Friday, October 31, 2014

Take Me Out to the Ball Game



October is one of my favorite months of the year. Fall leaves turn orange and red, and drop from mountain trees. Elk are in the rut, and their bellowing bugle echoes through the forest. Hot summer air transforms into a crisp autumn breeze. And finally, televisions are turned on to watch a batter come to the plate, tap the base with his bat, then test his skill against a ball blazing at ninety-five miles an hour.

Yes, October is World Series time, and I will admit that now days, it is the only time I watch a ballgame. I used to be an avid Braves fan, coming home from school each day to watch Atlanta play on TBS. I rarely missed a game.

Things are different now.  Family and responsibility force baseball lower on the totem pole of priorities. Plus, we no longer have TBS.

Yet my love and nostalgia for the game haven't diminished over the years. This year, the Kansas City Royals are playing the San Francisco Giants in the World Series. As I write, game seven is tonight. Winner takes all.

I can't help but recall that I watched Kansas City play earlier this year. The game was in May and it was at The Big A in Anaheim against the Angels. I brought the whole family. Not only was it their first time watching a Major League ballgame in person, but it was mine also. I was as excited as a little kid!

We left our motel an hour and a half early, just to be on the safe side, and arrived at Angel Stadium twenty minutes later. Men with batons waved us to our parking stalls within the gigantic lot that surrounded the stadium. We felt a little out of place without our Angels shirts and caps.

We found our seats behind the right field foul line and up a deck. There didn't appear to be a bad seat in the house. At this time, the stadium was mostly empty. Fans trickled in little by little. I wandered back downstairs to field level and perused the gift shops. An Angels dog feeder was very adorable, but not worth the money. I looked at the caps and jerseys, very tempted to buy, but not willing to break out the wallet.



Meandering the hall again, I found a memorabilia display that fascinated me. Photos of famous players, their signatures emblazoned across the front, adorned the wall.  Behind a glass were baseballs signed by Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, and Ted Williams.  I was reminded of the great players of this game, many who played in this very stadium.



I returned to my family in the stands. We were all very excited and just like children in a candy shop. We enjoyed watching the “Kiss-cam” on the Jumbo-tron. A camera crew covertly filmed unsuspecting couples in the stands, then expected them to smack a big one with everyone watching.

Field crews worked on preparing the white lines in the dirt. Girls circled the field with blow guns that shot souvenirs into the stands. Little by little, players drifted to the field to stretch their legs and warm up their arms. Before I knew it, a lady was singing the National Anthem at home plate, and fireworks fired off near the center field fence. It was time to play ball!



I admit that I had to do a little research to find out who was on the team, as I am out of the loop now days. I found three names that I recognized: Mike Trout, Chris Iannetta, and Albert Pujols. The latter of the three, Pujols, is probably the biggest name, and a future Hall of Famer. His career is full of many accomplishments. Currently he is twenty-first on the list of all-time home run leaders with 520 dingers.

My daughter, Kaitlyn, brought her mitt. We waited the entire game, but didn't get a foul ball to come anywhere near us.



With baseball being America's national pastime, we couldn't let the game pass by without buying some of America's greatest food. We spent $41 on four hotdogs and six drinks. That included two souvenir cups that we needed to bring home to prove we had been to the game. Jenelle desperately needed to spend $12 on the Nacho Daddy, a huge serving of nachos inside a plastic Angels helmet.

The game was very enjoyable to witness. Mike Trout hit an RBI double over third base, Albert Pujols was hit by a pitch, Chris Iannetta blasted a home run over the left field fence, and Howie Kendrick was hit by a ball on his way to first base. I was very impressed at the sharpness of the crowd. When there was a controversial play at home plate, they were the first to let the umpires know about it. Likewise, after two impressive diving catches, the crowd was on their feet with loud ovations.

I anticipated the seventh inning stretch. As a boy, I remember Harry Carey leading the song to Chicago Cubs fans, but I had never participated in the tradition myself. The time came, and everyone stood up and sung in unison. I am big on tradition and culture, and few things can match true American tradition more than standing at a Major League ball game and singing: “Take me out to the ball game, take me out with the crowd, just buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jacks . . .”

