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Showing posts with label road trips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label road trips. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2018

2018 A -Z Challenge - N


N    Things We Appreciate

The western end of America’s Mother Road (formerly US Route 66 and subsequently relegated to State Route status in 1985) begins in Needles, California where temperatures soar to heights that nary a lizard would scoff at. Needles set a new record in August of 2012 for the world’s hottest rain (115 degrees). The high that day was 118, while the humidity was at only 11%. This too was a record for the lowest humidity at which rain has occurred on earth in recorded history. Nevertheless, under Night skies, with the windows rolled down, it’s a temperate place to stop if you’ve been driving since the Dust Bowl as the Joad family did. And what could be more welcoming to a weary traveler on a dark and sultry night than the glow of a Neon Sign



A long-married friend of mine was pleasantly astonished to see the Northern lights for the first time when her boyfriend drove her to where he knew they’d be visible on the night he proposed!

Nature! Isn’t it wonderful?








Nests – Roughly the size of a ping-pong ball with velvety soft floors and interior walls, these miniscule Hummingbird mansions are constructed with twigs, pieces of leaves and plant fibers carefully woven together with spider silk which not only tethers the nest to a foundation (typically branch forks of shrubs or sheltered trees) but expands with the growth of the babies.  
   




 

For larger birds whose curious young tend to topple right out of their nests, I recommend miniature Safety Nets.  Interestingly, the first Life Net (as it was called), invented by Mr. Thomas Browder was designed much like the trampolines of today, which also require safety nets.
Other popular uses for nets include sports, insect, and animal barriers, fishing, and of course, Naps!







Naiche, meaning “mischief maker” was the name given to the son of Chiricahua Apache Chief, Cochise.

Happy N Day!




Any thoughts? Can you add to the list of things we appreciate that begin with the letter N?


Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Phantoms of Vallecito



Nothing seems as distant as your destination when crossing the desert in summer. Sometimes even a brief stop at a ramshackle gas station proved refreshing when we could run inside and take turns standing in front of the fan on the counter while grandma pumped gas out front. 

Of course, back in the day, I’m about to tell you about, there were no gas stations. Anywhere. But there is a place where you suddenly glide down from the menacing high desert mountains into a veritable wonderland of flatland grass and a natural spring. No wonder everyone stopped there.

Nestled in the heart of ‘earthquake valley’ in the Anza Borrego desert are remnants of a once bustling stagecoach station called Vallecito (little valley), where weary travelers and their burros could rest and replenish water and supplies.  However, having come through the ‘journey of death’ across the unforgiving desert, many weren’t able to go any further.

Such as the Lady in White, who was assumed to have traveled cross-country alone to meet her prospective husband (some speculate she was a mail-order bride), only to die of exhaustion and dehydration in a back room of the station. Although she was buried in a wedding dress found in her suitcase, and hers is one of only three gravesites in the old cemetery, her restless spirit is said to roam the valley ridges on moonlit nights, an unsettling vision; in tears, and flowing white.

As the first official transcontinental route (between Yuma and San Diego) for stage lines and emigrant caravans alike, especially during the Gold Rush days, Vallecito became a principal stop for the antecedents of the Pony Express, though back then it was called Jackass Mail. 

While the stagecoach that ran between Carrizo wash and Vallecito station is of small note in history these days; stories abound of sightings of four mules pulling a coach with a driver who sits slumped over. If by morning you’re not sure you saw what you think you did, wagon wheel tracks in the deep, soft sand are quite convincing that someone (perhaps the mailman?) wants the trail to remain open.

And then there are the fireballs. Reportedly seen (since as far back as 1858) north of Vallecito station as burning balls; projecting soundlessly up and exploding into cascading flames that light even the darkest of night skies. If there is an explanation for these sightings, I haven’t found it. But, as one local historian puts it; “Don’t gaze long into the darkened night…for something is undoubtedly looking back.”

Do you have a favorite road trip memory? Would you camp in earthquake valley? What do you think those fireballs are?