Day 4 – Germany Under The Sun

Bornheim Mitte U-Bahn Station Frankfurt, Germany

Even before leaving Arizona last Monday, I had planned that today (Friday) I’d head out to Wiesbaden and that this is exactly what I’ll do. Since I only slept less than 5 hours last night, I have an abundance of time. I wonder when this all catches up with me. Hopefully, I won’t fall asleep on the train. Time to go.

The rust is showing in my train-catching skills as I walked right up to one leaving for Wiesbaden and failed to pay enough attention to details to get on board. Good thing the next train was only 15 minutes away, and I’m in no hurry. After a short while on the S9 – Richtung Wiesbaden, I was getting quite the shock; the next stop was Gateway Gardens, the old U.S. Military housing area outside the Frankfurt Airport.

Frankfurt, Germany

My original plan was to spend the entire day out in Wiesbaden, but with the combination of poor weather still threatening rain and how much Jutta appears to enjoy my visits, I’m more than likely going to cut my time short so I can visit my mother-in-law before her dinner time.

Near Wiesbaden, Germany

While I’m inclined to put on my headphones and listen to music, I’m also enjoying the sound of the train accelerating, the doors beeping when they are about to shut, and the soothing voice of the person announcing stops along the route. Once we leave the airport station it’s nice to see that there are still woods next to the track, at least for a stretch until we reach Kelsterbach. Oh, I almost forgot to mention the sound of backpacks being taken off and set down.

Wiesbaden, Germany

I recognize nearly nothing at the Wiesbaden main train station. Again, the attempt to return to the familiar and celebrate nostalgia has been foiled. With that realization coming on so fast, the idea jumps into my head that maybe I should jump back on a train and beat a retreat, but I walk on.

Wiesbaden, Germany

I do love the sights here in Germany, and what’s better than red stone contrasting with deep blue skies? This is a corner of Wiesbaden’s main train station.

Wiesbaden, Germany

There’s nothing left in my memory of how I once navigated these streets, so I have to bring up a map and ask for a location that I know still exists, the Wartburg Theater and concert hall. When I see the street name Schwalbachstrasse, a ping of recognition rings loudly. I now try to recollect if there was a particular path I walked to the shops and clubs I’d visit out this way, but nothing looks like it used to. As I walk by this old church, I draw a blank and wonder if I’ve ever seen it before. With plenty of time, I figure I’ll walk back on a different route, and maybe that will kick my memory into recollecting where I’d been.

Wartburg in Wiesbaden, Germany

Now, on Schwalbachstrasse, I’m looking for a hint of an old club I used to love. Its name was Dschungel, a.k.a. the Jungle. A small place that was underground with more progressive/aggressive music compared to the Batschkapp or Cookies over in Frankfurt. I think I found the door with a sign about something to do with music now called The Basement; it kind of fits in the place my memory says it should, just down the street from the Wartburg! It sure seemed further away back then.

A mere few doors down is the Wartburg, where I saw my first two concerts in West Germany, Einsturzende Neubauten and Psychic TV. Those shows were quickly followed by Test Department and Front 242 in the same place. Formative memories for sure, but the experience of seeing the Wartburg again brings me nothing at all.

Wiesbaden, Germany

Seeing that I’m in town, I may as well follow my nose. I’m looking for a Döner shop, and I think I might know where it used to be. The neighborhood it’s in appears to be a kind of Middle East Quarter, and the shop is called Berlin Döner, but is it the one? I talked with the current owner, and he says it’s been here for 50 years, and he’s owned it for the past 13. It’s a good thing he doesn’t open until 10:00, giving me the chance to not ruin what, at one time, I thought was the best Döner I’d ever had. Now, it gets to remain that way.

Since I mentioned that this area had become a predominantly Middle East-influenced neighborhood: I’m reminded why immigration is such a great thing. If it wasn’t for Europe accepting so many immigrants, the diversity of culture here would not be developing the way it is. Yes, there are problems with integrating peoples of other countries, but what it ultimately offers is indispensable. There must be a good dozen small Middle Eastern groceries in the area, while the Harput and Günay families have opened a serious number of businesses along these streets.

Wiesbaden, Germany

What kind of neighborhood has a dozen barbershops? Apparently, this one. My experiences years ago remind me not to be so quick taking photos in places where a bunch of men with black hair and leather jackets are outside smoking and drinking coffee. I had learned pretty quickly after being run off a couple of times by angry people hollering at me. So, I made sure that those around me could see I wasn’t trying to take anyone’s photo. Just what original French tacos are I have no idea, but the logo suggests it’s ice cream. If they were open, I’d walk right in and ask for a carne asada taco and see how far I get.

Wiesbaden, Germany

After a brief couple of hours here, I feel that I’m ready to leave. While the architecture is different than that of Frankfurt, the rest of the businesses are nearly identical. Not much is open and I can’t imagine what else might be found if I continued exploring the city center, which is actually quite small.

By the time I reach the Hauptbahnhof, I’m hungry, but before I find food, I spot a man I’d seen earlier not far from the Wartburg screaming at someone. I figured it was a racial insult at the time, but seeing this guy here, I thought I would get confirmation. Getting his attention, it was apparent he was still a bit agitated, but realizing I had a real question, he asked if he could help me. So I asked him what happened back at the heavy confrontation and he told me that his issue was the man who asked him for money. He also explained that this is one of the young men who are part of the Beggar Mafia that fans out from Frankfurt to beg in the surrounding towns. He sees these people at parties all the time, arriving in expensive Audis doing loads of cocaine. Well, now I know.

Wiesbaden, Germany

Regarding my hunger, a Döner & Pizza shop was close at hand, so I nabbed a chicken Döner as that seems to be the popular choice these days. I’m guessing the meat is cheaper and so they go with that. I should have gone for a traditional Döner while I was in the Middle Eastern Quarter. My stomach is full; I’m on my way to Frankfurt a lot earlier than I could have guessed. The sun is shining, and now I’m overdressed. Here’s to hoping it’s not raining and cold back in Frankfurt.

Frankfurt, Germany

Whoa, it’s beautiful in Frankfurt, and it’s drawing people out.

Frankfurt, Germany

This was my view in the opposite direction.

Busker in Frankfurt, Germany

Needing a coffee and a sweet, I revisited Kleinmarkthalle, picking up a couple of hundred grams of cherries and an oat milk latte. Exiting, I saw the Cuban busker I ran into the other day while it was raining; we nodded hello to each other.  I threw him a few Euros and sat nearby, sipping my coffee and eating cherries. Life is good.

Frankfurt, Germany

A solar halo touching the cross of the Frankfurt Cathedral; I can’t say I’ve ever seen a solar halo or sun dog in Frankfurt. I’ll take this as being a first and that it portends good things.

Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt, Germany

I want to photograph everything in the city on my way to Jutta’s, as who knows if I’ll get another sunny day in Frankfurt? Just kidding, as bad as the weather is here, I know there will be many more beautiful days as we move into June.

