Staying Flexible

in astrophotography •  6 years ago 

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When Ren and I travel, often we do not have a definite plan in mind. In many cases, we didn’t even plan that we were taking a trip, let alone plan out the trip. At some point during breakfast, one of us will ask what we want to do this weekend, and an hour later we will be hitting the road. Some of our best trips have started out this way much like our trip to Houston. Other times we plan things out in detail. We know when we are leaving, how far we will drive, where we are staying, what gas will cost, and what our budget will be for the trip. Both of us exhaustively research the area, to see what is available. Sometimes we even have a list of specific things that I want to photograph while we are there. Our Davis Mountain Trip is a great example of this. Then there are trips that start out with a very detailed plan, but we end up scrapping it all and winging it. Our latest trip was one of those.

I have been crazy about astronomy since I was a kid. I got into photography three years ago because I wanted to do astrophotography. Specifically, I wanted to take photos of the Milky Way. When I told Ren I wanted to get a camera and learn photography, she supported me. One of the things I love best about our marriage is how we support and encourage each other. I never imagined how much I would love photography, or how much it would change my outlook on life.

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Scott taking photos at Petite Jean Mountain, Arkansas.

If you want to do astrophotography, one of the things you have to deal with is light pollution. You have to get where it is dark, far away from the city lights. Living in Fort Worth, that was not terribly difficult. I was about an hour and a half from reasonably dark skies, and three hours from very dark skies. The other thing you have to deal with is that you need to shoot when the moon is not in the sky, so the New Moon is ideal. Once we moved back to Tulsa, really dark skies were further away. Looking at the Light Pollution map on http://darksitefinder.com I saw that the darkest skies in Oklahoma were found at the far western end of the panhandle. In fact, these were as dark as anyplace in the continental U.S., and right there in the middle of these wonderfully dark skies was Black Mesa State Park. I wanted to go. The problem was that it was over seven and a half hours away; this would be a major trip. I had suggested it a few times, but Ren had not been enthusiastic because she was worried about the heat and the distance.

When I saw the August New Moon was going to fall on a weekend, and that it was going to fall during the middle of the Perseid Meteor Shower, I told Ren that I was going to want to be somewhere DARK that weekend. I was surprised when she suggested that we go to Black Mesa. It took me about half a second to agree. We started our planning. More accurately, Ren started planning. She presented me with three plans with a break down of costs, driving times, and the number of new counties we could get.

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Night sky at Fort Griffin State Historic Site in Texas.

We figured out what we wanted to see while we were there, which counties we would visit, how much gas it was going to take, and even where we would buy our gas, as we were headed into areas where you could not count on gas stations being nearby when you ran low. We knew we were headed to the park. There were three tri-state markers we wanted to visit, (A tri-state marker is where three states meet. If it’s not in the middle of a river, there will usually be a marker of some kind.), and, since Ren loves geology as much as I love astronomy, we were going to visit the Capulin Volcano National Monument in New Mexico.

Taking a half-day Thursday off from work we hit the road as soon as I got off work. We drove straight to the park along Highway 412, with only a minor detour to visit Gloss Mountain State Park, which was right on the way. We arrived at camp just after dark and got our first surprise. For a park that brags about their dark skies, they had the place lit up like downtown. Street lights everywhere. We would have to get away from the park to get our stars. We set up our hammock stand camp for the first time in the dark, but they are very straightforward and it went quickly. It was cloudy that evening, with a small chance of rain Thursday and Friday, but we got lucky, while there were storms around us, they passed us by.

We spent Friday, as planned, exploring the park, visiting two of the three tri-state markers, and a couple of canyons in Colorado. Friday evening I found a location and set up to take pictures, but it was pretty cloudy and I didn’t get the dark skies I had anticipated.

