My dear friends,
I am sitting alone in a busy Flagstaff restaurant enjoying a pint having finished the Havasu Falls trip not three hours ago. I don’t mind eating alone at restaurants as I typically busy myself in reading or writing, except you always get the worst table, next to the kitchen door, where it’s so busy you end up directing waiter traffic (“table 5 is ready, and you forgot to bring 9 their bread basket-don't let it happen again”). From your own waiter, you first get a look of surprise as they see you alone, then of extreme pity. They get a little watery eyed and I know they want to pat my hand and hope they won’t read in the paper the next day about a woman who jumped off a bridge. (“If only I had asked her if everything was okay and offered a hug.”)
I am surrounded by people and their energetic chatter and mirth, and I feel quite alone—but do not be alarmed. This is a typical feeling felt at least once by a solo traveler on trip, but up until now, the lonely meal has always been pre-trip. Whatever trip I’ve been on, I have gotten along with the group and have been able to enjoy their company after it has ended. As you may guess, this is an indication of how Havasu Falls went. The feeling will pass, and I busy myself in writing to you, Team Awesome, about the peculiar group—the extremely peculiar group—on the Havasu Falls trip.
I should preface my description to say that the scenery and falls were absolutely stunning and nothing, not even self absorbed people who live in their own bubble, could put a damper on that. I should also warn you I am a writer and therefore predisposed to observation, and with observation comes unavoidable judgment. And once someone has crossed over to my bad side I don’t hold back in my description. No rose-coloured glasses. I throw those to the ground, stomp on it, stomp on it some more, put it in an envelope, mail it to the person in question with a note that says “HERE YOU GO” and then sit down to write.
There were calls for all the stuff sacks for Havasu Falls which would be carried in by mules. This time around I was confident in what I had packed. I handed my bag to the other guide.
“Wow. That’s light,” he said.
I smiled and looked at the other bulky, hefty sacks already in the bin and thought to myself, “I empathize with the mules.”
The other guide was Brian. You would have liked him. Reminding me of a big teddy bear, tall with kind, gentle blue eyes and backcountry scruffy beard, he seemed to have no cares in the world. But even his patience and laidback demeanor would be tested on this trip.
“Where the hell does he think he’s going??” I thought. The situation reminded me of the tragicomic newspaper photos of the severely under funded Canadian army when they first went into Afghanistan, soldiers in dark forest green marching in a whitewashed desert. At the time I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. His name was Mark and it took me a few seconds to realize there was someone beside him, his wife lurking in his shadow. Nikki was a thin, very toned woman with hungry eyes and a mouth naturally down turned in a dour frown. What I could glean about them from their appearance in those few moments turned out to be quite accurate.
Mark was Yosemite Sam, bow-legged, gun toting, creature obsessed, “you varmint!” caricature come to life right down to the moustache. When he wasn’t talking about some critter they had in New Mexico, he was talking about killing it or death. In fact, the first words as we began our drive to the trailhead were not some pleasantry or question about the trip but the tragic news of a child’s fall in the Canyon.
“Did you hear about the girl that died from a fall in the canyon?”
“Yeah. It’s sad,” Bob said.
“What happened?”
I could hear Bob hesitate.
“It’s not a good way to start off the morning of our trip.”
“We don’t mind.”
“But I don’t want to talk about it now. I can tell you guys later.” He said it firmly, with finality. Nikki nudged Mark and said something to him inaudible to everyone else. She would do this often on the trip. It seemed like she did not have a voice of her own. I tried to make conversation with her but it was painfully unsuccessful. What little I extracted from her was that she was a personal trainer and her cliental was…anyone. Mark was more forthcoming. Presumably when he wasn’t trying to foil and blow up Bugs Bunny and shooting his pistols in the air, he held art workshops on his ranch, a sort of artist’s getaway where people could stay and paint, but he had recently retired.
A couple I had seen earlier in the store now sat behind me, fiddling with their cell phones. I had seen the woman with long blond hair and black streaks talking to the owner about whether she needed a warm hat before giggling, “Hold on, let me get my credit card. Barney!”
Barney turned out to be her husband, a tall and rather large lumbering man, as you would imagine a man named Barney might be. He whipped out a fat wad of a wallet to Gina, and she whipped out that card just as quickly and expertly. As we all waited outside for the van to finish loading Bob pleasantly asked them how they were; they complained they were cold.
