Archives for category: travel

There are just some people who know how to gather amazing souls and my girl  is one of “them”. She has some of the best friends life has to offer out here and  they all came through with joyful noise last night at Ava’s fundraiser event.

part of Eric & Cheryl's back yard

poolside

more of their amazing house

Cheryl and Eric graciously opened their hearts, wallet and home to Ava’s cause.  Cheryl orchestrated the whole event as Hostess with the Mostest while Ava  recruited raffle prizes, silent auction items, attendees and entertainment. Eric  was our MC during the raffle and host with the most. Cheryl and Eric hadn’t  stopped when I left at 2 AM and the event started at 6:30PM! They are the  “Energizer Bunny” on steroids. I guess I used to be able to keep up that kinda’  pace but it’s not been in my recent past.

Jenni (Ava's friend) and Cheryl (hostess)

Jenni Kearns and Jeff Malecki worked tirelessly as bartenders at the open bar making sure  everyone had anything they wanted to drink. Fred Stone was our “Grill Daddy” and he was a master at his task. Fred, Jenni and Jeff all play wind instruments professionally. Jenni and Fred play the French Horn at various performances around Vegas-Baby including “Phantom at the Opera”. Jeff has just gotten his Ph.D. in conducting and has applied to teach at some colleges!

Jenni & Jeff tireless at two AM

Items donated for the raffle included entertainment tickets, original works of art  (Cheryl’s and Vital’s) Gift Certificates, Star Wars Movie Photo autographed  by Harrison Ford and Peter Mayhew and other amazing items. For Silent  Auction,  Cirque du Soleil tickets for any show in the world and “Phantom of the  Opera”  autographed poster, backstage pass and tickets to the show. A big  “thanks” to  those contributors. Every item was a huge success!

Silent Auction and Raffle items exhibited

Marco Landin was our DJ who rocked the house until the break of day. Wow.  What a great guy who is married to an amazing lady, Heather Hyde de Landin, who performs a ballet number with fire. Thanks to you both for being who you are and  loving my girl so much.

DJ Marco Landin rocking the HOUSE!

The performers… oh my gosh… what can I say about the diverse and amazing  talent present for Ava’s cause. Carmen Woodruff sang jazz like you gotta’ pay money to hear. I haven’t heard good jazz like that since I was in Nawlins last. I sure hope someone recorded her. Reggie was kickin’ it on the keyboard for her. Sorry I don’t have a picture of her but I was still covering the front door!

Jill Martin after her naughty Burlesque number

Jill Martin sang a naughty parody Burlesque version of “Santa Baby” that  brought down the house! She exuded sheer 1950’s glamour (complete with  seamed stockings) coupled with modern-day fem fatale.

Left to right: Anastasia Synn (performed Muscle Piercing), Penny Wiggins (performed her comedic act), and Aimee Wade, dear friend and performer in her own right.

Anastasia Synn performed incredible muscle piercing that stopped the party in  its tracks. People sat in total silence in awe of her ability to perform such an  unusual talent. She was such a lovely person and appreciate her willingness to  add a great dimension to Ava’s event.

Penny Wiggins, comedian, kept the crowd going with her wonderful, unique  comedic slant with her St. Thomas, BVI upbringing. Next time you see her, ask  her to give you directions “island style” mon! She’s such a delightful, engaging  lady who opens her home to so many of us passing through (as she’s done for  me several times) and to those locals who are privileged enough to call her  “friend”. Thanks, Penny, for being such a good friend to Ava.

Fred Stone, in the bright yellow shirt, was our “Grill Daddy”! Thank you so  much, Fred, for cranking up the grill and getting everyone fed. In addition to his grilling talents, Fred plays a mean French Horn professionally.

Italian guests Alonzo and Charly

We had such an amazing cross-section of guests and nationalities present at  this party that would make the UN envious.

Landin and Heather

Bobby (from Ava's Apply IT days) and Kelly

Angela and Justin

Randy

And, to top off all the talent, Ava sang several arias with the accompaniment by  Michelle Lee on keyboard. After her performance, there wasn’t a person there  who doubted her talent or calling and thrilled to further contribute to her to  Austria for this intense opera program.

Ava performing

Ava singing

How in the world can Ava and I thank each and every one of those attending,  contributing, entertaining and providing venue? I have no idea except to say  that if ANY of  you are in northeast Georgia or any where in the vicinity of Atlanta (’cause I will come down there from the mountaintop) and you need ANYTHING, you call 1-800-MAMA and I’ll be there with bells on!

