Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Canyonlands, Arches, Mesa Verde and more — Sept. 2021

 

Delicate Arch (on the left) in Arches National Park

Link to more photos. (View the photos individually to see the captions.)

This tour took us to Canyonlands, Arches, and Mesa Verde National Parks, a narrow gauge railway ride, New Mexico's Ghost Ranch and the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. It was supposed to include Taos Pueblo, but that is still closed.

We began with our first flight since COVID and an overnight stay in Salt Lake City. Our first stop the next day was Dead Horse Point State Park, followed by Canyonlands National Park, where the Green River joins the Colorado River. We took the Island in the Sky scenic drive to Grand View Point.

We continued to Moab and began early the next day lining up for nearby Arches National Park.  The park has plenty of spectacular scenery. We stopped at Balanced Rock, Delicate Arch (the symbol of Utah), Landscape Arch (the longest arch in the park), and the Windows. See the photos (link above).

We left Moab via the Million Dollar Highway and, in the afternoon, the 19th-century Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad. At a top speed of 18 miles per hour, this was a 3.5-hour, 45 mile bum-rattling jouncy ride along the Animas River with beautiful scenery.

The next morning, we went to Mesa Verde National Park. I remember visiting it as a child. We viewed several cliff dwellings from across canyons, and also heard a presentation at the Pithouse Archeological Site.

Unable to visit Taos, we lunched at Ghost Ranch, and stopped at the sanctuary in Chimayo on our way to Santa Fe. I have visited Santa Fe several times, but decades ago. The highlight of our stay there was the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum

Oddly, and in a first for me, this tour did not end in the city of our return flight. The tour ended after breakfast in our Santa Fe hotel, but we then needed to get to Albuquerque on our own to fly home. We took the train from Santa Fe to Albuquerque. Next to the Santa Fe Railyard, the Jean Cocteau Cinema is owned by Game Of Thrones author George R.R. Martin. He commissioned this trompe l’oeil mural, Beauty in the Beast by John Pugh, for the back wall of the building. Click here to see its details and a better, complete picture (the last photo on the page). 


Friday, September 3, 2021

Yosemite & Eastern Sierras — Aug-Sept 2021

Half Dome, Yosemite National Park

Link to more photos (Click on the photos to read their captions.)

Travel is not yet back to normal. I first booked this trip in January 2020 for later that year. Covid canceled that, and I then re-booked in May of this year for August, by which time I thought everything would be fine. Nope. The mask mandates still due to Covid were no problem. It was the Caldor wildfire that really messed things up!

The tour, by Good Times Travel, was to include Mammoth, Mono Lake, two nights at South Lake Tahoe, and Yosemite. Three days before departure (!), it was clear that we would not be able to go to Tahoe, and GTT announced that instead of two nights at Tahoe, we would spend one extra night at Mammoth and one extra night at Yosemite. New activities would include Lee Vining and a ride on the Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad. (I would have preferred visiting Manzanar and Devils Postpile.)

But the hits kept coming! On Tuesday night, while we were at Yosemite, the US Forest Service closed all National Forests in California due to continuing wildfire threats. The train trip was instantly impossible. GTT, scrambling to adapt, added a new activity for Thursday, but Wednesday became an open day of no group activities other than meals. 

So what did we finally get? On Sunday, the Museum of Western Film History in Lone Pine and a tour of some of the film sites in the Alabama Hills. On Monday, a gondola ride to the top of Mammoth Mountain, a tour of the June Lake Loop, the Old School House Museum and Upside-Down House in Lee Vining, and a visit to Mono Lake. See the photos (link above).

At our hotel for Sunday and Monday, our "room" was enormous! Instead of a room with two beds, we had a suite with two bedrooms, two baths, a sitting room, dining area, and full kitchen. Three TVs: one in the large room and one for each bedroom. And one bathroom was gigantic, apparently to accommodate wheelchairs throughout, including in the shower.

We spent all day Tuesday in Yosemite National Park, with a number of sightseeing stops, including completely dry waterfalls, and a bit of hiking. See the photos (link above).

I saw that our hotel offered a nature hike at 10 am every morning, but when I asked about it Wednesday morning, it had been cancelled due to the overnight forest closures. So Victor and I did a short little hike around the hotel area.

On our way back home, we stopped at the Forestiere Underground Gardens.

