Vacation Must Be Had

Gold Beech

Travel planning in a time of pandemic feels simultaneously foolish and necessary for mental health reasons and because vacation time doesn’t roll over into the new year. “Why not stay home?” is the chorus I can hear rising, but that is not a vacation when every day for half a year has been spent at home. “But you are going to Oregon, which by now is your second home?” True, this will be our 20th trip to Oregon in 18 years, but we are doing it differently this time.

We are driving not because we are horrified by flying, though we are reluctant; the main reason we are passing up the incredibly cheap airline tickets is the obscene price of rental cars for our 18-day stay at the coast. Sure, we’d like to save the four days of driving to Oregon from Phoenix and back, but at $1,200 for the flights and rental car, we’ll take the slog up through the middle of California.

Shags Nest

Nervousness is the first thing that strikes me about this new adventure. At the moment, California and Oregon are ablaze with forest fires. The pandemic is still ravaging society, and the presidential election is looming. We also don’t know how people along the way are dealing with seeing cars with out-of-state license plates and if there’s still hostility towards those traveling through their small towns.

To mitigate some of this anxiety, we are approaching things the best we can. We have a solid 14 days directly on the coast, so we won’t feel cheated by all the driving. I spent an entire day plotting our way up and down the coast with where we’d be staying. Our old favorites, the yurts, are closed for the rest of the year due to COVID-19, and staying in motels wasn’t really an option. Due to the pandemic, I am reluctant to count on three meals a day at local restaurants, and so my plan was to find lodging with kitchens.

HuntingLodge

Airbnb came to the rescue, though of the four properties it pointed me to that I booked, only two of them went through their service. Charging me $100 for having found a place on their site felt like robbery, and so where I could find a way around them, I did. Mind you that part of my pain threshold here was evinced by the fact that in the last couple of years, we were paying between $40 and $70 for entire apartments from Germany, France, Italy, Hungary, and Austria where food and cultural options were extraordinary while in rural Oregon it’s not uncommon to see people asking $170 a night for places with wood paneling, pastel quilts, and decor straight out of the 1970s. Other than the location in nature, the local food is often mediocre, and there are really no cultural amenities unless you consider a bowling alley or the rare movie theater as the height of those services.

Our destinations are well off the beaten path. Typically, there are not more than a couple of hundred people max who live within a couple of miles of where we’ll be staying, mostly, it will be a lot less than that. All of them have kitchens with a stove being essential as opposed to kitchenettes that often only feature a microwave oven for warming food. This arrangement meets a couple of criteria for pandemic travel: first, we are not in population centers, and second, we do not have to visit restaurants.

Airstream

This brings me to working on a meal plan that minimizes our need to encounter other people. While we’d love to visit some old favorites, part of the allure of vacation regarding meals is sitting down in the location to absorb the ambiance and not worry about cleaning away our mess. Taking things to go still offers the same food, but we’ll be in Oregon in late fall. It could be raining (or even snowing), and even if it’s not, not many restaurants and cafes have outdoor seating. Who’d want to sit outside for breakfast anyway when it’s barely 40 degrees? We’ve eaten in the car, which is okay on occasion but not every day. The tragic side of doing things this way is not being able to tip wait staff, who are likely counting on generous people coming through to make up for locals who might be financially pinched at this time.

Back to the meal plan. I do not trust myself when it comes to giving in to whims, especially when it involves food. How many times visiting a grocery store, do I leave with many things I don’t need or really want when my rational mind is operating? So, before we leave, I’ll fill in as much as I can regarding how breakfast, lunch, and dinner will look like. Regardless of this intention, we are flexible enough to know that visits to places like Luna Sea Fish House in Yachats and the Schooner in Netarts for Oysters Rockoyaki are de rigueur. Funny, but both of these places have great outdoor seating, so nothing to worry about there.

CozyCottage

I’m now faced with only 49 individual meals I have to take into consideration, and instead of working on that, I turned to this blog entry as looking out so far into the future regarding my culinary experiences while traveling felt tedious, daunting even. Then, as I look at the photos of our lodging choices that are featured here, I can’t help but think I need to bring our Korean Ddukbaegi bowls to make sundubu jjigae, which translates to clay pot and soft tofu stew. That would be the perfect dish while looking out over the ocean on a cold rainy day. Then what about that old Indian recipe Kadai paneer we’ve been making for years? Sounds like a good start.

Along the way, we’ll stop at Dutch Bros. countless times for coffee, and of course, we’ll likely stroll along many a beach we’ve walked numerous times before as it’s possible we’ve visited the majority of easily accessible places along this stretch of ocean. We’ll be staying in each location longer than has been typical on previous visits as part of the exercise of embracing how things are different now, so vacations should also change a bit. The idea of taking a little more time to linger, to simply stop and gaze upon the sea for entire days, has a certain appeal. I’ll report back after our return.

