Trinity Site – Day 2

We are just outside of Socorro, and this is the line waiting to enter Trinity Site in New Mexico on the White Sands Missile Range. Visitors are welcomed just two days a year: The first Saturday in April and the first Saturday in October. Gates open at 8:00 a.m. and close at 2:00 p.m. We arrived early at 6:30, thinking we might be first in line – wrong! We are about 30 cars back. Who knew so many people would be interested in visiting the home of the first nuclear blast?

Caroline Wise at the Trinity Site in New Mexico

We are at ground zero of the “World’s First Nuclear Device Explosion.”

Trinitite at White Sands Missile Base, New Mexico

This is trinitite, and it was formed on the desert floor after the plutonium-based Trinity nuclear bomb test on July 16, 1945, here turned the desert into glass. This stuff was lying around everywhere during our visit (you are not supposed to take it, but it can be found in souvenir shops in the region). Our visit here on the White Sands Missile Range was intriguing as we drove through an area that is restricted to outsiders at all other times of the year. We were also able to visit the old houses where those conducting the test and observers were positioned back on that historic day.

An old cafe along the road in New Mexico

We are on the way home now and never had the chance to eat here. If it were still open, this looks exactly like the place we’d like to stop in.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at the VRLA in New Mexico

We are near the VLA, also known as the Very Large Array, which is outside Datil, New Mexico.

Very Large Array in New Mexico

While we didn’t have time for a proper visit this trip through the area, we made a note to return. You might recognize the dishes as they played a role in Jody Foster’s movie Contact.

Road side in New Mexico

It’s nice to be out in the mountains exploring New Mexico as spring is coming on.

Alma Trading Company in Glenwood, New Mexico

This place, “Alma Trading Company,” was up for sale as we stopped to use the payphone (just kidding).

Roadside in west New Mexico

We pass so many areas that beg for us to return on subsequent visits and explore the area, though with so much country left to find I’d bet a dollar our next visit might be some time.

Black Hills Scenic Byway Arizona

While we have to skip this 21-mile scenic byway, this time we take a photo to remind ourselves that the road ahead looked interesting enough that someday we’d like to travel this well-maintained gravel road. By the way, this is back in Arizona.

Arizona

I had to pull over for this photo after seeing the moon in my rearview mirror here on Highway 60, also known as the Old West Highway, as we were traveling west to get back home to Phoenix.

Trinity Site – Day 1

Arizona desert

Caroline and I had to take off on a Friday for this trip. We left Phoenix with solid gray skies for the first few hours of our trip east on Highway 60 to New Mexico.

Clifton Mine in Arizona

By 3:00 p.m., we were approaching the Arizona-New Mexico border but had to stop to look into the Morenci open-pit mine along the way. While it’s colorful, we have to remind ourselves that something is missing.

Road to Alpine, Arizona

Our road turns north as we take the Coronado Scenic Byway because we love hairpin turns in the snow. When it’s approaching 100 degrees down in Phoenix, it’s hard to remember that other places still have snow.

Road to Alpine, Arizona

And maybe a lot of snow.

Socorro, New Mexico

We have possibly found our favorite neon sign in America and one of our favorite restaurants, El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico. Green chili-smothered steak and chili relleno in an old diner atmosphere at 10:00 p.m. is our idea of perfection.

Socorro, New Mexico

If it’s cheap, we’ll stay in it. This room was borderline sketchy, but if we are going to travel at least once a month, we need to save money wherever we can. We almost were without a room and needed to backtrack to Magdalena to grab one of the last two rooms available.

America – Day 21

Alamogordo, New Mexico welcome sign in German

Only about 90 miles north of El Paso, Texas, is this little outpost of Alamogordo, New Mexico, where the German Air Force comes to train its pilots. Sadly there’s not a German restaurant to be found, not much of anything else for that matter. To say Caroline was surprised by this sign would be an understatement. Breakfast was here in town at a place called Ramona’s, where we were treated to another yummy Mexican meal. (As of 2018, this place no longer exists)

Caroline Wise at White Sands National Monument, New Mexico

This is the reason we didn’t continue west from El Paso: Welcome to White Sands National Monument.

Caroline Wise leaves a footprint at White Sands National Monument, New Mexico

Wonder what the chances are that 10 million years from now someone discovers my wife’s footprint?

