Thursday, May 6, 2010

Return to their Routes: Laurel and Jim return to Montana

If there is a theme in our trip, it is that many of our talented friends have established themselves in rural towns around this nation, often returning to the places where they were raised. After leaving the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota, we turned westward, beginning the long journey home. Fortunately the route took us through Livingstone, Montana, where our friends Laurel and Jim live with their two twin daughters, Nastia and Larissa.

Laurel Desnick and I have been medical school colleagues for many years, and for the past few years she has worked with me in the Rural Underserved Opportunities Program (RUOP), through which we introduce students to practices that serve disadvantaged popultions . Most of the sites where we send students are in remote rural communities, much like the ones Fernne and I have been visiting.

Laurel trained in internal medicine at the University of Washington, but at heart she is a family doctor, and indeed she sees not only adults but also children in her part-time practice in Livingstone. Laurel and her husband Jim Baerg hail from remote rural areas themselves, and moved to the small town of Livingstone many years ago where they married. Laurel later went to medical school after years as a house painter, and Jim used their time in Seattle to finish an architrecture degree. They adopted twins from the old Soviet Union, and we have been part of the extended network that watched, and tried to help, as the girls slowly recover from the devastating experience of having been neglected and abused in the orphanage from which they were rescued.

Livingstone is a charming and complex town, at once containing remnants of the flagging embers of the agricultural base upon which Montana was built, and also host to wealthy exurbanites who have traded in a city existence for the stunning beauty of the Montana landscape. Livingstone is only an hour from Yellowstone Park, which adds to its allure. But, as Jim told me, "you can't eat scenery", and for those without a profession or an inheritance it can be tough to make a go of it in this immense state.

Laurel represents the ability of many of the rural doctors in our five-state medical school to combine clinical practice and teaching, a combination that enriches both of these callings. Their dedication to their children and their community are steadfast and inspiring, and the warmth and ease of small town living remind me of the best parts of my own childhood in rural New Hampshire.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Another Family Comes Home: Dave and Phyllis Jollie and the Renaissance of the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation in Belcourt, North Dakota


I met Phyllis Jollie when I hired her to work in the Seattle Office of the National Health Service Corps sometime around 1975. Her husband Dave had forged a very successful career with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, but like many government employees, he and his family were transferred every couple of years. To our good fortune Phyllis felt like she could go back to work after having the fourth of their daughters, and when Dave got transferred to Seattle she came and joined our team. Fernne also became part of this intrepid crew shortly after, and we had a truly exhilarating and rewarding time building primary care practices in small towns throughout the West.



I was a bit flabbergasted when Dave and Phyllis decided to ditch their secure and reasonably lucrative government jobs to return to the reservation of their birth, the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation almost at the Canadian border in central North Dakota. Home was calling, they told me, and they wanted their girls to grow up in the midst of their family and their people. And so they went. We always kept in touch, and found out that they had opened the first supermarket in Belcourt, North Dakota, the town that is owned and managed by the Turtle Mountain band of Chippewas, a tribe whose roots are in North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.



We kept in touch with the Jollie family over the years, and hung the yearly calendar they sent us in our Okanogan Cabin, wondering what the scenes from Indian life really represented in the lives of our friends. When this road trip materialized, we decided to find out, and drove the hundreds of miles to a state and region we had never seen.



Driving into Belcourt was a surprise. Unlike the Colville Reservation with which we have worked and where we have travelled for many years, Belcourt seemed to be a flourishing and busy town. The Jollies lived in a beautiful house on a hill in the center of town, about a two minute drive from their mall - it turns out they had bought the entire mall when the previous owner foundered several years after they opened their supermarket. Not only did they host an impressive number of shops inside the mall, but they were heavily involved in almost every aspect of the town. Their most recent accomplishment was to open the first full-service bank in Belcourt, and the first Indian-owned bank in the country, surmounting decades of resistance from bankers in the non-Indian towns near the reservation.



