–Chicago,
somewhen either side of 1970
We
spend nearly a week without being sure
which hour of the day we occupy. Everybody's on Mountain Time here,
but Arizona doesn't recognize Daylight Time, which is why there's a
separate clock on each side of the road over the Hoover Dam. When we
cross the border into Utah and return, as we do a few times in our
sight-seeing, John's Mint Mobile phone server can't keep up. He
imagines the thing throwing up its little foxy paws and, muttering
imprecations not worth repeating, deciding to simplify its
life and screwing up ours while the Brys argue about whose phone is
correct. “Hey, Google! What time is it where I'm at right now?”
Debbie cannot abide hors d'oeuvres before
5pm while John never eats on a fixed schedule, anyway.

Now
we're in Arizona's Valley of Fire, where the time is Standard and high temperatures are above 100o
and the big horn sheep maintain their ancestral claim on the
ember-red rocks perched
on the scorched sand that we try to occupy for two nights. Debbie declares, “thrilling!” John knows we are
the interlopers here.

This is a
State Park and the campground is named Atlatl. For the first time in his seven decades of life, John learns to
pronounce this word properly (at-LAH-t'l) but still cannot grok the
physics involved in nearly doubling the striking power of a thrown
spear with this tool that smarter-than-he people invented thousands
of years ago. Some of them even lived right here, sleeping in
naturally hewn caves among the eroded sedimentary rock that is
everywhere locally. ← This view is from under our awning each night as we enjoy our pre-dinner drinks and cheese.
Debbie fantasizes this outcropping looks like a bird's head. →
The
people before us left their pictures scrawled on the rocks here and
there and, as we pointed out in Capitol Reef National Park some years
previously,
2019/05/canyonlands-arches-capitol-reef.html, the government bureaucrats consider the ancient graffiti more
valuable than anything we moderns might scrawl. (That woman's quote
still rings in John's head!) Here, the Arizona Parks built a big
scaffold with many, many stair steps to view the petroglyphs up close
and personal. Not being schooled in translating glyph, we don't
really bother. John can't tell a Monet from a Van Gogh anyway,
thinks Picasso must have been a total stoner, and isn't the least
ashamed that you now know that.
The state park is rather large, but fairly
homogeneous in its makeup. It is a Valley of Fire with the
red sedimentary rocks predominating in this area. This is said to be
Aztec sandstone mingled with other sedimentary types. This red rock is from Jurassic period, nearly 200-million years ago –which is to say about the time that the Pangea supercontinent was
breaking up. No humans existed then, of course; they first moved
into this area only 11-thousand years ago. The ancient red rock
actually formed of precipitating little pieces of iron rich organic
debris that built the floor of the ocean then. As Earth aged, this area was crushed into solidity, later uplifted, even later
dried out, and much later eroded from water and wind (and earthquakes
and other seismic cataclysms –recall the relatively nearby Meteor
Crater? –recall the Chicxulub meteor crater that is thought to have
extinguished the dinosaurs by crashing into the Gulf of Mexico with more
than a little crustal bell-ringing? –recall
all the continent changing volcanic disturbances of which Mount St.
Helens was only the latest little
burp?). It's a time frame beginning long before North America was
its own continent.
While
we're here, by the way, Verizon's 4G Jetpack internet ramp delivers the
fastest connection we'd seen in a few weeks. It's been frustrating to see Download speeds less than Upload to the point where Debbie used some “free” campground
internet connections to download Netflix movies for our pre-bedtime
cinema that she always falls asleep in the middle of. Verizon will send us a new SIM card they say will fix the service. We won't get it until we're back home, though.
We
haven't had our fill of rocks yet. We leave the Atlatl campground to
move to the Kaibab Paiute RV camp located in one of the many Indian
reservations in which our government settled the various groups of
overrun primitive people in the past century and a half. The park is just up the road from an historic museum and not far from
the Tribal headquarters, but we were too focused on other
sightseeing: in retrospect, a shame, really. In spite the
heat and lack of shade –trees
are unknown in much of the Southwest– we like the Tribe's RV park. Most campground showers are little more than a spigot behind a
curtain, but Debbie speaks highly of the frosted glass panel door in
her shower. John's is nice and spacious, too, but– a plastic
curtain; what're ya gonna do? However, it's good to have water under
more pressure than the coach's pump delivers. With
a fresher outlook the next day, we reprise our visit to Utah's Zion
National Park.