Gina’s son Julian sat next to me in the van. He was pale, awkwardly skinny and lanky. He wore glasses. A toque was pushed over his long, curly brown hair. He sat slouched, hands buried in his pockets, lost in the world of his iPod. He looked miserable and surly. I pegged this as 14 year old teenage angst. He didn’t say anything for the first half of the drive except to snap at his mother, who doted on him excessively, or to make sarcastic remarks to Barney, who I later found out was his stepfather.

Reaching the trailhead after a three hour drive, it was great to be out in the crisp air looking at the clear blue skies and the beautiful expanse of the canyon below. The rock and the formations looked different from what was at the North or South Rim. I was anxious to get started but everything was quite the circus operation for the family of three. Barney needed to be told what to do by Gina. Barney needed to look confused. Julian needed to be unresponsive and moody. Gina’s long hair (extensions) needed to be braided. She needed help taking off her jacket since her large fake breasts and presumably everything else above the waist that was plastic got in the way. It reminded me of when I was a child dressing a Barbie doll, trying to maneuver the tight outfit over unbendable arms and disproportionately large breasts.
Accompanied by res dogs, we started down the long series of sandy, rocky switchbacks. It was exciting to go down (and easy without heavy packs) as we had to stop and skirt out of the way of the mule trains making their way fearlessly down. They were loaded with everything from our stuff to horse feed to town supplies. I even saw one carrying a box marked ‘Eggs’. The switchbacks ended and the trail crested over a hill, before smoothing out and down.“Bob! Mark’s taking us on a new trail!” Brian called behind him. We had a good laugh about it but as I maneuvered my way unnecessarily around cacti, I learned NEVER to follow Mark. It meant a little effort throughout the whole trip, interrupting my reverie and taking my eyes off the soaring canyon walls and the swirls in the gorgeous red rock to look ahead to ensure I was following the right person: Mark scrambling over rocks to some unknown, perhaps a cliff edge or pit of snakes, or Bob or Brian clearly taking the better route. At that point I pretty much had Mark figured out: He had the alpha dog complex; he needed to be in front and on top. He would probably jockey for leadership, try at power plays with the guides the whole trip. Sadly, I was right.
We took a few short breaks, once for lunch in the shade of the canyon, then once again in the centre of the town of Supai that consisted of a grocery store, post office, cafĂ© and school. We continued on the trail which ran alongside a creek of the bluest, clearest water giving us a tantalizing hint of what was to come. I approached Julian and engaged him in a conversation about music since I knew that was what he liked. In the van, the only time he emerged from his teenage coma was to declare that he loved music and if he didn’t have his MP3 player on this trip he’d die, speaking in italics as only a teenager can. Our “conversation” actually consisted of me naming a band and him giving me his detailed opinion on them, their albums, his favorite songs and which songs were overrated. It was boring but at least I had got him out of his shell and walking faster, not dragging his feet like he was on a march to a firing squad. I found out he was in community college and wanted to write music reviews.Wait, I thought. Community college? How old was this kid? Something’s not right. He continued to drone on about some band when I began to hear the growing roar of water. I got excited and could barely stop myself from breaking out into a run.
“…it was on their 2nd album. That song changed my whole life because—”
I broke off from him and went ahead to the edge. I looked over and saw Havasu Falls.
Havasu was majestic. It curled over the red rock and dove into a large pool of calm and clear and effervescent blue, which then lovingly cascaded down into smaller glassy pools. The tangle of mist only seemed to enhance its allure and beauty. It certainly wasn’t the largest waterfall I’ve seen, nor the most commanding or powerful, but it certainly was the most sacred one to experience. I could understand why the Havasupai believed they emerged from its waters, a pristine oasis in a rocky and harsh landscape, a pure liquid jewel set in stone. I would want to born from there.
“Who’s going for a swim with me?” I chirped. The initial polite smiles were wiped away when they realized I was serious.“The water is cold,” Bob said. I raised my eyebrows and smiled.
Bob and Brian went to set up camp, carrying the gear with a wheelbarrow from where the mules dropped it off to our campsite, a ten minute journey. The group went to sit by the water and I gazed at the falls for a long time. The mist was cool on my skin.
I didn’t bother wasting my energy in encouraging the others to join me in the water. I took off my shoes and went to the right of the falls where the pool was deep and seemed most enchanting.
I dove in.
