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Sheep Rock at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument in Oregon (top) and Goldendale Observatory State Park in Washington. (National Park Service, State of Washington)
More interesting is what searchers have found: the remnants of at least half a dozen other plane wrecks. In fact, according to press accounts, in the past 50 years, more than 150 planes have been lost in the Nevada wilds.
The search for Fossett has been likened to a search for a needle in a haystack, but he is not alone. A search in Alaska was once described as trying to find "a needle in 10,000 haystacks." Alaska, which has swallowed its share of the prominent, including powerful Democratic congressman Hale Boggs, has been likened to the Bermuda Triangle for all the planes and ships that have gone missing. Nevada may be the Lower 48's new Bermuda Triangle. Until the Fossett search, most of us had no idea that so many downed planes simply vanished. No wonder tipsters in the Fossett search have included psychics. (Not to mention Amazon Mechanical Turk and Google Earth.)
With all the urban West's worries about population growth, sprawl, density, and mass transit, it's easy to forget that much of the region is just plain empty. Of people. Incidents like Fossett's are a reminder that this land — of Great Basins, Great Deserts, the Great Northwest, and the Last Frontier — is capable of swallowing you whole.
Last week, I was in Oregon, a state that has gobbled its fair share. Last winter there were two cases that got national media attention.
The first was the disappearance of CNet's James Kim, who took a wrong turn over the Thanksgiving holiday while driving from Seattle to San Francisco and died hiking out of the snow-bound woods of the Coast Range while trying to save his family (who were found alive).
Then there were the winter climbers on Mount Hood, one injured, who called out on his cell phone from a snow cave near the summit. His frozen body was recovered, but his two companions disappeared and have yet to be found. While I was at Mount Hood last week, the search for their bodies was continuing, but no luck.
This summer, cable TV featured the disappearance of a 76-year-old woman in the rugged canyons of the Wallowa Mountains of Eastern Oregon. Somewhat inexplicably, she was found alive late last week and in relatively good shape. Which reminds me of how people can be like eggs: incredibly fragile, but sometimes amazingly durable.
My companion and I spent most of our time in Eastern Oregon. We traveled from the Columbia Gorge to Mount Hood, down across the Warm Springs Reservation into John Day country — which ought to more properly be called John Wayne country given the fetish for framed Duke portraits in hotels and diners. But it's easy to see why a kind of instinctive conservatism would take root in areas like this, where urban problems seem so remote and cell phones and wi-fi are part of a different century. Here you can still explore backroads and small towns that have no chain stores or gas stations. The woman at the diner can take your order for chicken fried steak and pump your gas.
In these landscapes of ancient basins and ranges, sage desert, and tangled junipers that eke out an existence on rocky cliffs, one feels an aloneness that gives you strength, a scale that keeps you humble, and a silence that can keep you to yourself.
At Sheep Rock, one section of three-part John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, you get the history of the incredible rim rock country that surrounds you, filled with unprecedented layers of fossils going back 40 million years. They preserve evidence of animals you've never heard of and reflect scales of time you cannot comprehend. You try and imagine miniature horses, giant tigers, proto-elephants, and dog-bears in a landscape of sycamores and dawn redwoods — a fantasy world that contrasts sharply with the barren, beautiful blue-green badlands around you. You learn that these lands became dry like this when the Cascade range grew up and blocked the rains, all in the blink of a geologic eye. And that was one of the more recent developments.
Slow days of dry country hiking, no connection with the outside world, isolated and sprawling ranches, and a landscape that holds the graves of 40 millions years worth of jungles, grasslands, forests, swamps, and the thousands of species that inhabited them: In the West, time can swallow you, too.
And then the skies. Endless blue by day. Standing on Mount Hood, you can see the tide of gray clouds flow in from the Pacific and cover the lower elevations. But along the Cascade crest, an invisible barrier stops the blanket of gray. To the east, the sun shines and the golden pelt of distant grasslands is just visible. To the west are the clouds that make the wetside green.
Over on the dry side, just north of the Columbia Gorge in Goldendale, Wash., Goldendale Observatory State Park offers late-night programs and looks at the sky. Night is different in the interior where no city lights erase the Milky Way. On this night in early September, the sky was crystal clear, the moon and sun were down, and the stars were spattered like Jackson Pollock's paints on black canvas, an abstract open to interpretation. The constellations, save the dippers, never make sense to me, but they seemed almost irrelevant except as locators of other phenomenon.
We looked through the telescope to see a star cluster in the constellation Hercules. To the naked eye, it was at best a small smudge. It turned out to be a clump of a million stars called the Great Globular Cluster. One of the very first messages to extraterrestrial life was broadcast in its direction. We were told such clusters are widely distributed and form a kind of halo around our galaxy.
We saw the planet Jupiter hanging brightly in the southern sky and through the lens spotted two of its many moons, Io and Europa. In the constellation Lyra, we saw an exploded star — a planetary nebula — that has left a gas ring with a dark center. It resembled a sugar doughnut. We saw a blue binary star that rotates around its yellow twin. Every square inch of sky was filled with grand bodies and events. Through a telescope, the heavens resemble swamp water through a microscope, both teeming with activity.
The 40 million years of geological history under our feet is dwarfed by the billions and trillions of galactic stories above our heads. In the West, big skies can swallow you, too.
Funny how a trip through the Big Empty leaves you feeling full.
You've made me want to speed off into the Big Empty--an odyssey that I missed this summer. A reminder as well of Richard White's thesis that the West is the most urbanized region of the country. A weird juxtaposition, urban Northwesterners and the Big Empty, that somehow hangs together.
I am thankful there is no Tri Cities and no Spokane in eastern Oregon. There is, instead, a heartbreaking empty beauty that we should cherish. Bend/Redmond is working away at the center/west but, further east, there is still county after county from Interstate 84 to (at least) Winnemucca (and beyond as Knute comments) that is very, very sparsely inhabited and may stay that way for a long time. There is little economic value to the land but the cancer of 10 acre "farms" and vacation homes seems to be irresistible.
Here's something conceptual I'm trying to understand: with the vast emptiness that's out there, why the fanatical insistence on forcing people to live in postage-stamp-sized cubicles within rigidly defined geographic limits?
Knute you are right. City people get lost, hurt and killed when they get off the pavement. Regular, too. They do everything they read about, whistles, bells, emergency tube tents, gorp, compass and damn if the bear doesn't eat them anyway. Breaks your heart. Snakes. Yellowjackets. Hornets. Scorpions. Poison Ivy. Errant Kalishnikov rounds. Killer north winds. Avalanches. Pissed off mules. Power outages. Crappy cell reception. Greasy spoons. Rednecks on meth. Or a local sees your frogbelly white skin and drools like a coyote. "Oh, yeah, mister, good well, 50 gallons a minute and hardly any arsenic at all. Oh, and it's right on the bus line, too."
Is it Thursday? One day is as good as the next, and they all seem about the same to me. Besides...I'm not clever enough to be sarcastic...Sardonic, maybe, and then only after eating undercooked pork or overcooked anything else and reading the posts at Horsesass.org, but not sarcastic.
Report a violationPosted by: pietrojackson on Sep 12, 2007 6:06 PM