summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/bak/oldluxpages/writing/north-america/1/index.html
blob: a82a73806c2bb10d52ebe34520879c489aa66d18 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html  dir="ltr" lang="en-US">
<head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <title>Luxagraf | Travel Writing from North America</title>
    <meta name="description" 
          content="Travel writing, essays and dispatches from North America Page 1">
    <meta name="author" content="Scott Gilbertson">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
    <!--[if IE]>
    <script src="/js/html5css3ie.min.js"></script>
    <![endif]-->
    <link rel="alternate" 
          type="application/rss+xml" 
          title="Luxagraf RSS feed"
          href="https://luxagraf.net/rss/">
    <link rel="stylesheet" 
          href="/media/screenv8.css" 
          media="screen">
    <!--[if IE]>
    <link rel="stylesheet" 
          href="/media/css/ie.css" 
          media="screen">
    <![endif]-->
    
</head>
<body id="writing">
    <div class="wrapper">
    <div class="header-wrapper">
        <header role="banner">
            <h1><a id="logo" href="/" title="home">Luxagraf</a></h1>
            <h2>Walk Slowly</h2>
        </header>
        <nav role="navigation" class="bl">
            <ul>
                <li id="stories"><a href="/writing/" title="An archive of writings from around the world">Writing</a></li>
                <li id="photos"><a href="/photos/" title="Photos from travels around the world">Photos</a></li>
                <!--<li id="guides"><a href="/travel-guide/1/" title="Travel Guides, Tips, Tricks and Recommendations">Guides</a>,</li>-->
                <li id="notes"><a href="/notes/" title="Shorter thoughts, sometimes syndicated to twitter">Notes</a></li>
                <li id="maps"><a href="/map" title="Maps and miscellanea">Map</a></li>
                <li id="projects" ><a href="/projects/" title="Luxagraf: Projects">Projects</a></li>
                <li id="etc" class="last"><a href="/about" title="About Luxagraf">Etc</a></li>
            </ul>
        </nav>
    </div>
    <ul class="bl" id="breadcrumbs" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Breadcrumb">
        <li><a href="/" title="luxagraf homepage" itemprop="url"><span itemprop="title">Home</span></a> &rarr; </li>
        <li><a href="/writing/" title="See all Writing" itemprop="url"><span>Writing</span></a> &rarr;</li> 
        <li>North America</li>
    </ul>
    <main role="main" id="writing-archive" class="archive">
        <h1 class="hide">Writing from North America</h1> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2013/05/oysterman-wanted" title="Oysterman Wanted"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2013/abandonedboat.jpg" alt="Oysterman Wanted" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2013/05/oysterman-wanted" class="u-url" title="Oysterman Wanted">Oysterman&nbsp;Wanted</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2013-05-29T19:43:23">May <span>29, 2013</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">St. George Island</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Florida</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="29.664094724906786"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-84.86566792845446"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    The world of oystermen and local fishing industry is doomed. Even the people resisting the transition know they’re no longer fighting for their way of life. They’re just fighting to keep the thinnest resemblance of what they’ve always known around until they leave this world. They’re fighting to keep from having to watch the death of everything they know.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2013/05/all-the-pretty-beaches" title="All the Pretty Beaches"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2013/stgeorgeisland_1.jpg" alt="All the Pretty Beaches" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2013/05/all-the-pretty-beaches" class="u-url" title="All the Pretty Beaches">All the Pretty&nbsp;Beaches</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2013-05-26T22:43:23">May <span>26, 2013</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">St. George Island</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Florida</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="29.65981806259071"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-84.87047444700387"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    St. George is just off the Gulf Coast of northwest Florida, only about 7 hours from where I live. There are better places if you're looking to dive or snorkel. Ditto if it's nightlife you're after. But if you're looking for a seemingly endless amount of gorgeous white sand beaches you'll share with only a few migratory birds, St. George is the place to be.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2013/05/consider-the-apalachicola-oyster" title="Consider the Apalachicola Oyster"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2013/considertheoyster.jpg" alt="Consider the Apalachicola Oyster" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2013/05/consider-the-apalachicola-oyster" class="u-url" title="Consider the Apalachicola Oyster">Consider the Apalachicola&nbsp;Oyster</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2013-05-22T19:43:23">May <span>22, 2013</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Apalachicola</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Florida</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="29.72867205648089"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-84.98378973124662"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    If you know the name Apalachicola at all it’s likely because of its eponymous oysters. Very few things, let alone culinary things, are as attached to place as oysters. In fact, once you get beyond the Rockefeller, ordering “oysters” is akin to walking in a bar and ordering “a beer.” But unlike beer, oysters don’t have brands, they have places — Pemaquid, Wellfleet, Blue Point, Apalachicola. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2012/05/things-behind-sun" title="Things Behind the Sun"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2012/tucsonblur.jpg" alt="Things Behind the Sun" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2012/05/things-behind-sun" class="u-url" title="Things Behind the Sun">Things Behind the&nbsp;Sun</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2012-05-20T22:47:00">May <span>20, 2012</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Athens</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.95674257719642"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-83.37592612645985"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    My grandparents left the home they lived in for 60 years today. I don't know how much of my life was spent in that house, probably well over a year if you added up all the holidays and family gatherings. And now I'm thousands of miles away and someone is clearing out the house. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2012/03/street-food-athens-georgia" title="Street Food in Athens Georgia"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2012/foodcart1.jpg" alt="Street Food in Athens Georgia" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2012/03/street-food-athens-georgia" class="u-url" title="Street Food in Athens Georgia">Street Food in Athens&nbsp;Georgia</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2012-03-31T21:56:00">March <span>31, 2012</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Athens</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.959861666904274"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-83.37601195713451"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Cheap food, made fresh, in front of you. Served hot, wrapped in newspaper. Street food is the people's food, it removes the mystery of the kitchen, lays the process bare. It's also the staple diet of people around the world. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2011/03/we-used-wait-it" title="We Used to Wait For It"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2011/losangeles11h.jpg" alt="We Used to Wait For It" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2011/03/we-used-wait-it" class="u-url" title="We Used to Wait For It">We Used to Wait For&nbsp;It</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2011-03-28T21:50:00">March <span>28, 2011</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Los Angeles</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">California</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="34.04477171337467"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-118.25204621066614"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    When we first came here, there was nothing. Downtown Los Angeles was an empty husk of a place fifteen years ago. Now it's reborn, alive and kicking. Yet there is something in the older buildings, something in the old walls, something lost in the bricks, something in the concrete, the marble. Something you don’t find anymore. Something we need to find again.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2011/01/world-outside" title="The World Outside"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2011/snowh.jpg" alt="The World Outside" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2011/01/world-outside" class="u-url" title="The World Outside">The World&nbsp;Outside</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2011-01-26T11:56:00">January <span>26, 2011</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Athens</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.96016249314553"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-83.4028816107045"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    The world outside the house is blanketed in snow, a monochrome of white interrupted only by the dark, wet trunks of trees, the red brick of chimneys, the occasional green of shrubs poking through. The roads are unbroken expanses of smooth white, no one is out yet, no footprints track their way through the snowy sidewalk. The world outside is the same as it was last night, before the snow began, and yet, it feels totally different. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2011/01/charleston-a-z" title="Charleston A-Z"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2011/charleston-h_1.jpg" alt="Charleston A-Z" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2011/01/charleston-a-z" class="u-url" title="Charleston A-Z">Charleston&nbsp;A-Z</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2011-01-18T15:29:00">January <span>18, 2011</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Charleston</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">South Carolina</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="32.78595765272612"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-79.9366307147337"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Charleston alphabetically. For example, <strong>Q</strong> is for quiet, Charleston has a lot of it. Just head down to the Battery area, walk through the park and starting walking down the side streets. Take one of the many alleys and walkways that weave between the massive, stately houses. Get lost. It doesn't take much to find a quiet place of your own.