International Travel

At Sky Harbor Airport Phoenix, Arizona

It’s Friday, the day before we leave for Mexico City down south in Mexico. I’m sitting in Starbucks having a coffee while Caroline is at her office enjoying happy hour with her co-workers. I couldn’t check in with our flight, which was likely due to needing to present our passports to the ticketing window. I bought pesos earlier in the week and scheduled our Uber to the airport an hour ago.

Things are mostly packed but more importantly, the deep cleaning of everything is done. From the shelves of the refrigerator to under the stove, baseboards in the bathroom, and every surface that could be cleaned in that room is super tidy. All laundry is done, as is our bedding, so when we get back home, nothing needs to be tended to aside from possibly turning on the A/C, depending on what the weather looks like when we return. This ritual of housekeeping takes on greater importance the longer we’re away, as when vacation extends beyond a few days, I want to come home knowing that aside from fetching some fresh food and doing our stinking travel laundry, I’m free to bask in the glow of another wonderful vacation.

Hmm, this is mostly true; I’m out of granola and will have to deal with that the day after our return; we are also out of pickled ginger for our Burmese ginger salads, so after buying 10 pounds of fresh ginger, I’ll be occupied with that chore for a solid 5 or 6 hours. Our taxes haven’t been filed yet, and I need to find a new doctor soon after our return as I don’t trust my current one after two appointments where he proved too anxious to prescribe meds with crazy potential side effects when my conditions are relatively well maintained.

On the blogging front, I anticipate that I’ll shoot between 3,600 and 5,000 photos; if I were smart, I’d take less. Prepping the photos while in situ isn’t a problem, but staying current with writing about the day can be a challenge. Should I fall behind and need to work on things after our return, I’ll do that to the exclusion of everything else as I obsess about finishing before we leave for trip number 6 of the 25 planned for this year.

You think you are done preparing, and then after dinner, you realize there are still a dozen things you need to get done before you call it a night. That’s exactly what happened, but now it’s 10:00 pm, and my eyes are heavy. The computer is updated, the phone rebooted, Fitbit is fully charged, pesos are divided between us, documents photocopied, credit card numbers and their phone numbers are noted, plans for breakfast are made, nothing left to do but hope for a good night of sleep instead of a restless one like we’ll have tomorrow night in another strange bed.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Sky Harbor Airport Phoenix, Arizona

Good morning, Saturday, and the butterflies of going to a new place far away. Breakfast was out of the way, a mile walk was able to be fit in, and we had 10 minutes before our ride arrived. Time to power this stuff at home down, take out the trash, lock the door, and go. Next stop: Phoenix Sky Harbor airport.

Got some walking in at Terminal 4, verified that we’d get lunch on our flight, and now we’re sitting down near our gate where there are very few seats. We’ll start boarding in 15 minutes, though our flight isn’t leaving for another hour. By the way, I have a KTN or Known Traveler Number, but Caroline doesn’t; we need to rectify that as it sure is convenient to zip through security. This leg of the trip, I went to that line as with a CPAP, computer, camera, belt, phone, and shoes, it feels like a hassle to go through the regular line if I can avoid it. Next up, we are flying business class for the better part of this trip; this did allow Caroline to move through the Preferred Boarding security line; we board first, so there will be no issue of getting overhead bin space; we get that lunch I spoke of, and we’ll be at the front of the line for passport control when we land in Mexico.

Flying over Mexico

I was certain I’d see the border scar across the desert as we flew south but my vigilance wasn’t good enough. I did see a lot of desert and, on occasion, some canyon areas.

Flying over Mexico

Our three hours and some minutes turned into something less than three hours, allowing us to arrive early, but with immigration nearly a mile away from where we landed and the need to wait forever for a taxi, we were at the airport a good hour although we had no bags to claim. The great thing about our taxi ride was that it was a fixed price deal where you buy a coupon in the airport for your destination, so there’s no ambiguity, and at $14 or 280 Pesos, it was a terrific bargain.

Caroline Wise in Mexico City, Mexico

Ciudad de México or Mexico City to us foriegners, we are here. We lost an hour as we shifted timezones, lost that hour at the airport, and needed some time at the hotel to get checked in and figure out which way we wanted to go. The place for dinner I thought we’d go to closes at 6:00 for some strange reason, so instead of getting there 30 minutes before they shut the doors, we decided to go for a walk before grabbing our final meal of the day not too far from our hotel.

Mexico City, Mexico

We are in Bosque de Chapultepec Park, where the Museo Nacional de Antropología is also located. This corner of the park dedicated to the friendship between Mexico and Azerbaijan didn’t arrive without speedbumps, but the specifics are of little contemporary interest, so I’ll just leave this here without much comment.

