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‘THEN & NOW’ The Road to Glen Canyon by Charlie Kreischer

Just the other day, I published a brilliant image of ‘The Road to Glen Canyon’ by Charlie Kreischer. It showed his classic orange Rambler descending the last few miles to White Canyon and the ferry at Hite. The photograph was taken in 1959.  Almost 50 years later I was able to find the exact location from which Charlie took his photo.

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Above is Charlie Kreischer’s original image again.  And below, the same spot, from 2007.  The view is looking toward the west and the lake. You can see the blue water of the reservoir almost dead ahead. Much of the original road has been abandoned but a part of it in the distance is still used as Lake Powell access to Farley Canyon. In the foreground, even the broken shelf of sandstone seems to have changed little in half a century…But the ferry is gone and Hite is gone and the old dirt road…Glen Canyon is gone (for the time being). But as Abbey said, “Glen Canyon’s not really gone;  it’s just in liquid storage.’

And he’s right.

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HERB RINGER’S WEST…Camping at Death Valley. 1952

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(ABCNews) ‘Australia swelters through hottest ever day’

AN EXCERPT:   The hot weather that has fuelled fires in southern Australia has also delivered the nation its hottest day since records began a century ago…The national temperature is the average of hundreds of daily readings across the country and it hit 40.3 celsius degrees on Monday.  But the record is not expected to last – the weather bureau predicts Tuesday’s scorching temperatures in some parts will set another high

TO READ THE ARTICLE CLICK THE IMAGE:

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(space.com) ‘B68, the Black Cloud’

TO SEE THE LINK CLICK THE IMAGE:

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(Grist) ‘Obama vs. physics: Why climate change won’t wait for the president’ By Bill McKibben

AN EXCERPT:   So far, however, (Obama’s)  been half-hearted at best when it comes to such measures. The White House, for instance, overruled the EPA on its proposed stronger ozone and smog regulations in 2011, and last year opened up the Arctic for oil drilling, while selling off vast swaths of Wyoming’s Powder River Basin at bargain-basement prices to coal companies. His State Department flubbed the global climate-change negotiations. (It’s hard to remember a higher-profile diplomatic failure than the Copenhagen summit.) And now Washington rings with rumors that he’ll approve the Keystone pipeline, which would deliver 900,000 barrels a day of the dirtiest crude oil on Earth. Almost to the drop, that’s the amount his new auto mileage regulations would save.

CLICK IMAGE TO READ STORY

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CLICK HERE TO READ CURRENT ISSUE OF THE Z.

 

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(from i09) ‘How NASA might build its very first warp drive’ — George Dvorsky

(AN EXCERPT)  “A few months ago, physicist Harold White stunned the aeronautics world when he announced that he and his team at NASA had begun work on the development of a faster-than-light warp drive. His proposed design, an ingenious re-imagining of an Alcubierre Drive, may eventually result in an engine that can transport a spacecraft to the nearest star in a matter of weeks — and all without violating Einstein’s law of relativity.”

CLICK IMAGE TO READ THE STORY:

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MONUMENT VALLEY…1957 photo by Charles Kreischer

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Before the pavement came to Monument Valley…photograph by CHARLES KREISCHER. 1957

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(from the 2008 archives) ‘IN MEMORIAM: DEWEY BRIDGE’ —Stiles

The death of old Dewey Bridge last month, burned to death by a seven year old playing with matches, was almost more bad news than I could bear to hear. As one relic after another of the rural West’s past vanishes, this was one remnant I thought would survive. It was just a few years ago that Jennifer Speers, the millionaire with a soul, bought up the adjacent Dewy Bridge subdivision from a developer, plowed under the roads, dismantled the infrastructure and tore down a $600,000 home in order to restore the area to the way it had been.

It was a rare place of Hope. Now this. The fire triggered memories of my first visit to Dewey, more than 30 years ago.

I first heard about Dewey Bridge, believe it or not, from my mother. In 1973, I was still living in Kentucky, trying to scrape together enough money to come West again, if only for a month or so. The previous winter, I’d passed through Moab for the first time, on one of the coldest days in recorded history. With a can of flaming Sterno on the floorboard of my VW Squareback (the damn heater never worked), I stopped only long enough to gas up and then drove all the way to Grand Junction, where I used my dad’s Gulf Oil credit card for a warm bed at the Holiday Inn.

