Here I go...

One Adventure After Another!
Showing posts with label nomad life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nomad life. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Carlsbad Caverns

I just realized that I didn't post photos of Carslbad Caverns!
Oh, it was a VERY cool trip!

I got in FREE with my America the Beautiful card.
If you pay $4 more (with the card) you can take a guided tour
to one of the rooms that is not open to the public.
I wanted to do that but I arrived at 8 am
and the first available tour wasn't until 2 pm,
and I knew I couldn't wait,
as I had to get to Ajo, Arizona that day.

Anyway... I have suggestions.

First - be there by 8 am when they open.
That way you can be one of the first in
and don't have to fight crowds.
(It was CRAZY crowded by the time I got back up top.)

Second,
walk down and take the elevator up.

The walk down isn't bad at all.
Yes, it's a bit steep in place,
but quite comfie most of the way down.
It looks like this, with lots of switchbacks,
and just a few steep places,
where you'll find handrails to hang on to:



Third, PLEASE do not take a flashlight
or a headlamp
You don't need it
and you'll blind other visitors with it.
There's plenty of light down there.

Here are a few photos.
I apologize, but I haven't really learned
to take good photos with this phone.
They don't do it justice at all.
This is one stop you won't want to miss!

The entrance


Lion's tails



Several pools in the caves, all from condensation


I did see these aliens too,
but they wouldn't speak to me!


I have a lot of other photos,
but they just don't do the caves justice.
Visit and see for yourself!
A great stop!

By the way,
if you're vanning,
you can sleep at the Walmart
instead of the State Park.
It's a lot closer.

Happy Trails!
Annie





Sunday, March 17, 2019

Finding Forts

fort
/fôrt/
noun
...a fortified building or strategic position.




Since I was a child,
I've always felt the need
to have a place of my own,
a fort.

When I was a little girl,
I'd travel deep into the orange grove 
near our house.
I would climb high up into a tree,
and build a tree fort,
using scraps of wood and cardboard,
a place where I could sit, alone,
with a view all around me for safety,
and think my thoughts
or go on adventures in my own head.


I had another fort I built in tall grass
under some lemon trees
in an empty lot behind our house.
That one had a hole under the a lemon tree
where I could store magazines
and jars of snacks.

Another fort was in the middle of a corn field.
Another, in my grandparents' garage.
Still another place I loved to be alone
was in abandoned homes in old "Japanese Town,'
in Armona, California. 
These were houses behind my Aunt Vena's home,
the sad remains of those unfortunate families
who had been put into interment camps
during WWII,
and who had never returned.
Those houses looked much like this one,
an Ashiodozan Mining Town. 


When I was older, a teenager,
though I could not lock my bedroom door,
I did have a bathroom with a door that locked.
I'd wait until the house was quiet,
go into that bathroom,
lock the door,
and climb out the window.
Then I'd walk under the light of the stars
to one of my private forts
where I felt safer
than in the house of my mother and stepfather.

Lying on my back,
I would gaze deep into the starry heavens.
I'd dream of freedom
from the shame and pain and sorrow
that was my life.
I'd make up stories of a happy me,
traveling, finding people who loved me,
having children who I would cherish,
and seeing all the wonderful places
I would read about
in my red Children's Encyclopedia.


As an older teenager,
I'd walk down the dusty road to the riverbank,
drop my clothes,
and swim across to an island,
where I could be alone all day.

As an adult,
I've fought my way through failed relationships,
always breathing a sigh of relief
when the husband 
was finally gone,
and I could be alone
in my own space,
safe.

Now, in the last half of my life,
I'm still looking for a fort,
a girl cave,
a place I can be alone with my thoughts,
a place of my own.

For me now,
it is my van,
my cozy little cave of metal on wheels.
I feel very safe inside,
and sleep like a baby.

I'm feeling it's not quite big enough, though.
I want a place I can stand up and cook,
walk around,
maybe a motorhome,
maybe an apartment if I can find one 
that I can afford.
But a place of my own,
where I can unpack my treasures,
do my art,
listen to my music,
watch my tv shows,
write my stories,
and continue the journey of my healing.

I've been catching up on my programs this week 
while in Desert Hot Springs. 
One of those is a wonderful series called "This is Us."



Generally, I think of these shows as mindless entertainment.
But a character in an episode this morning
 made a statement
that caused me to pause the show, 
rewind, 
and watch again,
over and over and over.

What she said struck a chord.

The woman was trying to explain to her boyfriend 
why she wasn't unpacking her boxes. 
They had decided to live together 
but she kept procrastinating the unpacking process. 
He felt frustrated that his living room 
(HIS living room!) 
was littered with packed cardboard boxes 
he had to walk around.

She said,

"I had 3 locks on my apartment door in Chicago,
bars on the windows,
not because I was actually worried about 
someone breaking in,
but peace of mind was taken from me.
It's a lot for me to give up
my own safe space,
more than it is for most people,
and the idea of giving that up 
why I have never lived with anyone before."

She was speaking of her childhood abuse,
and the importance of having a safe space,
where she could lock the doors and windows
and feel protected,
feel peace of mind.
A place of her OWN,
where the peace she treasured 
could be enjoyed.

A fort.

My mind was blown.
I felt I had found the answer 
to an important question
about my own habit of 
NEEDING a place of my own.