Saturday the plan was to get the third tri-state marker and visit the Capulin Volcano National Monument in New Mexico. We left camp and headed toward the Oklahoma-Texas-New Mexico border. When we got close enough to civilization to get a cell phone signal, I checked the weather forecast. The clear skies that had been predicted, were looking more and more unlikely. I wasn’t going to get my stars, again. I wasn’t too upset about it because we were having a great trip, and if you do astronomy long, you know that this is just part of the hobby. Sometimes it works out and sometimes it doesn’t.

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Us at the Oklahoma-New Mexico-Colorado tri-state marker.

As we headed into Clayton New Mexico, on the way to the Volcano, I looked at the map and told Ren, “If I can’t have stars, I want mountains. Let's go to Taos.” She asked how far it was, and I told her it was just over two hours. I expected a little resistance to scrapping the plan she had worked so hard on, however, to my surprise, she agreed right away. At this point, we knew nothing about Taos except that there were mountains. While Ren drove, I tried to figure out what we wanted to do when we got there. We aimed to stop at a place called Eagles Nest Lake State Park, and figure out where to go from there. While I looked over Google Maps, I saw a marker for Cimarron Canyon State Park, but it wasn’t clear what it was. We drove on toward the mountains, which were becoming more and more impressive the closer we got to them.

Reaching the town of Cimarron, we stopped at a tourist information booth to pick up some brochures and spoke with the attendant. I noticed a National Park Passport stamp and asked her what it was for. It turns out that Cimarron Canyon was a National Scenic, and Historic drive and we were driving right through it to get to Eagles Nest. We always try to take any Scenic Byway we pass. This was as beautiful as any with its huge cliffs and thick forest while the Cimarron River flowed the length of the canyon. I love Rivers, and the Cimarron is not just any river, it flows into Keystone lake just a few miles from where we live in Oklahoma where I have camped many times. It had an entirely different character here near it’s beginning. The middle section of the canyon was the state park, with lots of campsites along the road. We were in love with the place.

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The Cimarron River near the headwaters.

Reaching the town of Eagles Nest we had decided that we could see lots of interesting places by taking the Enchanted Circle Scenic Loop, which includes Taos and goes through large areas of the Carson National Forest. The only issue was that it was nearly 3:00 pm and we were about three hours from camp if we skipped the volcano. I wasn’t willing to skip the volcano because I knew how much it meant to Ren.

I called my boss, asking if I could take an extra day of vacation, while Ren tried to find a reasonably priced hotel; turns out that reasonably priced and Taos, don’t really go together. After a bit of searching, we found a room right in Eagles Nest so we booked the room. While we chatted with the manager, he told us that if we were driving the Loop, we should be sure and drive over to the Gorge Bridge, and told us how to get there. We were set with a basic plan for the afternoon so we headed out on the Enchanted Circle Scenic Loop and it was well worth taking the extra day. There is something about the mountains that call to me, something that feels like home. Whether it’s the Davis Mountains in Texas, the Ozarks in Arkansas, or the Sierra Nevadas in California. I love the mountains. These were no exception. It was a gorgeous drive through mountains, forests, and quaint little towns. The highest pass we drove through was just over 9,800 feet.

There were several roadside parks that were part of the Carson National Forest when we stopped at one to stretch our legs a bit, we crossed a small stream flowing gently over the rocks. To my surprise, it was the Red River. We had lived on the Red River for five months when we were park hosting on Lake Texoma for Eisenhower State Park. We had even made a point of crossing every Red River bridge from Texas to Oklahoma, and here we were crossing it again in New Mexico; it was so small.

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The Red River between Oklahoma and Texas

As we made our way around the loop we reached the intersection where we turned left to go to Taos, or right to go to the gorge bridge. We turned right. Wow! Just Wow!. On this trip, we had seen mesas, huge mountains, beautiful lakes, canyons, cliffs, forests, and scenic rivers, but this was by far the most majestic, and impressive thing that we saw. It was the Río Grande del Norte National Monument. The Rio Grande. We have traveled extensively in Texas, spent the better part of three years trying to see as much of Texas as possible, yet this was our first time to see the Rio Grande. It was amazing. This is the seventh highest bridge in the US, 565 feet above the river. There is a parking area on either side, with a scenic overlook, and you can walk out on the bridge. It was truly awesome, in the best sense of the overused word.