But strong as their commercial ventures had become, their family was even stronger. All four of their daughters with their husbands and children, had moved back to Belcourt. Three worked in the family business, and one was a clinical psychologist in the mental health center. Wherever we went - the impressive college that the tribe had built, the clangorous casino, the Indian Health Service hospital with a full staff of doctors, several from the tribe - we met members of their extended family. The warmth and respect among them could be seen in every gesture, and heard in every word, no matter how mundane. To our eyes, Dave and Phyllis were the foundation stones of both a remarkable family, and the engines behind the renaissance of the most successful Indian reservation we have visited.



Not that all is roses and honey. The Chippewas have the same struggles with alcohol and drugs as other indigenous people, and wrestle with the high rates of unemployment that come from being a very small place far from any commercial center or rail head. But it was inspirational to see what a few determined people could do catalyze change, and how a family can maintain its integrity and mutual support despite the enormous strains of living in a remote and at times hostile environment.






Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Setting deep roots in the South Dakota soil: Tom and Kathy Dean of Wessington Springs

Tom Dean and I were residents together at the creation of the Family Medicine program at the University of Washington. He was one year my junior, and was a rock-steady farm kid from a place that I'd never heard of and couldn't imagine: Wessington Springs, South Dakota. A number of us in that new residency program had rural roots, but Tom's town seemed in many ways to be the most remote and alien. But all of us were by definition a bit weird for choosing a specialty as untested and improbable as family medicine, and only by cleaving together and supporting one another did we get our residency accepted in an academic medical center that knew little about either family medicine or rural towns.

Our group was also fortunate that Tom managed to dazzle one of the most important people in the hospital: Kathy, the chief obstetrical nurse. All of us were smart enough to know that the nurses were the ones really in charge of the wards where we spent countless hours, and when Kathy extended her grace and knowledge to our fledgling group of family doctors, we all prospered. Tom went further than the rest of us, married Kathy, and moved with her after residency to Hayden, Kentucky, where she became a nurse mid-wife.

When they finished their Kentucky stint, they moved back to Tom's ancestral home of Wessington Springs. There are now 6 generations of Deans who have been baptized ion the small country church near Tom's family's farm, and Tom and Kathy's daughter-in-law is the pastor of the church where the latest baptism occurred. Although Tom began driving tractors at the age of 6, rather than become a farmer he decided to follow in the footsteps of his uncle, who was the solo GP who helped create the remarkably strong and unified health care system that Tom and Kathy inherited and improved.

Over the last 35 years Tom and I have remained friends and colleagues, our bonds strengthened because of our mutual interest in rural health care. Tom has become one of the most influential rural doctors in the entire country, and in addition to the enormous responsbility of providing care to several small towns on this vast prairie, he is currently the first and only rural doctor to sit on Medicare Advisory Committee, one of the most important policy jobs in health care in the entire country. Kathy delivered the majority of children in the area over her career as a midwife, and now looks after Tom and the sixth generation of Deans, 5 of whom live in Wessington Springs.

Tom and I share another bond. He, like myself and Susan Schmitt, developed a rare and lethal cancer about 2 years ago - multiple myeloma. Tom had the same experience as Susan and I - collapsing unexpectedly in his very rural town, and surviving through pluck, luck, and the skill and compassion of family, friends, and the skills of some very good doctors. Tom at this point has gone through a stem cell transplant and is on continuous medication. But you would never know it if you saw him, and he has returned to his work in the clinic, hospital, nursing home, and conjugate care facility that he helped to build during his years in his town.

Trees are only as strong as our roots, and Tom's go deep into soil of this remote and productive land. From that soil he and Kathy have drawn not only strength and nourishment, but the wisdom and insight to devise ways for scores of other rural towns to continue to receieve superb medical care despite isolation and the inanity of our crazy-quilt medical care system. The winds are strong in South Dakota, but these sturdy souls will not be dislodged.








Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Black Hills of South Dakota

We left Colorado in a torrent, punctuated by lightening, on our way to the Black Hills of South Dakota. No matter. We perservered, and ended up in an a very funky cabin (built in 1929) in the town of Hot Springs, at the southern fringe of the Black Hills. The next day we began to explore this glorious corner of our vast nation. There were unusual impediments in the road. For someone skilled at hitting a deer, the notion of hitting a bison seemed a bit more catastrophic.
Not being too bright, we decided to go on a hike in Custer State Park despite the rain. we chose the "Lover's Leap" trail - go figure. Although we didn't jump, perhaps we should have. There were 7 creek crossings before we got out, thoroughly drenched. Why didn't we see anyone else on the trail? Oh, well, this sign sums up our existential insouciance:
Today the sun shone. It was still a bit cold, and it had snowed in the mountains overnight:
Undaunted, we climbed Mt Harney, a glorious peak deep in the Wilderness at the center of the Black Hills, and the highest point between the Rockies and the Pyrenees (think about that for a moment). We basked in the sun at the top, our breath frosty, our thoughts rhapsodic:

Friday, April 23, 2010

Next Generation: Boulder, Colorado

The Next Generation: Boulder, Colorado

 

A major bonus of our re-arranged travel itinerary was that when we landed back in Denver, we were close to Boulder, Colorado. Our "god-children", Daven Henze and Elena Hartoonian - Roger married them in 2007, and Daven has been like a son to us since his birth - had migrated to the University of Colorado.  Not only were they both in Boulder, but they had recently purchased a delightful and spacious town house walking distance from the University with four bathrooms (!) and a lovely basement guest room.

 

After fumigating our forlorn car - the cheese we had left in the car had turned into a failed science experiment - we pointed ourselves towards Boulder.  We got there with no problem, but found ourselves in gridlock when we got near campus.  Thousands of brightly dressed young folks moved languorously through town, policemen were at every corner, and a helicopter buzzed nosily over-head.  What the hell was going on?

 

When we called Daven to check-in, he told us with a chuckle that we had arrived in Boulder on 420 (April 20th), and perhaps we ought to avoid the campus until later that afternoon.  We had no idea what he was talking about, but then we noticed that many of the throng wore a serrated greenish leaf around their necks or tattooed to their foreheads.  420 is Christmas for potheads, and literally thousands of acolytes had congregated in Boulder.

 

So after repairing to one of the more sedate coffee shops in town until the mobs had ebbed, we found Daven and Elena’s delightful pad.   Daven showed us around, and then took as up to Chautauqua Park, one of the 40,000 acres of open space that encircles this amazing town.  This splendid park is encircled by several mountains called the Flat Irons, jagged shards of rock that provide endless challenge for the legions of rock climbers who live in this hyper-athletic town. We capped off the day by dining at an amazing seafood restaurant, presided over by an owner who had won the recent Top Chef completion on TV.  Only in Boulder.

 

The next day we explored the enormous park on our own while Daven and Elena worked.  Daven is a newly minted Assistant Professor in the School of Engineering, and is totally immersed in unraveling the mysteries of atmospheric chemistry, in particular in relationship to the production of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.  Elena is a first year graduate student in the math department, and in addition to her own studies teaches introductory calculus.  So while they toiled in the academic vineyards, we scurried up to the Royal Arch, one of the places in the Flat Irons recommended by Daven. Under the Arch we gazed over the town of Boulder which hosts not only the University of Colorado, but also the National Center for Atmospheric Research and a number of other major scientific institutions, such that PhD’s probably outnumber marijuana enthusiasts (unless of course these brainy folks also inhale).

 

The high point of our visit was not the lofty spires of the Flat Irons, but seeing Daven and Elena as a joyful married couple, and as two aspiring and extremely promising scientists.  Although most of the folks we are visiting on this trip are our age, it is heart-warming to see that the generation whom we have helped shape are managing to make their way in an increasingly complex and imperiled world.  There is no way to know how the story will end, but for us it means a lot that our children and their friends will keep embellishing the never-ending tale.

 

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A Heroic Rural Doctor in remote West Virginia


We reached the furthest point on our journey last weekend when we visited a person who had become very close to us over the last two years, but whom we had never met. We were introduced to this remarkable person, Dr. Susan Schmitt, by my brother Leon. Leon and his wife Lucy are avid folk-dancers, with a passion for contra dance. Every year they escape from the Eastern winter to dance with a convivial group on St Croix in the Caribbean. To my good fortune one of the couples who shares in this winter migration are Susan Schmitt and Doug Wagner, from Thomas, West Virginia.



