Category Archives: weather

Rocky Mountain High, in Colorado…

(This is a catch-up post. We had such a good time in Parker, and such a hectic schedule after, I am still trying to get us current.  As you may have noticed yesterday, we have a bit of time on our hands now. We left Denver heading east on Memorial Day. )

We have not actually spent the last six weeks in Moab. We did raft the mighty Colorado on a day-long expedition out of Moab.

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From Moab, our little rig, with our Dodge Caravan as always in tow, chugged up Wolf Creek Pass IMG_3156in southern Colorado, after a day at Mesa Verde National Park.

 

 

We had visited the cliff dwellings before, and they seemed none-the-worse for wear in the last ten years.

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The older I get, the harder it is to get my head around building something that lasts for centuries, with one’s bare hands. I wonder if the Puebloan who arose one June morning around the time Chris Columbus was cajoling Queen Isabella for cash thought over his breakfast of arrowroot and water about how to select rocks and mud that would support his dwelling roof through the bronze age, the industrial revolution, space exploration, and Miley Cyrus.

Probably not.

From Wolf Creek Pass, way up on the Great Divide, we found ourselves truckin’ on down the other side, and into Alamosa. On the way in, we passed the motel-in-the-drive in, a quirky establishment I stayed in in 1969 on a trip with my Aunt Kathy, and where Jen and I stayed again on a Colorado trip about ten years ago. In 1969 I saw the original True Grit there, with John Wayne and Kim Darby.

The next day we waxed up our boards and headed for Great Sand Dunes National Park, to show Coloradans how the coast dwellers play on running water. At the base of the Dunes is a river that runs about 200 feet wide and four inches deep—when it runs at all. In the lee of snow-capped Rockies peaks, my middle son demonstrated skimboarding. It’s probably been done there before, in this geological oddity–miles of sand beach in search of its ocean, now a thousand miles away. But it sure was fun to watch middle-son frolic.

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We left Moab for the most intense part of the drive so far. In southern Arizona, just beyond the area of Mesa Verde in the southwest part of the state.  Though we hadn’t planned to go to Mesa Verde, we hadn’t planned on Arches either, and once we realized how close we were, well, how could we not revisit the ruins of our ancient kin?

From the Great Sand Dunes, we pointed north for a week of R&R with brother Mike in sunny Parker, Colorado, and some repairs on the Caravan. We all breathed a collective sigh of contentment. For the first time on the trip, we were headed for a destination we knew well–my brother’s comfortable, spacious home.

We backtracked the second day to the Cheyenne Zoo, on the east slope of Cheyenne Mountain overlooking the Broadmoor Resort in Colorado Springs. We got there just in time to experience a hellacious hailstorm, and still carry the pockmarks on the Dodge to remember it by.

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The next day we paid a visit to the very cool Denver Museum of IMG_3232Nature and Science and were again patting ourselves on the back for buying our Museum membership back in Dallas at the Perot Museum.

 

Mike has never been one to let the grass grow under his feet, and while we were in town, in one memorable day, we drove to Boulder to tour the Hammond’s Candy Factory in Denver, then to tour the Celestial Seasonings Tea headquarters on (of course! Sleepytime Drive in Boulder, and then to The Boulder Dinner Theater featuring Shrek! The Musical!

The Hammonds candy tour will be remembered best for the IMG_3364moment when 20 cell phones sounded simultaneously in the tour group to warn of an approaching tornado. We chatted up the employees while huddled in the ladies room, waiting for the all-clear signal. We also loaded up on candy, to show our appreciation for the free tour, and to support local merchants.

The Celestial Seasonings tour featured a variety of tea samples, IMG_3376including ones we hadn’t heard of, and we bought several boxes at below-retail. Then we were off to the dinner theater with Uncle Mike, and cousins Matt and Jenny, for a night of laughs, thrills, and very touching moments.

Next day, we boarded the Georgetown Loop Railroad for a short but  IMG_7887wonderful excursion from Georgetown, CO up Clear Creek in the Rockies Front Range to the town of Silver Plume.

 

Mid-trip, we climbed off for a mine tour of the old Lebanon Silver Mine that turned out to be a real treasure! IMG_3401The guide was a lifelong resident of Silver Plume, and she really knew her mining stuff! She was a delight, and answered every question with wit and a deep knowledge.  We also learned about the miners’ lunch–pasties–which we had a chance to sample later in our trip.

