August 2019



Books read:
·         The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean
·         Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
·         Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad by William Craig
     The Path Between the Seas by David McCullough

Trails walked:
·         Mogollon Rim tourist walks (July 31st)
·         Arizona Trail Passage 27 south (Aug 7th)
·         Blue Lake near Boulder, Colorado (Aug 16th)
·         Black Powder Pass near Breckenridge, Colorado (Aug 18th)

Song of the month:
·         Bad Guy by Billie Eilish  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyDfgMOUjCI

Mt Boreas, near Breckenridge, CO


Why is this time of year known as the Dog Days of Summer?  I first heard the reference while watching baseball, when the announcers would refer to the month of August as the Dog Days.  I took it to mean that period when the stadiums were hot, the season was getting long, and the playoffs were still over a month away.  But it turns out that the term Dog Days originates in the stars.  The phrase is actually a reference to the fact that, during this time of the year, the Sun is in the same area of the sky as Sirius, the brightest star visible from Earth and part of the constellation Canis Major (Greater Dog). So we have Dog Days. August is rough in Phoenix.  It is always hot, even at 10 at night.  You get the occasional  monsoon which cools things off for a few hours, but then it just gets hot AND humid.  I've only been on two Arizona hikes this month because even up north it's hot.  Luckily we were able to spend a week in Colorado and get in a couple of cool weather hikes.  Actually another reason I haven't been hiking in AZ much this month is that my wife had ankle replacement surgery.  I didn't even know this was possible.  I've heard of hip and knee replacements, but ankle?  I guess they first were done in the 1970s but were pretty much a disaster.  It wasn't until the 1990s, when better synthetic parts and a better understanding of the earlier mistakes that the surgery starting becoming more common.  And in just the last 10 years, the materials and procedures have gotten really good and there is now a 90% success rate after 4-5 years.  In any case it's a brutal surgery.  They basically saw the bone off your foot and lower leg (leaving the ligaments and tendons in place), insert a sort of metal/plastic pivoting joint, close you up and away you go with lots of pain pills.  It's done quite a lot now to deal with arthritis and bad accidents.  My wife was thrown from a car in a fatal accident when she was very young and has been dealing with problems from her injuries much of her life.  Hopefully this will resolve it all and she'll be joining me on hikes next summer.  


Song of the Month:   I recently read an interview with Billie Eilish in Rolling Stone magazine.  I had heard the name but placed her in the general category of young female pop stars whose music wouldn’t interest me.  I was wrong.   I was impressed by this young woman’s honesty, intelligence, and creativity.  And, the fact that she has this normal family who loves her and supports her (her mom was telling her to clean her room while the interview was taking place).  She’s only 17 years old and she (along with her older brother) is creating some of the most interesting music around today.  Thom Yorke (lead singer of Radiohead) once came up to her and very grumpily said, “You’re the only one doing anything f’ing interesting nowadays.”  In her young life, she has already dealt with depression, Tourette’s Syndrome, and synesthesia (where one’s senses are simultaneously perceived; like hearing a song and seeing the color blue); so she already has a lot of material. This song that I picked has a great intro bass beat and tells the story of a woman taunting her abusive lover. I picked “Bad Guy” as the song of the month, but you really need to listen to other songs she’s done which are creative and really diverse.  Songs like “I Love You” one of the most honest love songs I’ve heard;  and “My Strange Addiction” which mixes in audio from the TV show “The Office” which is one of her favorite shows (there’s a video interview on YouTube where the actor who plays Dwight Schrut gives Eilish quiz questions from the show); and “Xanny” which is about our medicated society; and “Bury a Friend” which is truly haunting.  I’ve not heard of someone so young writing such meaningful lyrics since Jackson Browne wrote “These Days” when he was 16.  Here’s another fascinating thing about her: she wrote “When I Was Older” after being inspired by the film Roma, which in my opinion was the best film of 2018, but I didn’t think anyone under the age of 50 would like that movie.   I’ve made predictions of greatness for young artists in the past that I’ve whiffed on (I'm talking to you Counting Crows), but I really do believe this is someone special, and she has a supportive family that should help her get through the tough times that she’s sure to see with all this fame she’s acquiring at such a young age.  Here’s hoping she stays true to herself and doesn’t get caught up in the “star making machinery.” 


