Archive for category Vacation

Day 11 AKA Head for the Mountains

Location: Carlsbad, New Mexico, USA

Weather: outstanding.

Scenery: outstanding.

Our bodies: a little past their prime.

We hiked McKittrick Canyon in Guadalupe Mountains National Park today. This was the prettiest part of Texas we’ve been except for the Dallas Botanical Garden, and if something had been blooming in the canyon it would have won. Beauty around every corner, be careful not to step in any. Make way, hikers. I’m armed to the teeth and packing a hamster. Fellow hikers, you must gather your party before setting forth.

Breakfast at the Airbnb, lunch on the trail, dinner in town. Yum. Friendly people all day long.

Tonight: Laundry

Question: Minsc

What an usie!
The start of McKittrick Canyon
The road goes ever on
I feel kind of naked
Where we ate lunch
Our view at lunch
The Whole Foods backpack that has been all over the country on hike after hike. The hat has been all over the west, starting with our trip to Utah
There were two wet creek crossings, this one had the most soothing sound
There were a bunch of trees like this that had red, orange, and purple trunks/branches, and I don’t know why
MBH’s view at lunch

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Day 10 AKA Woah, We’re Half Way There!

This morning the sun was bright and the air clear in Alamogordo, which made me wonder if I had dreamed the day before. Then I put on my sunglasses and the grit on them made the truth clear, woah, yesterday happened. So I could only marvel at how quickly the dust settled. And then we were off on the next adventure.

We drove up into the mountains (again) and tried to follow the Billy the Kid Trail – it’s a driving route, but the visitor center was closed, there are no road signs, so about all we had to go on was picture of a Google Map with stops marked but no legend. Good times, good times. At least we found a good place for lunch, the Oso grill in Capitan, where we had another chat with a struggling restaurant owner sparked by her giving a rundown of what was on the menu but not actually available. No soup for you!

The drive out to Roswell and then down to Carlsbad was distinctive for the lack of visible mountains – you could see them in certain directions way off on the horizon if you squinted hard enough, and for the near total lack of vegetation, just some sparse short dormant grass with a few yucca looking plants when we got closer to Carlsbad. The scenery got so dull MBH started reading a Poldark book.

The picture taking was so minimal today I added a couple of old ones just to refresh our memory of how pretty the desert can be.

We took a side trip off the Billy the Kid trail up this very windy mountain road
We didn’t get out of the car but there was so little traffic I just stopped and MBH took a picture
That could be a picture of Sierra Blanca but there were several peaks and the road twisted around so much and you lost sight of any peak quite frequently, so yeah, that’s Sierra Blanca
MBH at Tonto National Monument
Sabino Canyon

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Day 9 AKA Tomorrow is Double Digits

Today dawned bright and clear, or at least it was when we got up sometime after dawn. I’m just making an assumption about what dawn was like.

Another day, another suitcase in another hall. We adjusted to our new AirBnb last night and this morning. You know what to expect in any hotel room, although sometimes you are pleasantly surprised by something simple like a refrigerator. Every Airbnb is different, starting with the coffee machine (going in chronological order here) way beyond just Keurig or not, where are the light switches, how to operate the shower (the first showerer gives a briefing to the other even if it’s only what o’clock to put the lever so the water temperature is right), even what is in the kitchen and where is it. And just when we’re comfortable, we are on the road again.

Air still clear, we set off this morning for White Sands National Monument/Park (I’ve seen it both ways). Soon we were there and the wind had picked up. After a few walks, first on a raised walkway and then barefoot thru the dunes, the wind really picked up. After a stop where it was really hard to see or breathe we gave up on getting out of the car. We drove the whole loop, and there were a few spots on the way back it was like driving in a blizzard – white out plus sand drifting over the road, which isn’t paved for about half the drive – you’re just driving on sand, gypsum actually, of varying degrees of hardness.

