The full moon was visible above the Asarco plant which used to smelt copper and lead. The process left the skies hazy over Juarez and contaminated the ground in El Paso, but the smokestacks looked kind of pretty. And look at the long shadows they cast!
Next stop: Fort Bliss National Cemetery, where both my parents are laid to rest against the backdrop of the Franklin Mountains.
I love the simplicity of the headstones. My mother was buried first, in 1975. When my father died in 1992 they engraved the other side of the headstone and turned it around so Dad is in front. Patriarchy dies hard in the military! That said, I love the fact that privates can be next to generals for all of eternity. My parents are close to a cook.
Next stop: White Sands National Park, about 90 minutes north of El Paso, in New Mexico. I remembered it vividly from my childhood and wondered if Magda, who was visiting a national park for the first time, would be as impressed by it as I had been. "Uncle Jeff," she observed as we drove into the dunes which get whiter and whiter as the vegetation gradually disappears, "it looks like a Ford commercial." And later: "It looks like a screen saver." To which I hissed: "Magda, this is the source of those images!"
Sand & Sky |
Sinking |
Dune Walker |
Homage to Jackie O. |
Indian Style |
Windblown Gypsum |
Sand Angel |
The trail markers are family-friendly.
There's plenty of other vegetation. I love the shadows it casts.
Not quite a tumbleweed, but pretty damn close.
Who says you don't have seasons in the Southwest? Just look at this tree and tell me it's not winter!
You get a sense of how high the dunes are from this shot of Magda walking back to the car.
Peace, baby!
If White Sands weren't enough, we took the scenic way home through the Rio Grande Valley and made a pit stop in La Mesilla, where Pat Garrett gunned down Billy the Kid. It's a little too picturesque for my taste. You can tell how sunburned we got at White Sands in a couple of these shots.
Notice the luminarias on the roof of this building.
Guess who? His descendants recently petitioned to have him pardoned. The new Republican governor killed that proposal.
Definitely no kid here.
A green-robed priest was about to celebrate mass in this colorful church.
A "blue highway" took us back to El Paso, through some of the largest pecan groves in the country. All the trees are perfectly pruned. The visual effect is dizzying at 50 mph.
We came across this bizarre place when we tried--unsuccessfully--to find the Rio Grande.
As the sun set, the landscape just got prettier and prettier.
A detour took us past this pauper's cemetery in Anthony, New Mexico. The ground hadn't even settled on some of the graves. I love photographing cemeteries and announced "I'm in heaven!" when we parked. Magda was pretty nervous as there were houses all around us, and a small crowd of men drinking beer in front a trailer home.
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