sunny birdsong morning
those high winds never arrived
they went elsewhere, over the
mountains and across the Llano Estacado
they went straight up into the sky
where they swirled and twisted into
each other, tore the clouds up,shredded
continents of clouds broke apart and
never came together again, the blue sky
wrapped its arms around them but they
blew away in scatter’d desperation,
crows enfolding their wings to drop
elevation precipitously in escape
(I watched this yesterday in 3 Gun Springs
Canyon —- one crow in particular, who
circled high up then was caught in thermals
that escalated him way up so that
he folded his wings in and dropped out of such
wind he had no control over, eventually
perching on a ledge in the high rocks of a ridge
out of danger) —-March 11, 2021
The forests of the western slopes
have never been logged: too craggy
and what trees the human busybodies
could want are too far up
remote —-
These trees all know each other from
generations clear back to the Ice Age
12,000 years ago and further, no doubt —-
When you walk among them this is the wild
pristine original forest
primeval
You are
a visitor from another world, but your spirit
remembers, you once gather’d
acorn here, you were acorn people,
cactus chewers, telepathic deer people,
if you step away from that fire
I’m going to eat you says the cougar,
my friend, Bear will gnaw on your
foot, the hornytoad and ponderosa
must be related, you never see one
without the other, higher up the
Doug Fir shudder at the rumors that
other Douglas Fir in less formidable terrain
become telephone poles, basket weaver
people found no shortage of Mountain Mahogany —-
Myself, I pretend I can understand
the language of the trees, but, it’s faint,
sorrowful and joyful at the same time,
E=mc2
Time is the slow undulation of clouds
overhead
Shirtpocket Notes —- Tuesday March 30, 2021
Breezy sunny I’m energized, probably Ricochet Effect coming off Vaxx #2 which apparently took a couple days to assimilate into my body —- The only side-effect was very hidden, it only revealed itself when I over-exerted myself by going on a hike Sunday, the day after (my jab was Saturday mid-morning) I was up Trail to the Sad-Eyed Lady, about two hours along realized I was in trouble, way up into the higher elevations and I was sweating like a sinner in church, thoroughly exhausted —- made it back to my truck after 3 hours and 20 minutes of jello muscles & sweaty shirts, and rather halting Pranayama (breathing hard)
12:15 Noon
Trailhead parking at Embudito Canyon
Exercise is just a side-benefit of walking in the mountains, certainly not the reason (I’m not an exercise nut —- My usual is to crash on the couch or rocking chair with an LP on the stereo, or book in hand munching Tater Tots)
12:50
Last View Promontory —- cooler up here, probably 49-degrees —-
I call this Last View as it’s the last you’ll see of Albuquerque and the Rio Grande for an hour or two, which is one of the highlights of this trail: You disappear the city —- usually takes me 20 minutes to get here, moving quasi-fast (“fast” is relative, you dig?) to get away from the rookies and yahoos and dog walkers, once up into the higher elevations you have solitude and meet more interesting types —- I had fooled around taking photos of the three
varieties of yucca found in the lower canyon, a lot of trailside Bear Grass, which has no relation to grass, other than its green, is a yucca, they’ll not flower until May —- the Mountain Mahogany is greening up! That’s good news for the deer —- I need put on another shirt and pack away my hat that keeps blowing off —- patches of snow, everything about to come alive after winter dormancy, popcorn clouds, sere blue sky hazy can barely see snowcapped Mt Taylor 60 miles west on the horizon —— We’ve been following the news regarding those 185 baby Galapagos tortoises that were intercepted, found in a suitcase, before they left the Islands thank gawd —- Janet said that black market brings $5,000 each and some are boiled into “turtle oil” as a cure-all nostrum for even more money —- So, the logic being that a human is more important than a tortoise? Maybe they should boil down those smugglers?
1:18
I’ve been wondering what the process is, how Bear Grass ejects it’s dry stalk (last year’s efflorescence) and I think I know: the high winds blowing it back & forth weakens its anchor
1:22
Hokku
OLD CANE
Who are you calling “old”
you old buzzard? —-
Says my walking stick
Wind really picking up —- icy and warm at same time —-
Birds have all taken cover
1:29
Fat rock squirrel just popped its head over boulder above me and dashed away soon as it saw me sitting here with my tea, it was only chance that I happen’d to be looking that way, who knows how many creatures are watching? Furious winds —- Quite exciting really, such winds (altho, wouldn’t want a steady diet of them) —- First two miles this trail follows northside flank of canyon essentially heading east, goes all the way to the crest if I had enough time and chutzpah —- steep over the side down 200 feet into the canyon floor below might be retreat from this wind?