Today is going to be a very difficult day. Ava and I hobnobbing with her in- famous friends. It’ll be one Memorial Day party after another all day. It’s a  tough job but somebody has to do it and we’re the girls for the job! We’re rested  and ready for the events de jour.

Yesterday was the warm up. Ava and I bounced between errands and planned  Sunday events all day long. We finally landed at a barbecue birthday party  attended by professional humorists, hypnotists and singers… and me.

We’re also out and about putting up flyers for Ava’s next performance at a  fundraiser her friend, Cheryl, is giving at her home this coming Wednesday,  June 1st from 6:30 P.M. to 10:30 P.M. to help with Ava’s expenses for the  intensive opera program Ava will be attending in Graz, Austria for seven weeks  this summer.

fundraiser

There will be silent auctions for: two Cirque du Soleil tickets ANYWHERE IN  THE WORLD with 24 hours notice; also two tickets to the Vegas-Baby  “Phantom of the Opera” production which includes an autographed poster and  backstage passes with a photo with the cast.

Raffle tickets are $5.00 each. Prizes include: $100.00 gift certificate to Tao  Restaurant in Vegas-Baby, H&M Gift Certificate, original works of art  (paintings by Cheryl Parker and Vital Germaine) and more to come.

The action will include an OPEN BAR,  hor d’oeuvres and performances by Ava.  Also performing are:

7:00 Carmen’s tribute to Jazz

7:30 Penny Wiggin’s act

7:45 Jenni’s french horn songs

8:00 Ava sing’s opera and art songs

8:30 Heather and Rachel’s fire act

8:45 intermission

9:00 Anastasia’s show (I’ve got you under my skin)

9:15 Irish Kevin songs

Knowing some of you can’t attend but would like to contribute toward this  fabulous opportunity for our own starving artist, there’s a site below where you  can make a difference in a very talented lady’s life. All donations are graciously  accepted and will go directly toward her $2000 plane ticket and food expenses.  All other fees have been paid through scholarship awards.   http://www.cherylparkergallery.com/page3.php

As an entrepreneur and artist, and through Ava’s experience as performer, my  awareness has been heightened for the need to network across all artistic  genres for each other. It’s the passionate artist that stuns the world with their  music or painting into remembering our humanity. It’s the writer or ballerina  who touches just the right spot in our soul that triggers the desire to do good for  the less fortunate. What would the world be like without the collective artistic  “us”? I, personally, think it would be more cold, harsh, painful and warlike.

I’m just sayin’…

Poster for Ava's Fundraiser event 6/1/2010

My body doesn’t take well to chemicals. If you take 1 pill, I take 1/4th. If you drink “leaded” coffee, I drink un-leaded and get cracked out for the whole day. A motion  sickness pill that won’t have any drowsy effect on my 40 pound dog puts my fanny  in the bed for 4 days! No kidding! I think it’s from being raised on a farm with well  water and  natural foods.

So, I’m not kidding when I say I had to get cracked out on caffeine (TWO 15 oz.  cups of Diet Coke) to counter the drugged  feeling I had this morning from the  “less drowsy”  version of motion sickness meds for vertigo before I even  felt like  venturing out of the house. I haven’t felt safe to drive knowing how dizzy I get  just turning my head to look over  my  shoulder. It was a desperate need to see  people, maybe  even converse with  people, that  pushed me to take such drastic  measures.

I’d recently heard of a local outdoor flea market called Broadacres, in North Las  Vegas. It’s one of my favorite  things to do on Saturdays.  While my daughter  slept, I planned my mini-adventure. I successfully found it on the internet and  took off. It was easy to find. I found it without using my crutch (TomTom), got a  parking spot in the shade (something a southerner learns early) and only had  to pay $1.00 to enter.  Great start, wouldn’t you say? And, to top it all off, the  place was appropriately  named… broad acres.  This was going to  be yummy  except for the fact that it took me two hours to wake up enough to  even drive  which meant the heat was  going to beat me down  if I didn’t  drink  lots of  water and walk in the shade.

As I arrived, I thought of my theory about east coast flea markets: the really  good,  inexpensive treasures are on the periphery. So, it was with great  enthusiasm  to prove it a national theory as well that I proceeded. And, I kinda’  did and kinda’ didn’t. This was an adventure all of its  own.

