Act
I: “It goes like this: the fourth, the fifth, the minor fall, and the major
lift—the baffled king composing Hallelujah (Javelina, Javelina)”
My
vacation began in a composition of cottonwood trees, grazing javelinas,
meditation, literature, and Christmas. I chose the Cottonwood campground in a
little used corner of Big Bend National Park because it was available—no reservation
required. Three nights of stillness under the bright near-full moon with a
serenade of great-horned owls. Days of small walks, intense sunshine, new
scenery, warm conversations. The Sarajavoan/Italian man camping a few sites
away was also reading Orhan Pamuk and had traveled to Istanbul. I shared some
fancy Christmas sparkling lemonade, he shared some date-nut brownies. He didn’t
like Pamuk as much as I do.
A
waitress in Marfa made hiking recommendations; two of the three I achieved. I
asked the volunteer at the Castolon visitor center, just up the hill from my
camp, about the waterfall hike which will remain a secret here. He said it is
not on any map, but if a visitor asks for it by name, he had a special hand-out
outlining the great care that must be paid in visiting. The secret falls were
not far, and a pleasant trek. He gave me directions to the enchanted maidenhair fern forest.
In
my reading time at Cottonwood, I finished my Pamuk book, a story of people treating
each other (and themselves) very badly. I appreciate this author because of his
exquisite attention to detail and his creation (re-creation) of his very Turkish
world in all the colors, flavors, and atmosphere for an outsider to enter with
ease. At the same time, I took a meditation book with me that I began to
re-read. The chapter that I began with talked about paying attention. Really,
that is what meditation is all about—to practice paying attention. As I sat on
my cushion under the cottonwood trees, javelinas grazing nearby, I also watched
a young bobcat sit in the sun, stretch, walk with nonchalance down the fence
row and into the woods. Be patient and pay attention, he said.
Act
II: “I wish I had a river I could skate away on.”
I
next spent three nights at the Rio Grande Village campground on the other side
of the park, down river many miles. One delight of this corner of the park was Boquillas
Canyon where the Rio Grande, the object of our affection like that tall
mountain is up in Denali National Park, cuts through a steep-walled canyon. Used
to be, and will be again in the near future, that a visitor to the park could
legally take a boat across the river to the village of Boquillas and enjoy a
home-cooked meal. Today this is off limits, although the neighbors cross
illegally to sell trinkets. I met one such a man and practiced my painfully
limited Spanish: buenos dias; no, gracias; adios. One walks along the river,
amazed that a short wade through lazy water could bring you illegally to
Mexico; amazed at the power of water to shape rock, shape lives, shape history.
Another
joy was the nearby hot spring. It is drivable, but there is a trail from near
my camp over hill and Chihuahua Desert dale to the spring. After a cold night
in the 20s, I awoke and dressed and hiked to the spring. Oh, the lovely soak.
The natural spring has been harnessed by humans for over a century. It sits
just by the river, so one can (if you are like me) hop in the river momentarily
to cool down. Just stay on this side, please. The hike back made the most of what
turned out to be a glorious 70 degree day. I actually got hot and found one
tiny mesquite under which to take a short shady break.
Back
in camp, I tackled the long awaited and twice attempted The Sound and the Fury
by Faulkner. Rich success this time as I completely gave myself over to the
flow of uncommon voices. The lack of sense of my own time and the inability to
do anything else in the evening hours led to success. The sun went down around
5:30 and I went to bed usually around 8:30. Big Bend does not allow for fires.
So wrapped in my down sleeping bag, armed with hot tea, and sporting my
headlamp, I made good use of the evening hours. All my nights at Rio Grande
Village were in the 20s. One night across the river I heard a donkey braying.
Act
III: “I’m walkin’ with a fortune teller. I can see my own way home.”