In addition to telling the story of orchids, The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean is a book about Florida; and a book about passion.  I imagine it’s probably on some of those lists you see of books to read for each state in the country.  Susan Orlean is a writer for New Yorker magazine and wrote a 1995 article about a guy in Florida named John Laroche who, along with three Seminole tribe members had been arrested for stealing orchids from Florida’s state lands.  That article turned into this 1998 book.  Orchids are a fascinating topic.  There are 30,000 different species and over 100,000 hybridized/laboratory species.  They recently outsold poinsettias as the most cultivated plant for sale worldwide.  But this is a recent phenomenon.  Before the 1980s and 90s it was nearly impossible to grow orchids outside of their natural environment, which made them rare and valuable.  But plant scientists eventually figured out how to do it with certain species and in the 80s and 90s orchids became available to Home Depot customers for around $80-90.  Then Taiwan got involved and came up with better cloning and growing techniques and now you can buy orchids for $10.  But in the 1800s and early 1900s people were risking their lives and dying to find and gather orchids from their natural environments because they were in demand by the wealthy and powerful.  There are still rare orchids that are unable to be grown in a laboratory environment and some of them are extremely valuable and are protected by governments in Malaysia, China, India, and other countries.  A rare orchid that was developed in a lab in Taiwan was sold in 2005 for $200,000, making it the most expensive flower ever sold.  Go Google pictures of the Monkey orchid or the Owl orchid; it’s crazy the shapes they come in.  Anyway, back to the book.  John Laroche is really an unlikable guy for me which sort of turned me off for a bit.  He’s a hustler who will do anything to make a buck and not care about rules or ethics.  I guess he makes for an interesting character, but if the book only focused on him, I would have stopped reading early on.  He was accused of stealing orchids from the Fakahatchee Strand State Park in Florida (a swampland in the southwest part of the state).  He was working for the Seminole tribe at the time and tried to argue that Native Americans weren’t subject to the same laws concerning plants in their native lands.  He lost the argument and was banned from the park.  The guy had lots of schemes in his life, from art dealing (where he basically stole artifacts from Central and South American burial grounds), to orchids, to internet schemes.  He did know a LOT about orchids though and was obsessed with them to the point of breaking the law to get what he wanted.  But I really enjoyed the detours the author took into topics such as the Gulf American Company that tried to sell Florida swampland to returning military vets from the Northeast United States "real cheap" (it’s where the saying “yeah and I’ve got some nice swampland in Florida to sell you” came from).  And did you know that the Seminole tribe is the only Native American tribe never to sign a peace treaty with the US government?  There’s a fascinating story of tribes hiding in the swampland from US Soldiers who would never be able to capture them.  They are still living in that same swampland.  And the stories of the orchid dealers from the 1800s through recent times is filled with adventure, death, and intrigue.  She met several other interesting characters in Florida that could be the basis for the term you may have seen recently as “Florida Man” when various men from Florida end up doing very stupid things that show up on YouTube, like sticking their hands in the mouths of Alligators, or shooting guns at hurricanes to stop them.  It must be the heat and humidity combination down there.  But I will also admit that I find myself really interested in someday exploring these swamplands for their abundance of animal and plant life…. even though it seems that sloshing through mosquito, alligator and snake infested ponds may not sound too inviting.


