Jackalope Mercado, Santa Fe NM |
Thursday, April 30, 1992
Santa Fe
Wednesday, April 29, 1992
Canyon de Chelly to Santa Fe
Canyon de Chelly Tour |
At breakfast we were approached by a native, obviously under the influence, who tries to panhandle some money. We found some empty NyQuil bottles scattered about. NyQuil is a cold remedy that's mostly alcohol and, I guess, it is available in the town. The alcohol we were searching for last night is not available. The tribal lands in much of Arizona are dry.
We left our hotel in Chinle early in the morning for the Canyon de Chelly tour at 8:00 a.m. The vehicles for the tour are old World War II all wheel drive troop carriers. They are sturdy old army trucks and can travel almost anywhere. About 24 people sit behind a cabin in an open air area. Our driver is a young local native named Timothy.
As soon as we start out we immediately drove to and into the river. The river is probably 2 ft deep in spots. In fact, most of the driving was done down in the river (it dries up in July and August but this is April).
We rock and roll and are jolted around in the back of the truck and are expecting to flop over at any second. It was quite a rough ride. We did see a four-wheel drive jeep kind of vehicle stuck in the river mud but we managed to do the tour without any mishaps on our part. The treat of the trip, besides the truck and the scenery, was our guide who was a really nice person with a quick sense of humor. He was a local Navajo, born and raised in the Canyon de Chelly.
Some funny Timothy quips:
- When someone suggests that we should help out the guy who was stuck in the mud, Timothy says, "I didn't tell him to drive there."
- Pointing out one of the overlooks about 600 ft above us: first he described the overlook then he said, "I see a person up there. A woman. She has blue eyes."
- At a later overlook someone asked Timothy if there was a person up there and what was the color of her eyes. Timothy looks up, paused for a few seconds and then said, "She's wearing sunglasses."
- We went into this little rock area with the truck almost touching the roof. Timothy called it "Martini Rock because it has a big hangover."
The canyon walls have cliff dwellings from long ago. They were all built by the Anasazi — a race who lived throughout this area in the period 500 to 1200 AD. No one knows where they came from and no one knows where they went. They were also in the Grand Canyon. Timothy tells us they were short people, under 5 foot and they only lived to 30 to 35 years. Cindy thinks they probably died from lung disease due to the smoke in the caves and small adobe buildings. The cliff dwellings had small rooms and were built with stones and clay mud. All the dwellings were destroyed by the Spanish around 1600 or so who were looking for gold. One of the canyons is called Canyon de Morte (i.e. Canyon of the Dead) for the Navajo massacred by the Spanish in their search for gold. The Spanish never found any. The ruins you see today have been rebuilt by archaeologist but there are many you can see that haven't been rebuilt.
There are tons of rock carvings and paintings in the canyon. Those by the Anasazi can't be dated but there are some by recent Navajo, say from the 1850's. Those by the vandal hordes of the 1980's (tourists like us) have meant that a lot of spots, as in most, are protected and fenced off. The petroglyphs showing what looks like horses would have to be Navajo as horses only came to North America with the Spanish explorers.
There is a rim road around the top of the canyon offering scenic views from high above the river where we toured today. We should stay longer and do that next time.
At the lodge in Chinle we discovered that the Navajo rugs we admire so much are a little bit out of our price range. They seem to start at about $2,000 for a small one. Maybe we'll find a made in Taiwan imitation rug or something we can afford. We like them and would love to have one for our home, but not at that price. Reg has been trying to convince the girls that an Indian feather headdress would be a good deal for Pat given his love of hats. There's also a nice hat made of a fox/wolf pelt but we won't get that over the border with that! Obviously buying a fancy bourbon is out of the question in the Indian territory.
We enjoyed our tour of the canyon but are anxious to get out of this territory. Our drinks are gone and the no alcohol beer they serve is wretched. Our experiences on the reservation, apart from the liquor situation, have been great. The scenery is beautiful and the people are friendly. It's their beautiful land and they're rightly proud of it.
We drive the 300 miles to Santa Fe and cross the "Great Divide" (where water on the west side flows into the Colorado River basin and then to the Pacific while on the east side it flows to the Mississippi River basin and on into the Gulf of Mexico). The country is mostly pastureland, there's more water here and we're even higher up. We passed several active Pueblos on our way but have no time to stop — we will see one later near Taos.