First impression was that I’d been transported to a 21st century Mexican  marketplace.  There was a lot of Spanish foods, music, customers,  products and  atmosphere.  I was sure I’d find some kind of cool Frida Kahlo treasure to buy;  even a book of  photos or earrings. By the way, Frida Kahlo was an amazing  Mexican artist in the early 1900’s who was wonderfully portrayed by Selma  Hyak in the movie, “Frida”. It’s a must see.

I briskly walked toward the back portion of this huge asphalt paved, fenced  arena of tent canopies abutting each other as far as you could see. There were  the occasional permanent buildings remnant of a past life but not many.

The place was packed but not as bad as an amusement park on a hot day, thank  goodness. You could still walk around without getting run over by strollers or  people. But, after the first hour, it was lookin’ pretty bleak. I’d only purchased  some Lucky Bamboo and a bottle of water and the heat was starting to get to  me. My next purchase had to be some kind of hat.

I kept my eye out for something with holes in the top with a wide brim. I had  several of these at home I’d failed to pack so I didn’t want to spend much and  there were plenty to choose from of all varieties. I needed an extra small one  and I knew that would be a trick. Got it and for $5.00. Now I had to secure it to  my head because the wind gusts were in the 40-50 MPH range (no kidding)  and get back to my Frida quest.

The second hour only served up large portions of penny arcade-type purchases,  brightly colored stilettos and stuff I wasn’t even slightly interested in  purchasing. There were jeans to be purchased for $5.00 and other items I’m  sure worthy of their price tag as well, just not what I wanted. I wanted a  treasure… a Frida treasure.

By the end of that second hour, I was burned up and out. I headed straight for  Silver and we drove back home with an adventure and a deeper tan.

Check it out the next time you’re out this way. Who knows. You might just find your own Frida treasure there.

http://www.broadacresmec.com

It was being vigilant in keeping my head firmly fixed straight ahead from the  allergy/vertigo attack of this week which forced me  into being still long enough  to remember a gift from a friend.  Little did my friend know that her wonderful gift arrived in the middle of a  hurricane-like event.  I was in the cross-hairs of a broken 16 year love affair;  neither one of us knew exactly how to end it. And, in true Donna fashion, I got  mad and made the cut… clean and swift.

It wasn’t until I got to Vegas-Baby and became virtually bed or chair ridden  before I  even realized the gift from a friend was packed.  The gift: Pat Conroy’s  new book, My Reading Life. It has served as a resuscitation of my writing soul.

As a dyed-in-the-wool southern girl raised on a family farm, born of  two well-educated, resourceful parents with generations of delicious family  history to  entice a fanciful, writer-to-be into a lifetime of love of history, it was  only  natural for me to become an avid reader. First, it was my sister’s timely  introduction to me of the Classics Section of the Buckhead Library  (specifically, Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy) that spurned me  onward to bigger-than-life European history such as that of Catherine the Great  and,  eventually, to racier biographies of famous and infamous people like those  in The Nympho and Other Maniacs. It was their stories that made my  ancestors’  journeys burst with life… resuscitating them to breathe again  through me.  Their struggles for religious freedom or desire to invent a  bicycle brake or to be the best American Impressionist was the cause and effect of my destiny to fall in love with a Southern autobiographical writer with a sprinkling of historical fiction.

It’s in my genetic structure. My paternal grandmother was a published writer of  the little known grubbers of the west… the real people who clawed the dirt aside  to only discover more dirt. The men and women she wrote about did everything  to keep the lifestyle they desired alive and would not settle. I like reading about that  kind of character. It pushes me forward in a way nothing else can. True stories  about real people struggling at all cost to make their dream come true.

Back in the mid 1960’s, as I struggled to become a published writer  of  poetry, I,  instead, found myself a single mom. At the age of 18, I was thrown head  first  into  sleepless newborn nights and forty hour work weeks. It didn’t stop my  drive to  read or write, however. It brought me to my knees in such a way that I  joined no less than five book clubs to get the variety of exposure for which I  longed. I couldn’t get enough knowledge. I went to college after work so I could  realize my dream.

My son, Carl, was both my inspiration and my albatross. After he’d go to bed, I’d  read. As life dealt its traumas, I’d write. Oh, I wrote happy things too but not in  the prolific manner as the mortified moaning of lost love which exploded from  my  soul.