When Leon visited me about three months after my abrupt and catastrophic encounter with a rare abdominal sarcoma called a GIST, he told me that that one of his dancing partners, a rural doctor in West Virginia, shared this unusual diagnosis. More remarkably, she was still vigorously alive, working as a solo rural family doc, and clicking her heels in St Croix five years after emergency surgery for the same condition. Although I initially thought he probably had misunderstood what she told him, when I was struggling with the side-effects of the chemotherapy for this rare cancer, I got Susan’s number from Leon and called her.



This was the beginning of a phone and e-mail friendship between two intense family doctors grappling with the reality of a bad disease, the side-effects of powerful medicine, and the various disruptions resulting from the fairly heroic surgery that had saved our lives, but altered both our anatomy and physiology. Each of us had discovered different strategies for coping with the disease, and the emotional and physical challenges that come with cancer and its treatment. We shared our discoveries with each other, used each other for informal consultations as new symptoms would crop up, and became a powerful two-person cancer support group.



Thus when this road trip progressed from fantasy to a concrete plan, visiting Susan in West Virginia became the compass pole around which we designed our journey. So our furthest point from Seattle became Susan and Doug’s majestic house on Backbone Mountain just outside of Thomas.



As part of the visit we visited Susan in her half-time solo practice in Parsons, a struggling town that was almost wiped from the map during the flood of 1985. Susan has a devoted following in the town, but the economics of rural medicine in West Virginia are so challenging that the practice works only because Doug is her volunteer receptionist and book-keeper, while both of them share some of the janitorial duties. The other half of her practice is in an other small town a perilous hour and half drive from her home, plus stints of taking call at a Critical Access Hospital in yet another small town.



Susan has also experienced some of the vicious politics of rural West Virginia, including a vendetta that led to her being fired from a health center that she helped to create at the same time she was dealing with the challenges of trying to survive a lethal disease. Not only did she lose her health insurance – the chemotherapy that has kept both of us alive costs thousands of a dollars a month – but she was slapped with bogus criminal charges. She fought back vigorously and successfully, being completely exonerated of the trumped-up charges. Fortunately, she had enormous support from her patients and some segments of the professional community, and soon returned to what she loves and does best – taking care of sick people in West Virginia. Not only does she take care of disease, but she is committed to trying to prevent the enormous toll that obesity and diabetes take in West Virginia, and started a Wellness Center in Parsons that has since been adopted and supported by the city.



Although Susan and I had never met before this trip, we felt like we had known each other for years. Her example, her fortitude, and her fierce embrace of life have helped me enormously over the last two years. Her husband Doug and my wife Fernne share the ability to sustain us without draining of us our fierce uncompromising independence. It was a powerful weekend.


Thursday, April 15, 2010

Wandering in the Mountains of West Virginia

After the idyllic River Farm perched on Virginia’s Clinch River, we felt ready to tackle the mountains of West Virginia – or as Jim said, West “God Damn” Virginia. West Virginia has the distinction of being the only state to switch from the Confederacy to the Union during the Civil War, breaking away from Virginia to do so. One of the many state parks we visited was a testimony to the battles at Droop Mountain where the Confederates were expelled from the new state, at the cost of many hundreds of lives.



Our first stop was at Pipestem State Park, more a resort and major conference center than most of the state parks we have visited. Set on the edge of the Bluestone Gorge, we were attracted by the lovely woodsy cabins and the miles of hiking trails. For some strange reason April is emphatically off-season, and we felt like we had this enormous park to ourselves.



One of the major attractions of this park is tramway that takes people from the rim to the Bluestone River at the bottom of the Gorge. But the tramway doesn’t even begin to run until the middle of May. When we told the folks at the front desk that we intended to take the four-mile to the bottom, they reacted with horror and disbelief. Apparently this sort of excursion is not something that locals consider, and the rates of obesity and diabetes in these remote West Virginia hollows tend to validate that conclusion. Nonetheless we had a splendid day exploring the trail and its various spurs, and emerged from the gorge a little tuckered but unscathed.


After several days exploring the southern slice of West Virginia, we ventured into the “real” mountains of the Monongehela National Forest, traveling on sketchy roads that vied with each other in packing in the most hairpin turns per mile, while going steeply up and over mountains before plunging into improbably remote valleys. Cell phone coverage was non-existent, and we even passed that most extreme test s of true rurality: we could put both the FM and the AM dial in seek mode, and never come up with a radio station.