Escape to Nowhere

Sunrise in Duncan, Arizona

Perspective shifts are dependent upon the circumstances under which we travel. The naivete that accompanies us can turn into a bitter truth when our routine is disrupted and we see the world for what it is. No, this is not a blog entry about existential dread.

Short-sighted perception connects our view of reality as a sequence of our expectations. For example, I live in the city and treat roads as paths to other cities instead of connections between potentialities. Along the way, I may stop in a quaint village, my romanticized ideas grabbing hold of the old architecture and bucolic rural life in an idealized rendition I can fantasize about in order to have a memory that stands out in contrast to the monotony of my typical life in the city.

Today, I’m in one of those locations by myself, and so even the act of arriving is different as the circumstances of traveling with Caroline set a romantic tone, lending a gloss to the setting where I celebrate love with eyes that want my senses to swoon.

Had I been a solo traveler for the past 30 years, I might have woken sooner, but I can’t know that with any certainty. Even during my trip to Germany last year, when I started two weeks earlier than Caroline, I was in some way bringing her along with me as I used my writing to wrap her into my sphere of experience. While on remote rivers, we’ve always been with others who create their own unique structures that affect time and movement.

Two weeks ago, Caroline and I were here in Duncan, but like so many other places we travel together, we use our location as a point on the map to branch out to other destinations. This excursion aims to filter out the need to be elsewhere, live within other people’s structures, and find a headspace where I can write for myself.

Morning in Duncan, Arizona

Back to this perspective shift. Yesterday, I arrived with crumbling ideas of the romanticized Main Street. I was seeing it for what it was: an extension of where I live. I’ve wanted these old towns to fill the role of a different time with a population that has a greater idea of how to appreciate life than I have.

The reality is that many are living in an undercurrent of hostility due to what they don’t have while harboring anger against the unknown. I base this on observations of the prevalence of racist symbolism, political affiliation, bumper stickers, overheard conversations, and messaging from t-shirts.

Driving the 40 miles to the nearest McDonalds, KFC, Taco Bell, or Sonic is worth the effort to escape boring routines before returning home to continue the diet of binge-watching Fox News. So, how is this different than life in the city I live in? Other than the distance to the nearest junk food, there is none. A large number of people out here make just enough money to get by and survive while others are doing well, just like life in any big city.

The sense of idyllic community I wanted to layer on in small-town America is as broken as the idea of a multicultural melting pot that is supposed to exist in Phoenix and elsewhere. While ethnic grocery stores, concerts with bands from around the globe, and foreign films are available, they are often quite segregated, with Caroline and I being part of a very small minority of Caucasians in attendance. From this lack of participation, many people lose out on the magic of attending a Polish or Thai festival, won’t listen to the oud player from Iraq, or taste the exotic flavors found in a Mercado.

Hanging out near the Lazy B Ranch in New Mexico

Then, when we leave the perceived dull lives in the city and end up in a small town, we show up with the bias that this place represents exactly what we are missing. The double-edged sword of gentrification is an ugly beast where city dwellers start to desire to trade in boring for this place of nirvana, though they are also arriving with the demands for certain conveniences that might be detrimental to the cost of living of those already present, which will dramatically change the character. The dreamers, experiencing the pushback of those who are afraid of change, sour the illusion of this intruder who may have already created irreparable damage.

And so it was yesterday as I crested a hill before descending into Duncan. Not that I was coming to discover a new place for Caroline and me to set down roots; nope, I’m here trying to capture a glimpse of why we as a country no longer have meaningful connections to ourselves, to the land, and to life itself.

Now, with that out of the way, I will have to head out to take up somewhere away from the artifice of people to a place with an overview of nature. Somewhere, I can sit down and listen to the quiet of being nowhere in particular.

My buddy the fly

So here I am, out in the quiet but not the quiet, as I’m not far enough out there to be in that kind of quiet. The wind over the low brush has its chatter, the birds flutter in branches darting here and there, and flies buzz about. Even when I can’t see the insects, they are often heard. Nearly a mile away, the tires of a truck let me know they are heading my way, and then maybe 20 miles away, a jet overhead is out of alignment with its place in the sky compared to where its noise is, such as the distance between that the sound must travel.

If what I’m looking for is quiet, I have to wonder if such a thing exists. Maybe real quiet only exists in the void where life is not present. Then I have to wonder what I would do with this elusive lack of sounds I think I’m searching for. Would finding it dull my mind from being able to find words? I want to believe a kind of harmonious oneness would unfold in a moment of instant enlightenment from the silence, allowing me to exclaim, I get it!

Instead, I sit here on the side of an infrequently traveled road with an ever-present fly searching for that interest in their species that I can only guess at while I search through the sounds that betray the stillness I think I want. Maybe my fly companion also has dreams of finding an elusive something right here in this apparition of an object that needs studying. So the two of us share a moment in the shade, oblivious to what each other ultimately is looking for, which might be the condition of us people for the most part too.

