Friday, September 9, 2011

Colorado 2011


We do not have the time. We do not have the money. Somehow we are driving 1,100 miles each way. Take the truck. Sleep at the top of Dead Man's Pass in Oregon in the rest area. Trucks all night. Different in a pickup than a big truck. Next night in the rest area above Salt Lake, it's getting quieter. There is a train. And then we make it to Dick and Kay's new place, Colbran. There are yellow flowers and Dick has on his irrigation boots. He is eighty one. Molly drives her two burros down from Oak Creek. Molly is seventy. She told her oncologist to assume she is sixty. Kay and I drink margaritas on the porch with one giant white dog, three border collies and one spaniel. Humming birds. Gold sun through the ivy. Two rams out past the fence, one has curved horns. The sheep are filing down the pasture to the barn. Red angus, fat and shiny.

Molly, Tony and I sleep in the bunk house. In the morning Fred will come in and take the plumbing apart. He pours bleach in the tank. We can't use the bathroom for twenty four hours. It's Fred's computer that has been moved out of the bunk house onto the porch. Molly and I tell Kay that Fred is passive aggressive. Kay says when we figure Fred out let her know.

We all hike the first day and four of us on the last day. Dick's neuropathy acting up. We hike at 11,000 feet. The land spills away from us on both sides. Kay says when she was young both families, both grandmothers, and all the cousins got together in the summer, every summer. Kay says that the older she gets the more important these times are to her. At the ranch she shows us the "no heat cooker". It is a two and half foot square wooden box. Inside is a round piece of granite, four inches thick. The rock goes in the fire then it goes on the metal plate inside the box. The round metal pan goes directly on the rock. Then the quilt and then the top of the box. The white paint is peeling from the wood. It belonged to Kay's grandmother's.

There is only one day out of the three that it rains. In the Rockies, the clouds are iron weighted and we are cold pricked by rain. We drive in one pickup truck, wending south through Delta and Montrose, the Chinese Buffet where Dick laughs and jokes while he puts grapes and noodles side by side on his plate. We stop in Ouray. File into the hot spring dressing rooms and out into the hot pools. Kay sinks against the hot water. One hundred and six degrees. Her feet are finally warm she says. A young man pulls himself through the water to hear Dick telling stories about the swather, the sixty years of haying mountain meadows. I do the breast stroke, over and over and over. Count the bubbles, the rhythm and pulse, float upon the water.

By the time I get back to the bunk house my tooth will hurt so much, I just go to bed. But we made it. We all made it this year.

We leave at eight, after dinner. After steaks cooked on the BBQ. Dick has his straw cowboy hat on with the sides tightly rolled like they do in Colorado and he has on his turquoise pearl button shirt. Danny, who lost his license again, and his girlfriend who drives him, bring grilled asparagus, potato salad and roasted corn from Palisades. There is watermelon from Green River. Barbara just came in from the zoo in San Francisco. She leaves in a week for the endangered animal school in England. Her hair is red, part of it caught in a braid. She has Dick's nose. She'll sleep in our used sheets tonight in the bunk house.

I look across the table, the smoke blown in from the grill. Kay is saying that my ex husband, when I was nineteen, that Terry, is the one who brought her home from the hospital. Three days in the hospital after the horse wreck, and Dick didn't even pick her up, sent Terry who she never really liked. My mouth is already moving, turning in Dick's direction and I am saying: I've heard Kay say this same thing before Dick and she's really angry. You better do something pretty soon Dick! Everybody is laughing. Kay is laughing.

Starting home we skip the interstate. State route 13, in the dark, the mountain sides, the deer, up through Rifle, into Meeker, finally Craig. All the names that have sat along beside me, in front of me, to the side of me. And there is the Sleeping Giant bathing in the moon light. Arms crossed over her chest. It's when I shut my eyes, there are so many doors I now see shutting, that have already closed. Tight. Yampa. Taponas. Dan-Dan-the Fish-Man found dead in his camper. But wait. Maybe, still a breath of air, a slight breeze blowing. Fingers working their way under the next door sill. We are not done yet.

1 comment:

  1. Penny, your words paint a picture of a Colorado that I don't know. Your Colorado is rich and rugged with generations, family, history, stories, long-timers. My Colorado is new in all ways, new family, city, bright colors, future, beginning. Both Colorado, both rich. Our Colorados collide off the interstate and it smells fresh/clean. I wonder if I will meet your Colorado all in good time.

    ReplyDelete