The ruins in the canyon were made by the Anasazi. In New Mexico we see there are several pueblos which are still active but those are a different group of natives. Both were/are covered with a clay mud to make that famous smooth adobe look.
We arrive at Santa Fe with intentions of staying downtown in the "old city" where there's lots of adobe. The road into Santa Fe is like every modern city lined with shopping malls, car dealerships and fast food restaurants but the downtown is historic with a square and twisty, winding, one way streets. The first couple of hotels are full so Kate and Cindy set out on foot leaving Reg alone with the car. They return after a very long time with rooms at the historic St Francis hotel. I'm told we have "baby rooms" with the washroom down the hall. In fact we have washrooms in our rooms but the rooms are really small — there's barely enough room to change your mind! Cindy's room is the other side of the hall from ours.
The St Francis is a "refined, century-old Mission Revival-style hotel. 1 block from Santa Fe Plaza and 2 blocks from the New Mexico Museum of Art." [Google Maps 2021]
Cindy's mom, Myrt, sent a restaurant review, from the Globe and Mail, for the Coyote Cafe which is just around the corner from our hotel. The review raves about the New Mexico cuisine and we're convinced we ought to go. The cafe is upstairs and furnished with lots of interesting Mexican folk art. Over the stairway there are some Mexican paper mache figures to make up a Mariachi Band. The figures are all skeleton corpses as in the day of the dead celebrations. Over the open kitchen there are folk art animal figures that are also in paper mache: a coyote (of course), a panther, rabbits, and cute little prairie dogs. The tables are polished stone and the chairs are covered in cowhide.
Our waiter is from New York City many years ago. A fun, friendly and cute fellow with a ponytail. Ponytails seem to be "de rigueur" throughout Santa Fe. He appears to be gay, which also seems a fashion here, but he's not (there are a few in Santa Fe). He picks our Chardonnay — two excellent oak aged California wines at just a bit beyond $20 each. The first was more than enough, we drank a bit too much. The food met the extravagant Globe and Mail reviews — Kate had salmon which was not too hot, Cindy head chile rellenos which were hot, and Reg had jerk chicken which was quite hot. We shared a variation on the Caesar salad. Reg had several over our time in Santa Fe.
Our cute ponytailed New York waiter, who isn't gay since he mentions his girlfriend who also works there, stops by the table to chat after things slow down. From him we learned that the chef mentioned in the article, his name is Mark Miller, is off today opening a second Coyote Cafe in Washington DC. Mark Miller has also published some fairly well received cookbooks. Also, he tells us that Santa Fe is a wonderful place where there are more days of skiing than in the Swiss alps! And Kate thinks he was the one who told us that humidity was 5% there! Later, she saw on TV, that the humidity was 20% in Albuquerque. But it did seem more humid there than in Santa Fe. Anyways as we became accustomed to saying "it's a dry heat" and mostly it was.
Lessons learned today: in this part of the world book your tours and especially your accomodation ahead. And stock up on your liquor and alcohol supplies before you enter these dry counties.
Tuesday, April 28, 1992
Monument Valley
Monument Valley, AZ |
This is Reg's day to get silly. Kate and Cindy have promised to drive so he settles into the back seat with a few cool ones having done all the driving so far. We get away very early from Page having awakened Cindy with a phone call —she persists in saying that she "never slept a wink". But we're on the road at about 7:00 leaving our Inn at Lake Powell and the town of Page armed with Mormon coffee, "This isn't coffee, it's barely brown water!!" Our plans are to have breakfast at Goulding's Lodge, a Fred Harvey tour lodge at the edge of the of Monument Valley. That's near the "Four Corners" (where Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah meet). Goulding's Lodge is in Utah while Monument Valley is across the state line in Arizona.
We're traveling in the Navajo reservation and while there are lots of people with roadside stands selling silver, pottery, rugs and other trinkets there aren't too many gas stations or other places with a "pissoir". Kate and Cindy love the scenery — the sheep, the craigy heights, barren washes — but they'd really like a loo. When the pain becomes unbearable we all pull over and "do our duty" behind little juniper trees only big enough to count as garden ornaments. At Goulding our waiter warns us to be very careful when doing so for the wet weather has made for lots of snakes and scorpions. Yes, that would be a painful bathroom break!
The landscape we travel through is mostly pasture land for sheep, goats and the occasional horses. Although there are a few fences the animals do escape and you need to be careful when driving. Especially so since the shifting sands mean that fences are often buried or sometimes left high and dry. On several occasions we encounter livestock on the road.
