Branbury State Park
Location/occasion: Late summer of 1998, Branbury State Park, Vt., – between Brandon and Middlebury, in case you’re curious, or have ever been there. Car camping.
Husband: bad knees, needs electricity or at least a car battery to run the machine to help him breathe at night, but eager to see (and show the kids) the night sky without much light pollution, scared of heights, a worrier and a careful planner.
Me: happy to assure husband I will “be careful†… no clue what that means. Generally my first thought when something goes wrong is, “What will I tell Lew?â€
Kids: 10 and 12. Not the least bit scared of heights. Quite agile.
I think we stayed there two or three nights. Nope, must’ve been just two; the car battery couldn’t last three. One evening, husband explained over dinner (with a Styrofoam plate) what a galaxy is and why the stars you see are all in our galaxy and in all different directions, but the Milky Way IS our galaxy and appears as a band in the sky. (“How could a star over there be “in†the Milky Way?†Thinking back to the thick plate helped.) Then he had us stay up until it was late enough and dark enough to see the “teapot†constellation (which spews steam which looks like it becomes the Milky Way (which I hadn’t seen as well we could that night at any point since I was a kid in Western Mass.) and ALSO another galaxy (the only thing we could see which wasn’t in our galaxy) with the naked eye and also through the telescope he had brought. Great science lesson. (Is this why neither of them has any interest in science?)
This was the next night or the previous night. I noticed the rangers were leading a “sunset walk†to a nearby outlook at say, 6:30PM. I wanted to go in the worst way, and the girls were interested too. Bad knees/scared of heights husband couldn’t come. “Be careful. Do you have everything you need? Don’t let them … †Of course, of course, of course not. (It must be safe; the rangers are leading it.) We got there … what, a few minutes early? No, must’ve been a few minutes late? In any case, no one was there. But there was only one place it could be; Cat had been there before. So we started the climb. The first part involved a lot of boulder scrambling. I figured we’d meet the ranger and the group on the way up. Then there were choices and Cat had crossed that stream, gone through that meadow – but the other way was the only one reasonable way to a sunset view.
We finally got to the place where you could duck under just a few bushes and be on an outlook. I can’t remember – was it a 45 minute climb? I don’t think it was over an hour. I hadn’t expected it to be more than a half-hour because I knew when the sun would set, and I figured the rangers would have planned for us to get there in time for the moment of sunset, let us admire it for a few minutes because isn’t it always best afterwards? and then head us back down, not wanting us to be hiking in the dark. We must have been just behind the group the whole time. We got on to the ledge/rocky outcropping. The view was just incredible – over 180 degrees with the color going from orange to deep blue; the layers of mountains in the distance each a different shade … just gorgeous. (“It’s nice to be here without Lew worrying the girls will fall off. Hey, if we cross to that ledge we would be able to see better. Good thing Lew isn’t here to be freaking out. It’s really quite safe – steep but not unstable.â€) It started to rain a bit, then stopped. People appeared from the other direction than I expected – without a ranger – we chatted for a bit and they moved on. It started to rain again.
“Hmm. The ranger group still hasn’t come back and now that rock we crossed is wet and slippery. It must be closer back to the campground in the other direction – where those folks came from. It would be a bad idea to go back the way we came – we’d have to go up and over this bit and there were some pretty steep places other places … and we don’t have a flashlight.â€
I’m not at all sure that we ever found the right downward trail. If we did, we lost it several times. It wasn’t rocky and steep – I was right about that. It was borderline swampy. It didn’t seem like it could get dark so fast but of course, we were no longer on a rocky outcropping. And where there had been a nice breeze before, now there were amazing mosquitoes. (Are you wondering about bug stuff? Look, we didn’t bring food, flashlights, or rain gear, you think I thought of bug stuff?) We could hear people in the campground, but a very different part of the campground, and we didn’t get to it for a very long time. I couldn’t see my watch, so I don’t know how long.