Hiking Buddy (HB) and I had plans to hike the Colonel Devin trail to the top of the Mogollon Rim, however the constant rain the area had the night before made the dirt road a bit slick for our tastes.  So, we ended up doing what I’ll call various Mogollon Rim tourist walks for the day.  The first stop was the Water Wheel trail which follows the East Verde River up to some nice waterfalls and swimming holes.  Tragedy struck here in July of 2017 when 10 family members ranging in age from 2 to 57 were swept away and killed in a flash flood.  It was partially a result of a forest fire on the rim a month earlier, in addition to heavy rains with no trees or brush to absorb the water.  There are some sobering memorials near the trailhead that included the tiny shoes of the children killed.  Since it had been raining the day HB and I went, we were a bit concerned, but as we made our way upstream, we kept our eyes open for escape routes in case we saw or heard a flash flood coming.  We felt relatively safe as there were 3 Game and Fish trucks in the parking lot and the rain was more like a gentle winter rain rather than the normal violent summer monsoon rains.  The walk is fairly short, about a mile, but it’s very slippery, so go slow.  Our next stop was Shoofly Village Ruin, which was a nice walk with interpretive signs pointing out the highlights of this 80-room village thought to have been inhabited from 1,000-1,250 CE.  The inhabitants were possibly related to the Hohokam and Salado tribes and farmed and raised turkeys on this beautiful site.   Next we headed to Tonto Natural Bridge state park.  It is believed to be the largest natural travertine bridge in the world (travertine is a sort of limestone formed from minerals in the water). The bridge stands 183 feet high over a 400-foot long tunnel that measures 150 feet at its widest point.  We ate lunch at one of the many picnic benches in the area before heading down to the trails.  There are 3 or 4 different trails to reach the bridge, but you can also get good views from the various viewpoints up on top.  The trail to the main deck in front of the bridge was closed the day we were there so we approached it via the steep Anna Mae trail.  It was slippery once you got underneath the natural bridge, but really beautiful watching the water fall 183 feet on the other side of the tunnel.  There is a lodge at the park that they rent out for special occasions like weddings or business events.  They have a nice grassy area with bbq grills, and the canyon walls are pretty.  It's a $7 entry fee for this state park.  Overall a nice day on the Mogollon Rim where the temperature was in the 70s and low 80s with intermittent rain to keep things cool. 