Trudging out from our day (one hour, fifteen minutes) in the mines, we were of course, ravenous. So next stop was for Mountain Pizza in Georgetown. Yes, pizza by the pound. Coming back into Parker, we stopped by Littleton in a driving rainstorm to snap a picture of the house on Josephine Way where I spent my fifteenth summer. My brother pointed out Columbine High School, three blocks from where I’d lived. Columbine has always had a connection for Jen and me. The tragedy started the week we married, in 1999, and sadly, continues every several weeks or so that schools are in session.

In America.

We wrapped up Colorado with a street festival in Denver on South Gaylord Street. IMG_3423For all your income tax needs, stop in at Mike Downs, CPA, 1040 Gaylord Street. 1040. Get it? The Festival was followed by a splendid cookout in Boulder at Matt and Jen’s, where we met their newest family member, and desserted on Chocolate Mousse cake from Carlo’s Bakery in Las Vegas. (Yes, the boys and I went back after all and bought a cake, froze it, and toted it to Colorado with us!)

Colorado is the one state west of the Mississippi where we feel at home already. We spent two weeks there nine years ago, and again two weeks three years ago, and if  it wasn’t so far from the ocean, we would strongly consider calling it home.

What Happens Here Stays Here!

Rolling into Las Vegas from Pismo Beach, we traveled past the spot where James Dean’s life ended so abruptly in his sports car, Little B******.

Driving across the eastern part of California, leaving the coast, is a quick change from the energy and excitement of the ocean to the tranquil, measured rows of grapevines, orchard trees, and vegetable crops. The transition is not unlike crossing Routes 50 or 99 from Ocean City back onto the Eastern Shore. Worlds so close, and worlds apart.

One thing about driving in to Vegas–it was, granted, a Saturday–is that first, it is a long way from anywhere, and second, a lot of people were heading there.

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Welcoming the Downs Travelers!

Las Vegas’s only campground-on-the-Strip really is just behind Circus Circus, at one end of the famous Strip. There, we spent a sinfully expensive day–I guess I can tell YOU–in the Adventure Dome.  It was decadent–at least for us–and very, very fun! photo(65)

In Vegas, we also caught the Water Ballet at the Bellagio and the Volcano at the Mirage, as well as the gondoliers at the Venetian. The Venetian is where we also searched long and hard for Carlo’s Bakery (of Cake Boss fame). We found it, but the line was way way too long!

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Number Three in Vegas! Well, not quite.

Back on the strip, the night time crowd was thick and wired. Adding to the concoction was a devil wind, with gusts up to 60 miles an hour! We finally caught a transit bus back to our end of town.

We stayed one extra day in Las Vegas, because our next destination, Cedar City, Utah, was forecasting snow on the day of our scheduled arrival. We took advantage of the extra time to drive the short way to Hoover Dam.  The tour took us deep below the road (and the lake’s surface!).  photo(67)

The dam is a silent, soaring tribute to the thousands of nameless men who took the only job they could find in an unforgiving desert at the nadir of the American Dream.  In its vastness, it is reminiscent of the Grand Canyon’s capacity to short-circuit your depth perception with devilish and deadly ease. In its technical genius, and its sheer audacity in pulling the skirt tails of Mother Nature, it reminded me  of the Confederation Bridge, separating New Brunswick from Prince Edward Island, Canada.  photo(68)Monumental works of man that seem somehow to eyeball Mother Nature.

In the realm of sheer solidarity of national will, Hoover Dam and landing on the moon, for my money,  are the two biggies. The sad thing for me is that initiatives requiring that much across-the-board  support are impossible in my lifetime. And  impossible at the one time when we are really called on to face some really epic problems as–well–as astronauts on Spaceship Earth.

I should’ve checked on the Vegas odds while we were in town.  I hope my bet is wrong.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sprints and Marathons

Phoenix is a shimmering, simmering city in the Valley of the Sun.  Its weathercasters spend ten seconds on local weather, and then describe in gruesome detail the weather in the rest of the country.  Phoenicians will tell you its a dry heat, and it really only feels like the anteroom to hell for two-three months a year.

Thirty years ago, on the eve of the Los Angeles Summer Olympics, I left Phoenix to return to Maryland.  I’d been here almost four years, first a a house painter, then as a Front Office Manager at the Sheraton Scottsdale. Long story.

