The May trip was awesome. First 3 days in Zion, 1 in Red Rocks, 5 in
Mexico, 1 in Cap Reef and then on to Powell for 7 more. That left the trip home.
Can’t spend a day just driving home. Have to try and fit something in
early, so it will be a canyon day. The weather on Powell, the prievious few
days, had topped 100 degrees and the accumulated efforts of 2 and a half weeks had
everyone dragging a bit. But, you know, you can rest at home. Poor
choices will be punished. Sometimes the cost is exorbitant.
Day 17 found us doing 2 canyons out on Powell. Like the child that
can’t keep his hands out of the cookie jar, we had to have more. Running out of
gas on the lake (stuck indicator) had us behind our time. The last canyon was a
splasher. Wet, so as to wash off the heat of the day. It also had a pothole that
took over an hour to solve. A sandbag behind a log, led to Vladman
aiding up the 5mm cord a total of 8 feet above the water line and, voila, we are past it.
But it is 9 PM by the time we are off the boat and back to our cars.
We drive to Sandthrax, throw dinner together, pack for the next day, lay out our
bags, and get to bed a little before midnight.
The plan for getaway day was a bit more than the average length. A 2–3
hour run through a Shimrock would be the standard. But it is sooo hot and
low and behold neither Stevee, Eli or Mike Offerman had ever done a Black Hole,
let alone after the infamous log jams (Vladman was on the 2nd FreezeFest
Hole). At 4–5 hours, a tad long, for me anyway, with an 8 hour drive to follow. But we
hunger for it and so it is planned.
At 5:15 AM, I am staring at the fading stars. I hear Stevee’s alarm go
off. No one budges. Finally, I rouse the troops and we do the ½ hour drive
to the bridge over White Canyon and peer down in first morning light. A few
potholes and no flow, so conditions say go. At 6:20 AM we are on our way.
I had done 12 new canyons on the trip, but here I was doing my third
Hole of the year. January 1, out of tradition and absurdity, a superb, family–only March Hole and now, using it as getaway day fodder. Always something
new, even when visiting an old friend. General practice for a Hole involves late
AM starts to take advantage of more sun and warmer temperatures but, with
the heat and our need to boogie, the early start is the play. So what is new in
this old friend? The lighting. Places shaded in the past blaze in the sun, sunny
spots are bathed in refracted light. I soak in differences, enjoy fleeting
moments with my partners, and ward off the end of the marathon trip, unable to
let it go. As always, change in conditions are present. What was a swimmer
last time is a wader now: A wader, now a swimmer. Mikey finds a 2–ton log
balanced on a boulder and, playing a somewhat risky game, carefully sends it crashing
to the ground with little more than gentle nudges of the hand. Amazing.
In good form, we finish the canyon, locate the sign warning folks NOT
to do the Black Hole. It is 100 yards away from what has become rarely used
exit now. Not very effective placement, it being over 2 air miles from the
standard entry and even off any exit route (we had heard of it and sought its
location). We change out of our wet neoprene, into the dry clothes, run the
shuttle, and say our good byes. It is 10:45 AM.
I agree to meet Vladman and Mikey at Ray’s in Green River for lunch.
They pass me as I stop at Stan’s for an ice cream cone (Yummm). I am a bit
tired, but I want to save the caffeine soda for later in the drive. Usually
more effective that way. I am pinching myself trying to stay awake, as I
pass the Goblin Valley turnoff. I figure I will tough it out till Green River anyway.
The music isn’t doing it. The book on tape is not inspiring.
A vibration ... and I open my eyes ...
I see the speedometer at 95, a reflector post go under the front of the car,
and a sandy–hilled desert is where the car is pointed.
I am AWAKE now.
A curious thing. I feel
no panic or fear. I turn the car gently ... it eases back onto the edge of
the pavement, then the tires screech. I don’t think the right tires left
the ground, but maybe. Easy does it ... and, now, screech and maybe the left tires
are off the ground. Right ones up, then left again. I am using the whole
pavement, both lanes. Each banking motion feels on the edge of launching into a massive
rollover ... still calm as can be. I swear my pulse was low, but I bet
the wheel was being squeezed like never before. Is this where the expression
‘white knuckle’ comes from?
After this last banking adjustment, the car is pointing across the
oncoming lane, into the desert. I am still going WAY fast. I don’t even try for
the turn. I just know, instinctively, that I would rollover. Across the road
I go and into the desert. Still angling away from the road, I bank up onto a
sand hill, follow it on a steep embankment ... come down off of it and parallel the
road ... then turn and climb back up, onto the road ... cross a lane and
back into my lane ... as if nothing has happened. The speedometer reads 70 miles–an–hour.
I scream to myself, “YOU'RE AWAKE NOW,
A—HOLE!!”
How long did this all take? An eternity ... or maybe under 10
seconds.
A little jumpy now, I look in the rear view mirror and see clouds of
dust, like a sandstorm, created from my unintentional off–road adventure. A
car coming from the other direction and I pass. It is the first car I have
seen during this attempted suicide. He heads into my man made sandstorm. I wonder
what he will make of it.
I first stop the car at Ray’s, 20 minutes later. I catch Vlad and Mikey
at their vehicle. I get out and take inventory. I note that the sidewalls
on the tires are scuffed clean for a few inches above the tread. Also, the
day I bought the car (’99 Pathfinder) used, a rubber guard on the front left
tire fell off. The clamps that attached it to the rubber remain — in those
clamps was a bouquet of sage, neatly arranged; I swear, you could not have placed
it there more neatly. I was still calm, but a little dazed. I shared with my
friends the events. Got a hug. We ate and off we went our different ways, again.
Fatigue came over me—again—and I could feel myself starting to nod again. NOT
this time. I pulled off, under the shade of the overpass at Thompson Springs
and slept for 1.5 hours. I would get home late, but I would get home.
For 14 years, in the 1970’s and 80’s, I ran an outdoor program. Vladman
was a member of that program. A bunch of fine outdoorsmen came out of that
program, in spite of its leadership. As these youngsters would come of age, they
would pine to head into the hills on their own. The parents would call me and ask
if they were ready, if they had the skills. The answer would always be the
same. They are ready for the mountains, more than ready, in fact. But at age
17–18, they may not be ready for the 5–6 hour drive. Especially on the way
home, tired from a Sunday’s exertions. I implored the parents to let them miss
school on Monday and drive home in the AM on Monday instead. Seems 20–30 years
later, I would benefit from my own advice.
Yes, it does.
The unusal calm that I felt going through the event has faded.
Several times, everyday, a chill or a knot in my stomach comes on, as the full
impact of how damn lucky I was. Lucky I awoke, lucky I didn’t flip, lucky a car
didn’t come by, lucky the desert I drove through was benign. Lucky,
lucky, lucky. And a fool.
I have hugged my family more often and with more depth of feeling. The
anxiety, which peaked after 4–5 days, seems to be decreasing now. But I know.
I remember. I am here, but probably shouldn’t be. Yet I know, as my friends know
too, when the time comes to ‘squeeze one more in’ that I will and with
passion ... but when I feel that wave of fatigue, I will pull over. That you can count
on. I will get home a few hours later, but I will get home.
A canyon to die for doesn’t exist.
Ram
© 2007–2025 Steve Ramras