Römer in Frankfurt, Germany

Half-timbered old buildings, socially distanced people, and blue skies, what more could be wished for?

Jutta Engelhardt and John Wise in Frankfurt, Germany

A photo of two not-socially distanced people enjoying it all is what could be wished for and realized.

Jutta Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

I spent the rest of the afternoon with Jutta along the Main River. We just finished crossing Eiserner Steg (Iron Bridge), with Jutta telling me it’s been a long time since she had last been on this side of the river. Well, we need proof then that you made it over here. I know; let’s take your photo with those two cherubs so others might know of the day that One-Eyed Jutta crossed the Main River. Why she felt the need to grope its butt is a mystery.

By the way, as my mother-in-law tells it in her thick German pirate accent, “The river was churning dark and cold back during the winter of ’42 when my parrot attempted to pluck my eye from its socket. I pulled that still-connected eye from the beak of what would soon be a dead bird and shoved it back in my skull; I am a doctor, after all, but damned if I’d ever see from it again. That’s how I went blind in my left eye, and it’s the tale as I know it.”

On the Main River in Frankfurt, Germany

Okay, that’s not what Jutta told me, nor is it how she lost sight in that eye, but so what? We were out here to laugh and have fun.

Jutta Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

Buying Jutta an ice cream is a surefire way to have fun. I had a coffee and sparkling water as we just continued to sit in the sun. The day has turned out beautiful but I’m starting to melt. From freezing cold to hot from one day to the next. People watching was working out well with all the Frankfurters needing to leave their caves to soak up all of this vitamin D. After nearly four hours with my mother-in-law, it was time to take her back home and for me to head back to my side of town.

But first, I needed to get food out of the way. Going to dinner proved a bit difficult as I’d originally planned on dropping in on Sachsenhausen for an outdoor seating establishment serving good old traditional German fare, but nope, not tonight; they are all still closed. Back across the river, I was hungry enough not to be too choosy and looked in on a place called Naïv, which has lots of beer, Handkäse, and burgers. Well, at least they have “Hand Cheese”.

Pulling out my computer to write some of this down is super awkward as everyone else here is having beers and meeting with friends, while I’m the single solo visitor and the only one with a giant digital device open. Spoke too soon as another English speaker across from me just opened hers. Then, in a flash, my dinner is delivered, and so it turns out I have no time to write anyway. I’ll definitely feel better putting this thing away.

Returned to Saalburgstrasse early tonight as I’m exhausted. Didn’t sort much other than books, and I spotted Jutta’s driver’s license from 1957. She was only 22 years old in this image and ten years away from giving birth to her second daughter, my wife, Caroline. Jutta had already lived through ten years of war and 12 years of recovery and rebuilding following the conclusion of World War II. Her mom was bitter at her losses, including her cherished son, and marriage to someone she didn’t really love was on the horizon.

On one hand, the woman in the image above is just another random human being, but more importantly, she was becoming the person who would most influence my best friend. Even after ten visits to America and the over 30 years I’ve known Jutta, I can’t ever really know her from the formative years she struggled to try and make sense of a chaotic society that was forced into broad sweeping changes that would alter the culture of Germany and have the Germans looking deep within.

Schulatlas from 1927 with U.S. Map - Printed in Germany

From her books, I found The Book of Mormon, gifted to her by a friend named Marianna back in 1988. An old book about San Francisco and a couple about various Native American tribes were buried in her collection. They all appear to pre-date her trips to America unless she bought yellowed old copies from a used book store at some time, but based on her other books, it looks like Jutta always bought new copies of what she was interested in. Stranger yet is an old “School Atlas” from 1927 with markings on the map of the United States. Notes on the edges of the map point to things about the Ozarks, tides, and islands, things a student might write as reminders from their lessons, but the markings that draw a line between Denver and Phoenix are the most curious.

I cannot believe that Jutta would mark up an heirloom that might have belonged to her father in order to remind herself of her last trip to America when she flew into Denver, and I picked her up for the drive to Phoenix. Maybe she did, but I like the mystery of believing that someone out of her past was foreshadowing a page out of Jutta’s future.

No longer able to keep my eyes open and brain reeling from exhaustion I was able to fall asleep at 10:30 and sleep all the way through to morning when I picked up again to finish this post.

Day 2 – Frankfurt

Frankfurt, Germany

Four hours of sleep wasn’t going to be enough, but waking at 2:30 in the morning was when the cock crowed in my head. By 5:30, I started feeling I’d finally be able to snag a couple more hours of shut-eye, but sleeping in until after 10:00 was not my plan. I was now running late and needed to call Jutta to let her know I wasn’t going to be showing up between 9:00 and five minutes ago. She told me not to worry and enjoy a nice breakfast along the way.

I was momentarily distracted by those things that were precisely the reason for my being in Germany, the effects left behind by Jutta as she went into assisted living. Strange how when she lived here, I never really gave a second thought to what she’d amassed over her lifetime, but looking over her artifacts now, I start to see part of her story arch based on literature she’s read, though I have no way of giving it a proper timeline. Already late; I have to save this for later and get going.

I’ll travel this path a few times during my stay, walk down Saalburgstrasse to Bergerstrasse, and get on the U-Bahn to areas further on. The bakery on the corner winked at me, telling me it had quick calories to jump-start my energy supply. Nothing like an Erdbeerplunder (strawberry Danish) to do just that. As I left the shop and noticed that the Wednesday open-air market was taking place, I had to at least check out some small corner of it. Good thing I did so as I was able to alleviate some of my guilt of indulging in those empty diabetic-unfriendly sugars by balancing it with a grilled Thuringer sausage.

Frankfurt, Germany

Standing there on Bergerstrasse, I got to thinking about how many people were just launching into German conversations with me. Thirty years ago, during the Cold War and with so many Americans in occupied West Germany, I felt that the population had developed a natural sense of who the Americans were, even when bearded with long hair as I had been during much of my time here. Today, that insight has faded and German is once again the only official language of this country.

People are patiently waiting outside shops where signs instruct shoppers that only one customer at a time is allowed in. While in line, they wear their masks. On the street, it’s a mixed bag of some people wearing masks and others not. I cannot find a pattern, as only those who’ve been vaccinated are allowed certain privileges, and  I’m not sure they eschew masks. The reason I’m struggling is that only those over a certain age have been able to get the vaccine, and mask-wearing does not align with people’s ages.

There are a lot of elderly people in this neighborhood which reminds me of the likelihood that someday I’ll need to stop driving a car and that living in Europe would be a possible good solution to that. But then you see these seniors shuffling by slowly with walkers and canes; how they also balance the bags of food, they are out collecting looks challenging. Something else seen but not certain is that they are alone, and my knowledge of Germany suggests they may very well be all living alone. Doubt looks to creep into my thoughts of being anywhere that will be easier on an old person. I’m considering this as I see the old person creeping out of me.

