahrenheit.  We made a pit stop in poor little McLean, Texas. The town is dying out, with a single filthy convenience store and a symbolic lean dog roaming the streets. As we drove out of town, I commented to Wendy, “All that is left is dirt and tears.”

She liked that turn of phrase, but was far less appreciative of my frequent references to the arroyos as we drove westward. As “arroyo” rolled off my tongue for the umpteenth time, she spat, “Don’t you dare say that again! Don’t you dare!”

Wendy noticed and shot a photo of stacked clouds as we drove south from Amarillo towards Canyon, Texas. We checked into the Best Western at Canyon, from which it was a short drive east to Palo Duro Canyon. There we had a “chuck wagon supper” and enjoyed the “Texas!” musical at the canyon’s Pioneer Amphitheatre. (Doesn’t it seem strange that a Texas park would spell it amphitheatre?)

Palo Duro Canyon

Texas!

The canyon was impressive, more so than the $14 dinner of brisket, beans, and cobbler; I’d have appreciated an actual bun for my barbecue sandwich rather than plain white bread, for one thing. But the scenery was nice, and a bust of Quanah Parker set the stage for his awkward inclusion in the musical to come.

Wendy and I enjoyed looking over a large stone relief map of the surrounding area and then took our assigned seats for the musical, down near the front of the amphitheatre. “Texas!” was in its 48th season, a musical staged over the years with help from students and faculty at West Texas State College (now West Texas A&M) and updated in 2001 to be more historically accurate. The story is simple, with some awkward dialog and a few oddball numbers, but the musical hangs together fairly well.

Spectacles included folks on horseback in the background behind the stage and up on the canyon wall and a tree dramatically split by lightning. The musical was followed, however, by a blend of Branson-style jingoism with Vegas-style effects. There was a close-up fireworks show, blasts of flame which made us flinch from the warmth, dancing waters, and more. None of it blended with the musical and, while it was spectacular, if I wanted to see something from Branson or Vegas, then I would travel there.

I can’t offer up any photos of the show, since photographs were firmly banned. But I did shoot some video of some of the musical actors entertaining the crowd in the courtyard before the show:

After the show, we returned to our hotel to rest up, since the next morning we would be returning to enjoy the scenery of Palo Duro Canyon before heading northwest to Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Click here for a slideshow from this day

Day 2 of July Escape 2013 >

Posted in photos, technology, travel, video | 2 Comments

Woman by Rhye

July 7, 2013
Woman by Rhye

Woman by Rhye

A happy custom for me is to download twice each year the podcasts of favorite album and song picks by Bob Boilen and friends of NPR’s All Songs Considered. Each summer and winter break, when my mind is relaxed and prepared, I explore a collection of new songs selected by the NPR professionals.

Music is a very personal thing, so I’m motivated to purchase only a tiny fraction of their selections for my music collection. I’ve little use for their more twee and urban picks, but they always highlight something which excites my ear and quickens my pulse. Today I listened to their recent selections for The Year in Music (So Far), 2013 and one song stood out for me.

It opened with lush strings and shifted to a rhythmic click track, beating in time with an arresting voice. Was that a woman’s contralto? Or a man’s falsetto? Well, it was the aptly named Open from the album Woman by Rhye. After sampling a few tracks, I was thrilled to purchase the whole album from Amazon for only $5.

The voice belongs to Michael Milosh, a Canadian electronic musician and classically trained cellist, who moved to Los Angeles and fell in love. There he teamed up with Danish producer Robin Hannibal, who had also relocated and found love in the Golden State, and they formed Rhye.

I love sophisticated pop, and Rhye reminds me of the deep swaying rhythms and romance of Sade Adu. I commend to you Ian Horrocks’ review of the album if Open invites you in.

“Open”

I’m a fool for that shake in your thighs
I’m a fool for that sound in your sighs
I’m a fool for your belly
I’m a fool for your love

I wanna make this play oh I know you’re fadin’
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands
I wanna make this play oh I know you’re faded
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands

Caught in this pool held in your eyes
Caught like a fool without a line
We’re in a natural spring
With this gentle sting between us

I wanna make this play oh I know your fadin’
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands
I wanna make this play oh I know you’re faded
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands

Ooh, stay open
Ooh, stay open

Stay open
Stay open

I wanna make this play oh I know your fadin’
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands
I wanna make this play oh I know you’re faded
Hmmm but stay don’t close your hands

Stay open
Stay open
Stay open

Mm, stay open

Posted in music | Leave a comment