Reluctantly, we left the gorge and headed into Taos. I won’t spend much time on Taos, as this is getting rather long enough already. We drove around for a few hours, loved the place. Ren wants to move there; of course, she says that about every place we visit. I guess it’s a good thing we plan to buy an RV someday so we can live wherever we visit.

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Río Grande del Norte National Monument

I suggested that we visit the Taos Ski Valley before heading back to the hotel. This was the first place I got any real pushback from her. Not that she didn’t want to go, but she is frightened about driving down twisty, turny roads, especially since it was getting late in the day; however, me driving scares her even more because, in her words, she is a bad passenger. One of the things I admire most about Ren is that she does not let her fears get the better of her. It took her a few moments to work up her nerve, but she agreed.

The Hondo Canyon Road is the road that leads up the valley to the ski lodge. I know I’ve said this several times already, but it was a beautiful drive through the valley with huge cliffs and tall trees and is a valley, there was, naturally, a stream named the Hondo, Rio. As is usual in this area, we were in the Carson National Forest and there were lots of scenic roadside campgrounds. We drove up to the lodge, but it was getting late, so we didn’t get out of the car, then headed through the valley again, stopping at a few of the parks.

It was time to be heading back to the hotel. The last leg of the drive was the twistiest and turniest road of the entire trip, and it was full dark, so we didn’t see most of it. When we got back to the hotel, Ren went to bed; she was exhausted from the last leg of the drive. The hotel manager told me earlier I could get a good view of the milky way from the deck on top of the hotel overlooking the lake. I went to take some pictures, but between the hotel and city lights, they were not the skies I had come seeking, but they weren't bad.

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Milky Way above Eagles Nest, New Mexico.

The next morning we found the entire town socked in with fog. We were not eager to drive through the canyon again until the fog lifted, so we walked through town to find breakfast. What we found instead was there wasn’t anywhere in Eagles Nest to get breakfast at 8:00 on a Sunday Morning. Did I mention that Eagles Nest is tiny? Did I mention that Eagles Nest is at an altitude of more than 8,200 feet? We hadn’t really paid much attention to that before taking our walk, but as we were walking back the thinness of the air became apparent. We were huffing and puffing by the time we got back.

When the fog burned off we headed back through the valley to Cimarron then north to Raton, where we found breakfast. Then we took the Raton pass into Colorado where we visited Trinidad State Park, before heading to the Capulin Volcano National Monument. This is an extinct, cinder cone volcano, with the cone remarkably preserved. There are a visitors center and a road that wraps around the cone to a parking lot near the top. From there you can hike down into the vent, or around the rim. We intended to hike around the rim, but between the altitude, our exhaustion, and general lack of fitness we turned back well before we reached the top. It was still worth the trip, and even from the parking area near the top, it is an impressive view.

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Scenic view from on top of Capulin Volcano National Monument.

It was time to head back to our camp in Black Mesa and Google wanted to take us back to Clayton, but we hate taking the same road back as the road we came on, so we took the road less traveled; literally. What a difference. We went north through Folsom then took a small road east. It alternated between paved and gravel, and, usually, the gravel was smoother, but it was so worth it. The road led through a canyon we didn’t find on the maps, and where there is a canyon, there is a stream. The canyon, river, and road were all named the Dry Cimarron. Yes, another branch of the Cimarron River. The canyon went on for hours, almost entirely empty. Huge, rugged and beautiful in a very different way than the other Cimarron Canyon, but no less impressive. It was one of my favorite parts of the trip.

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Dry Cimarron River Canyon in Northeastern New Mexico.

