On the Frontier of Luxury

Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

Not ziplining, whitewater rafting, or racing ATVs over sand dunes, we’re happy to explore little luxuries such as staying in a small town of only 16,000 at their grand old hotel that is lovingly cared for. Many hotels built in the past 30 years don’t have a fraction of the attraction of the Gadsden here in Douglas. We are less than 1 mile from the Mexican border, yet we were walking around nearly empty streets last night as it grew late, and never did we feel uncomfortable. Today, we’ll venture north, and with certainty, we’ll find 100s of things to dazzle our senses with, though they may be as simple as marveling at the basin of Willcox Playa or admiring birds. These are easy luxuries that take us out of routines at home and leave us with indelible memories of the larger world we’re a tiny part of.

The quote about the best-laid plans of mice and men comes to mind when considering how things worked out regarding our plans to hike in the Chiricahua National Monument today: that didn’t happen, nor did we visit the Willcox Playa. Plans were derailed, although we were still very much on track during breakfast when our conversation with our server, Christian, blossomed. The guy is finding his way in the world, and like many of us, he’s a bit late to the game, but hopefully, with a bit of serious intention and if he can make good on his hope to explore new things, he’ll find a way forward and be able to discover some of the things in life that bring greater happiness.

Haunted Room at the Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

From a pep-talk to a tour of the hotel’s 3rd floor and the allegedly haunted room #333. I’d read somewhere that if you photograph the possessed room in reverse, you have a 91.57% chance of capturing an image of the spirit. Look close to where the bed cover meets the red shag carpet, and maybe you can see someone’s ghost peaking out; that, or you will be happy that I didn’t photograph that hideous combination of the floral bedspread and shag carpet that brought on PTSD to those present.

A Church in Douglas, Arizona

A brief meander through town to see what the architecture of Douglas looks like. Sadly, the exterior photo of our hotel I shot this morning left a lot to be desired, but there were some nice churches, this being the most attractive one to me. After a brief ride around a few of the streets, we pointed the car north on A Avenue. The north-south streets in Douglas are lettered; we are lodging on G Avenue.

On Leslie Canyon Road in Cochise County, Arizona

A Avenue turns into Leslie Canyon Road, and this is where the plans really started to deviate. You see, we were going to take the scenic unpaved road over to McNeal to pay a visit to Whitewater Draw, where it was reported there were a ton of Sandhill cranes.

Caroline Wise on Leslie Canyon Road in Cochise County, Arizona

If you see desolation, your senses are not tuned to serenity. It’s divinely quiet out here, and as you might surmise from the electrical lines, there are a few people living out along this unpaved but well-maintained road going straight to the mountains ahead. See woman for scale, that’s not a blue banana.

On Leslie Canyon Road in Cochise County, Arizona

The road forked, but instead of taking the left to McNeal, we opted to go right in the direction of the Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge. Can you hear the silence?

On Leslie Canyon Road in Cochise County, Arizona

Just up the hill, they said. Right over there, they hinted. You’ll find the trail easily.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

Yep, right out there at the bend in the road.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

Oh, they meant the place with the big signs, a small parking area, and an information kiosk. Transparency moment, there was no “they”; it was just me making drama where there was none because drama is the bedfellow I enjoy employing in my narratives and, well, for that matter, my daily existence.

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

Did the sign mean the trail is 2 miles out and 2 miles back or 2 miles roundtrip? Obviously, this trail was used at one time by vehicles, but as we walked further, it became apparent that those days were long gone.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

That’s the very dry Leslie Creek, and if I’m interpreting things right, this is all part of the Yaqui River Drainage that plays an important role in the health of the biodiversity found in the region, which even has its own native type of fish, the endangered Yaqui chub. Needless to say, we didn’t see any chubs or other water creatures today.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

Further up the trail, we dip into the dry creek bed, and like chickens, we go to the other side.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

Caroline was reminded of the book titled Tracks by Australian author Robyn Davidson, and paraphrased the following, “There are all kinds of thorns from big ones that draw blood and puncture everything, to medium ones that pierce dog paws, to small ones that break off in your skin remaining unseen until they are inflamed a day later.”