The day after we arrived in the Valley, we enjoyed a picnic lunch with Lauren, our transplanted cousin and niece, who unfortunately was flying east later in the day, for a funeral.

We also renewed acquaintance with Aunt Kathleen and Uncle Mark of Mesa, and with cousins Jason and Kim, and their very cool kids Alex and Max.

photo(40)When we are on the road, day after day, the five of us, there are moments when it is just so fine to see a  familiar face.  As we sat in Kim and Jason’s beautiful, giant toyroom-of-a-house, we all relished the complete normalcy of an evening IN.  photo(44) We have met up with long-lost relatives in restaurants, and it’s not the same.  Live and learn.

One thing to be wary of in our extended trip is the pace.  When it starts to feel like we are leaping from the car, snapping photos, and leaping back in, it’s probably time to slow down and take a campground day.  It is a tricky balance.  My tendency is to want to see it all, since “when will we be this close again?”

But six months is a marathon, not a sprint, and life in 192 square feet requires accommodations all around.  So we have been learning more about each other, as we’ve motored west, and we quietly often beam with pride at how the kids roll with the punches.   photo(45)They live in the present and speak with an honesty that often serves to instruct the “teachers.”

Cave City, Kentucky

First, to start the week, a big thank you to those who have recommended places-to-see so far.  Thanks to Bill C of Eldersburg, who suggested we stop in to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where the Oak Ridge Boys of Elvira fame take their name.  Bill recommended the American Museum of Science and Energy, where IMG_1566 we witnessed spectacles that stood our hair on end! Oak Ridge is the Secret City created to provide the enriched uranium for Big Boy and the fateful choices that brought World War II to its climactic conclusion.  Awe inspiring and spine chilling.

Thanks also to Jen’s friend Bev from Maryland who recommended Mammoth Cave.  We have a tour scheduled for 9 am today.  And we are now citizens of Central Time!

Thanks as well to Resa D  of Parker, CO, who suggested we visit Cade’s Cove in Great Smoky Mountain National Park. She suggested hiking, and we did photo(8), but the boys also love discovering their own fishing holes.  photo(9)

Thanks, very much, to Eileen O of Maryland, who suggested we take in Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg. Dollywood deserves its own post, so look for that in the next day or so.

It may just be coincidence, but I assume the town we’re in this morning gets its name from the nearby Mammoth Cave.  It is 27 degrees outside as I write, and in case you wondered, the campground shut off water just after we arrived yesterday afternoon so the pipes don’t freeze.

Because of our need for internet, for Jen’s work, and of course these vital posts, we are staying in campgrounds we don’t normally frequent. Of course, we’ve never had a 29-foot motorhome along either.  This is our second campground on the trip, and the second one that looks more like a drive in, for those who remember them, than  a park.

It’s really a flat expanse of grass squares dotting a crushed gravel drive, with a few picnic tables and fire rings (our site has neither), and a few trees that stand barely higher than the four-foot posts for the electrical and cable hook up. Yes, our kids have only ten channels to choose from.  Why, I remember a day…

But to its credit, it has a dog park where Shadow can run free if she can talk anyone into daring the bitter cold to walk her there.

 

 

Packing Up

We have a contract on our Autumn View Drive home, a plane ticket snow houseto Boise, ID, to pick up our new home-on-wheels,  and a dwindling list of reasons not to make the trip happen.  Did I mention I will really miss the ice and snow a lot? I have titled the scene here The Ice Pic.

Where the season started with a full bag of rock salt, looks like that  is one of the items we won’t have to find a home for.

The plan now is for the five of us to leave on March 14, 2014. Deciding what to ship to our new Florida home, knowing we won’t see the item until August (didn’t January seem like six months?) hasn’t troubled us.  Taking perfectly useable items to the Carroll County landfill has been the painful part, and one we’ve worked hard to avoid.

God bless Goodwill. They take a lot of our gently used stuff. As if anything leaving a house of three boys can be considered gently used.

Once, in desperation, I went out on Facebook to plead for someone to come get our stand-up Lester piano.  You will be pleased to know that in addition to informing friends and strangers that I just picked up my mail from the mailbox, I could also have given away seven more pianos! Yay Facebook!

Speaking of downsizing, in our next post, we are a looking for a home for members of our living, breathing family.  After much discussion, we decided to take all three children. The fish are frozen at the bottom of the pond, so they of necessity will convey.  But …well stayed tuned!