Frankfurt, Germany

Nobody is making eye contact with me; there are no silent nods acknowledging each other’s existence as in America. The beggars are out, and so are the permanently drunk who, strangely enough, still wear masks over their loud and aggressive conversations with the person walking next to them or simply talking to the universe in their lament about all that’s worthy to broadcast to everyone in earshot.

Not having to translate much of what I hear, I’m just an observer traveling with my own cultural baggage, able to concentrate on the details likely unseen by those living here. We grow a thick skin to filter out the intrusions and construct the life we want to have in an anonymous society while the visitor is often overwhelmed by all that is new to their senses, but this is not new to me. On the contrary, my moments here are quite familiar, though often far from my memories, as they don’t really need revisiting while living in Arizona.

As though I weren’t already late, I’ve been sitting in the U-Bahn station, maybe 15 meters underground writing the above as train after trains come and go. I note this just before hitting save to board the next train so I can finally drop in on Jutta. It’s noon, and the little things keep arriving in my mind.

Maybe it’s because I’m so late getting underway, but I’m not seeing many young people on the train, or maybe they are homeschooling? What I am picking up on is the idea that more people are looking directly at each other. Maybe their masks have them feeling like they are hidden behind a barrier that doesn’t allow others to notice their eyes observing them, but I’m noticing. An older lady with the squintiest of eyes and I are looking directly at each other while I hold her gaze somewhat astonished that a German is making eye contact. Funny how, on one of my last visits to Germany, I noticed how smartphones were used to lock riders’ views to staring at their device, thus easily avoiding finding somewhere else to look while on public transportation. What is it about the noonday crowd that is hardly using phones at all?

Frankfurt, Germany

In minutes, I’m getting off at Dom/Römer, where it’s now raining. Over at city hall, family and friends of about 15 people are in a celebratory mood as a couple was just married. Signed in at Lebenshaus and given an FFP2 mask this time, I was let into Jutta’s room while she finished lunch. She and I were supposed to go out for coffee today, but with the cold, wet weather, I’m opting to stay in for my two-hour visit. Right now, her room is sparse, though she’s supposed to get a piece of furniture delivered this Friday, where some of her belongings will continue to live with her.

Jutta Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

The reason an attendant let me into Jutta’s room while she was at lunch was that I’m not allowed to sit with the other tenants, probably due to pandemic precautions or maybe also trying to get the others to socialize a few times a day, seeing they are all neighbors.

Jutta Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

Only about a half-hour after I arrived, a message from Caroline chimed on my phone: what’s she doing up at 4:00 in the morning? She set an alarm so she could go out and see a lunar eclipse. This allowed the three of us to have another video chat and for me to see her beautiful face smiling at me. And while I finally had slept well, I’m yawning now, so Jutta and I are going to head around the corner to a nearby ice cream cafe for a coffee…and maybe a treat.

Jutta Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

Nope, that didn’t happen. While there was a break in the poor weather that allowed the thought of going out, from the brief time we decided to go out until we got downstairs, the rain came on a bit heavy again. We dipped back inside, but it wasn’t relenting, so we were postponing until a sunny day came along. After a couple of hours of visiting, I was once again out in the city.

Frankfurt, Germany

Now in the rain by myself, I needed to find a bite to eat and a coffee. That was easy enough, but as is the case everywhere here, there’s nowhere to sit down, so you pop around the corner, pull your mask down, and eat once you decide just what you want.

Not yet satisfied, I remembered the sausages I’d seen at Kleinmarkthalle yesterday and grabbed one of them; it was a dried pork and paprika shriveled sausage of a thing. With the rain continuing, I lingered here at the market, paying a little more attention to each vendor than I did yesterday. It wasn’t far from there to Konstablerwache, where I knew I could find a seat underground so I could jot these things down and stay dry and warm. How strange this situation of being in Europe without a cafe, wifi, or restaurant to sit down and take a break.

Frankfurt, Germany

I emphasize being warm as I insisted when leaving Phoenix that it would be warm enough soon enough in the Frankfurt region. I knew that I could deal with a few days of rain and cold, so I could leave my bulky fleece at home. Now comes the mea culpa that Caroline was right; I should have brought it. Also, I brought a rain jacket, but I’m waiting until I really need it. It seems like I’ve really needed it both of these days, so I’m at a loss why it’s not with me. Damn, I hope my wife wasn’t also right about bringing sunblock [or your hat, maybe? – the wife].

In this cavernous underground train station, the subway is yet further below; I’m sitting next to the coming and going S-Bahns. These trains are the much longer ones that travel between regions such as between Frankfurt and Wiesbaden, Darmstadt, and Hanau. Normally, when I’ve been down here, I’m waiting for a specific train so I don’t really pay attention to the ones I’m not going to ride but instead count the minutes until mine shows up. Sitting here at 4:00 p.m., I’m watching trains pass through at a rate of what seems to be one every 60 to 90 seconds. By the way, not all subways of the U-Bahn system perform service strictly below ground but also find themselves out on streets, such as the U5 that used to bring Caroline and me home after visiting the downtown shopping area.

My coffee is not having the desired effect, or jet lag is simply chewing through my waking energy faster than I can muster it. Judging by people’s jackets who are walking past me, it’s still raining up there, and while I have an umbrella, there’s really nowhere else to park myself…unless I catch a train over to Hauptbahnhof that could promise more people watching and maybe somewhere to sit that’s not so far under the surface of the earth.

I’m also likely in danger of dehydrating as, with limited toilet facilities available to the public, I’m reluctant to drink. I’m guessing that for Germans, the idea is to get out to pick up what you need and go right home. I’m not giving in to that, as it’s far more interesting out here where beggars can go by asking for coins or smokes.

Pandemic Shopping in Frankfurt, Germany

Wandering around upstairs, still at Konstablerwache contemplating walking to the Hauptbahnhof, I spotted some open, and importantly, free toilets, which means I now have a goto location for that necessity. With the rain taking a break, I opted for a walk down Zeil and learned about a new way of shopping: scan a QR code to make an appointment to enter the shop at a later time or date. There’s obviously zero tolerance for ambiguity about how many people are in a shop, so a system was created to make shopping a little easier.

The respite from the rain didn’t last long, and my idea that I might walk to the main train station has been dashed so down the stairs I go into the Hauptwache train station.

Busker in Frankfurt, Germany

By and large, I find Germans to be an educated populace with a giant appetite to experience the entire breadth of their freedoms. They love their long vacations, free university system, and rich cultural offerings in nearly all mid to large-sized cities. They know world history, not just their own country’s history, and they are pretty well aware of global politics. Yes, they pay high taxes in order to have a very effective social safety net, but they are of their own mind and demand justice within their borders, and that sense of doing the right thing often extends well into Europe. With that as background, I’ve not seen a single person in the train station not wearing a mask.

