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    • on returning home
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  • Home
  • about ~ wander.essence ~
    • ~ the places i’ve been ~
    • ~ places i’ve been in the u.s.a. ~
  • Travel Destinations
    • America
      • Boston
      • Delaware
      • District of Columbia
        • Washington
      • Georgia
        • Atlanta
      • Maryland
      • New Jersey
        • Cape May
      • New York
        • Adirondacks
        • Buffalo
        • Niagara Falls
      • Pennsylvania
        • Pittsburgh
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
        • Nashville
      • Virginia
    • American Road Trips
      • Canyon & Cactus Road Trip
      • Florida Road Trip
        • Everglades
        • Fort Lauderdale
        • Florida Keys
        • Miami
        • St. Augustine
      • Four Corners Road Trip
        • Arizona
          • Monument Valley
          • Petrified Forest National Park
          • Sunset Crater National Monument
          • Walnut Canyon National Monument
          • Winslow
          • Wupatki National Monument
        • Colorado
          • Colorado National Monument
          • Colorado Towns
          • Great Sand Dunes National Park
          • Grand Junction
        • New Mexico
        • Utah
          • Arches National Park
          • Canyonlands
          • Navajo National Monument
          • Dead Horse Point State Park
          • Hovenweep National Monument
          • Moab
          • Valley of the Gods
          • Natural Bridges National Monument
      • Great Lakes Road Trip
        • Michigan
        • Minnesota
        • Wisconsin
      • Midwestern Triangle
        • Illinois
          • Carbondale
          • Murphysboro
        • Kentucky
          • Covington
          • Lexington
          • Louisville
        • Ohio
          • Cincinnati
      • Road Trip to Nowhere
        • Nebraska
        • North Dakota
        • South Dakota
      • Tex-New Mex Road Trip
        • Texas & New Mexico Road Trip
        • New Mexico
        • Texas
    • International Travel
      • Africa
        • african meanderings {& musings}
        • Egypt
          • Cairo
        • Ethiopia
        • Morocco
      • Asia
        • Cambodia
        • China
          • China Diaries
          • Guangxi Province
        • India
          • Rishikesh
          • Varanasi
        • Japan
          • Kyoto
        • Myanmar
        • Oman
          • a nomad in the land of nizwa
          • Nizwa
        • Singapore
        • South Korea
          • catbird in korea
        • Thailand
        • Turkey
          • Cappadocia
        • Vietnam
      • Central America
        • Costa Rica
        • El Salvador
        • Nicaragua
        • Panama
          • Bocas del Toro
          • Panama City
      • Europe
        • In Search of a Thousand Cafés
        • Croatia
          • Dalmatia
            • Istria
            • Dubrovnik
            • Plitvice Lakes National Park
            • Split
            • Zadar
            • Zagreb
        • Czech Republic
          • Český Krumlov
        • England
        • France
        • Greece
        • Hungary
          • Budapest
          • Esztergom
        • Iceland
        • Italy
          • Bergamo
          • Cinque Terre
          • The Dolomites
          • Florence
          • Rome
          • Tuscany
          • Venice
          • Verona
          • Via Francigena
        • Portugal
        • Spain
          • Camino de Santiago
            • packing list for el camino de santiago 2018
      • North America
        • Canada
          • The Maritimes
            • New Brunswick
            • Nova Scotia
            • Prince Edward Island
          • Ontario
      • South America
        • Colombia
        • Ecuador
          • Cuenca
          • Quito
    • how to make the most of a staycation
      • Coronavirus Coping
  • Imaginings
    • imaginings: the call to place
  • Travel Preparation
    • journeys: anticipation & preparation
  • Travel Creativity
    • on keeping a travel journal
    • on creating art from travels
      • Art Journaling
    • photography inspiration
      • Photography
    • writing prompts: prose
      • Prose
        • Fiction
        • Travel Essay
        • Travelogue
    • writing prompts: poetry
      • Poetry
  • On Journey
    • on journey: taking ourselves from here to there
  • Books & Movies
    • books | international a-z |
    • books & novels | u.s.a. |
    • books | history, spirituality, personal growth & lifestyle |
    • movies | international a-z |
    • movies | u.s.a. |
  • On Returning Home
    • on returning home
  • Annual recap
    • twenty-fifteen
    • twenty-eighteen
    • twenty-nineteen
    • twenty-twenty
    • twenty-twenty-one
    • twenty twenty-two
    • twenty twenty-three
    • twenty twenty-four
    • twenty twenty-five
  • Contact

wander.essence

wander.essence

Home from Morocco & Italy

Home sweet home!May 10, 2019
I'm home from Morocco & Italy. :-)

Italy trip

Traveling to Italy from MoroccoApril 23, 2019
On my way to Italy!

Leaving for Morocco

Casablanca, here I come!April 4, 2019
I'm on my way to Casablanca. :-)

Home from our Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving home from Lexington, KYMarch 6, 2019
Home sweet home from the Midwest. :-)

Leaving for my Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving to IndianaFebruary 24, 2019
Driving to Indiana.

Returning home from Portugal

Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!November 6, 2018
Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!

Leaving Spain for Portugal

A rendezvous in BragaOctober 26, 2018
Rendezvous in Braga, Portgual after walking the Camino de Santiago. :-)

Leaving to walk the Camino de Santiago

Heading to Spain for the CaminoAugust 31, 2018
I'm on my way to walk 790 km across northern Spain on the Camino de Santiago.

Home from my Four Corners Road Trip

Home Sweet Home from the Four CornersMay 25, 2018
Home Sweet Home from the Four Corners. :-)

My Four Corners Road Trip!

Hitting the roadMay 1, 2018
I'm hitting the road today for my Four Corners Road Trip: CO, UT, AZ, & NM!

Recent Posts

  • twenty twenty-five: nicaragua {twice}, mexico & seven months in costa rica {with an excursion to panama} December 31, 2025
  • the december cocktail hour: mike’s surgery, a central highlands road trip & christmas in costa rica December 31, 2025
  • top ten books of 2025 December 28, 2025
  • the november cocktail hour: a trip to panama, a costa rican thanksgiving & a move to lake arenal condos December 1, 2025
  • panama: the caribbean archipelago of bocas del toro November 24, 2025
  • a trip to panama city: el cangrejo, casco viejo & the panama canal November 22, 2025
  • the october cocktail hour: a trip to virginia, a NO KINGS protest, two birthday celebrations, & a cattle auction October 31, 2025
  • the september cocktail hour: a nicoya peninsula getaway, a horseback ride to la piedra del indio waterfalls & a fall bingo card September 30, 2025
  • the august cocktail hour: local gatherings, la fortuna adventures, & a “desfile de caballistas”  September 1, 2025
  • the july cocktail hour: a trip to ometepe, nicaragua; a beach getaway to tamarindo; & homebody activities August 3, 2025
  • the june cocktail hour: our first month in costa rica June 30, 2025
  • a pura vida year in costa rica June 12, 2025
  • the may cocktail hour: final wrap up, a wedding & leaving for costa rica June 2, 2025

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the agony & the odyssey…in search of “silver” sand (& ruminations on identity)

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 24, 2018

This is a story of a girl who, entranced by various articles and books about a “silver sand beach” on the south coast of Korea, determines to get there, come hell or high water or interminable bus rides.  This poor bedazzled (befuddled?) girl has been dreaming about this place since she first read the article put out by the Official Site of Korea Tourism: “Twelve Beaches Worth Visiting in the Summer.”  She even went so far as to find verification of this article in her trusty Moon Handbook which sang the praises of this beach: “Sangju Beach is one of the finest beaches along the southern coast of Korea.”  It goes on to say: “This two-kilometer-long crescent of silky sand nestles into a small cove protected by rocky promontories at each cusp and a diminutive island at its opening.”

Many of her friends thought this girl to be crazy, enamored as she was with the idea of this place. But, female Don Quixote that she is, she would not let go her fantasy. Weekend after weekend through the summer of 2010, as her plans were foiled by rain and forecasts of rain and imminent clouds and other untimely inconveniences, she kept that dream in her heart until happy skies were forecast.

The girl embarks on this odyssey one Saturday morning in early September. A day forecast to be sunny and 90 degrees. She leaves her tiny dust-filled apartment at 6:20 am. She walks 5 blocks to metro, takes the metro to Dongdaegu, where she then takes a bus to Masan, where she takes a bus to Namhae, where she takes a bus to Sangju Beach. All told, this journey takes her 7 hours for what should be a 3-hour drive in a car.

Her plan is to spend the last weekend of summer lounging on this mythical beach, sleeping and swimming and reading a book she’s brought along, The Black Book by Turkish author Orhan Pamuk.  She’s already much of the way through this book, and though it’s a deep and dense book, not your typical light beach read, she is into it enough now that it will keep her from being bored or lonely in her journey.

On the bus, she waits with the anticipation of a child to catch a glimpse of, and drive across (oh, unbelief),  the Namhae suspension bridge over the Noryangjin Strait between the mainland and the island of Namhae.  She is surprisingly unimpressed by this bridge that is supposed to be Korea’s version of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.  But crosses over it she does until she’s on Namhae-do, land of mountain bulges, highly cultivated farmland and ocean waters.

After being tossed off the bus at a spot where no beach of any sort is visible, she schleps along with her bag into the speck of a town, looking for a hotel, and finds a Korean-style room for 30,000 won (~$27).

