I’ve always been fond of pebbles and cobbles, especially ones that are well rounded and polished. They’ve travelled long distances, in rivers or maybe back and forth along beaches, in nature’s rock tumbler, rolling and rounding for thousands or millions of years by the force of flowing water. When I was growing up in Illinois, … Continue reading PEBBLES AND COBBLES
ARMORED MUDBALLS
According to vocabulary.com, the word ephemera was originally used as a medical term for an illness or health event that lasted one day. The word later evolved to mean anything that lasts a short time, maybe a day or maybe just a second. It might refer to anything, the very short life of mosquitoes, a … Continue reading ARMORED MUDBALLS
BAD DAY SCHMOOZING
The northern Park Range of Colorado is bounded by the Sierra Madre Range in south central Wyoming, by North Park and the village of Walden to the east, and Steamboat Springs and the Piceance basin to the west. I had never hiked or camped in the area, an odd state of affairs considering the mountains … Continue reading BAD DAY SCHMOOZING
ARTIFACTS AND RUINS
One of my earliest memories of ancient humans involves Louie F. Louie showed me his collection of Paleo-Indian arrowheads, spear points, pottery. It was an impressive array of antiquities mounted in a large glass-covered case. Louie grew corn and soybeans on 2,000 acres in northern Illinois farm country. He had a keen eye for tiny … Continue reading ARTIFACTS AND RUINS
THE END- PART 1
Humans spend a lot of time skirting death but don’t think about it. Driving at high speeds on two-lane highways requires concentration. Some people don’t concentrate, they may be impaired by alcohol or drugs, or simply have bad luck. Fifty-thousand people die in highway accidents each year, even with modern vehicle safety features. During the … Continue reading THE END- PART 1
CREATIVITY
I’m driving east on the Lincoln Highway, old US-30 in western Nebraska, 10 miles west of Kimball. Interstate 80 is only a few miles south, but I avoid high speed roadways whenever possible. I’m cruising at 50 mph in a 65 zone. The highway is essentially deserted, just the nearby BNSF railroad tracks, an occasional … Continue reading CREATIVITY
STUFF
While recently browsing the nonfiction shelves at my local Denver Public Library branch, I saw a title that grabbed my attention. The book, by Randy Frost and Gail Steketee, was titled Stuff. Frost and Steketee are psychology professors who study compulsive hoarding and the meaning of things. They are clinicians who’ve worked with hundreds of … Continue reading STUFF
SYMMETRY
Navigating Interstate 70 west of Denver is a painful experience for me. Truthfully, I don’t enjoy driving interstate highways, except maybe in Montana where the speed limit is 80 and the lanes are deserted. I-70 has changed in the last 40 years. People now drive too fast on crowded, poorly maintained roadways. But high-altitude road … Continue reading SYMMETRY
RUSSIA 1994
The Hotel St Petersburg was a nine-story monolith built in the 1970s during the period of extensive reconstruction following the Great Patriotic War. The white Moderne-style building filled a long city block. I stayed there while visiting the city. In the mid-1990s it was run as a joint venture with a Finnish company. That’s probably … Continue reading RUSSIA 1994
TWO BEETLES
This essay was written in collaboration with David Vaughn. It all began with an exchange of texts involving shared experiences from the past, two stories of fated Volkswagen Beetles. David had received a note in jest from Thaddeus, a text that jokingly included a picture of an old VW van, a colorful poster image from … Continue reading TWO BEETLES
BAXTER
Baxter (aka Crazy Bob, Mr Waggles, Baxter Boodle, The Bax, and Baxy) left us for a better place in December. It’s been a sad state of affairs for us. Baxter was a long standing member of our family, a sweet, gentle fellow. He was a brown, cocker spaniel mix, a true gentleman. Baxter’s mother was … Continue reading BAXTER
CONSPIRACY
I’m boondocking today, comfortably slouching in my camp chair on the warm side of my Dodge van, protected from a chilly northeast wind. The temperature is 48 degrees, the sky, a cloudless blue canopy. I’m camped one half mile west of Hatch Point Road, 30 miles southwest of Moab, Utah, at 5,975 feet above mean … Continue reading CONSPIRACY
HEADWATERS
I’ve been fascinated by rivers much of my life, by the very nature of rivers and streams, their geology and hydrology, the history of their human interactions, and my personal experiences with them. As an adolescent, I lived across the street from the Fox River in Geneva, Illinois. The Fox flows south from its upland … Continue reading HEADWATERS
NOMADS
My son, Ken, knows me well. He recently recommended the new movie release, Nomadland, staring Francis McDormand and directed by Chloe Zhao. The screenplay is based on a book with the same title by Jessica Bruder. The story features Fern, an introverted 60ish woman in the tiny mining hamlet of Empire, Nevada. She loses her … Continue reading NOMADS
BIRDS
I stopped briefly in Green Valley to buy groceries and check my weather app before driving to Madera Canyon. It was late January and excellent weather was forecast, mid 60s, partly cloudy skies, light breezes, perfectly fine conditions for birding. I drove east to the Santa Rita Mountains on the Madera Canyon Road. The Santa … Continue reading BIRDS