1:40
I marvel at how deer can find sustenance with such meager leaves as the Mountain Mahogany, and of course grass (hasn’t sprouted, yet) and prickly pear —- It’s not that simple for us, I’m packing two homemade pork-onion-chile-cheese-bean burritos (the second one is only for emergency, thank you very much) there might be an apple in my pack as well, and mixed nuts, I’m a growing boy! I wonder if Basho had to contend with such furious winds?
Where is the Carrock? I should have come across it somewhere awhile ago? —- A most disturbing thought that it fell down into the canyon? I need make a return trip to look for it —- Many is the time I’ve sat on that rock outcropping and bathed in the afternoon air (“Carrock” is derived from Welsh = rock outcropping promontory —- So, I gave it that name some time ago, I got it from JRRT)
3:10
I’m at Falldown Rock (another of my names) where giant boulder came down obstructing trail two summers ago —- I should consider heeding Janet’s concern not to “push it” today, but I’m so close to the Ponderosas —– these winds suggest I turn back, also —- I lost a half hour talking with that veterinarian from Chicago, Pat who moved to Albuquerque last July, nice conversation about these mountains, she’s 65 and these are her first experience on such trails —- I like to talk with hikers in the back country, asking as we pass, “How far did you go?” which usually opens up conversation —- Pat said, “Far enough!” and put on her mask so we could talk, well, that was an hour ago —- Foolish and foolhardy I push on —- Lots of LGBs —- Little Grey Birds that I would have trouble determining their actual taxonomy —- “LGB” is a term I picked up from Edward Abbey’s masterpiece DESERT SOLITAIRE (1968)
3:23
Barefoot Arroyo and my Ponderosas! —- I take a few photos then short walk on the downward side of trail I spread out my little blanket, remove my shoes & socks and have lunch —- It’s less windy here, somewhat —- Some asshole has taken a hatchet to two of the noble Ponderosa and hacked out something that looks to be his initials? —- I take a little walk in the gravelly sand with burrito in hand, feels so good on bare feet, like an acupuncture session, tingles all the way up your spine —- It occurs to me that immersion in nature is a respite from the other world, UNTIL you come across disturbances like this hatchet activity and you are jerked back into the world they call civilization, an anthropological evolution I agree with, if not ruefully
4:00
Break camp —- If I’m going to beat the sun and chill I better start on down
4:20
Hello, again, Mr Greenstone —- 7,126 elevation (so I can compare) this rare vein of metamorphic rock cuts through here —- More on that later in my book
4:30
Something I have never in all my years on these trails seen before, and today on two separate occasions: rubber tips to walking sticks! I put them in my pack, who knows when you might need one? ———— Well, I’ll not be seeing anyone on trail this late in the day, windy as hell, too, ferocious
4:55
I’ve often thought they should change the name of these mountains to the Lichen Mountains —- Bright sun blasting my eyes, high in the sky still —- Today is the day I got my spunk back! Vaxx #2 slowed me down for a couple days
5:10
Last View Promontory —- Hazy dusty skies over Albuquerque —- Now, the last 30 minutes of trail will be a gauntlet of dogs, half of which their owners seem unaware of Leash Laws and the posted signs to keep Fido on leash —- Most are maskless, also, probably easy to think not necessary out here, but, if we’re going to kick this thing we need bear down and follow Governor Michelle Lujan’s health & safety mandates —- Do you want this pandemic to last ten years? I didn’t think so
5:43
Old Faithful Truck ———– Janet is bringing home Matzoh Ball Soup from Flying Star Restaurant tonight, it’s Passover —- Also, once I get home from these long walks (5 hours today for a 67-year-old boho) it’s good to do a yoga inversion posture Viparita Karani (lay on your back and put feet up the wall for 20 minutes) ————– Took a shower and she served me the soup just in time to watch my man Henry Louis Gates Jr on TV with his Finding Your Roots, of which, he should receive the Nobel Peace Prize, certainly in that league of humanity, amen
Shirtpocket Notes —- Friday March 19, 2021 Sandia Mountains
11:50
Park at Hilldale Loop entry into Open Space
Hazy warm sunny day in the 60s
12noon
Take a quick jaunt on the Hilldale Loop roundabout to the saddle junction
with several other trails, I’ll take the forbidding one that goes straight up
(scares off the neophytes) informally known as Sandia Eye Trail —-
I do go fast the first mile to get beyond the dog walkers and joggers and exercise
nuts and those wearing the latest fashions in hiking ensembles —-
Strangely, I expected more hikers on such a warm day —-
Roar & hum of Interstate-40 (this trail goes along the southern edge of Sandias,
bordering Tijeras Pass)
12:15
. . . sometimes a little too fast
I’m huffing & puffing
Take a snort of tea
Remove flannel
12:37
Lots of Beargrass, which has no relation to grass other than it’s green,
it’s a narrow-leaf yucca, very
grassy, with always the dead stalk of last year’s efflorescence still in center —- They’ll not
flower until May (says here that the males have a pinkish-white flower and the
female are white)
12:45
Snow all over up here, in patches in the shadows of boulders and under juniper
surprising to see, although it did snow last week
12:58
One hour marks tea break sit down relax take a load off
It’ll probably take another hour to make the Sad-Eyed Lady and lunch
(I picked up a burrito at Federiquito’s for this hike —- they were not their usual
efficient operation today and took a half hour and I hate that)
Birds chattering all across the skin of this mountain today
I spoke with a guy a while back who said, “There’s going to be an official trail
through here someday” He was filming with smartphone and taking notes
I said, “Really?” Nothing wrong with this existing trail as far as I can see,
except that first scramble of elevation gain, “Have you heard a rumor?”