Lordsburg, New Mexico

That road I’d been on took me to Lordsburg, New Mexico, which certainly qualifies for being part of my nowhere journey. After spending 30 minutes exploring this place of only about 2400 souls, which should have taken no more than 5 minutes, I can say that I’m certainly oblivious as to what the inhabitants of Lordsburg are looking for. A couple of motels along the interstate with an equal number of gas stations, a McDonald’s, a small diner, and a grocery that might be smaller than the diner are all that remains and is holding on to.

Lordsburg, New Mexico

So why does this remote outpost have a population at all? I’d venture the guess that those who remain are too impoverished to move on. There’s a kind of cruelty here as it would seem that the majority of business is coming from people who have the mobility and means to take themselves across this corner of America with relative ease. This is akin to prison in a fishbowl where, every day, you look out to see that the other fish are swimming in the ocean while you squirm in a thimble of wastewater.

Writing in Lordsburg, New Mexico

I can’t imagine that hope exists here beyond that which travels at 80 mph down the highway. Whatever the attraction was back in 1880 when this outpost was founded, it is now gone. What’s left rusts and crumbles away until one-day ruins will be all that remains, those and the constant din of vehicle noise that I can hear a mile away from where I sit writing these very words.

On the way to Redrock, New Mexico

Then there are the roads that go places unknown and remain that way even after they’ve been traveled. This is no noise other than that of nature and the momentary ruckus I drag through it on my way to the end of where I’m willing to go. When I reach that point, that leaves me scratching my head, “Why am I here?” I can surmise that others know, but there are no signs that encourage me to continue into the unknown over a dirt road of potentially questionable quality a little further on.

At the end of the road in Redrock, New Mexico

Somehow, this day of being nowhere is likely indicative of the mind I’m querying to deliver insights. Instead of finding a treasure on the horizon, in town, or at the end of the road, I find myself searching within as to what I thought I’d find there. Surely, there must be something in the void, or else it wouldn’t be observable, or so goes my current thinking. Thinking, of course, cannot see everything, hence this need to venture out with the hope of seeing, hearing, or otherwise experiencing a spark of inspiration that might alight my synapses in just such a way that I could tease a thing or two out of the muck.

Looking back to Redrock, New Mexico

I must also be aware of my impatience to find what is still hidden in the obvious. Often, in reading the obtuse where this reader is likely ill-equipped to comprehend the complex, the material must be ruminated on, and even after a good amount of time, the subject can still elude me. Maybe I never understood the question I was trying to ask as I engaged with an author I thought would deliver answers to my thirsty mind. And so it may prove similar here in my writing exercise.

Fortunately, I’m here with three books so that, should I need to relinquish my goal of writing, I have plenty of reading to ensure my continued befuddlement. Better to be lost in good thought than be complacent in the banal, and so Stiegler, Berardi, or Zizek will surely keep me distracted.

Enough of the rambling, since if I don’t start transcribing my handwritten notes into the digital domain, my wife at home might not otherwise believe I’ve done much anything at all, and from what I’ve left here on paper, it could be argued that I, in fact, didn’t do much anything at all out here in nowhere.

Already Out Again

Greenlee County, Arizona

Just 48 hours ago, the idea of taking off on a writing retreat isolated out on the sparsely populated Arizona/New Mexico border seemed like a brilliant idea. Now, this morning, I’m supposed to leave. I’m acutely aware of what I will sorely miss: my best friend, all-around pal, and wife, Caroline. It all seemed so easy in theory, but after these six months of never really being more than a dozen feet away from each other, my separation anxiety is gripping me. Not that I’ll give in to it, as the rationale for putting myself somewhere outside my routine is not a bad thing, and with the idea that in order to gather value from my time away, I have to pen a weighty number of words that may or may not have exceptional meaning, I will endeavor to bring them out in the thousands. What I’ll write remains a mystery in the moments before I depart.

Driving for hours across the desert, listening to nothing more than road noise and whatever murmurings my brain allows to escape, the passenger seat is sadly empty, but my heart is not as Caroline is with me even when she’s not physically there. I can’t write that without some small amount of corny feelings welling up in my fingers; come on, who writes these kinds of cliches at this age? Allow me a small amount of mea culpa, as romantic pinings are not always easy to come by when the mind is distracted with unknown things that are at the core of what’s dragging me to go and spend some time contemplating whatever it might be I could discover.

How does one live in a remote place like Duncan, Arizona, and have the same concerns as somebody who lives in a major city? How long does it take to sit somewhere where nothing is happening until you come to the point that you are okay with nothing happening in your own life? Or is my myopic view and understanding of where one’s center is broken?

Duncan, Arizona

Walking around Duncan is a lot different than using this old town as a base for other destinations. I’ve finally started to really look at things, trying to see beyond the few aesthetic sights that are part of a narrative that celebrates travel. There was once faith that Duncan was a town that held the promise that this could be a good place to live. Back then, it was farming, mining, and ranching that drove the economy, but times change, and what once had been lucrative no longer was, and with the tumult of poverty moving in, some had to move out.

