Colorado Beans

weird truck seen in Taos, NM

Shot one-handed with a DSLR while driving (don’t try this at home)…

You have to admit, you don’t see something like this very often. I’ve been around quite a long time, and I can safely say I’ve never gone down the road behind a Colorado beans truck. For that matter, I don’t know if I’ve ever eaten any Colorado beans or why I’d want to, but now I’m curious. “Colorado beans!” Kind of rolls right off the tongue, doesn’t it?

Where do they grow beans in Colorado? I mean, these can’t be mountain beans, can they? Although that sounds even better! (Fart your way up some fourteeners, chilluns.) They can’t be eastern Colorado beans, the only things that grow there are cows, wheat, tumbleweeds, and dust. Mostly dust, though. See what I mean? The more I think about it, the weirder it gets. When we drive to Iowa, the first state we cross is Colorado. I’ll see if I can spot some beans next time.

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Winter Solstice 2013

Talpa valley sunset near Taos, NM

Last night’s sunset reflected in the east

There’s not much snow, and that’s just fine with me. New Mexico is drying up, however. Big dirt sucking up the wet, rocks and mountains hungry for whatever moisture falls. They say that all these trees will die in just a couple generations. No one can believe that, though; didn’t we just track in a ton of mud?

The Solstice marks the New Year, not January 1st! Not some arbitrary, chopped-up fakery decided on by clerics and an emperor back when people thought that frogs sprang up from rain… This moment, this point, when the tilted axis of the Earth gradually brings more light, not less, to the thin skin on the top side of the planet, and most of us wake up again. New life, new hope, new plans, new dreams.

I’ve now outlasted all but one of my parents’ generation, my Uncle Buddy on my mother’s side. They started earlier, of course, so that comparison lacks heft. It’s just a way of noting where I am, and I am ready for a change. In that vein, I’ll share this with you—maybe it applies to everyone?—but I feel something big approaching very soon. Something positive and good. It’s like a warm spot in my mind and even has a date: sometime near the second half of January. Maybe we will find a home. Maybe I will “see” another book, be carried down the river in a happy flood. It feels like sunshine at the very least, and that would be enough. Dissolving, melting, letting go, and moving on.

Whatever this thing is has legs, though, so all of you take note. And take some time today to feel just when the solar shift occurs. At this location, that was 20 minutes ago (10:11 a.m. MST). The mood just now is definitely brighter, if not the cloudy sky.

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Skull City

steer skull in snow

Found this in a tree on a deserted mesa

This post has morphed to mystery status! Previous content under evaluation. (We work with live ammo around here, ya know.) Enjoy this New Mexico totem. And yes, I really did find it in a tree. You can read the story in my TAOS SOUL book. It’s the last chapter, actually: “Piñon Lift,” which almost gives the game away.

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Best Car I Ever Owned

Nissan 240SX SE

Resting in the shade somewhere in Utah thirteen years ago

That, ladies and gentlemen, is a 1991 Nissan 240SX SE, and I did truly love it. It made me feel like I was finally one of the boys.

I found this one at a used car dealer in Chestertown (MD) while ostensibly looking for a new car for my wife. Other than a vague recollection of a Car & Driver road test on it once, I wasn’t too conversant on the details. It sure looked cool, though, slung low and nasty on fat wide tires, and felt purposeful behind the wheel. This being a laid-back small town, the salesman let me drive it home to play with (we lived ten miles away). He even said I could keep it for a couple of days, no hurry. Now that was one smart salesman!

I bought it, obviously, despite the 60,000 miles on the odometer. I simply had to. A real sports car, the 240SX featured a fuel-injected 2.4 liter four-cylinder engine with four valves per cylinder and dual chain-driven overhead camshafts. This was a torquey engine for a four and produced 155 horsepower. Not all that much, perhaps, but the car weighed less than 2,700 pounds, so it was plenty fast. It had front MacPherson struts and a rear multilink suspension with rear-wheel drive. Steering was sharp and quick. I loved the five-speed manual transmission, alloy wheels, and disc brakes all around. There was a killer sound system, a digital speedometer, and power everything.

We never heard a rattle or a squeak. The car felt like it was carved out of a single block of aluminum. One surprise was the fine big trunk, which made it the perfect grand touring car for me and my wife. You could go 80 mph in the summer with the windows down and still have a normal conversation. Oh, the places we went and the times we had. When I was driving by myself, I could fling the tail out with that rear-wheel drive and corner like a fiend. The car completed me. It was everything I’d ever wanted.