Mexico City, Mexico

Hundreds of vendors line the wide paths through the park, and though the sun came and went as it was replaced with very occasional rain and cloud cover, the festive sense of a beautiful Saturday afternoon is in full effect. From furry monkeys on kids’ heads that squirt water from their tails to Lucha Libre masks celebrating Mexico’s renowned history of wrestlers, it seemed nothing cost much for than a dollar out here. Sadly, we are reluctant to try the various colorful snacks and fast food items along the way as too many Americans have squawked about the dangers to us visitors that will fall afoul of an intestinal bug if we aren’t careful. Somehow, I know they are full of BS, but their poisonous words and fears have infiltrated both of our brains.

Caroline Wise and John Wise in Mexico City, Mexico

There’s something I find peaceful about being somewhere I don’t speak the language, and that’s probably the fact that I can’t tell when people are talking from their butts. I want to assume they are all talking quantum physics, philosophy, or politics using a filter of high intellect. While I can be sure that if someone were translating the nearby conversations, I’d be aghast at the same level of stupidity I find elsewhere, that’s not the case now, and I can easily delude myself, thus making me happier. Happier makes for better smiles, so I gain that, too.

Mexico City, Mexico

We are now on our way to the restaurant we’ll be eating at but first, we’ll have to backtrack a bit.

Mexico City, Mexico

There’s a comedy act going on nearby that has attracted about 100 onlookers who are, as they say, busting a gut, but we understand not a word (well, at least we got “pendejo”) and walk on to check out the spitting frog fountain where a bunch of scouts are standing around doing scout things.

Mexico City, Mexico

This bird of paradise just so happens to look like a flame is burning there or that maybe I over-enhanced the colors; well, it is what it is.

Caroline Wise at Carajillo Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico

Dinner was Carajillo restaurant I’d learned of before leaving Phoenix and you should be able to see from Caroline’s face that we weren’t disappointed. Prior to getting to this opulent dessert that was nearly as expensive as both of our entrees, Caroline started with a margarita as I ordered a guacamole. We’ve never had a hot guac, but we have now; it even had some ginger in it, not your garden variety version of this popular dip. Our entrees were roast pork for me and encrusted salmon for Caroline.

Carajillo Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico

Having limited Spanish skills comes with its perks; what Caroline thought she understood we were having for dessert was slightly off. We thought that the many tables receiving flaming towers of chocolate and gold leaf-covered strawberries with a small tower of deep-fried ice cream topped with berries and more gold leaf were celebrating birthdays or anniversaries; nope, this was the dessert option we unintentionally got too. Under the burning cone at the center was the fried ice cream. Do I need to mention that this dessert also involved dry ice and several servers clapping while another one provided light effects with his phone?

With the loud thumping music of this trendy hot spot, the boisterous, well-dressed crowd, and the extremely well-trained and good-looking staff, we were surprised at the sense of celebration going on here and how there’s nothing in the Phoenix, Arizona, area that comes close to matching any of it. Without a tip, the meal, including the appetizer, a mixed drink, sparkling water, two entrees, and this dessert, came to 1,500 pesos or $84. Muy elegante and a great start to this Mexican vacation.

The Race is on…Or is it?

Caroline Wise in the surf in Santa Monica, California

Back on the weekend of January 7th Caroline and I drove from Phoenix, Arizona to Los Angeles, California as we embarked on the monumental personal challenge of attempting to travel somewhere away from home no less than 25 times this year. This was our first trip that included museums, a botanical garden, the ocean, and dinner on the ocean in San Pedro among other things.

Caroline Wise at Teakettle Junction on the Road to Racetrack Playa in Death Valley National Park, California

On January 21st we returned to California, except this time we were aiming for Death Valley well north of Los Angeles. Caroline is seen here posing at Tea Kettle Junction on our way to Racetrack Playa to see with our own eyes the rocks that sail across a dry lakebed. Now, while this second trip of the year qualified as just that, I’d like to point out that was actually our third consecutive trip following the idea of going somewhere every other week. Over Christmas, we were over in New Mexico at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge for some birdwatching, 10’s of thousands of birds.

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

February 4th seemed to come on fast but this time we were staying right here in our own state of Arizona. I’d booked us a couple of nights at Bright Angel Lodge and hoped that we wouldn’t encounter snowy roads on the way up. As you can see, we had great weather, great views, and consequently a great time here at the Grand Canyon.

Caroline Wise at Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

Maintaining the theme of trying to avoid snow in the wintertime, our travel plans had us going south on the weekend of February 18. We came down this way to revisit a hiking trail we’d visited nearly 17 years prior. Well, we didn’t make it there because we were distracted by news of a mass of sandhill cranes nearby, and even on the way there we got sidetracked by a quick visit and hike to the Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge. So you can better understand just where we were on the map, Douglas, Arizona, is about 250 miles southeast of us right on the border of Mexico and about 20 miles west of New Mexico.