He said, “I’m with Open Space Division”
Not terribly open or engaging, one of those officious types who cultivates
an air of being in possession of certain information he’s not at liberty to discuss,
proprietary you understand? You know the type, you met them in high school —-
I did manage to get some information out of him, but needed a crowbar: I asked
about guns up here, can you bring one, and he said you can carry one but you
can’t shoot it, I said I’ve had trouble with scary dogs, he disinterestedly said, “Pepper
spray” —- I asked what number they were going to assign to this trail, he
said, “It’s obviously way too early to put a number on it now” Which translates:
They’ll never get it done —- Why does the Forest Service and Open Space have so
many deadbeats and lardbutts? No passion, the personality of a dish rag, all this wildness is just a paycheck don’t bother me . . . .
Hey, a happy little butterfly lands on my wristwatch, small, with a profile no bigger
than a quarter, the forward wings are golden and the back wings are psychedelic green,
he flitters off, I hope I can photo the next time I see him (or her?)
I can see way up on the ridge above are those two hikers that passed me when I was
talking with the surveyor, and have already outdistanced me by a mile, little tiny
moving dots —-
I’m bareback
Well, I’ll be up there soon as I get off my rear end
Igneous? metamorphic? Granite can be both igneous and metamorphic, the whole
bunch of it around here is called Sandia Granite but is definitely of two types: crumbly and diamond-hard ———– The good news today, especially for the deer, is the Mountain Mahogany
is greening up and sprouting new leaves, the deer love those (searched my memory for
what this plant used to be called when I first arrived in NM, you never see or hear anymore:
“Squawbush,” a somewhat downscale reference to the Indian ladies who stranded it’s branches to make baskets)
1:42
I need dig that apple out of my pack —- Need to eat something to hold me, my bad
habit of over-looking breakfast has the foreman of my furnace beckoning for more coal, and
the steepest part of the trail just ahead, what a scramble, I’m looking at it with trepidation —-
Crows overhead clucking at me, two of them circling —- Moon also (it’s stationery) —-
The Manzanitas and the Monzanos spread out to the south, I tell the crows
they can have my apple core when I’m done, they’re watching intently —-
“And . . . It’s over hill, over dale, we hit the dusty trail, and the caissons keep rolling
along!” an old U.S. Army infantry song my Dad used to sing —- I’ve always assumed
a caisson was a wagon of some sort? Or as the Anglo-Saxons called them: a wain,
and the Middle English called them a waggon, I could look it up, but, that’s no fun . . . .
1:55
Brutality —- Must be a 500-foot elevation gain at 45-degree incline up crumbly slippery
slipshod heart attack trail, I’m out of breath, chest heaving, still more to go, power’d by
the sugar-sweet Granny Smith
2:06
Now, I’m a tiny itty bitty person walking that high ridge, about 6-inches tall, slight
stroke of light-headedness, I’m stopped to let it pass, the trail now turned around
the ridge and faces the city of Albuquerque spread out around the Rio Grande
2:15
Sandia Eye —- 7,230 feet
2 miles with elevation gain of 1200 feet the book says
and those are mountain trail miles, which is an alternate universe
where time expands and contracts and distance is proportional to a gnostic
algorithm outside my realm of brain reach —-
Time for lunch
Lay out my little blanket
take shoes off
Release knee straps
Eat burrito pronto (dutifully stopping halfway as too much will make the 2 mile return
seem like ten)
Bathe in the open air (it was the summer before 9th grade I read a bio on
Gandhi and he talked about “bathing in the morning air,” a new idea to me, then)
“Mark, are we gonna weep in the weeping bag tonight?” Scotty was still learning how
to form words everything was an adventure, the previous night there’d been thunder &
lightening and in his fright I’d let him crawl into my sleeping bag —- The boys downstairs
and the girls in the loft, and our mothers in the various convertible beds in the living room,
a one-room cabin with kitchen tucked under the loft and an iron pot-bellied stove in the
middle —- My Mom loved telling that story for years about Mark & Scotty weeping in the
weeping bag —- Kennedy was President —- Two full weeks sometimes three every
summer we’d vacation up at Aunt Ida’s cabin in Big Bear, those idyllic San Bernardino
Mountains full of Ponderosa and spruce —- Our mothers and Granny: Jean Cecil and her two gorgeous daughters Michelle and Monica, and her boys, Chuck who was my age, and young
Scotty; me and my two brothers Craig and Brian; Dory Gustin and her two daughters, who
were the oldest of us kids, Sherry and Sandy (Ida was Dory’s aunt —- All the summers we stayed there I never met Ida, the last time was 1972 the year I was reading Steinbeck)
Years later I was able to introduce Janet to these old dear friends and Jean saw me come
through the door at a gathering at the Gustin’s and she rushed over and
hugged me and cried and cried, that’s how wonderful those years were —- Granny was
a transplanted Texan, was Jean’s mother, we all lived in the hills outside Riverside California, country people, horses, donkeys, cows, roosters, dogs, wildlife, how do you begin to
explain to anyone how innocent we all were those years?