Memorial for the family lost in the flood
Another memorial


East Verde cascading down the canyon 
Nice falls on the East Verde



Looking downstream on the East Verde


Shoo Fly Ruins

Travertine walls at Tonto Natural Bridge


Tonto Natural Bridge and tunnel

Under Tonto Natural Bridge
Scrub Oak acorns at Tonto Natural Bridge



I chose a 19th century classic to read this month.  Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe has been on my list a long time even though not everyone considers it a classic anymore and many people actually consider it racist and overly sentimental. But I found myself thinking about this novel a LOT after I read it.  First of all, you have to realize that it was published in 1852 and you have to understand the times.  There is no denying its influence on Americans’ attitude towards slavery at the time and was said by some to be one of the catalysts for the Civil War. Stowe’s son, in his biography of his mother, said that when Lincoln met her in 1862 (just prior to his release of the Emancipation Proclamation) he told her, “so this is the little lady who started this great war!”  And it is the highest selling novel of the 19th century. But before I get into the “politics” of the time and the novel’s influence and controversy, I’ll give a brief description of the story for the 8 people out there who’ve not read it (that number was 9 before I read it this month).   Uncle Tom lived in a cabin with his wife and children on a Kentucky farm with benevolent owners.  However financial troubles forced the owners to sell off some of their more valuable slaves, including Tom.  The story then follows those slaves as some escaped towards Canada, and others were sold “down south” where the possibility existed of additional cruelty from unsavory owners.   Tom first ended up with a kind owner (Augustine St. Clare) and his angelic daughter, Eva, and his inflexible and someone insane wife, Marie.  Days before Tom was to be set free by this kind owner, the owner was killed, and Tom was sold in New Orleans to the incredibly cruel Simon Legree (whose name became eponymous for a cruel, greedy person).  During this time, the story also flashes to another slave, Eliza who was on the same Kentucky farm as Tom initially.  Eliza, along with her young son, is being helped across Ohio and into Canada by Quakers and others who are part of the Underground Railroad.  She eventually pairs up with her husband, George Harris, who had also escaped.  The character George has some of the finest speeches I’ve heard given in any book, including in Chapter 11 where he describes his treatment and his opinion of American “Law” of the time.  Throughout these two story lines, there is excitement (slave catchers going after Eliza and George), misery (slave families separated and beaten), kindness (Eva St. Clare and Miss Ophelia), and racial politics (many dialogues about race and the laws at the time).  The author also introduces several other fascinating characters, each with their own harrowing story to tell.  There are scenes similar to Toni Morrison’s Beloved in which mothers choose death for their children rather than seeing them forced into separation and slavery.  It’s heart wrenching and I can fully understand how it must have impacted readers of mid-19th-century America.  Stowe wrote the book in response to the Compromise of 1850 which re-balanced the Fugitive Slave Laws in favor of slave owners and against northerners who helped escapees (Federal Commissioners who had the final say in contested cases were paid $10 for everyone they proclaimed an escaped slave and $5 for everyone they proclaimed as rightfully free).  Additionally, the author had recently read a slave narrative written in 1849 by a former slave (Josiah Henson) who had escaped to Canada.  The people and media outlets of the American South slammed the novel as “false rhetoric” (fake news) and the work of an “incompetent sentimental woman” (similar to some tweets I've read these days).  Booksellers who sold the book in the south were persecuted.  Stowe received the severed ear of a slave in her mail one day.  So, you can see that America has not changed much in the 170 years since that time.  The term “Uncle Tom” became a derogatory term for one who is exceedingly subservient to authoritative figures (specifically black men to white men); however this term was really developed from the many subsequent plays and “Tom Shows” that tended to make light of the book and focused more on the “entertaining antics” of the black characters in the book.  The Tom in the book was a hero in the end for dying a horrible death rather than revealing the escape plans of two women.  I understand that people today, especially African Americans, could see this book in a negative light.  There are racial undertones and the fact that the slaves who escaped in the end eventually left for Liberia in Africa as the place where they could “do the most good”.  But on the other hand, there are great conversations in the book about the hypocrisy of the abolitionists who would fight against slavery but would never take in a former slave to educate them and help them become part of society.  I believe the author had her own conflicting views on the topic, as many did during that time.  The Christian religion was a big part of the book and this was also a sign of the times.  The “turn the other cheek” attitude is seen as being subservient to false authority and somewhat of a cop out in dealing with the cruelties of the times by believing that you were to suffer on earth but receive your rewards in heaven.  Notwithstanding all the controversy of the book, in the end it was a strong statement against slavery during a time when the topic was becoming radioactive and eventually leading to our country’s most trying time as the Civil War unfolded.  I think it is a great and influential book.  


HB and I headed back up to the rim to hike the southern portion of passage 27 of the Arizona Trail.  It starts on the Rim Road (Forest Road 300), about 12 miles east of State Route 87 north of Payson.  The Rim Road is one of the top 10 drives in Arizona and everyone should do it if they can.  The dirt road is fairly well graded, and I’ve seen normal passenger cars driving on it.  The road winds along the Mogollon Rim for around 40 miles with stunning views to the south and forests, lakes, and streams to the north.  We parked at General Springs cabin which was built between 1914-1918 and used as a forest fire management cabin up until the 1960s.  It’s one of three cabins in the area that are connected by a loop trail that would make a great backpacking trip.  We hiked in around 4 miles along the Arizona Trail from the cabin up to a fence line by an old closed forest road where we had lunch.  Most of the hike was along General Springs canyon which was spectacularly green this time of year and had lots of water from recent monsoon rains.  The area looked more like the Little Colorado River area in the White Mountains with its beautiful meadows and thick forest.  Possibly the prettiest place I’ve seen on the Mogollon Rim.  We didn’t see any animals other than birds and squirrels, but we heard a bear snorting and a coyote yipping very very close to us and it pierced the air!  The last battle between the US Army and the Apache tribe occurred near here at Big Dry Wash.  It was ordered due to reports of Apaches raiding settlers’ camps in the area. There is a sign near the trailhead commemorating this battle and in an interesting political twist, someone has painted over the sign in red “The settlers had it coming!”.  There is a long and complicated history in Arizona (and, frankly much of the world) between indigenous tribes and white settlers.   There is no doubt that indigenous peoples were treated poorly (an understatement) and that many countries (USA, Australia, Mexico, etc.) were created from the blood and land of these noble tribes.  It’s not a point of pride for sure, but it is part of our complicated history and this commemorative sign, along with the added political message fairly well shows both sides of this history and I hope the added political message isn’t erased. 
General Springs cabin near the trailhead

Cabin with nice meadow in the background

A walk in the woods


The trail followed water for much of the way

One of many nice meadows

Starting the climb out of the canyon

Trail art

First time I've seen signs banning E-Bikes...

