Katharina – Grand Canyon Day 2

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Just try to get a teenager out of bed at the break of dawn, but for us oldies, just try to get us to sleep past the sun creeping over the horizon. If yer gonna have a rustic cabin on the rim of the Grand Canyon and the porch has rocking chairs, you’d be a fool not to at least use those things for a minute or two, so while I tried taking photos into the sunlight that weren’t working, Caroline sat here tanning the soles of her feet watching me dart to and fro looking for the perfect photo that never happened.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Taking a walk over to the south-facing overlook offered up some nice views of the other side of the Canyon, but it wasn’t the same without our niece joining us, so we went back to the cabin and got her moving so she too, could witness how the sun floods into the Canyon and changes the way things look as the colors return to vibrancy.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

This photo, while in shadows, is great on my computer monitor at full resolution, but looking at it here on my blog on my notebook screen where I’m writing, it leaves a bit to be desired. Hopefully, enough of the two ladies can be seen to prove that this was, in truth, our place for the night at least once in our lives.

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

We had an early appointment in front of the main lodge building where the girls were going to be taken up the road to the North Kaibab trailhead to meet their mules. Caroline is seen here mounting Cobra, who will take her down to the Supai Tunnel. Should you wonder about my motivation to post this particular photo, let me help you understand that, yes, I’m putting this here because I think that my 51-year-old wife still has it!

Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Cobra and Caroline going where I cannot because these mules don’t like fat asses such as myself. At 235 pounds I’m 36 pounds too big for them to safely transport me on the narrow, steep trails. Sad that this is my truth, but then again, I’m 50 pounds lighter than I was four years ago. By the way, doesn’t Caroline have about the greatest smile ever?

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

This was kind of like going whitewater rafting, where you get to the boat, get on board, and push off without much time to think about what you are going to do. The ladies weren’t on the mules for more than a few minutes before they were quickly following Kitty, the trail guide. I tried getting Katharina’s attention for a photo or two, but she was in the zone for riding and not posing. She’s right behind Caroline and Cobra here, riding Ellie.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Aunt and niece in the saddle for a truly Western experience, heading into the Grand Canyon on a summer day.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Down the dusty trail, they walked in single file as their cantankerous mules begrudgingly at times carried them forward. Going down, I was told things went quite smoothly.

Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

But on the way back up, it seems the extra strain on the mules had them farting up a storm of noxious gas. If their butts could carry a note, they might have been singing as they worked hard to carry their charges back to the corral, where cool water and more food would be waiting for them.

Near the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

We’ve started heading home, and although it’s early, we can be certain that we’ll be encountering some heavy traffic as during the summer, it often seems like half the city heads north to escape the heat. With so many people up north, they must all get themselves back home in order to go to work on Monday, so we can’t linger too long.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Even with time constraints, we can’t just speed past everything, so a stop at Lees Ferry was in order for Katharina to stand here at the point on the Colorado River where her aunt and I departed on our trip through the Grand Canyon nearly ten years ago.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Maybe because it’s about 100 degrees (38 Celsius), the water, while chilly, didn’t feel all that cold today. This was the first riffle we passed back in 2010, and from my perspective, in the dory, it looked like pretty big whitewater to me. Today, I can see that it’s really nothing at all but a small disturbance, yet back then, we were starting a major journey into something large and unknown, kind of like our niece, who is moving out of adolescence and onto university before starting a career that will hopefully offer her many opportunities in life to explore some things she could have never imagined.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Being on the Colorado River at the beginning of the Grand Canyon seemed like the perfect spot to set up for some horse photography, so Kat might take some very personal memories of this adventure.

Horse on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona

The results Kat achieves with her model horses in natural settings are pretty awesome. Great eye, Katharina.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Navajo Bridge over the Colorado River is our last stop for photographs. From here, we need to focus on driving south, with a brief visit in Flagstaff at the Red Curry Vegan Kitchen for dinner, and then on to dealing with the heavy traffic that is the cost of traveling north during summer in Arizona.

Katharina – Grand Canyon Day 1

Glen Canyon Dam in Page, Arizona

After a two-day pause in activities, so I could catch up on a few things, including getting ready to leave last night for a drive north, we woke in Page, Arizona, this morning. The ultimate destination for the day isn’t this far north, but getting up here put us in a good location for where we are going.

