Saturday, May 25, 2019

NNAOPP Update - May 2019 - SW Travels


NNAOPP Update
May 2019

Welsh Cousins Reunion And Other Stuff

Cousin Steve hosted this year’s reunion of the Welsh clan at his home in Los Alamos, NM attended by 10 of the 14 of us along with a smattering of spouses and significant others.

Jesse (1892-1986) and Mayme (1894-1993) Welsh begat five children, Helen, Hilda, Jesse, Jr. aka Bill, Ruel, and Mary aka Joan, who in turn begat 14 offspring.  Each is an accomplished person, and, like the children from Lake Woebegone, is above average. 



From left to right: Joan, Bill, Helen, Hilda, Mayme, Ruel, Jesse Welsh

One, however, is worthy of special note, Steve.  He once told me, “I was just an average student.” And I replied, “Yes, I’ve observed how common it is for ‘average’ students to obtain advanced degrees in physics.”

He is a quiet man, one of the smartest people I’ve encountered, and extremely self-effacing.  He would never boast of his achievements, so I’ll do it for him.  Steve spent his career working at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, specializing in the field of super conductivity. He holds 22 patents and authored 262 unclassified scientific articles, my favorite being, “Method for improving performance of high temperature superconductors within a magnetic field.”  He is an avid hiker, biker, and skier, once mapping the sites of the known petroglyphs in the nearby White Rock Canyon.  He served on the Los Alamos Art in Public Places commission, and his home and gardens and their museum quality contents are a testament to his exquisite taste.  He can fix / build anything and possesses a dry, wry wit.  Most importantly, he is a gentle spirit and a very nice man.

But possibly his finest attribute is that he can explain complex things to dunderheads.  For example, during one of our after-dinner group conversations Steve mentioned in passing reading a book on cell structure.  Only after being prodded, did he proceed to explain, to everyone’s satisfaction, the relationship of atoms and molecules to cellular components, even giving due to sub-atomic particles.  It goes without saying that this discussion was enhanced by alcohol.

Los Alamos may be the only town in America where restrooms in fast food restaurants feature periodic table posters.  Steve mentioned that one of his co-worker’s Dad visited and insisted on playing the license plate game.  They got all 50 states without leaving the Labs’ employee parking lot, owing to the presence of visiting scientists and interns.

One evening we were the guests of Steve’s friends and neighbors, Paul and Nancy, at their beautiful home situated on the western edge of the White Rock Canyon with pleasing views of the Rio Grande River and the Sangre de Cristo mountains in the distance.  Whilst enjoying tasty snacks and drinks and enjoying the majestic scenery we were treated to the sighting of a Western Tanager, one of the planet’s prettiest birds.



Steve and Paul led a hike down the 1,000’ elevation from the canyon lip to the Rio Grande.  Pat, husband of cousin Carol, distinguished himself by making the journey on two crutches.  He’s truly an iron man. On Saturday most of us went to nearby Santa Fe. 

Several of us went to Meow Wolf, a unique attraction. Imagine enlisting the talents of 100+ gifted artists and craftsmen, give them a generous budget and an overdose of LSD, then turn them loose in a vacant bowling alley, and you get Meow Wolf.  One walks into a nice Victorian style house with a front porch.  Then one ventures forth either through the fireplace in the living room, or through the refrigerator in the kitchen, or from the dryer, each leading into a phantasmagorical world.  Quite a treat and perhaps coming to a city near you soon.

It was a fun weekend, and we enjoyed reminiscing.  None were surprised to learn that we all called Jesse and Mayme, ‘Grandma and Grandpa’ having grown up in an era before designer grandparent names were in vogue.


The Welsh Cousins

Southwestern Travels

I’ve always wanted to see Bryce Canyon and Zion National Park, so the Judester and I decided this would be a great opportunity to make the journey. 