A place of PEACE.

And it felt good to know
I'm not the only one who feels this.

A kindred spirit expressed a truth to me today.
Maybe television isn't completely mindless
because at least one writer
knew the secret.

Healing can be found in the strangest places. . . 



Oh yeah,
there are OTHER reasons I like to be alone:


Happy Trails,
Annie

Monday, February 25, 2019

Route 66, Gallup New Mexico

It was late in the afternoon when I arrived in Gallup. 
I'm not sure what I was expecting, but the place is tiny.
I needed to find a campsite before dark, so I drove on through, figuring I'd go back to explore the next day or two. I was getting tight on cash and needed to find a place to hunker down for a week or two.  I found a campground not too far up into a canyon called Quaking Aspen, where the fee was only $5 and half of that for me with my federal pass.

I arrived and as I was looking for the pay envelope I saw a sign that said, "CAMPGROUND CLOSED SEPTEMBER 17 AM!"

Oh crap!  Really?  

Just as I was bemoaning my luck on this danged trip, a car with a sign, "CAMPGROUND HOST" pulled up.

I said, "Is the campground REALLY closing tomorrow???"

He nodded, and said, "And you may want to follow me to the next campground, because the host here says he's locking up as soon as he collects the envelopes in the morning. Last year, he locked a guy in!"

Sheesh!  Apparently the fellow had to use bolt cutters to get out of the campground. I didn't carry bolt cutters, so I followed him a mile or two up the road to another nice campground.  I had the pick of the place as there was only one other camper left. Really nice campground that I'll return to next season. However, it was also closing the next morning. Budget cuts, I guess?

So I parked for the night in this wonderful quiet place with pines and meadows, got a good night's sleep, and decided to head back to Desert Hot Springs next morning.   The Universe just didn't seem to be cooperating with my plans of finding a place to hang out a couple of weeks until the weather cooled in DHS.

I've learned to LISTEN to these signals from the Universe, and though it's over 100 degrees with humidity of 35% here today, I feel I made the right decision. I'll hang out here and paint and do water aerobics in the mornings, and continue my Route 66 travels possibly later in the season. At least I did make it across Arizona.


By the way, I stopped at this place just before crossing into New Mexico. It's on the North side of the highway and a grandmother there runs a little stand inside with the BEST tacos!

New Mexico looks like it will be gorgeous!

My nice campsite
As I was leaving I stopped in Gallup for breakfast and ran across this sign.
Maybe another clue from the Universe that I should get my butt home!
::laughing!:::



Happy Trails!
Annie

 GPS: 35.40581, -108.54017 for the campground



Painted Desert Route 66

The Petrified Forest and the Painted Desert are basically in the same park. You enter one from the south and one from the north. Both Visitor Centers are worth a stop, though the one at the southern end is better because they have a short trail where you can see petrified logs up close.

The Painted Desert was crazy spectacular!  I'm really happy I visited.   The colors were amazing; blues, purples, pinks, tans, just like someone took a paintbrush to the hills.  Beautiful.















There was a fellow with camels there - he was busy talking to a lady so I didn't stay to find out what his deal was, but the camels seemed to feel right at home ther ein the desert.











After a wonderful day exploring here,
I got back on the Highway and headed to Gallup, New Mexico.

Route 66 Petrified Forest

From Holbrook, I headed to the southern end of the Petrified Forest and Painted Desert.  The Petrified Forest is in the southern end of the park and the Painted Desert is in the northern end. If I had it to do again, I'd enter the Painted Desert at the northern tip right off Hightway 40/Route 66, but for some reason, the guidebook didn't say that was possible and I ended up driving the full length of the park 3 times. 

I parked at the lower end, right outside the park, in a small FREE Crystal Forest Shop campground run by tourist shop there.  The lady there was nice, and said as long as I had a toilet, I could park there free for up to 10 days. 

HOWEVER, for some weird reason (people without toilets?) the FLIES were CRAZY!  I'm talking 50 flies if I opened my van door for 2 minutes. I wasn't too happy about staying there, honestly, due to the flies. Otherwise, it would have been fine and I bet the stars would have been magnificent that night!

I left my ice chest and chair in my camping spot, the one under the big tree she suggested that had shade all day, and headed up the 20-something mile road to see the Petrified Forest, then the Painted Desert at the other end. Once I got up at the northern end of the park, I saw the sign that told me I could get back on Hwy 40 there!

I looked at the map and it was closer than going all the way around. If I'd not left my ice chest and chair, I could have just hopped onto the highway there, but the chair is special to me, so I drove back down to retrieve it. Then I drove back UP and stopped at the points I'd passed before due to the number of tourists in the parking lots. The park is self-guided, with pull-outs at the important points. It was pretty busy, so I'd passed some points, and was happy to have the opportunity to stop and see the ones I'd missed.
A beautiful specimen of petrified wood at the Visitor Center

Always look UP!
YIKES!








The best place to see the petrified logs up close is the Visitor Center Trail






Campsite is at  GPS: 34.79245, -109.890915

Route 66 - the JACKRABBIT!

Here It Is!
I arrived at the Jackrabbit, and met a couple from Eugene Oregon.
They were doing Route 66 in a convertible, and graciously offered to take my photo on the jackrabbit!







The shop was closed, so I got back on Route 66 and headed for Joseph City.