Korean-style means no bed, no furniture, and in this case, no sink. Only a red plastic washtub for a “sink”, a bunch of quilts for a bed, a nice TV with all Korean-language stations, and a small refrigerator that is not cold. The hotel proprietor also generously gives her two small hand towels, the norm in Korea. Koreans apparently don’t believe in or have never been introduced to large bath towels.

After dropping her bag and changing into her bathing suit, she ventures out to her treasured destination. On the road, she is accosted by two older Korean men, one of whom rolls down the window of his car and, spewing food out of his mouth that clings stubbornly to his cheek, asks where she is from. She says America, and he asks where she is going and then motions for her to get into the back seat which is piled high with stuff as if he’s a homeless person who lives in his car. She waves him off and says, I’m going to the beach! And turns on her heel and walks away.

The season is over at this beach; it’s sparsely populated but quite lovely. The girl is a little mystified as she is unable to find any “silver” sand. She realizes, much too late, that she has been duped. But, determined to enjoy this place she has fought so hard for, she settles in on a Korean aluminum foil-type mat, applies her sunscreen in a sad attempt to save her already sun-damaged skin, and lies down to nap.

After getting thoroughly bored with the napping, she gets up and goes for a swim after struggling through tangles of seaweed at the shoreline. The water is refreshing and kids are squealing and people are walking around with hats and long sleeves and umbrellas over their heads. She floats, she swims, she lingers. She goes back to her mat and pulls out her book.

The Black Book is a dense novel about a Turkish man whose detective- novel-reading wife left him.  The book has layers and layers of stories about Istanbul, a blending of ancient history and contemporary (1980s) life. There is a famous newspaper columnist, Celal, whose columns make up every other chapter of the book.  Galip suspects his wife may have run off with this columnist, who is actually related to both him and his wife (!).  Galip slowly starts to take on Celal’s identity. It’s a difficult book, but this girl, our heroine, our wanna-be Don Quixote, has just been to Turkey and fell in love with it and the book takes her back.

Funny, she thinks, how various books have become intertwined with places or times in her life.  For instance, at one point in this girl’s life, she went on her honeymoon to Islamorada, one of the Florida Keys, with her first husband.  She spent the entire honeymoon reading The Thorn Birds; while reading this book,  it became evident to her that she would never find in her marriage the passionate love that was so palpable (yet doomed) between Ralph De Briccassart and Meggie Cleary.  Ah, the destructive power of books, as her first marriage fell apart seven years later in a fizzle of non-passion.

fullsizeoutput_15502

me reading The Black Book in my Korean hotel room

The Black Book fills her mind here at Sangju Beach with questions about her own identity, questions that can only be answered by stories in her own life. It gets her mind working, probing about in too many dark alleys & dusty corners.  She begins to think about her physical identity.  For one thing, how can she really see herself?  She can never see herself, not really.  She can look in a mirror, but the instant she finds herself in a mirror, she immediately puts on her best face; she corrects her slouch, she smiles to bring her hangdog face to life.  So is she really the person she sees in the mirror, this 2-dimensional person with the fake smile and upright posture?  Or is she the uncorrected slouchy version of herself who goes about her daily routines looking neither happy nor sad, neither here nor there?  She can see herself in a camera, but once she knows she’s in front of a camera, she immediately smiles, or puts on her best face, showcases her best angle.  In front of the camera, she becomes a star, someone who steps out of her own under-dazzling skin.  Heaven forbid the photo turns out badly, showing her at an unflattering angle or with an ugly expression.  She always deletes these pictures, which no human eye will ever see.  Of course she is fooling only herself, as everyone else in her world sees her all the time in these unflattering poses.

Upon thinking these thoughts, she attempts to take some pictures of herself by setting the 10-second self-timer. But, in this blazing sun, the 10-second-timer lets in too much light and the picture turns out to be a burst of whiteness with an albino person it in. She tries a couple of times with the same result and finally gives up, resorting to taking a picture of her feet beside her sand-covered flip-flops.

She goes back to reading her book. A shadow of a person falls over her mat and when she glances up, she sees a stick-thin white guy with a reddish-blond beard and mustache and a bandana around his head. He is standing right beside her mat gazing out at the water. He stands there for quite a long time without looking at her. When he turns around for just an instant, she smiles at him, but he doesn’t smile. With absolutely no expression, he turns around and walks away on the beach, disappearing like an erased pencil mark on the horizon.

Weird. She’s taken aback and thinks more about her physical self, this self that she can never really see. The only other way she can see herself, she thinks, is in other people’s eyes. So, she wonders, what did he see? Did he see just an older woman, which is what our “girl” heroine really is, despite the fact that she still thinks of herself as simply a “girl?” Did he immediately discount her because she is older, as many people do? Or did he find her horribly scary and unattractive? She wonders if she terrified him, although he didn’t look frightened. Or maybe he didn’t see her at all, just looked right through her as if she were invisible. She is baffled. Especially as there are so few Westerners in this part of the world she would think that when they find one another, they should at least smile, if nothing else.

While reading her book, which probes questions of identity quite extensively, she thinks about how difficult it is to truly be herself. Who is she anyway? Is she the person who, when she is in the company of her best friend Jayne or her crazy friend Lisa, becomes a suddenly hilarious person? She and these friends play off each other and she is brought to life as a comedian. To these people, her identity is crazy and fun. Or is she the person who, in other people’s company, becomes quiet and boring? Is she the person who in yet different people’s company, becomes defensive and irritable? How can she really even be herself when herself varies with each person she encounters? Sometimes she likes herself a lot, enjoys her own company, but other times, she hates who she is. Which one is she? The one she loves or the one she hates?

In the book, she reads about a Crown Prince who, in an effort to truly become himself, decides that too many books have filled his head with other people’s ideas. He is dismayed to realize that the thoughts in his head are really these writers’ thoughts and not his own. So he burns all of his books and goes for years without reading. These writers’ thoughts continue to permeate his being. It takes him a long time, a strong effort, to remove the thoughts from his mind. He is never really able to get rid of them. And when at times he feels he can clear his head of these thoughts, he realizes he has no thoughts of his own.

The Crown Prince even shuns women because when he finds one he likes, thoughts of her take over his mind. So, he deserts his wife and children and goes to live alone in a hunting lodge for 22 years. All in a quest to “be himself.”

So, this girl wonders, after reading and reading hundreds of pages all weekend long, on the bus, on the beach, in her bedless room, and on the bus again, after being totally engrossed in this book and Orhan Pamuk’s thoughts, if she is losing her own identity and becoming Orhan Pamuk himself. Who is she, this girl who fancies herself a Passionate Nomad, a Don Quixote? It is all terribly confusing.

After all this contemplating, the girl leaves the beach and showers in her little hotel room. She is unable to wash her hair, because after hauling along her hair dryer on every single trip she’s ever taken — only to find a hair dryer provided by the hotel — she didn’t bring her hair dryer this time. This hotel doesn’t have one. Oh well, she’s on a beach vacation; what the heck if she’s dirty? This can be her identity this weekend, a dirty, ruminating, well-read vagabond.

So, what is the upshot? About identity, our heroine doesn’t know the answer. She only believes that her own identity is still in flux, constantly evolving, ever-changing. It is a composite of all the books she has ever read, all the interactions she has ever had, all the people she has ever loved and hated, all the places she has ever been, all the hobbies she has ever pursued, all the aches and pains and heartbreak she has ever felt, all the happiness and sadness and anger…. as well as that blob of gray matter that is in her rather large head. Plus. Many more things known and unknown, things remembered and forgotten, things experienced and only dreamed about. Who is she? She wonders if she will ever really know.

006

Namhae-do

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Namhae suspension bridge

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Namhae-do

Sanju Beach
Sanju Beach
Hotel room in Sangju Beach
Hotel room in Sangju Beach
Sparse grove of trees
Sparse grove of trees
colorful beach paraphernalia
colorful beach paraphernalia

Sangju Silver Sand Beach

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Sangju Silver Sand Beach

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feet & flip flops

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Sanju Silver Sand Beach

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Sangju Silver Sand Beach

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Sangju Silver Sand Beach

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Above Sangju

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Sangju Silver Sand Beach

*Saturday, September 4, 2010*

**********************

“PROSE” INVITATION: I invite you to write up to a 2,000-word post on your own blog about a recently visited particular destination (not journeys in general). Concentrate on any intention you set for your prose.  In this case, my intentions for this adventure were as follows:

  • Write about a book you’re currently reading. How does it inform your journey?
  • Write about the journey in the third person, to remove yourself a bit from the story. Have fun with it!

It doesn’t matter whether you write fiction or non-fiction for this invitation.  You can either set your own writing intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: prose & poetry.  (This page is a work in process.) You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Monday, August 13 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, August 14, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired.

