Monument Valley

Moon4069

This is Monument valley at 6 in the morning. It is cold here even though it is late April. You need a heavy coat and gloves and if you have a bald head like some of us you need a hat. Preferably one of those Russian kind made out of polar bear-wolf hybrids with ear flaps you can tie around your belt loops so the wind doesn’t blow it off. We didn’t need the tie downs this day as there was no wind. You also need lots of determination to stand out here waiting for the sun to come up.

It seems twice as cold as it is when you’re waiting. Stamping your feet helps some. Shivering is good. But what really saves the day is a hot thermos of strong black tea. No sugar, no milk, black as my last wife’s heart, as they say around the campfire at divorce school. That’s what gets you through the waiting, that and the thought of how gorgeous it’s going to be in a few minutes.

Everyone has seen pictures of Monument valley’s butte’s and spires, the colossal towers and the long views down the valley from John Ford’s point. They are the reasons many people come here, but there are other smaller views that are just as captivating. This one for instance.

Back behind the Totem pole and Yei Bi Chei is a place that is off-limits to visitors unless you have a guide. My guide whose Navajo name loosely translates to “Looks In My Wallet”, no I’m kidding, it actually means “Reaches Into My Wallet”, no, wait, I’m kidding again, it actually means Ed, brought me to a perfect spot to watch the sun come up behind the Totem pole. Behind where we had set up the camera gear was this dune and overhead our timekeeper the moon moving across the sky, clearing it of any obstacles that may hinder the sun’s passage. Ed said he liked this spot not only for the view of the sunrise, but if the wind was blowing which it does with startling frequency here in the valley, it was a protected place. The way he said it, in that low Indian voice made it sound much wiser than it really was. That’s one of the reasons you need a guide, you’d never figure that out on your own.

Ed was an interesting guy in his own right. He has been a stuntman in the movies, riding horses, falling off of them, “you don’t need much training for that ” he said, an extra in many of them, a guide around the valley and a sought after one at that, as he photographs the valley himself and knows all the good spots. He also tends to have a store of helpful tips for the visiting photographer. “When you fall and roll down the dune try not to get sand up your nose” was one of his favorites. “Don’t touch that it’s poisonous” was another. He said this even if what you were touching was actually poisonous or not. All in all he was a good guide and we weren’t lost for very long anyway. “An Adventure” he said, “to  tell your grandchildren.” I don’t think we were lost, I just think he liked to see me carry 40 lbs. of gear through ankle-deep sand.

But the places we went were worth every moment of Ed’s wit. I remember this one the most because it seemed to be more about the desert than all the daytime shots of the monuments and far-reaching vistas put together. As there was no wind the silence was complete, except maybe for Ed’s wheezing, and the far off calling of a raven waking up, and the colors, the colors were something you had to experience. They began to form out of the darkness and became richer and more intense as the sky lightened. The deep nearly mahogany color of the sand against that impossibly blue sky. The yellow highlights on the Rabbit brush just becoming visible and of course the moon, impossibly white against the background of the heavens. This is why one becomes a photographer. For the image of course but also for the memories. And maybe for the chance of a brief visit with Ed. No, it’s the memories.

Silence For As Far As The Eye Can See

Silence3169-3190click to enlarge

Quiet. You like quiet? I do, but where to find it, that’s the bazillion dollar question. It used to be that quiet was every where, in your backyard, down at the park, over at Uncle Skid’s boat dock early in the morning, you could lift the rug up in the dining room and what would you find? Quiet. Just laying there in a big pile not doing a thing. You didn’t have to go looking for it. I sat in my favorite chair the other day, reading, drinking a cup of Jasmine tea, just listening, trying to isolate the different noises I was hearing. Even with the TV off and no radio on there were noises everywhere. The refrigerator would kick on, there were hums and other soft sounds from stuff I didn’t even know was running. Noises from outside made their way inside and I’ve got really thick walls because the big house here is made of logs. It was a constant battering of sound. I thought back to where and when I had last heard nothing but silence.

It was in Monument Valley, that incredible place where the total experience can overwhelm all of your senses before you even get a chance to go “Whoa!, Man, it’s quiet here’.  It is one of the places where you can find true silence. In fact there is so much quiet here it’s deafening. Sometimes you have to put up with some tourists, I didn’t say the quiet was constant, or wait until that herd of goats makes it way over the dune, or for that lizard to scuttle back under the rock outcropping, but mostly it is quiet, really, really quiet. The wind will blow but there is so much space it can’t begin to fill it and you hardly notice it.

If you want to experience this go to Monument Valley, late spring is a good time as it’s not too hot yet, the crowds are still back home being noisy, and find John Ford’s Point, that’s the picture up there at the top of the page, walk out a bit, find a shady spot against the cliff wall and sit. Soon your ear drums will stop spasm-ing from the constant bombardment of civilization and the quiet will come down on you like a Tsunami. Some people can’t stand it when this happens and they run off screaming into the desert with their hands over their ears, never to be heard from again. It’s a good bet they didn’t really want to hear silence anyway and probably should have just stayed home with the TV playing softly in the background. If looking out over all that quiet is too much for you and it seems that you can’t take it all in, just squint a little or even close your eyes for a moment and you’ll settle out. Sometimes you have to ease into this new stuff. But if experiencing quiet is what you want to do, you know what to do now, you know where to go, so just do it. And remember, no iPods, that’s cheating, you can wear sunglasses though, that’s accepted.