Map of our U.S. Travels

Map of John Wise and Caroline Wise's travels across America

It’s been 18 years since we started tracking our travels on an old Michelin map. While we’ve been to all four corners, the geographical center of the United States in Lebanon, Kansas, and been to some places such as Yellowstone nine times and the Oregon coast probably more than that, there are still vast swathes of America that remain unseen to us. Large parts of the North and South Carolina coasts have not been explored yet along with small segments of the Texas, Florida, and New Jersey shorelines we’d still like to visit. The Great Plains could certainly use some work, along with the Southern States. We’ve been to the majority of the Hawaiian Islands and while we’ve seen Alaska from Anchorage to Fairbanks and from Juneau to Haines, that is one state that would require two lifetimes to see it all.

I used an infrared filter on the image to turn it black and white as it brought up the darker highlighted roads we’ve traveled and brightened the state outlines making them easier to see, should you be wondering why this photo, in particular, was chosen to be presented sans color.

Up to Sedona, Arizona

Arizona Highway 17 near Bloody Basin Road traveling north

Heading north on Highway 17 in the direction of Flagstaff after lunch with what seems to be about half of Phoenix. In previous years, the worry was getting stuck in traffic on Friday afternoons trying to get out of town or the crush on late Sunday of everyone returning. Now, it seems that there are so many people trying to escape the summer heat they’ll leave at a moment’s notice and satisfy themselves with spending the day somewhere between Prescott, Cottonwood, Sedona, and Flagstaff.

Starbucks in Prescott, Arizona

Our first stop was in Prescott, where Caroline wanted to visit Carma, who owns a shop called Fiber Creek. Pulling into the plaza, I spotted a Starbucks in a grocery, where I also knew I’d be able to make a pit stop for the facilities, have some iced coffee, and get the first part of today’s blog entry written. I’d planned on writing a screed about the traffic, lamenting the cultural and apparent education differences between the customers of the In N Out we had lunch at earlier here in Arizona and the last one we stopped at a few weeks ago in Rowland Heights, California, and whatever else I could throw in as I practiced the, “Get off of my lawn” routine, but instead I’ll just hint at my seething annoyance with public displays of stupidity and leave it at that. Now caught up purging my bladder and spleen, I’ll head over to the yarn store before Caroline purges our bank account.

Caroline Wise at Fiber Creek in Prescott, Arizona

She bought “stuff,” but I don’t know exactly what yet, and she insists that whatever is in the box belongs to her friend Christine, something about a loom from what I understand. Never trust a fiber artist in the wild is my motto.

Route 89A through Jerome, Arizona

Out of Prescott, we were back on the 89A through Jerome as we were just a few weeks ago; no time to stop there today as we are on our way to Sedona, as you already know from the title of today’s blog.

Cloud over Sedona, Arizona

Most everyone is busy looking at red rocks when they are in Sedona; we also remember to look up to catch those spectacular moments when the crepuscular rays (God rays) are beaming down to earth. This was the view from the gas station because, in red rock country, even the sky demands your attention.

Sedona, Arizona

This is the view from near where we’ll have dinner tonight. As for dinner, it was pale in comparison to the view, but you win some, and you lose some. After finding some of the best dining spots across America and more than a few in Europe, you have to accept that, at times, even the best of places miss the mark, and this was certainly one of those nights. The name of the place isn’t important as I feel restaurants have enough to deal with due to Yelp and the shenanigans of serious haters.

Writer and Activist Bruce Anderson from Nature's View of South Carolina

We arrived at the Mary D. Fisher Theatre, where the Sedona Film Festival is held in late February through early March, with a few minutes to spare before the movies got underway. Before I could get seated, I fell into a conversation with writer, filmmaker, and educator Bruce Anderson of Nature’s View out of South Carolina. Bruce is featured in the movie The Edge: Bruce Anderson – Natural Humanship, which looks at our relationship with ourselves and how we move out of sync with nature due to the burden we’ve incurred by ignoring our environment and our animals’ health and well-being within this toxic ecosystem. Unfortunately, we couldn’t be in Sedona for Friday’s presentations, but lucky me for getting the chance a couple of times this evening to talk with Bruce.

