Colorado myself to visit the grave of my friend John Henry Holliday.
I wrote about how I met Doc Holliday in my "I'm Ya Huckleberry" box
clues.
Glad you returned home safely.
OBJuan
--- In LbNCA@yahoogroups.com, Kel Gennert
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm back from another amazing road trip, this time to Colorado,
New Mexico and Arizona. I did do some boxing, and planted some, too--
you can take a peek at my logbook if you're interested in details--
but I did a bunch of art trekking, which often preempted finding
many boxes, and filled the well of inspiration for continuing work
here.
>
> Some trip highlights:
>
> The little town of Palisade, CO & boxes there, especially several
Napoleon Dynamite-themed plants
>
> Glenwood Springs, CO: Doc Holliday's gravesite and the cave tour
at Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park.
http://www.glenwoodcaverns.com/gc_tour_cave.html
>
> Taking the high road south through the state, passing all those
14,000+ foot peaks, seeing Leadville and Salida.
>
> Stumbling on (through pure serendipity disguised as bad luck) one
man's construction dream, see http://www.moosh.net/mark/castle/.
These pictures are a few years old; I'll post a link if I get mine
posted somewhere.
>
> Taos and Santa Fe, as ever, art, art, and more art. Discovering a
fun antique store called Pegasus (just when I thought there was no
funk left in Santa Fe), where I picked up a bunch of new items for
use in assemblage pieces. (A whole small bag of Monopoly pieces!)
Watching a bronze pour at Shidoni Foundry, accompanied by my own
personal tour guide of sorts, a sculptor friend who joined me for
the second half of the week. She really helped me understand--along
with watching the pouring part of the process, so primal--how labor-
intensive, painstaking, and expensive casting bronze sculpture is.
http://www.shidoni.com/ (aside to Lisascenic and other interested
parties: did you see the Chronicle article on the Crucible? Check it
out: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?
f=/c/a/2006/01/08/PKGN1GH9LR1.DTL&hw=foundry+theater&sn=005&sc=181)
>
> Touring Acoma Pueblo, the oldest continually inhabited city in
the U.S., with its nearly four hundred year old mission church:
http://www.collectorsguide.com/ab/abfa22.html
>
> Making a new friend in Flagstaff, an artist /gallery
owner/musician. Making connections like this is one of the great
joys of travel for me.
>
> Spending a few days in Lake Havasu City with the sculptor friend
and another artist friend, where we shared companionable communion
and worked on our various creative projects, visited the London
Bridge and marveled at the roadrunners and the desert in bloom.
>
> Vicariously seeing doublesaj and Old Blue in their boxes at Red
Rock Canyon, NV. (And Funhog in her NM boxes.)
>
> Visiting the ghost town of Rhyolite, NV; finding boxes and a
strange sculpture garden there. http://www.goldwellmuseum.org/
>
> Driving home on 395 along the east side of the Sierra and being
wowed once again by the varied and gorgeous landscapes that our
state has to offer. It's always good to come home.
>
> I don't know if I'll be able to join folks at the end of the
month to see Bandaid; I'll have to play it spontaneously. Snow is
melting at Tahoe--many boxes becoming available!
>
> I hope you all are well: Robb getting around without pain,
likewise Carole Kat, Old Blue maintaining a sense of humor
(shouldn't we all?)
>
> Happy Spring!
>
> artTrekker
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>