3:00
Break camp —- chattery group of college students have showed up around the other side
of this boulder where the Sad-Eyed Lady watches over Tijeras Pass, the girl of the trio has
voice like a megaphone, it’s time to pack up, anyway, head on down
3:35
Now that I’ve seen a lizard, maybe should keep an eye out for rattlers? Haven’t had to
think about them over the last several cold months, everything underground dormant —-
Everything waking up now, I had ants visit me during my lunch, and off in distance a rock
squirrel (or was it a chipmunk? they never stand still long enough to tell, all I know is that
I’ve seen squirrel through here in the past) and where there’s squirrel there’s rattlesnakes —-
still quite a lot of dormancy, at least on the surface, the deciduous oak (we have both up here)
haven’t resprouted, nor has the grass
4:05
Tea break on this high ridge close by Tijeras Pass, watch the planes land at Albuquerque
International, altho, haven’t seen one in a while, you would think Friday would be a fly
day but the pandemic has slowed all that down —-
Hawk circling way up, first over the Pass and now right above me cross-legged
on this rock pile, slowly drifting eastward down along the southern end of Sandias
4:30
Horses! (3) at the saddle between Hilldale Loop and here —- I asked if I could take his
picture, in his cowboy hat and ranch work attire, he said sure, “Let me turn the horse
around,” said he wasn’t going any further, and I concurred the trail would be rough for
a horse, he said “This horse is too old for this trail, and me, too” —- Horses name was
“Sky” —- (I thought it impertinent to ask the cowboy’s name)
4:44
Old Faithful Truck
IT ALL FOLDED OUTWARD
It all folded outward —-
Sounds poetic enough, but
it’s not true, there’s a whole city
down there to which
the mountains are nothing but
a cardboard cut-out on the edge of town, a jagged horizon
Spend their entire lives not the least
bit curious about them,
and for their part, the mountains
are folded inward
not the least bit interested in sharing
their secrets
DSC02412.JPG
Thanks for your wonderful photos, poetry and diary. You have given new life to the mountains we live next to. And OMG on the cougar prints.
Very cool my friend.
Shirtpocket Notes —- Wednesday March 3, 2021 Sandia Mountains
10:30 Trailhead parking
Embudo Canyon
I plan to make the terminus
11:36 tea break
Trail alternately slushy mud or ice, tho, mostly dry
AMazing how far a person can get in an hour if hungry enough!
(can’t eat this Federiquito’s burrito until I make the ridge)
Departure was waylaid as I wrestled with this “smart” phone
Janet got me for Christmas —- it appears to be defective —-
Frustrated me so much I forgot to put on my knee sleeves,
so, just now found me a good walking stick from deadfall
pinon, trunk all black from fire, I’m in the Plain of the Dead, just below
where trail gets steep, so,
I didn’t get out of house till 9:30 and then wait at p/up window for my
burrito
Not a cloud in the sky
sunny & chilly —– The morning started at 31-degrees
but it’s warming up fast
12:08 tea break
That young girl that almost lost her life last Sunday when a giant
boulder crushed her (not far from here, just over the northern ridge of Embudo Cyn
what they erroneously call Whitewash Trail)
Has me tip-toeing gingerly passed these giant rock outcroppings
These mountains move and shift, everything does, a pile of boulders
the young family climbed often, was no longer stable much to her unfortune,
they’re probably amputating part of her leg today —-
Sunday I was bushwacking up Rock Face Canyon, myself under boulders
all morning, a very boulder unofficial trail half up an arroyo and half up the
side wall
12:30
Need catch breath —- Kind of look like I’ll make the ridge & junction over to 3 Gun
Springs any minute, altho, I’ve been fooled before by these false summits —-
It was 25 years ago on this same sector of trail that I was started to see a horse
that had fallen off trail over backwards landed feet up wedged in a crevice,
absolutely no hope of saving her fifteen feet down, steep along here, not a very wide
trail —- What strikes me now, is why her skull and bones hadn’t been scavenged
by weasels and badgers and coyote? —- It must have been an agonizing death
12:50 at the ridge
Pretty fast (for me) 2 hours 20 minutes
The trail sign post is gone (?) Super-unfriendly to destroy, some of us like to see
these, I look around for remnants with no luck —- I can’t imagine the FS removed
it with ideas of replacing? Those lardbutts could never get this far up
1:00
I’m bareback with my shirts scatter’d over rocks to dry —- I saw photo yesterday in
one of my John Muir books of John sitting under a tree with a book with his shirts
dangling from branches! I need remove my shoes & socks, let them breathe, before
engaging in burrito worship
1:10
Found a spot between two boulders as windbreak in direct sun (of the last couple times
I’ve been on this ridge it was summer and one needed find shade for lunch break!)
