June 20

Day 20 – Fave photo I’ve ever taken

this is my all time favourite photograph. Everytime I look at it, I remember how tired and sweaty I felt, how hot I was. But most importantly, I remember the night we stayed at the Canyonlands Motel.

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Baby Boo and the Canyonlands Motel

You can always tell the people who have never really “ridden off into the sunset”. They’re the ones who still think it’s romantic.

The reality is anything but romantic. The sun is blazing into your eyes, and no matter how you squint, you can’t really see what’s up ahead. You can feel the mother of all headaches begin to take up residence between your temples. You’re hot. You’re tired, and tired of being on the road. You’re hoping that a decent motel will magiclly appear over the horizon, one with air conditioning and a mini bar. And you discover that hell is an empty, westward highway that never ends.

That is where I was late one August day. We’d been riding since the morning, through a desert heat that we were not used to. We were both dehydrated and tired. Monument Valley was visually dramatic in the late afternoon sunshine, but the view was not enough to stop me from wishing I’d forced a stop in Mexican Hat a half hour before. We hadn’t seen another vehicle on the road and I figured we were about halfway between Mexican Hat and Kayenta, quite literally in the middle of nowhere.

I looked in my rear view mirror and saw a view I had to photograph. Keith was ahead of me and I knew he wouldn’t be happy about a delay, but I pulled over anyway. I watched him ride off, taking the camera gear with him. While I waited for him to notice I wasn’t there anymore, I took the water bottle out of my pack and took a long swig of the tepid water that did nothing to wash away the bright metallic taste of the heat and the dust.

The look on Keith’s face as he pulled off his helmet matched the tone of his voice as he said, “What now?”. I gestured back the way that we had came, at what I had seen in the mirror.

“I need to take a photo.”

He looked the view, really looked at the vivid red desert bisected by new blacktop so straight that it seemed like it went through the distant red cliff rather than curve around it. He saw the same thing I did, and handed me the camera. He smiled and said, “Good eye. I’d have missed that one.”

He gave me some hints on composition, and we talked sporadically while I aimed the camera at the scenes around me.

“I’m about done”, he said as I sat in the middle of the road, focusing on the distant hills. I pressed the shutter button twice before I answered.

“Yeah, me too. Where do suppose we are?”

Keith helped me up and took the camera to take some shots of the dusty bikes in that golden sunshine.

“Middle. Of. Nowhere.”

“Literally. What do you figure, we’re about halfway to the next town?””

“The question now, ” he said as he put the camera away, “is do we go on? Or do we go back?”

I remembered the two-story hotel I had seen beside the river in Mexican Hat, the one with the all-important air-conditioning grills under each of the windows that overlooked the San Juan River. I mentioned it to Keith and added, “Plus, we’ll have the sun at our backs for the half hour, rather than it glaring in our eyes”.

“Sold. Let’s go.”The ride back seemed quicker, as it always does when you know that the end is in sight. We pulled into the hotel’s courtyard and smiled at each other in relief as we walked into the office. An older woman with long white hair, wearing a white tshirt over an ankle length red peasant skirt, smiled at us and gently explained that there was no vacancy, hadn’t we seen the sign?

I know I blinked in surprise. No vacancy? WTF does that mean? It took me a second to remember that it meant no room at the inn. In all of our travels over the previous years, we had never encountered No Vacancy in any of the budget or mom and pop motels wh had ever stopped in. There was always room and we had grown complacent.

The wind had been knocked out of my sails, but Keith still had the presence of mind to ask her if she could recommend another hotel in town, someplace clean and cheap.

“Go to the Canyonlands Motel. It’s up the hill on the left, beside the gas station. Don’t even bother with the other ones, they’re crap.”

Off we went, up the hill and turned left into an uneven gravel parking lot. The Canyonlands Motel looked pretty dismal, with cracked stucco around each door and a broken neon sign that now only said “Budget Rat s”.

