So, I have the conflicted relationship with sleeping in. Part of me likes sleep and part of me likes to get up because there are things I need to and even want to do. But, unless I am sick, really sick, not just a cold, I always feel guilty about sleeping in. Today was not an exception. After I get up, I consider what I am going to do on this cloudless, sunny day in Utah. I could find a hike. I could go for a drive. I could go swimming in the lake. But really, I feel like reading. I picked up a fiction novel in the JFK airport during my layover and I started reading it on the plane. My mind keeps running through all the excuses to spend the day reading: the book is really good, it is fiction and I haven't read fiction in a while, people have been telling me my itinerary is jammed packed with activity already, I deserve a break? I deserve to relax? Do I even know the meaning of this word? Isn't "relax" just another way to say "lazy"? Have I ever actually relaxed and not felt guilty about it? Yes, I have, exactly one time in my life. I actually went somewhere to relax exactly once, my honeymoon. But that's a once in a lifetime thing.
The road "off property" |
So we get out and hike across the red-orange, Utah desert toward the large outcropping of naturally poured rock formations. The little trail pamphlet promised us "pedestals" of smaller rock formations. We follow along the "trail" of park ranger made rock piles that supposedly mark the trail. We cross several washes that looked like they had been dried up for hundreds of years. Really, do they ever have water in them? We are loyally accompanied by Pancake who is quite happy to chase whatever desert creatures are scattering about. The dirt is more like sand in most places, making it a little slow going. Its really hot out. Its really dry. I am really hungry. My lunch had been really light since I was just sitting around lazily, all day. But it is really nice to get out and walk around.
This landscape troubles my photographer's eye. It is beautiful, but has not inspired me to photograph, so I kind of force it. Maybe it is the flatness, or the sorry looking desert plants, or the crumbling rock walls? Maybe its just that I am really, freaking hungry, so much that I am starting to feel light-headed. I begin to drag. I wish I could run around with energy and excitement like Pancake. I never thought, in my life, I would wish to run around like a pancake. We continue to follow the rock pile trail, but we don't really see anything that I would describe to someone as a "pedestal". There are some nice, sparse, clusters of wildflowers here and there. The sun is getting low in the sky and the shadows are getting long. We decide to head back. I trudge, my feet feeling like heavy weights, my arms dangling. The car seems so far away. My blood sugar level must be low? But we make it eventually. Pancake is very thirsty and Becki gives whatever water she has left. I am famished as we head back. I am excited for some food.
Tonight we are eating out in the only restaurant in Bullfrog, an establishment which is not open in the winter. The three of us pile into Mike's truck with an additional guest, their neighbor, Chris. After the very, very short ride to the Lodge, we sit at a nice window seat for dinner, the huge Lake Powell, like an enormous trough, below us. Chris, with his baseball hat on, sits across from me in his rather worn and very casual clothes. Chris is from, well, I don't remember where he is from, maybe he didn't tell me, but he was born in Southern California and he decided that he is a Seattle Seahawks fan. He kind of has an accent and he likes living in this remoteness, away from all the traffic and people. I guess he doesn't get bored here. I am beginning to really appreciate the variety of the San Francisco Bay area. If you want ocean, or redwoods, or oak forests, or mountains, or bare hills, or city streets you got it. There is variety in landscape, people, events, entertainment, dining, jobs and culture. But it does have lots of traffic and a very high cost of living. The fact that people like Chris really desire this environment intrigues me, I can really respect their want and need for this place. It is not a place where you just "end up" in. You are not here because your family is here or you grew up here. You come to Bullfrog because this is where you want to be. Why you stay here may be a different reason.
Our table is crowded with appetizers and dinner plates and we all eat large amounts of food. Then we go back to Becki's and prepare to watch the meteor shower. Tonight is supposed to be the best night for the meteors, although the best time is supposed to be at 3am. It is a bit unreasonable for Becki and Mike to stay up this late, so we head out again, to a side road away from the lights of Bullfrog and park ourselves in our campfire chairs with our faces towards the sky. The air is warm and the breeze is gentle. We see satellites and airplanes. We see meteors of varying degrees of brightness and spectacular-ness. Some look like dimly glowing, distant baseballs that seem to appear out of nowhere and then disappear. Some look like huge, glittering streaks of white fire, larger than any star and streak across the whole sky.
A Meteor Over Bullfrog |
The Night Sky at 3am |