Duncan, Arizona

The waxing and waning of economic vigor fluctuate with the few enterprising people who hold on to hope that there’s enough through traffic that might support a new endeavor so a small pizza joint hangs on; the Simpson Hotel is here though it’s operating on a very strict program, the Ranch House restaurant seems to have enough customers that they’ll still be here on our next visit too. As for residents, it’s hard to read the ebb and flow as many dwellings look well abandoned, though I’m reluctant to poke around to see if that’s, in fact, true.

Duncan, Arizona

It’s undeniably beautiful out here in the middle of nowhere. Well, that’s if you can define nowhere as being nearly 100 miles (160 km) from a town with at least 10,000 people living in it. To me, that’s close to nowhere, but don’t think I cast aspersions with this observation as, in some ways, I don’t believe this is remote enough, but it’s conveniently distant so that I get a good sense of being out of the wreckage of a big city. Go ahead and ask me, “Why must you disparage big cities?” Xenophobia, poor education, disappearing culture, belligerence, risk of chaos due to gross inequity, and my old worn drum beat of harping on mediocrity come to mind and are the driving forces that bring me out here to explore my thoughts if there’s something in my head that can be said differently and maybe more effectively.

Duncan, Arizona

A rainbow seems like as good a sign that something will blossom if I were to believe this natural phenomenon portended something significant, but I don’t, so I’ll just go with posting this as a nod to Caroline as we always, without fail, delight when we share a kiss under the rainbow.

Duncan, Arizona

I won’t be able to call in help or tap someone else to find inspiration while on this sojourn to search for words that would allow me to say something meaningful, even if they are so to nobody else but me. Here on this first day laden with the emotion of leaving Caroline, if even for only a short while, along with the four or 5-hour drive, I sit here at the Simpson Hotel and feel the struggle of finding much of anything to share. It’s kind of like looking in the phonebook that’s no longer there for a name I don’t know and not being able to grab the phone that has been removed to ask for information for help. So, it must be time to hang up and call it quits on this day.

Leaving Out – Day 3

The dry bed of the Gila River in Duncan, Arizona

The day begins in the dry sandy bed the Gila River plies when water spreads out between its banks. Birds are ever-present, though it would seem some species have moved on and maybe others moved in, but we are not ornithologists, so I cannot speak with authority. Beetles are copulating while ants scurry about as they emerge from and retreat into neatly groomed mounds around the passageway to their nests. The morning is pleasant out here and otherwise quiet aside from the distant dogs, chickens, and those birds I mentioned who live along the now-dry riverway.

The dry bed of the Gila River in Duncan, Arizona

We are leary of where our feet settle as we’ve been told to be aware of quicksand and, like all fools, I secretly hoped to find some, though I only dreamt of a periphery experience so I could add having escaped its clutches to the narrative here on my blog. For color, I could have lied while embellishing an otherwise mundane but not uninteresting walk where water should have been and we shouldn’t have.

Gourd along the dry bed of the Gila River in Duncan, Arizona

Checking my head, I cannot give you a good reason as to why we didn’t harvest some of the buffalo gourds that were growing everywhere. Along the river bed in the sandy soil, this stuff thrives, and we happen to be here while it’s still young and edible, and yet we collected not a single fruit. We’ve never eaten buffalo gourd that is said to taste like squash, now I’m tempted to drive the 205 miles back out to Duncan to get some for dinner and see just how tasty or not it is.

Dike on the Gila River in Duncan, Arizona

If you are wondering, we walked upstream and saw not a single sign of fish, dead or living. We exited the dry flow through a gap in the brush that hugs the shore, making our way atop a dike built to contain the invisible river should it decide to come back with a ferocity that might threaten the small town of Duncan. Last January, during our last visit, we were still within the confines of winter, bundled up and scarved to keep the cold at bay. We watched the river with admiration and respect for what might be hidden in the depths that we could not see or fathom. Today, on a late summer day, the sandhill crane shares its call somewhere else, well out of earshot of those in this crispy desert landscape. Funny how our instincts do not shoo us away from inhospitable places like those bird-brained specimens from the aviary family of creatures while we, with our superior intellects, walk right into the situations that threaten our comfort.

Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Then again, we can just as quickly return to our creature comforts at our lodging to dine on another exquisite meal assembled by deft hands from ingredients collected across a vast geography, while the bird can only eat what it finds in front of its beak. Our first meal of the day was again nothing less than spectacular, but the resumption of our conversation with our hosts that inspired us to want to return would have to wait as a suddenly sickly cat friend who goes by the name Maliki needed to be rushed to a clinic specializing in ailments of four-legged and likely two-winged creatures unable to describe what is wrong and relying on us to interpret the change in their behavior and help save them should the ailment prove dangerous. Later in the day, we’d learned that luckily for all involved, the cat, while apparently traumatized, was not in serious condition and was discharged into the loving arms of the concerned caretakers.