“Well, this is special.” I muttered to Keith as we headed to the office after making sure that the NO part of NO VACANCY was unlit on both sides of the sign.

“At least it will be cheap,” he replied. He really is a most frugal man.

We opened the door, and I worked to keep my face blank. I’m sure it was a tidy place once, but now it had the look of a place that had slipped quietly by inches. It wasn’t dirty, just messy as hell. People had put stuff just anywhere rather than put it away. Folded linens were piled high on the end of the counter in a tower that had a decided lean to it. A large dented industrial vacuum squatted in the corner in front of red vinyl chairs that had been new a few decades before. One of the chairs had a dirty white plastic bucket on it, filled with cleaning supplies with a pair of used yellow rubber gloves tossed over them. A box of cheap garbage bags sat on the other chair. Magazines and rolls of hotel toilet paper and boxes of thin motel soap were set down anywhere with no attempt at organization.

A teenage girl sat at a computer on the other side of the counter, sitting back in an old office chair with her feet up on the counter. She slowly put her feet down when we asked her if they had any rooms available.

“Sure,” she said, giving us a wide smile through snaggle teeth. It was my turn to get the accommodations so I chatted with her as I filled out the card. She was friendly, if a bit odd. Her hair had been dyed black, but a while ago and her roots were coming in a mousy blond. Frankly, it looked like it had been cut by a lawn mower, choppy and spikey in the most peculiar way. She wore black eyeshadow which only served to highlight how small and porcine her eyes were in that round white face, and the scarlet lipstick had been applied outside the lip line giving her a clownish look. She stood up as I finished filling in the our information, and I saw that her glitter nailpolish had been picked off and chipped halfway down each bitten nail.

The crowning glory of her look had to be her tshirt. It had to be at least 2 sizes too small and covered her ample form like a sausage casing ready to split. A black and red banner design had been airbrushed on it and the words Baby Boo was written in a bilious purple script that warped and distorted as the tshirt stretched over her chest.

“If ya need anythin, just call. I’m ______ and I’ll be happy to help ya.”

We both forgot her name immediately. To us, she would always be just Baby Boo.

A green rental car pulled into the parking lot as we walked out of the office, disgorging two couples that spoke in German to each other. The men talked to each other in that way that said what a great adventure this is and sauntered to the office. The women stayed by the car with slightly shell-shocked expressions and looked silently at the motel buildings. One caught my eye and we exchanged a smile and a slight shrug, silently commiserating with each other that we had ended up here in this dismal spot.

Keith started to unpack his bike while I wrestled with an aged sliding glass door, trying to get into the room. Finally he had to come and help. So much gravel and dust had settled in the tracks that the whole exercise took far longer than it should have, and nothing we did could get them closed again. Frankly that was just as well; the room was stuffy and hot after being closed up all afternoon and the faint breeze was more important than security right then.

The room held no surprises. It was as dejected as the rest of the place. A brown and beige shag carpet filled the room and was matted with more gravel and dust from years of travellers coming in from the parking lot. Both double beds slumped noticeably in the middle and the cheap nylon comforters had pulls and snags distorting the shiny satin-like surface. Everything seemed clean though and the scent of bleach overlaid the smell of heat and dust. I won’t touch anything but the sheets, I thought. AndNO WAY am I walking on that floor in bare feet.

While Keith fiddled with the TV and looked for the air conditioning controls I checked out the bathroom. Clean but dingy pretty much sums it up. While the porcelain and tiles were clean, everything was just a little chipped and shabby. I wondered how I would ever get dry with towels as threadbare as the ones hanging on a pitted chrome rail.

“You’re not gonna believe this,” Keith called from the other room.

“Only one channel?”

“Worse. No air conditioning.”

“Are you fucking kidding me?!?”

“There’s this space up near the ceiling, but I don’t know if that’s it.”

I sighed. “Well, let’s go ask on our way to get some food.”

“You going to shower first?”

“No, let’s just go. I’ll just get all sweaty and dusty again. I’ll shower before bed.”