TIME
I attended Catholic elementary school in Illinois during the 1950s. Some 60 years later, two memories from that experience still stand out. The first dealt with Hell, a really hot, pain-filled, agonizing place where the dead resided after committing a mortal sinꟷforever. That description really scared me, especially after I ate meat on Friday a … Continue reading TIME
EXPOSURE
I’m not hallucinating from the effects of hypothermia, nor am I suffering from a deadly virus. This essay does not address my vulnerability to risky stocks or ultraviolet light. I often take photographs with different exposure settings, but that’s also about photons. No trench coats either. Exposure to new ideas is my intent, to reveal … Continue reading EXPOSURE
PUBLISH OR PERISH
Several years ago while searching online for papers referencing my work, I ran across a disturbing entry. I opened a PDF file, a document entitled Flood Transported Quartzites—East of the Rocky Mountains, published in the Journal of Creation and authored by Oard, Hergenrather, and Klevberg. The authors were affiliated with Creation Ministries, an international organization … Continue reading PUBLISH OR PERISH
BIG SAUCE
Bannock Pass is a saddle in the Beaverhead Range, a grassy summit on the Continental Divide separating Idaho and Montana. I was driving from Dillon, Montana to Leadore, Idaho to do some hiking farther west in the Lost River Range. The 7,700-ft crest was not the route of Lewis and Clark over the Rocky Mountains. … Continue reading BIG SAUCE
CHAMA MAN
“Your moniker should be Chama Man”, I said, “like Java Man or Peking Man”. I meant that in the context of old archeological terms for species of Homo. “I would be Denver Man”, I added. I wanted to say “Teddy Man”, but didn’t. We were on the Continental Divide Trail south of Cumbres Pass just … Continue reading CHAMA MAN
SQUAW FLAT
The sage covered prairie was surrounded by red and white sandstone monoliths, a stair-step collage of barren Permian surfaces jutting upward from the plain as sawtooth ridges, pinnacles, knobs, and arches. Squaw Flat was the end of the road when I first visited in the early 1970s. The air was hot and dry. An old … Continue reading SQUAW FLAT
OF MOUSE AND MAN
The Centennial Valley is an unforgettable place, a 50-mile long east-west rift in the Rocky Mountain crust bordered by snowcapped peaks and jagged ridges, a remote destination for outdoor enthusiasts like me. I have fond memories of the valley, all reinforced by numerous visits over many years. This visit was a reconnaissance mission to observe … Continue reading OF MOUSE AND MAN
TODIE CANYON
I descended Todie seven or eight years ago, but it wasn’t entirely a pleasant experience. I vaguely remember the route, a short canyon rim stroll, a rubble strewn descent, a labyrinth of large boulders on the canyon bottom, and finally, a turn-around moment, a 10-15 ft vertical pour-off formed by a resistant sandstone ledge. I … Continue reading TODIE CANYON
IT’S A MUD HOLE
I recognized Kelsey immediately. Thin, agile, closely-cropped beard, cargo shorts, cap and bandana covering ears and neck, and that ubiquitous faded red t-shirt. A water proof Pelican micro case was strapped to the front of his belt. I own the sixth edition of his book, Canyon Hiking Guide to the Colorado Plateau. I use it … Continue reading IT’S A MUD HOLE
PIES
According to Wikipedia, pie is “a baked dish usually made from a pastry dough casing that…contains a filling of various sweet or savory ingredients.” In other words, crust makes the pie, and since the creation of flour and baked grains goes way back in time, pies are indeed very old. Pie has been traced to … Continue reading PIES
STORMS
I made numerous trips to the Chicago area to see my mom. I usually flew, either because I lacked extra time or I just couldn’t deal with the boredom of interstate driving in the Midwest. In March, 2009 I drove there. Paula Dyman was in an assisted-living facility in St. Charles, Illinois, and I was … Continue reading STORMS
SCHMOOZING
I was driving north on US-83 when I reached the North Dakota state line. For some odd reason, I planned to visit Flin Flan and The Pas, Manitoba villages at the northern end of public highways. I wanted to experience the true end of the road. The sign for Strasburg, in Emmons County was just … Continue reading SCHMOOZING
RATTLESNAKES
I occasionally dream about rattlesnakes, not really nightmares, just strange tales of snake encounters. This subconscious theater includes snippets of my real past, half baked and incomplete, often with real people I happen to know, or just strangers. One real snake encounter in the early 1980s no doubt contributed to these dreams. I was guiding … Continue reading RATTLESNAKES
3041
I had a strange feeling I selected the wrong job. This was a position with the Branch of Oil and Gas Resources I had been waiting to snag for 18 months while the wheels of government turned ever so slowly in my direction. One new colleague ate lunch so slowly that the term lunch hour … Continue reading 3041
GRAD SCHOOL PART 3
Denver, Colorado By the time I started working for Texaco, my focus to reach the U.S. Geological Survey was underway. Applying to the U.S. government has always been a cumbersome and time-consuming process, a task requiring patience and persistence. I was warned by others it would take time. Of course I was “using” Big Oil, … Continue reading GRAD SCHOOL PART 3