John Wise and Caroline Wise's hand prints in the sand at White Sands National Monument, New Mexico

Or maybe in 100 million years, someone will find our handprints?

White Sands National Monument, New Mexico

After enjoying near-perfect weather for most of the trip our last day out here is again spectacular. Nothing like a thin layer of water to make for a nice reflection of the dune.

Caroline Wise looking through a piece of ice at White Sands National Monument, New Mexico

While the sand might look like snow, it is not, though from the piece of ice Caroline picked up from some pooling water, it’s apparently cold enough out here for it to snow.

Caroline Wise and John Wise driving in New Mexico

Starting the final leg home and our last selfie on the road.

A dollar bill we left at Steins Mercantile in Steins, New Mexico

Ultimately, there would be four dollars stapled to these walls and shelves from four different occasions at Steins Mercantile (pronounced Steens) here in Steins, New Mexico. Sadly, this old ghost town location was shut down after the owner, Larry Link, was murdered in an unsolved crime 11 years after our visit. As of 2018, there might be some limited tours available by reservation only, but I can’t confirm that as of this writing.

The Mighty Bussalo brown VW bus in Arizona

We finally had to try to get a picture of this old VW bus christened the “Mighty Bussalo.” We’d been passing each other since the Louisiana border, and here we were in Arizona, passing one another for the last time. Over the years, we’ve looked for a sign of this car on the internet but never found a thing. The amounts of times we’d passed each other had started to become absurd, and each time it would put giant smiles on our faces.

Sunset entering Phoenix, Arizona

I tried to tone down the colors, but as vibrant as they were as we were entering Phoenix, Arizona, I blamed our camera for not being able to properly deal with the contrast in light and dark. Anyone who has lived here will know that, in fact, this is not all that far off from the truth. We are almost home after driving 8,722 miles out and back across America.

Various food stuffs from across America

While out for these past 21 days we did a fair amount of shopping trying to collect local flavors. The next images are the results of our haul.

Various food stuffs from across America

Various food stuffs from across America

Various food stuffs from across America

Various food stuffs from across America

America – Day 20

Bed vibrating device at the Antlers Inn Motel in Flatonia, Texas

Oh yeah…a vibrating bed and it only costs 25 cents for 15 minutes…plenty long enough. Just where do you find this kind of luxury? At the Antlers Inn Motel in Flatonia, Texas, room 111 and it only cost us $40 – oh yeah!

The Alamo in San Antonio, Texas

Guess what happens when you arrive somewhere at 7:50 in the morning? You leave because the place is closed; that’s what you do. This was and is the Alamo. I suppose we’ll just have to remember the Alamo as a place we could have visited.

Caroline Wise and John Wise driving across Texas

In Junction, Texas, we turned black & white as we entered the Twilight Zone. This is Caroline driving. Flat, wide open, clear weather, and me being tired were all the conditions that had to align like planets in some celestial once-in-a-hundred-years event that triggered this rare phenomenon. Lost from this excursion into the Twilight Zone were my favorite sunglasses she was borrowing, my Dolce & Gabbana’s.

Ozona, Texas welcome sign

Ozona had us thinking of Arizona. Getting closer.

Big broad Texas on Interstate 10

We have a ways to go, but the landscape is beginning to look familiar.

Decrepit old house in Texas

Finally, after 20 days out in America, we are back home, not.

German V-2 rocket at Fort Bliss, Texas

An old German V-2 rocket that had been brought to the United States from Germany along with Wernher von Braun and 120 of his fellow Nazi rocket engineers. This fine specimen is sitting at Fort Bliss, Texas, where I was stationed with the Army back in the ’80s after I first left Germany. Caroline and I visited the base so I could show her a little bit more about my past. The barracks in the background are similar to those that I lived in during my short stay here in El Paso, Texas.

El Paso, Texas at sunset

Just finished an excellent dinner at Avila’s Mexican Food. Being back in the Southwest has its perks.

Western Motel in Alamogordo, New Mexico

Our last night on our cross-country adventure was spent here at the Western Motel (now the White Sands Motel) in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Nearly 13 hours traveling across Texas, accumulating over 700 miles.

