mjhinton posted a photo:
4.8mm (27mm equivalent)
See zoom: www.flickr.com/photos/mjhinton/5909852844/
More photos and a video using zoom:
www.mjhinton.com/help/?p=1103
Photos by mark justice hinton.
mjhinton posted a photo:
4.8mm (27mm equivalent)
See zoom: www.flickr.com/photos/mjhinton/5909852844/
More photos and a video using zoom:
www.mjhinton.com/help/?p=1103
mjhinton posted a photo:
in Altura Park, Albuquerque, New Mexico
note the two splashes of red light from the setting sun
| From El Malpais, New Mexico |
El Malpais, the badlands south of Grants, is an especially large lava flow in New Mexico. (Another is Jornado del Muerte – Journey of Death, southeast of Socorro, New Mexico. Yet another sprawls over the westside of Albuquerque.) El Malpais is gorgeous, especially if you hike a bit at Sandstone Bluffs, the Narrows, and Lava Falls, all of which are along the eastern edge (US117), as is the Visitors Center.
My most recent trip to El Malpais was 1/13/11 (26th anniversary of my Mom’s death).
You can circumnavigate El Malpais, although the southwestern road that connects US117 and US53 is dirt, but decent. There are lots of sights and other trails south and west, notably Big Hole, some caves, and the Zuni-Acoma Trail (ZAT) across the lavafield.
My Dad died 40 years ago, 5/28/71. I had just turned 16 and we had just moved into a new house, a quirky fixer-upper that would become Pine Street in many memories.
Dad came home early that day in a cab, not feeling well. He went upstairs while I threw a ball against the back of the house for Barnabus, our St Bernard, to catch. The ball got slobberier and muddier with each iteration and a Pollack of brown spots broadened on the white stucco between windows on the second story. Those blotches stayed there for years. I heard a thunderous crash and ran inside to find my Dad prone on the landing where the stairs turned. He was unconscious but breathing. I tried to rouse him, then ran for the phone. I didn’t know what to do, so I called my sister, Elizabeth. (This was before 911.) She called emergency rescue. I sat on the steps near my Dad, listening to his last breaths. Rescue arrived too late to save him.
I remember when my friend Dave Stilwell came over the next day I said, in effect, if things seem weird around here today, it’s cuz my Dad just died. My first obituary.
My Dad was a farmboy who grew up to be an engineer and work for a series of communications companies, ending with Comsat. Mom loved to say it was his job to figure out the cost of the phone call between the President and the astronauts who first landed on the moon. By hobby, he was an excellent carpenter. Just this weekend, I saw a bench around a tree whose hexagonal design reminded me of a far-sturdier version he build for Mom years earlier. To this day, when I concentrate on certain chores, I whistle tunelessly just like he did.
Dad was a military man, proud of his service in Asia as part of the Army Corps of Engineers. He was a Colonel in the Army Reserves at death. Military service played a huge role in his largely-self-destruction. I have no affection for the War Machine. We need to outgrow the waste and destruction we celebrate too often.
I don’t remember crying when Dad died. We were unhappy with each other then. However, many years later, I wrote a letter to Dad, imagining he had outlived Mom and lived in Montana with dogs and a pickup truck. Then, I cried.