We had wanted to use the scenic Utah Route 9
the last time, a few years ago, but the coach is 12+ feet tall and
the tunnel in that part of Zion would've scraped everything off the
roof. This year, we used our Honda toad –uh, towed-vehicle,
for those late joining this party. The tunnels are rough-hewn inside
and longer ones have big windows chipped out the sides allowing us to
see the mountainous terrain outsi––As
Debbie learns, the side holes in the tunnel were not for our
enjoyment. Instead, they were dug to provide a way to dispose all
the rock chips from the digging. Unlike the tunnel engineers' plan
in The Great Escape, the
waste was not hauled back to the entrance to be dispersed down the
prisoners' trouser legs. Nevertheless, the views from-and-between
the tunnels are stunning.
Back
in Arizona (what time again?), we break camp the next day to head to
the Coral Sands RV park along Rabbit Brush Road, another intriguing
local place name; apparently rabbit brush is
a legitimate descriptive phrase here'bouts. Here'bouts also is Utah
(what time?). The
question is important as we head for Monument Valley –which is in
Arizona,
an hour... ––which
way?!
We're losing track.
Approaching, Debbie
excitedly creates her own version of the “iconic Forest Gump
photograph.”
John's at a
loss; he had yawnnn
interest in the movie and equates Life Is Like A Box Chocolates with
the same sappy script writing that gave us Love Means Never Having to
Say You're Sorry two or three decades earlier. Blech! {John's at the keyboard now; can
you tell?}
However,
seeing these monumental rocks thrust
skyward from the landscape is exciting, indeed! As you approach from
the north at 65mph –Debbie says, “Oh, absolutely, no doubt
because of the movie”–
at the very top of the hill when the scene punches you in the
eyeballs, the DOT posts the long downslope at 35
and declares No Stopping, No Parking
along that one mile. So, of course, every car in front of us, stops
and parks for the picture gawking. One stupid couple stands in
both travel lanes for their
photography. John has to stop or run them over. After 30 seconds he
beeps the horn to wake
the idiots up. They just glance, annoyed, and slowly amble off.
(John declares they're obviously from California; beeping probably
did the world a disservice.)
 |
Debbie wants to spray paint a dot at Jenison's location on this "Mitten Monument"! |
Some
other travelers insist one can see it all while traveling along US
Highway 163, but we elect to
take the privately developed Navajo (or Navaho –you
spell it!) sightseeing road among the dusty rocks themselves for
$8/person. The hours-long road closes at 4pm, leading to another My
Clock Says discussion. “An
Adventure!” declares John, who eagerly wishes he still had his old
Jeep Wrangler for navigating the road that's a stony, dried-out,
treeless version of a deep-in-the-woods deer-camp road back home.
“An ordeal,” laments Debbie, crying loudly at every rut, bump,
and sizable cobblestone along the very unpaved, barely scraped
surface. If John is never ordered Don't break an axle!
in stridently urgent tones again, it will be a much happier life. Both our Honda's axles survive just fine, by the way.
After
our Monument Valley Days, we head across a small corner of Utah
–confusing the phone time yet once again– to find Debbie thinking
that Arizona's US 191
“is worthy of
being a Michigan road!” Miles after miles of terrible, frequent,
jarring bumps. Worse
than the M-6 freeway at home in the early 2000's, this is very bad
all the way to Utah. Then, Utah's US 192 also is tortuous.
Debbie says, “they need two different signs to indicate Bumps: one
for a normal bump in the road and another for Oh My Goodness This
Will Give You A THUNK!” We slow to well below the limit, hoping
not to damage either of our vehicles.
We
didn't, that we can prove.
[
Oooo! Foreshadowing! ]
So now
it's June 6th
and we leave the time confusion behind us to find a camp at the
Circle C RV Park in Delores, Colorado. Nice place with a clean, okay
shower on a raised platform in a spacious room (with plastic
curtain). Debbie snags a freely loaned DVD and our cinema that night
is the worst movie either of us actually has seen before (not
counting that Love flick
mentioned above).
The morning finds us near
the bottom end (depending on how you look at it) of the San
Juan Scenic Byway. State Route 145
travels curvy mountainous roads. The C-RV makes it just fine,
though, and Debbie decides we can pass this way safely in our Bry Bus
and thereby changes our often tenuous plans so that we will stay at
Ridgway State Park in Colorado (with electricity for the air
conditioning!) instead of going to a barebones camp in the boondocks
of a baking Moab,
Utah.

No
doubt that we're actually among the mountains with this new plan.
The breeze is gloriously cool! The phone's Altitude App displays
10,200'. The sky is blue and the air is clear. There are alpine
meadows below the treeline and, frequently, snow remaining on the
ground above it. Lizard Head peak is unique, although both of us
fail to see the lizardiness
of it. |
Lizard – Wizard. John sees the dandelions define a “Yellow Plant Road.” |
We
do lunch in Ridgway, which it turns out we will visit again soon, at
a restaurant that calls itself Taco Del Gnar. There's a spray can on the counter hand-labeled Cougar
Spray and our server explains
that her hunky-looking, twenty-something male coworker needs it to
fend off the horny older women. So, y'see, it's that kind of place:
mostly tacos and tater tots in some sort of gnarly fusion. Quite
tasty, though, and we want to come back for the food –and the beer
and margaritas. The next day we take a break from sightseeing to
shop in a bigger town and do laundry. The restaurant we find there
serves simply terrible
sandwiches despite the online reviews of Debbie's research.
Tomorrow
we'll head up the same Route 145 in the Bry RV to Ridgway State Park. Stay Tuned. It's always an Adventure!