This man is very sad he's stuck to this tree for his whole life

Into the woods

Commemorative sign with political message painted over it


Depending on what source you reference, the Battle for Stalingrad in the winter of 1942-43 was one of the top 10 bloodiest battles in history (the bloodiest according to military-history.org).  Anywhere from 1-2 million people lost their lives, including Russian civilians, and soldiers from Germany, Hungary, Romania, Italy, and the Soviet Union.  This doesn’t even count the thousands of eventual POWs who later died in nightmarish prison camps on both sides.  I read Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad by William Craig this month and it is a graphic reminder of the insanity of war.  The author was thorough in his research, combing through archives from Germany and Russia, along with hundreds of interviews he conducted with survivors (the book was published in 1973, 30 years after the battle).  In many ways, this battle was the beginning of the end for Hitler, and his hubris is what did him in.  His personal battle with Stalin, was sort of personified in his desire to capture his namesake city, and he made several strategic mistakes in his zeal to quickly win the battle.  These mistakes eventually led to his famous 6th army of 200,000 remaining men being surrounded, dying via Russian ammo and starvation before finally surrendering (Hitler refused to allow his army to surrender, he wanted them to fight to the last death, but they had no more ammo and no food nor strength).  The city of Stalingrad was an industrial town which manufactured farm and military machinery.  It was at a key point on the Volga river and a way point between the oil rich Caucasus region and the rest of the country.  Hitler wanted to cut off the Russian’s fuel supply, and had he won the battle, it likely would have prolonged the war, and possibly even turned it in the Nazi’s favor.  Luckily the Russians were relentless.  The battle ended up being fought building to building, hand to hand for over 5 months, from August of 1942 through mid-February of 1943.  The book follows several people from both sides as they try to fight and survive this awful battle, through bitter cold, injuries, starvation, snipers, bombings, tanks, and disease.  How any human was able to survive that mess is beyond my comprehension.  The city ended up 90% destroyed but was eventually rebuilt and later renamed Volgograd in 1961 after Stalin's reputation fell out of favor and Krushchev tried to remove the cult of Stalin from the USSR.  The 2001 movie was pretty good, but only focused on a very small piece of this book.  I learned a bit about Stalin and Hitler from this book; also about some of the most horrifying ways to die and I can’t even describe in this blog what some Nazi soldiers would do to babies…I guess every war has its horrors and this bloody battle in one of the bloodiest wars in history was no exception. 


My wife, daughter, and I were able to visit our son and daughter-in-law in Colorado this month, and that means great Colorado mountain hiking!  I was able to get in two short, but sweet hikes on this trip.  In the first one, my daughter and I hiked Blue Lake outside of Boulder.  I’m pretty sure I hiked to this lake 40 years ago when I worked in Boulder for IBM, but I can’t be sure.  It looked familiar.  Blue Lake is an alpine lake at 11,500 feet in altitude.  The trailhead is about a 45-minute drive from Boulder and starts out at 10,500 feet, so it’s about a 1,000-foot gain in around 2.5 miles or so.   The scenery is spectacular as you will see from the photos below, and we saw MOOSE!  Two large bulls and one cow.  It’s always special to see these ancient looking creatures lumbering around in the wild.  Also, the wildflowers were in full bloom and made the trip even more special.  AND, AND, on top of all this, we got snowed on!  In August!  Snow!  And thunder.  The best part about the snow and thunder was that it cleared the trails of human beings and we had the lake mostly to ourselves for a bit.  That was special. 
Father Daughter hike

Beauty everywhere

You can picture the glaciers carving out this valley

Wildflowers!

It seems so remote, yet 45 minutes from Boulder

Dad and dog


Snow dog

Blue Lake (I'm color blind...is this blue?)


Moose!!!