Four Corners with Jutta – Day 3

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise and John Wise at Kokopelli's Cave in Farmington, New Mexico

We are taking this photo of us in Kokopelli’s Cave in Farmington, New Mexico, as proof that we stayed here. We can’t believe our luck in that we only had one night in the area, while Kokopelli’s has a two-night minimum. We got the cave due to a cancellation and now we have bragging rights that we’ve stayed in one of the most unique places to spend a night in all of America. Our shower had a waterfall, the kitchen features about everything you’d need to stay a week here, on the front balcony is a gas BBQ, and the place is about 68 degrees year-round.

Aztec Ruins National Monument in Aztec, New Mexico

Aztec Ruins National Monument is just up the road in Aztec, New Mexico. I’m not 100% sure if the rafters are the original as placed here by the builders about 900 years ago or if maybe they were scooped up and put back into place by people maintaining the monument, but I’d like to imagine this is the handiwork of the Native Americans who once lived here.

Aztec Ruins National Monument in Aztec, New Mexico

While this location doesn’t feature the ornate work we saw at Chaco Culture, it is still impressive and worthy of a visit.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at a Colorado State sign

At midday, we were crossing into Colorado, where for the next nearly four hours, we’ll get lost in time exploring a tiny corner of the state before heading to Utah.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at a Utah State sign

We crossed into Utah on State Road 262, as you can see (changed to State Road UT 162 at some point) on our way to this evening’s lodging and dining option.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise and John Wise in Bluff, Utah

So here we are with me being blurry all day. What’s up with my selfie-taking ability and all these blurry images of just me? We are in Bluff, Utah, again, a little more than a month after Caroline and I were here for the first time, and just as before, we are staying at Calf Canyon Bed & Breakfast. Knowing that the Cow Canyon Trading Post and Restaurant serve up a great meal with an amazing view, we’ll opt to revisit it too. I should point out that on our first visit to Bluff, a roadside vendor was selling cantaloupe which we bought a couple of and swear they were the best we’d ever had. Six weeks later there is no sign of the roadside fruit seller. I guess we’ll have to make do with the fond memories.

2018 update: Calf Canyon B&B is long gone, and from a recent call to Cow Canyon, I learned that the restaurant is no longer operational.

Four Corners with Jutta – Day 2

Franciscan Lodge in Grants, New Mexico

Maybe not the coolest of signs, but somehow a nice one all the same, or am I being blinded by the incredibly low price? When you are going to be traveling 18 of 31 days in a month, you need to save as much money as you can where you can. The Franciscan Lodge here in Grants, New Mexico, was just perfect for us; then again, we have a mixed bag of what perfection is, so don’t trust that this is going to be a luxury suite. We got an early start as we were heading south before turning around to go north and our main destination for the day. Our first stop, though, was at El Morro National Monument.

Jay's Liquors near Grants, New Mexico

We were too early at El Morro and couldn’t find a park map or any indication of what the main attraction was, so we got underway. Okay, so this roadside little shack with “Jay’s Liquors – Welcomes You to Uranium Country” painted on it makes our detour all worth it. How many times in your life will you see yourself in a place that takes pride in its uranium mining operations?

Navajo Service Route 14 aka Road 57 going to Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

We’re on a primitive back road numbered 57, also known as Navajo Service Route 14, and the sign at the intersection of it and Navajo Route 9 warns the traveler to be aware that the road is not recommended for RVs and that it can be dangerous. Well, there’s always turning around, so, as is usual, we go for it since the idea of approaching our next stop from out of the wilds of the desert seems more appealing than the paved “official” entry road towards the east of our destination.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

Caroline and I had just been here for the first time about five weeks ago, but like Yellowstone earlier in the year, Chaco Culture National Historical Park was beckoning for our return. We thought this was just the kind of place Jutta could appreciate, and so here we are. Wow, I’m impressed as I just realized that Caroline and I managed to get nine travel days last month, too, which took us to Northern Arizona, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Los Angeles, California.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

This time, I’m determined to get an adequate number of photos to serve our memory banks should this be the last time we visit this remote outpost. We are looking into one of the many kivas here, and this one is HUGE. Whatever the purpose of this mysterious place was, the ceremonial aspects of the early Puebloans at Chaco must have been of an extraordinary scale. At the Great House of Pueblo Bonito alone, there are 40 smaller kivas, and there are 12 Great Houses at Chaco in total that all have large and small kivas.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

