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April/May 2021

THE MOTORSHIP GILA MONSTER & OTHER ADVENTURES, 1948-49 …by Gene M. Stevenson

by stiles • March 31, 2021
Prospector Marshall Long showing boys how to pan for gold in La Plata Creek

The following excerpts are from the book: CANYON COUNTRY EXPLORATIONS & RIVER LORE: The Remarkable Resilient Life of Kenny Ross, by Gene M. Stevenson. The book was written about Kenny Ross, one of the forgotten personalities on the Colorado Plateau…

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April/May 2021

ZEPHYR AMERICA: Canyonlands National Park with Edna Fridley

by stiles • March 31, 2021
Angel Arch. Canyonlands. 1970. Photo by Edna Fridley

Our regular readers know that we began a new project at the Zephyr in the past year–called “Zephyr America.” We’ve been slowly wading through the massive Zephyr archives of historic photos and digitizing them to share with our readers. To…

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April/May 2021

What I Learn from Watching The News…with Walter Cronkite …by Jim Stiles

by stiles • March 31, 2021

I have always been a news junkie. I grew up with Huntley/Brinkley and Walter Cronkite. It was always a matter of debate in our family, and others as well, whether Cronkite was a Republican or a Democrat. The consensus over the…

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April/May 2021

“IT’S THE AESTHETICS, STUPID.” (Or is it?) …By Jim Stiles (FLASHBACKS #1 OCT 2011)

by stiles • March 31, 2021
The Latigo Wind Project at Monticello, UT. Photo by Jim Stiles

Note: This article first appeared in the October/November 2011 Zephyr… Many years ago, during one of my first trips to the canyon country, I made the dusty drive to Grandview Point on the Island in the Sky. The road was…

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April/May 2021

Dick Smith: He lived (and flew) Life to the max… by Larry Davis (From the 1997 Archives)

by stiles • March 31, 2021
Dick Smith from Windsinger by Gary Smith

Author’s Introduction, from 1997:A year or so ago Jim Stiles came by for a visit and in the course of the conversation we talked about Indian ruins and how they were being vandalized. We wondered if, at the present rate…

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April/May 2021

The Best of the Zephyr Comment Section…

by stiles • March 31, 2021
John Wetherill on the right with his successor at Navajo National Monument, Jim Brewer

Here at the Zephyr, we’re pretty proud of the articles we publish each issue. We’ve said this before, but we think we’ve assembled the best collection of writers we’ve ever had, all of whom are writing at a level that…

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April/May 2021

Herb Ringer’s American West: A 1948 Train Ride from Chama to Antonito

by stiles • March 31, 2021
The train waits at Chama, New Mexico. 1948. Photo by Herb Ringer

HERB RINGER and his parents, Sadie and Joseph, traveled across the American West and into the Canadian Rockies on numerous trips, from the 40s through the 70s. Herb was devoted to rail history, and was particularly fond of the historic…

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April/May 2021

HANK SCHMIDT’S MONTHLY REPORT: Arches National Monument, April 1941

by stiles • March 31, 2021
Harry Goulding, founder of Goulding's Trading Post in Monument Valley, driving at Arches in the early 40s. Photo by Harry Reed.

April 22, 1941 Dear Hugh: This report is going to be a bit brief because I am at present confined to bed with a severe cold, and am attempting to think and write clearly while lying almost flat on my…

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April/May 2021

A Full Year of Backbone Supporters! Please Join!

by stiles • March 31, 2021

The Zephyr Backbone is what keeps us alive! Click Here to Join! Click Here to Join the Zephyr Backbone!