The other thing we discovered was that there were very few places to stay, and even fewer to eat. After rejecting a few motels that came right out of Deliverance, we ended up at Yokum’s, which had the advantage of being opposite some magnificent quartzite cliffs called Seneca Rocks. The only problems with this solution were that a number of very large men burst into our room several times since the owner had booked more than one party into the same room – the itinerant workmen were kind enough to move to the room next door; and the one restaurant we visited was so bad that the rib’ eye steak I ordered would have made a better shoe than a meal. It was an experience.



But the next day we got to climb to the top of Seneca Rock. Unlike the climbers from the mountaineering guide service next door, we donned neither helmet nor harness as we chose to take the trail to near the top. An easy scramble put us on top of the northern peak (on the left below), while cries of “belay on!) echoed from around the corner.



With Seneca Rocks under our belts, as it were, we spent our last night in the mountains at another delightful state park, high in expansive mountain valley (Canaan) that even had a ski area with a little snow left. Our main impression of the mountains was their soft beauty, and their relative isolation. It seems inconceivable that as I write this we are only 3 ½ hours by car from Washington, D.C. We have traveled into a dramatic fold in the landscape, and a major warp in the fabric of time.


Monday, April 12, 2010

The River Bend Farm - Intentional Community in Virginia

This trip is less about landscape than it is about friendscape. Our horizons are defined more by the extraordinary people with whom we have communed than the number of miles we have tramped.

And in this spirit we went to visit our friends Peg and Jim on River Bend Farm, an intentional community nestled in the bends of the Clinch River in the extreme western corner of Virginia. Fernne and Peg had been grad students decades earlier, and we have forged ties over the years not only with Peg but her partner Jim, and Peg's sister and mother. They now live primarily in a remote corner of Scott County, Virginia, creating a community and restoring a farm in the folds of ridges and water that characterize the Appalaichans.

Jim gave us convoluted directions to the farm, but when we got the their road we doubted the accuracy of our transcription. It was a road in the Platonic sense, but a bit much for our rented Chevrolet Malibu. But after a few fits and starts - and some help from Frankie, a movie actor who is part of their community - we made it down the treacherous slope to their corner of this improbable farm tucked in a corner of the sweeping Clinch River. Their home - built by them with the help of their community - fit seamlessly among the cedar and forsythia and blue bells.

We spent most of our time walking over this marvelous place, with one excursion to hear a bluegrass band at the "Carter Fold", the product of the legendary family that made Appalaichan music the to ears of the entire country. But the heart of the experience was the soft and glowing hills and cliffs, and the sense of being in someplace both ancient and modern at the same time.

Their's is a sort of practical idyl, and this communal farm goes back to the activism of the Civil Rights movement, and the ongoing attempts to remedy the grinding isoltaion and poverty of these remote Appalaichan mountains. But the key is the sense of the community, that was as radiant as the trees exploding in new leaf with the intoxication of Spring.

















Saturday, April 10, 2010

The Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina

With a little bit of help from American Airlines and Budget Rent a Car, we found ourselves teleported from rural Oklahoma to the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina. The trip started with a nostalgic tour of Chapel Hill, home of the University of North Carolina, where Fernne has lived for five years and Garth was born. But though the sign said "Chapel Hill", the crowded, over-built, and unlovely city that had swallowed the once charming southern city looked nothing like the place that Fernne had lived. We fled.

Our original destination was Asheville, a popular tourist and retirement destination at the western edge of the state, deep in the Appalachian Mountains where both the Blue Ridge Parkway and the Appalachian Trail inter-twine. But when our trusty iphone disclosed that Asheville has itself metamorphosed into a megalopolis, we followed our instincts and pulled off in the still rural town of Black Mountain. We found a delightful funky cabin built on the banks of the Flat River, and used this as a base to explore some of the peaks and trails that penetrate into these gentle but relatively high mountain ranges - topping out at about 6500 feet. The deciduous forests and dense rhododendron under-story are quite a contrast to the gnarly Cascades, and the signs of 500 years of European exploration and exploitation are refklected in the remnants of ancient logging railroads and mining operations.