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

Don’t lose sight of the incredible nature of the time we live in. One moment, we’re racing down a dirt road before reaching a turnout next to wildlands we are about to walk upon. Carrying fresh water, a hat, and a camera, we stride along an overgrown, craggy trail on our way to see an old ruin just because. Later in the day, we’ll dine on a hot meal and sleep in a warm bed, and yet we must endure the echo of rants of the super-wealthy who will never enjoy these luxuries while they tell us that everything is broken so we can wallow in anger and ignorance instead of focusing on finding our moments lost in time.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

That old road on which we started this hike was far too overgrown and washed out at one point for vehicles to ever easily use the trail again, but arriving at an old mining operation, it now made sense why this primitive route was carved into the landscape.

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge in Cochise Country, Arizona

There were some scattered industrial pieces of foundation disappearing under the withering sun just as these ruins of an old home are returning to the earth they sprang from. This was also the end of the trail of thorns.

At this point in the day, we hadn’t come to the conclusion that we weren’t going to visit the Chiricahuas yet because we were going to make a quick stop at our next destination and return to the road for the short 50-mile drive to the national monument.

McNeal, Arizona

With the stories we’ve heard over the years of people being directed down dangerous roads by Google, I’m surprised every time their algorithm takes us down these dusty trails. I wonder if they still recommend them when it’s raining? Anyway, after 1 mile of dirt road, we turned south on the paved Central Highway, and a few miles farther, we found ourselves pulling into Whitewater Draw.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

We are here for Sandhill cranes and are not disappointed. But as beautiful as the sight and sound of this group are here, I couldn’t help but feel that there were also a lot of them to the south of us, though most visitors were on this trail.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

So Caroline and I went south.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

And with an explosion of sound and a sea of cranes that stretched off into the horizon like a giant feedlot in Texas, there were animals as far as we could see.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

The beating of wings, lots of wings from lots of big birds, creates the excitement of whooshing that rumbles in reverberation and drills into the deep pools of emotion lying just below the surface of those watching these spectacles.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

Following take-off and the focused energy required to escape the gravitational clutch of earth and water, the birds break into a chatter that sings to me that they are happy to once again be aloft. Immediately the conversation turns to the discussion of where it is they will set down next.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

And other plans that might have still been possible were being dashed by the hypnosis brought on by the sounds and spectacle of so many cranes. Cranes by the 10’s of thousands were pulling us into their universe and demanding that we ogle them in a form of worship, recognizing their power over us. The collective will of the cranes is impossible to dismiss and so we melt into their landscape and lose all sense of time or need to be anywhere else.

Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

That is until we start to feel like intruders and that our very presence is affecting their behavior. While I felt that we were keeping a respectful distance from the army of cranes, there was a point where no matter how slow we moved, the birds would start moving, too. While we are farther away, they are watching us but are not yet ready to react, but if they are changing what they would otherwise be doing, we are distracting them from bird things. I imagine that the fact that we hunt them right here in this area (as evidenced by spent shotgun shells) has made them leery of us violent humans. Add to that stress that we de-water their migration stops by draining that resource, which in turn squeezes them into ever smaller areas, making them prime targets for people interested in turkey shoots where the sport and skill of hunting have been replaced by not having to wander from the tailgate.

Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

When fear of not finding an ability within ourselves to comprehend our place in the world, we often turn to anger against nature for trapping us in a situation beyond what our senses can tolerate. This is misdirected aggression that would be better turned against those that left the person ill-equipped to celebrate the incredible luxury all around them, but the die is cast, and the politics, economy, the entire world are here to victimize them, and so they need to lash out and victimize what they can to level the playing field. In this sense, these fence posts have more purpose, although they no longer have any function.

Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw in McNeal, Arizona

My empathy for birds is greater than my sense of understanding for the stupid among us, those raised by the disaffected who would destroy everything in their path rather than feed their minds. How sad is my reality of awareness that while on vacation, I’m disturbed by those not even present as though they are ever-present? Writing this, I feel as though I’ve inadvertently elevated the troglodytes onto the pedestal of gods.

Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

In everything we found today, disappointment wasn’t one of those things. Our loose plan was turned on its head, but even upside down, everything sparkled and was beautiful to us. Lunch had to be sacrificed because there was nothing out our way; good thing we had walnuts, cashews, almonds, and dried apricots along with us, oh, and those Lemon Ups from the Girl Scouts that found their way into Caroline’s backpack.

We weren’t able to share a nice bottle of wine, there were no gourmet meats and cheeses on artisan bread, our off-brand generic drinking water was from a gallon plastic jug bought at a grocery store on the way down, and yet, the way smiles continuously lit on our faces, you’d have thought for a moment we had everything, every luxury anybody could ever wish for, wrapped in all the love that could possibly be shared between two people.

Going Down Douglas Way

Caroline Wise and John Wise starting a short road trip from Phoenix, Arizona

Leaving this Friday afternoon shortly before 3:00 p.m., our expectations of what we’d be able to accomplish before arriving at our destination in Douglas, Arizona, this evening were quite low. As a matter of fact, they were diminished even more because I was adamant that I was going to avoid a long stretch of the overly busy Interstate 10 by taking the AZ-87 south to Picacho Peak and meeting the I-10 there.

On the AZ-87 just south of Phoenix, Arizona

To our astonishment, this late day turned into an amazing day.

Selling ammo on the AZ-87 in Coolidge, Arizona

Initially, we passed this guy selling ammo next to the road and were flabbergasted. After so many roadside fruit and jerky stands, this was a first for us. We had to U-turn and U-turn again to get into position to snap the photo while hoping the guy wouldn’t have a problem with people driving by taking photos. After all, if he’s loaded with ammo, he might also be armed. To our foreign readers, can you believe this?

South of Benson on the AZ-80 at Sunset

While there wasn’t a cloud in the sky and we were in the middle of the desert south of Benson, Arizona, the clean orange glow of sunset demanded we stop for a photo before it grew too dark.

Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

Getting into Douglas down in the southeast corner of Arizona, just a hop, skip and jump from Mexico, we easily found our hotel and fell in love with it. At 115 years old and only $110 a night, the historic Gadsden Hotel ranks as one of the cooler places we’ve stayed. The aspiring young woman named Marina, who’s training to be a firefighter, checked us in, gave us a solid dinner recommendation, and offered to give us a tour of a few features of the hotel after we returned.

Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

We stowed our things in the room and headed out on a short walk in the cold air to a place just around the corner called Chatita’s Mexican Restaurant. Anticipating that we’d tip Marina for her gracious offer of giving us a tour, we made our way across the street to a Circle K as we needed an ATM. I’ve said it countless times here on this site: we always forget something.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

We’d walked over 10th street to the Pan-American Avenue to get to dinner but decided to walk up 9th street to G Avenue, where the Gadsden is. What a stroke of luck, there were some people inside a storefront, mind you that it’s after 9:00 p.m. in this small town. Of course, I opened the door and asked for details about a couple of things we could see, this Beetle wasn’t one of them.

Art Cars in Douglas, Arizona

We were welcomed inside and offered a quick tour of this funky joint called Art Car World. We didn’t have long to truly admire these works of mobile and drivable pieces of art, as we had our other date and had to get back soon. We were graciously offered the opportunity to return Saturday or Sunday, and Hunter, the guy showing us this showroom of the extraordinary, even offered to open up early Sunday morning if that worked better for us after he heard we had to return to Phoenix that day. We settled on meeting him there at 8:30. I can’t wait to grab more photos and share some details and some of their plans.

Caroline Wise at the Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

Back at the Gadsden Hotel, Marina took us into the basement and showed us the space that was a speakeasy back in the 30s during prohibition. The bar is well stocked because it and the lounge can be rented for private parties these days. Around the corner from that were some working-girl quarters and an old smoking lounge for the guys. Drinks, cigars, and happy endings, what could be better?