Lake Powell in Page, Arizona

The decision was made by Katharina on exactly the path we’d take and that afforded us the opportunity to drive north up the western shore of Lake Powell. There wouldn’t be a lot of stops on the way as we wanted to spend more of our day in the park.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt entering Utah

With our drive into Utah, Katharina has now visited every state in the four corners region. These states include Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and, of course, Utah.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

The meadows on the way into the North Rim of the Grand Canyon have always been beautiful spots to me, though impossible to adequately photograph. The extensive fire damage north of here was not so majestic, though it’s an obvious necessity for a healthy forest. Turns out that the nearby Kaibab Lodge is closed for the season due to an extraordinary amount of snow that damaged their property. Normal snowfall in the area is about 100 inches (254 centimeters), but this winter, they received over 200 inches or more than 5 meters.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Visiting the North Rim of the Grand Canyon National Park today was very intentional. This time of year is tourist season and over on the other side of the Canyon are likely 100 times more visitors today than over here on the more remote side of the park.

Katharina Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Here we are at the highest point in the Grand Canyon at Point Imperial, which towers over this park at 8,800 feet of elevation or 2,682 meters. For comparison, those who know the Zugspitze in southern Germany, its peak stands at 9,718 feet or 2,962 meters.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Here’s a better view from Point Imperial, which is behind us in the photo above.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

No matter where you look in the Grand Canyon, be it near or far, the view is always spectacular. Even bad weather can’t harm the view, but what can diminish it are photographs. Regardless of how I try to capture images here that have already been taken 100s of millions of times before, there are no photos ever taken that will convey the impression one gets from standing near or moving into the Grand Canyon.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Cape Royal as it looked to us this day. I suppose the best we can do with our photos is to create reminders of what something looked like to us at a particular moment. For those who were here at sunrise or sunset, they saw different skies and shadows that made their visit unique to them.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Through Angels Window, and likely not visible in this lower resolution photo, you get a glimpse of the Colorado River deep below. Those who might be rafting down there today likely passed the Little Colorado River or are still hiking out of the canyon where its milky waters join the larger Colorado. As the crow flies, that stretch of river is about 50 miles south of Lees Ferry, where the majority of river trips begin.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

The cliffrose is in bloom, and if not for Caroline pointing it out, I might have only focused on the bigger picture and forgotten some of the details. I don’t always pay attention to what I say others should do, and I could bet a dollar that my wife wouldn’t disagree with that.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Walking out on Angels Window, it’s easy to forget that below you is a giant hole because on each side of this narrow trail that is less than 6 feet wide (2 meters), the drop-off grabs your attention, letting you pay close attention to the path and nearly nothing else. Well, that is, of course, if you have any fear of heights because this outcropping demands you muster the strength to face a serious threat to the senses that are screaming at you to leave.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Walking out here at Cape Royal, we learn that Kat isn’t feeling her best. Maybe she’s a bit dehydrated, or maybe it’s the fact that she’s nearly 1,000 meters or 3,200 feet higher in elevation than she’s ever been before. Her uncertain situation gives me a bit of panic as I’m not accustomed to a fit 19-year-old having stamina issues, and since she is scheduled to ride a mule into the Canyon with her aunt tomorrow, I’m a bit nervous about the potential of her passing out while on a mule walking down a narrow trail where a fall can easily mean death.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

We made our way to the Grand Canyon Campground, stopping at the General Store to have a bite to eat and see how our niece was doing. We’re counting on her situation to be a temporary thing and with her reassurance, we decide to go forward with our plans.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

After checking in at Grand Canyon Lodge, where we scored a rim-side cabin with a partial view of the Canyon (this is not that view), we immediately headed over to the North Kaibab Trail. As Caroline and Katharina were going to be riding down this trail, I wanted to get some impressions of where I might set up to get some photos of them and came to the conclusion that the trail would not be optimal for me to get more than a couple of photos of them. Oh well, we had a nice walk down, probably about a half-mile, but it could have been significantly less as it only took half an hour to get back out.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Looking towards the South Rim about 200 feet (60 meters) west of where our cabin is.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

Our dinner reservation wasn’t until 8:15, but we managed to get a table earlier, and with food out of the way, we went out for a canyon rim walk into the sunset.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

This is the Transept Trail that connects the Grand Canyon Lodge area to the North Rim Campground. The easy hike is about 1.5 miles (2.5 km) and is letting us work off dessert.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona

By the time we reached the campground, the sun was further down than this, and in the woods, it was nearly completely dark. Lucky us, an almost full moon occasionally lit our way down the Bridle Path that parallels the road back to our cabin. All-in-all the day was packed with experiences and impressions that I hope Kat can look back on with fond memories.