At some point the worry shifted from “Will we get back ok?†to “What will my frantic husband do?†Then the realization hit that he – bad knees and all – would start up after us, the way we weren’t going down. Ultimately we did get back, and first I tried to find the rangers who (I was sure) would help me retrieve my husband. That’s when I found out that the ranger-led sunset hike had been the previous week (which also explained why the hike started as late as it had … sunset had gotten noticeably earlier since then). And no, rangers do not hunt for missing husbands.
I find it remarkable that the man you descibe here (I’m glad Diane doesn’t call me “husband”) allowed his sixteen year old daugther to travel to Nicaragua with some kid she met in high school. Most people worry and clamp down, but Lew worries and then says, “What the hell?” It occurs to me that I’m the opposite. I say what the hell and then I worry.
I notice that, though you think you leave Lew behind, he’s always with you.
Comment by michael — October 22, 2006 @ 7:45 am
Sounds right up the canoeguys’ alley, hiking to a distant overlook to see the sunset — pseudo-etymology: sun (light); set (disappear) — without a flashlight … These stories often end up differently and make the news. Glad yours did not, though it made a fine blog entry.
And as to explaining the universe, it seems there’s no telling whether parental enthusiasm will result in inspiration or ridicule, though the actual and lasting effects may not be known for decades, while the psychological counterpart to Newton’s third law plays itself out.
Comment by adam — October 22, 2006 @ 8:58 am
No, he waited until it was getting pretty dark down below — around the time we left the still-light outcropping — and only went about half-way up before he turned back the way he had come. At least he had a flashlight. (But it did a number on his knees. He never even went car camping again.) I only went 1/4 of the way up after him — still without a flashlight, if I recall — before I decided it was not useful. He returned less than 20 minutes after that.
Comment by Jennifer — October 22, 2006 @ 9:00 am
I don’t know if you know how funny that picture is. “Husband” climbs up after his dear lost family but quickly gives up, and La Madre takes off after “bad knees, ” but decides after a few steps she’s searched enough.
Comment by michael — October 22, 2006 @ 9:21 am
Thanks a lot! No, about half-way was the choice point for another trail, so he had to quit then — we might have been on either trail; and by the time I got one-quarter of the way I realized I had no idea whether he had gone all the way around and would start climbing again, searching for me.
Comment by Jennifer — October 22, 2006 @ 3:40 pm
I definitely will not show that chilling story to Mrs Rakkity! She doesn’t need to be reminded about the times I’ve returned late from a hike. Nor do I. As for hiking without a flashlight. No no non nyet.
Comment by rakkity — October 23, 2006 @ 9:46 am
“Steam” from the teapot. Great to be able to see the Milky Way, which is hard to do in the eastern US. I’m looking forward to being out under less light-polluted skies in the west, where I can see the “steam” more often than I do now. like this:
http://www.flandrau.org/skywatcherimages/MilkyWay_Sept1_930PM_2.jpg
Comment by rakkity — October 23, 2006 @ 11:15 am
‘Twill sound over-decadent (and I can only plead the uniqueness of the instance), but perhaps my best “steam” viewing ever was floating in the deck pool of the St. John peninsula villa where we were staying with some friends for our 10th wedding anniversary. Wee hours, past moonset, nary a wisp of cloud, and the place had a better than 180-degree view E-W, and all the way to the southern horizon (the day we arrived we had moon rising above one horizon and the setting sun just above the other — only time in my life I can recall both orbs seen simultaneously).
Probably better/clearer (that pesky sea humidity) but perhaps not as memorably romantically stunning, was stopping during a late-night drive through the malpais (basalt desert badlands) of east/central New Mexico — no cilization for a hundred miles in any direction. Mountains far west and far east, White Sands missile testing range south. Wow.
Comment by adam — October 23, 2006 @ 11:38 am
Wow is right! That’s one of the best places to view the sky. I’ve gazed into the Milky Way many times from the NM deserts, mostly at the site of the Very Large Array in the Plains of Augustine, west of Socorro (when I went to observe at radio wavelengths). The stars were always so thickly strewn it was hard to pick out the constellations.
Comment by rakkity — October 23, 2006 @ 4:18 pm