Baby Boo was still in the office, and looked genuinely puzzled when Keith explained that there was no air conditioner in the room.

“Oh there totally is. There’s one in every room. It’s just a little different that what most people are used to.”

That was our introduction to swamp coolers, also known as evaporative coolers. It is not, as Baby Boo claimed, an air conditioner. It is a fan that blows air over water, and cools by adding humidity into the room. She told Keith how to turn it on, and I waited by the road while he went back to the room to get it started.

“You’re not going to like it,” he said to me when he came back.

“Like what?”

We started walking down the road to find a restaurant.

“The room is getting damp, but not cool. I think separate beds tonight”

I sighed. I didn’t like it very much, but we’d learned that a night spent trying not to roll into the dip in the middle of an old bed didn’t make for a good night’s rest.

We passed another hotel as we walked, and we tried to peer into the dim lobby as we passed it.

“How bad does this place have to be, if it’s worse than the Canyonlands?” I asked Keith.

“Maybe the woman at the San Juan Inn gets a kick back.”

“Just how much of a kick back can one expect from a $60 a night room?” I wondered.

Mexican Hat is not a big place, one of those blink-and-you-miss-it towns, so we soon found a sign for the Swingin’ Steakhouse. The smell of barbeque was too good for us to look for another restaurant. We walked around a fence to find ourselves on a partially covered patio. There was a bar at one end, and about 10 old-style melamine tables with mismatched chrome chairs. The flag stones were uneven, and everything wobbled no matter how we shifted our chairs or propped up a table leg with a folded napkin. We turned our chairs so we could see the other end of the patio.

Here was a large firepit, maybe one meter by three meters with a grill hanging from chains suspended over the glowing charcoal fire. It was attended by a young man in a dark cowboy hat with black jeans and tshirt, who drank from a steady supply of long-neck Budweiser bottles as he tended to the orders on the grill and kept it swinging steadily over the flame

“You want chicken or beef,” asked the heavily tanned blond who could have been 30, could have been 50. “There’s nothin’ else.”

We both settled on the beef, and I added a Bud to my order. Keith wondered idly what vegetarians would order.

“There’s salad and beans and bread that comes with,” said our waitress helpfully.

“Guess this isn’t the place to be a vegetarian,” Keith remarked after she left.

“Umm…no,” I said, laughing as I looked at the big slabs of steak on the grill

We sat on the patio and watched the stars come out in a perfectly clear sky as we enjoyed what is possibly the best steak dinner we have ever had. I splurged and followed it up with a piece of home made apple crumble a la mode (“that means it comes with ice cream, ya know”), that was so good it made me sleepy with contentment.

We walked back to the motel hand-in-hand, pleased with the dinner at the Swingin’ Steak. and the night in general. While I waited for the eight daddy-long-leg spiders that had been lingering in the tub to wash down the drain before I stepped in for my shower, I thought about what had been a good day’s ride followed by a good dinner with good company. And as Keith later remarked, even though it wasn’t the best of accommodations, Baby Boo and the Canyonlands Motel made for a good story.

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The next morning, we rode along the same route. It turned out that where we stopped so I could take the photo had actually been much closer to Kayenta than Mexican Hat. If we had carried on another 15 minutes, we would have been in the kind of town you find where two highways intersect, with chain hotels, Denny’s and MacDonalds. Air conditioning a-plenty, but no good stories.

 

June 16 – 19

Day 16: out and about

Road trips are awesome; you never know where you’re going to end up. Like on this Saturday, we rode up through the Kawarthas in search of curvey roads we haven’t been on yet and stopped in a little town called Coboconk. They were having their Freshwater Festival, so we watched trick waterskiiers and bought burgers from the the ladies at the Kinsmen trailer. We walked around an exhibit by a company called Zoo To You where I gravitated toward a woman with a huge yellow snake around her neck.

