Monday, June 6, 2016

Saturday, June 4: Rattlesnake Ledge

Distance: 6.4 km at least.

Pace: About 2 mph
Weight: 18-pound backpack
Weather: Overcast, 70s-80s
Elevation gain: at least 1,160 feet. (Washington Trails Assn.)
Accumulation elevation gain for 2016: 42,648 feet. 
Accumulated distance hiked: 306.377 km

Note: The pace was the Mountaineers' "moderate" rate, which I've had trouble with in the past. I'm curious as to whether the high altitude of Arizona last week compensated for lack of strenuous hiking, or whether my body just needed a break.

View of a section of trail.



Mt. Si to the north of Rattlesnake Ledge, in late afternoon haze



View to the southeast from Rattlesnake Ledge


June 2, Thursday: Better (Cliff) Homes and Gardens, White Russia's Barefoot Traveler, Arizona's Meteor Crater

The "Barefoot Traveler," on the left, the author, and the traveler's son, Nikita, at an overlook enroute to Meteor Crater and Walnut Canyon National Monument.

Distance: Not worth mentioning

Weight: Backpack--about 20 pounds, but not counted
Weather: Overcast, 90s, mostly
Elevation gain: Approximately 300 steps at Walnut Canyon.
Accumulation elevation gain for 2016: 41,488 feet. (Conservative figure; doesn't include steps)
Accumulated distance hiked: 299.97 km (excludes today's adventure)

Today was more about sight seeing and less about hiking. It featured meeting an international barefoot traveler, seeing the largest extant meteor crater on the planet and visiting abandoned Indian dwellings.

The traveler was Vladimir Nesin, the gentleman in the photo at the top with the naked head and feet to match (not pictured). He had beautiful feet. It's hard to believe they've walked over several continents, but this is what the "Barefoot Traveler" claims on his Web site, vnesin.com,

I met Vladimir at a Highway 89a overlook while enroute to visit Walnut Canyon National Monument's Indian ruins, and Meteor Canyon east of Flagstaff Arizona. I first noticed his backpack, and my traveling companion, Mary Vesper, asked him whether he was training for a hike. Then we saw his feet, and he explained that he travels without the comfort of shoes. As a three-time bunyon surgery survivor, I affirm that he had a pair of the most beautiful male feet I've ever laid eyes on -- and after my surgeries I've paid a lot of attention to feet with straight toes.

Vladimir is from Drogichin, a town in Belarus (White Russia) Here's a sampling of the places he  has visited, as indicated by videos on his Web site:

China, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Indonesia, Dominican Republic & Haiti, India, Kanchatka and Sakhalin, Archangel and Dagestan, Nepal, Bangdalesh, Australia, Alaska, South Africa, Zimbawbe, Niger, Egypt, Turkey, Zaire, Jordan, Cameroon, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Cambodia, South Korea, Mexico, Guatemala,  Seattle, Vancouver Island -- to name a few.

His very impressive Web site includes the following map of his travels:

The barefoot travels of Vladimir Nesin

Walnut Canyon National Monument

Walnut Canyon is noteworthy for the somewhat preserved home site of early native Americans. They knew how to make rugged country liveable, as the photos that follow indicate.

The canyon is deep enough to protect the foliage from the unremitting heat of Northern Arizona. The walls are steep with plenty of overhangs to allow for shelter

Rock overhangs were divided up with stone walls to provide living spaces.

These partially-restored ruins indicate the size of rooms beneath the overhang. The stairs and smooth path on the right were post-discovery additions for tourists.


Deep in the canyon the stones are heavily worn an the foliage is very green.

Near the top, an old tree trunk testifies to the toughness of life "on the edge."

Just below the visitor's center large boulders --limestone, perhaps--tip downward in anticipation of their long, glacially slow odyssey to the sea.


Mary Vesper, my traveling companion, and Meteor Crater. This was created 50,000 years ago by a meteor estimated to be 50 yards in diameter, coming in so fast and at such a steep angle that it was an estimate 500 feet below ground before the kinetic energy of the earth and meteor colliding created an enormous explosion that killed anything within 10 miles -- instantly!