eastern side of saddle looking over into Three Gun Springs and also view south to
Interstate-40
Streaming jet coming over South Sandia Peak leaving dul contrail, always reminds me
of opening scenes in movie LONELY ARE THE BRAVE
You can see the mysterious Great Unconformity of sandstone/limestone layer like
a capstone on top of the 1.4 bya granite under it —-
we know the top layer of striated limestone are 300 mya because of marine fossils
within BUT WHERE HATH GONE the 1.4 billion years in between these two
rock strata? This being a geologic mystery
of which I have a theory: Space aliens stole it, in a giant cargo ship —- okay?
“drifting clouds like a wanderers mind” —- LiPo [p48]
1:37
My foot has gone to sleep, yow, tucked under myself, I cannot get back on trail,
just yet, you don’t want to wake it too quick
1:45
Break camp, head down
That last half hour of trail up was hellacious, so, going down those rock faces are
going to be tentative but sure-footed careful
2:05
I forgot to check altimeter when I was on top
but reading here is 7,351
so, on the ridge probably 7400
Possible title for book: THE GALILEO TREE
I’ll think on it
Being that so many poems I’m choosing for this collection are from
the Sandias
3:43
Water pooling at bottom of downside of old (silted in) dam, coming
out the little hole, mossy green —- The furry creatures will be happy
4:23 Old Faithful Truck —- full parking lot, but not that many people on trail,
must be bicyclists
You can sure tell winter is about over on a day like today, even tho it was 31
this morning, it’s in mid-60s now with buds on the trees, I hiked down in a
teeshirt
Shirtpocket Notes —- Tuesday April 20, 2021 Sandia Mountains
Forecast is for cold winds coming in off the eastern plains where it’s snowing —-
So far, it’s sunny, with a slight chill
10:20 parking at Embudo Canyon Trailhead
I’m taking Whitewash Ridge Trail, approaching it from this wash that I’ve brought
many times down but never up —- Usually one starts this trail at Menaul TH
but I want to bypass the three summits and that first hour of hellacious straight
up climb, so as to preserve as much strength as possible to be able to take this Ridge
trail further than I have before —- When I was on Horse Bypass Trail hiking through snow
flurries last Saturday morning I was specifically walking that precipice to be able to see across
Embudo Canyon and read the mountains,
maybe see where Whitewash Trail goes and how it possibly goes all the way to South Peak?
From vantage points below it doesn’t look feasible —-
Even tho,
I have no intention of making it to South Peak today, only to test my theory that this trail skirts
a slope and follows that up to Oso Pass, then final climb to the Peak —-
Looking at the map this morning my hike yesterday looks kind of wimpy —-
I’ll have to start earlier to get further in a day’s go —- So, here’s what I scribbled
down while on trail:
10:30
I don’t know what it is about aspirin, but when I capitulate and take (took 2) I feel super-charged,
probably because of relief from my lumbago, which wears a person out —- I hope to make
tracks today —- Pull up knee straps — This wash goes up to saddle where I’ve lunched
many times under that old pinon —- It has quite drastic elevation gain itself, but, should knock
off a half hour ————
I think the scariest symptom of my Covid-19 infection (realistically, the attack on the lungs
was the most concerning) but, the fact that the sense of curiosity disappeared —- I’d pick up
a book but only read barely two pages before setting it aside with a “Feh” [Yiddish for
blase lack of interest, an apathetic dismissal]
I had lost whatever it is that makes a person curious enough to read books! And, in
hindsight, that spooked me: WHAT if it never comes back? I need find that old newspaper
photo of me, age 10, at Upland Public Library (Calif) where the older folks are promoting me
to the adult library, handing me my new card (the kid’s library was in the basement and
apparently they were impressed I’d read most of it) I remember one of them, after the
ceremony, or part of the ceremony (I was less than involved in this charade) said, “Okay,
Markie, now go and pick out a book” which I suppose I did but really wanted to shout at
them to leave me alone, and on my next visit I went straight to the basement, ignoring
those meddlesome well-meaning old folks
10:45
At my age, exertion doesn’t lead to building strength & stamina —- At a certain point in your
life you no longer build muscles, you just sort of keep them sturdy —-
Tea break, full view of Embudo Canyon City Water Tank —- Huffing & puffing —- Remove