  • Jude, of Travel Words, wrote a piece directly from her travel journal about Carouge, Geneva’s Italianate district.
    • Impressions
  • Jo, of Restless Jo, wrote fondly and vividly of her recent trip to Poland and her deep love for her Polish family.
    • REMINISCENCES FROM POLAND, 2
  • Pauline, of Living in Paradise…, wrote of some wonderful memories surrounding the town of Maleny and her adventurous backpacking years.
    • Down memory lane in Maleny…

Thanks to all of you who wrote prosaic posts following intentions you set for yourself.  🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Arches National Park
  • Four Corners Road Trip

the delicate arch hike at arches national park

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 22, 2018

We entered Arches National Park just before noon, after having driven from Grand Junction and the scenic route along the Colorado River.  After sitting in line at the park entrance for about 15 minutes, we climbed to the top of the mesa using switchbacks along a steep road.  We didn’t spend any time at the Visitor’s Center because we were anxious to begin exploring, so I told Mike we’d have to come back down by 5:00 so I could get my cancellation stamp in my Passport book for the day. He agreed, but later wasn’t too pleased about it!

First, we came upon a group of monoliths including the Courthouse Towers Viewpoint, the Tower of Babel, Sheep Rock and the Three Gossips.

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Courthouse Towers, with Tower of Babel behind

Three Gossips
Three Gossips
Tower of Babel
Tower of Babel
Arches National Park
Arches National Park

I love what is called the Petrified Dunes Viewpoint; the landscape of what looks like sand dunes is actually stone.  In the distance we can see the snow-covered La Sal Mountains.

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La Sal Mountains viewed from the Petrified Dunes Viewpoint

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Petrified Dunes Viewpoint

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La Sal Mountains viewed from the Petrified Dunes Viewpoint

At the 128-foot high Balanced Rock, the caprock of the hard Slick Rock Member of the Entrada Sandstone is perched upon a pedestal of mudstone. This softer Dewey Bridge Member of the Carmel Foundation weathers more quickly than the resistant rock above. Eventually, the faster-eroding Dewey Bridge will cause the collapse of Balanced Rock.

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Balanced Rock

Cliffrose & Balanced Rock
Cliffrose & Balanced Rock
Balanced Rock
Balanced Rock
Cliffrose
Cliffrose
Near Balanced Rock
Near Balanced Rock
Balanced Rock
Balanced Rock
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John Wesley Wolfe settled at the Wolfe Ranch in the late 1800s with his oldest son Fred.  A nagging leg injury from the Civil War prompted John to move west from Ohio, looking for a drier climate. He chose this tract of more than 100 acres along Salt Wash for its water and grassland, enough for a few cattle.

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Corral at Wolfe Ranch

The Wolfes built a one-room cabin, a corral, and a small dam across Salt Wash.  For nearly a decade, they lived alone on the remote ranch.

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Wolfe Ranch

In 1906, John’s daughter Flora Stanley, her husband and their children moved to the ranch.  Shocked at the primitive conditions, Flora convinced her father to build a new cabin with a wood floor – the cabin that sits here today.

The reunited family weathered a few more years in Utah and in 1910 returned to Ohio. John Wolfe died on October 22, 1913, in Etna, Ohio, at the age of 84.

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Wolfe Ranch

The strenuous Delicate Arch Trail begins at Wolfe Ranch, crosses a bridge near Salt Wash, and continues up a long stretch of open slickrock to Delicate Arch. The trail also winds through an area full of chert – a hard, shiny rock used by Native Americans for tools and weapons – and around a short ledge, hugging a steep cliff.

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starting up the Delicate Arch Trail

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slickrock on the Delicate Arch Trail

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steps carved into the slickrock

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looking back down on the parking lot

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Mike on the Delicate Arch Trail

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the Delicate Arch Trail looking down to the parking lot

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Along the Delicate Arch Trail – the La Sal Mountains

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gnarled juniper along the Delicate Arch trail

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more gnarled juniper

After climbing what seems like an eternity up the slickrock, we now walk along a ledge with a steep drop-off.  The ledge is to the right in the photo below.

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The Delicate Arch Trail – the ledge we walked shown to the right

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canyon below the ledge at Delicate Arch

Delicate Arch, an isolated remnant of a bygone fin, stands on the brink of a canyon, with the dramatic La Sal Mountains as a backdrop.

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Delicate Arch

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Delicate Arch

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the carved out stone around Delicate Arch

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Delicate Arch

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the canyon below the ledge

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me with my gnarled juniper

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walking back down

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close up of rock

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salt flats

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textured rock

The Delicate Arch Trail is considered a difficult trail, as it has no shade and some exposure to heights.  Elevation change is 480 feet (146 meters).  We followed rock cairns on the steep slickrock slope and the trail leveled out toward the top of the rock face.  Just before you reach Delicate Arch, the trail traverses a rock ledge for about 200 yards (183 meters).

We actually walked 3.65 miles over 2 hours and we were quite exhausted after all of it.  Some parts, especially along the ledge, were quite scary.

After the hike, we drove past several more viewpoints and then, before we could do our last hike at Park Avenue, I insisted that we drive back down to the Visitor’s Center to get my cancellation stamp for today!

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my stamps in the National Parks passport

*Tuesday, May 8, 2018*

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: A Tall Ships Treat.

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  • American Road Trips
  • Arizona
  • Four Corners Road Trip

🎶 standing on a corner in winslow, arizona 🎶

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 19, 2018

Winslow, Arizona’s claim to fame was firmly established in 1972 when the Eagles sang “Take it Easy,” which includes the line “standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona.”  The Standin’ on the Corner Park features a life-sized bronze statue of a balladeer (AKA, Easy), a flatbed Ford, and a mural that depicts the lyrics of the popular rock ballad. The park, built by the Standin’ on the Corner Foundation, was built in 1999.

Well, I’m a standing on a corner
in Winslow, Arizona
and such a fine sight to see
It’s a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed
Ford slowin’ down to take a look at me

The music to the song was written by Glen Frey of the Eagles, and the lyrics were written by his good friend Jackson Browne.  Apparently there really was a girl in a flatbed Ford.

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“It’s a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed Ford slowin’ down to take a look at me”

Renowned artist John Pugh is the creator of the trompe l’oeill style mural that graces the brick wall.

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“Standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona”

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“Standin’ on a corner”

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“Take it Easy”

The bronze statue of the balladeer was made by sculptor Ron Adamson, who began his sculpting in Libby, Montana.

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“Standin’ on the corner”

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Winslow cowboy

U.S. Route 66 was originally routed through the city.  When Interstate 40 was built north of Winslow after 1977, it replaced U.S. Route 66 in its entirety.

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Route 66 in Winslow, AZ

The booming railroad town of Winslow was born here 130 years ago. The town is named either for Edward F. Winslow, president of St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad, or prospector Tom Winslow.  The Lorenzo Hubbell Trading Post Building has been restored and is now the “home” of the Winslow Chamber of Commerce/Visitor Center.

 

Lorenzo Hubbel Company Trading Post & Museum
Lorenzo Hubbel Company Trading Post & Museum
Inside the Winslow Visitor Center
Inside the Winslow Visitor Center
Winslow Visitor Center
Winslow Visitor Center
bank building
bank building
Root beer floats
Root beer floats
R. M. Bruchman Indian Trader
R. M. Bruchman Indian Trader
Snowdrift Perfect Shortening
Snowdrift Perfect Shortening

*********************

“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20 photos (fewer is better) and to write less than 350-400 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, August 1 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, August 2, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, every first and third Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Candy, of London Traveller, wrote a beautiful and informative post with gorgeous photos of a special church and enclosure in Brittany.
    • The Church of St Melar in Locmelar, Brittany
  • Carol, of The Eternal Traveller, posts some square shots of roofs throughout the Australian capital cities.
    • Cityscape
  • Jo, of Restless Jo, has a beautiful photo essay of the Tall Ships Race in Sunderland.
    • Jo’s Monday Walk: A Tall Ships Treat
  • Anabel, of Glasgow Gallivanter, has beautiful photos of the canals of Amsterdam.
    • Amsterdam: the canals

Thanks to all of you who shared posts on the “photography” invitation. 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
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(on journey) chapter 2: missouri as it seemed {part 2}

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 18, 2018

This is the second half of chapter 2 of my novel-in-progress.  This will be the last section I’ll be posting online. The rest I will complete privately and eventually try to publish or self-publish (after lots of revision!). 🙂

These are the first three sections:

(on journey) chapter 1: on borrowed time {part 1}
chapter 1: on borrowed time {part 2}
chapter 2: missouri as it seemed {part 1}

**************************

*Missouri*

Finally at 1:30, Mykaela and Atsushi crossed into Missouri, another red Trump-supporting state. They were in the middle of the Mississippi River when they crossed, at least according to the GPS. Atsushi looked up and read the symbols: Flower: Hawthorn, also known as “red haw” or “wild haw.” Bird: Bluebird. Gamebird: Bobwhite Quail. Insect: Honeybee.

They were quiet as they drove past Florissant, across the Missouri River, past Wentzville, Hannibal, Schnuck’s Grocery Chain.

Carrie Underwood sang “Dirty Laundry:” All the Ajax in the world ain’t gonna clean your dirty laundry.  Mykaela thought how simple it would be if Emre would cheat on her, if only he had some dirty laundry. She could just leave him, without any qualms. But how could she leave him when he was hurting so much, so devastated by Szonja’s suicide? He wasn’t the same person she’d married, that was for sure, and she’d never felt lonelier than she had for the last nine years, especially as it had dawned on her over the years that Emre had no interest in getting better.

Shaking thoughts of Emre from her head, she asked Atsushi, “How did you meet Chiaki?”

