Petrified Forest- rocks and ancient trees that have turned
into rocks! Anna was in rock
heaven!
Sunday, 23 March 2014
Shit Show
A word about shit.
Yep the real human stuff.
We have been doing some boondocking in our travels- which at its most
basic is camping not in a campground- off of the side of a back road -legally. This is usually on public land like Bureau of
Land Management or in National Forests- similar to crown land in Canada. We love it- we can find an out of the way
spot down a forestry road and pull off.
No one around, dogs can relax and run around, kids can be loud- no noise
or rules. But the major drawback to
boondocking is that humans are disgusting and apparently no one has taught most
of us how to shit in the woods. We have
been in sites where there is so much human shit that we have had to tie the
dogs up (they are disgusting and will eat it) and the kids can’t run
around. Toilet paper all over, piles
of shit right on the surface- NASTY! So
here’s how you do it in a nutshell. By
the way our kids knew how to do this by the time they were toilet trained. If you have a toilet in your trailer or
camper- use it- that’s what it’s there for.
If not- go away from the campsite, away from a trail and away from
water. Dig a hole with a trowel, shovel,
stick, rock or the heel of your boot, 6 inches deep. Shit in that.
Wipe- wrap used toilet paper in a clean piece and set aside or put in a
bag in your pocket. DO NOT BURY, BURN,
OR LEAVE TOILET PAPER!!!! Bury the shit
with the soil you dug out. Now cover the
spot with a large rock or log. Take the
toilet paper with you and burn it in your campfire or put it in the
garbage. So- not so hard. Remember the kids’ book We all poop? Learn to do it right and don’t inflict your
remains on others. Enough said.
Grand Canyon Side Trip
South Rim |
Only this family could make a trip to the South Rim of the
Grand Canyon an afterthought....we were all pumped to go to the Petrified
Forest and Greg and I realize that we are only 60 miles south of the Grand
Canyon South Rim. So we found a boondocking
site just outside the park and went in exploring for the day. It is breathtaking- but too many tourists
and really it is impossible to take a photo or describe it. The Grand Canyon is one of those places that
must be experienced. We were all inspired and loved the views and
the rocks and also the tower at Desert View.
We had a big brainstorming session about a round house and cool stairs
and pictographs on the walls....we aren’t that rich.
Funky Town
Chloride- an out of the way place off of highway 93 on the
way to Kingman, AZ. Middle of nowhere
place that used to have a silver mine.
The now have funky houses, a tourist information centre a ton of local
character and characters including the guy that drives this “truck”. Yep it drives.
At 10:30 in the morning he was already
buzzed on some kind of hooch and was chatting me up at the info centre aka liquor
outlet, art gallery, used bookstore and general mercantile. I asked him if he had a friend that followed
him around with shovel and the store owner started laughing and said know it
all falls down into his boots! If you
are driving past- go in. Totally.
Death Valley
Death Valley....
Sounds forbidding- so beautiful and at the same time
harsh. There are springs here that feed
life as long as it stays in balance.
“There is no shortage of water in the desert but exactly the
right amount, a perfect ratio of water to rock, water to sand. There is no lack of water here unless you try
to establish a city where no city should be.”
Edward Abbey
It feels like there is enough water here. When we were at Red Rock and Lake Mead it
felt sort of dirty to use water- knowing the water level in the reservoir and
knowledge of climate change. There
shouldn’t be a city there- or so many people. For sure not green grass, casinos and fountains. Likely in the future it will be a surreal
ghost town.
A land of extremes – low- Badwater Basin – below sea level
with no diving equipment!
Hot- we only
got to about 87 deg F but it can get to 130 F!. It is super dry.
Water- springs, and snow and salt and a swimming pool. Weird.
The area gets about 2 inches of rain per year! We were there for rain!
It does turn “dirt” to gumbo and rain to snow
at the higher elevations. Our friends
from Kentucky that we met made the mistake of going up to 11,000 ft the day
before it rained. Apparently they are
still (one week later) waiting for it to melt so they could get their truck and
camper out. Expensive lesson, but will
make for a good story some day.
We drove a backcountry canyon road, rock,
cliffs, up and down, switchbacks and one way through Titus Canyon- unbelievable
that we were actually allowed to drive there.
I love seeing Leland in the mirror. |
Checked out mines, views, a new
rock formation at every turn. We met an
archeologist who was volunteering at the park demonstrating flint knapping and
got the kids really keen to see some ancient ruins and cliff dwellings. Even saw a real live roadrunner! No picture though.
Wednesday, 5 March 2014
It's not about the easy way up.
Red Rock Canyon west of Las Vegas is one of the top rock
climbing destinations in North America.
Greg has been waiting 30 years to come here. The rock is spectacular, the climbing is amazing,
the sun and temperatures are perfect. A
few too many people, but we can’t have it all.
Leland is really loving climbing.
Greg set up a top rope on this climb called Side Effects which has a
difficulty of 5.10b. Hard.
It also has an overhang which makes for some
swings when they fall off, but prevents as many scrapes.
Anna likes it too but is more cautious.
Greg did get up on the rock too with Leland
learning to belay with me as backup.
Rusty
loves hiking to the crags and hanging out.
Tilly comes too but moans and then tries to curl up in the shade.
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