Friday, November 22, 2019

Elton John 1973 "Lost Concert" T-shirt Replica Available at MoabJim.com - 2008


MoabJim (Jim McGillis) wearing the restored vintage Elton John 9/7/73 "Lost Concert" t-shirt - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)

Elton John 1973 "Lost Concert" T-shirt Replica Available at MoabJim.com

In late 2002, I dragged out my slowly deteriorating Elton John September 7, 1973 Hollywood Bowl vintage concert t-shirt and assessed its sad condition.  The silkscreen image on my vintage Elton John t-shirt was crumbling further with each washing.

A spirit told me that I might have the last souvenir t-shirt from that magical Hollywood night, so I decided to restore my vintage 9/7/73 garment.  After snapping a digital picture of the t-shirt, I began the laborious "re-pixilation" of that image. 

Over the course of several months, I spent at least 200 hours restoring my 9/7/73 Elton John T-shirt image to as close to the original merchandise as possible.
The restored image of Elton John from the 9/7/73 Concert - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
The Elton John replica concert t-shirt is a MoabJim worldwide exclusive item, not found on TV or in any store.  Be the first on your block to relive Elton's classic live concert of 1973 in bright red style.  To learn more or to make a secure purchase via PayPal, go to MoabJim.com and click on the word "Apparel". Ten dollars of every purchase will go to the Elton John Aids Foundation.

January 5, 2014 - Author's Note - After shipping another Elton John replica t-shirt to a customer, I received the following note from fellow concert attendee, "N.K.". His vivid recollections of that night and the concert itself help us all to remember that special night with Elton John at the Hollywood Bowl.

I received the t-shirt and washed it per your instructions, but haven't worn it yet.

Elton's 9/7/73 Hollywood Bowl concert has become one of my favorite stories, one that I tell over and over again. Just walking in with everyone to find our seats was an experience, as I'm sure you remember that the crowd was really into it as a "happening" and LA did it up right. Everyone was dressed and ready for a party, and Elton sure gave us one. One thing I remember was seeing someone wearing clear plastic platform shoes with live goldfish in them, and everyone was dressed to the nines.

Remember the mermaids? The stagehands carried out a couple of women in full mermaid costumes and set them down in the fountains, which started flowing and lit up with colored lights. All the "celebrity" guests walked up the stairway and then down to the audience, and when they lifted up the lids of the five pastel-colored grand pianos that spelled out "E-L-T-O-N" on the lids, all the doves flew out of the pianos, and circled round and round in the colored spotlights pointing up above the audience.

The smoke from all the joints going in the crowd was like fog in the air, and when Elton walked down the stairs in his furs and plumes, and his glasses lit up to spell "Elton", the crowd went crazy.
As I recall, he did a set with the band, then a solo set at the piano, and then brought the band back for the finale, and each song was one that everyone knew. I think it was part of the Yellow Brick Road release tour, and as Elton himself said, he was at the peak of his creativity.

Thanks for the effort you put in to recreate the T-shirt - I'm looking forward to wearing it for the first time and saying "This shirt? Let me tell you what that concert was like..."

Cheers, N.K.

Email James McGillis
Email James McGillis


By James McGillis at 01:53 PM | Personal Articles | Comments (0) | Link

From Hazelton, BC, Canada to Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, by Motorcycle - 2008


Shane (left) and Dan in Moab, Utah, preparing for their epic ride to Argentina - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)

From Hazelton, BC, Canada to Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, by Motorcycle

On October 6, 2008, I met Dan Burns and Shane Pierce at the Laundromat in Moab, Utah.  They and their friends, Riley Beise and Brendan Hutchinson were completing a shakedown ride, prior to taking off for road’s end at Ushuaia, Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego, near the southern tip of Argentina.  All of the BC Buckaroos, as they call themselves, hale from the towns of Hazelton or Smithers, which are located in remote Northeastern British Columbia, Canada. 
BC Buckaroos "Canada to Argentina 2008-2009" logo sticker on the fender of a Kawasaki KLR 650 motorcycle - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
Some might think it is foolish or even a bit crazy for these four young Canadians to ride their Kawasaki KLR 650 motorcycles from the far north to the far south, covering a distance of 8100 miles (13,000 kilometers).  The BC Buckaroos trip is self-financed and self-supported, meaning that they have only themselves and their financial reserves to carry them forward on their ultimate KLR road trip.
 
As Dan tucked his clean clothes into the waterproof North Face duffel bag mounted on his bike, I asked him why they are making this trip.  “We are doing this ... we are not really too sure, but we want an adventure, and are excited to see how another part of the world lives.  We are looking to broaden our awareness of the other cultures to the south”, he said. 
 