The largest meteor remnant discovered at the site. It weighs more than a small car.

A photo of a visitor's center photo. The black line at the bottom is the road to the visitor's center. The crater is aproximatley 500 feet deep. Its rim is above the surrounding landscape, thrown up by the force of the explosion and slowly eroding back into the hole. There were attempts to mine the crater, but they have long since been abandoned.

Sedona sunset

When you shoot sunset photos in Sedona, you don't aim west. You aim east, toward the red rock that's capturing the sun's evening rays. The gray sky displays smoke from one of several wildfires, most lightning-caused. The smoke enveloped Sedona in a morning haze but cleared up by nightfall.



Wednesday, June 1, 2016

June 1, Wednesday: Kaleidoscopes, ghosts a Rolls Royce



Today's dispatch isn't about hiking statistics or even hiking. It's about what you can do between hiking days in Sedona AZ. We start with the photo above.

Those two headlights that are glaring out at you belong to a vehicle almost as old as the hotel where their owner is housed -- in the garage of the Grand Jerome Hotel, in nearby Jerome, AZ. Perhaps you have not heard of Jerome, but according to a plaque on one of the few major streets in this all-but-a-ghost town, Jerome miners dug up enough copper ore by 1952 "to put 13 pounds in the hands of every citizen of the world." Well, if you say so. Since it's heyday, Jerome's population has shrunk so precipitously that the best way to know that you have arrived there is by the great big letter "J" on the scrubby hillside above the former mining town.


Jerome's population doesn't thrive on mining nowadays but on tourists with an interest in its history, including the rumors of the haunting of the former hospital building that has become a restaurant. At least one shop has a reputation with a long reach--Nellie Bly, which purports to be the largest dealer of kaleidoscopes in the world, representing more than 90 artists, most of them living in the United States. The child pictured below is peering into one of those kaleidoscopes while generating enchanting patterns for her viewing fascination.

If the appearance of that first contraption didn't impress you, try looking at the one below.

 How many kaleidoscopes can you count on the table in the photo below?

These kaleidoscopes below are encased in turned wood tubes.

What was once a hospital where many died has become a "haunted" hotel. The staff and guests tell stories of hauntings.


The hotel sports a restaurant called "The Asylum."
 

 There's nothing special in the Asylum's decore, but a view from the dining room shows the austere setting of Jerome..

There's a claim that, from Jerome's high perch, you can see for 100 miles.

In the men's room of the Asylum, naked sprites and spirits dance in the wash basin.(Women diners have to use a boring white nondescript basin.)

Behind these garage doors lies a surprise...

...a late 1920's Rolls Royce, which the owner reportedly drives a couple times a month to maintain its condition.

This so-called "Century Plant" (Agave Americana) can be found in Jerome. It actually lives only 20-30 years, then flowers and dies.

The "century," "sentry," "maguey" or American aloe, depending on your preference

A common name for the plant in the photo above is "Century Plant," but it doesn't really live that long. It is monocarpic, meaning that it blooms once, and dies. The bloom make take up to 20 or more years to appear. The official name for this is agave americana, a.k.a. sentry plant, maguey or American aloe. It is native to Mexico and the American southwest.

May 31, Tuesday: Archeological tour, Fay Canyon Trail

No statistics today. Just photos. This first one is of our morning tour guide, Cory, who, unlike Maxwell Smart, doesn't rely on his shoe to phone home. Instead, he employs this mortar, formed from lava rock by natives who lived near Sedona AZ a few hundred years ago. Possibly  there was a large gas bubble in the magma that gave the natives a good start in shaping this implement.

Photos from Fay Canyon, near Sedona AZ

The following photos show the area in and around Fay Canyon, a hiking area near Sedona. The photos speak for themselves, so most are without captions.

This tangle of fibers is actually some sort of plant. A young yucca, perhaps?

This is a small, blooming cactus.

This flower of a prickly pear cactus will soon produce a very tasty sweet fruit.

Yucca plants were vital. Their fibers in their leaves have high tensile strength, making them excellent for weaving ropes reliable enough to use for bridges The tips are very pokey.

My hiking companion, Mary Vesper

The sand along this trail is very, very fine.