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/08/dinosaur-national-monument-part-two-down-river" title="Dinosaur National Monument, Part Two: Down the River"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/lodorecanyonh.jpg" alt="Dinosaur National Monument, Part Two: Down the River" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/08/dinosaur-national-monument-part-two-down-river" class="u-url" title="Dinosaur National Monument, Part Two: Down the River">Dinosaur National Monument, Part Two: Down the&nbsp;River</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-08-02T09:00:00">August <span>2, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Dinosaur National Monument</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Colorado</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="40.457462390627"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-109.2584323730928"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    This is the only real way to see Dinosaur National Monument &mdash; you must journey down the river. There are two major rivers running through Dinosaur, the Yampa, which carves through Yampa Canyon, and the Green, which cuts through Lodore. <a href="http://www.adventureboundusa.com/" title="Adventure Bound Rafting">Adventure Bound Rafting</a> runs some of the best whitewater rafting trips in Colorado and I was lucky enough to go down the Green River with them, through the majestic Lodore Canyon.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/dinosaur-national-monument-part-one-echo-park" title="Dinosaur National Monument, Part One: Echo Park"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/dinosaurh.jpg" alt="Dinosaur National Monument, Part One: Echo Park" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/dinosaur-national-monument-part-one-echo-park" class="u-url" title="Dinosaur National Monument, Part One: Echo Park">Dinosaur National Monument, Part One: Echo&nbsp;Park</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-28T17:00:00">July <span>28, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Dinosaur National Monument</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Colorado</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="40.52063402652926"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-108.99388073317648"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Dinosaur National Monument was poorly named. The best parts of it are not the fossils in the quarry (which is closed for 2010 anyway) but the canyon country &mdash; some of the best, most remote canyon country you'll find in this part of the world.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/endless-crowds-yellowstone" title="The Endless Crowds of Yellowstone"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/yellowstoneh.jpg" alt="The Endless Crowds of Yellowstone" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/endless-crowds-yellowstone" class="u-url" title="The Endless Crowds of Yellowstone">The Endless Crowds of&nbsp;Yellowstone</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-25T14:00:00">July <span>25, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Yellowstone National Park</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Wyoming</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="44.46180292448713"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-110.82196979172171"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    There is wilderness in Yellowstone, even if it's just inches from the boardwalks that transport thousands around the geothermal pools. It may not be wilderness on a grand scale &mdash; the sweeping mountain peaks or wild rivers of other parks &mdash; but in some ways that makes it more enticing. As one Ranger told me, Yellowstone isn't about the big picture, the grand scenery, it's about the tiny details within each pool. To really see Yellowstone, he said, you have to take your time, move slowly and look closely. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/backpacking-grand-tetons" title="Backpacking in the Grand Tetons"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/grandtetonsh.jpg" alt="Backpacking in the Grand Tetons" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/backpacking-grand-tetons" class="u-url" title="Backpacking in the Grand Tetons">Backpacking in the Grand&nbsp;Tetons</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-22T17:00:00">July <span>22, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Grand Teton National Park</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Wyoming</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="43.79315431684632"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-110.79651831037907"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Hiking into the wilderness empties your mind. You fall into the silence of the mountains and you can relax in a way that's very difficult to do in the midst of civilization. The white noise that surrounds us in our everyday lives, that noise we don't even notice as it adds thin layers of stress that build up over days, weeks, years, does not seem capable of following us into the mountains. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/great-sand-dunes-national-park" title="Great Sand Dunes National Park"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/greatsanddunesh_4.jpg" alt="Great Sand Dunes National Park" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/great-sand-dunes-national-park" class="u-url" title="Great Sand Dunes National Park">Great Sand Dunes National&nbsp;Park</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-17T09:00:00">July <span>17, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Great Sand Dunes National Park</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Colorado</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="37.72673718028319"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-105.55097578487117"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Something about the desert inspires me to get up early and watch the sunrise. The cool mornings seem worth getting up for out here in the high plains of Colorado, especially when there's the chance to watch the sunrise from the largest sand dunes in North America, here in Great Sand Dune National Park.