Journal
of our trip |
Robert
Leverett |
Aug
09, 2006 11:49 PDT |
Chronicles of western trip of Monica and Bob Leverett:
Monica and I would like to share our recent journey to the Rocky
Mountain West with our companion Ents (now all 133 of you). We
will,
hopefully, accomplish our task through a series of essays spaced
several
days apart that follow our trip, day by day. In our description,
we will
deal with landscape features, fauna and flora, historical and
cultural
spots, some exceptional books we bought, and most significantly,
our
particular experiences and impressions along the way. It will be
our
impressions that drive the narrative. We will profile our route,
the
major rivers, plateaus, mountain ranges, and valleys that we
paralleled
or crossed, the other geological features we encountered, and
but of
course, the forests and trees. And again, we will concentrate on
our
individual impressions and reactions to what we saw. Because,
beyond the
physical composition of the land, there is a psychic component
to places
that Monica and I often explore. This component has no
particular shape
or purpose. The psychic component enters as impressions that we
get that
take on many forms. I’m probably treading in dangerous waters
here to
bring in a non-physical element, but something compels me to
broach the
subject and to explore it at least to a degree. For instance,
the impact
of Devil’s Tower in Wyoming (or the Indian name of Bear Lodge
as
preferred by Monica and now me) on both of us was more powerful
than the
feeling we got at any other location. No, we didn’t sense any
alien
presence at the Lodge, but the impact of this incredible
geological
formation was substantial, and for us, transcended its purely
physical
form. What might be the explanation? Both of us have our ideas
on the
role of the psychic. Perhaps others of you will be willing to
enter the
discussion at appropriate points.
I should point out at the beginning that our trip was a
whirlwind car
event that took 18 days from July 21 through Aug 7. Not all days
were
especially significant. So the narrative will not be equally
distributed
across the days. Having said this, I hope the whirlwind trip was
the
last of its kind for us. We both agree that the 6,000 miles we
covered
should have taken 5, if not 6, weeks to remotely do justice to
all we
saw. But alas, I didn’t have the time.
In terms of division of labor, my job was to plan the trip. I
unabashedly proclaim myself an expert at trip planning. I pore
over
maps, and employing Excel, calculate alternative routes with
times,
expenses, etc. I pride myself at putting together an itinerary
with
military precision. Of course, it isn’t followed, but the
initial
planning is there. However, Monica does the car packing. Her
sense of
spatial efficiency exceeds mine. I get impatient and start
stuffing and
cramming – not a good strategy for a long trip. I am envious
of how she
so carefully puts ample thought into what we will need to
quickly
access, while on the road. I just want to hit the road. So, for
the
packing phase, I supply the muscle and she supplies the brains.
That’s
okay. I was well trained by my dear deceased first wife Jani,
who was
also a superb packer. The ladies planning and putting stuff into
the
containers and arranging and me doing the heavy lifting works
best.
In terms of our itinerary, we had a busy schedule planned. We
intended
to make stops at a couple or three mid-western tall tree sites,
including Goll Woods in Ohio, several mixed and tall grass
prairie
sites, and at least two wildlife refuges before reaching our
ultimate
destination - the Rocky Mountains, where we have friends and
relatives
and an abundance of great scenic sites to visit. It will become
abundantly clear that our predilection is nature. It is true
that we
also like historical and cultural sites and events - provided
they are
not in congested areas. From the start, we mutually agreed that
dense
urban areas were to be avoided. So, with our car fully packed,
on the
morning of July 21, Monica and I were set to begin our westward
trek.
Well I’ve given enough of the preliminary stuff. So, here we
go with day
#1. Oh yes, I apologize in advance for the inevitable
grammatical goofs
that I know that I'm going to make. I’m a miserable failure at
catching
my own writing mistakes.
Bob
Day #1:
At 10:00AM, we officially began our journey by immediately
stopping in
Northampton, Mass. Monica needed her large coffee latte to go.
Unfortunately, the latte machine was down and that spelled
trouble for
me. An early morning Monica without a large latte is to be
approached
with extreme caution. Like watermelon for me, lattes are for her
not a
luxury, but a necessity of life. One can exist latteless for
only so
long (more on this story to come). However, making the best of
the
situation, we took I91 south to connect with I90. We headed west
across
the Berkshires. We chose the I90 Mass Pike route instead of a
slightly
quicker route following I91 south to Hartford and then west
across I84.
Our planned route was always intended to keep us in scenic
country as
much as possible and away from population centers. With both of
us,
topographical and botanical features of the land rank high.
However,
Monica is a birder and a good one. She was trained by the best.