The Lodge at Goulding, probably the only accommodation for 50 to100 miles, is our brunch destination. It's at Monument Valley but set back a way along a canyon across from the gateway to the valley. The rooms are built into rows along the side of the canyon wall. Each has a beautiful view of the old west landscape of Monument Valley. Over breakfast, or best so far with really neat biscuits that seem to have been a staple for the old timers, we watch airplanes arrive on a dirt landing strip. Our waiter (we seem to have had several servers) tells us the planes come from Page, where we had started out some two and a half hours ago, and are mostly booked by the Japanese and Germans. There are lots of these tourists but I think it's an exaggeration. People used to talk about the "ugly American" now it's the "ugly German" and "ugly Japanese". We're the "ugly Canadians".
At brunch Kate and Cindy talked to a tourist from England; she is awed by the distances and space. We're not so awed, in fact the space is filled with a lot of farm homes: often trailers but sometimes log hogan's, or more substantial homes, and, too often, only tar paper shacks. But the natives we've met, albeit briefly, who live here are friendly and conversant. They have well-deserved pride in their land; e.g. when we say how beautiful it is they say "thank you". Bear in mind this is their land. This is the Navajo nation. Monument Valley is a tribal park although we think, perhaps wrongly, that they may receive federal money as a "National Monument", c.f. national parks. [Ps. They don't, it's native land controlled by the Navajo Nation.]
In any case, we decide to tour the park ourselves rather than take a guided tour in an open bus or truck. Inside the park we are thankful that we did: on the one hand there's the insidious dust. However, on the other hand, we're sorry we didn't given the terrible roads. E.g., we have to make a second run at one hill where we're bogged down in sand.
There are lots of trails through the valley for cars and four wheel drive vehicles. At a couple of places Indians pose for pictures; we pay to take photos of a couple of children with mesas in the background but we could have taken a photo with an Indian cowboy. Reg took a posed picture with Cindy and Kate that he titles "Two butts and a butte".
Throughout the valley there are people who actually live there! Why beats me given the roads, heat and lack of water. There are no rivers or creeks that flow here with any permanence. However, the winter had lots of snow and earlier they had three days of gentle rain. For the moment that means that the ground looks quite green — not so green come July I'm sure.
The ground dust is red as are the sandstone buttes and towering pillars and mesas. The ground has certain feel to it. Sort of like snow with a sleet crust on top. It's hard but breaks to reveal the dusty interior. Everything becomes covered in red dust; especially your shoes from walking in it.
We drive on to Chinle at Canyon de Chelly where we have a hotel reservation — thank God we did! There are only two hotels in town and both are completely full. We saw a couple looking for a room. They may have to drive to Albuquerque before finding one.
At the Lodge in Chinle, where we might have stayed, we book a reservation for a tour of the canyon tomorrow morning. Kate and Cindy are out to stretch their legs and also looking for a liquor store. Reg has finished his last beer and thirst. Our motel has a restaurant, he's hungry for dinner and a drink; it's 7:15, where are Kate and cindy?
Well, it turns out that you cannot buy liquor or beer or etc. on the Indian reservation including here in Chinle. It's a dry town, a dry county, a dry nation. The girls finally come back after confirming the above with the locals and at various shops.
The tired trio struck out to the only restaurant in town and had a pretty good meal (or at least good prices). Kate was going to have the meatloaf but was told it was "off" so she had home pork chops, Reg had a No. 1 Mexican Dinner, and Cindy had a "Navajo Taco" (taco fixings in Navajo fry bread). But we were thirsty. It's bad enough that the Morgan's are dry on Lake Powell and in Utah, why here as well?
Since things shut down at 9:00 p.m. in Chinle everyone went to bed in order to get up early for the tour of the canyon the next morning.
Monday, April 27, 1992
Lake Powell
Pool and Lake Powell at Page AZ |
We got up in the morning and went to Bubba's Texas style BBQ for breakfast (it really isn't Texas style, nor is it BBQ). We did some laundry, bought our tickets for the cruise on Lake Powell to the Rainbow Bridge (from 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. $50), and went back to the hotel to level out a bit. We decided to stay one more night and drive to Monument Valley in the morning of the next day. Especially since we would not be done the cruise until late in the day.
