Each Spring, I Hear The Call - And Then It's Moab Time
In May 2014, I departed Mesquite, Nevada,  heading for Moab, Utah, 375 miles to the northeast. Normally, it is an easy trip north  on Interstate I-15 and then  East on I-70. At  Crescent Junction, I would hit U.S.  191, and then head south  toward Moab. According to Google Maps, the highway trip  should take five hours and thirty minutes. Since I was pulling our  Springdale  travel trailer, I added two hours to the estimate.
Near its start at Cove Fort, Utah, I-70 traverses parts of both the  Fish Lake  National Forest and the  Manti La Sal  National Forest.
 Along that route, the  mountain passes exceed 7,250 feet elevation. 
After transiting through both  national forests, I-70 presents itself as
 a slow-motion roller coaster ride. The culmination  is a twisting 
descent down the east side of the San Rafael Swell.
Combined, my  Nissan Titan
 truck and its trailer weigh 11,000 pounds. With a  twenty percent 
horsepower-loss at 7,250 feet, the 5.6 liter V-8 in my pickup was 
averaging just over six miles per gallon. The only way to go  faster was
 to downshift into second gear while ascending. At that throttle  
setting, the engine runs at over 5,000 RPM, increasing both gasoline  consumption and engine wear.
The only sensible solution was to slow down and not push my rig so hard.
 In  doing so, I finessed the gears, rather than the power to keep my 
average speed above  fifty-five miles per hour. Another consideration 
was the hundred-mile distance  to the next service station, in Green River, Utah.
 In case of emergency, I carry  several gallons of gasoline in an 
approved container. I rarely have to use my  reserve fuel, but it offers
 peace of mind when I visit remote locations.
Once I reached Crescent Junction, I had only thirty-three miles to go on U.S.  Highway 191 South. In Moab, my final destination was the Moab Rim Campark,
 at  the south end of town. Before I reached Moab, I had a brief side 
trip to take.  On a railroad siding near the turnoff to  Utah Highway 313, I hoped to  locate an  old friend. Like an old-time prospector’s affection for his burro, I had become  fond of the Moab Burro.
Although it is not an animal, the  Moab Burro is a fascinating example of  twentieth century railroad construction equipment. Built by the  Cullen Friestadt  Company,
 the Moab Burro is a self-propelled railroad crane capable of pulling  
other rail cars, lifting 12,500 pounds and swiveling on its turret 360 
degrees.  On my previous visit, the Moab Burro lay idle and alone on a 
railroad siding of  the Union Pacific Railroad Potash
 Branch Line. In fact, the  crane and its flatcar-tender had been  on 
that siding for so long, Google Maps had snapped its picture from space.
That day, I was not so lucky. As I approached Seven Mile,
 I could see that both  the Potash Branch Line and its siding lay 
deserted. Since the Moab Burro is a functioning piece of railroad  
maintenance-of-way equipment, Union Pacific Burro Crane No. BC-47 was  probably elsewhere in the High Southwest. My hope of  photographing Plush Kokopelli and  Coney
 the Traffic Cone with the Moab Burro  were dashed. Instead, I had to 
settle for pictures of my unlikely superheroes  sitting on the empty 
track at  Seven Mile.
If
 any reader spots the Moab Burro elsewhere on the Union Pacific network,
  please take a photo and send it to me via email. If received here, I 
will then  post any newly found images of Union Pacific BC-47, also 
known as the  Moab Burro.
After leaving Seven Mile, I headed straight for Moab. While crossing the  Colorado River,
 I noted that it was flowing higher than it had in the past few  years. 
If the increased flow originated in a heavy snow pack on the Western  
Slope of the Colorado Rockies, that could be a good sign for  Colorado River  health. If the flow came from a  rapid snowmelt
 upstream, it might be just a  “flash in the pan”, soon to subside. As 
it turned out, 2014 would be a good  water flow year in the Upper Colorado River Basin.