You cannot imagine the grin on my face when she asked if I wanted to hold it. I quite like snakes; I like how they move, curving and coiling around objects in sinuous ways that humans can’t.

Day 17: in your bag

iPad. iPhone. Wallet. Cat-shaped pillbox. POW changepurse. Kangaroo case with iphone camera lenses. Shure case with earbuds. Gum. Anti-inflammatory pills for elbow. Minted rose lip balm. L’Occitane cocoa flower hand cream. Extra glasses. Sunglass clip-ons. And everything somehow manages to fit in my Roots flat pack bag.

 

Day 18: Something you don’t know about me

It was 1975. I was 13. What can I say. And yes, I still have this on vinyl. And yes, I still know the words. And no, I don’t listen to them anymore except by accident.

Day 19: Imperfect

I found that I’d made a mistake on the back panel of this sweater about 3 rows after I did it, but decided to leave it in rather than go back and fix it for reasons that I fail to express properly.

June 11 – 15

Day 11: Door

The view down my hallway to the door at the end.

Day 12: Low angle

Last year’s reeds against a blue sky. Love this shot.

Day 13: Art

This is part of a mural on Queen East that always made me smile. It’s since been graffiti-e with a muddy brown tag over most of it; now it just makes me angry.

 

Day 14: Time

It’s the last day of students, the graduation ceremony is over. That makes it time for a drink!

 

Day 15: Yellow

Daisies are my favourite flower.

June 9- 10

Day 9: your view today

Well, one of my views, the one that was the most fun. No one wants to see the other view I saw most of the day, while I was marking photoshop projects, spreadsheets and programming reports. Not even me.

 

Day 10 – the best bit about your weekend

Explored The Liberty Village neighbourhood with Keith today. Coffee at Balzacs, booze-flavoured cupcakes, and taking in the sights.

 

June 5 – 8

Day 5: Sign

Yes, I am surrounded by signs all day, but this is one of Keith’s favourites, taken near Manly Beach, Australia.

He laughs and looks at me every time he sees it.

Day 6: Hat

In fifty years, I have yet to find a hat that looks good on my big round melon of a head. This particular fashion disaster of a bucket hat was purchased in Sydney as we had neglected to pack anything to keep the strong Australian sun off our heads.



Day 7: Drink

Made a late-afternoon decision to take myself on a date. Cocktails and dinner at the Queen Mother Cafe followed by Hamlet performed by the National Ballet. I can honestly say that as good as the ballet was, the best part of the evening was this glass of Killer Koolaid.



Day 8: 6 O’Clock

At 6:00, I was at the Fill House, finishing a rack of ribs and a pint of Steam Whistle while enjoying good conversation with my beloved.

 

June 1 – 4

Day 1: morning

I played hooky on Friday. I told work I needed the day for some PD, a programming workshop. I lied. I was actually at one of Chris’ retreats. Well, technically it was a workshop…

It was held at a place called Loretto Maryholme on the shore of Lake Simcoe and it was glorious. It rained, which one normally doesn’t come to mind when one hears the word glorious, but it was perfect to curl up on a couch by a window and scribble in a notebook while water drips from the big maple tree outside the window.

I loved the space, and I loved the writing. It’s run by nuns, but it’s not obviously Christian. There are some silent retreats being held there over the summer; I might indulge myself.

Day 2: Empty

‘Nuff said.

Day 3: On your plate

Not very clever or original. The bacon sandwich was very tasty though.

Day 4: Close-up

Playing with my new Olloclip lens on my grat-grandmother’s gold pocket watch. Color me impressed.

 

May 29 – 30

Day 29: a number

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Well, I lost 7 kilos before I got lazy last month. I need to get back to it if I want to shed the next 7 kilos.

Day 30: your personality

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I’m friendlier than I look.

Day 31: something beautiful

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This was a hard one; beauty is all around me every day.

May 25-28

Day 25: Unusual

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Erldunda is a dot on the map at the junction of the Stuart and Lasseter Highways, about 2+ hours south of Alice Spring and 2+ hours east of Uluru. It is, by urban standards, right smack dab in the middle of nowhere.