Then it was off to lunch and the search for someplace open. New Mexico has really done a number on their restaurants with a long stretch with no on premises- indoor or outdoor – dining. After passing many closed restaurants we found a good local diner. After trying to help fix the front door (apparently high winds are somewhat common around which as you can imagine can put a lot of stress on doors) we had a nice chat with the owner. She is at her wits end and very stressed.

After lunch we engaged in a search for something to do in high winds & high dust. The Space museum is closed while they remodel their bathrooms. We started out to take a scenic drive in the mountains but the further north we went the worse the wind got and darker/dustier the air became, so we turned around and stopped off at Pistachio land. I know this may come as a surprise, but there is only so long you can spend at a pistachio themed tourist trap, but at least it was indoors. We then drove back into town where were going to while away sometime at a local cantina but it is closed Mondays and Tuesdays. As I write this back at the Airbnb, the sky is still a dusty white.

Tomorrow is another day.

Just the two of us, before the wind was bad.
Really amazing, total desolation
They call this a road
A warning sign at the entrance. From a distance I couldn’t tell if was don’t step on your mask, or your footsteps raise sand, or don’t salt your eggs before putting them in a basket. Oddly enough, I never guessed no confetti eggs, and I like all of mine better.
I’ve seen this a in all the outhouses here, and I’m just glad I don’t have the job of removing the trash.
Feet of clay
Fortunately the cross street isn’t Leap, but every trip ends with Siri telling me to turn on Lovers Lane.
I hit a tumbleweed at high speed (both me and it) and this is all that was left. This has not been a good trip for the rental cars.

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Day 8 AKA Journey to the Far Side of the Moon

We woke up this morning in Arizona, and in a microcosm of the total trip, drove through New Mexico to El Paso Texas, and then turned and went north back into New Mexico and finally settled in Alamogordo, which the locals shorten to Alamo, which I won’t mention when we return to Texas. We went to El Paso to switch rental cars since the Sentra developed a hitch in its get along, or at least a leak in the transmission. I should post a picture of the rental car parking garage since we spent a good deal of quality time there because, according to the guy at the car rental desk, spring break had cleaned them out of cars. Somebody isn’t doing Spring Break right IMHO. But for your sakes I try to only post the most luscious photos, and even I at my craziest wouldn’t take a picture of a rental car parking lot. Just keeping it real in the Thrifty rental car lot.

Last night we saw a beautiful new moon above the picturesque hill out the front door of the Airbnb, but sadly the technology at my disposal was inadequate to capture the ineffable beauty of the sight, so until the Vulcan mind meld becomes an actual thing, you’re stuck with my puny and inadequate words.

On the subject of abject fails, we crossed the continental divide this morning in the flattest, most desolate plain which is no way to cross the continental divide. We did take a side trip to the City of Rocks (state park) but to be honest, our heart wasn’t in it with the car and our calls to Thrifty. So we had our picnic lunch courtesy of Subway, wandered around a bit, found an outhouse – the nice bathrooms were closed because COVID, the lousy ones are still open because when you gotta go, you gotta go.

We didn’t lose an hour Sunday morning like everyone else, we lost an hour this morning because (1) Arizona doesn’t do daylight savings time, and B. New Mexico does. Arizona really should change their state motto from the Latin for “God enriches” to “Ornery” or “like no where else” or even “live free or die” – that one may be taken but it’s a good one and seems to fit. If I was smart, when I retire I should buy a house in New Hampshire and one in Arizona.

Desolation factor for the day Maximum, beauty factor Minimum.

Even the ussie is substandard today.  

You’d think I would be getting more used to the teeth aligners, not less.
I give you a city of rocks.
This is the best of the moon over the mountain pics, but in person the moon was new, huge, and amazing.
This is the day the Lord has made, I will rejoice and be glad in it.

Even if it’s a picture from Day 2. Some days are easier to rejoice in than others.

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Day 7 AKA A Farewell to Arizona

Last night we took advantage of the remoteness to stargaze, until we got too cold and went back inside.

This morning dawned cold and clear so we visited Chiricahua National Monument which managed to be extra beautiful and not particularly desolate. Really stunning scenery.