The BC Buckaroos had stopped in Moab to get their bikes tuned for the road by Fred at Arrowhead Motorsports.  Dan emphasized how grateful they all were for Arrowhead’s help in getting the bikes ready for the big ride.
Dan with his Kawasaki KLR 650 motorcycle - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
On October 13, 2008, I received a quick update from Dan, stating, “The USA has been great.  We are now in Douglas, Arizona making a few last minute stops and getting ready to cross into Mexico tomorrow."  From the remote towns of Central and South America, communications via the internet are spotty at best, so it will be interesting to hear where the B.C. Buckaroos are, now that it is late November.
 
Things have changed a lot in this world since January 1952, when an unknown 23-year-old Argentine medical student took off from Buenos AriesOld Time Magazine cover, from August 8, 1960, featuring Che Guevara overshadowing both Khrushchev and Mao. Beyond revolution, Che was famous for touring South America on a 1939 Norton 500 Motorcycle - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) for an 8100-mile (13,000 kilometer) tour of South America on a sputtering 1939 Norton 500 motorcycle.  In those days, Che Guevara’s unreliable “one-lunger” and pigs in the road were the biggest threats to his safe return. 
 
Today, in a world where Somali pirates range as far as the Indian Ocean to hijack an oil tanker loaded with two million barrels of oil and over three hundred people die in the Tijuana, Mexico drug wars in less than six weeks, we wish the BC Buckaroos Godspeed.  And watch out for pigs in the road.

By James McGillis at 02:10 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

When it Opposes New Energy, Old Energy is Powerless - 2008

When it Opposes New Energy, Old Energy is Powerless

 
Saturday, November 10, we arrived home after a week in San Francisco.  During that week, I spent more time in the Marriott Hotel and our room on the Rainy day reflections in Downtown San Francisco - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)twenty-fifth floor than I did outside the building.  Even when I did venture out, the tall buildings all around often shaded my walks in the city.  Sunday afternoon, I reflected on how good it was to be home in LA, with the sun shining down upon me.  It was a glorious feeling. 
 
On Monday, just after midnight, while I was entering a sleep state, I had an experience like no other I have ever had.  The incident took place there, in my bed.  Although brief, my experience, which some would call a dream felt like a live event to me.  Lying on my back, all my senses were present, including full cognition… or so I thought.  An old friend was there, asking me if I wanted to help, or to give hope.  I was not sure which question he was asking, so I asked a question of him. 
 
A San Francisco - Oakland Bay Bridge tower looms in the distance - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)As I asked my question, I knew that I would not be able to control where my being would take me.  During the moment that I was asking my question, I received an answer of pure love.  It was love that I was giving to All that Is.  The receiving of love, I then discovered, was contained in its giving.  With all that was happening, I almost missed that revelation. 
 
Just as I came to understand the meaning of unconditional, universal love, my being rocketed headfirst, and in freefall.  It was not that I traveled far, but I could see and feel a cylinder of light energy around me.  Almost immediately, my consciousness began to rise, telling me that this might be an earthquake, and that I should wake up, which I did.  As my temporal consciousness returned, I let out an audible moan, which brought me all the way back to the present moment. 
 A sunny day in San Francisco, with the bay in the distance. - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
Nothing had changed.  The room was quiet and I had not awakened my partner with my unearthly yelp.  Next, when the dog next door starting to bark, I had an hour or so to contemplate what had just happened.  There was no way I could say that this was “just a dream”.  The energy infusion and concomitant feelings were far greater than anything I had ever felt before, either awake or asleep.  Lying there, I felt like asking, “What the heck was that?”.  Finally, I fell asleep and had a good night’s rest.
 
On Sunday, my thoughts returned to the energy-exchange incident I had experienced in bed the night before.  As I meditated on the subject, new thoughts and feelings came to me.  While I was both asking and answering my friend’s question, I had felt a complete release of everything I had ever held back in my life.  I opened up and gave my love to the entire New Energy Receiver atop a Downtown San Francisco building - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)universe.  Simultaneously, I received a spectrum of powerful new energies, all in that moment.  Ancient stories talk about individuals who experience a visitation from a “shaft of light”.  Because of our cultural bias towards biblical interpretations, we naturally assume that such a light comes from above, like a spotlight on the stage of life.  In my case, it did not.  I felt like I was inside a scanner, not much different from an open MRI machine.  During the giving and receiving of love that I had experienced, something in my core genetics had changed, or rearranged.
 
The signs are all around us, if we believe that we can see, hear or read them for what they are.  New energies, combining frequencies not previously activated, or new energies having no frequency at all coalesce around with those who are open to them.  What are these new energies and what do they “do”?  They, in connecting with our own ethereal access points do not do anything to us or for us.  The new energies may be nothing more than lines of communications (string & can-telephone style?) to the universe. 
 