“My band played a concert in college. A friend of mine came to help us set up and Chiaki came along. She loved our music. After the concert, I took her to my room and I sang John Denver’s ‘Sweet Sweet Life:’ Sleep pretty darling, do not cry, and I will sing a lullaby, and she cried to the words.” He spoke with tenderness and Mykaela could tell the memory transported him to that blissful moment. “How did you meet Emre?”

“He was a consular officer at the Hungarian Embassy in Washington. I went with an International Group to every embassy party we could find.  At a concert in his embassy, I was hovering over the snack table, gobbling down crackers slathered with Liptauer, this very addictive, paprika-flavored cheese spread. I couldn’t stop eating it and he thought my addiction to it amusing. He was quite older than me, 16 years, and he’d been all over the world.  He’d been married before, had a daughter, and seemed so sure of himself, so rugged and handsome, with dark thick hair and dark skin, and he had a wry sense of humor. He was more cosmopolitan, more cultured, than anyone I’d ever met.”

Mykaela paused, thinking about the husband she fell in love with.  Emre had been most at home in cultures not his own, and he was fascinated by urban and rural homes that people had abandoned for one reason or the other. He loved any kind of ruin. His parents had had to flee their home during 1956, when he was just three years old, during the national uprising; his father was one of the protestors demanding the Soviets withdraw; he and the other rebels were crushed by the Soviets, and soon killed. Emre had survived with his mother and two sisters. He still had a sense of humor, even after such a harrowing childhood.

It was Szonja’s death that ruined him.  It made Mykaela sad to think of it. Now Emre was overcome by gloom, much like that movie they’d watched together on one of their first dates: Gloomy Sunday. The worst thing though wasn’t his overwhelming gloom, but his failure to engage, with her or with anyone.

On the long straight road leading away from St. Louis, Mykaela thought she’d never seen a more ugly corridor. Suburban sprawl for miles and miles: Kohl’s, Bob Evans, Ross, and every other cheap chain in existence.

Signs about religion got to Mykaela more than anything. Real Christians Forgive Like Jesus. She did agree with that, but that wasn’t how most evangelical Christians behaved these days.  She mused about how much she had really forgiven Emre. Had she forgiven him for falling into his bottomless hole of despair, and had she forgiven him for his emotional abandonment of her?

The green-field landscape dipped and rose slightly around them. Two billboards, in succession, near High Hill, Missouri:

EVERYONE THAT IS FOR ABORTION

HAS ALREADY BEEN BORN

“Do you think a woman be allowed to choose abortion?” Mykaela asked.

“I think so, as long as the man agrees. It’s a decision for two.”

They passed Mark Twain Lake, New Florence, Williamsburg. And then another series of billboards:

ROAD TRIP TRADITION – OZARKLAND – FUDGE

CHOCOLATE HEAVEN – ROAD TRIP CALORIES DON’T COUNT

“Should we stop for chocolate?” she asked.

“If you like.” He seemed unenthusiastic, so she continued on. She didn’t need it anyway.

The land was barely changing around them, flat farmland but still some groves of trees, and slow gradual climbs. Mykaela missed Virginia’s beautiful rolling hills, green fields and tall broad leaf trees, its varied landscape.

More glaring billboards scarred the landscape: LARRY’S BOOTS & APPAREL. PASSIONS ADULT BOUTIQUE. ROCK GARDEN ANTIQUE BARN. CLUB VOGUE – GENTLEMAN’S CLUB. ARTICHOKE ANNIE’S ANTIQUES. SATIN STITCHES SEWING & EMBROIDERY.

Among more redbuds were signs for the 25th Annual Testicle Festival. Mykaela couldn’t resist her own curiosity, so she when they pulled off at the next rest area, she Googled it: “Olean Testicle Festival to celebrate 25th anniversary,” said the headline in the News Tribune.

She told Atsushi they’re breaded and deep fried cattle testicles. Apparently they also come from lamb, bison and — in Olean’s case — turkey.

“Testicles, what does it mean?” Atsushi asked.

“They’re the male glands; it’s how you reproduce. They produce sperm and testosterone.” Atsushi still looked confused, so she pointed to her crotch and said, “You know, the male parts.”

He laughed. His laughter was rare, but when he laughed she liked the musical sound of it.   “They have a festival for that?”

“I guess so. I’ve never heard of such a thing. It’s crazy.”

Redbuds continued to follow them as they crossed Missouri. Camping World RVs and Xpress Liquor & Smokes beckoned. Jose Jalapeños offered Mexican food and Cracker Barrel promised Mom-approved Meatloaf. Huge billboards lined the road for wineries, with bold lettering in brash colors. Mykaela thought how Virginia’s wineries advertised themselves with class and discretion, on blue signs with unobtrusive white letters. Farm equipment suppliers offered their wares: Bobcat with its compact loaders and excavators. Sydenstricker John Deere with its tractors, combines, windrowers and balers gleaming in yellow and green.

It was a long slog through Missouri, and Mykaela wasn’t impressed. Mykaela and Atsushi sang together with Ben Harper on the playlist, Always have to steal my kisses from you, and Mykaela wondered fleetingly what it might be like to kiss Atsushi. It didn’t matter; he seemed to be irretrievably in love with his wife, even despite her alleged “obesity.” She probably wasn’t even obese, at least not in American terms. Japanese obesity was rare in Japan, so what he called obesity was probably just plumpness. Besides, she was married to Emre, and they had been happy once. He was the father of their children, well, sort of; at least the father who raised them if not their biological father.

They sped by signs for Lake Lotawana and Lake Tapawingo. Odessa. Boonville. Prairie Home.

Blake Shelton sang in “Sangria,” We’re buzzing like that no vacancy sign out front, as they passed the Lion’s Den Adult Superstore. At the same time, they passed a billboard: BUZZED DRIVING IS DRUNK DRIVING – DON’T CHANCE IT. Fireworks could be bought at PYRO CITY and at FIREWORKS SUPERSTORE.

Mykaela wondered, with the suggestive lyrics about buzzing and the signs — adult stores, drunkenness, and fireworks — whizzing past, if she could ever feel sparks with Atsushi.  He seemed so mild-mannered, she couldn’t imagine it. He didn’t seem like the kind of man who could be ruled by passion. She didn’t know if she even had it in her herself.

They passed eateries and gas stations – DQ, Stuckey’s, Valero – and towns with names such as Sedalia, Houstonia, Knob Noster. Giant red and yellow irrigation sprinklers reached across the fields.

They passed a sign that promised: SUICIDE IS PREVENTABLE. Mykaela thought how it really wasn’t, especially if a bystander didn’t know it was coming, or the person was addicted to drugs and liable to do anything. How Szonja, before the heroin, had played the flute and loved her two cats, and had been the gentlest of girls, yet she had gotten in with the wrong people. While high one day, she leaped off the scaffolding around the 72-meter-high dome of Esztergom Basilica, holding hands with her perpetually disgruntled boyfriend, as if they could fly.

They continued on past Grain Valley, Buckner, RV Central, Brass Armadillo Antique Mall. Missouri, as it seemed, was yin and yang all at once, brash and boring, against abortion but full of adult superstores, crowded with speeding eighteen-wheelers and slow-moving farm equipment, offering secret gentlemen’s clubs and over-the-top fireworks stores. It was the most boring landscape she’d ever seen, and the most disturbing. Mykaela wouldn’t be happier when they could finally leave it behind.

*Kansas*

It wasn’t until 6:00 when they finally reached Kansas City, Kansas, their destination for the night. They moved into their separate rooms in a Comfort Inn on the outskirts of the city, with only fast food options in the vicinity.

Over dinner at Taqueria Arandas, a low-key fast food Mexican joint, Mykaela and Atsushi enjoyed Coronas with limes stuck into the bottle necks. They talked about all the people they’d encountered during the day, people young and old, whose cars were packed with all their belongings, heading west.

“It’s the American dream, to head west,” Mykaela said. “For the young ones, I bet they’re heading to Colorado where cannibas is legal.”

Mykaela’s jeep looked like these packed cars as well. The trunk was filled with her and Atsushi’s suitcases, jackets, hiking shoes, bags of art supplies, and Atsushi’s guitar, which he’d brought all the way from Japan. In the back seat were Lena’s things all jumbled: a lamp with a faceted glass orb at its base, two mid-century modern rose-colored chairs, a bulletin board filled with Lena’s hodge-podge of recipes and lists and food photos, and a pile of her older cookbooks. Lena’s butterfly collection and her lacrosse stick were also jammed in with the rest.

At dinner, Mykaela asked Atsushi to tell her about Jiro. While she ate her Camaronesa la Diabla, he told her about his son, while his taco salad sat untouched.

He told her Jiro loved a game called Kaodokus; it was similar to Sudoku but used partial smiley faces instead of digits. The smileys could have three possible shapes and three possible mouths, for a total of nine unique combinations.

Mykaela didn’t understand even Sudoku as she was horrible with numbers, so this smiley face version didn’t make sense, but she didn’t interrupt for an explanation.

Atsushi said that Jiro would sit absorbed for hours in the game, especially when he was out in his little greenhouse. He always took along matcha, a hot green tea, and he loved anything flavored with matcha:  mochi, or glutinous rice cakes, soba noodles, green tea ice cream, matcha lattes and other Japanese sweets. Jiro could entertain himself in solitude for hours, but he also loved to play basketball with the neighborhood friends. He liked to pull pranks on his friends, telling them that a typhoon was coming or that he heard they were in trouble with the school principal. Sometimes he put on his jacket backwards in class because it got laughs from his friends.