Our week in Arizona has been filled with two lane backroads, some dirt, most paved; sunshine, hiking, and mountains. When we are in the valley, there are mountains all around us, and when we are on the mountain top, there are still more mountains, some close, some in the distance. The roads have either been super straight or super curvy. The food has ranged from surprisingly good to way past time to change the oil in the fryer, from Mexican to burgers, from picnic lunches to sit down dinners. Our current Airbnb even provided a basket of farm fresh eggs. The people have been super friendly, from locals to tourists. Tonight the manager (probably owner too) of the restaurant we picked dinner up from told a gentleman who ordered a drink with his to go order he couldn’t sell it to him since he was openly carrying, but if he concealed his pistol or put it in his car there would be no problem. Arizona has been fun.

As always, we start with the obligatory usie. All systems are go for MBH, I’m struggling to smile in the cold or maybe the wind is moving my mouth around.
The stones are impressive at Chiricahua
The valleys are impressive at Chiricahua
The rocks and stones themselves sing the glories of God
A petrified dinosaur head, perhaps
Us, Sugerloaf Mointain, the valley where our Airbnb is, and more mountains way off in the distance
Yesterday’s snow on the Sugarloaf Mountain trail. Between the snow, the cold, and the fierce wind we turned back here
So long, farewell, Auf Wiedersehen, goodnight
We hate to go and leave this pretty sight

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Day 6 AKA Senior Skip Day

Now that it’s the two of us, we have become planners on our long vacations. We start with trying to figure out how many days in each location, and then look for Airbnb’s or motels to stay in, and based on availability we might change locations or durations. Then we book our stays, and any flights and car rentals. It all gets written out in a text document so that there are no gaps or overlaps – we learned that lesson the hard way when we set up or Ireland & Scotland trip and left a gap. We have kind of a rough notion about what we are going to do, but it begins with the spine of where we are spending the night and how we are getting there, booked in advance. Later we investigate each location for all the things we might do, and those all get included in the trip planning document. Some places, especially with COVID, require advanced booking (like Biosphere 2 this trip) so we go ahead and make those reservations in advance. And then while on the trip each night we review our options, look at the weather forecast, consider suggestions from friends and locals, and decide what we are going to do the next day.

Then one day all your options are outdoors and the forecast is cold and windy. And when you wake up, it’s snowing. And snowing. So you do laundry, hang around the Airbnb, eat lunch at a diner – we’ve had the best luck eating in diners at RV parks in the middle of nowhere. Thankfully, your rental car is just fine after the roads you drove it down yesterday, so you kind of just putz around minor attractions including the local maxi-mart where you pick up a couple of things and drive the car down some more dirt roads, which seem to be most of the roads in this part of Arizona. It snows and rains on and off all day, but the wind never stops blowing. You keep an eye on the nearby National Monument but all you see is clouds and precipitation of some form dropping out of them over the park all day.

So you write your daily post early and relax with MBH. And you remember, Tomorrow is another day.

This is the view from our Airbnb towards Chiricahua National Monument in the afternoon. There wasn’t near that much snow yesterday
Our Airbnb here is an odd mix of rustic and opulent. This is the opulent part (except for our suitcase). The bedroom and living room have huge overstuffed and leather furniture, the kitchen/dining nook is fairly rustic. The outside is extremely rustic, as a later picture will show.
One way keep track of how many nights left. We put the vitamins in a single large bottle for easy transport, and when we get to new location I sort them out by days.

Yes, I take more than MBH, I need all the help I can get
The view out the front of our Airbnb. I think the setting qualifies as extremely rustic.

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Day 5 AKA On the Road Again

Today we packed our bags and said farewell to Tucson. Because of groceries, we actually left with more than we arrived with. So after my second run of the trip (shortened because we are on vacation), a second nice chat with Cindy our Airbnb host, we left our second stop on the Journey and headed out into the unknown again.