Everyone stops here at this last chance for gas. Such a transient customer base made this sign seem even more odd.

Just who is licking the window often enough that a sign had to be made?

Day 26: 12 o’clock

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This is one of those boring prompts that did not inspire at all, so this is an uninspiring shot of what I do around midnight on a Saturday night; knit and watch tv. My night life is pretty uninspiring these days.

Day 27: something sweet

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We’d gone to a few places listed in this year’s Doors Open Toronto. Keith thought I should have used a shot of the interior of the raw sugar shed at the Redpath plant, two football fields worth of unrefined cane sugar. I thought it a bit too obvious and took this one next to Redpath on the harbor, a faux Northern retreat complete with Muskoka chairs and imported rocks and sand to cover an old parking lot, called Sugar Beach. Neat effect courtesy the MarbleCam app.

Day 28: the weather today

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The sun broke through the clouds as I waited for the bus to work, silhouetting my building. From it just got hot and grossly humid. Cue the school’s annual air conditioning failure.

May 24

Day 24: Something new

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I just started wearing my new bike jacket, and am loving it so far. It’s mesh, so it’s nice and cool to wear even during these incredibly warm days we’re having here lately. Well, cool until I have to stop; then I sweat like everyone else until I can move again.

What I really like about it is the fit. This is the first jacket I’ve owned that has been constructed to fit a woman’s shape, and the corset back means I can cinch it in. When I first put it on and asked K what he thought, he replied that with the styling and fit, it made my ass look fast (private joke based on my tshirt).

And what I really like about it is that it’s not covered with pink crap, fringe or cheesy red roses. Kudos to Joe Rocket for finally figuring out that not every biker chick likes girlie shit.

May 11 – 23

Sorry, am catching up. Been a little distracted lately, what with an upcoming Inspection at the school and me with my paperwork in its usual state of procrastinated incompletion. Paperwork is now done (for now), inspection is over, and we can now return to our (ir)regularly scheduled programming.

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Day 11: Kitchen

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I’ve heard that some people use kitchens for food preparation. in our case, the kitchen is mostly the room the coffee is kept in.

Day 12: Something that makes you happy

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“What do you want to do today?”
“I dunno. Let’s go explore Guildwood Park.”
“Cool! Let’s go!”

Spontaneous exploration, good conversation and bad Monty Python jokes make me oddly happy.

Day 13: Mum

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I love this picture of my mother on her honeymoon.

Day 14: Grass

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Another Australia shot, taken after watching the sunrise at Uluru. Like Alaska, that place has gotten under my skin in many ways.

Day 15: Love

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Our wedding day. The only person who wore white was Elvis.

Day 16: What are you reading

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I am not a fan of non-fiction. The only book here I am having any fun reading is The Bloggess’ memoir. However, I am collecting titles for my summer reading – any suggestions? Keep in mind I’m a sci-fi girl.

Day 17: Snack

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I keep trying to tell myself that these are tasty as well as better for me than the other snacks I used to keep at work, ie. cookies. Somedays I can convince myself; for other days there’s chocolate.

Day 18: Something you made

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I resisted for a long time, but man, I really like making socks. Challenging, fun, quick. At least the first one always is. The second one is always less fun and somehow harder to finish.

Day 19: Your favourite place

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The seat of my motorcycle is really my favourite place.

Day 20: Something you can’t live without

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Coffee stops with my guy.

Day 21: Where you stand

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On a gorgeous day there’s really only one place to stand: a beach.

Day 22: Pink

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This one was hard…I really do not like pink. Other than the pink wheels on my roller skates, this is the only pink I have. Fitting that’s it’s the little bows on the girl skulls *grin.

Day 23: Technology

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I own a lot of technology, too much actually. But my absolute favourite is this Fossil watch with animated flames that Keith bought for me when we were in San Francisco years ago.