Katharina – Chaco Culture

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at Chaco Culture NHP in New Mexico

Good thing our journey through the San Juan Mountains up there in Colorado happened yesterday because a fairly thick cloud cover has moved into the region today.

We left Durango without fanfare and didn’t wait around for the old steam train to leave the station; we left the station, so to speak. Our destination was only two hours down the road in New Mexico, but I wanted us to have as much time as possible here at Chaco Culture National Historical Park.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

While this is obviously the first time Katharina is visiting this UNESCO World Heritage Site, it is Caroline’s and my fifth time visiting the park together, though I have a sixth visit that was made with my daughter Jessica back in 2013. I’d link to that trip, but I’m just now realizing that I never blogged about our travels into the desert back then.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

With so many visits to Chaco, you might think we’ve seen it all, but new perspectives are always opening up. When I look through this, I can choose to see a ruin in decay, or I can imagine one of the builders a thousand years ago looking from across the way at the work in progress.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

The walls between Chetro Ketl and Pueblo Bonito have a novel’s worth of petroglyphs etched into their surface, but I have no facility for understanding them, and most interpretations are merely guesses as to what the intention of the original messenger was.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

There’s little to say about this place that I’ve not blogged about before, and when I’m here, I mostly try to find impressions and echoes of what might have been. Eight hundred years of intervening silence after Chaco was abandoned have left little to glean from those who are so far outside of Puebloan culture.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

I can easily imagine that an elder from the Acoma, Zuni, or Hopi tribes would see things here in far greater detail. Without a doubt, I believe they could look into one of the many Kivas and have a full understanding of exactly what it once looked, sounded, and smelled like. I may never understand why the dominant American culture is so afraid of its citizens learning early on about the cultural heritage of other peoples – other than it is fearful that the traditions it holds sacrosanct might be lessened.

Katharina Engelhardt at Chaco Culture NHP in New Mexico

We stand in their footprints and pass through the doorways they used with purpose. We collect souvenirs with our photos while they lived with intention and gathered history in the ceremony of living outside of time. What I mean to say here is that we people of this age live every day within the limitations of the time we can afford to do something, such as visiting Chaco for an hour, a day, or a week. To have arrived at Chaco on foot a thousand years ago from hundreds or even thousands of miles away likely implies that the visitor wasn’t here for a day or two; their relationship to time had to be profoundly different than ours.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

I feel honored to pass through these portals, though it would be made a million times better if we were able to do so with a Puebloan guide. Upon their historic lands, I feel small and insignificant without the ability to even dream of what is no longer here or might still be, though I don’t have the senses to know it.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Thirty generations ago, men, women, and likely their children cut trees in some far-off place and dragged the logs over the earth to bring them here as supports for the floors that, in some instances, were up to five levels high. Why was so much effort made to transport tons of wood out here and then chip away at rocks to make millions of squared-off stones that would be stacked to make these walls? What was their vision, and how was this seen by first-time visitors?

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

The inner rooms would have been pitch black unless an open fire was going on, but then ventilation would have been essential. With dried wood and grass being used for floors above the dirt ground floor, would fire even be an option? Maybe their relationship with the dark was different than ours, where artificial light has always been our norm.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at Chaco Culture NHP in New Mexico

There could not have been fat Puebloans out here, nor very tall ones. At 235 pounds (106 kg), I am a pretty tight fit in some of the doorways. The doorway that Kat and Caroline are standing in is about the tallest one we’ve passed through, while some of them are barely more than a few feet (1 meter) tall, requiring me to nearly get down on my knees to crawl through.

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at Chaco Culture NHP in New Mexico

Miscommunication was at work this afternoon as I thought we had an understanding that Caroline and Kat would run up the crack in the sandstone cliffside up to the mesa, take a photo, and come right back. Instead, they got up there and interpreted things as “go to the Pueblo Bonito overlook and take photos.”

Caroline Wise and Katharina Engelhardt at Chaco Culture NHP in New Mexico

An hour later, they finally reemerge to a perplexed man below who’s wondering how the information channels get crossed. You see we were somewhat worried about the weather and the 20% chance of rain as the 16-mile rutted dirt road we drove in on would be unmanageable with our Kia in the rain. So, the idea before they headed up was that we’d be leaving very soon. Well, the weather held out, and the visitors center was opened later than thought, so Caroline was able to get her Junior Ranger Badge from this park, too, and everything ended well.