After a few minutes of quiet, Atsushi admitted it saddened him that he had always worked long hours during Jiro’s childhood.  He had barely seen him except to tuck him in at night and sing his favorite John Denver songs or Warabe uta, traditional Japanese songs much like nursery rhymes.

Mykaela ordered a second Corona and nursed it as the listened to Atsushi.  She yearned to sense his heartbreak, but it seemed elusive.  He seemed to her a solitary, impenetrable  man, no more conscious of himself than a cloud floating through the sky. She could sense at moments a shadow self to him, but it dissipated as soon as it was within reach. She wondered if he could ever be truly knowable.

She pulled the lime out of her Corona, sucked on it and puckered her lips, then downed the rest of the beer.  She hoped it would put her into a sleep so deep, she wouldn’t have room for dreams.

A rest area in Missouri
A rest area in Missouri
A rest area in Missouri
A rest area in Missouri
A rest area in Missouri
A rest area in Missouri

Missouri: endless farmland and suburban sprawl.

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farm operation in Missouri

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rest area in Missouri

**********************

“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

In this case, my journey to Colorado from Virginia, where I began my Four Corners trip, took three full days of driving.  Here, I continued writing the first draft of a fictional road trip novel. This post is the second half of chapter 2, which covers day 2 of the road trip.  The actual sights seen along the road trip are real, but the characters, conversations, and events are fictional. My writing goal for this road trip was to write a novel about the road trip keeping in mind the following:

  • “Bring a character to…” Invent characters and take them along on the journey, keeping a journal from the main character’s point of view. After the trip, write a novel or novella of the trip putting those characters into the tale (in the vein of Jim Harrison’s The English Major, and inspired by a creative writing assignment to keep a journal for a fictional character).
  • Pick random titles from poems or short stories as titles for each chapter and let those titles inform the tale.

Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, August 14 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, August 15, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be my last post of my novel-in-progress as it will take me a good year to write and will go through many iterations. My next post will be on my actual journey to Buffalo and Niagara Falls. This will be non-fiction.

This will be an ongoing invitation, once on the third Wednesday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

 

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  • Great Falls
  • Hikes & Walks
  • Riverbend Park

riverbend to great falls: the bluebell path

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 15, 2018

While walking one day in early April with the Camino group, someone told me that Riverbend Park was a great place to walk because of the bluebells in bloom. Riverbend is a Fairfax County Park that sits beside the Potomac River upstream from Great Falls.  On this beautiful spring day, we walked through the bluebells downriver to Great Falls and beyond, giving me a 5.38 mile hike.

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bluebells along the Potomac

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path through the bluebells

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bluebells

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bluebells

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trees along the river

exposed roots
exposed roots
following the path
following the path
bluebells
bluebells
gnarled trunk
gnarled trunk

Across the river, we saw some eagle nests. I wish we’d had binoculars.

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eagle’s nest along the Potomac River

Honey locusts, native to Virginia, have multi-textured bark.

bark on the Honey Locust
bark on the Honey Locust
Honey Locust tree
Honey Locust tree

We continued on toward Great Falls, where we stopped at the overlook.

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leaning tree

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daffodils

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Great Falls

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trees along the path

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trees

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fungi

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some erupting buds

*April 8, 2018*

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: THAT BRIDGE, AND BEYOND.

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  • American Road Trips
  • Fiction
  • Four Corners Road Trip

chapter 2: missouri as it seemed {part 1}

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 10, 2018

*Indiana*

Mykaela settled into a nubby sofa in the hotel lobby promptly at 8:00, as they’d agreed the night before.  Atsushi was nowhere to be seen.  Just outside the front door, she finally found him smoking a cigarette and talking to a burly pony-tailed man. Atsushi was diminutive compared to the man, whose voice was raspy and deep. Mykaela didn’t know if she should interrupt the conversation, so she stood aside, hoping Atsushi would spot her. Finally, as he seemed oblivious, she moseyed over to them. The man was saying, “I don’t test positive, so I don’t know where she done got it. She said she must’ve had it when we got married two years ago, so how come I ain’t got it?   She’s cheatin’ on me, I know. I just don’t know who the dirty bastard is.”

“Sometimes life is confusion,” said Atsushi, puffing on his cigarette. He seemed quite natural at smoking. Mykaela wondered why she didn’t know this about him.

She tugged at Atsushi’s elbow and whispered, “Sorry to interrupt, but we ought to get going.’

The burly man turned to her, “Would you cheat on your husband?”

“That’s quite an inappropriate question!”

He asked Atsushi, “Would you cheat on her?”

“My wife is in Japan,” Atsushi said. “This is my friend.”

“Friends, huh?” The man sneered and glared at Mykaela. “Where’s your husband, then?”

“We better get going, Atsushi,” she said, and headed abruptly back into the lobby. The man muttered something she chose not to hear.

After they loaded their suitcases, along with Mykaela’s numerous bags full of sketchpads, colored pencils and fabrics, into the car, they stopped at the McDonald’s drive-through, where Mykaela ordered a cheese and egg biscuit and Atsushi a maple and fruit oatmeal. Atsushi told her they had been discussing the man’s wife, who was in the hospital with pneumonia after doctors discovered she had AIDS.

Mykaela frowned. “That’s a sticky problem. Nonetheless, that was so damn rude of him to ask a question like that. You don’t have to answer him you know.”

“I want to understand him,” he said. “Everyone is human.”

“You have more faith in mankind than I do.” She could smell the smoke on his breath and in his hair and clothes. Yesterday, he had smelled pleasantly of soap and caramel coffee.  “I didn’t know you smoked.”

“Just while talking,” he said. “Don’t worry, I don’t smoke in your car.”

Mykaela pulled the Jeep onto I-70 and, as they settled into the drive, they passed black cows grazing on flat green pastures and later, bristly brown fields with silos and barns.  This was farm country, home to corn, soybeans, wheat, and cattle.

Mykaela pointed out a sign for the Wilbur Wright Birthplace & Museum. “Wilbur Wright was one of the two brothers who built the world’s first successful airplane. The other one was Orville. You know of them?”

“I think so, but maybe I’m not familiar with the names.”

“I’ve been to Kill Devil Hills in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, where they made their first controlled flight. You can go hang-gliding from the sand dunes at Jockey’s Ridge. I’ve never done it, but I always wanted to.”

“I don’t like heights,” said Atsushi. He was silent for a bit. “It might be nice to be famous.”

“For what?”

“I would be a doctor who discovers the cure for cancer instead of selling the technology for cure, but a doctor who sings and plays guitar too. Like William Carlos Williams, the poet doctor. What for you?”

“I’d love my art quilts to mimick nature, like Georgia O’Keefe’s paintings but with fabric. I want people to be awestruck when they see my work, to be inspired to honor the environment.  Many of our Native American tribes believe nature and the land are sacred. I wish everyone believed that.”

“I could be a singing doctor and you could be a quilting environment activist,” said Atsushi.

Mykaela smiled. Actually, she didn’t really have much interest in being famous, although of course she’d love people to connect with her art at a heartfelt level. Mainly, she would like to get her husband to laugh again, and her daughter Lena to find the right medication and maybe a boyfriend who could give her some stability. She’d love it if Viktoria could shake her stalking ex-boyfriend Will, and if her mother would show even the slightest interest in Mykaela and her family. She wished her father weren’t ill.  She would love to have a few close friends who could truly understand her.

A sign said, WELCOME TO KNIGHTSTOWN: HOME OF THE HOOSIERS. “Hoosiers are people who are born or live in Indiana. A lot of the sports teams are also Hoosiers,” Mykaela said.

“Hoosiers,” repeated Atsushi. “A strange name.”

“I don’t know if this is true, but I heard the name came from the frontier days. When people approached a house, they were afraid of being shot, so they’d call out to the homeowner. The owner would reply, ‘Who’s here?’ and it eventually slurred into ‘Who’sh ‘ere?’ I don’t know if it’s true though.”

“Who’sh ‘ere, Who’sh ‘ere,” Atsushi said several times, trying it on for size.

Huge trucks barreled past them on the highway. Whenever trucks came up too close behind her on the highway, she thought of the 1971 movie Duel, with Dennis Weaver. Although she was only two years old when the movie was made, she had seen it much later with Emre on TV. She had bitten her fingernails to bloody nubs while Weaver, driving his Plymouth Valiant over deserted California canyon roads, was harassed by the mostly invisible driver of a decrepit Peterbilt tanker truck.

“This road is a caravan of trucks,” said Atsushi.

“It’s one of the main east-west roads in America, so yes, lots of trucks.”

The I-70 corridor certainly catered to trucks. Signs spoke to careless drivers: BIG TRUCK ACCIDENT? CALL THE HAMMER.  Eighteen-wheelers hunkered down in sprawling parking lots around rest areas. INDY TRUCK WASH promised clean big rigs. Double Fed-Ex trucks rumbled past them. Tractor-trailers squatted on the shoulders of exit ramps. Mykaela had never seen this in Virginia.

Gleaming silver grain silos dotted the landscape. The Mountain Goats sang, “The gray sky was vast and real cryptic above me / I wanted you / To love me like you used to do.”