Yes, the water was cold—wonderfully cold; the type of cold that sucks your breath, numbs your skin but makes you feel more than you’ve ever felt before. I was alone in the world, hearing nothing but the pounding of the water and my own pounding heart flourishing and fighting the water pushing life into every pore. In the stillness, I was lifted.I emerged from the water as ungraceful as a creature of the deep taking steps on land for the very first time, toes squelching in the primordial ooze, and I felt good.
I received funny looks from the rest of the group which I ignored. I told them I was heading to camp and left them to their complicated mobilization operation. I met up with Bob taking the last load of supplies to camp. I was sopping wet and dripping and he gave me a high five. Arriving at camp I was surprised to see the luxury compared to our Rim to Rim. They had already set up the tents—large, spacious two person tents (one all to my special self). We had air pads too, 3 picnic tables, and best of all, the creek and its turquoise waters ran beside the site. It would lull me to sleep each night with lovely chatter which was very welcome that night as dinner conversation was uneventful and dull. I felt tired and drained of energy by this group for some reason I couldn’t explain. I wanted to curl up in my sleeping bag on the comfy air pad and hibernate.
Boy was I wrong.
The next morning I woke having slept comfortably without frequent waking for the first time. Though dark in the tent because of the rain fly, I could see it was light out through the small window. I heard voices so I rose. I emerged from the tent refreshed, with a positive outlook on things. I can get along with these people.
The men were up and waiting for coffee so I sat there, patiently listening to Barney relate a story, the subject being the most compelling topic universally known to mankind: the dream. (I am, of course, being sarcastic.)
He dreamed he was stumbling around camp and he accidentally crushed a box full of eggs, so he tried to cover it up and walk away before anyone saw. (Anyone care for a go at Freudian interpretation?) My summary took less than 30 words; his description took 10 minutes. He also told us that Gina had accidentally taken his XL sleeping bag and he slept in her woman’s small. That news made me giddy with glee. My resolution to be nice was already off to a bad start. I needed more coffee, fast. The highlight of that breakfast was, by far, when Mark asked Bob for a mirror so he could wax the ends of his moustache. Bob later confided in me about the monumental nature of that request: He had never been asked for the mirror for the purpose of waxing a moustache. I wish we had hard liquor to celebrate. Just as Mark was responsible for the highlight of breakfast, he was the cause of the lowlight.
“Omigod Cindy, you should have seen my lips a few months ago after the Restylane. Omigod, like Angelina Jolie.” I felt my breakfast eggs rise to my throat. I felt sick to my stomach at the thought of the body mutilation in the guise of plastic surgery. Imagine selling plastic surgery. Imagine viewing the world through those lenses. I wondered if all she saw were flaws, the imperfections of people’s bodies, what she thought should be bigger, smaller, lifted, tucked, pushed, pulled, sucked away, cauterized. I absolutely think there are situations where plastic surgery can be good. Maybe that’s how she viewed all plastic surgery, that she was helping people improve. And who knows how I will feel 30 years from now after giving birth to 12 children. But at that moment, as I sat across from her talking about the work she’s had done, I was never prouder of my body. It had taken me in and out of the Grand Canyon, and it would take me out again at the end of this trip, far, far, FAR away from these people. It was currently making heroic efforts to keep the eggs down. I was loving its quirks: I loved it for all the scratches and scars and bruises on my legs, its persnickety intolerance to dairy, even that single blister on my little toe.
“I had a 97 year old get work done. Get this: she asked me how long it would last. Isn’t that hysterical?” Gina was yukking it up like Joan Rivers.
The group lingered after breakfast and chatted while I half listened, growing listless. I drifted off into a daze before being rudely thrust out of it when Mark made a racist joke about Muslims. My heart stopped and I sat frozen, unable to truly believe I had heard what I had indeed heard. When it finally sank in that it really happened, I got up abruptly and walked off in an unknown direction, head spinning, incredulous that oafs like him existed. I had to pace for ten minutes before I could collect myself and return to camp without the risk of unleashing a tirade on Mark. I would take a few steps in the direction of camp and have to turn around because the image of Bob and Brian pulling me off Mark as I tried to claw at his face kept popping up in my head. If that happened, things would have been mighty chilly within the group over the next three days. It was the first of several moments where I kept a stiff upper lip (without the help of collagen). For the guides’ sake, I didn’t say anything or else it would have put them in an awkward situation. I ignored his jokes about Iraqi people, his 18th Century anthropological observations about Mexicans and Hispanics.