Train after train passes me on its way into the station, and everyone I glance at is wearing a prescribed mask. They are not wearing gators or cloth masks; they have KN95 or medical masks on, period. I’m sure if I sit here long enough or maybe if I rode the train multiple times a day, I’d see the occasional offender but not once in the underground area or on the trains themselves. It should go without saying that it’s the exact same in the shops, but on the street, it’s definitely a mixed bag.

Just as I finish writing the above, my observations are proven wrong. A drunk man took up a seat about a dozen seats away from me and has gone to sleep; his mask is down under his chin now. Another guy further down, suffering from Tourettes or schizophrenia, is wildly gesticulating in almost violent movements, but he is quiet. Watching him, I realize there are two pigeons down here at Hauptwache with us, and maybe his head movements are trying to communicate with the birds. While not likely, I’ve got nothing other than my uneducated guesses to explain him. Time to board one of these trains to make my way out to Heddernheim.

Frankfurt, Germany

What a hodgepodge of weather in such a small region. Emerging from the bowels of the subway system, the sun is out here making me wonder if it had always been shining on this side of Frankfurt.

Frankfurt, Germany

After arriving at my in-laws, seen above, they assured me that just two hours before my arrival, it was hailing out here and the sky had just recently cleared up. We sat down at the dining room table and started to gab. Along the way, Klaus made dinner. Well, I got leftovers, but let me tell you that these were no ordinary leftovers; this was Grüne Sosse (Green Sauce) which is a famous Frankfurt specialty you will not find anywhere else on earth. With a handful of boiled potatoes and a couple of hard-boiled eggs, this dish of cold ground herbs in yogurt sauce is an absolutely perfect preparation that takes the simple and transforms into wonderful.

The conversation continued as we lost all track of time…

Frankfurt, Germany

…It was only minutes before 11:00 p.m. as I walked over to pick up the train heading back into the city center.

Medical Mask in Vending Machine from Frankfurt, Germany

The trains run late into the night, but they are not as frequent as during the day; this gave me more time to spend looking for things in these tunnels I might have missed on every previous visit I’ve made. Heading to an important meeting for work, and your mask is getting dingy? Just stop at a nearby vending machine, and between the gummy candy and chewing gum, you can buy a fresh FFP2 mask for a couple of Euros.

Frankfurt, Germany

I’m not alone out here, which makes me feel better as on my way into Germany I wasn’t sure how enforced the curfew is. I should have known that it was a recommendation and not something that turned people into criminals for needing to keep moving between places.

Frankfurt, Germany

A major source of entertainment for me in the subways has always been the sections of walls dedicated to advertising upcoming cultural events. The industry surrounding the printing and posting of these large, widely distributed missives must have taken a serious hit during the pandemic, as there’s little to read with large parts of the dedicated spaces empty. This poster, at least in my translation, captured this perfectly, “Archive for Nothing.” With nothing going on and nowhere to go, this otherwise white space is offering you a glimpse into nothing.

Frankfurt, Germany

Seeing how I no longer live off Glauburgstrasse on Gluckstrasse, I won’t be taking the U5 home tonight but instead boarded the next train, the U4, to Jutta’s old apartment. The train cars are quiet, no revelers are partying with open bottles of alcohol, nor have I seen a single homeless person or beggar on the trains yet.

I didn’t shoot very many photos today, and I won’t know for years until I read this on that future date if what I captured and shared achieved something worthwhile, but this was the best I could do. Finally, while this was only my second day in Germany, I feel as though I’ve already been here for many more days. Such is the impact of having our senses moving to fully alert from casually aware.

Becoming Infinite

Sunrise in front of Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

The catharsis brought about by Remote Self-Isolation is therapeutic, restorative, and soothing. Allowing the eyes to find focus at such a variety of distances is an exercise in optic nerve relaxation and de-tensioning of many of the facial muscles. Inside my head, the brain is able to decompress, stretch, and bask in the vastness of clarity from the calcified and atrophying state it was in while it played observer to the circus of news, politics, pandemic, and the rest of the show called 202o. It seems appropriate that as we go deeper into calm and further in our travels, the weather and ocean, too, would be a reflection of our internal being.

Rainbow in front of Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

When you are thinking it can’t get much better, a rainbow appears and somehow that makes things better yet. Conversely, will I feel so lucky when the day comes when things are horrible, and I’m thinking, “It can’t get much worse,” and then it does?

We are moving slowly today as I fight the impulse to race outside to do stuff. The sense of rarity being in this environment pushes me to seize every moment and experience it as viscerally as possible, but we are here trying to learn what a routine might be like if we were living here. Trying to remain off of any self-imposed schedule isn’t exactly easy, though maybe this contradicts my previous sentence in which I suggested we are trying to explore a different routine, implying a variety of habits. The point is, would we run outside every few minutes to gawk at every new twist in the appearance of things?

Taking our time to get out of bed slowly, enjoying its warmth and coziness along with the view of the sky transitioning from dawn to morning while the surf rolls in, is a delightful creature comfort. Waiting to make breakfast until a bit of coffee has been had and then moving over to warm last night’s beans and dropping a couple of fried eggs on top seems to be luxurious, indulgent even. Then it’s time to tend to the writing that will start to capture the day, but not before we throw open the windows for some Stosslüften (German for fresh air exchange) that has us putting on our sweaters. It is, after all, mid-November and a brisk 46 degrees (8c) that the weather service claims feels like 43 (6 Celsius), so while the ocean view may be cool, so is the air above it.

Second rainbow in front of Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Then, an hour later, a second rainbow greets us. While far from Hawaii, we like to get reminders of our time out on the islands where rainbows are quite the common occurrence. Another half an hour passes while nothing really happens besides me getting lost staring at the ocean. Time for a short walk.

Caroline Wise at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Down the dark, steep trail over slippery rocks, we once again try making it down to our secluded private beach.

Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Might have made it 10 feet further on our trail to the beach than we had before, but now it’s time to resign myself to the reality that I won’t be traversing the rest of the narrow footpath that’s cut out of the rock face. My fear of the 20-foot drop that you can’t get a good perception of from this photo is too much to handle for my exposure-terrified mind. Tomorrow, the plan is to try a trail from a more southerly point, hike up the beach, and see if my angst can be assuaged with a different approach.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Earlier this morning, while we were admiring the rainbows, I’d talked with my sister Amanda about meeting up at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park, about five minutes south of where Caroline and I are staying. It was about 11:15 when we converged in the parking lot across the street. Due to COVID, the campground was closed, but the trails were open. I don’t know how many times we’ve hiked the Valley Trail to the China Creek Loop Trail, but it’s a lot, not quite an infinite lot, but you get the idea.