What took me completely off-guard was when we also sung, “God Bless America.” We took off our caps and watched the waving flag beyond the outfield.



Kaitlyn and I decided to take a stroll around the stadium. Behind the stands in right field you can see the 230 foot tall “Big A” sign next to the freeway. Beyond center field there is a large sign with Albert Pujols' picture and the number 505 across the front. They change the number every time he smacks a round tripper. We watched the game for a few minutes from the outfield perspective, hoping that a home run would soon be blasted over the wall. It never happened.

At last, it was the top of the ninth inning and the Angels were up 4-3. There were two outs and a runner on third base. The crowd came to their feet, chanting, “Let's go Angels, let's go! Let's go Angels, let's go!” - That is is except the two Royals fans that sat in front of us. They inserted "Royals" instead of "Angels," but no one could hear them. Everyone watched the batter in anticipation as he popped the ball to second base. Angels win! Fireworks blasted into the air from the center field fence along with two plumes of fire.   Almost everyone was on their feet, clapping and hollering - except for those Royal fans in front of us. They sheepishly stood up and walked away, leaving their Angel cups on the floor for the taking. 

I guess those two Royals fans got the last laugh. Now I am at home watching the World Series on television, knowing that Kansas City beat the Angels in the playoffs to get there. That's alright. I can root for the Royals now. Or I can just sit back and enjoy the game, wishing I were there, or else imagining I were there: the crowd on their feet, the smell of pop corn and hot dogs, and the sound of the ball on the wooden bat.

   

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Oceanside


The pier at Oceanside, California is a long, wooden walkway that juts seaward from the beach. On bare feet it is hot and slivered. Not very comfortable.

A bottle with a hand-written message is held in my left hand. I wrote it a few minutes ago while sitting on the beach on the north side of the pier.

The message is for Brittany, my daughter who passed away a year and a half ago. We hope to make this a long tradition. I feel closer to her every time I write a letter.

We walk to the end of the pier, and one by one, we toss our bottles into the deep blue water. We watch them far below us bobbing up and down and gradually drifting one way or another. There is no clear direction yet. We hope they drift seaward instead of toward the coast.


When we are done, we make our way back to the beach and settle down south of the pier. The beach is busy. Today is Memorial Day. A Spiderman kite flies high with the wind. A family sits beneath a large umbrella with a cooler full of food. Women in bikini's and men in swim trunks lay on towels on the sand and brown their skin in the full sun.

One of the first curiosities I notice about this beach is how shallow it is. Frolickers of all sorts stand in the water at a significant distance from the shore and the water only comes to their thighs. What a good idea!

My shirt, my socks, my shoes, and my glasses all come off, and all that is left are my flowery-blue swim trunks. My bare feet step into the wet sand and white, foamy water rushes in and covers my ankles, then sucks back into the ocean. I walk in further and the water covers my shins, then knees, and now my thighs. A large wave with its rolling white water are within my reach and at once, I bring my hands together over my head and dive into the wave. A cacophony of tumbling seaweed and sand spin across my body. I stand up, my body above the waist out of the water, wipe the wetness from my eyes, and feel another rolling torrent hit me from behind. It knocks me off-balance and I fall to my side, a big smile on my face. I don't know that I've had this much fun on a beach since I was a kid!


I look behind me, and see my seventeen year old son, Jordan. He is here to join me. He's taller than me now. His trim, sculpted body is stronger than mine also. He was on the water polo team a couple of years ago.

We both dive into deeper water. We try swimming with the flow of the wave and ride it the way surfers do. That doesn't work too well. All our bodies manage to do is to sink beneath the water.

The crest of the waves lift high. The undulation of the water moves up and down and I find that if I can stay afloat on top that it is almost like jumping on a trampoline. The waves seem to be building bigger. We float atop the crest and watch the people on the shore become smaller as I am lifted higher. Pure exhilaration!

Soon, we realize that we are not quite so close to the beach anymore. The waves are no longer breaking, but just bobbing us up and down. Sometimes our feet no longer touch. Jordan and I look at each other and know that it is time to swim back to shore.