We flew into Albuquerque, rented a car, first going to Los Alamos.  The drive from ABQ was interesting owing primarily to the many roadside advertisements for injury lawyers.  If imitation is truly the greatest form of flattery, then the creators of ‘Breaking Bad’ and ‘Better Call Saul’ would be pleased.  Signs read, ‘Hurt, Call Bert’, ‘Enough Said, Call Ed,’ ‘Fall, Call Paul,’, ‘Spurned, Call Fern’, and so on.  I pondered my missed opportunity had I become a billboard attorney.  With time and the help of friends, I’m sure I could have come up with something that rhymes with Chuck.

Our westward journey took us some 1,250 miles through the sparsely populated region that makes up a goodly portion of the Navajo Nation.  We crossed the Rio Grande, Chama, San Juan, Animas, and Colorado Rivers.  Once in Utah we crossed the Kanab, Mystic, Sevier, and Virgin Rivers.  All were flowing vigorously, a consequence of heavy spring rains and snow melt.  The northward flowing Sevier River was out of its banks.

We traveled through numerous tiny towns in NM and AZ, each with a Post Office, often the only habitable building.  Among those were: Abiquiu, Coyote, Calina, Regina, LaJara, Nageezi, Shiprock, Teec Nos Pos, Red Mesa, Mexican Water, Kayenta, Tsegi, Shonto, and Kaibito.  We would drive for dozens of miles without seeing another vehicle or any signs of human activity.  We did see herds of what appeared to be wild horses. 

Because of the wet spring and winter, we were treated to an uncommonly green desert.  From a distance, the sage looked like a carpet covering the landscape. 

Once in Utah the towns and farms became uncommonly tidy.  Towns like Kanab, Orderville, Hatch, Springdale, Virgin, et al were quite handsome and well kempt.

The principal benefit of driving through this isolated portion of the great American Southwest was viewing the infinite array of earthly etchings created by 200 million years of wind, water, and planetary upheavals.   Shiprock is one of the first masterpieces we viewed, rising nearly 1600’ from the high desert floor.  Once in Page, AZ we toured the Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powell, Antelope Canyon, and the Horseshoe Bend of the Colorado River.  All fantastic.  Lamentably, we were not able to descend into Antelope Canyon due to the possibility of flash floods.



Horseshoe Bend just downstream from the Glen Canyon dam

Even though it was mid-May, and it was rainy and cold, every attraction was hugely crowded.  There were dozens of busloads of Asian tourists.  One could hear about any language imaginable when mixing with fellow visitors

It was cold, rainy, and snowy when we got to Bryce Canyon, all to the good in enhancing its ethereal beauty.


Bryce Canyon from the Fairyland Lookout

I was certain that nothing could surpass Bryce Canyon, but I was quickly proven wrong as we entered the Mt. Carmel – Zion highway into Zion National Park.  It is an engineering marvel offering unparalleled scenery.  Far better scriveners than I have attempted to describe the park. 

Frederick S. Dellenbaugh spent the summer of 1903 painting Zion Canyon.  His paintings were exhibited in the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair where spectators could not believe such a place was real.  He further introduced the nation to Zion Canyon with these words:

“One hardly knows just how to think of it.  Never before has such a naked mountain of rock entered into our minds!  Without a shred of disguise its transcendent form rises preeminent.  There is almost nothing to compare to it.  Niagara has the beauty of energy; the Grand Canyon, of immensity; the Yellowstone, of singularity; the Yosemite, of altitude; the ocean, of power; this Great Temple, of eternity—"

Shuttle busses provide the only transportation up and down the canyon, and we overheard one of our fellow travelers echoing Dellenbaugh, “It just doesn’t seem real.”

My favorite part of the trip was a five mile hike up to Angel’s Landing.  The path rises about 1500’ from the Virgin River, and it is fairly strenuous, but fortunately at relatively low altitude (rising from 4500’ to 6,000’) enabling one to breathe.  The path is mostly paved.  One of the most famous features is a series of man-made switchbacks called the Wriggles.