Serious
birders maintain life lists of what they see and will literally
go
around the world to bag another bird. Monica is not that
fanatical, but
she is always on the lookout for a new species. If she spots
one, I’d
better find a way to get the car stopped – or……However, I
completely
rely on her to identify interesting avian life along the way and
profess
a growing interest in birding. In terms of balance, and to be
expected,
I am the principal tree spotter on our trips. We are both
equally into
wild flowers, although I still hold a slight advantage on here
in terms
of quick identification. My edge is fast disappearing. But
birds, trees,
flowers, landforms, whatever, it is a good partnership that we
have.
With due consideration for stop-offs along the way, the true
focus of
our trip was in the western lands, and from the outset, I had
images of
snow-capped peaks dancing in my head. On earlier western
excursions,
this was such a preoccupation that I robbed myself of many
pleasurable
sights along the route. However, I do like to absorb the essence
of the
changing landscape and just to value the experience of
traveling. I like
to greet each mountain range, each valley, each river, etc. as
we go. Oh
yes, and a quest of mine on these trips is a search for good
breakfasts.
One can find good breakfasts in the rural South, and to a lesser
extent
the West, but good breakfasts in the Northeast are scare as
hen’s teeth.
It has to do with the insane pace of life that Northeasterners
maintain.
So with this introduction, our trip description will begin in
the
Connecticut River Valley, where Monica and I live.
Although, I mention the Connecticut River Valley frequently in
my tree
e-mails, there is a lot more to the valley to explore than just
its
abundance of fine trees. There is geology, scenery, history, and
culture
– too much for this venue, so I’ll deal with the landscape.
The
Connecticut River valley is technically a rift valley that dates
from
the time of the ancestral Atlantic Ocean. An old volcanic seam
runs up
the valley that has left a low mountain chain characterized by
basalt.
The Mount Tom and Holyoke Ranges are locally famous and provide
relief
to the landscape. The volcanic features rise between 600 and
1000 feet
above the valley floor. The scenery is much more striking than
the
modest elevations would suggest. From atop Mount Holyoke, famous
Hudson
River School of Art painter Thomas Cole did his famous painting
of the
Oxbow. The Mount Tom and Holyoke Ranges were also the
destination of
many a New Yorker during the 1800s and early 1900s.
In terms of general feelings, antiquity is written across the
face of
the land. One senses the passage of the eons, yet it also is
marked by
much more recent geological events. The Valley has the
unmistakable
stamp of the most recent ice age, and indeed, the valley held
historic
Lake Hitchcock from 15,000 to about 12,000 years ago. At its
height,
the lake stretched from St. Johnsbury, VT all the way to Rocky
Hill, CT,
a distance of around 200 miles. The lake was up to 12 miles wide
in
places and varied in depth, up to about 150 feet. An excellent
description of Lake Hitchcock can be found at:
http://www.bio.umass.edu/biology/conn.river/hitchcock.html.
The Connecticut River, itself, is a modern geological feature,
dating
back about 11,000 years. It has a length of 405 miles. Its
starting
elevation is 2660 feet and it discharges water into the Long
Island
Sound at an average rate of 19,600 cubic feet per second. The
Connecticut is New England’s largest and longest river and
establishes
the character of the Connecticut River Valley, which in its
lower
reaches, is New England’s richest agricultural region. The
river follows
an ancient rift valley that separates the modern day Berkshire
mountains
to the west from the Pelham Hills to the east. The uplifts are
the
remains of mountains that were once far higher, perhaps as high
as the
Himalayas.
Leaving the valley domain, as Monica and I headed westward on
I90, as we
passed, we said goodbye to Westfield, the Whip City, made famous
for its
manufacture of whips for stagecoaches. My first wife Jani’s
cowboy
stepfather was well aware of Whip City. I recall learning of
that in the
1960s. He had actually ordered whips from the Westfield company
when
still in business. I periodically encounter such connections and
they
remind me of an America that has largely passed. After
Westfield, one
enters the Berkshire country. By formal name, one refers to the
Berkshires as the Berkshire Hills. However, they often represent
more of
a plateau region and distinct hills. The Berkshires only appear
in
relief as mountains in the river gorges and valleys, notably the
Deerfield, Hoosic, Housatonic, Westfield, and Swift Rivers.
Where these
rivers cut deep into the ancient rocks, the Berkshires take on
the
relief of mountains, and as has been reported so many times, it
is in
the mountain ravines that the tallest trees in Massachusetts are
found.
The relief is generally 500 to about 900 feet. Occasionally,
changes of
1000 to 1300 vertical feet occur.