I go to my belly and begin swimming. Another large waves beats against us and leaves me panting.  I look at the shore and realize that we're not getting any closer.  I look over my shoulder to make sure that Jordan is still with me.

A life guard is in the water near us and yells out, “A rip tide is starting! You need to move, now!  It's an underwater current. Swim that way! Can you still touch?”

A small panic comes over me. I can see the distance we have moved from the shore and I can feel the swift traveling sand against my legs. We paddle and walk in slow-motion in a diagonal direction toward the beach. At last, the water comes to our thighs, then knees, then ankles. My chest heaves in and out and I feel light-headed as I walk toward the shore.

"We're lucky to be walking out of that one," I say to Jordan. 

The situation wasn't dire, but could have ended much worse. Perhaps Brittany was there with us. A nudge here, a whisper there.

  

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Run for the Border



I've always wanted to take my kids to another country. Not when they're too young, because I don't believe that they would appreciate it. The ideal time would be when my oldest son is seventeen or eighteen years old. That would put the youngest one at eight, and all of them, at one level or another, at an age were they could recognize the worth of being in a foreign country.

My original plan was to take them to Spain. I quickly learned that I wasn't rich enough to do that. I will admit that it was my only plan. Soon afterward, the idea of taking them to another country just fizzled out . . . unless I somehow won the lottery.

Now, my son is seventeen, and we are going to Southern California. We decide to spend a day near San Diego, so I determine that it may be wise to take the whole family as close to the border as we can get. (We would go completely into Tijuana, but I don't want to buy passports for each of the kids for just one day.)

We don't have a lot of time on our hands. We're traveling from Anaheim and we have already spent a few hours at the beach in Oceanside.

Our first stop is at El Ranchero taco shop on Main Street in Chula Vista. We are only six miles from the border, and according to my research, this is the best taco shop around. I want my kids to feel like they have entered that zone where American and Mexican cultures cross. What better way to do that than through their tummy's.

El Ranchero is a small building. In fact, we accidentally drive past it the first time. A portable taco bus is parked behind it and beneath a white tarp a man grills beef over a flame. Inside there is not a lot of space. There are just a few tables and behind a partition are the cooks. Most of the names on the menu appear familiar from other places I have eaten. I order a barbacoa burrito. The meat is well flavored, although not as flavored as the carne asada.

Miguel, the man behind the counter, gives me a selection of hot sauces to use. Really, I don't know his name, but Miguel seems like it should fit. He speaks in a very strong Mexican accent, and sometimes I can't distinguish which language he is speaking in. He invites me to try the habanero sauce, which proves to be a good choice. I've never tried this kind of sauce before and I find it very flavorful with a huge kick.

My youngest daughter, Savanah, asks me, “Dad, why does everybody here speak Spanish?”

“That's because we're only five miles from Mexico,” I respond, hoping that she is beginning to understand what I am trying to do.

We return to I-5 and drive south a few miles south to the exit for Dairy Mart Road. Not far from the exit, the road crosses the Tijuana River. We stop for a moment to explore the river. Above us a model plane buzzes in loops and swoops through the air. In the distance we see a man with a large controller in his hands.

I see a lot of green vegetation, but it is so dense that I can't see the river. I walk over toward the bridge, then I follow a dirt path that leads under the bridge. Who knows what has taken place beneath this beneath this bridge over the years. I don't know if I will find a bum, or an illegal alien. I find neither. But I don't find a river, either. I see a pool of stagnant water and plenty of thick riparian vegetation, but no river. I don't know if it is because of the drought year, of if Mexico commonly saps all the water out. Neither surprised nor disappointed, we move on.

I must say that at this point, the view into Mexico is very close. A busy highway just over the border runs parallel with the fence. A patchwork of houses fill the hillside. A large white church with red trim, Gothic windows, and twin bell towers sits amidst the houses.

We pull onto a dirt road that will take us right to the fence. I found this road on Google Maps and became excited and wary - at the same time - to travel on it. If we were to park at a certain place and walk to the top of the hill, we could have an up-close view of Tijuana. On the other hand . . . we could get shot.