Yes, we can access the universe, not merely one of its near-earth realms, where chaos often reigns.  Chaos in those near-earth dimensions works like a breeder reactor.  The more chaos and fear we, here on Earth, send out through our electromagnetheric transmitters (our brains), the more we receive chaotic or fragmented information back from these non-physical realms.  The volatility of energy dynamics in the near-earth realms occurs because of the intermingling of the two largest groups of non-physical beings gathering there.  One group is comprised of recently departed earthlings, many of whom have appeared there after traumatic or unplanned deaths.  The other major contingent of non-physical beings inhabiting the near-earth U.S. Flag flying on top of a Downtown San Francisco building - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.comrealms consists of “crystals”, defined as those who have never been on Earth before.  The two groups are so energetically dissimilar that their energies can conflict, cancel each other or combine into energies never before felt on Earth, hence the name,
“new energy”. 
 
If one can obtain a broad enough perspective, one can see order in chaos.  The apparent chaos created by the meeting of these anomalous energies can result in unpredicted forms of energy transferring between dimensions, possibly affecting some of us on Earth.  The types of energies we receive from the near-earth realms and from the universe at large are dependent on only one thing.  That “thing” is our point of attraction.  If we open ourselves up to the love and understanding that is available to each of us, we shall partake of new energies yet unimagined. 
 
The art deco, unpainted reinforced concrete structure known as Coit Tower, atop Telegraph Hill in San Francisco, California - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
If we take the road towards fear and recrimination, we shift our point of attraction and the new energies cannot connect with us.  If we hold hope in our hearts for only a moment, hope connects with love and thus creates a potential for new energy flow.  Since all energy seeks resolution, the flow may be dramatic, as it was for me or it may be so subtle as to make you doubt its existence.  If we allow doubt to enter our thoughts, we force another energy decision-point.  In that flux of continual change, conscious life becomes a series of decision points.  As each decision approaches, one can easily ignore hope and return to a default state of fear.  In that plane, fighting and "pushing against", which are prime characteristics of old energy, may rise again.  Because manifestation always trails intent, old energy ways may still be a a "grounding point" for many of us, throughout this lifetime. 
 
Spokesmodel Carrie McCoy, walking across time and into the Great Depression era Diego Rivera mural inside Coit Tower, San Francisco, California - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)Go there.  Wallow in self pity that you must “use less energy”, as Chevron Corporation now shouts to us from almost every television station, national magazine and bus shelter in the country.  Chevron’s non-committal, scruffy-bearded spokes-model has his stigmata plastered across his face in white marking pen.  “Guilty, as charged”, we immediately agree.  Have we not all “wasted some energy” in our time?  Is it not now time to repent of our energy sins and to cleanse ourselves at the profit-pump?  Should we take as our new energy guide, an old energy company?  Should we trust an old energy company that recently recorded the most profitable quarter in its one hundred twenty-nine year history? 
"Martini" and "California Wines" signage detail in the Great Depression era mural by artist Diego Rivera, Coit Tower, San Francisco, California - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
If we personally were to use old energy to earn $7.9 billion during one quarter of a year, the guilt we might feel could imbalance us enough to run a series of thinly veiled “mia culpa” ads, as Chevron has unintentionally done.  Chevron's ad model looks like a high-class bum.  With the look of a Wall Street insider, should we identify with him?  In judging his questionable conversion to a supposed new energy ethic, might we heap further derision on his guilty soul? 
 
Regardless of whether we share his guilt or dispise him for his apparent former excesses, we have bought into the “fear of shortage” syndrome that keeps group consciousness panicked and ready to bolt.  All of this happens in a bumbled, yet powerful attempt at manipulation.  Chevron Man's disingenuous declaration, “I will use less energy” sounds like what we might hear right after he has admitted to being an “energy-aholic”.  The ads attempt to tell us that we are all complicit in wasting energy and thus we are all as guilty as their partially defaced spokesmodel appears to be. 
 Transamerica Building, often called a pyramid;, which acts as a New Energy transceiver at San Francisco, California - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
As the Wizard of Oz once said, “Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain”.  In Chevron’s advertising campaign, they put the man in front of the curtain, scribble all over his face, and then dare us to figure out where all of our money went.  On that day in the future when Chevron pledges ten percent of its bloated, windfall profits to new and sustainable energies, I will gladly support them in their quest to “save the world”.  Until that time, I entreat them to keep their sanctimonious, self-serving advertising campaign to themselves.  Hey there, Chevron Man, is that your self-mutilated, graffiti-scarred face staring out at me from my copy of The New Yorker?  Yes, I thought so.
 
