
Open road in central California [x]

Open road in central California [x]

The jagged rock formations of Zabriskie Point in Death Valley.
Country road, take me home…
John Denver shuffled to the top of the playlist before we’d even left the national park. Ashley and I laughed at the happy coincidence: we were indeed on the road home, though it would take us several days and three states to reach it.

View of the Grand Canyon from the top of North Kaibab Trail.
The Grand Canyon.
The sight of it inspires different emotions for different people, most of them very strong emotions. For me, it inspires a kind of disbelief and despair. Disbelief because it is so big, so grand, so… so much that my mind cannot grasp it. Walking along the rim of canyon, I start to wonder if it is even real. If the park staff printed a really, really long poster and suspended it from a scaffold… would I really be able to tell the difference? It is unreal the way the solar system is unreal, the way those vast distances and massive objects just cannot exist in the same reality as coffee mugs and car keys and you and me.

Looking down to the continuation of the Kaibab Trail and the inner canyon.
And despair, because of course it is real, the way both car keys and Jupiter are real, but there is no way to ever convey its reality to someone else. I could write pages of description, and you would still not understand what it is like to stand on the edge of canyon. I could take thousands of photos, and not a single one of them could capture it immensity. The Grand Canyon makes me put down my camera because… what’s the point.

The Kaibab Trail switchbacks down, down, down.
And so I will say very little about the Grand Canyon except that we hiked part of the North Kaibab Trail, and part of the Rim Trail, and that it was more than I can ever, ever convey to you.

A team of mules takes a break while heading up the Kaibab Trail.

On the day Ashley and I turned thirty and our youth died forever, we broke camp in darkness and drove out into the desert. For all that the Navajo National Monument feels remote, it’s actually quite close to civilization: we passed a school bus on our way west. A little outside the town of Page, we pulled into a nearly-empty parking lot and settled in for a long wait. We were here to see the famous Antelope Canyon.

The rising sun casts cool shadows over the Colorado River.
We woke on the banks of the Colorado River. This far north, the river was a tiny thing. The canyon it had carved through the red Moab rock was equally small, the walls barely high enough to delay the sunrise. In a few days we would see the Colorado again, but by then it would be a powerful river sunk deep within one of the largest canyons on the planet. The thought was almost too much to wrap my head around.

Red rocks and blue skies near the entrance to Arches National Park.
I won’t say the showers were worth the expense and disappointment of staying in a KOA, but they were nice. We started the day (Day Three) clean and well-rested and refreshed, and then it was a short drive from Green River to the first of our major destinations: Arches National Park.
Ever since I read Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey, Arches has seemed like a pilgrimage site to me. I was excited by the prospect of finally seeing it for myself—and of spending most of a day outside of a car.

It was one of those mercurial fall days that’s sunny and blustery in turns and leaves you unsure whether you should be wearing sunglasses, a jacket, or both. After a short, indifferent summer autumn was here in force, and my friend Ashley and I were fleeing the rainy weather for somewhere warmer and drier.
Ashley and I met back in college and knew we were platonic soulmates when we discovered that we had the exact same birthday—same day, same year. Since this year we were turning thirty, we decided we should do something big to celebrate the death of our youth and the onset of old age, and we settled on a road trip around the American Southwest. Which was why, as the evening began to threaten rain, we crammed our camping gear in the back of Ashely’s SUV and set off on an adventure.
In my memory, everything is bigger, taller, fiercer. Guard towers thrust upward from a looming palisade wall. Around their base, gardens sprawl forever in maze of sun-drenched foliage and gravel paths. Inside the gates, heaps of cannonballs litter the ground around menacing cannons.
My memory is false. When I return to Fort Vancouver, I find the palisade does still loom, but the garden is a modest patch at the foot of one wall and there are only two cannons, with a single tidy stack of cannonballs apiece. It’s a shock, how much smaller everything is. But then, I was much smaller back then.

When I was very young, my father volunteered as one of the living history reenactors who populate the fort on busy summer weekends. He worked in the blacksmith shop, a dark space that was intimidating to a small child like me. My father’s presence somehow made it more so, because seeing him dressed in strange clothes and performing unfamiliar work made him seem like a stranger. But it meant my mother and brother and I often went to go see him there, and so the fort lingers among my childhood memories like a kind of recurring dream.
On an unexpectedly gloomy August afternoon I went back to the fort for the first time. I was motivated by my slightly-crazy life goal to see all of the national parks (Fort Vancouver is a national historical site), but also to see how the reality of the place lived up to the memory of it. My first stop was the visitor’s center, which I hadn’t even known existed–never, in all of my childhood visits, had we ever set foot inside or even gone to the upper parking lot that services it.

When I finally strolled down to the fort itself, my first reaction was one of disappointment. Maybe it was only the overcast skies coloring my mood, but everything seemed small and a little shabby. The displays and interpretive materials were mismatched and sometimes dated, clearly installed at various points over the last decades and in some cases not updated since then.
But those displays did offer me something my past self could not have appreciated. As a child, the fort was nothing but a giant, if unusual, playground, a place where I could run and explore. Now I could appreciate the historical significance of it and imagine the lives of the people who lived there.

As I wandered in and out of the reconstructed buildings, I was struck by the contrast between the lives of the everyday residents of the fort and its environs, and the lives of those who lived in the “Big House.” On the one hand: bare wooden structures, a narrow bed, and few crude possessions. On the other: a sumptuous mansion filled with ornate furniture and delicate glass and china.
The extreme concentration of wealth in the Big House was an important display of power in a region caught in a tug-of-war between Britain and the young United States. Fort Vancouver was an outpost of the Hudson’s Bay Company, a commercial corporation that effectively ruled the no-man’s-land of the Oregon Territory.
I vaguely remembered hearing about the Hudson’s Bay Company from my childhood visits, but living in Canada has brought what once seemed like distant history into new focus. Where I had thought the HBC was a thing of the past, in Canada it’s alive and well as a chain of department stores. And where U.S. history often frames the tension that surrounded Fort Vancouver as conflict between America and Britain, Canadian history seems inclined to frame it as tension between America and Canada. Smaller and more humble wasn’t the only way the fort was different to me now.

I saved the blacksmith’s shop for last. It, too, was smaller than I remembered, and less intimidating. But the smell was the same: scorched metal and ozone and coal and through it all the determined clang clang clang of hammer on steel on anvil. Here at last was was the Fort Vancouver of my memory.

We had to get out of the bus to go through Customs. It was gray, chilly day, and after we’d shuffled through the various lines and counters we milled uncertainly around the exit doors, unsure if we could get back on the bus yet. No one wanted to wait outside. A customs officer, his belt heavy with an array of weaponry, stomped over and glared at us.
“Everyone out!” he barked. “Go outside!”