Entering the eastern edge of the Berkshires, we slowly climbed
to their
crest on I90. The climb remains gentle. The elevation changes
from about
200 feet at Westfield to eventually reach 1724 feet at the high
point.
I90 does not reach a greater altitude until Oacoma, South Dakota
is
reached at an altitude of 1729 feet. Oacoma is near Chamberlain
on the
western side of the Missouri River. There is about a 1600-mile
swath of
land in between. When I pass over the high point in
Massachusetts, I
always puzzle over the highway engineers who were interested in
posting
the elevations along I90. It is nice to feel that there are
kindred
spirits out there in terms of interest in landforms. One sees a
decreasing number of the elevation signs as the interests of
people
traveling the Interstates stray farther and farther from any
curiosity
whatsoever about the natural features of the land.
Passing over the Berkshires, we descended into the Housatonic
River
Valley. The Housatonic heads in the Berkshire-Taconic region and
then
flows south into Long Island Sound. Crossing the Housatonic
Valley,
the ancestral home of the Mohican Indians, we ascend the
Taconics,
which form the border between Massachusetts and New York.
It is in the Taconics that we find Mount Greylock,
Massachusett’s
highest peak (3,487 ft). Most Massachusetts natives do not make
a
distinction between the Berkshires and Taconics, but they are
geologically different mountains. The geological history of
these two
ranges is complex and tortured. Try as I may, I can’t seem to
draw
coherent pictures in my mind of the march of these geological
processes
that gave them their current shapes except as embodied in the
idea of
building up and wearing down. Of course, I get that general
idea, but
300 to 350 million years produce a lot of specifics that have to
be
ignored to go from then to now. Geology is a fascinating science
and I
think one that requires a particular talent of visualization of
complex
processes acting over time.
As one crosses the Housatonic Valley, one enters the second
significant
mountain range of Massachusetts – the Taconics. Fore the most
part, they
appear much more mountainous than the Berkshires. They form the
border
with New York. Thereafter, the Taconics flatten out into a broad
plateau-like region. As a distinct mountain range, the Taconics
rise
just south of Rutland Vermont and peter out along the
Connecticut-New
York border. Their high point is Mount Equinox near Manchester
VT at
3,864 feet above sea level. At that point their uplift is an
impressive
3,000 feet above the surrounding lowlands. In the Northeast, one
reads
about the White Mountains, the Greens, the Adirondacks, the
Berkshires,
etc, but the general public is seldom aware of the Taconics as a
distinct range.
Past their high points along the Mass-New York border , the
Taconic
country in New York is very spacious and pleasant. It seems
almost
devoid of people, but the human imprint is seen in the
attractive blend
of fields and forested hills. The region is interlaced with
Dutch names.
State Route 22 that parallels the high part of the Taconics was
once
known as the Milky Way because of the abundance of dairy farms.
One then
descends from the Taconic uplands into the valley of the Hudson
River,
the second significant river of our journey.
The Hudson is 279 miles long. It has its origin at Lake Tear of
the
Clouds in the Adirondacks at 4293 feet. Its average discharge at
this
mouth is about 21,000 cubic feet per second. The Hudson is
incredibly
scenic and is gradually being restored from a state of extreme
pollution. It is a national scenic treasure and it has an
abundance of
great cottonwoods along its banks that one sees from the
bridges. Oh how
tempting they are. One day…….
West of Albany, we pass through an area of pine plains – pitch
pines to
be precise. They never cease to impress, but the elimination of
fire is
gradually leading to a succession to hardwoods. In my mind this
is
unfortunate. Pine plains can be fascinating places. However, I
have been
remiss in not exploring the remnant. There are many very mature
pitch
pines in the barrens and somewhere in there, there may be a
champion.
From near Schenectady, NY, we turned southwest, heading down I88
toward
Binghamton, NY. I88 passes across another plateau west of the
New York
Catskills. The whole region is technically the Allegheny Plateau
– a
vast area, with the Catskills being the most prominent part of
the
plateau. The Catskills are technically not part of the
Appalachian chain
that emerges from Pennsylvania and New Jersey, although it is
usually
though of as such. Neither is the Poconos, for that matter,
which are
also part of the Allegheny plateau. The relief of the Catskills
and
Poconos is mostly from water erosion as oppose to the aftermath
of
mountain building processes (If I get too feisty and overstep my
bounds
on these geological descriptions, our geologist webmaster Ed
Frank is
invited in to straighten things out.)