The first signs of my devoted love of Pat Conroy’s writing came with the reading  of The Great Santini sometime in the early 1980’s during a nasty divorce. It was  only natural. We shared the same father. Although my  father didn’t fly  Corsairs, he did fly during WWII and had enough of that “Patton”   disciplinarian in him to make  us all (including Mom) stand at attention with  the greatest of fear seasoned  with  a healthy dose of Dad’s demanded respect.  Yep. Conroy and I were cut from the  same southern cloth distributed with the  cattle feed… coarse outer  surface and smooth inside, stiff to look at, sturdy yet  easily destroyed with the  wrong cut.

My reading of Conroy’s painful parental expose’ was followed by The Lords of  Discipline. This book painfully exposed what southern gentile thought was the  right  way to bring up a gentle man… military school… break ’em hard school of  hazing and harassment. Fortunately, my family couldn’t afford that kind of  expense for  my biological brothers but that didn’t exempt them from early  military  service  that served the same purpose.

I guess we girls were lucky in some strange mind-bending way of logic because  we were “only” subjected to one ogre’s demands… of all kinds.

But, it was within those wonderfully torturous pages of  The Prince of  Tides where Conroy spilled his southern guts that held me tightly in his talent. I  studied each page with highlighter and crimped corners knowing the suffering  this author endured to expose this story. Conroy grips the reader to expose the  truth about many Baby Boomers in the Deep  South. Yep. We were a secret  society of abused, tortured souls forced into silence  from domineering  patriarchs. And, from one who instantly recognized the  “road less traveled” in  action, I saw truth.

Therapy teaches you that truth can only be revealed through exposure to a bright, shining halogen light on the darkest corners of a tortured soul. For that, one must have a  deep, burning desire to exorcise those real and imagined nightmares from the  soul. Conroy bravely, humbly and willingly thrust his whole being into that process and I will love, admire and respect him for a lifetime. I also applaud and thank him from the bottom of my heart as I have used his example in his book to help free loved ones from their prisons of darkness.

Interestingly enough, Conroy is actually a generation ahead of his time, to my  way of thinking, because writing with full disclosure is right in line with  Generation “X” group  thinking… at least the ones with whom I have had the  greatest exposure and  connection. My thirty-something nieces (daughters from  anotha’ motha’) and daughter all have been seekers of the bright light. It’s  taken them years to understand where to aim it and what to do with the  information it reveals, but it was their desire to speak of the unthinkable, do the  unthinkable  and express it in new ways that lead me to my own acceptance of  the concept. It was the “X” factor that raged from  every walk of life from artist to  lawyers to musicians to therapists who joined in  Conroy’s quest. So, was Conroy the catalyst or was his work a process of synergistic thinking from the universe. Hmmm. Delicious thinking.

See what I’m tawkin’ ’bout? Word.

Sunday, after my wonderful day with Maya and the horses, I came down with  major allergies coupled with an  extraordinary bad case of vertigo. I,  literally, can’t lean my head in any direction without the room spinning out  of  control. The nausea from the room spinning is wearing me out  I can’t bend  over, lean over or do anything  other than keep my head straight up and ahead.

I don’t like slowing down and am getting quite ill about it all!

On Sunday, my daughter woke up in excruciating back pain. As she’s an opera  singer with two very important  upcoming performances, she can’t take any  anti-inflammatory medicine as it can cause hemorrhaging in her  throat. I can’t  help her  except to drive her to the doctors or drug store.

And, yes, she’s ill about it all as well. She joked with the doctor this morning saying she’s ready to be cast in an  opera that requires singing in a reclining position because that’s the only way she’s been able to prepare for
Friday night’s opera aria performance with an orchestra.

So, that’s why you haven’t heard any cool stories about going to last-minute events or fun stuff. We’re just trying desperately to heal so we can go on  the next leg of  Great Adventure 2011!

Yesterday, I joined Maya (dear friend and confidant) to have lunch at “our”  Mexican restaurant, Agave, in Summerlin, NV north of Vegas-Baby. It’s what  we  do first when I’m in town. Their ambiance is a superb example of up-scale  interior design complete with colored glass mosaics at the open kitchen counter-front, beautiful tile work throughout and topped off with authentic old world Mexican doors and hardware even in  the bathrooms. The sink in the bathroom is the coolest. It’s a long, flat, slightly slanted surface adorned with brightly colored green and deep blue tiles with hidden drain  system. Worth taking a trip just to look at the place. But, to top it all off, the food  is the BOMB! It’s all fresh and delicious. Prices are appropriate for a nice  restaurant but not outrageous (http://agaverestaurant.com). It’s a big thumbs up if you’re out this way and  won’t mind an amazing view of Red Rock, but  that’s another story.