The character of our hosts here cannot be understated as, without a second thought, they were moving to the door with Maliki wrapped up while we inquired about what needed to be locked up as they were about to head up, maybe down, the road. I believe they would have left without our payment had I not pressed it into the hand of Deborah, who was more concerned about this sweet cat than the ability of her guests to show themselves out and to do so graciously.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Before we could depart, we had one more mission to accomplish here at the historic and incomparable Simpson Hotel: we had to revisit the collected works of resident artist Don Carlos. As the inimitable Herr Comrade Carlos, under the steady gaze of a young Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky, a.k.a. Iron Felix, was clearing the way for Maliki to be fully interrogated by a nearby Doctor of Veterinary Sciences, he waved us on to inspect his works that were illuminated and ready for our observations.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

The microcosms inspired by Don Carlos’s investigations are held in suspended animation during these plague days of 2020, but today, we are the lucky ones to have a private viewing at the pace we decide. Without narrative, without music, and only the shuffling sound of our feet, we move between the dioramas, able to peek into the tiniest of corners of the artist’s creativity. I know firsthand that while the emotion held in his work may be broad, the scope of what feeds the expression is larger than any diorama can hope to contain. Fragments and musings of things that have passed through the mind of the artist find their way out to where paths intersect and inject delight within those encountering an imagination that travels and trades in the magic of images, both visual and verbal.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Multidimensionality is alive within the space cultivated here at the hotel. Cats and dragonflies, bees and flowing water, deities, and things organic mix with history being pulled from a global culture not aligned with pretense, dogma, or deeper meaning. My takeaway is this is an assemblage of love where the creator imbues the environment with a universe that hints at passion and recognizes the disorder of an entropic reality we call chaos. Here in the shared mind-space of Don Carlos, I tend to want to feel puny but console my inferiority by accepting his wisdom as that coming from a mentor, even if this formal arrangement is of my making.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Don’t be fooled by the thought that a box is a self-contained object of art, as the world around Simpson Hotel is a diorama in its own right. I could easily entertain the thought that given enough canvas space; Don Carlos would fold all of Duncan into his art; as a matter of fact, it might only be my own myopic viewpoint that doesn’t allow me to grasp immediately that he’s already done precisely that.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Being in the shared imagination of a world you may initially want to still consider your own, you would fail to understand that you’ve entered the living canvas that is borrowing things familiar, but their arrangement removes you from the surrounding desert and embraces you in a dreamlike oasis. Simply browsing without thinking might be a good place to start as you pay a visit, but like Felix the Cat, you should arrive with your Bag of Tricks, where you can unfold your knowledge in order to peer through the filter of history. There’s more here than meets the eye, and sadly, few will ever know the depth of its assemblage.

At the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Being here in Duncan is our re-encounter with life as we knew it earlier this year. This was not exactly the way things were, but as a surrogate wrapped in caution where the players are deeply aware of simple changes that are respectful of those wanting and needing to continue this act of trying to live full lives, it was a gift that starts the healing process after fear hurt our sense of the world. While we cannot travel to Europe, and I’m not ready to fly anywhere yet, I hope to return to the Simpson in the next weeks on my own for a week of writing and immersing myself in nature out the front door while an amalgamation of culture that speaks to my sense of the aesthetic is found on the other side of a screen door.

Guapo the Old Man at the Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Just yesterday, we were introduced to Old Man Guapo. This elderly and fading cat was resting out back and obviously not interested in our approach. Shortly before our departure this morning, Guapo took up a position right in front of the door that was our exit. He didn’t budge while I snapped a few photos down at his level, trying to capture the warmth of the sun he was basking in. While listening attentively to my presence, he couldn’t be bothered to look at the person who was more interested in him than he was in me. Slowly, we did our best not to disturb his cozy spot as we barely opened the door to sneak out. Then, without fanfare and farewells, we locked the front door and drove away.

Cotton growing in Safford, Arizona

Out of the imagination of artists and authors and into the mountains, we’d go. The plan was to drive the steep and often harrowing road leading us up Mt. Graham. This mountain oasis springs 10,000 feet out of the surrounding desert and leads into pine trees. Below us, the famous Pima cotton we just passed is flowering under the blistering 107 degrees summer day. Up the mountain, the temperature will drop to a comparatively chilly 73 degrees.

Caroline Wise and John Wise on Mt. Graham in Arizona

Before reaching the summit, we ran out of paved road. If it weren’t for my nerves frayed from constantly glimpsing the precipitous drops that looked to fall thousands of feet to the desert floor below, we might have continued following the trail, but I’d had enough of this adventure ride, took the opportunity to capture a selfie-and beat a retreat. Later on, I had to ask myself: how did I convince myself not to continue the journey? My weak answer is that during these days of divide and conquer, anger and mistrust, illness and death, I find that the encounter with people’s impatience is enough to reassure me that self-isolation might be a preferred state to live in.