We got back to camp at a reasonable time, and as we were settling in, it became apparent we were going to have clouds again that night. Realizing I was not going to get the perfect night sky photo, I suggested we pack up camp and head south into Texas. In visiting the Texas Panhandle a few weeks earlier, we now had visited all but two counties in Oklahoma. The last two were down south and we decided to go get them.

We got back to camp at a reasonable time, and as we were settling in, it became apparent we were going to have clouds again that night. Realizing I was not going to get the perfect night sky photo, I suggested we pack up camp and head south into Texas. In visiting the Texas Panhandle a few weeks earlier, we now had visited all but two counties in Oklahoma. The last two were down south and we decided to go get them. In no time we were on the road. An hour and a half drive, and a minor crisis involving so many bugs hitting the windshield we could barely see out took us to Lake Meredith National Recreation Area. Being Sunday night the place was empty and we found a nice site overlooking the lake, and slept under the stars, with a cool breeze to keep the bugs away.

The next morning we visited the Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument. Walked through the visitors center, watched the informative movie and took a short hike, then got back on the road. We headed into Oklahoma to get those last two counties. On the way to Kiowa County, we were passing right by Quartz Mountain State Park. We couldn’t be this close without stopping. It is a very pretty park, though the lake was very low at the time. We spent about an hour here before heading to our next destination.

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Quartz Mountain Nature Park near Altus, OK.

The Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge is a place I had to hear about for a while but had not yet managed to visit. It was getting late and I was thinking we should just head home, but Ren knew how much I have wanted to go here and insisted that we take the time. I’m so glad I listen to her. I had been afraid that after seeing New Mexico, that Oklahoma would seem dull and unimpressive by comparison. I needn't have worried. The mountains of Oklahoma may not be as tall as those of New Mexico, but they are no less beautiful. We ended up staying much longer than we intended and it was getting dark by the time we headed home.

Arriving home late, we were tired and sore, however, the trip had been more than we ever expected because we abandoned our plans and took a chance. Sometimes having a plan is important because it tells you the when, the where, and the how; but it often causes you to miss the unexpected treasures of traveling along the backroads. Our motto is “Get out, live life outside your box,” sometimes that means getting outside of your plans. Take a chance, do something unexpected, live your life to the fullest. I still want to go back to Black Mesa. I still want those dark skies. But I wouldn’t trade this trip for the one we planned.

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Safe Travels,
Scott

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Congratulations @xcountytravelers!
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Wow! what an experience! i am falling in love with your travels.
Despite only featuring you in yesterdays Xposed Curator's rebound, i am going to feature you again today. And will still until your posts get attention. They deserve to!


I am going feature this post in the next Xposed Curator's Rebound #52. You may find details about it Xposed Curator's Rebound

My hope is to bring your quality work here the exposure it deserves, and with it, hopefully some additional rewards.

Best wishes, @mirrors

We love our travels as well. When we started it was because we were bored in Stillwater, OK, and it has just blossomed into what we do today.

Thank you so much for your kindness. We do appreciate it. I am still trying to figure it all out and have sooo many questions. However, for the moment, we will take it one day at a time.
Ren

Well, looks like they got some attention @mirrors :)

They did. Very glad for them.

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Hi xcountytravelers,

This post has been upvoted by the Curie community curation project and associated vote trail as exceptional content (human curated and reviewed). Have a great day :)

Visit curiesteem.com or join the Curie Discord community to learn more.

Thank you very much. Even though we have been here a short time, I do know this is an honor. Thank you again.
Ren

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

In germany we have an adage for this: "The route is the goal" :-)

We wonderful photos you bring to us, thanks for this, and well deserved up from curie 👍

I love learning things like this; it is one of the reasons we travel and meet people. "The route is the goal." That is so very true.