flannel shirt, I’m down to a short-sleeve tee, in a sea of Beargrass, Prickly pear, & Mountain
Mahogany —- I decided to forgo my dog stick as I’ll not see anybody today, this trail is only
for crazy people
11:00
Chilly breeze coming in from the east, I’ll have to put flannel back on, brrrrr
Odd that I’ve seen zero deer or deep poop, one always sees deer around Embudo, and
no evidence of nibbling on these fresh newly-bloomed tiny Mountain Mahogany leave
I had to stop and lay down in a gravel wash to ease the tension in my back, I’ve been
hitting it hard, thank you, aspirin —- Can feel the muscles taking big sigh
11:10
Crossing Meditation Wash —- I call it thus as I’ve sat here many times, so peaceful —-
And now up steep trail to where I broke my beloved walking stick two Sundays ago —- Let’s
hope I don’t slip again, I still have scab on elbow from that fall —- Today, my only objective
is to test my theory —- I watch passenger plane disappear over western horizon going to
Phoenix, which is a hub: Fare forward voyagers, fly safe, my humble blessings —- Hazy, no
clouds, chilly chilly up here
11:34
And there’s my broken walking stick, boohoo [photo]
And there’s two deer up above, watching me in the lee of a juniper, quite mottled, now
grazing the dry grass —- A slip and a tumble can surprise you it happens so fast, even
for such as I who has spent years traipsing in these Western Lands over hill & dale, where
crumbly granite is king —-
Cougar in these mountains are ambush hunters, I stay wary, I could offer him a burrito
in trade for my arm, “It’s carnitas, Mr Cougar, yum, pork simmered in onions and garlic
and chile”
He’d consider that and say, “Well, this arm is a little scrawny, maybe I’ll let Bear have it,
what else you got?”
“Uh, I have another burrito, but . . .”
“Holding out on me, eh?!”
” . . . well, I was hoping to have that one for myself, which will help my arm grow back”
11:50
I keep hearing Coach Loney, my old track coach, saying, “Little tiny steps,” teaching us how
to negotiate the hilly cross country course at Mt SAC —- That’s the only way to get up this
steep 45-degree grade, I’m almost to the saddle —- Wind picking up
11:55
And here I am: out of breath, I join Whitewash Ridge Trail at saddle that goes over into
Piedra Lisa Canyon, and there’s the old pinon I’ve lunched many times in its shade in
summer, where deer, and chipmunks, and sasquatch find refuge, probably not cougar,
they prefer more hidden redoubts
[I’ve always been fond of that old backwoods dogma: LEAVE NO TRACE, if Sasquatch
and Aliens can do it, so can you]
Took me one hour and 35 minutes to get here, which is as fast as I’ll ever make it, I was
chugging along, determined to test this theory —- After a rest, it’s time to go for it —-
Hawk floated past and over next ridge heading north —-
12:20
This trail swings around and is now essentially at apex of Piedra Lisa Trail, after a brutal
scramble, no wonder I’ve turned around in past attempts, but today I intend to haul my
fatso 194-pound carcass further (I need lose 15 pounds) —-
7,298 elevation says my altimeter
Bareback
I’m going to have a burrito and think about it: You say 179 is still fat? I say I come from
Ulster-Scot warrior stock, we’re crazy —- I don’t feel “big” but then, I look around at all these
wimpy pudgy guys and I’m sure glad the Russians don’t attack, maybe
I am big? Sort of —- Having a human body is a life-long science experiment —-I’m plopped down smack
in the middle of trail, doubtless there’ll be anyone coming along —- panoramic view of
Albuquerque and the Rio Grande and roar of jets down at Kirtland AFB, got to keep those
warriors in tip top shape, the world such a volatile place (one of the pitfalls of reading
so much history makes a person aware of such things unbidden) —- Here’s a toast (V8
juice) to warriors brave & merciful & with judicious leadership
12:48
What a scramble, soon I’m gonna be on my hands & knees, it could never be said these
western slopes are gentle, if you want gentle circle around to the eastern side of these
mountains (photos of precarious balancing rock with a squirrel on top, fat guy, must be
a squirrel, if we were in the Wasatch I’d say it was a pika, one sees a lot them there,
rabbits don’t come this far up, that balance will eventually tumble in the evolutionary
destiny to level these mountains and start all over again)
I need rest my right knee, it’s acting funny —- 7,472 feet
1:05
There, I did my good deed for the day: I freed a large pinon who gave up the ghost, lodged
in the branches of a young pinon cliffside, “You can thank me, later,” I said,
it bowed, or was that just the wind?