We departed for our hike to Mooney Falls, named after a miner who died trying to climb the falls in an attempt to rescue an injured friend. Immortalization seems but an act of courage/stupidity away. Mooney Falls is taller but thinner than Havasu. A ribbon of water plunges over the red travertine cliff into a turquoise pool. To get down to the bottom, you have to go through a couple of very narrow, steep tunnels, then do a semi-vertical climb down the rock, slippery from the mist, aided by tiny steps or toe holds and some strategic chains, handholds and ladders. Gina went no further than the lookout at the top and Nikki went down the first few steps before turning back. The climb was treacherous and dangerous, and therefore all the more thrilling and fun. I was not concerned about my own ability but the ability of those above me—I wasn’t keen on having this path named after me. In my mind I could see the guidebook blurb:
The bottom of Mooney Falls is reached by Cindy’s Ladder, named after a Canadian who fell to her death in 2007, after an obnoxious man dressed in camouflage slipped. Reportedly, her last words were “You idiot, eh!” There is currently a large petition for her canonization by the Catholic Church. St. Cindy, patron saint of solo travelers stuck in awkward situations.

The climb was very serious and intense. Not much was said except to communicate to the person above good places for them to step. We all made it to the bottom (by our own free will). Looking up at the rock wall, it was quite the feat. Julian certainly thought so.“There was one point where I started, like, freaking out and then I was like Whoa! But then, then I was okay.”
We walked into a small canyon which got trickier to progress the further we ventured in. We scrambled over large rocks until finally we came to a section completely blocked by a wall of massive boulders. To pass, we squeezed between two boulders and hoisted ourselves over using a creative combination of shimmying and climbing. By the end I had scrapes on my legs, bumps that I knew would be devilishly purple by morning. On the other side was the dead-end of the canyon, a towering wall with a water mark, like a giant paint stroke in the rock, which my eye followed from the bottom up to the top. I saw where the water would gush forth during flooding. It was a neat little spot and it felt like a secret, like something a child would discover and make into their own special fort.
Had I really been looking that miserable? It was hard not to feel down. Perhaps I was spoiled from being with mid-Westerners for four days (I love you Minnesotans—don’t you ever change!), but when people rub you the wrong way, it’s hard to look past their faults. I found some of the things they did unforgivable. Their manners were terrible. They had this thing with grabbing food and always helped themselves, generously, first. I refuse to compete with vultures. The snack bag was a feeding frenzy. Julian would belch, long and loud, without apology, at the table without a single word of reprimand from Gina until the fifth time. Inside I shook my head in disbelief and felt the same reaction to seeing Mark dressed in full on Rambo-wear: should I be laughing or crying? I found the way Mark talked to his wife particularly appalling. Mark took a patronizing tone with Nikki, like a smarmy father to a child. After dinner one evening, Nikki went to clear his bowl and he said, as if to an eight year old, “Now, did I say I was finished?” He in fact was—I didn’t see him take a third helping, he was just being a certifiable asshole. Another instance was at breakfast. Mark had poured two cups of coffee and was adding creamer to both just as Nikki was joining the table.
“Oh, I don’t want that.”
“Want what?” Mark said.
“I don’t want creamer. There’s milk.”
“Well this is what you are going to get,” in that condescending tone again.
I think it would be very hard to wake up one day and realize your husband or wife was a giant pecker head. I fully acknowledge that four days is a very short time to be judging these people (but undeniably a very, very long time to be traveling with them). I am definitely the last person to be commenting on relationships (I travel alone, remember?). And I’ve traveled enough to see that the best and longest of relationships get seriously tested on vacations. Travelling together is the true test of compatibility. I’ve seen people not speaking after a three hour car ride together. I’ve seen people signing divorce papers as they check out and settle their room service bill. And there may be many reasons why that person loves that pecker head. I just think that it would suck to be spoken to in that way. But I can’t speak for Nikki.
Only Mark can do that.

After lunch, all except Gina and Julian went for another hike which required wet crossings. To cross at the bottom of Havasu Falls, we walked on the lip of the pool, where it cascaded over a drop not more than three feet and flowed into the creek. Bob and Brian took us walking in an incredible narrow canyon. The entire ground was covered with river rock and boulders. It was hard to imagine that whole section could be flooded during the rains. We headed further and further in, and the canyon became narrower. My sense of adventure was ignited. We were going until we could go no more.