We went through Saguaro National Park East where the desolation factor was upped and the beauty factor was lowered. There seems to be maybe 10 basic plants in the park, the same ones we’ve seen every day so far, so after awhile I have to admit our attention wavered. And once again bicyclists infested the park – at one pull off MBH hadn’t bothered to get out of the car and I came running back because I saw heading towards us a cyclist slowly climbing a hill on the one way one lane road with a bunch of cars oozing behind and I didn’t want to get stuck. They were the most exciting moments of the visit but I’m sorry to say that between my unexpected arrival and the shortness of the hill we failed.

Oh to own a cycling shop in Tucson.

We had debated and discussed both with ourselves and with our host Cindy where to go in the afternoon so we headed towards the wine country around Sonoita but never made it. We found Charon vineyards a little ways south of I-10 down a gravel road where we enjoyed a delicious lunch, a very tasty Cab Sav, and had a nice view of the ever present mountains of Arizona. We cannot figure out how we traveled in the days before smart phones, GPS, and the internet. We did, and quite well, but we just can’t remember the technology besides paper maps.

But you can’t get from Point A to Point B without traveling, so we set off for our next Airbnb in the wilds of Sunizona and after a brief stop to purchase gas and milk we discovered you can drive a Nissan Sentra down spectacularly bad dirt roads. Did you know a dirt road over a hill becomes a rocky road? Now I do. Did you know a low dirt road becomes a soft sand road you shouldn’t stop on? Now I do. Even with all our modern technology you can sometimes take the road you really shouldn’t travel. Or need to. We were never lost since we could always see our blue dot on a map, but it can sometimes be hard to tell the difference between not knowing where you are versus where you want to be.

I sure hope the car runs tomorrow.

Another day another picture of us
The most complex Saguaro I’ve seen so far
To think, yesterday we were on top of those mountains and no clouds.

Notice the lack of saguaros in their eponymous park
Spiny Norman and the Piranha Brothers

In my imagination anyway
Our view at lunch
A panorama of Saguaro National park
Boulevard of broken dreams; I miss those early days of search engines not being evil

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Day 4 AKA What Were We Thinking?

After last year’s Road Trip Almost Without End, MBH vowed that for our next big trip we would go somewhere and stay. And then she planned another road trip of moving every three days or so but added the wrinkle of flying to different cities to start and finish just to add to the degree of difficulty. I’m looking forward to the next trip in so so many ways, one of which is how do we increase the degree of difficulty?

Today we officially determined that we had too much to do and not enough time in Tucson. We didn’t realize that when we set up the trip so here we are. After considering the options, we decided to head to Mount Lemmon, the 9,000 plus top of which is reached via the Catalina Highway which is a bit of a misnomer since the (top) speed limit is 35mph. It is a stunning drive, and fortunately not popular in mid March so we could go at our own pace which was good except when I was freaked out which only happened a few times on the way back down.

When I say not popular, I mean with cars since there were more than plenty bicycles on the road, and at one point a lady running downhill with her dog. Kind of reminded me of Ireland – narrow, windy, never know what you’ll meet only without the stone walls but instead with mountains. I was very impressed with the cyclists pedaling away like mad, barely moving, at altitude with a relentless climb and the only reward the satisfaction of an outstanding workout and stunning scenery. And, oh yeah, going like a bat out of hell on the downhills. I imagine it’s hours growing up and then minutes going down.

The temperature steadily dropped and the wind increased as we went up, so at each scenic overlook I put on more clothes, and by the time we got to the top and hiked portions of a couple of trails we had a multilayered defense against the cold including hats and gloves. It was so cold we ate lunch in the car, which kind of reminded me of the time we did that in Scotland only the view of the loch was better, at least what we could see when the rain let up.

After a brief recovery at the casita, it was off to dinner with my former coworker Dave Ridyard who lives here. It was great to catch up with Dave and I know how much MBH likes to talk to people, especially people who aren’t me. There is a lot of togetherness on a road trip. A lot.

Today’s ussie (selfie, twoie, dosie, or usie) at a scenic overlook on the road less traveled
We saw a lot of pine trees today. A lot of pine trees.
We saw some snow today, not a lot.
Today’s dose of soothing riparian video.  