Katharina Engelhardt in New Mexico

The road to Pueblo Pintado is not paved, but it’s a shortcut to the place we want to end up, so we take it. Good thing we did because we got to meet these two beautiful horses.

Caroline Wise and horses in New Mexico

Oh, maybe it’s a bad thing we did because our maps from Google are not showing a way through, and the car navigation system is jumping around recalculating our route on roads that don’t exist.

Horse in New Mexico by Katharina Engelhardt

Lucky for us, a pickup truck is coming up behind us, so I flag it down and ask if the dirt road we’re on dumps back out on a paved road somewhere ahead. The Native American lady driving tells us that’s exactly where she’s going and that we should follow her.

Where the end of the primitive road gives way to the more civilized paved one, we come across a small herd of horses wandering around. My goal and commitment to our niece is to stop every time horses are within photographic range. My general impression on this road trip, though, is that a lot of people have given up horse ownership in exchange for affording their smartphone bills, but this is only a snarky guess, to be honest.

New Mexico storm clouds at sunset

Big dramatic skies with god rays are the perfect punctuation to end a day with. That is until the check engine light comes on and forces you to change your plans because freaking out is now part of the equation. Sheesh, there are only 10,000 miles on this Kia Niro, and the check engine light comes on? Seriously? So, goodbye, Socorro and El Camino Family Restaurant. Goodbye, Pinetown, with pie and ice cream; see ya later, Datil and the giant satellite dishes. Instead, we head into Gallup to better position ourselves for a quicker drive home tomorrow.

Yucca Fiber

Caroline Wise holding a basket made of Yucca fiber at Tuzigoot National Monument in Arizona

A rare Saturday mini-road trip took us north to Tuzigoot National Monument in Clarkdale, Arizona. We’ve visited Tuzigoot previously but never before for a talk. The subject that interested Caroline enough to ask me to accompany her was a presentation by archaeologist Zack Curcija about the use of Yucca fibers among indigenous people of the southwest. As happens so often when I’m reluctant about something I’m not sure I’ll have an interest in, it turns out that listening to just about anyone who is passionate about something is enough to draw me in and start wishing I knew more or wonder when their next talk is scheduled.

North Carolina

Caroline Wise and John Wise at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina

On my shoulder is my Canon DSLR with an amazing lens that wouldn’t have been out of focus with the blown-out sunlight over the left of my head, but I was feeling lazy and decided to shoot this entire trip with the camera in my phone that while it was okay for Facebook is shit for my blog. Oh well, some blurry reminders are better than none at all.

I’m posting this two years after we made this momentous trip that would have serious implications regarding a change in direction in my life, more of that as the blog entry progresses.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina

This was our second visit to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park but our first visit to the absolute southern end of the park. These chickens had southern drawls and tasted like pork; it was the weirdest thing.

Caroline Wise at Luella's BBQ in Asheville, North Carolina

Guess what we had for dinner? BBQ, that’s what we had! By the time we got back to Arizona, we likely were emanating smoke from this meat indulgence themed around the smoker. Tonight’s meal was at Luella’s BBQ in Asheville, North Carolina, where we will stay and call home for the next few days.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Firestorm Bookstore in Asheville, North Carolina

Amazingly smart bookstore and coffee shop here in Asheville called Firestorm. By the time we were done shopping here during our stay, we’d leave with at least half a dozen books and a sticker for the computer slung over my shoulder. It’s great to be on vacation, and it’s our first in six months, which is nearly a lifetime measured in John and Caroline years.

Death Valley with Jutta

Death Valley National Park in California

We are in Death Valley National Park on the last day of the year. With Jutta having been here a couple of other times, we decided to take her into a corner she hadn’t visited yet, nor had we.

Death Valley National Park in California

To get to our surprise location, we had to head to the west side of the park and find the Emigrant Canyon Road turnoff.

Death Valley National Park in California

Our route took us right into the snowline on this beautiful blue sky day.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise in Death Valley National Park in California

We are at the Wildrose Charcoal Kilns that are now long out of use, but back in the late 1800s they were busy at work making charcoal for the miners in the area.

Death Valley National Park in California

Our views were spectacular up here, affording Jutta sights of Death Valley that few take the time to see. From way up here, we needed to way back down there as Caroline needed to get to the visitors center before they closed so she could be sworn in for her newest Junior Ranger badge.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise in Death Valley National Park in California

With a stroll down a boardwalk in Death Valley, we closed out 2013.