Heading southwest on the I86 corridor of New York, one is struck
by the
bucolic, pleasant nature of the landscape. I88 has not yet
become
clogged with obnoxious parade of truck traffic the way that I80
has. In
fact, I88 gives little hint of the congestion that one must
endure in
the southeastern portion of the Empire State, which leads me to
a brief
digression. I have often marveled at how much open space New
York state
has and how varied the character of the state is. What is called
upstate
New York by natives goes against the images held by outsiders of
overall
character of New York State. In the eyes of nonresidents, New
York, like
Massachusetts, is often identified with its largest city. If you
say you
are from Massachusetts, people from other geographical regions
assume
Boston or a facsimile thereof. Personally, I loathe being
identified
with Boston or any big city. I'm sure many upstate New Yorkers
feel the
same way about being associated with the big apple. But it is an
identification that follows from our having become largely a
nation of
city slickers. I suppose that my friend Lee Frelich’s view of
population
containment in urban areas is the only practical one to keep our
species
from overwhelming the land, but despite where I currently live,
I’m not
a city person.
Toward the southern end of I86, we entered the domain of our
third great
eastern river, the Susquehanna. In authoritative descriptions,
the
Susquehanna is listed as 410 miles in length, beginning at
Otsego Lake
near Cooperstown NY, at an elevation of a modest 1,180 feet. The
discharge of the Susquehanna is a substantial 40,080 cubic feet
per
second, making it the 16th largest river in the U.S. The
Susquehanna
exits at Chesapeake Bay. The Susquehanna has substantially more
volume
than either the Connecticut or Hudson Rivers. One might not
guess this
fact crossing the lower Hudson River. Because of the tidal
backup, the
width of the Hudson is substantial and makes the river’s
volume appear
much greater than it actually is. It is also dredged. I know
very little
about the Susquehanna other than to mutter its name when I cross
it.
However, I suspect that it has some fabulous flood plain forests
along
much of its length with huge cottonwoods and sycamores.
From I88, we intersected with I86 at Binghamton in southern New
York
and from there continued westward across the broad Allegheny
Plateau.
Along much of its length, I88 which is also called the Southern
Tier
Expressway, is a vision of loveliness. The countryside becomes
rolling
with an exquiste blend of sky, forested ridges mixed with open
fields.
There is a spacious feeling to this country that is reminiscent
of
places far to the West. One passes through towns with familiar
names
like Corning, NY, as in Corning Glassware. One place along the
route
that has special significance for me is Elmira NY. That is the
home of
the late psychic Jane Roberts who authored the Seth Material –
a study
obsession of mine and hint to my understanding of the source of
the
nostalgic feelings that I sometimes get.
At Salamanca, we passed through the Seneca Reservation dating
back to a
1794 treaty. The town of Salamanca is actually leased from the
Seneca
Indians, a member of the Iroquois Confederacy and the largest of
the
original 5 nations. The Senecas were considered to be the
keepers of the
western gate and the Mohawks, the keepers of the eastern gate.
The
Senecas were the primary enemies of the Hurons, another
historically
powerful agricultural tribe, and drove them out of western New
York.
Interestingly, Salamanca’s lease with the Seneca runs out in
2030. It
will be interesting to see what happens then. Monica wanted to
drive
through the town to see what it looked like. It was pleasant and
historic looking, which fits its role as a junction of four
major
railroads. But, presently, only 13% of the residents of
Salamanca are
listed as Native American. Still, the Native American imprint is
there.
The town has a distinctly Indian feeling to it. I had a slightly
nostalgic feeling while driving through the town. I didn't
mention it to
Monica, sense it was ephemeral. More on nostalgic feelings in
the
future. BTW, “The current name is derived from a major
investor in the
Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, the Spanish marquis Don
José de
Salamanca, which in turn took his name from the city of
Salamanca in
Spain.”
As dusk set in on Monica and me on our first day westward, we
worked
hard to find a decent motel in what is basically a large
vacation land
east of Lake Erie. The small New York lakes in the southwestern
part of
New York are surrounded by vacationers. Motel prices, by my
standards
are high, but Monica was very tired. She had been nursing a
cold, so I
finally stopped at a Holiday Inn out of desperation. Ouch! I
instantly
became $104 poorer. Much farther west, I knew that I would
encounter
motels charging from an occasional $35 to a more common $45 to
$60 per
night, $104 seemed like I was investing in the darned place. I
just
wanted to sleep there. However, I was also cognizant of the
exorbitant
rates that I would have had to pay in virtually any large city,
so I
counted my blessings and we both slept soundly, ending day #1 of
our
journey.
Robert T. Leverett
Cofounder, Eastern Native Tree Society
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