“What time does it get dark?” Barney asked.

“Ah…around 6:30,” Brian replied.
There was a pause.
“It’s 5:00,” Barney said.
“Hey asshat! I know where you’re going with this and maybe you should trust the guides. I think they know what they’re doing,” I said. Not really, but I wish I did.
“Shouldn’t we turn back,” Barney said, more as a statement than a question.
“Ahh…why don’t we just see if we can make it to the end of this canyon,” Brian replied. I loved Brian’s replies. They kept me entertained. They were never confrontational (he doesn’t seem to have a confrontational bone in his body). He always maintained his super passive tone of voice (well, all except once, but we’ll get to that later), but sometimes there was a subtle underlying insult and sarcasm that didn’t register on the victim. I delighted in this. Much to Barney’s chagrin we continued on until we found the end. We hung out for a while before heading back, making it to the bottom of Havasu Falls as the sun was setting.
“Are you going swimming?” Bob asked me.
“I’ll go if you go.”
“I’ll go if you go.”
“I’ll go if you go.”
And so it was settled. We both had to go in the water now even though neither of us particularly wanted to, a textbook example of Groupthink, or an example of being plain nuts. We ran and jumped into the cold, cold water. Of course I was happy as a fish to jump in and I screamed with laughter. We were two lunatics who had been in the canyon too long with these people, bent on having a blast and enjoying life.
Dinner was the same. Bob made the mistake of asking Barney why he was called that instead of Bernie, as is usual for Bernard.
“Well,” Barney began. “My uncle Bernard, on my father’s side fought in the war. He entered the war in…” (Ten minutes later) “…there was also a General Bernard Montgomery in the war but that has absolutely nothing to do with why I’m called Barney I’m just throwing that in there because I want to bore Cindy to tears with my painfully longwinded, pointless nattering…” (And still later) “…but my parents have always been quick correct people. They’d say, ‘No, it’s Barney.” Really, I’m sorry if it sounds like I’m complaining or being mean spirited but listening to Barney tell a story made me want to jump up and start eating as many random canyon plants as possible in hopes of a quick death, which I guarantee would have been infinitely more fun. I think my head hit my bowl and I had to quickly wipe rice off my face before anyone saw. My last thoughts before drifting off to sleep that night, with the utmost sincerity: Man, I wish I had brought a bottle of vodka.
There were two hiking options on day three. There was the easier Navajo Falls or a more adventurous and challenging hike to Beaver Falls that required descending Mooney Falls once again and many wet crossings. Thank goodness there were two guides, perfect for dealing with varying degrees of physical ability. Bob took Nikki, Gina and Barney to Navajo while Brian took Mark, Julian and I exploring. We definitely were the odder group, but my plan was to keep enough distance from Mark so I could manage to have some peace. And I was feeling better about Julian since he made it down and up Mooney Falls the previous day. Something like that would boost anyone’s confidence and surely since he opted for this hike, his level of enthusiasm was up. Plus, his healthier diet on the trip compared to what I saw him eating in the van on the morning of day one—Redbull and candy—should have helped his energy levels.
“Julian, how’s it going?”
“Ugh. I’m tired.”
“What’s the matter?” Brian asked.
“I’m just really tired,” he droned.
“Maybe we should take a break and have a snack,” I volunteered.
Brian took us off the trail way down to the creek at a lovely part where it broke into a set of mini waterfalls. Again, it looked like a tropical oasis. Brian and I went for a swim in the cool water. I waved up at the large REI group, mostly older hikers, walking by and they smiled and waved back. We had passed them earlier at the creek. They were all carefully taking off their hiking shoes and socks and putting on their sandals to cross. I had taken a cue from Brian’s personal anti shoe policy and hiked in sandals as well, and as we passed they were amazed at my bravado. There were bruises and fresh scratches from the branches all over my legs. I got a lot of quizzical stares because of my day pack. I had decorated it with the eight large, fluorescent orange permit tags our group had been issued the day we had arrived. It made my bag very…loud and festive. I also had decorated my bag with a large Ziploc bag that had once contained my first day’s lunch sandwich. Whoever had packed it wrote in bold, black marker “Little Dairy” to clearly mark my lactarded status. I took this on as my Indian name and proudly attached it to my bag. I kept tissues in it just in case I had another nose bleed. Come to think of it, too bad I didn’t get blood all over my shirt and put Datura flowers in my hair and run screaming like a banshee into the bush because then the REI group would have thought I had gone native. To see their expressions would have been positively wild.We dried off on the rocks and ate snacks. Then the biggest squirrel I’ve ever seen—the Schwarzenegger of squirrels—popped up on the rocks. The size of a gopher, it perched there very still, looking at us with its beady eyes.