Second, we go to Costco. We had to buy the caffeine free coffee drink my mom loves not  sold in any of their Atlanta stores called Caffe D’Vita. Yep, I drive 3000 miles to  buy this for my mom. Wouldn’t you? Last October, I bought her 12 cans and this  year I got 24. We don’t want Mama running out!

Next, we were off to the stables to play with Moose and Jessie. Well, at least for me it was play. For Maya, she worked her tail off shoveling the horses’ by-products! I brushed Moose and did whatever Maya directed me to do, within reason, took pictures and stood in awe of her energy and enthusiasm doing hard labor even of love.

Maya and Jessie

Moose is loose!

Tac attack.

When I was a kid, we had horses. We never worked hard with our horses,  but,  then again, I wasn’t the parent and we had pastures for them to run in. We  didn’t have dried poop-filled arenas that needed daily cleaning-up to ward off  hoof problems. Because grass is expensive and downright impossible  here in  Vegas-Baby, the locals who want horses take the horse by-product, dry  it and  re-surface the arenas and open stalls with it. The wind stirs it around  constantly making the air not only full of dust but horse poop. Makes having  horses in the desert less attractive to me but I’ve known differently and wouldn’t  do it this way. Nope. When I live out west, I won’t have horses. I’ll rent one if I  get a hankerin’ to ride.

As with people, there are so many more health issues with our animals, big and  small alike. For example, just last week, I heard of a herpes outbreak with some  horses in Utah at a rodeo type event. As there’s no cure and, because it  attacks their neurological system, they all had to be destroyed and the state is in  quarantine.

We  rarely called a vet or blacksmith. We just “had horses”. We didn’t have to  labor  over any of it. I fed the horses and jumped on their backs when I wanted a  ride around the pasture. And, after being reminded yesterday of Maya’s hot, backbreaking daily tasks with  even these extraordinary animals, I wouldn’t do it. Nope. Even loving  horses as  much as I do, it ain’t happening. Plus, I woke up this morning with a  horrible  spinning in my head from an allergic reaction to all the poop in the  wind. I’m  basically incapacitated even with two daily anti-histamines. Any  fast  movement of my head sends the room spinning until I sit still again. Now,   those of you who know me well, know I don’t do well sitting still.

The funny part? Jessie. When Maya scratches just in the right place, Jessie  extends his upper lip like something I’ve never seen. He moves it like an  Aardvark snout in hunt for tasty ants! Maya administered just the right  scratching needed for Jessie to show his “Dopies” while I clicked away. Look at  this crazy horse.

Jessie “Dopies”. Can you see how far out he extended his upper lip from his lower one?

I’ll keep trying to download the video. It’s absolutely hilarious!

I’m in R&R right now and, an integral part of that is doing what I love to do when I finally get to Vegas-Baby: eat at Lucille’s, listen to my girl sing, sleep in my room at Ava’s and hang out with my girl.

So, here’s the scoop on Lucille’s. It’ one of the finest places out of the south that serves good, authentic, down home barbecue and veggies. Lucille’s is in a shopping center near Green Valley (I think) off the 215. Here’s a visual for you:

LUCILLE'S

And ambiance from the 1950’s circa “The Christmas Story”:

FRAH-GEE-LEE ("Fragile" written on the shipping box in the move.. remember?)

And, finally, the order:

Ready to order beef ribs for me!

Now, dig in!

DIG IN!

I’m just sayin’! Nighty night!

It’s been so much fun staying off the Interstates (when possible) and keeping to  the  back roads to get in touch with the towns like I remember doing when I’d  travel  Georgia with my father as a child in the 1950’s. He was the Public  Relations Photographer for the numerous Governors for the State of Georgia over 25 years. When  the current Governor told Dad to cover a specific  event, Dad went and, when possible, I went with him. I sat on the laps of  Governors and knew many important State Legislators; that’s how it was  being his daughter. But, the most   impressionable part of it all to me was traveling those  country roads. I’d sit quietly in his car, imagining what the life was like in the  house we’d just passed where the people were sitting on the porch next to the  old wringer washing machine; the lights inside  barely glowed and looked more like candlelight than like Edison’s invention.