Traveled
up to the Chisos Basin campground for three nights. Higher elevation, surrounded
by a ring of mountains that makes one feel as if you’re in the middle of an
ancient caldera—not the case although volcanism created the Chisos. Visited
here in my camp by birds and a confused deer. Alas, as well, visited by clouds
and wind and rain. Oh elusive stars: first the dazzling moon and then cloud
cover.
Nonetheless,
settled into a nice routine with a new book about the park itself, a collection
of articles and memories from a naturalist/photographer who arrived in the Big
Bend area in the mid-1940s. I spent my last few days following his trail and
understanding the park through his eyes. I was also reminded of another
photographer/philosopher who understood the value of a place “where the clocks stopped long ago.”
Hiked
one morning before the rain down to the Window, a dramatic outlet for water
from the basin. The trail led downhill to the top of a vast waterfall, dry this
time of year. The view was fantastic and the trail took me through the higher
elevation vegetation: pinons, juniper, oaks, and an assortment of cactus and
agave.
The
last day we achieved again sunshine and warmth. I drove west of the park to
historic Terlingua, now a strange mélange of espresso joint, foreign tourists
looking for The West, hippies, cowboys, and meth-heads. One of the chapters in the
book I was enjoying: Smuggling and other Career Paths. I ate a delicious
chorizo-egg burrito at the popular breakfast spot.
The
brilliant German filmmaker Wim Wenders once made a movie called Paris, Texas.
Part of it was filmed in the Big Bend area, including Terlingua. He wrote later
that he had intended it to take place all over America. “But my scriptwriter
Sam Shepard persuaded me not to. He said: ‘Don’t bother with all that
zigzagging. You can find the whole of America in the one state of Texas.’ At
the same time I didn’t know Texas all that well, but I trusted Sam. I travelled
around Texas for a couple of months, and I had to agree with him. Everything I
wanted to have in my film was there in Texas—America in miniature.”
Later
I drove down to a state park education center named after a colleague of my
naturalist/photographer/memoirist. Learned more about the nature of the area and
got recommendations for a scenic drive and a slot canyon hike. Along the way I
enjoyed again my new Calexico collection, a Tucson band named for a town in
California straddling the Mexican border. I don’t really understand many of the
words, but the sound is a rich blend of folk, Americana, and mariachi horns. A
compelling soundtrack to the drive.
This
night, this last night in the park, this New Year’s Eve in a place where the
clocks stopped long ago, the stars came out to serenade me. The dark evening
began with stunning alpenglow on the peaks of the basin, followed by the appearance
of the international space station blazing across the sky. Then my beloved
stars bloomed in the sky. Bundled in down, I watched the sky for nearly three
hours. Attention must be paid! Until the clouds rolled in and to bed I crawled.
Artists,
filmmakers, musicians, writers, stars, small strange animals: guides along our
path, shining a light.
My fortune teller, the roadrunner...
Act
IV: “And a screen without a picture since Giant came to town.”
Marfa,
Texas, is known for being the location of Giant, the motion picture of epic
1950s Texas. Today it is rather arty and tourist-laden. I had previously ridden
the Amtrak through Marfa. I knew I wanted to return. Alas, I was not able to
secure a room for New Year’s Eve (and I therefore missed Butch Hancock and
Jimmie Dale Gilmore at Pedro’s, but fortunately didn’t know this ahead of time
or I would have been tortured) so I arrived on the day of the New Year. I found
late lunch at an airstream taco stand and ate up the last of his black-eyed
peas and more chorizo-egg corn tacos.
Then
I checked into the swanky and historic Hotel Paisano where I took a very long
very hot shower. The actors of Giant stayed at El Paisano in the summer of 1955
and guests today can select the Rock Hudson suite or the Liz Taylor suite or the
James Dean historic room (Dean evidently didn’t rank a suite). My humble
historic room suited me just fine.