Scott tries really hard to get good photos, he loves sharing them. Thank you for your kind words.
Ren

Hello this looks like i beautiful trip with some wonderfull photos i love the photos under the stars it looks so nice:)

It was a fantastic change of direction trip. We loved it very much and can't wait until we take our next huge trip to Tucson.
Ren

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Another fine travel post @xcountytravelers! We've again done the same ... best laid plans blah blah blah. Follow the stars :)

Congratulations on the curie vote as well :)

It seems the serendipity style of travel is our favorite, but I almost always start out with some type of plan. We are planning a trip to Tucson in October and I am fearing the plans will disappear upon our first NPS location. haha. As long as we get there, I will be happy.

Thank you. I am still stunned. Both Scott and I are wanting to keep doing the quality posts to help encourage others to get out of their comfort zones and see what amazing things around out there. I just actually realized the other day that when I put up a video, it comes out as a blog post as well. So I can relax just a little and not focus on getting a video and post up. haha! Scott thought it was funny.

Thanks again.
Ren

And when you do a video @xcountytravelers, put "ulog" as one of your tags. You sometimes get a nice upvote because of it. Some also put Ulog#1 as part of their title, and continue upwards in numbers to keep track of how many they do.

That "comfort zone" has a lot of people bamboozled into thinking so conservatively. So many of our friends and people here were shocked to hear that Brian and I got rid of everything and moved to Mexico, or that we took a road trip, like you two, very often and never touched the main highways. Your posts are beautiful and show people how it can be done so easily😅

Wow! Mexico! That is so far out of my comfort zone. Not ready for anything like that! I hope to hear about some of your and Brian's adventures.
Ren

welcome to Steemit.. I really loved your website and love how you support each other. I wish I can be as courageous as you and be on the road all my life.
great article..
Respect and much love 😍

Thank you so much. We are really starting to like it here, so welcoming and friendly. Scott and I try very hard to support each other, isn't that what a partnership is all about. I do not know if it could be called courageousness, I think it is more just satisfying the drive to travel. We often throw caution to the wind when the opportunity to travel comes around.
Ren

I am still trying to figure out this partnership things as recently got married, until then I was a lone wolf.. ;) I love riding or driving especially on the hills.
its seems i have lots to learn from you and be inspired

P.S. I featured you in this weeks @pifc curation.[here](https://steemit.com/payitforward/@itravelarts/my-entry-for-week-21-pay-it-forward-curation-contest
I am so happy to see that you have been picked by curie..

Thank you very much. I really appreciate it. We are trying to figure it all out. This morning I just realized that every time I post a video it comes up as a blog post. I have been double posting and must be driving you all nuts! haha

Congratulations! I love being married to Scott. We will be married 14 years in October. It has been really good; we try to treat each other better than we do strangers. I have never understood how some couples treat each other less than they do strangers. Just doesn't make sense to me.

There is so much to learn no matter who you are or how old you are. I am constantly learning new things and bettering myself on a daily basis.

Thank you again and keep stepping out there.
Ren

Wow, what an amazing post! I loved the writing. Sorry about the not so good weather. That's always a drag...

Still, you've managed to take a whole bunch of amazing photos! Great work!

PS: I've found your post after @buckaroo suggested it on his entry for the Pay It Forward Contest

Thank you so much. Sometimes i dont think Scott knows how talented he really is.

I had no clue about the Pay It Forward thing! Thanks so much for comi g to join us!
Ren

This is quite and adventure and traveling with your spouse is awesome. Great post and i look forward to reading more of your travel adventures.

It is extremly fun traveling with Scott. I love how we seem to be on the same page. Of course, life isnt always cherries on the road, but thats what makes it an adventure.
Thanks so much for reading.
Ren

You are welcome @xcountytravelers

Hi @xcountrytravelers, as you may know @itravelarts featured you in this week's @pifc's Pay It Forward contest. Please take a look, it's a great iniative to give support and exposure to others on the platform

Very nice write up and amazing pictures. I very rarely see pictures with stars come out so amazing. I've been through that area a few times, but it's been a while. Most of my visits through Texas have been the panhandle and that doesn't leave you with much desire to see anything else, even though I know as you move further south the terrain changes dramatically. Keep up the great postings.