But I’d seen enough of this country to plan a return visit under better conditions. I’d hoped to leave in July for SE Utah, but my parents had booked a raft trip down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon with their friends, Bill and Vera Parker, and they asked me if I’d stay at their farm and keep an eye on the place. In exchange, they offered to help me out with gas money when I came West in August.

When they arrived home, I was eager to hear of their adventures on the river, and they had plenty to tell. But the highlight of their trip, it seemed, had been a 50 mile drive down a Utah back road, a dusty unpaved, corrugated “highway,” designated State Route 128. And they told me of a one-lane suspension bridge, Dewey Bridge, that crossed the river 30 miles upstream from Moab.

Weeks later, when they came home to the farm, and my dog Muckluk and I prepared to leave, my mom gave me very careful directions—it was the first exit to Cisco, not the second, she insisted. Look for the dirt road on the left, a couple miles west of the town.

I followed her directions and, incredibly, they were accurate (my mother has never been known for her navigational skills). We passed through Cisco—there was one café still open then, Ethel’s I later learned, but didn’t stop. Just as my ma had predicted, I spotted the gravel and dirt road, Utah 128, and turned left toward the river. I saw no one. Not a car or motorhome. No trucks or RVs. No ATVs. Nothing.

We came to the river, my dog and I, and figured the bridge was just ahead, but it was late afternoon, so I pulled into a stand of cottonwoods to make a camp. I pitched my cheap little blue nylon tent, fed Muck, cooked some beans on my Coleman stove and walked over to the Colorado to eat. The river was low, but the current was swift. I saw a Great Blue Heron, heard other birds whose songs I could not identify. And I could hear the rustle of the leaves in the great cottonwoods above me.

Finally, as the canyon filled with shadows, I heard the whine of a motor, coming down the grade from Cisco. It was a pickup truck, a local rancher I guessed. He saw me and waved and kept going. I could hear his truck for a few minutes and then the silence returned.

That night was one of the happiest of my life. An evening of “quiet exaltation” as someone once said.

The next morning, I found the bridge, just where my mom said it would be. We stopped for a while, Muckluk jumped in the river for a swim so she could later smell up the upholstery on my car. It was a glorious morning.

I knew it would be the first of many visits to Dewey Bridge. It never occurred to me that any of this would change or disappear.

But in 1974, much of the gravel and dirt road from Cisco to Moab was paved, though the asphalt was rough and pitted, and the “improvements” were negligible. Even better, because Dewey Bridge was only one lane wide, barely eight feet, large vehicles could not get across it. It was one kind of discrimination I could live with and even applaud. For another decade the road from Moab to Cisco remained quiet.

In 1985, however, UDOT construction began on a new bridge, just down river from the old one. And a year later, when it opened, traffic on highway 128 increased dramatically. Further “improvements” have brought still more traffic. Sometimes it is downright congested. Still, it’s a beautiful drive and those discovering it for the first time will be awestruck. But they’ll never be able to understand just what it felt like on that summer night in 1973. I’m not even sure they’d care to.

Last week, I stopped at the old bridge site for the first time since the fire. I could still smell the ash. The parking lot adjacent to it is now a staging area for mountain bicyclists and on this day, about a hundred brightly clad participants were prepping themselves and their bikes for a ride over the Kokopelli Trail. I felt peculiarly out of place in my Wranglers and Redwings—as much of an anachronism as the old bridge once was. I walked to the south abutment. The fire had burned every sliver of wood; all that remains are the cables. I stood there for several minutes, almost paralyzed by the sight.

One of the bikers walked up to me and said, “Hey I hear they might rebuild it…It’ll be just like it was before.”

I looked at him, smiled, and went back to my car.

The Feb/Mar Z (click the cover)

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(DenverPost) “Sand Creek Massacre descendants seek justice 148 years later”

AN EXCERPT:    At dawn on Nov. 29, 1864, Colorado soldiers attacked peaceful Indians camped on the banks of Sand Creek in what is now southeastern Colorado, slaughtering an estimated 163 — mainly women, children and the elderly — and desecrating their bodies.

The backlash was so severe, the U.S. government not only acknowledged wrongdoing but promised reparations of land and cash to survivors and relatives of victims.

That promise — spelled out in an 1865 treaty — remains unfulfilled, according to descendants and their attorneys.

TO READ THE STORY CLICK HERE

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http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_22280966/sand-creek-massacre-descendants-seek-justice-148-years

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Poking Through the Ruins #4… ‘When Chevys Had Wings’

Is it a ’60? And is it a Chevy???

 

Read The Zephyr Online:

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