When Mykaela heard words like these, she felt full of gloom. She’d like to see the future, to see if the rest of her life would be spent in utter loneliness with Emre, or if she could entice him, somehow, out of his debilitating depression. If only he would agree to psychotherapy or anti-depressants or hospitalization, but so far he’d refused. He didn’t want his mind messed up by drugs or shock therapy or whatever “experimental methods” doctors used on emotionally disturbed patients. She wondered if there were other solutions not evident to her. She tried to open her mind to the universe for possibilities, but no answers ever appeared to her. She didn’t believe in prayer that asked for specific things, like new cars or houses or healing for people she loved. She thought it was greedy to ask for specific outcomes, so she asked only for wisdom and strength to get through every day.

A billboard reared up ahead of them: HIGHSMITH GUNS – PISTOL RANGE – TOP GUNS INDOOR RANGE.

“Why do American people love guns?” Atsushi asked.

“Many of our immigrant ancestors escaped from oppressive governments. Now, generations later, the children of these immigrants still cling to the belief that citizens have a right to bear arms, to protect themselves from government overreach.  But isn’t it likely that if the government became oppressive, even a man with a gun would be powerless against it?  Anyway, it seems any crazy person can get a gun these days, and look what’s happening with the school shootings, church shootings, people getting knocked off at concerts. There’s no end to the insanity.”

“What kind of person kills innocent children?” Atsushi said. “I want justice for Jiro. I want his killer found. I have questions to ask him.”

“Of course we’ll go to the police in Grand Junction and try to find out what we can.”

They drove silently for a while, passing a billboard that read: After You Die You WILL Meet God.

“I wonder if Jiro met God,” Atsushi said, “I don’t have God. We are Buddhists and Jiro loved nature.”

“Why did Jiro go to Colorado Mesa University? Why didn’t he stay closer to home?”

Atsushi told her that Jiro loved plants and was pursuing a degree in Biological Sciences with a concentration in Ecology. He was attracted to CMU because of a three-week field course in Ecuador the university offered. He was excited about visiting the remote tropical habitats in South America, such as the lowland rainforest, the cloud forest, and the páramo, a high, treeless plateau. He was eager to learn about the natural histories of the organisms found in each area. He was especially enamored of grasses found at the high altitudes, especially tussock-grasses and bunch-grasses.

“Also, his girlfriend was going there to study winemaking, but at the last minute she broke up with him and decided to stay in Tokyo.”

“So, the girlfriend who deserted him could almost take the blame for his death,” said Mykaela.

“No, I don’t think it’s that way.  I don’t want to blame and be angry.  Jiro always loved tropic plants, always reading about them in books. He built a small greenhouse in our backyard and grew plants and grasses.”

“Did he ever get to Ecuador?”

“No, he was to go last fall.” He stared out the window as they drove in silence past Indianapolis, Monrovia, Terre Haute.

The Grateful Dead sang, “Friend of the Devil,” and Mykaela thought about Jiro’s killer, who was obviously a friend of the devil — an evil person who still had his freedom and his life while he’d stolen Jiro’s.

The land flattened out, but trees and bushes still clustered between fields, and the wind shimmied the car as it moved down the highway. The smells of hay and dust and grass permeated the car.  Mykaela felt unease needling her skin, quickening her heartbeat.

They crossed Vermillion Creek. A quarry gaped under a hazy blue sky smudged with white clouds. Chuck Berry sang “No particular place to go… Riding along in my automobile,” and Mykaela felt that she and Atsushi were speeding along in this cocoon of an automobile into uncertain futures, wrapped in separate blankets of grief.

They crossed Big Walnut Creek and Honey Creek. Tom Cochrane sang, “Life is a highway.” Mykaela agreed; life was a highway with a lot of tacky road signs: billboards advertising adult stores, shooting ranges, liquor stores, fireworks, and detours to nostalgia, all diverting a person from the true road to serenity.

*Illinois*

They crossed into Illinois, the only blue state in a sea of red, and the first one since they’d left Virginia. Mykaela breathed a sigh of relief. Here were people she understood, people who weren’t nasty and hateful and all puffed up with white privilege.

Atsushi looked up the symbols: the flower was a violet, the bird a Northern cardinal, and the insect a Monarch butterfly.

“Tell me some other interesting things about it,” said Mykaela.

“There are two slogans: ‘Mile After Magnificent Mile’ and ‘Right Here. Right Now.’ And there’s a prairie grass: Big bluestem. I wonder if Jiro would have known it. I like to think he did.”

“Me too,” said Mykaela, and this time she reached over and touched his shoulder.

They sped by Whippoorwill Antiques and Effingham, and Mykaela couldn’t help but think driving on this highway was “effing monotonous.” Huge expanses of farmland opened up, bordered by sparse forests. The hills became more gradual, long straight slopes. The jeep slogged up and coasted down, as if on an endless slow-motion treadmill.

Another sign, glaring at them from the roadside: Where will you spend eternity? Jesus Christ has the answer.

Did he? she wondered. Mykaela had been brought up Catholic but now attended a Unitarian Church. They believed in the moral authority but not necessarily the divinity of Jesus. She believed herself to be moral but fallible, and she didn’t care for rigid dogma or beliefs that everyone must embrace only one religion to gain access to paradise. Hell, she didn’t even believe in paradise.

A series of signs boasted of THE WORLD’S LARGEST ROCKING CHAIR, THE WORLD’S LARGEST WIND CHIME, THE WORLD’S LARGEST MAILBOX. Mykaela looked all around near the exit to see if she could spot these “world’s largest” items, but she didn’t see anything on the flat horizon. They can’t be that large, she thought. She considered pulling off to look for them, but at the last minute sped by the exit. Too much distance to cover.

They passed Lost Creek Orchard, offering up apples, pears and peaches. Montrose, Teutopolis, giant drills, and hauling equipment with the largest tires she’d ever seen. Signs placed blame: MATTRESS STORES ARE GREEDY – LEARN THE TRUTH. Names blurred outside the windows: Pilot, Little Wabash River, St. Elmo. Cows clustered around dainty ponds on farms. BLUE SPRINGS CAFÉ promised foot-hi pies. Signs at construction zones threatened: “Hit a Worker – $10,000 fine – 14 years in jail.”

They passed two workers in the median strip trying to remove a deer carcass. It wasn’t a pretty sight, and Mykaela focused on the road, stomach turning. She knew she was lucky in many ways not to suffer like so many people in the world did, under horrible poverty, violence, endless war, starvation, slavery, mind-deadening jobs. She was lucky, so why did she often feel overwhelmed by her problems?

Mykaela thought how it was true that some cities and places have nothing to recommend them. The views from the road in Illinois were a disappointment. Maybe she’d find something interesting if she got off the interstate, but they didn’t have time for that. They needed to keep moving along.

She had to face it, as much as she appreciated Illinois for voting against Trump, it was a state with unimaginative place names, often names of people: Collinsville, Edwardsville, Maryville.

Can’t they do any better? Mykaela thought.

***********

The second half of this chapter will post on Wednesday, July 18. This will be the last chapter I’ll post on this blog.  I’ll continue to work on the novel privately, in hopes of revising multiple times and eventually publishing (or self-publishing)!

For the first chapter of my road trip novel you can see the following two posts:

(on journey) chapter 1: on borrowed time {part 1}

chapter 1: on borrowed time {part 2}

**********************

“PROSE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a 2,000-word post on your own blog about a recently visited particular destination (not journeys in general). Concentrate on any intention you set for your prose.  In this case, my intentions for my Four Corners trip included the following:

  • “Bring a character to…” Invent characters and take them along on the journey, keeping a journal from the main character’s point of view. After the trip, write a novel or novella of the trip putting those characters into the tale (in the vein of Jim Harrison’s The English Major, and inspired by a creative writing assignment to keep a journal for a fictional character).
  • Pick random titles from poems or short stories as titles for each chapter and let those titles inform the tale.

It doesn’t matter whether you write fiction or non-fiction for this invitation.  You can either set your own writing intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: prose & poetry.  (This page is a work in process.) You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Monday, July 23 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, July 24, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Jo, of Restless Jo, wrote beautifully of her time with her friend Meg in Warsaw and time spent relaxing with her Polish family in the countryside.
    • Reminiscences from Poland
  • Mari, of Travels with My Camera, wrote a post about a visit to Daintree National Park – the Aborigine’s Dreamtime that Never Wakes – in Australia.
    • Dreamtime on the Daintree

Thanks to all of you who wrote prosaic posts following intentions you set for yourself.  🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Colorado
  • Colorado National Monument

otto’s trail & the devils kitchen trail at colorado national monument

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 8, 2018

As we made our way back to the north entrance of the park, we stopped at Grand View, where we enjoyed a panorama including Independence Monument, Grand Valley, and the Book Cliffs.

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Independence Monument from the Grand View

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wildflowers at the Grand View

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Monoliths seen at the Grand View

At the viewpoint, we could almost reach out and touch a 200-foot tall sandstone spire.  The top layer of this spire is the Kayenta Formation, more resistant to erosion than other sedimentary rocks in the park.  This formation was deposited by a high-energy braided river system similar to the Rio Grande River in New Mexico.  The bottom layers are the Wingate Formation, a tan sandstone whose sweeping tilted layers tell us this rock was deposited in a desert environment where wind-swept sands accumulated and were buried.  An environment like this can be found in the modern Sahara Desert of North Africa.

