Friday, March 6, 2009

Big ol' hole in the ground



So. The Grand Canyon. If you've never been there you probably won't understand, but it truly is the most epic sight you'll ever see in terms of natural geography, hands down. Standing from the South Rim, looking out over the canyon, it's hard to fathom how huge it really is. It looks more like a huge painting, beautiful and magnificent, but something to look at, not really something you could go down into and explore. So after about 2 minutes of standing there on the rim, saying "ooh, aah" and taking lots of pictures, I was asking myself, "what else?" With such a large area it was really hard to decide where to start. I wanted to be home by dinner-time, which limited the length of any hike I could take. I wanted to avoid large crowds of people, and seeing as how there were really only 4 day-hike trails, 2 of which were "easier" and more popular, the other 2 more "difficult" and less scenic, the options were fairly limited. I decided then and there that next time I visit the GC I would bring full backpacking gear and go on a 3-day minimum overnight hike through the canyon. There's really no other way to experience the Canyon in all its glory, I figured.

Nevertheless, I had several hours before I needed to return home, so I decided to go hike down the Hermit's Trail for a while. Seeing as how it's farther down the canyon from the main touristy area and in a part of the canyon that is not as deep or magnificent, I figured it'd be less congested in terms of hikers and I'd have more of a chance to experience the wilderness sans interruption. And I was right! I only ran into a few people on the trail, and (aside from the European tourists whose english didn't seem to good) they were all very friendly and talkative. Experienced hikers they were, none of these silly city-folk who are used to walking with their heads down and their eyes forward. The first guy I ran into had been out in the canyon for something like 5 days and looked just exhausted. But he was still really friendly and took our encounter as a chance to catch his breath and prepare for the last leg out of the canyon (he was really close, considering how far he must've hiked the past few days). We chatted for a while and talked about the midwest (he was from Wisconsin, I think), and then parted ways.

I just want to say, when I'm hiking in the wilderness I really enjoy the encounters I have with fellow hikers. Some people are more reserved and shy, but by and large, hikers have been hiking for so long either by themselves or with the same person/people, when they run into you, a lone wandering soul, they just get so excited that they have someone new to talk to the conversation can end up going on for a long time, and I'm usually the one who ends it, since I want to continue on my adventure. It reminds me of the inherent good and companionship of wandering souls and makes me smile.

So anyways, I ended up making it down to the bottom of the canyon (which wasn't as deep as other parts, since the part I was in was formed by a feeder creek instead of the full Colorado River), ran into some more hikers and asked them how far it was to the "dripping falls", and they pointed to a distant canyon wall (the white one in the pic, if you can figure that out). It felt very far, so I walked a bit more, took a picture and turned back, expecting it to take twice as long to get back up to the rim as it did to come down (I had been hiking for about an hour and 15 minutes or so by that point). Well, I dunno, maybe I'm just good at meditating on long uphill hikes or something, but it really only took me about 10 minutes longer to get up the wall as it did to get down, so I still had an hour and a half to kill before I had to leave. I guess they were right, slow and steady really does win the race.

So I drove back into the main area and searched around first for some postcards (which were easy to find), and then a belt buckle (which, it turns out, are not sold anywhere in the Grand Canyon tourist area. Surprise!). By the time I decided to send the postcards though, the post office was closed (bastards closed at 4:30!) so I couldn't even get stamps. The postcards are still sitting in my car..... lol. I suppose I'll send them next time I get some more postcards, though by then I kinda feel like they'll have lost their significance. Postmarks are important to me, so if it's not postmarked in the Canyon itself, what's the point? Meh, oh well.

After driving back to Flag and eating some leftovers for dinner, Leigh, Heidi and I headed out to check out this Reggae show at a local venue called the Orpheus. The band itself was....okay, I suppose. Not worth the $15 cover charge, but it was fun nonetheless. They were really weird, they kept switching between reggae and hard rock. And the guy's voice was really weird, it kept wavering all over the place and to my ears sounded really pretentious and annoying. But I'm a bit of a music snob, so if you're not as critical as I am you'd probably like it. Heidi left after only a couple songs to help some friend who had been taken to the hospital, and around that point I lost track of Leigh, who didn't return that night.... but still had a good time, apparently. Whatever, it's all good. No 40-year-old republicans to buy us drinks this time though, but $2 pbrs so it's all good. I hung out and listend to a couple more songs, giving them the benefit of the doubt, but then got tired of it and headed outside. I then ran into a couple friends from before and hung with them for a while, smoking cigs and chillin outside, before heading back to the casa and hanging out with Heidi for a little while (they wouldn't let her visit her friend in the hospital because she wasn't related). Then it was bed time and I passed out on the couch once again.