The weather was mild throughout. I'm very sorry we couldn't get to Lake Tahoe, but there was nothing anyone could do about that.

Sunday, August 1, 2021

The £50 Turing banknote


I've got a £50 Turing banknote

I have written before about my interest in Turing

In 2018, the Bank of England decided they wanted a scientist on the new £50 note and invited nominations from the public. In six weeks, they received 227,299 nominations with 989 eligible names. With the help of public focus groups, their advisory committee determined a final shortlist of one dozen. The bank's governor, who makes the final selection, announced the choice of Turing in July 2019. The design was released in March 2021, and the bills were issued June 23rd

Although the US Mint sells coins and bills direct to the public, the Bank of England does not. After declaring everywhere that I wanted one, a computer science teacher friend said she wanted one, too, and she asked another math teacher friend with family in England, and that connection worked.

Thursday, June 3, 2021

Returning to travel

 


We now have multiple trips booked for the next year. Nothing international yet, but at least domestically, it's pretty much back to normal. Yes!

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Gibbons & Forever Wild — April 2021

Link to more photos.

Our first travel in more than a year! Only local, and only one day, but still a bit of travel, and in a group! Now that we are both vaccinated, we joined a one-day tour of two nearby animal sanctuaries, both new to me. The tour company added plenty of COVID-related precautions.

In the morning, we visited the Gibbon Conservation Center and in the afternoon, Forever Wild Exotic Animal Sanctuary.

The trip went well. The weather was cooler than expected, and there were some threatening clouds, but it didn't rain.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Celebrity Trumps All ('21)

In the Los Angeles Times, Nicholas Goldberg wrote a column headlined "Caitlyn Jenner for governor of California? What a terrible idea"

My immediate response was one I've written about before. I sent it to the Times. They edited it slightly (adding "Donald" and "so"), and printed it today (second letter on the page):

When Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor of California, long before Donald Trump was president, I lamented, “Celebrity trumps all, so how can we overcome that?”
 

“Celebrity trumps all” is still the case, and I still don’t have the answer.

 

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Impeachment

 I sent this letter to the Los Angeles Times (not published):

If the parties were reversed, if it were a Democratic former president on trial in a 50-50 Senate, he would be convicted.
 
I believe enough Democrats would have the courage to put country before party and their own re-election.

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Green Card for Victor!


On January 5th, we had the last step in Victor's green card application: an interview. When we finished, they told us the application was approved. Victor received the card in the mail on January 12th.


With a green card, Victor can leave and re-enter the U.S. any time. 

This is all we have wanted since the mid-1990s! A simple tourist visa would have sufficed, but that was refused repeatedly in the 90s and refused repeatedly again in 2015. The fiancé visa worked (2019), but that's only a single entry. Now, in 2021, Victor can finally come and go at will.

What a waste of time, energy and dollars!

P.S. Of course, no sooner did he have a green card than COVID stopped all travel! Sigh.


Sunday, December 27, 2020

"Newsom choice let down Black women"

California governor Newsom appointed a Latino man to replace VP-elect Kamala Harris as Senator. A Los Angeles Times columnist insisted that it should have been a Black woman. I sent this letter in response (not published):

So many who are complaining about this are minimizing the VP-elect. Yes, there will be no Black woman in the Senate. But instead, there's a first-ever Black woman Vice President! That's a pretty good trade-off.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Aging

Another sign of aging. 

Today's LATimes has a feature story on Luis Zapata. In the opening, it mentions that he died earlier this month. 

As I see that, it just adds to the losses evoked by the story. As I've written previously, Kieran knew Zapata and, at my request, got him to autograph a book for Victor, who loaned the book and it never came back. Any mention of Zapata brings Kieran to mind. He died many years ago. 

So, even before getting very far into the story, I'm feeling the loss of Kieran, of Zapata, and of the autographed book. 

And I realize that this is just another sign of aging. More and more things will inevitably remind me of people and things now gone.

Or, as Julia Wick writes in the LATimes about a supercentenarian, "To defy death is to endure a long onslaught of loss."

Or, as Lawrence Wright writes in The New Yorker about Austin, "If you live long enough in a place, it becomes haunted by ghosts: memories of events and friends long gone still inhabit spaces that have been levelled and covered over by the unstoppable newness. It’s a form of double vision: you see things that are no longer there."