Caroline Wise at the Gadsden Hotel in Douglas, Arizona

How about a ride on an ancient Otis elevator? This is the original from 1907. There was other information shared, but it’s nearing midnight as I put these words down when the original idea was to wake early so we could drive up to Chiricahua National Monument for some hiking, but now we’ve added a walk on the Willcox Playa and a visit to the Whitewater Draw Wildlife Area in McNeal after learning that there’s a bunch of Sandhill cranes staying over there. A seriously surprising day compared to the idea that we’d drive south, grab some dinner, and go to sleep. I’m certain that tomorrow will be 872 times greater.

A Great Big Happy Place

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

A great, big, happy place graced with a sweet, happy face is the kind of starting a day I find agreeable. Add a pot of Belgian hot chocolate, mix in some coffee, and breakfast is off to a great start too. Can you recognize the setting by now? Yep, we are back at the El Tovar, luxuriating in yet more indulgence as if that were even possible.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Yesterday’s journey on the Rim trail took us west; today, we go east.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

I didn’t share it yesterday, but our walk took us out on the Trail of Time, albeit the part of history that is not visible, such as the beginning of the timeline when the earth formed. Today, the Trail of Time marks spots along our walk that not only explain when particular geological layers were laid down but also what the rocks look like and how they arrived here at this corner of our planet.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Gneiss, schist, and granite make up the Basement Rock layers of the canyon, and I would have loved to share an image of the Vishnu Schist, but that rock is black and sat in shadow; thus, my photo wasn’t worthy. Again, in my book Stay in the Magic, which chronicles our first-ever whitewater adventure, I wrote about my teary-eyed encounter with the basement. I’d like to recommend you click here to read about that day back in the fall of 2010

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

This is an example of Bass Limestone that is part of the very interesting Supergroup formation that is squeezed into the canyon. While I find the subject fascinating, maybe it’s not the quickest of explanations without diagrams, although the photo of the Trail of Time sign clearly shows the angular intrusion of the Supergroup between the basement and the majority of visible rock layers here in the canyon.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

By now, I wouldn’t blame the casual visitor to my blog for getting a sense that I’m posting many photos that look like others. Maybe you’ve not been to the canyon or studied its geology and history, so you wonder why these somewhat repetitive images are so intriguing to Caroline and me. Well, each photo I share is another work of art painted by the adept hand of Mother Nature.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

This polished section of rock was on the south side of our trail and was unmarked. The named and year-identified rocks are on the north side of the trail. I do wish we knew what this was.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

There’s as much gone from erosion in this photo as there is to be seen. A one-mile layer has been eroded from the north rim, which is visible at the top of this image. That’s where the fossils of dinosaurs and mammals would have been found had weathering not erased that part of history from our continent. To see what’s missing, simply travel north of here into Utah, Wyoming, and Montana, where much of that record still exists.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

The Trail of Time is not a difficult hike into the canyon; it’s a handicapped-accessible path offering all visitors the opportunity to take a nice slow walk on the canyon’s edge while also learning about the history of how the canyon formed. Spoiler alert: this place isn’t only 6,000 years old.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Things are not always as they seem here in the canyon, such as that age reference made to the religiously devout just above. This Redwall limestone is obviously not red. Back when the science of geology was a nascent endeavor, the people who had a hand in naming canyon features might have played fast and loose with things, as the truth about Redwall limestone is that it appears red due to erosion of the rock layer that lays just above it.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Manakacha sandstone is a 200-foot thick layer that rests upon the Redwall limestone, and thanks to its erosion, the limestone below it appears to be red. Don’t forget that limestone is formed by the shells of sea creatures, while sandstone is formed from eroded rocks that accumulate on a land basin or underwater. Maybe this all seems normal to most people, but to me, the processes that were at work to create the lands we live on are simply astonishing yet probably mostly taken for granted.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

This sign points out the top layers you’ll see in the following photo, where first there was a river (Hermit Formation), and then on top of that, sand dunes formed (Coconino Sandstone) until a river and a sea started leaving deposits (Toroweap Formation) before another shallow sea formed (Kaibab Formation). Personally, my mind is blown again and again, no matter how many times I read this and see it with my own eyes.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