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The Grand View

The cliffs and monoliths of the Monument are made primarily of sandstones over 200 million years old.

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The Grand View

We took two more hikes at Colorado National Monument to wrap up our day.  We stopped to walk on Otto’s Trail, a gently sloping trail of 0.95 miles, where we enjoyed dramatic views of many monoliths.  We were walking in the footsteps of John Otto as we followed the route he used for his first ascent of the 450-foot high Independence Monument.

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dead juniper on Otto’s Trail

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John Otto’s climb on Independence Monument

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Independence Monument from Otto’s Trail

On this late afternoon, we spotted some climbers atop Independence Monument. I don’t know if they were enjoying the view or too terrified to come down!  Years ago, I climbed Pilot Rock in Oregon with my first husband and his best friend.  Climbing up was fine, although a little scary, but when it was time to come down, I was so terrified I couldn’t do it.  I cried, wept actually, and told them they were going to have to call a helicopter to rescue me. Finally, inch by inch, they encouraged me to climb down as they stood beneath me (as if they could really catch me if I fell!).  I am careful now not to go up anything so steep that I’d be afraid to come down.

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Rock climbers on Independence Monument

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view from the end of Otto’s Trail

We stopped at the Balanced Rock View on our way out of the northern entrance.  Balanced Rock is a snapshot in time that won’t last forever.  Gravity will someday cause it to fall.

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Balanced Rock view

We had to drive outside of the park and to the southeast entrance to do the Devils Kitchen Trail. It took us about an hour to hike to a natural rock room formed by huge upright boulders.

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cacti along the Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

I loved how the cottonwood trees glowed in the sunlight.

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cottonwoods along the Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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flora along the Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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cacti along Devils Kitchen Trail

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cacti along Devils Kitchen Trail

We crossed a wash and then climbed uphill on a slickrock bench to get to the Devils Kitchen.  The trail was a bit confusing and we got on the wrong track several times.

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

Devils Kitchen is a natural rock room surrounded by Wingate Sandstone cliffs, and provides a bit of a resting spot after the steep ascent.

inside Devils Kitchen
inside Devils Kitchen
inside Devils Kitchen
inside Devils Kitchen
inside Devils Kitchen
inside Devils Kitchen

I loved looking at the patterns on the towering rocks.

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inside Devils Kitchen

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen

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Devils Kitchen Trail

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Devils Kitchen Trail

The Devil’s Kitchen hike was 2.7 miles and took us a 1:04 hours. Between getting out for the various viewpoints and the hikes we took, we walked 18,913 steps, or 8.01 miles, over the course of the day.

On the way out of the park, we passed by the Book Cliffs along the southern and western edge of the Tavaputs Plateau.

Book Cliffs
Book Cliffs
Book Cliffs
Book Cliffs
Book Cliffs
Book Cliffs

** Monday, May 7, 2018 **

***********************

On Sundays, I plan to post various walks that I took on our Four Corners trip as well as hikes I take locally while training for the Camino de Santiago; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: Same river, different city.

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  • American Road Trips
  • Arizona
  • Four Corners Road Trip

poetic journeys: A R I Z O N A

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 6, 2018

All that happened – ancient volcanic eruptions, drought, erosion, uplifting

Regions, social pressures, the Long Walk, and finally, the concrete slabs of

Interstate highways – prodded ancient people to scatter and fractured a mythic road, remnants of which

Zigzag now in spurts through towns like Winslow and Holbrook. Only in the vestiges

Of Route 66, with the neon signs, wigwam motels, vintage cars, the

Nullified graffiti-covered trading posts, does

America hang on, pierced with twin arrows, to its last good times.

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The Mitten at Monument Valley

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Three Sisters at Monument Valley

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Betatakin dwelling at Navajo National Monument

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Aspen Trail at Navajo National Monument

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Fossil near Tuba City

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Coal Mine Canyon, AZ

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Wupatki Pueblo at Wupatki National Monument

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Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument

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Island Trail at Walnut Canyon National Monument

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dwellling at Walnut Canyon

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the 1924 Winona Bridge frames the San Francisco Peaks

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Twin Arrows Trading Post

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Standing on the corner in Winslow, Arizona

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Rainbow Forest at Petrified Forest National Park

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Wigwam Motel, Holbrook, AZ

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Joe & Aggie’s Cafe in Holbrook

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Nichols Sportsman in Holbrook, AZ

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Blue Mesa at Petrified Forest National Park

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Window Rock

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Hubbell Trading Post

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Spider Rock at Canyon de Chelly

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White House Ruins at Canyon de Chelly

*************************

“POETRY” Invitation:  I invite you to write a poem of any poetic form on your own blog about a particular travel destination.  Or you can write about travel in general. Concentrate on any intention you set for your poetry. In this case, I wrote an acrostic poem about ARIZONA.

“The basic acrostic is a poem in which the first letters of the lines, read downwards, form a word, phrase, or sentence. Some acrostics have the vertical word at the end of the line, or in the middle.  The double acrostic has two such vertical arrangements (either first and middle letters or first and last letters), while a triple acrostic has all three (first letters, middle, and last)” (from The Teachers & Writers Handbook of Poetic Forms).

Some examples of acrostics can be found in Seasonal Sonnets (Acrostic) by Mark A. Doherty.

You can either set your own poetic intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: poetry.  (This page is a work in process).  You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, August 2 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, August 3, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the first Friday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Carol, The Eternal Traveler, can claim her fame as the author of rhyming poems about charming loos she encounters in her travels.
    • A Loo With a View – The Kevtoberfest Edition
  • C L Couch, of clcouch123, wrote a poem capturing the pains of aging, both from within and without, and the dreams of romance and adventure as epitomized by Don Quixote and Sancho Panza.
    • Override
  • Jude, of Travel Words, wrote a poetic meander through history and modern days in the north Pennines and Northumberland.
    • Countryside of Contrasts (Part II)

Thanks to all of you who wrote poetic posts. 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Colorado
  • Colorado Towns

picturesque colorado towns: grand junction

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 5, 2018

Colorado is full of picturesque towns with understated but distinct characters.  Many have a cute main street lined with colorful low-slung buildings, charming restaurants and quirky shops. Many of the shops promise adventure – bicycling, rafting, canoeing or kayaking, rock climbing, hunting, fishing or hiking.  The towns are often surrounded by mountains or other grand scenery.  Some may be off the beaten path and a bit of a challenge to get to.  But, whatever their variations, they are recognizable as pure Colorado.

Grand Junction has a storied past, one full of gunslingers, miners and early settlers to the southwest. People as varied as Doc Holliday, infamous member of the Wyatt Earp U.S. Marshalls group, and screenwriter James Dalton Trumbo were once residents here. NFL players, aviators, marines, and authors have called Grand Junction home.

The town sits near the midpoint on a 30-mile arcing valley, the Grand Valley, and is the most populous municipality in western Colorado. The Upper Colorado River flows through the Grand Valley; before 1921 it was known as the Grand River, thus the “Grand” in the town’s name. “Junction” refers to the confluence of the Colorado and Gunnison Rivers.

The town is known for farming, fruit growing and cattle raising.  Fruit orchards in the Grand Valley yield peaches, pears, apricots, plums, cherries, and, since the 1980s, grapes for wine.  Since the late 20th century, wineries have cropped up around the valley, especially around Palisade. The town, long occupied by the Ute people and other indigenous cultures, is now home to Colorado Mesa University, major health care facilities, and tourism-related services.  We found later that residents from Moab, Utah, travel to Grand Junction for healthcare services.

Though Grand Junction is surrounded by the same unsightly urban sprawl found on the outskirts of many American towns, the downtown area is charming, with its Art on the Corner (AOTC), a year-round outdoor sculpture exhibit of more than 100 sculptures in a variety of mediums and styles.

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“Stop in the Name of Love” by Janene DiRico-Cable

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Art on the Corner

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Art on the Corner

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James Dalton Trumbo

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Art on the Corner

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Art on the Corner

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Art on the Corner

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Art on the Corner

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Art on the Corner – bench with parking meters

Businesses boast such names as Ruby Canyon Cycles, Old Friends Trading Co., Candy Time Shoppe, My Generation Boutique, The Avalon, Bella Balsamic, Heirlooms, Bejarano’s Barbering, Board Fox Games & Coffee, Tasting Emporium & Eatery, Suehiro Japanese Restaurant & Sushi, Main St. Minerals and Beads, Twisted Turtle, Western Anglers, and Amber Floral.  Outside of Buffalo Trace Distillery is a sign: You’re Right on Time, it’s Beer:30.

On the door of Out West Books is a quote by William Butler Yeats:

“There are no strangers here;
Only friends you haven’t yet met.”

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Bella Balsamic & Brown Cycles

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Mosaic wall

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Curvy Main Street

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Buffalo at Wells Fargo

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Candy Time Shoppe and Novelties

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Main Street, Grand Junction

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Old Friends Trading Co: Native American Art

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My Generation Boutique

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The Avalon

This is #1 in a continuing series I’ll do on Colorado towns.