Author Carly Kade at the Equus Film Festival in Sedona, Arizona

Lucky me that as we approached the moment between two of the films I decided to jump out of the dark theatre to support our local artist; well, I assumed she was a local artist. This is author Carly Kade, and between getting our seats and talking with Bruce I’d see Carly behind her stack of books, but I got caught up with trying to hurry things along so I could catch the films. Good thing, too, as I loved the first film titled, “The Wild Ponies of Chincoteague” by Kurt Kolaja & Tod Mesirow: it’s a tear-jerker. When I got to the lobby, Carly was packing up to leave, but not so packed up she couldn’t grab a couple of copies of her books and sign them for Caroline and me. Turns out that Carly is a Phoenix resident, too, and is working on a third book in the series of her cowboy romance journeys. The first books are “Cowboy Away” and “In The Reins.”

I tried to get back to the movie as quickly as I could, but still, I missed the opening of the next title called, Talking To The Air: Horses of The Forbidden Kingdom, about the region of Mustang, Nepal, and their culture of the horse: a fascinating look into a disappearing way of life.

The last film of the night was All The Wild Horses, about the Mongol Derby 1000 km horse race across Mongolia. This movie was as intense as Chincoteague was emotional, a serious winner of a movie that wrapped us up in its story and immersed us in the landscape as well as any great movie we’ve seen in the last ten years.

Night sky near Sedona, Arizona

I wasn’t properly set up to get a great photo of the Milky Way tonight, but that didn’t stop us from getting out of the car and gawking at the night sky and recognizing that it had been too long since we were out stargazing. It was almost 1:00 in the morning when we got home and we were still elated by such a wonderful day shared between us.

A Long Friendship

Kwality Ice Cream in Phoenix, Arizona

This storefront used to read, “Indo Euro Foods” and for a dozen years, the woman who owned this shop had become a friend. Prior to Sonal Patel buying the place back in June of 2002 Caroline and I had been visiting it under its previous owner to buy British and Indian foods and more importantly rent Bollywood films. After seeing Devdas in L.A. back in the summer of 2002 Caroline and I stepped up our renting of movies from the shop, especially those starring Shah Rukh Khan, and it was during this time we first met Sonal.

Caroline Wise, Sonal Patel, and John Wise at Kwality Ice Cream in Phoenix, Arizona

This is Sonal Patel of Indo Euro Foods that a couple of years ago became Kwality Ice Cream. After 14 years of selling groceries and renting videos her business like so many others was being heavily impacted by streaming video and online sales of hard-to-find food items that had by then become easy to acquire online. It was time for a change, but after two years of trying a new business model, it is once again time to move on. The population of the Phoenix area is likely too bland and conformist to venture away from the safety of their pizza and wings to try exotic ice cream flavors from India, sad. Today was the last day for us to share one more falooda from our good friend Sonal.

The Elusive Monsoon

Monsoon Clouds over Phoenix, Arizona

Here we are on the cusp of August and I’ve only recorded four rain days in our corner of Phoenix brought in by the summer monsoons. Sadly on one of those days, we were in Los Angeles. In a place that gets so little rain, we delight in experiencing water falling from the sky; it’s a kind of affirmation of life, a restoration of the environment. The one thing to note about our monsoons is that when they finally do materialize they seem far more violent and while we had plenty of flooding from them 30 years ago, I cannot remember the incredible number of trees that are being knocked down in these storms.

Los Angeles – Day 3

Caroline Wise at Guasti Cafe in Chino, California

Friday night, on our arrival in L.A., the temperature was incredibly pleasant. On Saturday, a cool breeze was in the air. By Sunday, things were warming up, and today, it was said things would get hot.

While we had the entire day to spend in Los Angeles today, our experiences were full enough that we feel quite satisfied with our time here and have decided to skip the synth shop, another museum, and whatever else might have come our way and opt for an early return to Phoenix. Before we took seriously the drive home we stopped at a place for breakfast we hadn’t visited since my father passed away early in the century; Guasti Homestyle Cafe in Chino, California. If this looks like a stupid amount of food to you, it did to us, too.

East of Indio, California

About that hot weather, I just spoke of, by the time we reached Indio, California, where the majority of the city is 14 feet (4 m) below sea level, and parts as low as 150 feet (50 m) below it was hot out here, hotter than Arizona as a matter of fact. I’m quite familiar with our car getting this hot and hotter when it has been parked in the sun, but 118 degrees was the temperature while the car was moving.