“What critter is that?” Yosemite Sam asked. (Oh, here we go.)
“Uh…that’s a Rock Squirrel,” Brian replied.
“We have them in New Mexico too.”
“Yeah, their all over the Southwest.”
Then before I knew it, Mark broke off a piece of his granola bar and tossed it to the squirrel. I couldn’t believe it. The appropriate clichĂ© to describe this is that my jaw hit the floor.
“Are you fucking stupid?” I said (no I didn’t, but I really REALLY wanted to).
Brian, in his calm way, immediately said, “Ah…you don’t want to do that because they become used to humans and lose their survival instincts. It’s not a good thing.”
He was being nice about it but Mark, in a smarmy chuckle, said “Well I’m sorry, for feeding that li’l ol’ piece to him.”
“You giant prick,” I thought. “You just couldn’t fully apologize.”
“That’s okay Mark,” I said sweetly. “It’s a good learning opportunity.”
I sincerely hope that pissed him off.
“When are we going to get there?” Julian asked.
“The faster we walk the sooner we’ll get there,” Brian replied.
“But how much further do we have to go?”
Silence.
“Brian, when are we going to get there?”
“You know what Julian, I don’t like that question,” Brian said loudly. “If we walk faster we’ll get there faster. If you walk slower we’ll never get there.”
Julian stumbled over some words, then shut up and picked up his pace. That put him in his place. On that sobering note we hiked on.

We picnicked in this really lovely spot by the last waterfall of Havasu Creek before it joined the Colorado. On a low, small ledge outcropping from the rock wall, we ate. Then Brian and I climbed up to a high point and took turns jumping into the water.
When we headed back, I had a sneaking suspicion Brian took us through more water crossings than necessary and at deeper spots on purpose so Julian could “enjoy” the cold water more. At one point we were simply walking up the creek in the water. It worked out well as both Julian and Mark tripped and fell in. We also passed this very neat spot with a rope swing. It goes without saying that we enjoyed a few rounds.
We came across a black and white striped snake on the trail. According to Brian it was non-venomous. It was the largest snake I’ve ever come across while on a hike but I surprised myself as I wasn’t perturbed at all, just excited. I was more freaked by a monstrously large neon green caterpillar, the size of a glue stick. One can only imagine what kind of evil butterfly that would mutate into.The most disturbing part about talking with the group was how quickly the conversation derailed. We would be having what I thought was a normal conversation when some bizarre fact about someone’s life, a stunningly candid disclosure was seamlessly incorporated in. I would tilt my head to one side and think to myself, “Did she say what I think…nah.” They’d continue to talk, all the while their life story got stranger and stranger and I was left to nod my head and keep a smile plastered on my face and think, “Is anybody else hearing this? Someone please tell me I’m not crazy in thinking this is weird.” It was like watching Maury Povich. You’re watching a show parading bizarre people—anything from a man who is deathly afraid of peaches and cotton balls to a woman who has five men lined up as the possible baby daddy—and these people do apparently exist. So after three days of many did-I-need-to-know-that? revelations, why would final night be any different?
Talking to Gina about her family was opening a can of worms, the kind that give you a jolt as they shoot out everywhere. Politely asking people about their family is a basic enough question. She was the seventh of twelve children, the youngest girl (normal enough). Her mom was still having children at the same time as her older children so there were uncles the same age as nieces and nephews (okay, that happens). Gina became close to her mother as she battled cancer in the last five years of her life. Her mother went to live with Gina and Barney. Gina even quit her job to take care of her. Fifteen months before she died, her mother married a 21 year old man (here Barney adds: “He was black” before Gina shushes him)—okay, a 21 year old black man; her mother was 54. And while Gina was happy her mother was able to find someone to “fulfill her” before she died, this caused a rift with the rest of the family (here Barney adds: “Although he did cry at the funeral”). Originally the man didn’t want a funeral but Barney was able to convince him to have it since the family needed closure (here Gina whispers: “Barney’s such a good man”). Her siblings thought the man poisoned her mother (Gina shakes her head: “That’s just silly,” and at this point, I’m trying hard not to do anything—not to cry, laugh, shake my head, scream, run for the forest to never return.) She has a 28 year old daughter whose father is Hispanic. She was upset her daughter couldn’t get breast augmentation because she’s pregnant. I don’t think I need to point out to you how quickly things go off the deep end over the course of a bowl of rice and stew.