Turns out this is the top part of Sabino Creek which forms Sabino canyon and is the creek in yesterday’s videos. It is a small world after all.
Our view at lunch- pretty much the same for both of us except I had a better view of the reflection of my sunglasses
Majesty!
Another trip, another phone booth, this one outside El Charro in downtown Tucson. Sadly, not the kind Clark Kent can change into Superman.
The sun is so bright here I often can’t see what I’m taking a picture of, so somehow I got Kilroy instead of MBH

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Day 3 AKA We’ve Only Just Begun

Today we hiked in Sabino Canyon Recreation Area which is run by of all agencies the USDA, which might explain their poor trail markings. The scenery was worth the confusion. We managed to up both the beauty and desolation quotient from yesterday.

Later in the afternoon we enjoyed refreshments in the garden at our AirBnB and just soaked up the sun. Until it got a little too cool and we moved back indoors.

For dinner we ate near the University of Arizona and added people watching to the menu. College kids are still letting it all hang out, quite literally. Plus they still cruise, based on a number of distinctive cars (the Corvette was yellow not little or red) that kept going past us – parking spots were hard to find, but not that hard.

I can’t wait for Day 4!

Today’s ussie. There is some controversy (be sure to pronounce it in your head the proper British way) about how to spell usie/ussie. I’ve seen it both ways so I’m going to spell it with 1 1or 2 ses ( new controversy: what’s the plural of s?) depending on my mood.
A true selfie
Several miles in we came across this sign marking the exact spot wilderness starts. We didn’t dare go past it, although based on the trail right past it not everyone is so squeamish.
We saw a lot of cactus today. A lot of cactus.
I wanted to post some nice soothing videos of flowing water but this is what I had to work with today.
We did find a nice stream to eat next to so I did get one soothing video
Make that two soothing videos, here of water flowing over a dam. I’d post a picture of the not big enough to qualify as a pond body of water above it they call a lake, but you’d laugh; and that’s the last thing I want.
“It’s a small world after all” sings Indiana Jones as he creeps up on Cactus Mickey with a bag of sand
Today I leave you with MBH’s view at lunch. Mine was much better.  

Yes, I’m eating a Frito.

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Day 2 AKA And So It Begins

We shook the dust of Phoenix off our sandals and took the long way to Tucson. The scenery was beautiful but desolate; we expect the scenery to be varying degrees of beautiful but desolate the whole trip.

Today was a day of up and over nameless passes from one nameless valley into another on the back roads of Arizona. The morning found us on the shores of Theodore Roosevelt Lake chatting with a fisherman whose wife showed her love by letting him slip away to fish while she remained behind at the RV with the kids; lunch was both lakeshore and al fresco; the afternoon we hiked up a hill at Tonto National Monument and later toured the Biosphere 2.

A road trip is as much about the roads you take as it is about the stops you make.

In Tucson we found our Airbnb, ate dinner, and spent vacation dollars (they only cost half of normal life dollars in our family) at Albertsons buying groceries for breakfasts at the AirBnb, lunches on the trail, and snacks on the road. We also picked up a few necessities like dark chocolate.

We start with the obligatory selfie, oops I mean usie (I learned something new from Ted Lasso -thanks Erin)
It’s amazing how you can find out where you are
Another usie with a demonstration of how beautiful engineering can be
The Roosevelt dam doesn’t look like much from the upstream side…
But it’s impressive from the downstream side. Good engineering, like good scientific theories, should be elegant.
The view from Tonto National Monument
Which looks stranger, the mask or the hat? MBH is wearing her new Cardinals mask so that everywhere we go people know we are Cardinals fans. I’m also a Cardinal fan.
I give you Biosphere 2, or at least a portion
The ark ship spins slowly in space…
Maybe not since there are no clouds in space
I leave you with this video that I just really like for some reason I can’t put my finger on. Speaking of fingers, I can’t help but think the saguaro cactus looks like it’s giving the world the finger

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