Line, please…   Leave a comment

Posted December 14, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

Mein Sprocket   Leave a comment

Hank vs. Wild   Leave a comment

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Did another one of those “drive 2 hours to the middle of nowhere, turn left and go another hour” outings to Monticello Box, a small, scenic slot canyon not really near anything, except maybe some beryllium and cattle. About 30 minutes into the slog, with H on my shoulders, we accidentally flushed a full grown mountain lion out of some waist high brush near the creek bank. He or she definitely had no interest in us, but it was a pretty exciting encounter nonetheless.   I wondered if it had come all the way from the San Mateo range looking for a meal. Some more pics of Monticello Canyon, including an amazing shot of where the lion was just 1 minute earlier, in the Fall 08 picture board.

Posted November 26, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

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Thank you Sam…   Leave a comment

Here’s JohnnyPretty slow trick or treater count, this guy might have scared the kids away. Had fun with the few kids who did show up. Went to CC’s again this year and stood in line for 50 minutes to tour the haunted backyard but  it was worth it. Expello!

Lantern Chair

Posted November 26, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

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Chaco Canyon   Leave a comment

Loaded some photos of Chaco Canyon in the Fall 2008 album. Hope to have more pics of Halloween up soon, and, hold onto your hats, the scene of a mountain lion siting in Monticello Box! (couldn’t get any pics of the lion, he moved to fast).

Posted November 15, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

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You call that a pie hole?   Leave a comment

Hank ready for the bell

Spent the weekend in Pie Town, NM, where every September the locals host the Pie Town Pie Festival. My guess is the festival draws about twice the entire population of Catron County for games, food, music, horse shoe throwing, the usual arts and crafts, and a lot of bikers. The town’s isolation and rural character were well documented by the photographer Russell Lee in the 1940’s, and the Lightning Field brings in arty, eccentric types from more civilized parts. But forget art. We hauled H on the 3+ hour trip for one thing: serious, no holds barred, homemade pie bakin’ and eatin’. New Mexico Tech brought in a team that pretty much dominated the pie eating contest, and the Horned Toad Race was a hoot. This year’s pie cult had an entry called “Gardenia berry”, a mysterious sounding pie that didn’t make it past the judge’s final cut. No prickly pear pies like last year, though. Also met a guy whose son was undercover in the DEA and had to retire early in Las Cruces when his cover got blown. That was sort of interesting. Had good enchiladas at the Daily Pie and took home some growlers from Socorro Springs brewery.

Anyways, i tacked up some more photos in the Summer 2008 Gallery, so take a look at Hank destroying a piece of pumpkin pie, monkeying around, and holding up a stage coach.

Posted September 15, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

Boys Named Sue   Leave a comment

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The Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash at State Line in Sunland Park. The little caped crusader made another appearance. Catch more pics in the Summer 2008 gallery.

Posted August 16, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

Wednesday is the new Saturday   Leave a comment

Gourds at the Desert Crossing

The Gourds must have gotten lost on their way somewhere else because they played Ardovino’s on a school night and it was worth the drive.

Trip up North   Leave a comment

Welcome to your National Forests

Over the 4th of July holiday we drove North toward Taos to get out of the heat, both natural as well as the potential for urban wildfires. We took the high road into the Carson Nat’l Forest for a quick overnight at the Trampas Lakes trailhead. At 9,000′, this is a good place to visit in early summer before the monsoon storm patterns begin moving into Northern New Mexico. A high country landscape loaded with Blue Spruce, Ponderosa pine, Fir and Aspen towering over the Rio de las Trampas drainage. The bleachers had already started filling when we arrived late in the day, and all the Holidays backpackers, horsemen, car campers, trailers and ATV’ers–not too mention the anonymous Truchas tagger who claimed the Forest boundary gate– got me thinking about concepts of wilderness. Not just the common interpretation of federally designated areas devoid of development, roads, mining, etc., but also what different users value in these places. Or maybe more precisely, what qualifies as a “wilderness experience”. William deBuys says this about it:

…the idea of Wilderness is a sociological, not an ecological concept, and the Pecos and other modern wildernesses owe their preservation to legislation rather than the environment. Essentially, wilderness is whatever people say it is: a park for dispersed, nonmechanized recreation, a biological research area, a gene preserve, a game preserve, an outdoor temple of solitude, or a museum of environmental history

Being around  or in wild areas has always been for me an aesthetic experience. The fun comes from the sensation that i was experiencing something untrammelled and untouched, without the aid of 4 wheels or other things that would sully the whole deal.  But there’s a lot of space between this ideal and the reality of management and caretaking that must exist for this place to be available for our weekend jaunt.

Taking a short dayhike with the kiddo up the Lakes Trail, we soon got above the campground and within a mile or two the growl of ATV’s and barking chihuahuas fade. Soon after the National Forest boundary gate, a Forest Service sign announces the Pecos Wilderness. The whitewater of the Trampas river is there, and stays with the track up toward its source at the Lakes. European, anglo, and hispanic families were there too, most enjoying the outing at about the same level you would a trip to the playground. A few backpackers passed, loaded for overnight stays at the Lakes or beyond.  Henry’s doing okay, he makes a heady effort to keep going under his own power and doesn’t appear bugged at all by the altitude. We hit the wilderness boundary, and the Forest Service sign there reminds me that this area is a designation, a place on the map with a set a restrictions (sometimes) enforced by law in order to ensure the preservation of the land and water for future generations.  I sort of like that those Truchas civic boosters drove all the way up there to lay their own claim on the wilderness.

Anyways, more pics of Hank and the trip in the Summer 2008 gallery, for your viewing pleasure.

Posted July 14, 2008 by jdryden in Uncategorized

Drive-in movie theatres are still pretty rustic in West Texas   Leave a comment

Drive-in movie theaters are still pretty rustic in West Texas

At Movie on the Mountain somewhere above El Paso. Young Frankenstein was the feature.

Posted June 24, 2008 by jdryden in posts

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