It has been pointed out by historians that these buildings are unique in pre-Columbian Native American architecture because not only were some of the buildings four stories tall, but these were well planned instead of the more typical organic construction method of adding on living space as required. As I pointed out in my previous post these were the largest human-made structures in North America right up into the 19th century.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

When we consider that Chetro Ketl was made of some 50 million stones, it starts to boggle the mind how all of these structures were built by hand and that these early Puebloans had to drag some 200,000 conifer trees from up to 70 miles away for the roofs.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

By the time modern humans are old enough to be aware of their environment, they have already seen spaceships, pyramids, 100-story tall glass buildings, images from two miles deep on the ocean floor, and pictures of their own planet from the moon. A thousand years ago, it wasn’t that easy to see the extraordinary, and so I can only imagine what a 20-year-old person would have thought wandering out of the Great Plains to come upon this metropolis of gargantuan proportions. If, as some theories suggest, this was a central gathering point for indigenous peoples from all corners of the region, how would the items for trade and displayed here by the varied people have been marveled at with incredulous eyes?

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

As a child, I was taught through various messages from the media and directly from my formal education that Native Americans had a primitive culture and needed conquering to bring them into modernity. Aside from learning they played a role at our first Thanksgiving, they were otherwise battling the European settlers as they fought the encroachment of the inevitable, being dragged into the customs and religions of the invaders. Then you see this intention, or listen to their languages, or try to understand their symbiotic relationship to the lands they were stewards of, and I realize that the negative stereotypes needed for cultural hegemony are just as alive today as they were more than 400 years ago.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

How many of us stop and think that European settlers first went to war with Native Americans back in 1540, keeping up the aggression right through 1924? That’s nearly 400 years of near-constant battles. Even after the American Indian Wars in the 1920s, these peoples were relegated to impoverished, hardscrabble lands, and when treaties were negotiated for land usage rights, many times, those financial agreements were ignored, and native peoples were cheated. But a thousand years ago, while much of Europe was emerging from the Dark Ages, hopeful Native Americans were peering out this window, marveling at the skills and resources their people were able to bring together as they tried to build their future.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

The doors are still largely shut to our Native American population, their cultural history is nearly extinct, and references to them still disappearing after our ancestors started a program to rid America of “savages.” What a sad legacy we are leaving on our incredibly beautiful planet while laying waste to the extraordinary abilities that all people imbue.

Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico

While we’ve spent the better part of the day here, we’re leaving still feeling like we’ve not seen or learned a thing. How could I ever walk in the footprints of the early people who traveled hundreds of miles on foot to visit Chaco? What about the Anasazi Sun Dagger up on Fajada Butte that we can’t visit? Who brought the macaws and their feathers to the desert from Central America? Did visitors from present-day California travel nearly 800 miles across deserts, the Colorado River, and through mountains and forests to reach Chaco for trade? These walls have a rich history and tell a story that we can only imagine, and yet we still fail to celebrate the people who led such complex lives in often harsh environments. The more I think about it, the more I am in respect of those I can never really know.

We are spending the night in a place like no other in North America. It is not a hotel, motel, bed & breakfast, or even a private home. We are enjoying the view from our balcony in this photo, and we do not have a neighbor for miles around us. While almost impossible to see in this photo, there is Shiprock off in the distance. Tonight we sleep in a cave. It is a man-made cave carved out of a sandstone cliff, and we were lucky enough to be able to grab it for one night due to someone else canceling a reservation at the last minute.

Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought I’d come face-to-face with a ringtail, but here it is, walking right up to me, lying down on the balcony of our cave as it came up, looking for cat food in a well-practiced routine. Matter of fact we were told we might have visitors and that the bag of food next to the sliding door was there for our guests.

If that wasn’t enough, it was just minutes until this skunk showed up. Initially, we were quite nervous as the three of us were lying still at the open sliding door, debating quietly if we should slide it shut before this cute little stinker threw some of its odoriferous secretions into our faces. Instead, we decided to remain calm and hope that our black and white visitor was more interested in a free meal from the non-aggressive giant heads staring at it. The ringtail and skunk danced around each other with some uncertainty about the other’s intentions, but they were able to keep the peace, and I’m sure our noses are happier for it. Tomorrow, I’ll share what it was like to spend the night in a luxury cave.