Mastery – Tao Te Ching

Elkhorn Crest Trail, Baker County, OR.  [Photo Copyright Max Vollmer, Click to Enlarge]
The Master doesn’t seek fulfillment.                                                                 Not seeking, not expecting,                                                                                    She is present, and can welcome all things.

I Love Rock’n’Roll – Joan Jett & The Blackhearts

I first heard her track, Bad Reputation, that’s playing on the jukebox on a demo record from the early 80’s.  Nice leathers.  Hard to believe, she still does concerts.  Go to Full Screen and play it loud.

Langlitz Leathers, Portland, OR,  are made with goat leather, the best choice.  They are surprisingly heavy, supple, durable, and comfortable even in hot weather.  The jacket, pants, and the 100th Anniversary Harley  Davidson Road King, FLHRI, carried me through all kinds of weather including rain and snow.  Crazy fun.

Max and the customized 2003 Road King, FLHRI.   Corvallis, OR.  {Photo courtesy of Karl Vollmer, Click on  image to enlarge]
A true classic!  Joseph, OR.  2007

[Photo above copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on image to enlarge]

Refuge Hot Springs – Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge, Nevada

The Sheldon NWR sits on the Nevada side of the OR-NV border and is accessed by OR and NV Hwy 140.  The Reserve is vast and home to antelope, big horn sheep, elk, deer, mountain lion, wild horses and burros that were set loose years ago.  The Refuge Hot Springs was developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930’s by building a wall on the low side of the hot spring runoff.  The CCC built a shower house that is free and open to the public, fed by the hot spring water.  There is a great free campground surrounding the pool.  [All photos copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on any image to enlarge]

Refuge Hot Springs pool and shower room.

The road to the hot springs passes an active opal mine which offers tours in season.  There is also an old homestead with a stone barn and a corral with a fence woven with willow branches.

Stone barn and corral.

Home Away from Home – Chimayo, NM

It’s been my good fortune to enjoy the hospitality of my friends, Debbie and Liz, in Chimayo, NM, for the past nine years and be a guest in their adobe home along the Santa Cruz River.  Their home adjoins the Malpais, i.e. the BLM badlands where I hiked many an hour.  [All photos copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on any image to enlarge]

Debbie and Liz’s house, Chimayo, NM.
The guestroom.
The Malpais with cholla cactus in the foreground.

I’ve found many potsherds on the south facing slopes of this rock formation, typically with a white clay slip and black painted designs, but occasionally in red polychrome.  The nearby Santa Cruz river would have provided water for the small settlement.  The Jemez mountains are on the horizon.

The Malpais. Site of prehistoric settlement, 1000 to 1200 A.D.

Historic Hispanic Churches of Southern Colorado and Northern New Mexico

There are many in this land that was part of Catholic Mexico until the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and The Gadsden Purchase of 1854 brought what is now part of Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona into the U.S.

The Santuario de Chimayo dates from 1816.  It sits on the site of a natural spring believed to have healing properties by native people before the arrival of the Spanish.  Since the early 1800’s the Catholic faithful have come here seeking miraculous cures.  Over 300,000 from all over the world make the pilgrimage to the Santuario de Chimayo  each year during Holy Week, many walking or even crawling on hands and knees from as far away as Santa Fe, NM.

[All photos copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on any image to enlarge]

The Santuario de Chimayo.
Interior of Santuario de Chimayo with worn and cracked, natural clay floor, original hand painted retablos, and vigas supportd by carved corbels.

Present day Our Lady of Guadalupe church in Conejas, CO, known as the oldest Catholic church in Colorado, sits on the site of an 1863 adobe church.  Spanish families with centuries of occupation in the San Luis Valley have  endowed the church with beautiful stained glass windows, carved wooden stations of the cross, and a handmade altar, all made by local craftspeople.

Our Lady of Guadalupe church, Conejos, CO.
Interior of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Conejos, CO.
Window in Our Lady of Guadalupe, Conejos, CO.
In memory of Teodoro and Epimenia Lobato, in Our Lady of Guadalupe Church.
Our Lady of Guadalupe, Conejos, CO.
Offered by the family of Josephita Maestas in memory of her husband, Francisco.

The Sangre de Christo church sits on a high hill overlooking the tiny town of San Luis, CO.  On the path up to the church are fourteen bronzes depicting the Catholic “stations of the cross” that were donated by a wealthy couple in Santa Fe, NM, who made the annual Easter pilgrimage to the church for 25 years.

Sangre de Christo church sits on top of a hill overlooking the tiny town of San Luis, CO.
Bronze Station of the Cross on the path leading up to Sangre de Christo church.
San Luis, CO, from the hill top location of the Sangre de Christo church.  the mountains on the horizon are the Sangre de Christo’s.

The San Francisco de Asis adobe church in Rancho de Taos, NM, was constructed between 1772 and 1816.  It has become famous as the subject of several paintings from the 1930’s by Georgia O’Keefe.  Two examples of O’Keefe’s depiction of the church, from the front and rear, are included following my photograph.

San Francisco de Asis church in Rancho de Taos, made famous by Georgia O’Keefe in her paintings.
Georgia O’Keefe’s “Rancho Church.”
O’Keefe’s study of the rear of the San Francisco de Asis adobe church.

Basin and Range – Nevada

This is what it looks like on US Hwy 50, “The Loneliest Road in America” across Nevada.  Actually, there are longer, emptier stretches elsewhere in the state.  US Hwy 93 south from Majors Place to Pioche, NV, is one of them.  The open road beckons.  [All photos copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on any image to enlarge]

Morning, Spring 2024.
Evening, Fall 2024.

Million Dollar Highway – Revisited

My brother, Terry, recently brought my attention back to a 25 mile stretch of highway, U.S. Route 550, from Silverton, CO, to Ouray, CO, that I traveled and photographed in the Fall of 2012.  The name, Million Dollar Highway, refers to the rumored cost of $1,000,000 per mile to build it in the 1920’s when a dollar bought a lot more than it does now.  https://thenatureseeker.com/million-dollar-highway/  [All photos copyright symbol Max Vollmer, Click on any image to enlarge]

Red Mountain, viewed from U.S. Hwy 550 from Durango, CO, to Silverton, CO.
Former Yankee Girl Mine, north slopes of Red Mountain.
U.S. 550 downhill to Ouray, CO.
Ouray, CO, from descent along U.S. Hwy 550.

The route was originally surveyed and built as a wagon road in the 1880’s to carry incredibly rich silver ore from the Yankee Girl Mine located on the north slope of Red Mountain down to the smelter.  While narrow gauge railroads were built to serve mines all over the Colorado Rockies in the late 19th century, defying gravity and the elements to extract gold and silver, the geography surrounding the Yankee Girl defied the best railroad surveyors and engineers of the day and no tracks were ever laid

I drove the high altitude 25 mile stretch, 11,000 ft. at the highest, from Silverton to Ouray behind a Colorado Highway Patrol cruiser, keeping me from being overly aggressive.  The speed limit was, and no doubt still is, 25 mph because of the steep grades and narrow pavement with no guardrails.