Canadians
are nice, it rains a lot in the Cascades, and Idaho is quiet and quaint. I’d
heard these things were true, but I had to see for myself.
Prusik Peak, Cascades, Washington |
I just
returned home to Durango after a nice two-week tour to some places I’d never
been to. British Columbia gave us her fruits of the most perfect granite climbs
overlooking the ocean, friendly locals that showed us the way, and smiling,
fit, beautiful women that seemed to be everywhere, but then drove us out with a
rainstorm.
Dave Ahrens roping up for Prusik Peak, Cascades, Washington. |
Washington showed us the odd,
German themed village of Leavenworth, and led us into a sublime and pristine
alpine wilderness where we shouldered heavy packs and hiked miles and miles to
climb on salt and pepper granite. City of Rocks in Idaho unveiled hundreds of granite
domes, and showed us the California Trail, where immigrants moved west on
wagons; for a minute my tiny little brain tried to grasp the monumental ways
technology has altered our existences in just over 100 years.
I am not a
man of riches, yet by working hard at my night job and writing nearly every day
I can afford to float across the West, burning up precious fossil fuels in
search of what I am seeking. And what am I seeking? To find myself? No, I think
I know who I am, or at least who I am not, by now. I am looking for stories,
and I’m trying to get away from glowing rectangular screens for a couple weeks.
At the end
of the trip, inside my tent, curling up with my journal to write out a few
contemplative thoughts, I could only think of one thing: my bed. My spacious,
comfortable queen sized mattress, one I inherited from some friends who left
the country; my first ever bed that sits off the ground on a frame and makes me
feel like a grown man. Yes, that would be the prize for two weeks of sleeping
on the ground inside a tent. Bed, sweet bed.
And then
more revelations came: the most important being that I never dread coming back
to Durango, even while facing a 60 hour work week. In fact, of all the places
I’ve seen I would rather live here than any of them, no matter how beautiful or
exotic.
To quote a
recent New York Times “Opinionator” editorial
piece by Costica Bradatan, “To live is to
sink roots. Life is possible only to the extent that you find a place
hospitable enough to receive you and allow you to settle down. What follows is
a sort of symbiosis: just as you grow into the world, the world grows into you.
Not only do you occupy a certain place, but that place, in turn, occupies you.
Its culture shapes the way you see the world, its language informs the way you
think, its customs structure you as a social being. Who you ultimately are is
determined to an important degree by the vast web entanglements of “home”.”
Home. Even the most vagabond
travelers inflicted with dire cases of wanderlust come to the realization that
home is necessary. And, what a modern luxury we have to travel about (Canadian
translation: abuut) and still call somewhere home.
So with
Durango, and the advent of the automobile and relatively cheap gasoline, we so
often take for granted, I feel home extends all the way west until the
majestic, alluring, simple, dry and dusty red rock desert two hours away. And
why should it not be included as part of home, I spend as much time outdoors
there as I do here in Durango. And after five days of working around the clock,
a buddy and I hopped in my Subaru, turned off the cell phones and transported
to the crimson land of rocks, wind, and the open sky.
Indian
Creek is known far and wide, but at the moment, the climbing tribe has yet to
fully inhabit its confines, leaving it open and free for the “locals” who
transport for the weekend from Salt Lake, Moab, Durango and other Colorado
towns. On Sunday, we didn’t see a soul as we climbed the perfectly fractured
cracks on Wingate sandstone.
“Its like
climbing in a painting,” we mused. Puffy clouds dotted the blue sky, the desert
floor with a hint of green from a recent rain, and crimson cliffs as far as the
eye can see. At home, in a work of art, simultaneously appreciating the ability
to live so close and within this landscape, but also with the luxury of
technology to flee it back to civilization. Home is more of a basecamp, than a
place that you rarely leave. Even within a couple hours of Durango there’s more
to see and experience than a lifetime will allow.
I’m back in
the middle of a workweek now, going through the motions of writing, working,
and the modern day to day of earning a living (Durango style of holding down at
least two jobs of course). What I live for is exploring the wild places, near,
and far, and then hoping to squeeze some juice of meaning out of them. I think
many of us in Durango live for that.
And what a
blessing that is, to know the time allotted in our lives will run out before
the adventures do. To have the accessibility of wild places, and a small town
filled with likeminded folk. A place where we can simultaneously be rooted, but
find the inspiration to constantly grow and spread our breadth of experience
and knowledge.
This piece is published in today's Durango Telegraph.
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.
This piece is published in today's Durango Telegraph.
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.