On our last day in this part of the Blue Ridge, we found a waterfall - Linville Falls - that almost rivaled Palouse Falls from the first day of our explorations. And then we finally got to walk up to a small peak on the Appalachian Trail itself, that 2000 + mile trail that runs up to Maine and is the eastern companion to the Pacific Crest Trail that has been such an important part of our lives for decades. These three days have been a very calming and peaceful interlude in what at times has felt like a bit of a frenetic escapade. And these gentle, old mountains suit our current stage of life.












Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Wewoka, Oklahoma - An Extraordinary Family Comes Home


Our trip has taken us the center of the nation to visit a family with whom we have a special bond: the Overstreets. Roy and Pauline Overstreet (nee Jones) were our friends and neighbors for many years in Montlake. Roy worked for NOAA as a physical oceanographer, and Pauline became a nurse supervisor in rehab medicine at the old Providence

The Overstreets brought an unusual personal history to our Seattle enclave. Their roots were in the thin red soil of rural Oklahoma; they started out as children of farmers who scratched out a livliehood in one of the poorest parts of the nation. The center of their physical universe was Wewoka, a town founded by the Black Seminoles after their forcible deportation from the deep south to central Oklahoma. The Seminole and Creek Indians had a complex and inter-twined relationship with the slaves of the south. The Trail of Tears, during which thousands of the deportees died after being expelled from their ancestral lands, ended largely in central Oklahoma.

Roy and Pauline’s ancestors were refugees in their own land, but they encouraged and prodded their children to excel academically, and they did. With the help of a few strategically fortuitous mentors along the way, Roy - an only child - and Pauline and her many sibs dispersed across the country and built families of their own, The Overstreets and their three grown children became our neighbors when Roy transferred to the NOAA lab in Seattle from his previous posting in Boulder.

We got to know their 3 kids – Frederika, Roy, and Marcie – and our families got to know each other over the years through bar mitzvahs and weddings. Frederika (Freddy), to our delight went into public health and then medical school. After finishing her medical degree she became a family medicine resident at the hospital in Seattle where her mother had been a nurse. Along the way she married one of her Peace Corps friends, who helped design and remodel Roger’s study (Gordon is now an architect, and he and Freddy have 2 kids of their own). And Freddy has now joined our faculty as a clinician based at Harborview, our county hospital.

During this period Roy and Pauline decided to move back to their ancestral home, and bought a magnificent old house on a hill at the edge of Wewoka. Several of Pauline's brothers and sisters also clustered around Wewoka, bringing their urban perspectives and mastery of a more complex urban world to the town. This family influx has helped shake a few of the cob-webs out of this sleepy, inbred town. One quote we heard that was attributed to one of the conservative white land-owners in the town was: "This place was alright until the Overstreets showed up."

The Overstreet-Jones clan also did something that few of us ever do: they gathered in their family members and reconstructed their lives and their relationships. As I heard one of Paulette's brother say: "We invented the family that we never had." The warmth and acceptance and inclusiveness of this family went far beyond the friendship that grew on the streets of Seattle: by the end of the trip, Roger fantasized about buying the house next door and hanging out his shingle. Life refracts into so many shards, and this trip has helped coalesce some of these fragments into the glowing rainbow that this country still has the power to create.




Sunday, April 4, 2010

Lamb Fried in the Cattleman's Cafe - Intro to OK

Lamb Fries in the Cattleman's Cafe - Our Introduction to Oklahoma

Two down and 498 to go. When we got off the plane from Denver in Oklahoma City, we looked for a place to eat before heading off to Wewoka (more about Wewoka anon). With unerring serendipity, Roger took an exit in the rental car to something called the Historic Stockyard District and, voila!, the Cattleman's Cafe appeared. Fernne recalled that this venerable establishment - oldest operating restaurant in Oklahoma - had appeared in the book Walter gave us, "500 places to eat before it's too late". But we couldn't remember what it was famous for.

When I sat ourselves down at the boisterous counter - Oklahomans are as friendly as the denizens of Irish pubs - the requisite delicacy was evident the moment we cracked open the very short menu- Lamb Fries. They are sort of the equivalent of Rocky Mountain Oysters in our part of the world, except the anatomical object involved comes from a hapless sheep and not a cow. Needless to say, Roger had the Lamb Fries while Fernne played safe with the chicken-fried steak.