*Sunday, May 6, 2018*

*********************

“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20 photos (fewer is better) and to write less than 350-400 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, July 18 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, July 19, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, every first and third Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Jude, of Under a Cornish Sky, posted some very enticing photos of the Lizard peninsula.
    • On the Lizard
  • Anabel, of The Glasgow Gallivanter, participated weekly in the #RoofSquares challenge; last week she posted about the roofs of Glasgow, highlighting the turrets of Victorian houses.
    • #RoofSquares 23-30: Glasgow edition
  • Ulli, of BANACTEE, wrote about La Palma in the Canary Islands, and shows us photos along with its interesting history.
    • LABRINTHIC VOLCANIC AMBITIONS OF LA PALMA ISLAND

Thanks to all of you who shared posts on the “photography” invitation. 🙂

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  • International Travel
  • On Returning Home
  • Reverse culture shock

on returning home from south korea

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 July 2, 2018

Starting in March 2010, I spent one year in Seongju, South Korea, outside of Daegu, teaching English at two elementary schools. At age 54, it was my first time living and working abroad; not only was it an adjustment, but I found it quite a hardship as well.  I was soon to find out that teaching elementary-aged children was not for me.

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a meditative pose on the way to Gatbawi

Before I left for Korea in February, 2010, I feared that things in my life would always be the same. I remember, as vividly as if it was yesterday, the last five years of my humdrum existence as a suburban housewife in northern Virginia. I remember driving around in the traffic of Virginia, running the same errands I always ran, going through the same old routines and feeling increasingly depressed and restless. I sat at stop lights in my car, listening to foreign music, thinking about my longtime dream of being a writer, and thinking that I would never have anything to write about. My life was so boring, so mundane. What would I ever have to say? And I would think, over and over during those last five years: Is this all there is? This is IT, for the rest of my life? It took a long time for things to snap, but snap they did, and I was off for my first adventure living abroad.

I couldn’t have been thrust into an environment more alien to that of my Western upbringing.  I had never felt so disoriented in my entire life, other than the one month I’d spent in Cairo in 2007.

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me in Gyeongju, South Korea, April 2010

In Korea, I had a horrible 1 1/2 – 2 hour commute to work each way, in freezing cold or steamy hot weather, on dilapidated buses that seemed to have no discernible schedule. I shivered in my classroom during winter, huddled over a space heater in my winter coat, when the school refused to turn on the heat.  Or alternately, I sweated profusely when they refused to turn on the air conditioning.  I endured Korean food, which I never liked because of the grisly chunks of meat Koreans favor and the strong vinegar taste of kimchi that accompanied every meal.  I was older than almost every other teacher there, and the oldest of all my friends and acquaintances. I lived in what amounted to a college dormitory, a small room in which I could barely fit, much less entertain anyone.

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Me at Donghae Yonggung-Sa

Yet, while in Korea, I set out to explore a country that is quite isolated and not known for tourism.  I looked through my trusty Moon Handbook and plotted travels through the country several times a month. I set out to discover new places and new experiences, if not outside of Daegu, then within the city.  I enjoyed my friends Anna, Seth and Myrna, our small group of expats in a foreign land, as we spent evenings together either playing Ticket to Ride, watching movies, or eating dinner and singing in a Korean singing room called noraebang.

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me and a white-haired monk at Donghae Yonggung-Sa

I learned not only to be alone, but to relish it. And I learned to be self-sufficient, independent, and adventurous. I also learned that I don’t generally enjoy events with random large groups of people, and that certain things about a culture, which one may find endearing on a short holiday trip, can become annoying with constant exposure. I found myself irritated by the Korean group mentality, and the inability of the people to accept individual differences in what is a truly conformist society. I found everyone’s black hair annoying, because it was often dyed even into old age. I remember being thrilled when I visited China and found old people with white hair. I found it frustrating that Koreans refused to try to speak English, even though they had been studying it for years, for fear of losing face. I was put off by their criticisms of my appearance, such as the fact that I didn’t dye my hair or that I had fat arms or a big nose, and their constant offering of unsolicited advice.

I also found them extremely generous and giving of their time and their friendship. I found them to be hard-working and diligent and well-organized. And many of them knew how to enjoy life, with their love of partying, drinking and singing.

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me in Gyeongju, May 2010

In Korea, I tried to make the best of the experience, in my way. It wasn’t everyone else’s way, as most other teachers were young and into partying and drinking into all hours of the night. I had to cope with disappointment, and I was able to do it. I got up in the morning and slogged my way through my horrible commute. I taught my students to sing “California Dreamin’” and Justin Bieber’s “Baby.” I made goofy faces to keep them laughing. I organized team competitions of Jeopardy.

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me with Korean ajuma at Boseong in October 2010

I did my best. I didn’t know what the future would hold, but whatever it held I knew would be different than the life I had before. It was most certainly different.

After my year in South Korea, followed by three weeks in India with my best friend Jayne, I returned home on March 22, 2011 to find Alex and Mike the same in appearance as when I left home a year before. Adam, however, had grown by 2 more inches and loomed over me. I’d become a midget.

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Adam, me and Alex

The following Thursday morning, I was wide awake from midnight to 5 a.m.  Saturday afternoon, I slept for 3 hours, and went to bed at 9 p.m. My body obviously hadn’t made the leap from Korea/India time to Eastern Standard Time. Not only did I have to adjust to the physical effect of being in a different time zone.  There was the mental discombobulation that came from reorienting myself to home.  Everything felt bizarre and off-kilter.  I had no balance.  I was lost.

I felt a stranger in my own land.  I thought people really believed I died and was gone forever, into the eternity-land of heaven (or hell, depending on what they thought of me).  I returned to my house in Oakton, which I still shared with my husband (from whom I had been separated for 4 years) and my two sons, to find total disarray.  A tornado had swept through our house, redistributing all our earthly goods in the unlikeliest of places.

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our house in Virginia

A long hot bath beckoned. After enduring the shower-bathroom of Korea for the last year (a bathroom with a shower head mounted above the sink which sprays water all over the sink, toilet, and bathroom floor), a long hot bath was something I craved. It was one of many things I took for granted my whole life until suddenly, when I moved abroad, I didn’t have it anymore. In 5 days, I took about 8 long hot baths. I soaked in hot water until my skin was shriveled and hot pink. I even fell asleep one time and woke to find myself shivering in room-temperature water.

Everyone walked around me as if they didn’t know what to make of me or what to do with me. Interactions were awkward. I didn’t quite know how to pick up where I left off, how to fall into a groove in our interactions. Patterns which I’m sure they took for granted were a mystery to me. The boys had grown, they’d changed, and I didn’t quite know how to have relationships with these kids whose personalities had rearranged themselves into fresh versions of their former selves.

In addition to the suitcase I needed to unpack from my trip to India, there was a huge suitcase full of stuff I sent home with Alex when he visited me in Korea in December of 2010. Another box full of stuff I mailed at the end of January. One box I sent my last day in Korea by airmail with my computer and important papers. And on Friday, a Korean guy knocked on the door and delivered two more boxes I mailed by “surface” in mid-February. It was as if the post office guy had carried them all the way across the ocean and across continents himself from Korea. Six more boxes were still to come. Where would I put all this stuff?

I spoke to my friend Lisa in Pennsylvania who was my roommate in Egypt for all of July 2007.  She, who has lived abroad in Middle Eastern countries off and on, says she knows how strange and disorienting it is when you come back home from living abroad.  You get on an airplane and instantaneously you’re in a different world, with a whole new cast of characters and a spanking-new script. You’re the same character you always were but you’re now in a different story. It’s as if you changed the channel and you’re in a thrust into a sitcom…or drama, one not of your own making. Feeling lost and unsure and not knowing any of your lines. A perfect description.

dis·o·ri·en·ta·tion ~ n.

1. Loss of one’s sense of direction, position, or relationship with one’s surroundings.

2. Mental confusion or impaired awareness, especially regarding place, time, or personal identity.

Culture shock: a condition of disorientation affecting someone who is suddenly exposed to an unfamiliar culture or way of life or set of attitudes.  I have the experience of “reverse culture shock,” being exposed to a “familiar culture or way of life or set of attitudes,” but one that has become unfamiliar over a year away.

I never thought my life here in America, the life I’ve had for over 50 years, could feel so strange.  How long, I wondered, before it would feel like home again?  And how long before I would get the urge to venture abroad again?

************************

I was hoping to write a post about returning home from the Four Corners, but I haven’t had time yet to sufficiently process it and think about it. Hopefully I’ll be able to write something coherent by August.  As I’ve lived and worked abroad four times – in South Korea, Oman, China and Japan – I’d like to write posts on this blog about how it felt when I returned home from each of those long-term expat experiences.

For more on my year in South Korea, you can see catbird in korea.

************************

“ON RETURNING HOME” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about returning home from one particular destination or, alternately, from a long journey encompassing many stops.  How do you linger over your wanderings and create something from them?  How have you changed? Did the place live up to its hype, or was it disappointing? Feel free to address any aspect of your journey and how it influences you upon your return. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

For some ideas on this, you can check out the original post about this subject: on returning home.

Include the link in the comments below by Sunday, August 5 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Monday, August 6, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation on the first Monday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!

  • Meg, of snippetsandsnaps~ Potato Point and beyond, wrote with such vivid description of her return home from Warsaw to her home in New South Wales.
    • Returning home

Thanks to all of you who wrote posts about “on returning home.” 🙂

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