There are spores in that mushroom in front of me that might carry generations to come of mushroom offspring. Maybe there’s a variation in its genetics that could prove meaningful to us when a new pandemic shows up, but in many places, our endless requirements for money demand we take all we can from the earth with no regard for the damage we inflict on it as long as we can conduct commerce. This is a profoundly outdated perspective at this time, as all currency is really nothing more than digital ledger entries that represent abstractions of wealth. Our wealthiest are not worth trillions of pieces of lichen or billions of pieces of gold; they are valued by the representational value of stocks that are certified to have a particular value that changes electronically day by day due to supply, demand, and perception. We could do the same for those who perform labor or make art, but the real goal of putting so little value on some people who dig ore from the ground or clear trees from forests is to ensure there’s a baseline poverty in order to compare the wealthy and what they deserve for that accumulation of accounting figures.

But this walk in the forest is not about economics; it’s about the nature found in this park. In that sense, my writing here is only possible because this land is protected for now, and nobody has been given orders to come and erase this mushroom so they can pay rent on their tiny home, but in many parts of this state, that is exactly what goes on. Of course, there are not enough of us who even want to come out to these wildlands to witness what’s at hand. The flip side of that is that we cannot build another Grand Canyon or Yellowstone, so the point of diminishing return, when the demand is too high for natural places, means the experience can be lost when too many of us want to see these beautiful lands.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

But we must find a way to strike a balance in our pillaging of the unseen world and somehow educate the masses about the importance of unspoiled places, which are outside of their purview, and simultaneously not denying someone who lives in the area the ability to feed and shelter themselves and their family; we ensure that nature continues to have the opportunity to create sights such as this.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Bacteria, fungi, spores, insects, food, oxygen, plants, wood, carbon sequestering, moisture capture and release, heat transferral, evolution, and an insane amount of genetic diversity that’s what exist in this photo, along with a likely long list of things I don’t have the knowledge to share. While all of this is right here, just up the road, the forest has been turned over, stripped clean, and is now on fire, as those reaping the economic reward of doing such a thing turn every last bit of life into profit. It’s sad that nothing, absolutely nothing, about what I’m writing is new. There’s no original thought in these words, only the futile wish that maybe they reach someone’s mind at a time they are able to work with them in a way I cannot. Think of my musings as just someone else attempting to create a base structure of paint that will be utilized a thousand years later by Leonardo da Vinci to paint a face that will be cherished for the next 500 years.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Can you not see the art of the infinite in this fern? Stop a moment and consider the root that nourishes the plant above it with minerals extracted from the soil that is made of other decaying matter from bacteria to insects and other plants. The roots are also the conduit for getting water to the rest of the plant. The leaves are green due to the chlorophyll that more easily absorbs sunlight with pores called stomata, so carbon dioxide can enter the thin leaves and fuel the action, finally releasing oxygen. This inherited process first occurred in blue-green algae and kickstarted the creation of our atmosphere, but we don’t look at plants as having a long lineage of familial relationships; we see them as food, ornaments, or tools that lend themselves to our comfort. This should be a respectful symbiotic relationship, but most of us in modernity are oblivious to this important fact.

At an even deeper level is the genetic data, which acts as the blueprint of how nutrients are drawn from the earth and energy from the sun are harnessed to assemble the atomic and molecular structures that will build cells that can be chained together in order for the shape of the plant to form. While it may seem obvious, the roots do not have lips and mouths for drinking water from the dirt. They use osmosis, where cells of tiny hairs on the roots are tuned to absorb ions of minerals and water. As a refresher for those who slept in science class, as I might have, ions are the charged atoms and molecules that make up the minerals and water.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

About 350 miles (560km) from where we are right now on the Oregon Coast is the Malheur National Forest and the home of Armillaria ostoyae.  The honey mushroom, as it’s better known, is the world’s largest organism; its nickname is the Humongous Fungus. The mushroom pictured is not of that family, and I’m only pointing this out in keeping with my theme of the infinite. You see, that organism is incredibly large, as in about 2,400 acres or 3.7 square miles (9.65 square kilometers) and is estimated to be over 2,000 years old and maybe up to about 8,600 years old.

I’m sharing this because as we entered the China Creek Trail here at Washburne State Park, something became quickly apparent: with the lack of tourists plodding through this corner of the rainforest, there were many more mushrooms still standing. For some reason, people enjoy kicking over mushrooms. Then, when we arrive, scenes such as this feature the broken and decaying mushrooms that appear tragic and sad, vandalized by idiots. The nature of our world is not infinite, but the knowledge and beauty that can be extracted could be unless there’s not much left of its diversity.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

The next thing I noticed was that the moss covering the ground was not as plush as in previous visits. I’d attribute this to a lack of rainfall. While the area has had nearly 3 inches of rain this past week, it was a dryer summer with more fire activity in the surrounding areas. Could the dryer conditions have anything to do with the ever-growing amounts of land that are stripped of its bio-diversity, requiring years of restoration? Heavy vegetation and thick ground cover hold moisture, which is slow to evaporate; as that water evaporates, creating vapor, clouds form, and the cycle of replenishment is at work. Take away the glue from this equation, and nobody should wonder why things are dryer.

Similarly, in Phoenix, Arizona, we have removed the majority of open spaces and replaced them with asphalt, concrete, cinderblocks, homes, shops, and glass. We now have a heat island where the nature of monsoons is quite different than it was 30 years ago. Walk around a Phoenix neighborhood near a nature preserve in the evening or early morning, and you’ll be shocked at how the temperature flowing off the open land can be 3-5 degrees cooler than the area packed with homes, streets, and cars. Our environmental intelligence is lacking and needs its own restoration work.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

This is not smog or smoke being illuminated by the sun; it is water vapor lifting out of the forest. I used to think this was a rare phenomenon as I never saw it in the forests of southern California where I grew up; I can’t remember seeing it in German forests either. When I did see it, I was usually near a campground, so I often associated it with campfires and their drifting smoke. This scene is now accepted as being absolutely common, as I’ve seen it so very often, especially right here in this corner of Washburne State Park. I’m fairly certain I could have seen it in other places, but tend to think I wasn’t as aware of wanting to see all the details that were present to my senses, but I was busy ignoring them as I had places to be and was moving through more focused on myself instead of the nature I was temporarily within.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Have we seen you before? Have you been held by my wife on a previous visit? You look familiar, but that may be due to our inability to appreciate the subtle differences that newts can see between each other. Walking through the rainforest, one should be mindful of small movements underfoot as these slow-moving creatures traverse the moist ground. By now, we know not to pick them up as they release a toxin when under stress, but silly us want to believe they remain calm when held by a creature that means them no malice and simply wants to appreciate their beauty and incredible eyes. Regarding having seen this guy (gal?) before, the newt lives for between 6 and 20 years, so it’s not impossible that we’ve smiled upon this one before. Have you ever seen a newt walk? Click here to watch an example, but be careful searching for “Newt Walk” as you may stumble upon the Naked European Walking Tour instead!