Chevron Energy's Old Energy "Sad Sack" spokesmodel, pushing old energy consumption as he vows to use less energy - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)Although old energy will attempt to manipulate both old and new energies, that is a corporate strategy that will no longer work.  Each attempt, as exemplified in the dippy Chevron ad series will only make the perpetrators look as manipulative as they really are.  The irony is that their, “You should feel bad so that we can feel good behind your back” advertising campaign shall have an effect exactly opposite of its nefarious intention.  Chevron’s copyrighted tag line is “Human Energy”, yet their ad campaign seeks to drain us of any such energy we may have retained.  Thank you, Chevron, for caring so deeply about “us”.
 
The lines of communications between love and fear are no longer open.  Now we must choose one or the other.  As Earth’s population approaches its carrying capacity of around ten billion physical souls, the price of entry here has gone up.  Because of our collective prayers and wishes, from this time on, only those who have something to contribute shall enter the Earth-realm as human beings. 
Sailboats take advantage of new energy while sailing on San Francisco Bay; Yerba Buena Island and San Francisco - Oakland Bay Bridge in the background - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com
 
Does this mean that life will soon be perfect for all of Earth’s residents or that war will cease immediately?  I am sorry to say, “No, that is not true”.  If we combine statistics on the current "human recycling" rate with the low average age on Earth, it will take a while for the ner-do-wells and energy suckers to cycle out and be gone.  Meanwhile, each of us has a choice to make.  We can (here comes the cliché) remake ourselves as part of the solution or remain as part of the problem.
 
The epic struggle on Earth right now is not about gay marriage, animal rights, global warming, genocide or even the rise of stupidity in mass culture.  It is
Detailed close-up of sailboat and San Francisco - Oakland Bay Bridge girders - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
about fear and hope.  Move towards fear and you will contribute to chaos on Earth.  Hope for a better day, or surpassing that, experience a better day and you will contribute more to the common good than you may know. 
 
The world is a beautiful place and experiencing its beauty first hand is the only way to go.  Get outside and feel the sunshine, or for that matter, the rain, wind or snow on your face.  Allow the power of nature to cleanse your soul, if only for a moment, for in that moment, you shall discover the power of universal love and new energies with which to enjoy it.
 
 

Experiencing Seven Mile Canyon Petroglyphs with Author and Naturalist Craig Childs - 2008

Experiencing Seven Mile Canyon Petroglyphs with Author and Naturalist Craig Childs

On October 15, 2008, I was up early enough in the morning to see the full moon, as it descended behind the Moab Rim.  In anticipation of my first day at "Confluence – A Celebration of Reading and Writing in Moab", I drove to the Moab Arts and Recreation Center.  Unlike the many public activities at Confluence, the intensive writing seminar was limited to only twenty-four individuals.
Canyonlands Field Institute logo sign on the window of a passenger van parked at Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger Image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
Moments after finding my group of seven fellow writers, we loaded ourselves into a passenger van provided by the Canyonlands Field Institute.  None of us knew our destination for a day of hiking and writing.  Having renowned author and expert on the desert southwest, Craig Childs as our personal guide for the day made those prospects even more exciting.
 
Heading north on U.S. Highway 191, we crossed the Colorado River, then drove through the notch of the Moab Fault, a deep gorge that features the main entrance to Arches National Park.  Five more miles up the road, we turned west on State Highway 313, which leads to Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point, a Utah State Park.Led by author Craig Childs (center, wearing a brimmed hat), a group of budding authors views an ancient petroglyph site, on Utah Highway 313 at the entrance to Seven Mile Canyon - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
Only a mile or two from that junction, our van slowed and then our driver turned on to an unmarked road-stub.  We all piled out of the van, and then surveyed the surrounding area.  Knowing that Craig Childs had spent many months of his life hiking in and around the Moab area, we were curious why he would choose what appeared to be such an undistinguished spot to start our day.
 
Not knowing what to expect, we crossed the highway and walked west toward a canyon wall, where the sunshine had begun to warm the morning air.  Once we reached a suitable place for our group to sit and listen, we quieted down and Craig Childs, the master of the canyons, spoke.
 
Ascension of the Ancients - While the wheel of infinity spins, the elongated human figure rises above the horizon, a trail of dots implies that the figure is ascending - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)In talking about the area surrounding the spot where we sat, Craig did not mention the sporadic traffic along the highway, only fifty yards away.  Instead, he began a lesson in perception, inviting us to see these canyons as he sees them.  Juxtaposing Craig’s intimate description of that landscape with the impersonality of what I saw as an unremarkable roadside made me feel uneasy.  I felt like he could see things that I could not.
 