According to the  USGS interactive website,
 on May 15, 2014, the Colorado River was flowing at about 10,000 cubic 
feet per  minute (CFM) at Moab. By June 3, the river peaked at about 
37,500 CFM, which was  more than twice the sixty-three year average. 
Downstream,  Lake Powell
  reached its  2014 low of 3574' elevation around April 15. By July 10, 
2014, the lake was  peaking at 3,609' elevation. That rise of 
thirty-five feet put the lake  level ten feet higher than on the same 
date in 2013.
A six foot rise might not  sound like much, but with Lake Powell's 
immense surface area, that represents almost an  eight percent gain in 
water volume. As of July 10, 2014, the Lake Powell  watershed had mixed 
statistics. The snow-pack was at forty-seven percent of  normal and the 
total precipitation was at ninety-six percent of normal. A  vigorous 
Monsoon in early July had  added greatly to the total precipitation.  Still, the lower mass of the snow-pack suggested lower  flows for the remainder of the year.
added greatly to the total precipitation.  Still, the lower mass of the snow-pack suggested lower  flows for the remainder of the year.  
Soon after passing over the  Colorado River,
 I saw a rare sight in Moab. As I  waited at the Highway 128 stoplight, 
four identical 1960’s Shelby Cobra 289  sports cars pulled on to U.S. 
191. From my vantage point, I could not see if the  Cobras were original
 or if they were among the ubiquitous replicas manufactured  over the 
past forty years. After snapping a picture of each Cobra, I followed  
them toward Moab. Soon, they pulled off for an early dinner at the 
venerable  Sunset Grill. I wondered how the stiff suspension of each Cobra would fare on  the long, washboard driveway that leads up to the restaurant.
Soon, I arrived at the  Moab Rim  Campark, where I stay when in Moab. Owners  Jim and Sue Farrell  always offer old-fashioned Moab hospitality to all who stay there. As I pulled  in to the RV Park,
 I noticed a young couple standing at the rear of their rental  RV. 
Emblazoned across the stern of their RV was a high definition  image of  Yosemite Valley. With their permission, I took several photos of the couple and  the Sierra Nevada
 scene. As I shot the photos, I zoomed-out to show that they  were in 
Moab, not in Yosemite. To see the full scene, please click on their 
image.
Reflecting now on that meeting, I remembered that the young woman had 
looked up  toward me and into the sun. She said, “I can’t see, so tell 
me when to smile”. Later, after  examining the photos, I realized that 
the woman was blind. In my experience, blind  people often see more of our universe than many  sighted people can. I only wish  I could have explained to her the double meaning created by their standing in front of  the Sierra Nevada Range and Moab’s  La Sal Range, all at the same time.
For years, I have witnessed and studied various  dimensional anomalies in and  around Moab. To witness a young blind woman standing in two places  simultaneously was an event on par with  witnessing a plasma flow etched across  the morning sky in Moab. Smiling about my good fortune to witness such a sight  that day, I realized that as of that moment, I was on  Moab Time.
Returning from Yosemite to the Moab of my contemporaneous three-dimensional time-space  reality (3DTSR), I looked beyond the young couple to the  snowfields of the La  Sal Range.
 Fresh snow, which fell only a day before my May 15  arrival dusted the 
lower slopes of the great mountain range. The brilliance of  white snow 
against the blue sky was spectacular. Looking at my photos later on,  I 
realized that one shot captured an image of a large bird of prey, frozen
 in  time within that infinite sky.
My first trip to Moab
 was in the summer of 1965.  After leaving there, I assumed that it was a
 magical  place, which I would never see again. Decades later, I read 
about the  Moab Pile  and its nuclear threat to life along the Colorado River. Upon returning to Moab  in the early 2000’s, all of the magic and many new  threats to the environment  came to me. With Big Oil,  Big Gas,  Big Potash and  Big Tar Sands all ganging  up on Moab and Grand County, the soul of that magical place might easily be  lost.
During my current visit, I hoped to join others and sway Moab toward a more  positive outcome.
            
 
By James McGillis at 04:59 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

 
