Best Meal Ever

Twice lately I’ve been asked to describe the best meal I’ve ever eaten and I have thought about it a lot. Except my thoughts don’t linger with this meal because the food was so good. It was actually the atmosphere and company that made it so amazing.

My Wyoming friend and I spent an epic week exploring Utah a few years ago. We road tripped from Salt Lake City to Moab for several days of exploring Arches National Park and Canyonlands National Park.

After checking out the house where we were staying in Moab, we unloaded the car, packed our backpacks and headed to the store to pick up some groceries before driving south to Canyonlands.

We found a spot to park and spread a blanket on the ground. You see, there was a meteor shower that night and Canyonlands has some of the darkest skies in the country.

So we sat there in the dark eating a picnic of peanut butter sandwiches, crackers and Bing cherries. We chatted while we waited for the show in the sky to begin.

It was a feast like none other.

Sadly, we saw the meteor shower only briefly before a dark cloud sprawled across the sky. We car camped that night and woke up to enjoy the sunrise. It was my first desert sunrise and another incredible memory. The pictures don’t do it justice.

Five years later, I don’t hesitate to buy cherries when they’re available because the memory is so sweet. They will always remind me of that night and the freedom that I found on that trip.

Reminiscing About Arches

As winter begins to wind down and adventure season dawns before us, my mind is wandering to some favorite past trips. This is what I do when I’m itching to travel but not able to go just yet.

The Wandering Canadians’ account of their visit to Utah and Arches National Park made me nostalgic for the glorious week I spent wandering through that area with my western adventure friend. That was back in 2018 and still stands up in my memory as one of my best trips ever.

This place is drastically different from my Ohio home. The red rocks, wide open skies and desert climate are like the surface of the moon compared to the lush, green hills of home. Here in Ohio, forests grow thick and tall. In Arches, the trees are small and gnarled curiosities that have fought to survive each passing year. Arches features spires, giant stone arches, balanced rocks and monoliths.

Maybe it’s the drastic difference in landscape that makes it so appealing. When you find something growing here like a cactus flower, a tree or an insect, it seems so miraculous that anything can survive in the sand and heat of this place.

This is why we travel – to understand the world beyond our daily reach and to better appreciate the places where we do live. It encourages us to ask questions and drives us to seek answers about the world and ourselves.

Traveling feeds a curious mind and a wandering soul. My feet itch just thinking about it!

Four Corners Monument

The Navaho Nation operates a number of parks including Four Corners Monument Navaho Tribal Park.

This park sits where Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet. They call this a quadripoint and it’s the only place in the US where four states meet like this. It also marks the boundary between the Navaho Nation and the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe.

This is part tourist trap but it’s also a special place. There’s a granite medallion that marks the exact quadripoint and people line up to have their photos taken here.

On site, you’ll also find Ute and Navajo people selling food, T-shirts and handmade items including some gorgeous jewelry.

I liked it because, for once in my life, I was finally able to be in four places at one time!

This kid had a great approach.

There is an $8 per person admission fee and you are still required to wear a mask in public places on the Navaho Nation Reservation. Get current hours, admission and advisories at their website.

Arches

“All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveler is unaware.” – Martin Buber

Image: Arches National Park, 2018.

Beyond The Horizon

We have always held to the hope, the belief, the conviction that there is a better life, a better world, beyond the horizon.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Desert sunrise, Arches National Park, 2018

Temple Square

Temple Square (21)

Temple Square is a magnificent place, even if you’re not Morman. If you’re ever in Salt Lake City, go explore. You’ll love the flower gardens!