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

This is the halfway point of an infinitely long blog post. I have reached over 2,200 words for the first 14 photos that accompany this day of recollections from our time of Remote Self-Isolation. I don’t know exactly where this will go and how I’ll maintain my wordiness, but like the mushroom holding a lifetime of water for some creature or other, my brain still has words in abundance I could choose to share. Maybe you are thinking, “These photos hold a lot of beauty while your words just go on and on.” Well, in that case, please know that I’ll not be hurt by you scrolling through the rest of the entry so you might see how our day appeared instead of learning whatever it was I thought important while we were strolling through a rainforest.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

One mushroom holds its water within and the other on its surface. The idea that the surface tension of this fungus is so great that it holds a sheen of liquid clothes is amazing to me. The subject of wetness brings me to my forgetfulness in remembering to bring kneepads on these visits to wet forests. It never fails that I leave with muddy pants as I give in to the need to kneel on the earth to snag a photo that brings me down to the height of moss and mushrooms. Come to think of it, I’d do well if I bring my tripod as holding the camera still long enough to take a photo in low light is never an easy feat, but this then would require us to bring even more stuff than we already do. Just remembering our curiosity and flipping the off-switch to current events is a monumental task. Shiny mushrooms in a rainforest, who knew?

Caroline Wise with Amanda and Brandon Horton at Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

You shouldn’t have the impression that this blog post is being written as we go along here on the 19th, as at this point, it’s now the evening of the 20th, and returning to it after a languid day of dawdling, I have to admit, is a task that I’m not really up to. That doesn’t mean I won’t try my best, but honestly, I’d like to head off to sleep. Anyway, back to the story.

After a long pause, I can only come up with nope, can’t do it as my old brain just won’t cooperate; it’s stuck in done and finished. So maybe tomorrow, which would actually be the 21st, I’ll catch up with this entry from the 19th, tackle today, the 20th (which, compared to the blog post you are reading, is still the future), and not fall behind regarding tomorrow’s post which is even more in the future. Then again, you can’t be reading this on the day it happened as it’s not been posted yet, and it could be weeks, months, or years after the events memorialized here that you have discovered my missives heavy on words and photos with nary a moment of video.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Grabbing a spotlight in the sun on a branch high above, this fern has left its terrestrial home for a place closer to the stars. What is it about plants growing on plants that are so intriguing? I believe the first time I can remember seeing this was down in the Redwoods National Park and then up in Olympia National Park in Washington was another standout moment in plant parasitism. Or, as I would rather think of it, symbiosis. Come to think of it, we are the actual parasites on the plant life here on Earth.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

The path out of the woods has me thinking about our need for a way out of the immature intellectual woods humanity is cowering within. COVID is to us what we are to the rest of the planet; from the sea below to the sky above, no life is safe from our onslaught. We kill with abandon, despoil with relish, and exterminate with nary a care because we are the HOMINID. The path ahead can take us from the darkness of our primitive natures, or we can continue our rampage pretending we are the Earth’s normal. We are not normal, nor are we ultimately good for life at this time in our evolution.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

From the death cult of humanity, we celebrate the macabre, even in beautiful places. The Hobbit Trail, a connector segment from the rainforest trail we just left on the other side of the road, brings us to the beach. But first, we must pass through the gauntlet of gutted crab shells that have been amassed next to the trail on a sand shelf a few feet above the trail. Hundreds of crab parts are neatly organized as though some kind of ritual passing of dead crabs into the crab netherworld had been taking place, celebrated by some Druid culture that had fetishized these crustaceans.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

Out in the open, with clear minds, we can choose to celebrate life and all of its inherent beauty. We could decide to do our best to be a sustainable, clean, do-no-harm species. We could each use the power of our minds to do better instead of relying on the smarter people “out there” who will make these decisions for us. Think about this mirror image of the clouds reflected in the wet sand; we are seeing beauty above and below*. Well, we are in some way similar: If we are the worst representation of what humanity can be, we’ll see that reflected in much of what’s around us. And when our anger and greed know no bounds and there’s not enough chaos in our immediate vicinity, we’ll take our personal war to others.

* Navajo Blessingway prayer: In beauty, I walk. With beauty before me, I walk. With beauty behind me, I walk. With beauty above me, I walk. With beauty around me, I walk. It has become beauty again.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

A large swath of our population is feeling like fish out of water. They have not adequately adapted to walk on the technological landscape that is our new reality. Those people are being whipped into a frothing, seething wave of anger and may ultimately need to take their personal war of frustration out on others, whom they can make feel their pain. Those of us who have made the Tiktaalik-like transfer from sea-to-land-to-electrosphere (read Neil Shubin’s Your Inner Fish) are doing okay, but we are leaving behind a vast part of our brothers and sisters, and they are growing seriously angry.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

We cannot just walk away from all of our responsibilities and build ourselves shelters on islands away from the carnage our barbaric practices have left behind. Our need to self-isolate is indicative of an uglier issue that we have abandoned one another, and now we can’t face them due to the growing guilt and awareness that we are not good people. We are selfish, petty, vain, and arrogant, married to a glamourized economically driven piety where everything is justified as being good as long as it creates wealth.

Changing this requires a conversation that we cannot have as our belligerence stops us from recognizing that we’ve soiled our own bed. We’ve failed one another with our acceptance of mediocre education as long as one is a consumer genius. It’s better to be popular than good or smart.

Carl Washburne State Park on the Oregon Coast

When the last two people are left battling over this tiny island of land, we will extinguish our legacy while the bacteria that have been on earth 14,000 times longer than our species will be free to start all over again with a new attempt at spreading life. Just because it’s 2020 and we have smartphones does NOT mean we ourselves are smart, but then again, who in their right mind would want to listen to some idiot blogger proselytizing on behalf of nature and his own narrow understanding of what it means to be human?

Caroline Wise at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

At least there is love, the stars, and the constant motion of the sea. These are the three most meaningful things for my soul. Of course, I’m referring to my living soul, as my jury is still out if there’s an eternal soul. Funny how it’s okay to be uncertain and questioning about everything else I wrote above, but this whole question about the domain of God is beyond reproach. How are we able to have such firm beliefs in the things that are absolute unknowns while we can throw our hands in the air regarding our responsibility to a planet we credit the same God as having created?

Sunset at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

If one day or evening I do, in fact, encounter God, I am certain it will not be a mirror image of the ugliness we are as a collective. God will be love stretching into the stars and coming in waves of humility that it had created such a hostile species that would be so arrogant to claim it had been created in God’s image.

Sunset at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

The sun is setting on our lives every day, and the time is short that we can remove ourselves from the self-isolation of living in our chosen darkness. The cycle of things will continue regardless of our will or lack of it, but large numbers of our fellow humans will have to remain in their suffering if we don’t act on what we claim to believe in.

Sunset at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

I love these sunsets by the ocean, and I love them even more because I’m experiencing them next to my best friend, Caroline. As the last remnants of a golden horizon fade away, I know that an infinite field of stars is about to shower me with ancient light, demanding that I again recognize my good fortune to be here witnessing it.