It was  all mystical and alluring but unsettling all at the same time to this little  girl  who was as young as 5  on her first great adventure with her dad. Who were   these people? Where did they work so far away from civilization? Did they play  Checkers? What did those children do during those long, hot, South Georgia  summers? Did they have a swimming hole like we did or a lake?  A million and  one questions raced through my young mind formulating stories, lives yet all the while trying to keep a very low profile so my dad wouldn’t quiz me with words to spell  in rapid fire fashion. Not only was I supposed to know how to spell words at 5  like “kudzu” but also remember the history of it in our state, etc. Needless to say,  I wandered off into their world to avoid answering his questions wrong!

Yep, it was then that I fell in love with country roads and their stories. And, I  guess, it was the hope that the ambiance of the small town still existed almost  60 years later that sent me on the first Great Adventure in 2009. I’m happy to tell you all that it does exist. The rapid rate of technological advancement has NOT deleted this wonderful attribute of our country. Thank you, God!

It’s the back roads I take, the Mom and Pop places where I sleep at night, fill up my truck and buy my food that keep me feeling alive. No big chain stores for me… except for the Truck Stops  (aka Welcome Centers) when the Interstate can get me where I  really want to be mo’ faster so I can spend more time off ’em!

As the weather has been unpredictable with high winds, rain and snow, I really haven’t even been able to pop-up the pop-up as yet. You just can’t fold up a wet pop-up without ruining your bedding and probably the particle board underneath. So, it’s been motel-ville for me. Not what I wanted, but as a friend of mine reminded me, “It’s what’s NOT planned that’s the most fun!” Thanks Big Ed-2 (not to be confused with Big Ed-1, my bro).

So, it was the Mom and Pop in Chugwater, WY and the Mom and Pop near Bryce  Canyon that tell the stories of how families stick together for the greater good of  all. Nice stuff.

At Buffalo Lodge and Grill in Chugwater known to serve the famous “Chugwater  Chili” (307-422-3463), the owner of the facility had become too sick to run the  place so the family stepped up to the plate… not just immediate blood-type  family but in-laws and out-laws alike doing the cooking, cleaning, managing  and baby sitting for those working. There was the cutest little 4-year-old girl  chirping around the small lodge. She ran back and forth between her grandma  in the restaurant to her mom/or aunt behind the desk. I really liked seeing that  part of Americana that appears to be lost in the big cities like Atlanta.

At Harold’s Place (435-676-2350) near Bryce Canyon (at the junction of Hwy.   89 and 12), I met Christy (sp?/Kristi/Christie), the daughter of the Mom and Pop   establishment. She rattled off her duties in rapid fire succession… manager,   landscaper, gardener, security, cook, waitress, bottle washer and overall get ‘er   done lady. When a Brit came into the restaurant and asked her what they   served, she replied, “Food” in the driest of British humor that totally went over   the Brit’s head! It was all I could do to keep from throwing out one of my   spontaneous, turrets like guffaws at her wonderful, Utahns British dry humor.   Thanks, Christy/Kristi/Christie! And, also, a special shout out to  Marty/Mardi (again sp?)  who had recently been hired to help with the hotel part of Harold’s. She’s   following along with me on this Great Adventure. Christy/Kristi/Christie   doesn’t touch computers and doesn’t even want to because they lock up, freeze  up or just go crazy when she touches them. She leaves all that to her dad   (harold@color-country.net).

And, as in the past few days, I woke up to more snow! So, off I went from   Harold’s to explore Bryce Canyon. Boy, was I glad I’d gotten my Senior Lifetime   National Park Pass in Georgia for a whopping $10.o0! It saved me the $25.00   fee to see the small but impressive park.

It snowed all the way through yet another aptly named “Red Canyon” (this one  in Dixie National Forest) to get to an overcast, snowy Bryce. Here’s what it  looked like going through Red Canyon on the way to Bryce.

going through Red Canyon to Bryce

more Red Canyon

Now, finally, at the famous Bryce Canyon:

Bryce

Natural (?) Bridge

At Bryce Peak

coming back out of Bryce

coming out of Bryce 2

Now it was onto Zion National Park going west on Hwy. 9. I had no way of  knowing the magnificent views and white-knuckle driving waiting me around  the bend.

Entering Zion

no stopping for pix... this is on-the-go photo ops

right before the white knuckle driving started & battery in camera ran dry

Ava and I will be driving through Zion (going east this time) to camp there (if  space is available) on our way to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, Four  Corners and other points east on our way back to Atlanta. Even with bad weather, I saw lots of tents and bicyclers in Zion. They must all be young!