Next
day I drove north a little to visit the McDonald Observatory and its giant
telescopes. Remote and moderately high and dry, this facility—associated with the
University of Texas, Austin—is truly world class. You may know StarDate sky
updates on NPR: they originate from McDonald. And they offer popular tours for
very little money, so I went. With our talented and enthusiastic guide, we went
inside the large, squat, domed chamber and saw the telescope. Our man worked
the controls and opened and closed the curtain, rotated the dome, and raised
and lowered the floor. The only thing he didn’t do was open the bay—must keep
the room at nighttime temperature. In the presence, we then were, of those who
have taken stargazing to another level. Talk about paying attention.
My
departure from Marfa was delayed by the annual west Texas snowstorm, so I had
three nights here as well. Good and diverse food and a great bookstore kept me
occupied. Picked up one day a book of…well, I think one review called it
poetry, but not exactly poetry. But a treatise on love, loss, and life themed
on the color blue. She wrote that for years she was writing about blue and that
was what her friends knew her by: the person writing about blue. She pulled it
off well, I would say, and offered me a good example of a festering writing
project of my own inspired by something Pamuk wrote about. For my snow day, I
went back and purchased Zora Neal Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, which
shamefully I had never read before. Perfect snow day activity as I did a pile
of laundry.
Hated/needed
to leave Marfa: my new Livingston, my new crossroads. Worth quoting more of my favorite Lyle Lovett
song:
And this old porch is like a steaming, greasy plate of enchiladas
With lots of cheese and onions and a guacamole salad
And you can get 'em down at the LaSalle Hotel in old downtown
With iced tea and a waitress and she will smile every time
And this old porch is the Palace Walk-in on the main street of Texas
That's never seen the day of G and R and Xs
With that '62 poster that's almost faded down
And a screen without a picture since Giant came to town
And this old porch is like a steaming, greasy plate of enchiladas
With lots of cheese and onions and a guacamole salad
And you can get 'em down at the LaSalle Hotel in old downtown
With iced tea and a waitress and she will smile every time
And this old porch is the Palace Walk-in on the main street of Texas
That's never seen the day of G and R and Xs
With that '62 poster that's almost faded down
And a screen without a picture since Giant came to town
Coda:
“And I’m thankful this old road’s a friend of mine.”
Crawled
out of Marfa Friday morning with much snow still on the roads. The 21 miles to
Fort Davis took me an hour. The man at the gas station in Fort Davis, on being
asked the road condition to Balmorhea, told me it would be fine because there
hadn’t been any accidents yet. Impeccable logic. I continued and conditions
improved. By Pecos the roads were mostly clear. Multitasking: learning to drive on the shoulder when others want to pass you while escaping the great New Year’s
West Texas Blizzard.
Drove
long into the dark as the sky cleared and the stars came out. Maybe I just
wanted to make up for lost time with my stars. Crossed Raton Pass and settled
in for the night in Walsen-Matilda-burg. Came on home at first light.
Spent
a dang long time outside which was my goal. Slept ten hours a night, read five
books, enjoyed quality time with javelinas and sunshine, learned a few new
things about how this world works, got some exercise. And I do believe I paid
attention. Yes, indeed.
I:
“Hallelujah” Leonard Cohen by way of Jeff Buckley and others, as recounted in a
new book called The Holy or the Broken, which was discussed in an NPR story
sent to me by my sister while on vacation. Really, sing it replacing the title
word with “javelina.” Big Bend locals find the javelinas to be annoying, but I
was utterly charmed by these small pig-like ungulates.
II:
Joni Mitchell’s “River” but actually I mean the great cover Vin Scelsa played
last week by…I want to say Tracy Wolfe, but I can’t get confirmation.
III:
“Fortune Teller” off the new Calexico. Listened to it 20 times in the past two
weeks.
IV:
Old favorite “This Old Porch” by Lyle Lovett and Robert Earl Keen. Absolut
Texas.
Coda:
Townes Van Zandt’s “Snowin’ on Raton.” Great example of loving a song long
before it became geographically relevant.
























1 comment:
Thanks for taking us on your adventure!
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