Cindy met a woman in the laundromat from Seattle who had lived in Minnesota and Phoenix — she said the former was too cold the later was too hot. She also said the reason they don't have daylight savings time in Arizona is because no one would want to cut their lawn at 11:00 p.m. at night!
We did the laundry in downtown Page and shopped in the Safeway for our essentials. An Indian panhandled $5 from Kate on some pretense of getting to Las Vegas — Kate was feeling generous. Suppose you arrived in Las Vegas with a $5 grub state; do you really think you could build anything on that? Kate sure can't! That evening, at the same mall we had been in the morning, we were hit up by the same Indian — now he tells us he's trying to get to Austin Nevada. This time we said no.
The afternoon boat cruise on the Canyon Odyssey leaves from Wahweap Marina. There's a hotel there, with a pool and the scenery is weird. It's a whole other country, very odd to have all this water in this arid dry canyon land.
It's 2:00 p.m. and we're currently on the cruise on Lake Powell. It's good that we brought our own supplies as we're heading into "Utah/Morgan" territory and shipboard sustenance is limited to water, lemonade and coffee. Huh? No beer? While Page is in AZ much of Lake Powell is in Utah. The Rainbow Arch is in Arizona but there's no beer there!
Our boat ride was scenic and lots of fun but there's way too much sun. The lake is down some 80 ft from the high water mark of 1983 and there's a white "bath tub ring" left on the canyon walls.. They had too much water then and had to release the excess long, i.e. they couldn't control the river. You can see the high water mark along the shoreline landscape as a white mark on the buttes and canyon walls.
The dam is comparable to the Hoover dam — it's over 700 feet tall, closer to 800 feet and completed in 1963. Once built it took 17 years to fill! The lake is narrower than Lake Mead with much more dramatic landscapes — buttes, narrow canyons, etc. Our tour goes 40 miles up the lake to the famous Rainbow Arch and there's lots of stunning landscape along the way. The Rainbow Arch is an impressive natural stone arch about 300 ft wide at the base. We have to hike about one mile after navigating a narrow Canyon for about 6 miles from the main body of the Colorado river. When the water was higher the boat went right up to the arch.
By the way it turns out that we could have taken an early morning tour if anyone had let us know; and we had tried to find out!
The important story for the book is how we arrived back at the end of the cruise on Lake Powell. We're exhausted, sun burnt, ready for a car ride back to our hotel, and aren't you glad we decided to stay rather than travel? Only to discover that Reg no longer has any car keys and we have only one set. Cindy leads us step by step through our last contact with them and then points out to us that they are laying in plain view in the backseat! Reg is relieved that it was Kate who had left them this time as this has happened before to him (c.f. Davenport, KY and the Dicks).
The security fellow at the lodge where we had taken the tour has a complete kit for breaking into cars. He tells us he drove a tow truck in Phoenix and this kit was the second best $40 he'd ever spent. He also tells us that he does this about 3 to 4 times a week. In any case, he gets into the car with a minimum of fuss as Kate had left her window open a bit. We tip $5 and are very relieved that the experience wasn't worse. The lesson here is to get two sets of keys when you rent.
We went to our pool back at the Inn on Lake Powell after the long tour to cool down after a day in the sun. Although the day had been very hot and sunny the pool was cold, very cold! Next morning they admitted, only when we mentioned it, that "We usually warn our guests that the pool isn't heated."
These notes, originally composed by Kate, Cindy and Reg at the time of the trip, were transcribed '21/07/06 with the help of Google voice recognition.
Sunday, April 26, 1992
Grand Canyon
Mule Train on Bright Angel Trail |
Saturday, April 25, 1992
Vegas to Grand Canyon
On Route 66, Indian Land. |
We left Las Vegas in the early morning. We sort of stumbled out of town to the Hoover dam with no good map to show the way. But there are only a very few roads so you can hardly go wrong. Our intention is to tour the Hoover dam and make a good start on the route to the Grand Canyon which is 300 miles east from Las Vegas. We did a bit of sight seeing at the dam itself; the road crosses the dam and there are lookout areas on each side.
We talked about taking a river raft ride from the Hoover dam down the Colorado River but never had it figured out. There's a casino nearby where you can get tickets for that; I think it's called The Gold Rush Casino. There's also bus tours from the city. It looks like a good idea and we'll have to try it — next time. We also talked about taking a tour inside of the dam. The lineups were very long and the elevator ride is not for the claustrophobic. So again we'll have to do that — next time. We got some snaps from the lookouts on each side before heading on.
