Wednesday, February 22, 2006. I’m heading for Window Rock in northeast
Arizona, almost New Mexico. Bright sunny day. Leaving Phoenix is
always a joy. I like to see the city and its blight drop over the
horizon in my rearview mirror. Phoenix recedes in stages. Off the
freeway on to the Beeline Hiqhway north across the Salt River
Reservation. The immediate landscape is sparse and open, reservation
houses on my left, sand and gravel operations and, farther north, the
big landfill. Lots of red tile roofs in the distance to the east.
North of Shea Boulevard and the Fort McDowell casino, I cross the Verde
River, leaving most city signs behind me. Not all, scattered
houses are still visible. But soon even those intrusions are gone. Now
the Superstition Mountains stretch east and south. North and east is
Four Peaks, the southern rampart of the Mazatzal Mountains.
North
of Four Peaks road, I cross into the Mazatal Mountains. Phoenix is
well out of sight and mind now. As if to celebrate, cresting the ridge
offers a panoramic view of Round Valley, the wide, rugged basin cut by
Sycamore Creek. The landscape is open and expansive. The many rocks,
crags, peaks and canyons give the valley a feel of greater depth and
scope. Yet this is only a small space in the scheme of things. How
truly massive is this planet of ours. I climb over ridges, in and out
of basins, gradually working up the Sycamore Creek drainage, snaking my way
through. Crossing Sycamore Creek for the last time, the road follows
Kitty Jo Creek as it climbs the southwest face of Mount Ord on the
Mazatzal Divide. After the divide these mountains are to my left as I head into Rye
Creek drainage.
The Mazatals are my mountains. I’ve walked
this range many times beginning in 1983. Mostly four and five day trips
and usually without seeing other people. Although the wilderness area is
within a couple hours of a major metro area, few venture here. The
Mazatzals are rugged and difficult walking. Solitude and grandeur.
Worth the effort but it’s a big effort.
The long climb from Rye
to Payson goes quickly. I head east on Route 260 on a combination of
new and old roadway. The road runs under the Mogollon Rim, a long
escarpment that is the southern face of the Colorado Plateau. New
construction has all but obliterated the old two lane route. Driving is
much easier on the big, new road. Climbing again, this time to the top
of the Rim, with views of the Mazatzals to the south and west. On the
Rim, I stop and nap for a while.
Through Forest Lakes and Heber
before heading north toward Holbrook. Still climbing. Landscape is
sandy, rocky and brushy. No big vegetation, juniper and pinon pine,
open range. Nearing Holbrook, I see the buttes and mesas north of the
Little Colorado River–Navajo country. To the west I catch a glimpse of
the San Francisco Peaks, a small blue-gray jagged bump on an otherwise
flat horizon. Turning east on I-40 now. Traffic’s not too bad. Moving
fast. Across the Painted Desert, north of the Little Colorado River and then
the Rio Puerco. The land is wide open, mostly empty except for the
railroad tracks that parallel the highway and scattered Navajo Homes.
East of Holbrook is the Dinosaur Park with its life-size beasts posed
along highway. Big as they are, the dinosaurs look small against this
land. Near Petrified Forest National Park the land turns strange,
undulating bands of red, gray and their infinite permutations wrap
around hoodoos and other surreal formations.
Farther east, I am
heading toward the sandstone ramparts that mark the Arizona-New Mexico
border. The sheer cliffs shine brightly, tinged with a red. At Lupton,
two miles shy of the state line, I turn north on Indian Route 12, heading deeper
into the Rez. The road is narrow, two lane but good. The land is bent,
uplifted and eroded, mostly forested. A few dwellings and buildings
are along the way but they are pretty spread out, often family
compounds. I see houses of all shapes and states of repair. Mobile
homes, stock pens and derelict vehicles. A small human presence on a
vast land. Oak Springs is a community of buildings and home sites
clustered around the Chapter House. Now I climb the final ridge. I can
see Window Rock in the distance, across a rocky, tilted landscape.
In
Window Rock, I am back in a city but it is small in scale. The town
sprawls across Black Creek Valley, homes, businesses, livestock,
government all together in this remote space. The land is open under an
infinite sky. The sandstone cliffs on the east glow fiercely in the
late afternoon sun.
Checked into my motel, I eat and then walk,
following a bike route from when I lived here. It climbs to the ridge
overlooking the Window Rock, a solitary natural arch formation in the
sandstone. As I climb I pass what I call BIA Hill, an area of finely
built stone homes that must have housed officials from the Bureau of
Indian Affairs who oversaw the Navajo Nation in the pre-sovereignty
days. The stone is red sandstone cut into broadly faceted blocks, the
style is distinct and common among the older tribal headquarters buildings. One house is
noticeably larger than the others–the superintendent’s, no doubt–and has
arguably the most spectacular view in the area. The view looks down
the valley and encompasses the cliffs, now exploding with light at
sunset.
About half of the houses, including the big one which
looks renovated, are boarded and vacant. Others are occupied, many with
large gray-blue shipping containers nearby. Several houses have been
well restored. Dogs bark at my passing. The few who come forward to
challenge me retreat at my sudden increase in size as I raise my arms
and hands, moving toward them. At the top of the hill, I see the Window Rock. My position
is almost as high as the arch and overlooks the Navajo Nation government
buildings surrounding the Council chambers.
It's twilight as I
descend. The sun is behind the Defiance Plateau in the west. Horses
graze alongside an abandoned road. Two, both white, turn toward me as I
pass. One looks like it is coming to check me out but it cuts behind
me with its companion. The air cools quickly. This day is done.
originally published in Unsolicited Opinion
[editor's note: A road trip is not exactly at the speed of foot but the Arizona landscape is so immense that it can be grasped even traveling at highway speeds. Of course, that requires observation, a skill learned at the speed of foot which is why I posted this story here.
Also, it's my blog and I can do what I want.]
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