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February/March 2021

The February/March Issue of the Zephyr!

by stiles • January 31, 2021

In this issue… Take it or Leave it: The Insta-Facebook West …by Jim Stiles The Love of Maps …by Tonya Audyn Stiles A Satisfied Mind …By Harvey Leake “(Still) ‘Enough Rope’”: (A Reporter’s Moab Memories. 1978-1984) #6 The Pot Plane…

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February/March 2021

Take it or Leave it: The Insta-Facebook West …by Jim Stiles

by stiles • January 31, 2021
Horseshoe Bend. c/o NPS

One of my favorite poet/songwriters, Utah Phillips, once wrote: “I’ll sing about an emptiness the East has never known, Where coyotes don’t pay taxes and a man can live alone. And you’ve got to walk forever just to find a…

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February/March 2021

The Love of Maps …by Tonya Morton

by stiles • January 31, 2021
Detail from the 1940 Utah Pictorial Map

The oldest surviving map of the world—the Babylonian Imago Mundi—circumscribes a landmass between the Mediterranean and Caspian Seas. The world it describes is only as long as the Euphrates River. At its center lies the city of Babylon. To the…

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February/March 2021

A Satisfied Mind …By Harvey Leake

by stiles • January 31, 2021
The spiritual home of the traditional Navajos was their enduring natural surroundings rather than their temporary hogan shelters. Nede Cloey (Nii'ditt'oii) at his hogan in Tsegi Canyon

The wealthiest personIs a pauper at timesCompared to the manWith a satisfied mind —From the song “A Satisfied Mind,” by Joe “Red” Hayes and Jack Rhodes “I don’t think Mr. Harriman is very rich. He has not as much money…

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February/March 2021

Remembering & BELIEVING Melvin Dummar…by Jim Stiles

by stiles • January 31, 2021

Before Moab, Utah became the absurdly expensive, over-built, over-wrought, contrived and conflicted population center that it is today, it was a different kind of town.  Somebody once said,  “Moab used to be a hard place to get rich, but it was a…

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February/March 2021

THE OPEN ROAD: The Travel Journals #1 …Words and Photos by Paul Vlachos

by stiles • January 31, 2021
Amargosa Valley, Nevada. Photo by Paul Vlachos

I don’t feel like coming up with a narrative or story arc here. I’m a bit discombobulated. I just want to throw some stuff up against the wall, some words and some photos, and let it stick or watch it…

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February/March 2021

Winter Walks …by Damon Falke

by stiles • January 31, 2021
"An empty road..." Photo by Damon Falke

By early December there was not much snow, and by the end of the December there was not any snow. I took a long walk on a day between then and now. A walk in the far north in winter…

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February/March 2021

“(Still) ‘Enough Rope’”: (A Reporter’s Moab Memories. 1978-1984) #6 The Pot Plane Crash …by Bill Davis

by stiles • January 31, 2021
pot plane wreckage

The local high school kids called it PCP: Plane Crash Pot. The source of the PCP was, logically enough, a plane crash. The craft went down late the night of Tuesday, Feb. 15, 1983, about five miles south of Canyonlands…

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February/March 2021

On Herb Ringer’s Trail in DEATH VALLEY

by stiles • January 31, 2021
The Devil's Golf Course. Herb Ringer. 1946

Longtime Zephyr readers won’t need any introduction to Herb Ringer. His photography has appeared in this publication for nearly our entire existence. As a photographer, and a chronicler of the 20th century, he has always been right at the heart of…

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February/March 2021

Should Rangers be Cops: a Personal History …by Jim Stiles

by stiles • January 31, 2021

Recently, while most of the country’s attention was focused on the riots in Washington, DC, NBC News reported another disturbing event, two thousand miles west. As a former law enforcement ranger at Arches National Park, so many moons ago, the story…

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February/March 2021

“Starlight on the Rails”: Learning the Fine Art of Hoboing …by Timothy Knouff

by stiles • January 31, 2021

This article first appeared in the November 1989 Zephyr… No doubt, when traveling, you have stopped for a passing freight train. Chances are, on one or more of those occasions, you have seen someone riding on a car. What crossed…

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February/March 2021

LEAN TIMES: A Winter Message …by Alan Cornette

by stiles • January 31, 2021
Solstice, a painting by Al Cornett.

Several of my lean years here at Slade, in the Red River Gorge area, were spent alone at special times like Christmas and New Year’s. A couple of times I broke up with my girlfriend to avoid buying non-affordable gifts.…

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