Thank you so much for your kind words. I am so blown away by the kindness here.

I just love Texas and am missing it so much.
Ren

You're very welcome. You had a second person feature you this week too @buckaroo. You have to major things that a lot of us look at. You're engaging, as much as you want feedback, commenters want to know you appreciate them too. You're posting is enjoyable and personable. Most importantly it's original. We're suckers for that! As you'll see there are so many (however getting to be less) that work so hard at being lazy.

Then.... you have had some amazing things happen community wise you should be proud of. You got a @curie curation, that is the biggest compliment. Then @mirrors' project featured you and then you caught the attention of 2 pifc members.

The community in general is extremely helpful and so many groups to help and support in so many different areas. As you can see payouts like you're seeing with this post is not a norm in the begining. Just sit back and enjoy it. I have feeling you're going to do very well :)

We never received anything like this type of welcoming acceptance on YouTube. We were ignored and have not been thought about in three years. Here we feel we are adding to a community that seems to care and want to know more. We want to share our story so badly with those who will never get to travel farther than their home county. There is so much wonderfulness out there and we just can't keep quiet about it. Our motto is "Get out, live life outside your box" and we try very, very hard to live what we say. There is nothing more thrilling than to hear of another person's success of doing something they never thought they would be able to do.

I am still trying to figure all this out here on this forum so we do the right things and enhance the community. I have been searching for information on the Pay It Forward program and others, but I must not be putting in the right search words to locate it all. I have been moved by all of this kindness and just want to do for others what is happening for us because of people like @buckaroo, @mirrors', @curie, @itravelarts, and so many more of you wonderful people. The question going through my mind is "How can I help their cause?" "How can we make a difference?"

Anyway, your words encourage me and make me want to sit down and write another post before I head to bed, but I am exhausted. Thank you again for the encouragement and kindness.
Ren

Thanks, I really enjoed this. You really articulated your point. Great job.

Thank you so much. It is nice hearing that I wasn't just being emotional.
Ren

It is inspiring to think that you are trying to collect all counties of the United States. I bet you will have great adventures and memories with those collections.

I found your post through @itravelarts who featured it on her post as an entry to this Pay it Forward Curation Contest.

Keep travelling and Steeming!

Since we lived in a 122 sq ft RV when we started, it was all we had room to collect! Haha. I've been teaching the GrandGeorges to finish what they start, do we must finish.

I so appreciate @itravelarts for sharing us with everyone..

Ren

Contentment is what makes people happy so living in an RV is no issue as long as you folks are happy.

If you weren't flexible then you wouldn't have enjoyed your trip! I am glad you guys had fun and enjoyed yourselves despite things not going as planned. Things may not always go as planned, and we really should be open to seeking other options and and having fun regardless.

Getting an RV in future wouldn't be a bad idea, it will infact be cool!

Very true. We love traveling by the seat of our pants. It makes for a great adventure. We had an RV for a while, but that is a whole other story. We loved the Beast, but it just wasnt the right fit for us at the time. I guess that will be a post soon.

Thanks.
Ren

It sure does open room for more adventure.

Looking forward to that post!

What a great post! Thanks for sharing this amazing work. I wish I had a camera capable of handling the night sky - maybe the next one... (I'm sorta, kinda, in the market right now.)
I found your article thanks to @itravelarts's pay-it-forward curation contest post.

Scott has a Sony A6000. He loves it really. I tend to go with my phone. The phone camers thes days are pretty good for me. I'll have him comment as well once he's done with today's post.
Ren

Cool, thanks. I like a camera that is relatively non-fancy. Ability to handle night and sun pictures well, action shots and the ability to over-ride the automatic settings are paramount for me. Basically, I want a DSLR which is able to handle like a good old-fashioned SLR did. (I got spoilt, I guess.)

Wonderful photography, especially that night-sky shot at Fort Griffin in Texas! Wow! Fantastic! 💜