View of the Wriggles leading up to Angel’s Landing

My journey ended when I got to the spot pictured below, about a hundred yards from the peak.  It is a pretty narrow path giving way to a precipitous drop-off.  It’s not visible in the photograph, but there is a strong chain strung along this part of the hike offering the hiker some semblance of safety, but I still took a pass.



View of the final yards leading to Angel’s Landing

It was rainy with temps in the mid 40’s during our visit, making for comfortable climbing.  We were told that May temperatures are usually in the 90’s.

We made final stops in Kolob Canyon and the Virgin River Gorge while traveling back to Las Vegas for the flight home.  I’d recommend the trip to anyone.

A few tidbits.

If you’re going to travel to any of the national parks, and you’re old, it is wise to get a senior pass.  It costs $80, but it is good forever, and it will save you the $35 entrance fee each time you enter a park.

I’d highly recommend Ruby’s Inn in Bryce Canyon and Flanigan’s in Springdale, both offer great lodgings and tasty chow.

I can’t wait to see what happens to this magnificent landscape over the next 10-20 million years. I bet it will be mighty cool.


Waverly’s Stories

Granddaughter Waverly often asks me to tell her stories, and I eagerly oblige.  She sometimes exaggerates in retelling said tales, but who am I to complain.

A few weeks ago, I joined Waverly for lunch at her school.  We were seated at a table with three of her classmates, and Waverly was being a bit frisky.  She proclaimed in her machine gun delivery, “My Papa was in jail!  Twice! He once stood at a busy intersection and mooned cars passing by! His friend fell through the ice in a river and then shot himself in the leg with a pistol! In the army he stitched up a guy’s face who was in a knife fight and the cut was 5” deep! His brother tried to kill him! More than once!”

I then tried to defuse the situation with defensible explanations, “Hey, I was only five when I mooned those people”, but by now there were about a dozen fourth graders at our table, and the die was cast. 

One week later, Judy and I hosted Waverly’s girl scout troop for a campout at our farm.  I drove the girls out in two different groups into the forest for an orienteering exercise, gave them directions how to first find their treasure (s’more’s ingredients) and then how to find their way back to the barn.  Earlier I had given them instructions on how to use a compass.  I also wisely instructed them on how to identify morels.  Each group did get hopelessly lost, but fortunately, while meandering aimlessly, Group A, found a treasure trove of morels.  We ended up picking about a bushel and a half.  No girls were lost permanently.

After cooking our aluminum foil hobo dinners on the campfire, I let each girl drive my Kawasaki Mule (with me sitting nearby).  On such a drive, one of the girls asked, “So, are you the guy that was in jail?”

I am now less invisible than before.

Judy’s Cousin Bob

I hear a new, great story almost every time I encounter my 89-year-old friend Bob.  Here’s the latest as told in his voice (with my parenthetical asides):

“When I was about 14 (growing up in Joplin, MO), I had a typing teacher named Irene Prosser Freely. (Think about that for a minute).  She was beautiful, and I was madly in love with her. (In spite of the unfortunate name.)  She was single and lived in a boarding house near our school.  One day she was sitting on the porch of her home when I walked by.  I extended a greeting and sat down beside her, and then timidly put my arm around her.  Whereupon she smacked me so hard, I almost fell over, and she said, “We will not speak of this.”

Judy’s dream

President Trump was visiting our house, and he gave Judy some decorating ideas.  After walking around, he opined, “This space would make a better study than a closet.”  This is a promising development, as Judy’s dreams often involve me doing something nasty.


Book sales continue to trickle in, but I still remain quite short of my goal of besting Melville. And that’s the news from here. 
Chuck


Charles A. Wells, Jr.
3317 W. 68th Street
Shawnee Mission, KS 66208
816 289-1924
Author of: Ordinary People Who Aren't: An Anthology and
Nude Nuns and Other Peculiar People
Now available in all ebook formats on Amazon at:  http://www.amazon.com