Archive for April, 2012

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Can’t go on

April 23, 2012

We went to the Petrified Forest National Park today.

I was driving this morning (or there would have been a post posted about Meteor Crater while we were in the car instead of much later). Anyway, I didn’t get a snack when I should have and ended up way too hungry. I’d hiked around Flagstaff’s outskirts and Meteor Crater on a breakfast of coffee and a protein bar.

So, I had gotten well into the low blood sugar mode that includes tired headaches, finding concentration difficult (kind of important when going that fast). I wasn’t sure I really wanted to see something else new. But we had a picnic lunch and needed a place to eat it.

When we finally got to the exit for the Petrified Forest, we got out at the visitor center with our picnic (grocery store bagels, cheese, hummus and a half pound of fresh cut fruit). I gobbled it down and felt much better, like we should go on and see whatever it is they made a national park around before heading off to Albuquerque.

OMG, I think I may be the first person to have discovered this incredibly beautiful place. (Yeah, the roads and paved paths managed to leave me that illusion.) I mean, have you seen the Painted Desert? It was incredible. As with Meteor Crater, no picture does it justice. It was huge. More than, that though, the Painted Desert was incredibly, awesomely beautiful.

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I look at that picture and it is missing all the colors, the incredible striations and hills of individual colors. The sky was huge, like the normal California sky is just a little bitty part of the sky here. I don’t have the words and I don’t think the pictures are enough but they are better than the words so I’ll choose only a few more.

These pictures are just reminders to me, like a short list jotted down means a lot more to the person who wrote the list than to someone who comes across it later. Imagine that level of difference between these pictures and the real thing. Then multiply by ten.

It just went on and on. We went to several vista points and each one was majestic and breathtaking.

But this national park is not a mesmerizingly beautiful one-trick pony. It also has evidence of indigenous people, including the ruins of a pueblo city and Newspaper Rock,  a wall of petroglyphs. Further on, there are huge logs of petrified wood, each one a giant jewel from eons ago. I don’t mean little chips of wood-rocks. These were giant trees make into giant geode colored rocks.

However, we didn’t see those. We got to the end of the Painted Desert and didn’t go on. Part of the reason was because C was tired (didn’t sleep well last night) and we were both pretty hot. But that wasn’t really it…

I couldn’t take in anymore. The painted desert was so mindblowingly beautiful that I was a little afraid to go on. What could be a second act to that? Why dilute the beauty?

And, part of me wondered, what if it got better? My brain was full of the box of paints splattered across the desert. If it got better, it (my brain) was just going to go kablooey.

I turned that into a joke but I meant it, I really didn’t want to go on because I wanted to let my mind settle, to soak up what I had and to fix the picture in my head that my camera just can’t capture.

 

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Fuel up in Winslow

April 23, 2012

Spent $53.75, went 282 miles on 14.18 gallons, so 19.8 MPG. I’ve been doing more driving and I tend to drive a little fast (plus, speed limit is now 75mph).

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Meteor crater was awesome

April 23, 2012

Meteor Crater in Arizona is amazing. It is huge, so much bigger than can be comprehended from a photo. But it wasn’t even that large of a meteor, 150ft of iron.

Looking from the rim at a 6ft high prop on the floor had to be done through a telescope. It was just a speck.

But my favorite photo came as we were leaving, headed back to I40 where I captured the clouds, big sky, mountain with snow and huge plain (mesa, really).

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Zoe and the gang are fine

April 23, 2012

We once had a cat sitter who left a card that she said she saw a black cat in the yard and wondered if it was ours. She didn’t call to ask even though she knew our cats were indoors only. I wonder if she knew why we immediately asked for our key back.

 

So with some trepidation, I read a text message from Jennifer, the house and pet sitter, yesterday. She was at the house, “I’m here with Zoey and the gang 🙂 Everything is fine.”

 

Um, Zoe has a gang? That is not good. A gang? Those are really bad news. I can only imagine the initiation rite: the beagle demanding that all who join up eat part of a dead-for-many-days squirrel (she did it, only the strong will survive).

 

And I bet she’s dealing catnip to Dylan. He loves the stuff but isn’t allowed in the backyard to get high, he’s probably her enforcer (he is a very large cat). I always thought Ani had more pride, she certainly turns her nose up at the ‘nip when I bring some inside for Dylan. But, hey, we leave, who knows what sort of coercion they are using on her.

 

I’m sure, in the end, Bear (with his new Rizzo style haircut) will rat them all out to the authorities.

 

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Shining, crappy beacon of civilization

April 23, 2012

I used to work at ShotSpotter, a gunshot location company. To test the system, sometimes it is necessary to shoot stuff. And as we tried to teach the computer the difference between these guns, those guns, echoes, fireworks, and explosions, sometimes we had to just had to blow things up.

Yeah, it was pretty cool.

One particularly weapon-ful business trip was held at Fort Irwin, an Army training base in the center of the Mohave Desert. In August. It is a great training base because it is a lot like the Iraqi desert: full of the sandy, silty soil that gets everywhere. And because it is very, very hot.

It was so hot that my hiking boots melted.

I used duct tape to hold them together for the rest of the trip. It worked very well though I had to cut them off at night.

The tests were conducted at Limaville, a fake city in the far reaches of Fort Irwin. It was a ninety minute drive from the bare bones hotel at the base, across the bomb ranges. Let me say that again: across the bomb ranges. As in boom and as in multiple ranges.

Why, yes, we did get lost on the dirt roads and stuck in the sand. Several times. On multiple bomb ranges.

On the last day of testing, we ran late, leaving the site just before sunset. That was dangerous, not only because of the bomb ranges with unexploded munitions but also because we couldn’t find our way during the day, what would it be like at night?

Eventually, thanks to everyone but the map reader, we got back to base. I remember feeling filthy with silt and gunpowder, caked by dried sweat. We packed the vehicles and started on the road out of there. It was dark and late. But not stormy, so I suppose that is a win.

My hardware engineer called over the radio to our convoy. He could see the lights of Barstow, “the crappy, shining beacon of civilization.” There were cheers, we were happy to see it. Showers, beers, beds, they would all be ours soon.

Yesterday, from a different angle, for a different reason, in a different season, we went to Barstow again. We needed to stretch our legs during the long drive from San Jose to Flagstaff.

We stopped at the Tangers Outlet Mall. It was 100+ degrees in the shade and really crowded with busloads of people elbowing to get the best deals.

Shining, crappy beacon of civilization indeed.