And then, off to Wewoka!

Friday, April 2, 2010

Bad Planning - Good Outcome

Today was our first layover day, which meant we could stretch our legs. Finding ourselves in Grand Junction, Colorado, on a glorious spring day, we headed for the Colorado National Monument. This gem is a sort of mini-Zion on the outskirts of Grand Junction: fanciful towers, improbable vistas and - mirable dictu - no people. (This turned out to be a blessing and a curse).

After some flailing about looking for the trailhead, we set out on the Monument Canyon trail, a climbing path that transects the park. Our intention was to go half-way, and then head back. But somehow the crisp and sparkling day, the increasingly glorious trail, and our disobedient legs kept going past the turn-around point. In fact, they took us to the canyon's rim, 6 miles slog and 2000 feet up. Oh, well - we figured we could easily hitch-hike back to the car, about 13 miles by road.

WRONG. There was virtually no traffic going the way our car was parked. After staring at each other and the empty road for 15 or 20 minutes, Roger set off at a fast pace downhill, hoping to hit the visitor center - 6 miles - before it closed. We figured that Fernne's winsome form would do better at hitch-hiking alone.

But as Roger walked on - eating snow because he was out of water - no one appeared. Just before the visitor center closed - Roger was close - a large SUV pulled up with 5 people in it - and Fernne in the way-back. Saved by a Grand Junctionite squiring Austrian tourists. We made it back to the car, and stopped in town for celebratory drinks.

So tomorrow we are off to the Denver airport and a quick trip to Wewoka Oklahoma to visit our wonderful friends and ex-neighbors, the Overstreets. More to come!

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Flexibility & Spontaneity: Major Change of Plans

Is it still a road-trip if you grab a plane here and there? As we absorbed the ambience of Burley, Idaho - that took a minute or two - we realized that we had three choices: convert to the LDS church and stay in SE Idaho; do a 180, and head back home; or get out the pruning shears, the credit card and the ingenuity and figure out a way to actually visit most of the places and the people we had set out to see in the time available.

So, we are now on the way to Denver. Yep, Denver, where Roger was born, home of a large airport, and a driveable distance to the Dakotas. The current plan is to make separate airborn excursions to Oklahoma and the Virginias. The exact agendas is still taking shape.

Today's other milestone: We had idleberry pie in Idle Isle in Brigham City, one of the 500 delectables one is supposed to eat "before its too late". At least that's what the book that Walter Henze sent us said. Only 499 to go. (By the way, it was delicious.)

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The Loneliness of the long-distance road tripper

Today we came face-to-face with the enormity of the continental U.S., and our shrinking ability to spend our lives staring out of a car's windshield. Not that the scenery isn't captivating: the snowy Blue Mountains over which the Emigrants trudged on the Oregon Trail 160 years ago; the sinewy Snake River, tamed unfortunately by dismal dams; and the incredibly fertile fields of Oregon and Idaho. In fact the dilemma is the opposite: as we rush across the landscape at warp speed, there are so many unexplored and unimagined byways that flicker past while calling out.

So how indeed are we going to pursue this dream of ours? We ended up in Burley, Idaho for the night, well short of some imaginary plan to reach Salt Lake. What is clear is that plans are gossamer shackles that have nothing to do with life on the road, not if one wants to be more part of life and less part of the road.

So we have a decision to make: hue to the plan, or start letting fate improvise (which she will do whether we give her permission or not). We will sleep on it, and visit tomorrow when it comes.

Day 1 Begins with a Splash

Road Trip USA - Day 1: Okanogan to Palouse Falls, with a night in Walla Walla

Our day began in fire and ended in (near) water. We spent the morning with folks from Okanogan High School, Washington's Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the redoubtable fire ecologist Jim Agee from the University of Washington. Our friend Lee took us on a charred tour of the remains of his forest along the Loup Loup Creek to its confluence with the Little Loup, the creek that courses through our forest. The Oden Road fire this summer swept through 10,000 acres of these hidden canyons.