Immediately, I realize that walking up to the view point is out of the question. The path to get there is chained off with signs reading No Trespassing. Instead, we park by the fence and observe. The fence is concrete with slots, and there is another sign warning us not to cross. I don't dare touch the fence. I fear electrocution, or getting dropped by a hidden sniper. We can't see into Mexico as well, although we can hear the rumble of cars and have an up-close look at a billboard on the other side. The sign shows pictures of colorfully dressed ladies and advertizes an event called Las Lavanderas.



Looking to the east, we still have a good vantage point into Mexico.  There is a stark contrast between the crowded buildings of Tijuana on the south of the fence, and the barren California desert on the north.  

As we turn around on the dirt road, we notice a white truck up on the hill in the off-limits area. I'm sure that they were watching us through binoculars the entire time.

We return to the paved road and drive west toward the beach. The ride is pleasant. Small ranches are scattered throughout. A cowboy on a horse spits up dust in the distance. Corrals, avocado trees, and plenty of No Trespassing signs.

A gate blocks off the road, accompanied by a small parking lot. We are at the Border Field State Park and due to budget restrictions, the road to the beach is closed off. Pedestrian traffic is alright, but we don't have the time to make the three mile round-trip hike. Perhaps on another day.

We turn around and return the way we came.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

The Lone Cone


From the top of the hill where my grandparents lived in Blanding, you could always gaze into four states. To the west there were the prominent buttes called the Bears Ears, jutting along the horizon from the distant hills of Elk Ridge. Separating the ridge from north to south was a teardrop gap called The Notch. From the green mesa of Milk Ranch Point, the terrain descended into rocky canyons around Comb Ridge, a stony spine emerging from the earth that seemed to run endlessly to the south. I could see Black Mesa, Butler Wash, and in the distance, the spires of Monument Valley, which run into Arizona. The one prominent landmark from New Mexico was Shiprock, a craggy-looking stone that rises sharply in the southeast. Moving my eyes into Colorado, there was the Sleeping Ute Mountain, a landmark sacred to the Utes, giving the appearance of a proud Indian Chief laying on his back and folding his arms. Further north were climbing peaks of the San Juan Mountain ranges. I didn't know the name of any of them, except for one, and that was the Lone Cone.

It stood by itself and looked just like its name indicated, an isolated cone. During early morning drives between Blanding and Monticello, the prominent silhouette of the Lone Cone, against the orange hues of sunrise, struck me with interest and mystery. For some reason, I never got close to that intriguing mountain. As we would travel further into Colorado, usually going to Cortez, it would disappear about the time we passed through Dove Creek. It was during that time, many years ago, that I decided that one day I would hike to the top of the Lone Cone.

View of Lone Cone from Norwood, Colorado.




My dream wasn't realized until about twenty five years later when I decided to hike it with my sixteen year old son, Jordan. I learned that there really isn't a short, direct route to the Lone Cone. From Blanding we drove a seventy-something mile circuitous route that led us through Desolation Valley and Norwood, Colorado. In Norwood, we were truly close. The cone rises due south of the little town and is so close that the individual patches of trees can be seen. Our route took us along a very rocky, two-mile road that climbed the southeast flank of the mountain. I forgot my GPS, but we were probably 10,000 feet high in elevation.

Middle Peak (middle), Dunn Peak (right), Wilson Peak (far left)

Lone Cone from east side.
This is where we camped. It was probably as beautiful as any place I had ever camped on earth. The air was crisp and clean, and I couldn't help but breath deeply and take in the scent of the wild flowers that surrounded us, and the pungent smell of pines. Every now and then I caught a whiff of elk. We didn't see any, but without a doubt, this was their country. I found a few wallowing holes and saw their sign on the ground. To our west stood the bulk of the Lone Cone. It looked less like a cylindrical cone from this angle and more like a tooth, with a sheer wall hanging from its belly like a belt. The most impressive sight, however, was the impressive mass of Middle Peak, soaring well above the treeline, in the near distance at our southeast. The sun was setting about now and I watched with fascination as the hue of this impressive peak changed colors.