This flannel fairly frayed after all my winter jaunts up here crawling up mountain sides —-
With so little rain lately these pinon will have to fight for their lives, many dead ones
hereabouts
1:15
Biggest Claret Cup Cactus I’ve ever seen, fat, with only one tubercle —- They’re flowering
down in lower elevations, this one’ll flower in a few weeks, there are buds forming —-
I’m still precipitously directly above Piedra Lisa Canyon, one false step and I’m goners —-
Waves of light-headeness —-
This is far from being a friendly trail and looking up is not welcoming
1:30
Man, I sure hope I don’t have to return via this trail —- Going up is hard enough,
going down would be slip slidin’ crash boom bang glissade —-
I shouldn’t go much past 3 o’clock if I want to return safely, my theory might have to
remain a theory, for now
1:35
I’m already dreading the return, not a fun way to proceed —-
Lots of the infamous pink granite (hence: the watermelon visage in the sunsets)
Impossibly getting steeper, gadzooks, am I crazy? I’m chasing a mirage or is that
the ridge coming up?
1:40 [photos]
Well, I’m at some sort of summit —- 7,768 feet —- Not sure how happy I am to be here,
what with the return looming, elevation gain today has been ridiculous —-
Full frontal view of South Peak and the Great Unconformity and south through
Tijeras Pass can see that cement quarry where Tim worked all those years
1:50
Decisions, decisions
If I were 40 years younger I’d keep going but I’m not 40 years crazier, so, I’ll continue!
Come hell or high water, damn the torpedoes (what does that mean, exactly?)
I can see moon over South Peak and one lonely cloud —- Not too windy
2:00 elevation 7,804
Highpoint on this trail —- Now, to continue onward into pinon forest —- I can see
Embudo Canyon saddle behind me across the way
2:18
Crow mocking my progress —- Spooky drop off the side —- Not sure where this trail
goes, it has swung northward and I’d rather be going the other way and finding a cut-down
trail that takes me into Embudo Canyon —- Sure wish I’d run into another hiker who
knows, but I’ve not seen another soul all day, which is telling in itself —-
Curiously, have seen no Ponderosa (in these mountains Ponderosa show up at 7200 feet)
I’m in a deep forest of tall pinon shelter me, walking in shaded uncertainty —- Sure glad
I’m not scared of bears, because . . .
2:25
Trail has been a pleasant stroll since that summit —- Here’s an anomaly: Rocky Mountain
Juniper!
If this trail is fixin’ to take me to South Peak, I’m not game, am ill-prepared for an over-
nighter —– Hoping to find a cut-down side trail, get off this ridge
2:35
Finally, my first ponderosa, and here’s a gang of them, a proliferation, and Gambel Oak
Surprised by a young fellow coming down trail —- in running shorts —- and I ask if
he knows what’s up ahead, and he’s quite friendly and we sit in the sun and talk and
he pulls out his smart phone and shows me the map —- Garrett, age 36 from Denver,
has been living in Albuquerque only 3 months, down here for work (I neglected to ask
what it is he does) ——— Elevation 8,006
He’s making a loop but as we talked it became clear he wasn’t exactly sure where he’d
been —– Certainly not Oso Pass, he’d only been jogging 2 hours —- Very graciously helped
me with my decision, we had a nice chat
3:25
I’ve decided no choice but to retrace my steps and go down this hell trail
4:44
Back at saddle (Sasquatch ducked out) — I must have slipped and fell half dozen times
or more —- Skies darkening —- chilly —- Winds coming in off the eastern plains
5:05
Meditation Wash
Water break
Sit
Sun a fuzzy orb shrouded in haze
5:20
Dropping down into Embudo Canyon, precipitous, wish I had my knit cap (I almost
brought it! Having consider’d what Joe Diaz the weatherman had said on evening news)
Two hawks floating
5:44
Old Faithful Truck —– windy —- chilly cold
5:50
Tramway & Indian School the giant U.S. flag that’s always on this corner is at half-mast, I
wonder why? Might be something to do with all the mass shootings?
Hike was 7 hours, not bad for an olde guy
Shirtpocket Notes —- Thursday April 22, 2021 Sandia Mountains
I decide it’s time to investigate the other side of the mountains —- Drive over
to eastern side, take State Route 14 north to “Sandia Crest Scenic Byway” (536)
I borrow Janet’s car, it’s easier than my old truck
11:15
Park at Sulphur Springs TH
Digital sign on a hardware store down on 14 said 53-degrees
It’s probably 45-degrees here —- breezy
Ponderosas!