For the 5th trip away from home this year, which is coming up very soon, I’m now scrambling to finish a ton of details that I put off until the last minute. Because we are so familiar with traveling I need not worry too much about getting things perfect too far in advance. I believe Caroline and I have confidence that the flow of our travels, no matter how they unfold, always seem to have been well-planned and fortunate regardless of the situation once we’re there.

So maybe this shouldn’t be considered a race at all but more a marathon because with 21 trips still ahead of us we need to pace nearly everything we do so we don’t burn out by feeling like we’re always on the run. This is where my preparations which occur in the background while Caroline is at the office should allow her a seamless move from working to being transported someplace where a real adventure in exploration, beauty, and fun can be woven together, allowing the high frequency of so many trips to remain exciting and not slip into feeling like chores. Oh yeah, the last thing, where are we going next? Ha, check back soon.

Leaving Tranquility

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

We are back at Art Car World for a slow tour after Friday night’s quick tour. Our guide, Hunter Mann, unlocked the door and turned the lights on before we arrived. Hunter’s enthusiasm from Friday night is alive and well on this early Sunday morning as he starts sharing the vision of Harrod Blank, the person behind this effort, though Hunter is obviously integral to the operation and playing a key role in bringing Harrod’s vision to life.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

There’s so much to the backstory of art cars and the personalities that endeavor to build these drivable works of art that whatever I might share here is of minor importance compared to others making a visit to Douglas, Arizona, to see these cars with one’s own eyes.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

Both Harrod and Hunter come from a filmmaking background, though that would be too narrow a lens to focus on them. From our limited time here, it would seem that both are Rennaisance men who, from art, authorship, teaching, renovation, and even a bit of philosophy, are now trying their hands at revitalization as they tackle rebuilding a corner of a formerly prosperous mining town. Maybe the town and the timing are right to capture the need of people to get away and find experiences that are off the beaten path.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

Caroline was responding to a decorative element on one of the cars, a wire sculpture of a woman at a spinning wheel, when Hunter grabbed a book by Harrod titled Art Cars: The Cars, the Artists, the Obsession, the Craft and opened to the pages that showcase the “Yarn Car.” We left with that book.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

Behind the decorated snail is a windshield, and the snail itself rides on the hood of a car of a make, obscured by thousands of different pieces of jewelry, coins, and other things.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

The facility in which these cars are being exhibited is a work in progress with a lot yet to be done, but the dust and construction yet to come are in no way detractors from the amazement the cars deliver to your senses. The wrought-iron transparent Beetle in the next room must be seen to be believed; the quote in the photo up above about “May you live as long as you want…” is from Harrod’s Oh My God Beetle, while this Beetle is fashioned with a layer of stained glass that has been painstakingly conformed to the shape of this iconic car.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

Close-up detail of the “California Fantasy Van” built by Ernie Steingold in Burbank, California. The underlying vehicle is a  1975 GMC van that originally weighed 4,700 pounds, with two tons of brass and thousands of dollars in coins; it now weighs 10,000 pounds.

Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

Awesome, got a decent photo of the exterior of the Gadsden Hotel. Caroline and I could easily see staying here again, although, with 21 more trips away from Phoenix scheduled for this year after completing the first four adventures, I don’t see us returning during 2022.

Graffiti in Douglas, Arizona

This weekend, we had the opportunity to meet entrepreneurs, students, and travelers, all making their contributions to this small desert outpost on the Mexican border. From Marina studying to be a firefighter, Cesar studying to be a nurse, Christian who understands he must move and grow to continue to improve his situation, to Cheryl who’s giving these young adults the opportunity that could allow them to reach their dreams. And then there’s Harrod and Hunter trying to inject culture and investment in the community; along the way are those of us down here looking for birds, rocks, and solitude, spending our dollars on lodging, food, gas, and souvenirs.

Arizona Highway 191 north of Douglas, Arizona

Sadly, I see a big, fat, ugly truth splayed out across this town and many small towns across America: if there isn’t a wealthy benefactor who picks up the slack of capital that is missing, these places are likely to continue to wither away. This equation suits the wealthy ruling class as it drags the undereducated out of these podunk towns and into the dead-end jobs required to make big cities go. In our rural decaying locales, there’s no justification for raising rents when houses go unsold and with jobs drying up as banks, grocery stores, and restaurants disappear, the opportunities of maintaining these places also go away. Unless the wealthy have decided that an old town holds promise to become an enclave for the rich, attrition will take it off the map. Such is the future of the populations that live out these ways, one of exploitation and servitude to debt traps.