So that was Flagstaff. Crazy college party town, I had a really fun time. The next morning, Kelli and I drove down to Sedona, had lunch at a Panera-esque restaurant with a beautiful view of the surrounding red rocks, and hiked around for a bit on some trails near town. Then Kelli went to hang with her old golf friends and I walked around Sedona for a while before heading down to Prescott for my next couchsurfing experience.

Sedona is full of fortune tellers, mystics and psychics, and rightfully so. It really does feel like the twilight zone, or maybe a martian oasis, with the crazy red rock formations and the super expensive tourist shops. I did not get my fortune read (I'll save that for the wildnerness of the northwest), though I did see some pretty cool art in "Sedona's number 1 art gallery" or something. I guess they're too rich for Artists' Cooperatives though... didn't see any of those.

On the way from Sedona to Prescott I stopped in the little mountain village of Jerome and found it quite endearing. Very narrow roads up and down steep mountain inclines with 15 mph speed limits, rickity old buildings repainted so many times the paint was peeling underneath the peeling paint, very eclectic little stores and art galleries, and...lo and behold...an artists' cooperative gallery right there in the middle! I went straight in there and looked around for a bit, but the postcards were all $3 each and I'm poor, so I left emptyhanded (save for a photograph of the gallery's sign). It was really cool though, to see a successful co-op out in the middle of the mountain/desert. Artists are the shit.

I then arrived in Prescott to my hosts' house (Reuben and Jourdie) to be greeted by Reuben's friend Clancey, who was also there visiting from California. We hung out for a bit, then Reuben came home and we talked for a minute before heading out to a friend's house to witness a pig butchering. Apparently the way they slaughter pigs in the third world is by taking a sledgehammer to their head to stun them before stabbing them right in the forehead and again in the jugular (or something like that). Well, the only sledgehammer this guy had was a small hand-sledge, so whacking the pig with it really just shocked it more than rendering it unconscious. So it wasn't the most humane slaughter, but I guess it worked, since the pig was already dead by the time we got there. Surrounding it were four mexicanos with blades who obvoiusly knew what they were doing, and while we were there they were shaving all the hair off the pig so that the skin could be left on the meat. Hot water, knives and a sharpening block was all they needed. It took forever, they were still shaving after we went to visit another friend in the neighborhood, walked home to grab my camera and walked back, but it seemed like once they got that done it was just a matter of chopping up the pig itself, which really couldn't have taken too long.

Anyways, visiting the other friend was another interesting experience in urban farm animal raising. These guys had just purchased about 100 chicks, which were all chilling in 3 big tubs under some heat lamps, chirping their hearts out. One had managed to escape and was running around the floor of the garage, but we grabbed it and put it back. It was a trip seeing all those little baby chickens, apparently they have a farm out of town a little ways where they were going to take the chicks once they got a little bigger to begin producing eggs. But 100 chicks, it really was kinda ridiculous. They were super cute though, so I can't complain.

After all that excitement we went home and had dinner, then headed over to another friend's house for a little party/jam session and I got to play the bass for about 45 minutes, which was super awesome. I haven't played bass in years, and it all came flowing back to me really quick. It felt good to make music again. :)

While at the party I met one guy who had been working as a park ranger for a while, another guy from Vancouver who was coming back from some sort of desert living-off-the-land convention and stopped in Prescott on the way, got to eat some tasty Caribou and Elk meat (wild caught game is the tastiest!) hunted by the sister of one of the guys at the party (I really wanted to meet this girl, but alas, she was not there), and drank some tasty Tecate beers. (note: Tecate is not tasty beer). All in all it was a fun and very surprising afternoon/evening. Who knew there was so much urban farming going on in Prescott?

Oh yeah, finally, a note about Prescott's geography. The city of Prescott is located in the middle of a "valley," though really it felt like a crater, since there were mountains in every direction but the area surrounding Prescott was very flat. It was really cool, and seemed like the perfect place for a city to thrive. Apparently Prescott used to be the capital of Arizona when it was still a territory, and according to signs around downtown, it is also the Cowboy Capital of the West, being one of the first thriving towns in the southwest and also a capital. There was a lot of history to this town, and it all felt strangely familiar.... I definitely have cowboy genes somewhere in me. It was cool.

Ok, that's it for today. This afternoon I'm going to Tucson with a couple friends, then tomorrow is Beerfest at the Tempe Town Lake (yes, they have a man-made lake in Tempe, just south of Scottsdale. It' a big waste of water, but hey, who can really complain about a significant body of water in the middle of the desert?), so the next post probably won't come until Sunday. But stay tuned, there's much more to discuss! Prescott day 2 and Phoenix/Scottsdale, coming up!

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