After cautiously placing myself into Craig’s perceptual landscape, it became easier to see the uniqueness of that place, which was one of an infinite number of potential stops along that road.  Having driven Highway 313 many times before, I knew that the landscape along that road was itself a paradox.  On one hand, the highway meets our human needs to get somewhere.  After passing photo spots of drama and beauty, the road ends at the equally dramatic Dead Horse Point.  No one would dispute the beauty of the famous visual attractions near the end of the road.  Yet, if one stops along the lower portion of the road, he or she will also find an abundance of unique and beautiful micro-environments.Ancient Creation Myth - As dark matter rains down from above, a rare fertility goddess prepares for birth of an infant, pictured within her womb. Winged angels stand to either side. Before a campfire, a council of six sits in witness; Fremont Culture rock art gallery, Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
After completing our first small writing exercise, Craig stood and invited us to follow him around the far side of a large boulder.  There, only a few yards away, were many examples of Native American rock art incised into the desert varnish of the canyon walls.  Unlike many of the pictographs and petroglyphs that are visible from local roads, this great art had remained untouched since its creation.  According to the style of that rock art, members of the Fremont Culture created it sometime between 600 and 1250 CE.  If one needed a better example of Craig Child’s contention that there is unimaginable beauty available throughout the Canyonlands area, this art gallery, created by grand and ancient masters humbled me into recognition and belief.
The Burning Bush - Observing nature at the New Energy Portal, Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
Soon, it was time to start our trek up the broad, flat wash of Seven Mile Canyon.  Again crossing the road, we gathered beneath a cottonwood tree.  Although Seven Mile Canyon is open to both hikers and motorized vehicles, that morning we saw no one other than our group for the first two hours of our hike.  With non-native bulrushes partially overgrowing the entrance to the canyon, the driver of a full-sized vehicle would scrape off a lot of paint in order to run that gauntlet and pass through into the canyon itself.
Seeing is Believing - An unguarded moment with Author and Naturalist, Craig Childs, Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
While walking up-canyon, we began to feel the warmth and dryness of the desert environment.  Frequent breaks for water helped facilitate our passage along the soft sands of the canyon bottom.  Stopping in the shade of a cottonwood grove, Craig asked us to take off our shoes and feel the canyon sands beneath our feet.  Once barefoot, each of us took off in our own direction.  Our assignment was to find a place to sit and write about the feeling of being in touch with the canyon on that bright October morning.
 
To Touch the Earth - A group of aspiring authors walk barefoot in the sands of Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)After a trailside lunch, Craig directed us towards a nearby, but partially hidden canyon wall.  After a scramble over some boulders, we arrived at an intimate alcove, hidden from the sun by a massive overhang of Navajo Sandstone.  In such places, one intuitively accesses a faith in geologic time.  If, in eons of time, this stone overhang had not crashed down in a pile of rubble, why should let go as we walked into this stone sanctuary?
 
When seasonal rains visit, the spot where we stood becomes a waterfall and receiving pool of a size and power that would drive any human back to a safe distance.  On this day, there was no water pitching over the precipice and the receiving pool was dry.
 
As with our previous stop, we found one wall of our secret canyon alcoveEntering The Sacred Space - A Navajo Sandstone overhang, Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) covered with both Fremont Culture and Archaic Era rock art.  Once again, we found no sign that anyone had visited this sacred spot since the last of the pre-Puebloan Indians chipped and painted their artwork into these walls.
 
If you were to take the stone-age tools available to the ancients and attempt to make your own mark upon these walls, it is likely that you would quit before you created anything of note.  Scientists estimate that each incised figure might take several weeks to complete.  For that reason, the defacement of more accessible rock art is often in the form of bullet holes or surface scratches across the face of the artwork.  How and why did members of these ancient cultures take the time and put forth the incredible effort necessary to decorate their home canyons?
Within the Alcove - As author and naturalist Craig Childs consults his Book of Knowledge, a happy soul rises above at Seven Mile Canyon, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
Our theory is that before European contact, there were times of lush abundance in the Canyonlands.  Being efficient hunters and gatherers, good years allowed the ancients to fill their granaries with enough food to take them through the harshest of winters.  In the best of years, their larders might be full by summer’s end, leaving leisure time sufficient for the ancients to pursue an activity that motivates almost every human culture.  That is a desire to tell their story to other humans and other cultures who might later visit these canyons. 
 
On a beautiful fall day, not unlike the one we spent among their galleries, the ancients may have carved and painted the story of their lives, their hunts and their spirit guides into these sacred canyon walls.  To me, it felt like they had just been there, suspending their chipping and carving as we approached.  Hearing our voices, had they retreated to be with their ancestors, waiting patiently for us to leave before returning to their timeless work? Connecting the Dots - Fremont and Archaic Culture rock art panel depicts an ascended master creating the connection between a wild animal on the left and the kaleidoscope of happy humans, animals and fanciful spirits on the right. - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
Thank you to Craig Childs and the Confluence Organization for transporting our group to a special place, where our contemporary world and the Canyonlands of our pre-Puebloan Indian ancestors converge.  As with so many lessons in human life, we found that the similarities between them and us are far greater than the differences we so easily perceive.