Legs poking out of the ground in Elfrida, Arizona

Maybe it is the knowledge of the cultural-economic warfare that has our rural population heavily armed and ready for combat, but little do they understand that money is simultaneously patient and frenetic. Money must move in order for capitalism to thrive, but the minuscule amount of cash represented by 50,000 households scraping by on the margin of anger doesn’t really represent a threat to those waiting for these curmudgeons to grow old and their children to move away. The ironic thing about this photo is that I’m reminded of the Nancy Sinatra song These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ except look at those feet; not only is the person’s head planted deep in the ground, but those feet are broken, ain’t nobody walking away from their economic trap out here and feeling good about it.

Arizona Highway 191 north of Douglas, Arizona

These silos are likely filled with beans at the expense of the limited amount of groundwater flowing underfoot. It’s a good thing that while Caroline and I are out here finding enchantment with the sights and sounds, I put the thoughts of reality behind me and enjoy the moment. I wouldn’t be able to argue against the idea that by returning home and dragging my perception of the ills of society into my travel narrative, I effectively shit on my own memories, but I’d also argue that I must remind myself of the anger I’ve felt that people of greater intellectual powers than me appear to be empty of the ideas that would have us acting equitably and operating with a forward-thinking plan that would capitalize on the will of those of us who if the infrastructure supported us, we’d work remotely in these areas and bring prosperity back to smalltown America. That’s enough of the social justice ax-grinding for another minute as I’ll try to finish writing about the rest of the day without equating dry lake beds with economic or racial disparities.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

We were warned at the visitor’s sign-in station that the last people who walked out on Willcox Playa found not a drop of water nor a single crane. Maybe we should have heeded that, especially as the last entry in the visitor list was from earlier this very day, but we didn’t require birds and water; we were happy to be out for a nice walk to the playa for the sake of it.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

There are mountains nearly all around us, some still carrying snow, such as the Chiricahua Mountains to our southeast. These are not those mountains, as my photo of the snowcapped peaks was of poor quality.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

It is obvious that there was once water here and maybe even recently. Nearby pumps suggest that people can turn this dry lakebed wet if they choose; I can only assume it’s not being pumped due to some level of depletion, with whatever remains being promised to the local bean and grape growers. Grape growers in the desert? Willcox has become well-known as a wine region because we are just that fucking stupid. Oops, I was getting off my soapbox, wasn’t I?

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

I love arid places where everything but scrub grass has ceased to exist. Without a sign of a bird, snake, lizard, javelina, or even an insect, I can rest assured that there are places to visit where I can celebrate the total annihilation of the environment that was exchanged for a bit of economic activity that arrives in air-conditioned homes in Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tucson, and Flagstaff that is as sweet as the blood that was drained from the lives we squeezed for our pleasure. Long live those kinds of incentives that make me proud to be (in)human.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

Keep on walking, Caroline; the vintner is just over the horizon chanting his mantra that your bodily fluids are his soylent-profit; we are likely next after the weeds fail to offer value.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

All snark aside, this playa is incredibly beautiful, and even without its blue reflective waters and the cacophony of thousands of migrating birds to fill the quiet, we couldn’t be happier to be out here right now, all by ourselves. Again, solitude makes an appearance, and we are the luckier to be on hand for it. Those are the Dos Cabezas Mountain in the distance, I think.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

While difficult to see clearly in this photo, there’s a somewhat shiny patina of bronze crust overlaying the cracked mud, and while we don’t know what species of bird that feather came from, at least there’s evidence that at times they might be able to roost here.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

There’s a thin black line interrupted by a tan space at the foot of the mountains out on the horizon; it’s a string of train cars traveling west. Between them and us, and difficult to see, is a mirage that looks a lot closer to us than it likely is. To the best of my calculating ability, the train is about 8 miles from us.

A great article up at a Northern Arizona University website reads, “Willcox Playa is an interior-draining basin—the largest in the state. Such “graben” valley landforms developed in the Southwest over the past 20 million years as the earth’s crust has been tectonically pulled apart. This same tectonic extensional process is occurring in East Africa’s Great Rift Valley.” Visit their website HERE to read more.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

Signs of this being old ranch land and even relatively fresh cow patties where cattle have broken through the Arizona Game and Fish Department’s fencing are evidenced by images such as this.

Willcox Playa in Willcox, Arizona

The winds across the region are picking up, and we are good and hungry, so a stop in Willcox at a local Mexican restaurant was next up on our impromptu itinerary. While it’s still relatively early in the day, we can see the need for a coffee, and just before reaching Interstate 10, a Safeway promises revitalizing cups of Starbucks being available within. We feel obliged for the safety of other drivers to imbibe on that caffeine; we sure wish we’d also grabbed a couple of donuts, but the voice of reason (Caroline) insisted we didn’t need them. Not four hours later, we were already back in Phoenix after another great weekend exploring things other than the habits found at home.