The second Colorado hike was near Breckenridge which is a beautiful ski town about an hour and a half west of Denver.  The whole family hiked the Black Powder Pass trail which takes you from 11,500 feet at the trailhead to 12,200 feet in about 1.8 miles.  The trailhead is at the top of Boreas Pass Road, a stunning 40-minute drive from Breckenridge. The trail itself winds through pine forest and then on above the tree line to a pass between Boreas and Baldy peaks. Here at the pass there are great views of the Breckenridge ski area to the west and beautiful French Creek Valley to the east.  Great wildflowers, a nice creek, and views that went on forever.  Another beautiful day getting Colorado Rocky Mountain High!  

Wildflowers with Breckenridge in the background

Pan out view

This is just perfect....



Taking in the views of French Creek Valley

Boreas Peak


French Creek Valley

Hiking up into the clouds



Thanks to my daughter for most of these great photos

Here’s a good trivia question.  What was the first foreign country to be visited by a sitting US President?  The answer is contained in the great book by David McCullough, The Path Between the Seas.  McCullough is a great storyteller of history.  I’d previously read “1776” and “John Adams” and they were equally fascinating.  “The Path Between the Seas” is the story of the Panama Canal (yes, Panama is the answer to the trivia question, and it was Theodore Roosevelt who visited).  I was really surprised that no US president had visited a foreign country until 1906.  And it was a pretty big deal at the time, especially since his predecessor (McKinley) had been assassinated.  The book is separated into 3 sections.  The first section deals with the French attempt at the canal in the late 1800s by Ferdinand de Lesseps (builder of the Suez Canal).  The French project was mainly a disaster as they had assumed that Panama would be like Suez, but they were completely different.  After 20 years and many thousands of deaths from disease and accidents, the French finally gave up and it eventually ended up in court due to multiple financial scandals associated with the project which bankrupt many French citizens who had invested in the idea.  The second section tells the story of how the US ended up taking on the project.  It was nearly decided that the canal would be built across Nicaragua instead of Panama and if not for the lobbying efforts of 2 key people (Philippe Bunau-Varilla of France and William Cromwell of the US) that’s exactly where the canal would have been.  But the story here was so much more than a lobbying effort.  It involved a revolution which eventually formed the country of Panama in 1903.  The story of how this happened is fascinating, with political and financial intrigue (Netflix must make a mini-series about this).  Another key event during this time was the Spanish American war in Cuba in 1898.  The US battleship Oregon was in San Francisco at the time and it was needed in Cuba as soon as possible.  It took 66 days for it to sail around South America to get to Cuba.  Had there been a canal, the time would have been cut by more than half.  This event basically eliminated any US opposition to building a canal.  The third and final section deals with the US building the canal in Panama and everything involved in this stupendous effort.  There are so many things that had to fall in place for it to succeed.  The right physician had to be hired who had discovered that Yellow Fever was spread by mosquitoes and not filth or soil as had been the common view of the day.  The recent electrification of US factories during this time and the establishment of a new company called General Electric that allowed the use of motors to operate the locks.  Having the right chief engineers at the right time was critical.  John Stevens was perfect for the start in order to establish the rail systems to excavate and haul away the millions of cubic yards of dirt and to establish the communities that allowed people to exist there without dying or leaving.  Then George Goethals was needed to finish the job with his unrelenting work to make progress while keeping the people satisfied.  This wasn’t a rose-colored glasses view of the project.  The author addressed the discrimination issue which was rampant nearly everywhere during this time:  far more people of color (mainly from the Caribbean islands) worked the dirty jobs, and far more of them died than the white Americans on the project.   But even with this division, the death rates towards the last few years of the project (2 per thousand per year for whites and 8 per thousand per year for blacks) was still lower than it was for average citizens in the US at the time (around 14 per thousand).  When you think about the dangers of the work and the possibilities for disease in the jungle, this is phenomenal.   It’s a great story and a great human accomplishment for the time.  By the time the first ship went through the canal in August of 1914, it got few headlines as the world was just then plunging into the first world war.   

Until next month, and the end of Dog Days...Happy Reading and Rambling.