The purpose of our hike was to plan a workshop for students from the advanced biology class at Okanogan High School, and students in the Ecology class at the Wenatchee Valley Community College, that we will conduct soon after our return. The students will learn about the vagaries and force of wildfire, and will start a series of scientific monitoring projects that future students will use to document the way this fire-evolved landscape responds to predictable - but awesome - events.

After lunch, we packed the trusty Camry - no sudden accelerations here - and headed south-east, through the channeled scablands sculpted by the catalysmic floods from the last ice age. Our objective was Palouse Falls, a dramatic fall that spews over the basalt and empties into the Snake River, near Walla Walla, where we spent the night. A fitting start to a great adventure.


Sunday, March 28, 2010

Map (Tentative) of our Planned Road Trip

Day minus 1 (or minus 2 ) and counting

We are still in the Okanogan, planning the fire ecology workshop we will be sponsoring in mid-May. Depending on how things go tomorrow with our instructors, we will either leave tomorrow or put our departure off until Tuesday, Macrh 30th.

Meanwhile, here is the tentative map of our trip. Just paste it in your web browser, and you will conclude - as we already have - that we are out of our minds.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=Buzzard+Lake+98840&daddr=Palouse+Falls,+WA+to:Walla+Walla,+WA+to:John+Day+OR+to:SALT+LAKE+CITY,+UT+to:Ramah,+New+Mexico+to:Wewoka+OK+to:Greenville,+MS+to:Abingdon,+Washington,+Virginia+to:Thomas+WV+to:Chicago,+IL+to:Minneapolis,+Hennepin,+Minnesota+to:Belcourt+ND+to:Wessington+Springs+SD+to:Livingston,+Mt+to:Spokane+WA+to:Seattle+WA&geocode=FYHT4gId5Evd-Cn96I5SFcCcVDHybw11qYgcSA%3BFbsHyAIdBQ30-ClXE1Qfqk6fVDHm9smkfx-n_w%3BFcXjvgIdkzry-Ck799CgSxWiVDHUsR3nz6_EEg%3BFfS7pQIdzuvo-CmrV6drcQW7VDGmF97QJw8tnw%3BFcv1bQIdma1U-SntMdGIlD1ShzHKMU1IoLdTWw%3BFaEWGAIdI4yI-SmDRUNF3FokhzG0JVNt_DbW2Q%3BFaJ6GAId3qA_-ilhqBmSKYSzhzHAjcDKwWEBfg%3BFUTM_QEd8oGS-in7ya63ze8rhjERUfSsgeToBQ%3BFcklMAId_B8d-yndwv1yFhNQiDE-xKvVHigKgQ%3BFcVdVQIdg_RC-ykBfd08CslKiDEby6wMqJBxzQ%3BFbGUfgId_JDG-inty_TQPCwOiDEAwMAJrabgrw%3BFf1WrgIdJOhw-im9u3eTkDOzUjEH7novhMmfkw%3BFQM66QIdmwMO-ilvtrCsdPjcUjFnr2ZP1Ep9UQ%3BFTWYoAIdwPIf-ikDj-8k_wGHhzHZQt0UW4wkQg%3BFbi-uAIdhPNo-SkjR6AnvhNFUzFMjIRaJjKWRQ%3BFRw31wIdgTgA-Snl57swXBieVDGx2YQL1sn83Q%3B&hl=en&mra=ls&sll=41.015865,-99.607645&sspn=44.726709,62.666016&ie=UTF8&ll=41.046217,-100.898437&spn=44.726709,62.666016&z=4

Sunday, March 21, 2010

10 days and counting

With whimsy and chance as our compass, Roger and Fernne are packing up for a wander around the country. Our plan is to visit old friends in new (to us) places, observe the march of spring across the landscape, and enjoy the spontaneity ands romance of a trip across this magnificent landscape.

Follow along with us if you are so inclined.

Roger and Fernne

file:///Users/rogerrosenblatt/Desktop/Rosenblatt%20Road%20Trip.webarchive

Brigham City's Finest Pie

Brigham City's Finest Pie

The Blue Mountains-In the Snow

The Blue Mountains-In the Snow

Silos from the care at 80 mph

Silos from the care at 80 mph

Fernne at Farewell Bend, Snake River

Fernne at Farewell Bend, Snake River