“But I know,” Gina said happily, “If there was plastic surgery in heaven, my mom would be the first one to get a face lift! God bless her.”
Amen.
I couldn’t let my last night in the canyon end like this. I asked Bob if we could do a night hike and to my surprise he said yes. When the group crawled into their tents, we took our flashlights and walked to Havasu Falls. Sitting in the dark, we watched the shadowy movement of the water, listened to the comforting rush of music in the night. We sat there for a long time, sometimes chatting, sometimes in silence as we looked for shooting stars. I tried to think of a wish to make and instantly felt foolish. I didn’t need to wish for anything. When we finally pulled ourselves away, as I said a silent goodbye to the falls, the brightest star of the night streaked across the sky. A perfect finale.
The morning of our hike out we had an early 5:30 start, the first time we had a wake up call. It was still dark as we got ready. We had to have our mule sacks handed in before we were allowed to have coffee or breakfast. We didn’t have to take down camp though. Another group would be down in a couple of days and Brian was only walking with us for a little while before heading back and cleaning up. He was guiding the next trip and would meet the new group at the trailhead.
“Are you planning on making it first?” He asked
“Oh, shut up you twit. Who gives a shit?” (Sigh) No I didn’t say that but that really would have been the time to let it all out or the perfect opportunity to push him off the cliff.
“I’m not planning on it. I’m picking a challenging pace for myself,” and I left him coughing in my dust.
Going up was still hard even if there were no heavy packs to carry. The switchbacks seemed endless and there was a constant stream of mule trains to avoid. Sometimes I would have to run up the length of the switchback to avoid being trampled. I made it to the top and was quite please with myself but had to sober up for Mark’s appearance. I just knew he would 1) make some smarmy ass comment 2) ask me my age to make himself feel better. As soon as I saw him reach the rim:
1) “Well, aren’t you the queen of the trail.”
2) “How old are you?”
Sometimes my ability to read people frightens me.
The van was still parked where we had left it on Day 1 and Bob was genuinely glad to see no one had siphoned the gas. The contents of the cooler were still ice cold and we sat on the bins and ate sandwiches. On the drive back, I sat in the front seat writing in Bob’s journal while the others slept. I drew funny little cartoons of our Rim to Rim trip, reminisced about Team Awesome. The only thing of note on the drive back was all the tarantulas on the road making the slow, treacherous cross to the other side. Maybe the females were sluttier there. I told Bob to avoid running them over because the poor things just wanted to get laid. He did his best to swerve around them. Julian woke up and was suddenly full of energy and would not shut up. He kept going on and on laughing at his own joke. It was a very long three hour drive back. But suddenly, as I saw how close we were to Flagstaff, I didn’t want it to end. It would mean the end of my trip, the end of waking up with a whole day of adventure and discovery laying before me, the end of sharing a laugh with Bob, the end of my time in the canyon, a place enchanting, mysterious and beautiful. I felt at peace and open and true to myself there. I was heavy in my heart. It was hard to let go.
I stopped at Target where I looked for Corn Nuts (drat! no Corn Nuts), bought a coffee from Starbucks (yes, Starbucks in Target) which I drank two sips of before recalling for the 65th time I hate Starbucks coffee. There has to be some drug in their coffee that makes people forget how much they hate the taste of overpriced roasted tar. The coffee would spend the rest of the day fermenting in the car before being disposed of 143 miles away in Phoenix, which is the best a cup of Starbucks purchased by Cindy can hope for. I said goodbye to Flagstaff, or Flag as I felt I could call it like a local, and hopped onto 89A.
I didn’t have a plan for Phoenix except maybe to go Scottsdale because I read about nice stores and restaurants there. I looked at the map and went bug eyed. The roads in Phoenix didn’t have names—they were numbered. It was insanity. How could a city function like this? 7th Ave., 7th St…all the way to 191st Ave., 195th Ave. Why?? Can you imagine getting directions?