We stopped at Willow Beach, the marina and landing down river from Hoover Dam that's the end point for the raft tours. There's a pleasant park with a restaurant and obligatory souvenir stand. We saw a large raft disembark with some passengers making a desperate bee line to the nearby toilet. The raft ride is 3 hours long, it's quite a distance!
We got an ice chest and filled it up with ice at the landing. Last night, on our walk up the Las Vegas strip, we stopped in at the Sands and got a couple of travel cups with lids that Kate and Cindy have put to good use today. Filled with ice, juice and vodka; it puts a new light on things. We bought one here at the landing for Reg to have a Coke in. He did all the driving today and did get a beer much later.
At Kingman, AZ we decide to take the old route 66. It's a bit of a diversion to the north from travelling the interestate 40 but connects back again. The country side we cross changes from desert land through to pasture land with prairie dogs. The land is very green with lots of flowering cactus. The girls try to impress Reg with their color discrimination — they say those flowers are "fuchsia"; Reg says "pink".
Route 66 is the old two lane highway from Chicago to Los Angeles. For us it's a diversion from the interestate. Off the side of Route 66 is a paved road leading to "Havasu Falls". There's a trail there down into the canyon and it looks like there's a connection to the park at the south rim. This side road is about a 50 mile diversion and near the end is marked, at least on the map as an "unimproved road". The vodka is taking hold of the girls and the plan has been hatched to take this diversion and the unimproved road as an "interesting" detour that will "speed up" our arrival to the main village at the south rim of the canyon. Reg is not too keen on this idea (visions of vultures circling our wilted corpses are dancing in his head) but less sane heads prevail and we are committed to this adventure. Two requirements — we need find bathroom pretty quick and we need to stock up on drinks as Kate and Cindy have have almost finished their vodka.
At Grand Canyon Caverns, a small town on route 66 where this 50 mile diversion to Havasu Falls starts, we find a place to fill our supplies. The few villages we've gone through are very poor; we're in the middle of an Indian reservation. Kate and Cindy rush into the bathroom and get the drinks. Reg decides it would be a good idea if we find out about road conditions and seeks out a local. He chats up an Indian fellow who's waiting in the car with a kid and another adult. We suppose he's waiting for his wife who works at this motel complex. The temperature is 90° by the thermometer in the patio. It's hot but the air conditioned car keeps locals and tourists alike comfortably cool.
To cut the story short the local fellow tells Reg that the view is great at Havasu Falls but the undeveloped road requires a four-wheel drive and there's no traffic and there's no one living out there and we'd better stick to the highway if we hope to get out alive. We take his word for that.
As it turns out we make it to the Grand Canyon just at sunset and have a glorious view of the canyon. We realize now that you're not supposed to be out here without a hotel reservation and panic sets in — there are tons of people, buses, etc. and signs say that all the lodges and camp grounds are full. There is, of course, no room in the park and nothing posted in the gateway Tusayan Village.
But we find two adjoining rooms at the Quality Inn in Tusayan (the village just outside the park at the South Rim). We are lucky as, apparently, they had a tour cancel. The clerk tells Cindy and Kate that we are very lucky to have a room at all. It's not unusual to find ill prepared tourists sleeping in their cars! Cindy tries to get a room in the new part of the hotel but is laughed at. She asks if the room has a phone — he says yes and that by next year they hope to have running water and indoor plumbing. A bit of humor for the desperate.
That night after visiting the canyon at sunset we have dinner at the "Steakhouse" near our hotel — Reg has a steak, Kate has ribs, and Cindy has shrimps. We're told they are "Genuine Colorado River" shrimps — some joke.
The waiter asked Kate what kind of salad dressing she wants and then proceeded to explain that the only dressing is "Ranch Dressing". When Cindy and Reg were asked the same question they said "Ranch" to avoid the retelling of the joke. The waiter hardly spoke English — oddly, it improves the Ranch Dressing joke. Dinners were barbecued on juniper which tastes a lot like mesquite.
A notable oddity: The women's crapper at the restaurant was a two-holer — flush toilets of course but a shared space like at the cottage.
These notes, originally composed by Kate, Cindy and Reg at the time of the trip, were transcribed 21/07/05 with the help of Google voice.
Friday, April 24, 1992
Las Vegas
Kate & Cindy, Caesar's Place, Las Vegas |