Mt. Graham in Arizona

While at the Simpson, we moved from our cocoon at home to a cocoon shared by a couple equally concerned with finding harmony and love in life. In this sense, I want to gel with Vishnu while Shiva can guide the minions over their own spiritual cliff into the abyss of folly and self-harm. When a simple scene of serenity found in the grass, shadows, leaves, trees, the sky above, and insects below has lost its value to me, maybe then I’ll lose my desire to embrace my better zen moments, but until that time I will strive to be at peace.

Deer on Mt. Graham in Arizona

The landscape below us was obscured by the fires burning in Arizona and the smoke drifting in from the more than a million acres smoldering across California. So, instead of panoramas of hazy horizons, we look around us and think of our return and another encounter with the wildlife that calls these mountains home.

Mt. Graham in Arizona

Our next visit could be a guided tour to the observatory atop Mt. Graham; for that we will have to make reservations and get to leave the driving to someone else. Before the end of the day, I’ll be making an inquiry regarding availability.

Indulgence was the only way to describe the remainder of our drive home as in Pima, we made a stop at Taylor Freeze for a couple of chocolate milkshakes, and then in Miami, we just had to revisit Guayo’s El Rey for more carne asada even if we had just been there 48 hours ago. Getting back into the Phoenix area, we were gobsmacked by the heat, a hefty 117 degrees of asphalt melting anger from the sun. Arriving at home, we are no longer out; we are, once again, in.

Edit on September 4th: I just spoke with Deborah, our host at Simpson Hotel, and learned that Guapo passed away 48 hours after I shot this photo on August 26th. He rests in peace in the garden, basking under the sun.

Being Out – Day 2

Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Without a sound, we woke from our internal alarm to find the house reflecting its age with quiet. It’s only when moving into the parlor that the tick-tock of a clock becomes our companion to the emerging day. The place settings that were put out the night before identify where breakfast will be, but that’s still being concocted if Clayton and Deborah’s movements in their kitchen are indicators. Coffee is brought out with the promise of being strong in order to appeal to our European sensibility. We start to wipe away the remnants of sleep with this jolt of caffeine and the serenading of opera flowing from the kitchen and wait patiently; Caroline knits a sock, and I am writing.

Breakfast must be identified and accounted for as it is a labor of passion and investment of skills. Initially, we were informed that the cooking services were on hold for the duration of the virus, but it turns out that my rhapsody about the wizardry of tastes that enchanted our memories of a January visit was enough to have Deborah inquire of the man behind the frying pan if he’d be willing to grace us with a new ensemble of flavors to help us break the overnight fast. He agreed.

Simpson Hotel in Duncan, Arizona

Aplomb cannot be the right choice of words as I do not believe Clayton finds his time in the culinary alchemist’s lab to be demanding. Our breakfast arrives, radiating the skills of the maestro. We are brought a small ramekin of fresh fruit, a carafe of juice, and a plate separated into threes, which could be a nod to the father, the son, and the holy ghost, or is it a reflection of academia where there is your opinion, my opinion, and someone else’s opinion? On second thought, maybe nothing at all was implied with our servings of veggie frittata, field roast sausage, and chia seed pancakes about to be topped with prickly pear agave syrup, but it’s nice to dream. As for the appeal of the palette? Gluttony would have me asking for seconds while manners dictate I simply gush over the exquisite meal.

Speaking of dreaming, it is time to temporarily leave this house to wander over to the Gila Cliff Dwellings and visit others’ faded dreams.

Gila River at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

In the distance, long before we ever reach our destination, we start to see where normal used to be. Driving into an adjacent state reminds me of the freedom to roam. Our sense of place has an inherent need to take ourselves to the end of the road in order to look out and wonder what’s beyond the limits of what we can see and know. Our exercise in exploration offers us a footing to better understand what the toil at home is for.  This journey over to Silver City, New Mexico, where we’ll connect to State Road 15 going north through Pinos Altos and up into the Gila National Forest area, where the cliff dwellings are, will literally deliver us to the end of the road.

Caroline Wise at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Nearly two hours of twisting, windy road in an air-conditioned car traveling between 25 and 45 mph allowed us to arrive in the middle of nowhere in comfort; we even had iced drinks in the backseat along with snacks for our visit by way of absolute luxury. The entire way, I thought about those who would have lived in the cliff dwelling we are visiting for the second time in our lives. How far did they venture away from home? Had any of them ever gone so far as to walk to the ocean? What was the totality of their universe? I’d wager that they likely did not have concepts for the need to escape on a weekend sojourn to change things up.

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

From the clues that remain in the area, researchers have surmised that people known as the Mimbres lived in this area, with the Gila River running through it, from about 1,000 to the year 1,250. Only 25 years later, the members of the Mogollon people took up residence on the cliffside, building a series of 46 stone rooms within five caves, but then abandoned the area a bit over 100 years later. We have little certainty about what was in the minds of indigenous peoples of North America since before we could learn of their customs and history, our ancestors tried to annihilate all references and appearances of what they might have contributed to our culture. Such was the weakness our forefathers felt about their own religion. Funny, not funny, how that holds true to this day.