Moab, Utah - I've seen fire and I've seen webcams - 2008


Close-up, similar to MoabLive.com webcam - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)

Moab, Utah - Matheson Wetlands Wildfire

On Wednesday, October 22, I departed Moab, Utah after three weeks of hard work, learning and meeting many new friends.  There is so much about Moab, the place, the time and the happenings that I want to share, it is hard to know where to start.
 
While ensconced in my Pioneer travel trailer at the Moab Rim Campark the night before, I heard fire engines racing north, on nearby Highway 191.  Although the nearest fire department to the south is in Monticello, Utah, fifty miles away, that fact did not register with me.  Somehow, it was nice just to hear that an emergency was receiving an Trailer Campsite, Moab Rim Campark, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)emergency response, as we would wish if our property were in peril. 
 
On Wednesday morning, I hustled down to the RV Park office to create the final changes on our new webcam, streaming live from that location.  With the consent of Jim and Sue Farrell, the proprietors at Moab Rim Campark, we had installed a webcam up under the eaves of their second story.  Offering a panoramic view of the RV Park, Highway 191, the Slickrock area and the La Sal Mountains, our new webcam offers the world a completely new view of Moab, Utah and its weather patterns.  If you like, you can view the webcam at MoabLive.com or MoabRV.com.  Just click on either link and be patient as the webcam loads.  With the view changing every five seconds day or night, I assure you that you will not be disappointed.
 
October 2008 Matheson Wetlands fire, along the Colorado River, Moab, Utah - Click for larger image (https;//jamesmcgillis.com)Wednesday morning, I was so busy with the webcam that I failed to notice a column of smoke rising from the  Matheson Wetlands Preserve, which fills the space between the City of Moab and the nearby Colorado River.  According to the Wildlife Action Plan (WAP) for the area, the Matheson Preserve's lowland riparian habitat is the most critical habitat type in all of Utah.  As a unique wetland, it formed when the Colorado River bend in the Spanish Valley eroded its outside bank, leaving its former watercourse as a tangled swamp or reeds, bulrushes and non-native Tamarisk trees.
 
Moab UMTRA uranium cleanup site in foreground, with Matheson Wetlands Reserve, beyond the Colorado River, in the background - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)As with so much of the Desert West, the Matheson Wetlands are no longer as wet as they once were.  Although the water table there rises and falls with spring runoff or the occasional thunderstorm, a system of irrigation and water control dikes has turned much of the southern pond into “solid ground”.  Hunters and others camp or party in clearings, amidst the tangled undergrowth found throughout the preserve.  Did one such individual or group leave a campfire unattended the prior day?  Perhaps ironically, the fire appears to have overlapped a prescribed burn originally planned for October 2008.  That burn was only a small part of a wetlands restoration project planned for the preserve.
 
As I connected my pickup and travel trailer that morning, the wind came up and swept the fire from up near Highway 191 and the Colorado River, downstream to the gap where Kane Creek Road meets the river canyon.  Luckily, the firefighters stopped the fire there, but it was dramatic to watch, even from several miles away.Looking downstream, old U.S. Highway 191 Colorado River Highway Bridge, with Matheson Wetlands Reserve on the left - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
As I prepared to drive back to Los Angeles, I remembered a bit of Moab history.  In 1855, eight years after founding Salt Lake City, a party of forty-three Mormon men built a rock fort in the area now called the Matheson Wetlands Preserve, near the Colorado River.  Growing crops and attempting to convert local Native Americans to their religion became the Mormons’ primary challenges.  Additionally, they sought control of the strategic river crossing and trade with travelers along the wagon road known as the “Old Spanish Trail”.
 
The naming of Moab retains elements of controversy.  Some say that the original settlers named Moab for its appearance, supposedly being similar to an area located on the eastern side of the River Jordan.  Others say Moab was a bastardization of the Paiute Indian word “moapa”, meaning mosquito.  Either way, with the coming of regular postal service and incorporation of the town in 1902, the name Moab became official.
The Spanish Valley, Moab, Utah - with Matheson Wetlands at the far end of the valley - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
Several months after their 1855 arrival, Native Americans attacked the Moabites, burning crops and killing three settlers.  The Mormons then abandoned Moab, not to officially return until 1878.  With its cultural affinity and geographical proximity to Colorado and Arizona, Moab grew into the twentieth century more as a typical Western town than as a Mormon colony.
 
To my knowledge, the remnants of the old fort did not survive the one hundred fifty-plus years of mud and floods visited upon the Matheson Wetland Preserve by the mighty Colorado River.  Perhaps the denuding of that area will lead to renewed archeological interest in locating remnants of Moab’s original, if brief, non-native culture.
 

By James McGillis at 06:25 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

New Energy Portal Opens at the 24 Hours of MOAB - 2008


24-Hours of Moab Sign, 2008 Off-Road Logo - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)

Waiting for a Moab Sign? 