Not The Same As Yesterday

The view from Ocean Haven south of Yachats, Oregon

While the day was starting as a repeat of yesterday with gray stormy weather, by 11:00, things were clearing out, which was good as we had plans for the afternoon that involved us leaving our cozy enclave. We were both surprised by how quickly we had become attached to this place by the ocean. From yesterday’s photos, you might wonder what the attraction was as it’s not always what is obvious to the eye at first glance, but we knew that past the gloom was this view. Now with the sun fully arrived and Friday promising to be a sun-drenched glorious day too, would you think it crazy if I told you that a big part of me wished for a week of crippling weather bringing the threat of melancholy with it?

As far as writing goes, that will not happen until well after dinner tonight, though that 3,000-word behemoth blog entry from yesterday needed serious editing this morning, so I was able to tend to that. I was approaching the end of that task as the weather cleared, but by then, we needed to get on the road. We were traveling north to Yachats proper for a meeting that had been planned nearly a month ago.

Brandon and Amanda Horton with Caroline and John Wise in Yachats, Oregon

Yesterday, my little sister Amanda Horton and my brother-in-law Brandon drove 350 miles south from Seattle, Washington, down here to the Adobe Resort in Yachats. They are down for a few days of vacation, their first in two years, using the opportunity to visit us in addition to getting away.

While the photo is showing us standing in front of the ice cream shop, socially distanced mind you, we were meeting at the Luna Sea restaurant for lunch. It took us an hour and a half of gabbing before we could get our order in, and due to COVID restrictions, we couldn’t even eat on the property, but that wasn’t a problem as a nearby table in front of another restaurant that was closed served us just fine. Until that time, we just talked and talked. Even when we thought we were leaving, we continued the conversation for nearly another hour. We are uncertain if we’ll get together tomorrow as, although Amanda asked about the possibility, we gave them a pass should they need more recuperation time on their mini-vacation.

There’s a 20ish-year difference in our ages and a solid generation gap between us, but there’s a deep curiosity that binds us as siblings. Amanda needed to make her life somewhere other than Arizona, which is likely similar to the circumstances that drove me from Los Angeles, California. Sometimes, having the opportunity to define yourself away from the influences and environment that starts feeling like a trap is a great reason to grab what is often a once-in-a-lifetime second to seize the moment and change our destiny. She was one of the lucky people to do just that. Sadly, our origins are from dysfunctional parents where we never had the chance to be proper brother and sister besides her very first few years when I spent many an evening watching over her or taking her out to parks to visit the ducks or go pick oranges. After I joined the military, it would be nearly ten years before I’d see her again, and by then, she was a teenager like all other teenagers. But now, our family is tiny and will soon enough disappear. That we have this briefest of moments to meet up on vacation is a real treat, not lost on me.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua on the Oregon Coast

With the weather turning gray again with intermittent rain and getting a bit cold after standing outside for a few hours, it was time to part company. Caroline and I thought we were heading back to Ocean Haven until we figured we’d run down the trail at Devils Churn. It doesn’t matter that I already have maybe 10,000 photos of foam from this exact location; it’s always exciting to stand next to this gash in the earth and watch the furious waters race back and forth, trying to compete for space where there’s little to be had. In the process, the ocean beats itself into a frothy overflowing chaos that earned it its name: the Devils Churn.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua on the Oregon Coast

I’m leery to write anything here describing anymore than I just did as I’d imagine I’m only saying something already said before on a previous visit. As a matter of fact, I won’t dare compare these photos to some of the others I posted in years past, as maybe they look identical. But I don’t care, as every time we stand before this dynamic monument to what looks like the most violent butter-churning device ever invented, I stand in awe.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua on the Oregon Coast

Should you have thought that one foamy photo would be enough, you are wrong. I just realized one thing I may not have shared over the years: if you fell into this deep, narrowing chasm, you’d die. I refuse to believe anyone could be rescued from this cauldron of fury. The water is so aerated I can’t imagine keeping your head above the surface; if it were above the surface, you’d be gulping volumes of seafoam. Then, if you were to get your bearing, the next wave would come in and slam you with brutal force into the rock ledge, game over. I’m not so certain that retrieving a body from this liquid hell would be possible, so I stand far back, giving the Devils Churn the respect that it demands, and hope some rogue sneaker wave doesn’t come in and clean us out of its way.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua on the Oregon Coast

You know how when you do psychedelics and mathematic shapes unfold, producing blissful moments as you stand in astonishment at the incredibly beautiful complexity? Well, that’s what I get here without the shrooms or acid as the universe exposes itself to my naked eyes and naïve mind. With that in mind, if you can’t see what I’m referring to, then you should seriously consider finding yourself a dozen hours, some things that bring on hallucinations, and pull up a floor so you might look inside the vastness of the universe and be dazzled by its magic.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua on the Oregon Coast

Maybe I’ve been pulling your leg the whole time, and this is nothing more than a river of meringue that some pranksters dumped upon the surf? That idea, too, would come to you while tripping; seriously, you should consider going where your mind is afraid to travel.

Sunset at Neptune State Park on the Oregon Coast

This is the Oregon trip of eating my own braggart words as I start to feel we’ve hardly stopped at a fraction of all the places I claimed to have covered on our previous extensive journeys up and down the coast. Here we are for our first sunset photo at Neptune State Scenic Viewpoint. While it’s a good photo, I think nature can do better, so we move down the road believing with almost 30 minutes until the sun sinks out of view there are more opportunities to capture a masterpiece.

Sunset at Strawberry Hill on the Oregon Coast

At Strawberry Hill Wayside, I believe we found today’s perfect spot. How is a location like this measured? If every couple of minutes, a new, more spectacular scene is framed that elicits oohs and ahs from Caroline and me, there’s a really good chance this is it. If I get to 40 or 50 photos in less than 2 minutes, that can also be considered a good indicator. If I step left or right a few feet and swear that this perspective is the greatest ever, either I’m drinking my own Kool-Aid, or this really is the place to find the money shot.

Sunset at Strawberry Hill on the Oregon Coast

Twenty seconds after the previous photo with a different aperture, I think the warmer colors make for an even more impressive sunset photo. I’m enchanted by those remnants of golden light surrounded by the heavy storm clouds that weigh low on the ocean while in the distance above them small windows of blue sky can still be seen. It’s as though everything that the sky can offer is available right here.

Sunset at Strawberry Hill on the Oregon Coast

While this wasn’t necessarily a favorite sunset image, it joined the ranks of being featured due to this seagull being captured in just the right place.

Sunset at Strawberry Hill on the Oregon Coast

Then I walked over to where Caroline was standing and found that she had located exactly the best place in our universe, such as it existed in this moment of our lives, and so I moved in on her place with the superior camera and stole her thunder by snapping this masterpiece. So you need not ask; I’ll offer you what makes this one such a work of art: do you see that glimmer of golden light on the ocean at the bottom of the photo? That’s the magic. Like I said in the title at the top of this blog entry, today was not the same as yesterday.