While I stand upon lands they were forced to give us, I cannot stand in their footsteps. I watch the shadows of birds whose ancestors flew over the same adjacent canyons as their descendants. Lizards scurry about just as they would have when the Mogollon and Mimbres people walked amongst them; I can’t help but wonder if the lizards and birds don’t know more about the people of these lands than we ever will.

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

I’m jealous of the stones that knew the touch and felt the warmth radiating from the people and their hearths, taking refuge from the elements within these homes fashioned by ancient architects. I listen closely to the silence but cannot hear the echoes of knowledge of the band of humans brought to this corner of remoteness.

I don’t mean to infer there was ever anything in North America like a hub or city for the millions of indigenous people that strode among the trees, mountains, rivers, and animals over the centuries. The one thing I can surmise, though, is that while they likely knew hardship, they also knew how to occupy a quiet place upon the land, which has me questioning if they didn’t find a kind of enlightenment in the quiet of the mind when one soars effortlessly within one’s environment.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

But this is all speculation and flights of fantasy, as my own mind is a hive of parasitic jingles and messages conditioned by consumption that were supposed to deliver me to happiness and success. I can have everything shipped home from Amazon, Walmart, musical instrument shops, all kinds of food, even marijuana, but I cannot have anyone bring me the vastness of being from a place that conveys the spectacle only nature can deliver to one’s eyes, ears, nose, and touch. For this reason, I will always be poor.

Wild grape at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Had it been the Mimbres or the Mogollon living here, they did so without fee, without tax, without deed, and without anyone to answer to. All they needed to do was survive, and maybe that wasn’t all that easy as, within about 100 years, they abandoned their perch with a view. I don’t believe they all perished, but would like to think they moved on as circumstances had become difficult, which necessitated a relocation, and that their descendants are now in nearby communities. As a visitor to these lands, I’m allowed to take nothing besides my memories and photographs; I cannot even pick a wild grape that would have been free for the taking in the centuries before my ancestors arrived.

Caroline Wise at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Caroline has continued in her effort to know something more about the place we’ve been visiting and on our arrival, she inquired about the local Junior Ranger program only to learn she could earn her Senior Ranger badge today. Needing to understand what could be gleaned from a visit to this National Monument, she ventured up the trail, trying to capture every clue from the details on display so that when the park ranger tested her knowledge, she might qualify for the honor of once again taking the oath to help protect what is held as important to our culture. With her right hand raised, socially distanced, and masked up, Caroline is now a Senior Ranger.

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Our own time here was extraordinarily brief, and the timing was perfect, with beautiful skies on hand until they started to darken with the threat of storms on the horizon. We managed to visit another small dwelling and almost missed some incredible pictographs had my eye not caught a hint of them after we’d started to drive away. I reversed back to the Lower Scorpion campground and pulled into the parking lot again so we could take a different trail that delivered the reward of more than a dozen cliffside panel pieces with meanings lost in time or at least lost to the invading forces. We can admire the messaging from afar, but deciphering their intrinsic value is a guessing game that I cannot claim to know how to win.

Driving south toward Silver City, New Mexico

Our signs, on the other hand, are easy to parse, “This windy road pissed off others who passed this way which required them to leave their vehicle with a weapon and attempt to murder the sign.” We’ll pass through old town Pinos Altos on our way back through Silver City, where we’ll need to get dinner. This town is not very well equipped for serving people food on a Sunday. Most restaurants are closed. I can only guess that Silver City is not really on anyone’s map of places to go, and so with a depressed economy, the locals cannot support these businesses seven days a week. If there was a demand from tourists, I’m sure owners would have brought on staff.

Once we’d decided on where we’d pick up food, we started hearing a commotion outside of our windows; it was the buzz of cicadas sounding, unlike the ones we have in Phoenix. Their screams were like a sine wave of volume modulation that would wax and wane, and at the top of their crescendo, you wouldn’t be blamed if you were slightly frightened into thinking some kind of imminent explosion of their species was about to occur. I say, unlike their Arizona brethren, as the chirp is significantly different.

Caroline Wise dining el fresco in Silver City, New Mexico

After our incredibly mediocre Mexican dinner, taken al fresco in a local park, we licked the wounds of having missed out on one of New Mexico’s famous green chili dishes, but there will be other visits to this part of the Southwest in the future. On the bright side, we are enjoying the idea of taking our food to go and finding a picnic table to have a private dinner in the great outdoors.

Driving west towards Mule Creek in New Mexico

Our options to return to Duncan were to go back the way we’d come or take a longer route up north on a road we’d not traveled in years. Of course, we took the long way. Were we rewarded with some spectacular sunset for our efforts? Nope. But, there was one moment when a deep, beet-red sun peeked through a keyhole in the clouds and let us have a tiny glimpse of our star far out in the distance. We’d never seen such a phenomenon and sadly do not have photographic proof as the road we were on was not amenable to pulling over safely to indulge our sense of capturing an aesthetic we’d not experienced yet in all of our years. Such is the magic of the little moments that pass without documentation, images, icons, or words. It feels like the Mogollon people and so many other native peoples from these lands can only be seen as the fleeting image of something profound and beautiful glimpsed through the tiniest of keyholes.