As for now, I’m settled in at Ava’s home for the next couple of weeks in Vegas- Baby. I will keep you posted on our adventures here and photos when they can be  published! Just kidding. We’re not all that rowdy any more! Really. Why don’t  you believe me?

See you all soon and thanks, again, for joining me on this Great Adventure. I am  so truly blessed to have this opportunity of combining the three things I love  most in life: my daughter, writing and travel.

Happy trails!

Having fallen in love with Utah in 2009 during my first Great Adventure, I wasn’t   sure that I could fall any deeper in love with the state. I was wrong. Today has  proven that. When I woke up to 4-5 inches of snow after sleeping in a log cabin  (at Red Canyon Lodge – http://www.redcanyonlodge.com) in my favorite spot in Utah (Red Canyon in the Ashley National  Forest within the Flaming Gorge Recreational Area), I knew today would be  magical. Just how magical it could get was what made my trip all worth while.

what a view US 40 South toward Vernal

It was STILL snowing! How cool! ME driving in the snow in UTAH! Wow! I  get all silly remembering the feeling I had when I took this picture.

Ashley Forest Hwy 191 building to crescendo

It was a bitter sweet departure… not wanting to leave but couldn’t wait to see what was in store for me, too.

leaving log cabin was so hard

What I’d forgotten about leaving Red Canyon via Vernal was the fabulous  panoramic view of Lucerne Valley before you arrive in Vernal. Right before.  Nothing prepares you for it as cameras only take a picture of what will remind  you (hopefully) of the magnificence you actually experienced. It fails in  comparison.

Lucerne Valley - it only got better

Lucerne Valley

more Lucerne Valley

and more Lucerne

almost done

Wasn't that worth it?

But, as my dear friend from high school, Bunnie, used to say, “God don’t make   no junk”. She was so right. She even made a needlepoint saying that and hung   it on the wall. Gosh, I miss her. God didn’t make no junk and I  was to see  more of His glory as the day went on with an amazing reminder at the end of  my day’s journey.

It was during this next stretch of Highway 191 that meandered through Ashley  National Forest again that caused me to, literally, hold my breath for most of  the drive in total awe and disbelief. I was transported into the most amazing  winter wonderland of pristine forest, snow, rock outcroppings and mountains  majesty. It was almost too much but just shy of it. Here. See if you can “feel” “it”.

Ashley Forest Hwy 191

Ashley Forest Hwy 191 building to crescendo

Trees heavy with snow -Hwy 191

magnificent views Hwy 191

I know these pictures can’t really show you but it does my heart good to have something of that stretch of back road that touched my heart and showed me yet another place where God lives. I saw a little ranch for sale nestled at the base of these mountains with a nice stream running through it. Drool. The only problem is that you’d have a very long drive to the store!

What could possibly top this? I’d NEVER seen that much snow. EVER.

Well, Hwy. 10 wasn’t too far off the mark.

Hwy 10 South

Ashley Forest Hwy 191 building to crescendo

Trees heavy with snow -Hwy 191

magnificent views Hwy 191

And, it was toward the end of this section of highway where the treat God had been  promising me all day long belonged.

Thank you, God, for a wonderful day.

And, when I was getting into my 7th hour of driving through fabulous  countryside on my way to Bryce Canyon for some hiking tomorrow, lo and  behold, I’m transported back into 1950. I gotta’ go back into this town on my  way to Vegas-Baby. Look a’ here.

the whole town looks like it never left the 1950's

Thanks for listening… and looking… and sharing this wonderful trip with me.   And, I promise I’ll get back to Wyoming when their weather is better! I guess  it was more important for me to be in Utah this trip.

Time to rest. Montana and I have a big day tomorrow in Bryce Canyon. Sleep well and happy trails.

out my front door

AND IT AIN’T STOPPED SNOWING YET! Guess I’ll mozy on down toward  Vegas-Baby. If weather isn’t too bad in Bryce Canyon, I’ll stay there tonight.

Oh, yeah. I think I’ve stumbled over the origin of the saying “land-a-goshen”.  Torrington, WY is in Goshen County. It’s just gotta’ be the source seein’ as  how they need a snow plow as big as a house! We could sure use that snow  plow here in Utah this morning!

Heading over to the weather site now to see what “they” are predicting for today. They sure missed the mark on THIS forecast!