Try the 24 Hours of MOAB

Every year, thousands gather to watch and record video of the most exciting off-road bicycle race in the world.

Watch the video, "24 Hours of Moab - Off-Road 2008".

 

As we know, the
Anasazi, Pre-Puebloans or The Ancients, depending on which name you wish to apply, vacated “The Far Country” now known as Moab, Utah by 1350 CE.  Between 650 BC and the time of their departure, they took the time to leave visual messages for us to find and enjoy.  Whether their art took the form of pictographs or petroglyphs is not important.  What is important to us in our current time is that they were both visually and artistically oriented.Fremont style Indian Rockart - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
 
The term “starving artist” simply could not apply in their environment.  Only after sufficient hunting and gathering to see them through the winter, did they have time to create their painstakingly incised rockart.  Experts estimate that each pictograph may have taken several weeks and several separate processes to complete.
 
From 1350 CE until now (2008), is 658 years.  Although the exact number of years is not important, it is important to see how we, the new stewards of Mother Earth are treating both Gaia and ourselves. 
 
Not five miles from my first visit to the unique and previously undocumented rockart of Johnsons On Top mesa, lies the 24 Three mountain bike racers - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)Hours of Moab off-road bike race.  After viewing the first hour and the last hour of this unique and unparalleled bicycle race, I came away with enough memories to fill a lifetime.  In fact, the unusual and intense 24-hour racing format lends itself to new energies and activities.  If you read my previous article, you know that I was on a mission to track down Dax Massey and Dean Miller, the two and only members of the Bach Builders Shake & Bake Duo Pro mountain bike racing team.
 
Having checked the race website for live race results both late last night and "Liquid Gray Infinity" team raced "Just for Fun" - Click for larger Image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)"early this morning, I knew that Dax and Dean were well on their way to a category win in the 24 Hours of Moab and an overall category win for their five-race season.  Whether by design or by circumstances, these men are elusive.  Not only had I missed them on the racecourse yesterday, but again today.  Just after the race ended at Noon, I enquired about them at the scoring table.  The gentleman there told me that they came in before Noon and did not need to go out for one more grueling fifteen-mile lap.
 
Bike racer, crossing the finish line - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)Determined to see them and congratulate them on their win, I waited the two and one half hours until the awards ceremonies began.  Since there was nothing else to do while waiting for the ceremony, I mounted the four flights of stairs that ended at an observation deck almost thirty feet in the air.  There, Suzuki Motors, the corporate sponsor of the 24 Hours of Moab provided an unparalleled view of the Behind The Rocks area and the La Sal Mountains.  The only furniture on the deck was six massaging lounge chairs.  What better way to relax and meet new friends than when everyone is "relaxing to a near-professional level massage in the great outdoors?  Thank "Optically Delicious" team drags golden and silver light into the scoring tent - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)you to Suzuki Motors for supporting the 24 Hours of Moab in such a great way.
 
When they came to unplug the massage chairs, I made my way downstairs to the awards ceremony.  Around 3:00 PM, Dean and Dax came to the podium to accept their Moab and series championship trophies on behalf of their sponsor, Bach Builders.  Engrossed in capturing the scene on my Sony MiniDV video camera, I had time to take only one still shot. 
 
New Energy filled the scoring tent - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
"When they exited the stage, I took off after them.  Just as I visually located Dean, I remembered that I had left my gloves on a folding chair, back at the awards ceremony.  By the time I retrieved my gloves, both Dax and Dean had disappeared.
Six hundred and fifty-eight years after the Anasazi vacated Moab area without a trace, so too did Dean and Dax.  The Anasazi left us with enduring artwork for all to enjoy.  Dean and Dax added to their reputation as the best single-speed, Duo Pro mountain bike racers in the country, if not the world.  Congratulations to Dax Massey and Dean Miller accept their Championship Trophy - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)Dean and Dax.  With luck, I will catch up with you again, at the 2009 24 Hours of Moab.


By James McGillis at 11:41 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

Dax & Dean of Bach Builders and "Shake & Bake" Team Pedal Towards Victory - 2008


Campgound at 2008 Moab Bike Race - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)

Dax & Dean of "Shake & Bake" Team Pedal Towards Victory

 

Every year, thousands gather to watch the most exciting off-road bicycle race in the world.  Join us, as we review the excitement of the 2008 24 Hours of Moab.

