You have to
drive around most of the city to get to Lake Mary Road from our house. I’ve
spent a lot of time riding my bike between my house and campus to know Lake
Mary is closer by trail than by road, but still not that close. Erik and I took
Max and Zoe and the news dogs, Bear and Zora, to Sandys Canyon Trail. It was
late February. The trail dropping into the canyon was covered in ice. Zoe
skated down. Max and I climbed up and around off trail, apologizing to the grass
as we swung above the trail.
A couple of
miles in, we arrived at a sign that said Fisher Point. I remembered it from the
time I’d come down, maybe exactly a year ago—although there had been no ice
then. That year there had barely been any snow.
“We should
walk all the way home, we could get the other car.” Erik looked at six year old
Max and 12 week old Bear.
“I don’t
think they’ll make it,” Erik said.
“I want to
do it,” Zoe said.
“Is that
cool? I’ll take Zoe and Zora? You take Bear and Max back to the car?”
“You know
the way?”
“Two miles
from here to Fisher point. About two miles from there to Lake Elaine, then two
miles home. We can do it. My phone works out here.”
So we were
off. We had lots of water, a map on an iPhone, and a dog that probably needs to
run 30 miles a day anyway.
The trail is sandy, the canyons sides are
substantial, with cliffs of Kaibab Limestone and Coconino Sandstone. We walked
deeper, toward Walnut Canyon. I can imagine how water had cut this channel. The
Sinagua lived here, because of that water. The river is dammed now, making Lake
Mary and supplying Flagstaff. There used to be walnut trees down here but,
without the river, the trees are long gone. Not as long gone as the Sinagua,
but just as gone.
Zoe and I
don’t follow the Walnut Canyon trail but turn left and hike up toward Fisher
Point. From there it’s a straight shot, although a long slog, through Ponderosa
Pine forest, which is still here, but, as the snow pack diminishes every year,
may not be much longer.
We hit
forest road 301B so I know where we are. Erik calls. He’s worried about us. Zoe
and I admit, six miles in, that we wouldn’t mind a ride home.
I’m reading
Craig Childs’ House of Rain. He
traces the migration and the disappearance of people living in the southwest in
the 1300, 1400s, and 1500s. He wonders if maybe they who left early had a hint
of what was coming. Although many anthropologists think people left primarily
because of drought, Childs thinks it was a combination of drought and too many
people drawing on too few resources. He wonders if people from brought too-different,
possibly too-violent, social practices together, unweaving once-stable social
fabrics.
While Erik
was at the Bernie Sanders rally, I was reading how you signed into law, House
Bill 1487. The one that forbids local cities from passing ordinances of which
the state doesn’t approve. This reeks of hypocrisy: Aren’t you members of the government
that doesn’t like the federal government telling states what to do? If
Flagstaff wants to ban plastic bags, how does that hurt you (Oh yeah, you have
campaign donors in the plastic industry). Ironically,
I feel the way you must sometimes when the federal government insists you spend
money on children and the homeless. Shackled. Hobbled. I feel saying to you
what Princess Leia says to Darth Vader, “The more you tighten your grip, the
more star systems will slip through your fingers,” but then I look at the star
systems: they’re really just sand. I pick up some sand that was once Kaibab
sandstone and think, everything falls apart. Entire cultures living in Walnut
Canyon. Entire copses of trees. Entire climate systems. (Where is the snow?) You
and I just see things so differently. A government that helps versus a
government that hinders. I do feel the hand of your government constricting
around my throat. I don’t know if this might be the end of our social fabric as
we know it or just this particularly hypocritical one. I do know when I look
out at the Ponderosas, I see needles turning brown, plastic bags hanging in
branches like tattered rags.
1 comment:
I love/hate this one. So beautifully, achingly sad.
Post a Comment