.jpg) 
  Flame-Out in Phoenix, Arizona 2007
Thursday
 was my day for both old and new energies. After a morning appointment 
in Phoenix, I returned to my coach in Black Canyon City, ready to move 
on... or so I thought.
The
 predicted high temperature in Phoenix that day was 109 degrees, so I 
had left the air-conditioning in my coach set at 80 degrees. Upon my 
return, I sat comfortably in my coach. As the day progressed, the 
temperatures outside were rising, thus putting greater strain on my A/C.
Around
 Noon, my A/C faltered briefly, but I was obliviously unconcerned. Ten 
minutes later, the machine seized, causing a flash fire in the 
controller box above my head. After flipping off the circuit breaker, I 
could still hear crackling sounds for another thirty seconds. Then smoke
 poured out of one of the A/C vents. “Not good”, I said to myself. Since
 it was time to get out of Phoenix anyway, I called ahead to the RV 
repair shop in Flagstaff and arranged for a diagnosis of my problem 
later that day.
When
 I arrived at Flagstaff, the elevation of 7000 feet made for a pleasant 
82-degree air temperature. The friendly staff at the RV repair facility 
quickly diagnosed my problem. “Catastrophic meltdown of the controller 
box”, caused by an unknown failure in the A/C unit was the story. “We 
have a new one in stock and can install it this afternoon for $825”, the
 service manager said. “Let’s do it”, I said.
While
 waiting for the installation, I spent an hour with a pleasant British 
couple who were waiting for a toilet-repair on their rented Cruise 
America RV. They were plying their way across America on Old Route 66, 
wherever they could find it. Among other things I learned, gasoline in 
Great Britain is the equivalent of $20 per gallon and that in the south 
of England, you cannot water your yard with a garden hose.
By
 seven PM, I was ready to start out on the 177-mile trip east on I-40, 
to Gallup, New Mexico. Arriving at the USA RV Park here at 10:45 PM MDT,
 the owner had graciously waited for me in the office until I appeared.
If
 we represent Old Energy through fossil fuels, central air-conditioning,
 mobile telephones and plug-in electrical, Thursday was my Old Energy 
day. The only New Energy I could find was in the help that people 
provided me, good company as I waited for my coach and acceptance of 
that which I could not change.
.jpg) At noon today, I will start out for Chaco Culture National Historical Park (www.nps.gov/chcu/),
 in Northwestern New Mexico. If Phoenix, Flagstaff and Gallup are Old 
Energy, “on the grid” cities, Chaco Canyon is a New Energy, “off the 
grid” place. For the next two days and nights, I will be where no mobile
 telephone or wireless internet connection dares to go. I will be 
visiting ruins of “pre-Puebloan”, “Anasazi” or “pre-Columbian” cultures,
 depending on which description you might like to use. From 600 AD 
through 1200 AD, Chaco Canyon was the premier human cultural center in 
Western North America.
At noon today, I will start out for Chaco Culture National Historical Park (www.nps.gov/chcu/),
 in Northwestern New Mexico. If Phoenix, Flagstaff and Gallup are Old 
Energy, “on the grid” cities, Chaco Canyon is a New Energy, “off the 
grid” place. For the next two days and nights, I will be where no mobile
 telephone or wireless internet connection dares to go. I will be 
visiting ruins of “pre-Puebloan”, “Anasazi” or “pre-Columbian” cultures,
 depending on which description you might like to use. From 600 AD 
through 1200 AD, Chaco Canyon was the premier human cultural center in 
Western North America.
Tonight,
 one hundred miles form the nearest large city, I will stargaze with the
 “local” telescopic community on a near-moonless night. After two nights
 in Chaco Canyon, I will “emerge” from the land of ancient cultures and 
make my way to Taos, New Mexico on Sunday, September 16. Until then, 
please accept my offering of Happy New Energy to you.
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