 

 

Watch the Video, "24 Hours of Moab, 2008"

 

Moab, Utah - October 12, 2008
 
After midnight in Moab, it is 39 f degrees outside, but the wind chill on exposed human flesh feels like 34 f degrees.  To the north, in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, a major winter snowstorm rages.  Although no precipitation has fallen here in the past five days, the storm to the north is acting like an atmospheric vacuum cleaner, pulling in strong winds from the south.
Mountain biking in Moab - Old friends shake hands before the 24-HOM race - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
At Noon Saturday, the thirteenth annual Suzuki “24 Hours of Moab” mountain bike race began at its traditional course “Behind the Rocks”, ten miles south of Moab.  For those who do not know, the “24 Hours of Moab” is the premier endurance race of its kind.  For all of those years, Laird Knight and his Granny Gear Productions has been the driver behind this event.
 
As the huge regional storm was building to the north on Friday night, thousands of mountain bike racers and race fans made camp on a former cattle-grazing land near the Start/Finish line.  As they spent the night in tents near the course, I slept in my heated travel trailer, at the full-service Moab Rim Campark, ten miles away.  Even in my sheltered spot, I awakened several times overnight, fearful that my trailer might blow over in the wind.  I can only imagine how little sleep the racers and fans may have gotten in their campground that night.
 Full bike racks, prior to race - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)
On Saturday morning, I drove to the race site, intent upon finding the two-man Bach Builders Team, also known as “Team Shake & Bake”, comprised of Dax Massey of Boulder and Dean Miller of Littleton, Colorado.  Having met both men in the parking lot of a Moab supermarket the previous day, I wanted to photograph and interview them before the start of their 24-hour race.  Upon my arrival at the camp and racecourse, the thousands of tents, bikes and racers made me realize that finding Dax and Dean was unlikely.
 
As the minutes counted down to race time, the winds built in equal measure.  Sweeping winds alternated with vortices of super-fine red dust.  Almost immediately, the actuator on my digital camera developed a gritty feel.  Looking like bandits or bank robbers, many fans around me wore bandanas over their noses and mouths.  After realizing that the western bandana is really an early type of filtration device, I lamented the fact that I had left mine at home.
Serious-minded racer, prior to start - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
The race includes an exciting “LeMans Start”, patterned after the classic sports car race of old.  Rather than running to their sports cars, our bike racers first ran one hundred yards out, then one hundred yards back, before jumping on their bikes and pedaling away.
 
With the strong wind and the loud public address system whipping up the crowd, the race start was pure pandemonium.  Crowd control broke down, with fans, photographers and racers intermingling like Native Americans stampeding a herd of American Bison toward at cliff. 
 
I would like to say that after the race started that the dust cleared, but it Racer, holding his team baton - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com)did not.  After the racers pedaled furiously away, the PA announcer told us that we would not see the leaders return from their fifteen-mile loop for about an hour.  Being a long distance bike-racing fan is like working for the CIA.  There is endless boredom, punctuated by occasional action, when the riders return.  If the race itself is a test of endurance, for fans it is a test of dedication. 
 
Since I am a math whiz, I realized that at the pace of one lap per hour, I would see each of my favorite team riders not more than twelve times over the 24-hour period.  After eating more dust than ever before in my life, I decided to leave the scene, planning to return for the final hour of racing, late Sunday morning.
Dax Massey (left) and Dean Miller of Bach Builders Team - Click for larger image (http://jamesmcgillis.com) 
Why would so many people brave such hardships to participate in or watch a 24-hour bike race on a remote, windswept mesa?  The roots of off-road bicycle racing go back to the late 1960s, when a few intrepid souls raced up (or was it down) Mount Tamalpais, in Marin County, California.  Not to be outdone, young men and women throughout the Rocky Mountain region took up the sport in the 1980s and 1990s.  Now that it is a mature, if niche sport, off-road bicycle endurance racing appears to attract participants in their late twenties to their early forties.  There are younger and older participants, but the core group has “Generation X” (for extreme?) written all over them.  
 
As I complete and post this article, the high, cold mesa is still a beehive of activity, with racers, volunteers and support staff monitoring the ongoing race.  As I prepare to retire, it reminds me that Dax and Dean will have little rest again tonight.  Only when one passes their team baton to the other, can the first rider rest for an hour or two, depending on their riding schedule.
Dust Storm, La Sal Mountains- Click for larger image (https://jamesmcgillis.com 
I forgot to mention that when I met Dean on Friday afternoon, an injury to his right hand and wrist prevented him from offering me a traditional handshake.  Undaunted, Dax and Dean planned to come in first in their self-supported Duo-Pro class.  If they finish at all, they will be my heroes.  As I write this article, time wears on.  According to current race results provided by promoter Granny Gear, Bach Builders/Team Shake & Bake is currently in thirteenth place overall and they are first in the Duo-Pro category.  While they clocked early laps at one hour, eleven minutes, their after-midnight lap times have fallen to one hour and thirty-one minutes.  Go Dax and Dean.  I shall cheer your anticipated victory at the finish line on Sunday at Noon.

By James McGillis at 01:59 AM | | Comments (0) | Link