I must mention, as a side note, that one of the reasons that I was so fascinated with Middle Peak, was that I mistakenly thought it was Wilson Peak, the infamous 14,000 foot summit that finds itself on all of the Coors beer banners throughout the world. I knew that we were close and from what I remembered, it looked very similar to what I was viewing right now. I hope to hike Wilson Peak some day, so I inspected it closely, planning how an amateur like me could scale its ridges. It wasn't until I got home and looked at my maps a little closer, that I discovered that what I was really looking at was Middle Peak, an overlooked neighbor with a puny altitude of just over 13,000 feet.

So I digress. To make a long and beautiful story short, we took pictures, ate kebabs, and slept in a tent until early next morning.

Northeast slope


We awoke and set out to climb to the summit of the Lone Cone. I don't know that I will go into tremendous detail, but suffice it to say, by the time we were done, we had circumvented the entire cone. Our first attempt to reach the top resulted in failure. This was on the northeast corner of the mountain and we got pretty near the tip, but the route to get there was becoming too sheer and rocky, and considering that I am a chicken when it comes to heights, we decided to move to another side.

Now, this wasn't easy. We moved to the northwest side, which reports had told us, was the easiest way to ascend to the top. But in order to arrive there, we had to lose some elevation and cross the giant rock field on the north side called the Devil's chair. It looks like a giant finger pressed itself against the north side of the cone, dug into it, and scraped a path northward. This divot in the mountain makes it impossible for an average guy like me to ascend the summit from here. Instead, we just crossed the width of this long field of rocks to the northwest side. The concern here is not falling, but twisting an ankle as you jump from boulder to boulder.


Northwest slope
At last we made it to the northwest side and began our way up the hill. The climb up the shale rock was very steep, but very doable for anyone in decent shape. After a long ascent, we finally made it to the top with no problems.

Did I mention what the elevation is at the top? It is 12,666 feet. What a nice feeling it is to be at the top of a peak and to know that you are higher than any human being for miles. It was gratifying to know that I was fulfilling a dream that I had since I was a kid. I tried looking for the little hill where my grandma and grandpa's house still stands, with no luck at all. The Blue Mountains that bulge from the ground north of Blanding were just small hills in the hazy distance. To the south we could see Ground Hog Reservoir and to the southeast, Middle Peak and peaking out from behind it, Wilson Peak.

Devils Chair
Looking south from the peak.  Groundhog Mountain (left) and Groundhog Reservoir (right).




Looking west
Middle Peak group, Wilson group, and Little Cone.






Our trip to the top took us roughly two hours from our campsite. Not bad. We stayed on the top for about twenty minutes, then began to work our way down. Originally, I thought that we could descend the southeast side. But gazing down it, we changed our mind. It was too steep and too craggy, and one of my goals was to return home alive.  So we opted for the southwest side, which proved to be just about as genteel as the slope we ascended. The slope worked a steady angle to the bottom. Our only concern was that our truck was on the opposite side of the mountain. About half way down, we decided to take a short-cut down the even steeper south side. We made it, but it was kind of rough going down. Jordan slid down about twenty feet at one time and lost his water bottle and tore a hole in his pants. I'm lucky that I didn't do the same. I was mostly worried about creating an avalanche of rocks and having them come down and break my leg.
Southeast slope

We finally made it to the bottom of the south side, then hiked along the base to the southeast side. Looking up at the cone, we were immediately glad that we did not attempt to come down that way. It would have been ugly. From this corner of the cone, it was just another steep descent until we reached the wild flowers and the streams that gushed from the hillside. This is where we completed our circumvention of the cone. We saw a porcupine climb a tree, took pictures of strange flowers, and drank deeply from the fresh mountain water.

Back at the truck, we were grateful to have beaten the July thunderstorms. I wont go into detail on our trip back to Blanding, but I will say that we took a different route. It was much prettier, and until we got to Dolores, all the roads were graveled and rocky. At one point, about twenty miles in, I was worried that we would have to turn all the way around because the rocks on the road looked like something that was made for four wheelers. We passed Ground Hog Reservoir and about fifteen minutes later got a flat tire. That was fun!
View of  Lone Cone from Groundhog Reservoir