Heading Out – Day 1

San Carlos Apache Reservation in Arizona

With a good dose of apprehension manifesting as some low-level tension on the verge of aggression, we are nearly ready to go. It’s Saturday morning and instead of being ready beforehand like we typically are, today we had to tend to a lot of last-minute details prior to our departure. Consequently, we are getting out later than I might have otherwise desired, but at least we are forging ahead with our first nights away from home in over half a year. While sitting here at my desk a minute before heading to the car, there’s not a minor amount of ambivalence about going through with this. Pandemic conditioning has had its impact, but we can do this.

It takes about 45 minutes to get far enough away from home that I can start relaxing, which then allows Caroline to crack open Magic Mountain and get to reading me some Thomas Mann. We are down to the last 150 pages of this 720-page tome and hope to put a good dent in what remains while we are out on our little sojourn.

Passing through Miami yet again, it was time for lunch we pulled up to Guayo’s El Rey restaurant for a great carne asada that we shared at a nearby picnic table in the shade. You might remember that we came out this way on a day trip for my birthday, hoping to eat here but had to go to Guayo’s on the Trail down the road in Globe, except they weren’t serving carne asada then nor on my solo trip a month ago. Today, we hit pay dirt.

Smoke blankets the landscape as wildfires take their toll on the Southwest. The pallor of the sky, though, doesn’t dampen our enthusiasm to be out here now that we’re seriously underway. For a quick minute, we thought we might be stymied in our effort as an overhead sign warned us of a road closure outside Globe, which was our direction. Fortunately, it was the way north and not eastward, so we were good to go, as a detour in this area would have added 5 hours to our driving at a minimum.

The photo above was taken on the San Carlos Apache Reservation and, while a relatively non-descript image, it shows that every street into the reservation has a security person at a small shack ensuring that everyone who enters is a tribal member due to the worry of outsiders bringing COVID-19 into their lands.

Caroline Wise and John Wise roadside near Duncan, Arizona

Our plan of visiting Mt. Graham today had to be put on hold. The plan is instead to visit on Monday on our way home. For one, the smoke was pretty heavy, but more than that, we had told our hosts that we thought we’d arrive around 4:00, so it was apparent we’d have to give up on that visit.

After getting into Duncan right on time and being greeted by the inimitable Clayton of the Simpson Hotel and possibly the alter ego of one Don Carlos, we were quickly falling into the familiarity of being awed by this man’s wisdom and wit. Somewhere between referencing Oswald Spengler and Marcel Proust, he quite correctly repeated a quote from Heinrich Heine that reads:

Mine is a most peaceable disposition. My wishes are: a humble cottage with a thatched roof, but a good bed, good food, the freshest milk and butter, flowers before my window, and a few fine trees before my door; and if God wants to make my happiness complete, he will grant me the joy of seeing some six or seven of my enemies hanging from those trees. Before death I shall, moved in my heart, forgive them all the wrong they did me in the lifetime. One must, it is true, forgive one’s enemies–but not before they have been hanged.

With our hosts wishing us a good dinner, we were soon on our way out again, back the way we’d come, for a 38-mile drive to dinner in Solomon. We were heading to La Paloma restaurant for more Mexican food because the nostalgia of a great meal is a powerful draw to return. Along the way, we stopped to take the first selfie of ourselves since April 26th, when I posted a photo of us in our matching face masks that Caroline made us before the industry of artful masks exploded. Our dinner did not disappoint.

Mt. Graham in distance near Safford, Arizona

The serenity found in a place that is nowhere is unmatched when the forces of man-made chaos are kept at bay. The wind can blow, hail can fall, and lightning bolts from above can threaten one’s existence, but the machinations of nature often arrive with such astonishing beauty that, more often than not, we have to give the world around us a pass for its occasional tantrum that disrupts our well-being.

A cascade of delight is available out here for those who desire to see what is just before them, but first, we have to acquire a sense of what it is we need to feed our souls. For us today, it is the palette, the eyes, the memories, and a dry river bed with remembrances of sandhill cranes flying overhead this past January. I don’t mean to imply that the memories have to come from previous visits to the area but from the collective memory of a life lived in the search of the unseen and unknown. Until you see something a second, a third, or multiple times, how do you know you’ve really seen what you think you have?

Love is not found in singular glances, although it can first arise from a simple gaze upon just about anything, but we must look again and again, reach out and touch, smell, and bring into our sense of expanding emotional knowledge that inspires our love to conquer our reason, thus becoming a part of ourselves. Repetition of familiarity is key, but it can also be a curse should you come to believe that you now know this thing, person, condition, or possibility. Certain knowledge is a kind of death of potentiality, and it is the uncertainty of what one might find that brings us back to stare into the eyes of a loved one or into the sunset as we’ve never seen it before, though we may have already seen 10,000 sunsets before.