To be fair, my dream machine did develop issues over time. For instance, the digital speedometer conked out before we moved to New Mexico. To get around this minor nuisance, I calculated engine RPMs in various gears for relevant speeds and made a little sticker for the dashboard to remind us. Driving with the tach alone was easier than it sounds, and I never really missed the miles-per-hour number. There were other glitches, mostly electrical, but nothing that affected speed, reliability, or the sheer joy of driving. Life went on.

When my wife left Taos for Dubuque to find a job—hard times, chilluns—and also take care of her mother, she took the Nissan and I kept the truck. That reassured me, though, because I knew she’d be as safe as she could be. Shortly thereafter, her mother gave up driving. That meant the family’s Dodge Spirit was sitting around unused, and my wife adopted it. Utterly undistinguished and agricultural in feel—a sofa pulled along by an underpowered tractor engine—at least its automatic transmission and front-wheel drive made navigating icy Dubuque winter hills much easier. Also, the speedometer worked, which my Iowa-born wife appreciated. Meanwhile, the Nissan had a nice long rest. She made sure to drive it once in a while to keep the battery charged, but mostly it just sat.

After her mother died, my wife moved back to Taos. Before she did, however, the Nissan needed work. Something minor, as I recall. The plan was for her to take it to a brake and tire shop, which she attempted, and it nearly got her killed. Over time the seals on the disc brake pistons or the master cylinder must have dried out. When she tried to brake at the bottom of one of those ridiculous Dubuque hills, nothing happened! I don’t know how she ended up getting to the tire place, but when she reads this, she’ll remind me. They gave her a ride back home and took a good long look at the car. You know what’s coming next, right? Of course it needed “everything.” New pads, pistons, seals, master cylinder, and I don’t know what all. The tab would be well over a thousand dollars. I told the shop to hang on while I mulled it over and my wife and I debated cars. This didn’t take too long.

I badly wanted the Nissan back, but by now, the beast I’d named the “Red Rocket” was getting pretty old. With over 200,000 miles on the engine, resale value was less than what repairs would cost. (I had the feeling you get before you take your dog or kitty to the vet that one last time…) My wife was moving back and we needed every penny, so I decided to give the car away. One of the mechanics expressed an interest. I signed the title over, mailed it to my wife, and lo, the deed was done.

A few weeks later I flew up to Iowa and drove us back to Taos in the family Dodge Spirit, which we loaded to the gills. My wife and I were reunited. The trip was happier than any I’d made in years, despite the loss of my beloved sports car. That which had “completed me” was gone, or was it?

What brought this surging back to consciousness was simply listening to a song last night: “Stop Breaking Down” by the Rolling Stones, from the Exile on Main Street album. Back in Maryland, I had this on a cassette tape that I kept in the glove compartment in the Nissan. I played it crazy-loud and thumping almost every time I drove to town, proud as hell behind the wheel of my Red Rocket.

The intervening years of testing have been hard. Due to chaos and decay as much as healthy choice, I own so much less now than I once did. Depending on my mood, this is either tragic or a great relief. Yet the completion I once sought has been hiding deep inside my heart the whole damn time. I know because the other day I felt happy for no reason. In that moment, just being here inside my skin was all I needed—I could have shaken hands with the President or gone on national TV without a trace of fear or subtext. This will pass, but I’ll remember. I didn’t take a pill or go to church to get it. It showed up on its own and it will come again.

On the way home tonight—we’d been out to a concert—I wound our Pontiac Vibe out slowly in the lower gears, holding the revs high instead of shifting up, so the engine ran near maximum torque. At the bottom of a steep hill heading up, I punched the throttle like a kid, and the Vibe shot forward with a roar. “JOHN!” my wife yelled.

“I’m just having fun,” I said, and didn’t mind a thing.

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Piñon Jays in the Morning

piñon jays in Taos, NM

(Cropped so well it hurts)

They come in wondrous flocks with so much energy, making calls that sound like seagulls. Always flocks, never just the one. They must be very sociable. Sometimes I see them when I’m hiking on the mesa, hiding in the—where else?—piñons, or escaping from me in a yakking mob.

We live close enough to open country that they show up here from time to time. The sound of their arrival jerks my head around. I’m listening to shore birds on a rocky coast without the surf, far away beside the ocean of New Mexico.

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