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THE REDHEADED NOMAD BLOG

…following the wild self in this human journey

 

I write stories about the places I travel and my personal experiences in these places. The inspiration for my work as an artist is fueled by my travels & adventures. As an adventurer I’m known as The Redheaded Nomad. Here you can learn more about me as an adventurer, read my travel adventure blogs (below), and see what gear I use on my adventures.

 

Hayduke - Moab to Needles

It was a long drive across southern Utah. We set eleven food caches, every resupply between Moab to past the Grand Canyon.

• Setting our first food and water cache •

By the time we made it as far east as Moab, Moab had closed its doors to overnight lodging, including camping anywhere within the county. We shifted our plans, deciding to skip Arches National Park (hopefully it will be open to hike when we come back to Moab at the end), and set out from Moab in time to reach the county line before camping.

• On the outskirts of Moab, heading up the Amasa Back trail, above the Colorado River •

• Descending the Amasa Back trail. Can you see Neon? •

We headed out of Moab, happy to finally separate from our truck. Now on foot, we climbed over Amasa Back, an alternate out of town, traversing a cliff above the Colorado until we climbed up onto a Mesa, high on red rock, hiking with the clouds. Here is where the ribbon effect begins... I leave that part of myself behind, the part attached to the human ways of a programmed society ...the part that compartmentalizes everything ...it’s a slow process ...but over hours, and days, and weeks—I become a ribbon across the landscape—tuned into nothing and everything at the same time. I breathe in the smells and fragments of earth, I sing songs with the birds until our melodies sync with time. I drink all the waters across the landscape—tasting the abundance of life and death and the flow of time in a single drop. This ribbon comes and goes at first, but slowly settles in until I let go, into the ribbon’s flow. I am the ribbon now, the wind whispers across the landscape. I can feel it, but I don’t believe it yet, still distracted with the worries and duties of another time.

• view from camp, night one •

• Our first water source. A puddle in the rock. Yes, those are cow patties around the puddle. •

• High above the Colorado River. •

• In a side Canyon, finally off the dirt roads. •

• Rain, day two. •

• Still rocking the rain gear I made for the Pacific Crest Trail in 2012. •

• Cowboy camping on the plateau. •

• Things you find in the desert. •

• It gets really dry out here. I think my skin is starting to resemble this cracked earth. •

• Beautiful rock is everywhere out here. •

• I’ve been using my tiny Suntactics solar panel every day. It’s been working great! •

• That’s not snow. It’s alkaline salts, left after the water evaporates. Several of our water sources have been incredibly salty. •

• Broken arrowhead found in Rustler Canyon. •

Our hike started out with a couple of days of dirt road walking, with a few short connecting canyons, before dropping us into Rustler Canyon and Indian Creek Canyon. I found a broken arrowhead made from an olive-green colored rock, a color unlike any other rock I’ve seen out here so far. When I find things like this, I always wonder whose hand made it. Handmade objects are precious to me—a beautiful tie between imagination, necessity, and earth’s materials.

• Cowboy camp sunset from Rustler Canyon. •

• Beautiful, glassy, red rock everywhere on the climb out of Indian Canyon. •

Somewhere above Indian Creek, my thoughts grew anxious. Every rock felt precious. Every rock wanted to tell me a story. The clouds grew overhead, and my desire to find the perfect rock took on an importance that I knew was about my mother. It started raining. I knew I needed to find a rock to keep in her memory. I picked up pretty rocks, plain rocks, little rocks, and big rocks. None of them were the one. I’d almost given up when the perfect rock presented itself. A rectangular, smooth, red rock. I don’t know why it was the one. But it was. I put it in my pocket and hiked the rest of the afternoon wondering what message awaited me when my phone would have signal again.

• My homemade rain booties work as well for mud as they do for rain. •

• Making the best of the rainy afternoon in this natural rain shelter. •

Shortly before camp, the clouds parted, and the sun came out with a warm blast just before bed. I didn’t sleep. I kept thinking about my rock, my mother, and where I would find signal again out here.

• When your tent lights up like a desert temple... •

• First view of the Needles District of Canyonlands. •

• Spring is starting. Little seedlings are popping up everywhere. •

I found cell signal near our first food cache. I scrolled through my messages. And there was the news—my mother had passed at the same time I was finding my rock. Tied to the earth and to the wind, in the middle of the desert, my ribbon flowed in and out of time like a magic carpet ride of joy, and love, and sorrow...

• Small piece of old pottery near Needles. •

• We made it to Needles Outpost. Wifi, veggie burritos, and showers! •

Distracted by food, people, and social distancing, I sat at Needles Outpost a bit lost, staring into the big sky, wondering who I was now.

A bird that has lost its wings—cannot fly. What does this say of life—beside those who have woven us into time. What does this say of death—plucking each feather that makes possible our flight. Who are we when we lose—those who have taught us to fly?