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essay

canyonlands, utah
crossen
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Arches
and Rattlesnakes
- chris crossen
There was a call
on the walkie-talkie today from Arches National Park in Moab regarding
a man pinned beneath a boulder in the backcountry.
Apparently, the man was walking
along a trail when a large slab fell from the base of an arch,
crushing one of his legs. A freak occurrence. This is a land of
eroding rock, yet seldom do you see any of it move. This man just
happened to be in the wrong spot. Or the right spot, depending
upon how you look at it. It's not often that one gets the chance
to see a six ton boulder fall. You just don't expect it.
Arches National Monument has changed
a great deal since Edward Abbey wrote about it in Desert Solitaire.
It has become a national park, and the roads that were being planned
and surveyed while Abbey was a seasonal ranger there have all
been paved. Visitors can now see the majority of the arches without
ever leaving their cars. Some of the land has been left for the
more stalwart, however. Backcountry does exist, though the majority
of visitors never see it.
This man was one of the brave.
He heeded Abbey's advice. He left his car and went out into the
woods, ventured out into the roadless land of hoo-doo rocks and
had one fall on top of him. Ed would have been proud. He would
have gone out to that man himself, laughed a great bearded laugh
and helped him out from underneath the slab, set his leg, then
carried him back to Moab to buy him a beer. Having a rock fall
on top of you is what it's all about.
The landscape here appears still,
looks as if frozen in time, but really it is eroding relatively
quickly. Everywhere there are fallen boulders, broken cliffs,
talus slopes, collapsed walls and pillars. Landscape Arch, in
Moab, is crumbling away rapidly, an old arch in the process of
dying, about to go any day now. Exactly when the center span will
come tumbling down, no one can say. But it will collapse eventually
and someone may be fortunate enough to see the rock actually fall,
hear the explosion as tons of stone break away and crash to the
earth.
It takes a great deal of effort
to make an arch. Those surrounding Moab were formed over hundreds
of thousands of years by the weathering and erosion of huge Entrada
Sandstone walls, or fins, as geologists refer to them. Frost,
rain, snow, and freezing water, aided by gravity, all find their
way into fissures and cracks in the stone causing pieces and slabs
to flake off. When the flaking breaks through the fin an arch
is formed.
Arches National Park has the greatest
density of natural arches in the world, more than 500 within its
boundaries.
I spend a good deal of time watching
the arches in Moab and also some of the lesser known ones found
throughout the Canyonlands of southeastern Utah waiting for something
to happen; I have yet to be so graced. It's always the same, a
long hike into the backcountry to see the arch, the bewilderment
and smile, the impossibility of it all, finding a hole in the
sky surrounded by sandstone.
Each arch is enormous, most hundreds
of feet high, magnificently huge. They stand complete, an arch
through and through, silent, sculpted, as if on display. But watching
from across the canyon, waiting, I always have the feeling that
I have missed something.
We move too quickly. When something
as dramatic as having a piece of cliff fall on top of us occurs,
we attribute it to blind chance, to fortuna, which in some sense
it is. But to see the landscape move, to be in the right place
at the right time, you have to be open to the possibility.
We spend most of our energy fumbling
about, missing much while we do so. If only we could sit and watch
for days, months, years. If only we had the patience.
After about six hours, the park
service managed to haul a few hydraulic jacks into the backcountry
and lift the slab off the man, who suffered nothing worse than
a broken femur and a great deal of pain. Well worth it Ed would
say.
Yesterday, I was walking down
the Lost Canyon Trail when I came across a snake. It was blind
luck. The trail came up out of the dry creek bed to a bulge of
slickrock. I was pushing along, back home to camp, staring at
the harsh afternoon light on the rimrock, when I came to a cairn.
I saw the cairn, but something else caught my eye, and I froze
in mid-step. I had that feeling that something was out of place.
My sixth sense smacked me across the head, and I looked down to
find a snake stretched out across the dusty sandstone inches below
my next step. I brought my foot back slowly, placed it gingerly
on the stone, and tip-toed backwards three feet. I had that rush
of adrenaline surging in my heart and gut.
He was beautiful. Yellow sand-colored
with a black diamond pattern running from the tip of his mouth
down to his mid-section where the markings faded to maroon, then
scarlet, then back to black on the last six inches of tail. He
was small, two feet long at the most, slightly fatter than a garden
hose in the middle. His tail was black and his head shaped in
a V. He didn't budge.
The only snakes that supposedly
inhabit the region are gopher snakes, garters, and the occasional
faded midget rattler. This snake looked like a viper, had the
distinctive Crotalus head and patterned markings, but I could
see no rattle, and this snake didn't look anything like the faded
midgets mounted in the Visitor Center's glass display case. The
markings were all wrong. Faded midgets are supposed to be the
same creamy yellow with dark brown to black diamond patterns,
but nowhere did red enter the picture. And faded midgets had rattles.
I waited for the snake to do something,
but he just lay stretched across the hot rock, sun beating down.
I was sweating. I scraped my foot across the stone. His black
tongue flickered about, and he brought his head quickly back beside
his neck, coiling his body like a whip. Cocked and ready. Definitely
a rattler. I didn't want to step over him so I took a deep breath
and waited. Slowly, after a minute or so, with a heightened sense
of caution, the snake rippled his body and glided down past the
cairn, across the slickrock toward the reeds and brush in the
wash below.
Effortless.
When he was almost to the grasses
I took a step. Immediately he hissed, coiled, head bobbing away,
and fired a machine gun rattle that spiked my spine. I froze.
He hissed again, then calmed his rattling to a purr and backed
his way into the reeds.
I later read in a field guide
that he was a Hopi rattlesnake, not indigenous to this area, and
seldom seen outside of his native Arizona. I feel fortunate to
have almost been a victim.
Most people believe that rattlesnakes,
scorpions, Gila monsters, and other such dangers abound here.
They do not. You can spend an entire year deep in the backcountry
without coming across one instance of livid fauna. But the thought
of them lingers constantly in the back of your mind.
Certain sections of the Lost Canyon
Trail run through dry grass and brush and are littered with fallen
cottonwood leaves. Lizards dart everywhere. They seem to have
the run of the place. When walking, they scatter from their resting
spots on the cairns or trail, racing into the leaves just before
you arrive, sounding much like a rattler. You don't know what
to expect. You know that it's probably only a lizard, but perhaps
it is a snake this time. It takes a little while to brush the
anxiety aside.
But when one realizes how little
there is out here that can really hurt you, it begins to make
you wonder about other places.
Only a few thousand people in
the United States are bitten by rattlesnakes each year. Of those,
only a dozen do not recover from the poison. The number of people
who happen to be beside an arch when a slab flakes off most likely
isn't known. Dangers abound everywhere, but I believe there are
fewer out here. You must possess a certain knowledge of a place
in order not to get hurt, but this is a relatively easy thing
to learn.
I feel safe here. I'd rather take
my chances out in this desert savannah and labyrinth of slickrock
canyons before any city or town. People are crazy-canyons are
not. The maze may be very hot in the summer, freezing in the winter,
and somewhat temperamental regarding water, but it will not try
to kill you. If it does, you'll probably be amazed at what you
see the moment before you die.
Chris Crossen is the editor of
this journal. He lives in Truckee, California and works as a writer,
researcher, and artist. He spends as much time as possible exploring
the remaining wild places.
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