11:35 elevation 7,487
I’m already in Poplar Zone
This trail begins more or less in Mixed Conifer Zone and quickly leaves the
Ponderosas behind [for the time being]
Humongous Doug Fir and other conifers through here (on the Western side
it takes me 3 hours to get to the Mixed Conifer —- Over here, you arrive via
auto) —- White fir youth
11:50
Junction with Faulty Trail
I’ll take it south
Steady turbulent whoosh & whir of wind roaring in treetops, turbulent,
clamorous —- Ponderosa reappear —- most prominent tree is the Doug —- Junkos —-
Poplar in early very early stages of budding, has no leaves, nor does the Gambel Oak, their
leaves brown and still attached awaiting the new —-
Rocky Mountain Juniper —- Entire slopes of Poison Oak [photo] —- Box Elder, no leaves,
yet —- Trail is hard red clay, easy going ——
Both sides of trail, arroyo and canyon sides a jumble of windblown falldown broken
tore-out less-fortunate trees, destruction: It would not be good to be caught in a fire here
12:12noon
Junction with Cienega Horse Bypass and Faulty Trail North —- I’m taking Cienega today,
if it merely loops back to TH, then that will give excuse to drive to the crest
12:28
Wind picks up
7,640
Sirocco -like blowing, intermittent, comes in waves
No wonder so many trees blown down up here —- Very pleasant along this ridge with
views south over thick pine forests ————- If not so violently windy I should call this
the Bob Ross Happy Juniper Trail —-
Two hawks soaring, when wind picks up I don’t see them, I wonder what they do? that
wind would blow them out of the sky ———
And here’s something you don’t see very often: Alligator Juniper! [Boy, was in for
a surprise]
1:00 Lunch —- 7,598
I have burrito from Federiquitos w/ nuts & a dried plum & dried cranberries, chai
Trail has now looped back around and seems to be heading toward TH
This ridge should be named Alligator Ridge, quite a profusion of Alligator Juniper
and Ponderosa —- View of eastern plains, sunny, a crow somewhere making loud
announcement of my whereabouts —-
4 hawks circling east, in a whorl together —- Forest Service seems overly concerned about
bears (they’ve tacked up signs along the way) —- Sure hope one doesn’t smell my
burrito (a bear, not a ranger, altho, judging by how fat Cibola Nat’l Park rangers are these
days, there might be a contest) —- I’m barefoot (only during lunch) a swift departure could
be dodgy, tricky for my tender soles (they say not to run but to make like you’re
Sasquatch, make crazy & loud noises —- By which, I’m sure they mean the opposite of
shrieking) Call me timid but I do watch over my shoulder and listen for lumbering
noises in the brush —- It would be just my luck to meet up with the one bear who’s
insane (these brown bears are more likely to run from you than the other way around),
and/or has an insane love of burritos, just like these Picnic Ants (my new name for
them!) Gawd, there’s some ancient Alligator around here, with their dinosaur-plated
bark and graceful swirling branches, some are scary huge, unnatural, hundreds of years old
1:37 break camp, fold up my little blanket, put on socks & shoes, pull up knee straps,
check my pulse, yes, I’m still here, secure my hat and away we go (I’ve been proofing
my latest chapbook that Nanette is printing, THE GALILEO TREE, named after a Ponderosa
on the Pino Trail), put my reading glasses away with my altimeter, take deep breath, I love
it up here, it’s as real as real can be
1:45
I would call this a Ponderosa forest, with a large presence of Alligator Juniper —- You can
see where a fire has been through here not too long ago
2:10
Trail descending zigzag around and down ——- I was off trail for a while photographing
the burned Ponderosa, most of whom survived the fire, and looking down into Cienega
Canyon —- Have shot
six-dozen frames of Alligator, mostly because I am so not used to seeing them, also,
when old & dead, so photogenic —– Speaking of old: an old-timer coming down trail
with his two walking sticks & a daypack —- I wait for him thinking he’d be interesting
to talk to (he wasn’t) asked if he knew when the fire was, he annoyedly removed an ear
bud, said, “What?” Do you know when the fire was? “Oh, long time ago” No shit Sherlock,
this answer tells me nothing, the old coot re-inserts his ear buds and hobbles off jabbing his
sticks into the red dirt and pine needles —- I do not for the life of me understand why
someone would come out into the wilds and listen to a radio broadcast? He’s the only
other person I saw today on trail, except for that nice girl near the beginning who gave
me pointers on the many trails around here —–
Then, when the path heads toward the Horse Bypass Trail and horse trailer parking I meet
another hiker, I ask him about the fire, and he can’t say exactly, I say “Ten years?”
and he says around then, yes —– He says the FS did a lot of cleaning up in the last
couple years “You no doubt saw the chainsaw work?” I did indeed, he suggests the fire
could have been a controlled burn, but then, looks around this slope below and says, “and
maybe it got out of control?”
Having gotten confused reading my map with my dyslexic brain I popped out more than
a mile down onto 536 and walk up in the warm afternoon sun
2:56 Car —- I didn’t notice the Pay Station (little envelopes —- $3/per car day parking only
no camping) so, was glad to see I didn’t get a ticket