Number 9 of 20

Trip 9: We are now booked for a rather short 5-day visit at Yellowstone National Park with reservations in hand for Old Faithful Inn during May 2020.  I even called ahead to have a note put on our reservation asking for room #225 we’ve stayed in on nearly half a dozen of our visits. To date, we have spent 36 days spread between 8 trips here at Yellowstone; this visit will push us to 41 total days. You can bet I’m already thinking about a winter return, possibly as early as Christmas 2020.

Update: This trip was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Caroline Wise and John Wise in Yellowstone Jan 2010

Trip 8: The next time these two faces are seen in Yellowstone National Park, it will have been ten years since we were last in the park and 20 years since we made our first visit back in May 2000. This photo was taken on January 22, 2010, during our second winter visit to the first national park on Earth. This indulgence of being able to visit two winters in a row afforded us another eight days here. That ice-cream-colored beanie was hand-spun and knitted by the woman on my right, and I chose the colorway. I felt it made a bold statement.

Yellowstone Jan 2009

Trip 7: Our first winter visit to Yellowstone was for nine days, split between Mammoth Hot Springs and Old Faithful Snow Lodge. We thought the park was going to be enchanting, but we never could have anticipated just how astonishing the place is during winter. There’s a fraction of the number of people who visit during the summer, and the quiet and serenity that accompanies this time of year cannot be understated. We arrived on January 10th, 2009, in time to celebrate our 15th wedding anniversary here in Yellowstone.

Canary Spring in Yellowstone July 2007

Trip 6: Four days over the long 4th of July weekend back in 2007 was enough to refresh our memories of how beautiful Yellowstone Park is.

Yellowstone Hot Spring May 2005

Trip 5: Only two days were spent in Yellowstone back in May 2005. My mother-in-law, Jutta Engelhardt, is with us again five years after her first visit to Yellowstone, this time in the spring instead of late fall.

Bison in Yellowstone May 2004

Trip 4: It’s May 2004, and we are with our friend Jay Patel on a cross-country road trip that wouldn’t have been complete without a stop in Yellowstone. Over the course of three days in the area, we spent a great deal of time exploring the geysers, mud pots, and wildlife. While you can’t tell from this photo, we also had plenty of snow to make snowmen and snow angels in.

Old Faithful Inn Yellowstone July 2003

Trip 3: Our only 1-day visit to Yellowstone occurred on July 6, 2003, after being away from the park for three years. We were on our way south after visiting Glacier National Park on the long 4th of July weekend.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise in Yellowstone 2000

Trip 2: Under the guise of bringing Caroline’s mother, Jutta Engelhardt, over to see Yellowstone (because I’m that kind of selfless husband and son-in-law), I was able to convince my beautiful wife of the importance of making a second visit to this corner of Wyoming in the same year. Truth is, I would have sold Jutta to any bidder for the opportunity to visit again, as I couldn’t get our first visit out of my head. This is during October 2000, the closing days of the park. We spent five days on this visit.

Caroline Wise and John Wise in Yellowstone 2000

Trip 1: Our very first visit to Yellowstone National Park with our friends Ruby and Axel Rieke started on May 14th, 2000. While we had reserved a room for four days, I could have stayed for months. I was smitten with Yellowstone all summer long and schemed to figure out how to justify coming back sooner rather than later. Never in my wildest dreams could I have ever imagined that within 20 years, we’d be making our 9th visit and that we would be able to visit the park during all seasons.

Katharina – Salt River Wild Horses

Wild Horses at Salt River in Arizona

Today is Kat’s last day in America but that didn’t mean we’d not try to do something spectacular to close out this leg of her gap year and brief three-week vacation in America. We woke shortly after 4:00 in the wee hours of the morning with about 90 minutes to go before the sun would rise. After dropping Caroline off at her office our niece and I continued across the Valley of the Sun over to the Salt River.

Since Katharina arrived on the first of July from New Zealand we have traveled over 2,192 miles with her here in the Southwest, which at 3,528 kilometers is about the same as driving from Barcelona, Spain, to Moscow, Russia. Our destinations have included the Petrified Forest National Park, Grand Canyon National Park, Chaco Culture National Historic Park, Canyon de Chelly National Monument, the Navajo and Zuni Reservations, the San Juan Mountains, Heard Museum, the Desert Botanical Garden, the Colorado River, Sedona, and a horse sanctuary right here in Phoenix. These places took us into the northeast corner of Arizona, the southwest corner of Colorado, northwest New Mexico, and we dipped into southern Utah.

Our niece has tried Mexican food, Korean food, a Piccadilly (Navajo shave ice), various pizzas, pancakes, pizza cookies, and cheesecake. All the while she was able to maintain being a vegetarian which she chose to practice while in New Zealand. She got a judo practice in, visited the gym a few times with her Aunt Caroline, rode a mule into the Grand Canyon, went horseback riding in Sedona, and obviously from these photos had the chance to photograph and visit with the wild horses of the Salt River.

Along the way she’s been offered countless cups of coffee (she doesn’t drink it), cigarettes (she doesn’t smoke), marijuana in Colorado (it’s legal for recreational use but she doesn’t smoke that either), tattoos weren’t appealing, we couldn’t get her to cuss so I made up for it by cussing all the time. Even when we tried to turn her to another kind of vice by offering her beer or hard alcohol she was able to abstain, good thing too, as she’s only 19 and we’d have been contributing to the delinquency of someone to whom it’s illegal to give alcohol. She didn’t want a haircut, she vigilantly wore sunblock, she stayed awake for our long drives, didn’t get car sick once (she’s quite prone to that), she didn’t complain about me listening to Rammstein or dubstep in the car but I don’t think she liked either. Boba tea didn’t go over well, nor did deep dish pizza but she made up for most everything with enthusiastic laughter.

Wild Horses at Salt River in Arizona

Like all young people, and creatures too, our niece is only now stepping out on her own and still has lots to learn. She may not know it yet but she’s got a big journey ahead of her where each step offers her experiences that will help define her evolving perspectives which will hopefully grow as she continues to mature. We learn best when others give us nudges that help keep us on the right path and just like with the horses she adores, sometimes a sharp bite or solid kick (metaphorically speaking) is needed to bring attention to a drifting awareness. Most of all though we need compassion and love and while we may not be well-practiced in how to best share that, it doesn’t mean we don’t try our best to give of ourselves and find compromise when we are not getting our way.

Wild Horses at Salt River in Arizona

It’s been nice to run around the Southwest with Katharina and show her a different way of life of two people she hardly knew when she landed here. She left the winter of New Zealand and dropped into our summer heat in the desert and has done great keeping up with us and helping us think about the way we do and see things so we might better understand a teenager. I’m guessing that the next time we spend some serious time with her she may likely be in her career following the next four years of university she’s returning to Germany for. For now, she still feels like an adolescent to us oldies but given a bit more time she’ll join the ranks of adults, and if she’s lucky she’ll still be laughing and ready for other adventures.