How many photos that capture minor iterative differences in this scenery are required to be shared? All of them. I look at the spectacles of nature in ways similar to how others listen to their favorite songs. How many people might listen to nearly all 213 songs the Beatles released and never believe they all sound the same? Well, each photo I share here of these views of the Grand Canyon is a song, and each major point in the canyon is a different artist.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Inspired by our travels, writing these posts to images is the musical composition or aroma of a favorite dish that becomes a classic in the repertoire of references that amplify what would otherwise be fading recollections. In effect, I’m creating a soundtrack that allows us to relive moments as viscerally as a favorite song brings us back to being a teenager or falling in love for the first time.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Listen closely, and you might pick up on the smell of amazing as you gaze into the deep canvas of the infinite. While you scan the horizon, you are seeing the past, the present, and the future, too, though nothing of you is still left here from previous visits and your next present moment will be elsewhere. Out of that reality, your presence will likely never have been known here, but should any of my writings and photos exist at some later date far from this day, I might be so lucky to remain a part of the places I’ve been just as the sediments and fossils do before they rejoin the flow.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

The flow of time, of rivers, of songs, and stories over the ages all create impressions that leave temporary indelible marks on those things they touch. Carving into youth, imagination, rock, and space, these flows impress character and define the extent of culture that should be boundless but are often constrained by self-imposed and societal boxes that people are unable to escape. The man cave is not the totality of experience, nor are the toys that allow us to distract ourselves; it is the vastness of the Grand Mind and Imagination traversing words and thoughts we ultimately have to use to define where we are in this universe. Not taking the path of going deeper within one’s humanity of language, words, and speech, we risk falling off the cliff and into the void of an abyss. We are not meant to become nothings in a universe that offers us the unbelievable; we, too, must carve a mark upon the life we’ve been offered.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Well, this is embarrassing as, apparently, I’ve run out of songs. My lyrical content has dried up, and I’m sitting here trying to regain my flow as I move to finish this blog post.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

At least we are at the end of this trail, and I can begin transitioning to our exit of the Grand Canyon. This particular end is near the South Kaibab trailhead, where we’ll get a ride back to Grand Canyon Village, where lunch and our car are to be found.

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Of course, mule-powered transport the five miles back would be preferred, but as that would involve stealing a couple of these friendly animals, we’ll defer potential arrest and instead opt for the shuttle bus that stops here.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Lunch was at the El Tovar because, of course, it was. Thinking we’d get out of the Grand Canyon without another stop at a gift shop was folly because, of course, it too was. While Caroline went hunting for postcards in the Hopi House gift store, I remained vigilant in the great outdoors, waiting for the perfect image to present itself in case another addition to the photos shared here was required because I will never have enough to write about.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Caroline might insist that this was Moran Point, but I will remain defiant in my insistence that I read Moron Point; I’d then bet a dollar that she’d use that tired reference to the town in Texas that she says is indicative of these moments, it’s called Dumas. [John, you can be such a dumbass – Caroline] [John, did you really just write that fake comment in my name? – Caroline (the real one ^_^)]

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

We both agree that this is Lipan Point and remain astonished that we’d never visited this overlook before. Keeping something unseen to drag us back works again.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

At Lipan Point, we decided to skip the Desert View Watchtower in order to catch this overlook and the next one. But before we leave this view of the Unkar Delta, I need to point out another detail from our river trip that took us down the green band out in the middle of this image called the Colorado River. Just left of center on river left (as seen from the flow of a river, which in this case comes in at the right and flows to the left of the photo) is Cardenas Camp at mile point 71.6. The Unkar Delta area is also known as Furnace Flats; if you are curious about some of the psychedelic rock down in that area, you should take a glance at Day 5 of Stay in the Magic; your mind will be blown.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

Finally, this is the view from Navajo Point, looking north up the Colorado River. If you look closely towards the top right of the image, you can make out a crack in the plateau that branches off the main gorge. This smaller canyon going to the right is the canyon that brings the Little Colorado River in to meet its bigger brother. And with that, we say goodbye to another visit to the Grand Canyon. What an amazing weekend and culmination of the third trip away from home this year.