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/comanche-national-grasslands" title="Comanche National Grasslands"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/comanchenationalgrasslands.jpg" alt="Comanche National Grasslands" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/comanche-national-grasslands" class="u-url" title="Comanche National Grasslands">Comanche National&nbsp;Grasslands</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-16T13:00:00">July <span>16, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Comanche National Grasslands</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Colorado</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="37.14748995999048"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-103.0095720147769"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    To say the Comanche National Grasslands is off the grid would be an understatement. With the exception of Highway 50 in Nevada, I've never driven through such isolation and vast openness anywhere in the world. And it's easy to get lost. There are no signs, no road names even, just dirt paths crisscrossing a wide, perfectly flat expanses of grass. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/why-national-parks-are-better-state-parks" title="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/palodura.jpg" alt="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/why-national-parks-are-better-state-parks" class="u-url" title="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks">Why National Parks Are Better Than State&nbsp;Parks</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-15T10:00:00">July <span>15, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Amarillo</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Texas</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="35.18854030957816"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-101.9194793559329"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    There are many reasons, but here's the one I currently consider most important: National Parks never close. Take Palo Dura State park outside of Amarillo, Texas. Were it a National Park, I would be there right now. But it's not, it's a state park and so I'm sitting in a hotel room in Amarillo because everyone knows nature closes at 10PM.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/legend-billy-the-kid" title="The Legend of Billy the Kid"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/billythekidmuseum.jpg" alt="The Legend of Billy the Kid" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/legend-billy-the-kid" class="u-url" title="The Legend of Billy the Kid">The Legend of Billy the&nbsp;Kid</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-11T18:00:00">July <span>11, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Hico</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Texas</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="31.981920692582488"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-98.03087709969479"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    History rarely offers neat, tidy stories. But the messier, more confusing and more controversial the story becomes, the more it works its way into our imaginations. The legend of Billy the Kid is like that of Amelia Earhart or D.B. Cooper &mdash; the less we know for sure, the more compelling the story becomes.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/dixie-drug-store" title="The Dixie Drug Store"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/nopharmacymuseum01.jpg" alt="The Dixie Drug Store" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/dixie-drug-store" class="u-url" title="The Dixie Drug Store">The Dixie Drug&nbsp;Store</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-08T17:00:00">July <span>8, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">New Orleans</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Louisiana</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="29.955903613807074"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-90.06511865792525"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    New Orleans is it's own world. So much so that's it's impossible to put your finger on what it is that makes it different. New Orleans is a place where the line between consensus reality and private dream seems to have never fully developed. And a wonderful world it is.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/07/begin-the-begin" title="Begin the Begin"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/gulf_port_beach.jpg" alt="Begin the Begin" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/07/begin-the-begin" class="u-url" title="Begin the Begin">Begin the&nbsp;Begin</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-07-05T22:00:00">July <span>5, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Gulf Port</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Mississippi</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="30.380400296597216"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-89.03081058216594"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    It's travel time again. This time I'm driving my 1969 Ford truck out west, to Texas, Colorado, Utah and more&nbsp;&mdash; a road trip around the western United States. The first stop is Gulf Port, Mississippi. It's hard to believe, sitting here on the deserted beaches of Gulf Shore, watching the sun break through the ominous clouds, but soon this beauty will be gone. The BP oil spill is somewhere out there, blown slowly ashore by the storm hovering over us, waiting to drown the beaches in crude.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/05/los-angeles-im-yours" title="Los Angeles, I&#39;m Yours"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/launionsubway.jpg" alt="Los Angeles, I&#39;m Yours" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/05/los-angeles-im-yours" class="u-url" title="Los Angeles, I&#39;m Yours">Los Angeles, I&#8217;m&nbsp;Yours</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-05-17T16:43:18">May <span>17, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Los Angeles</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">California</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="34.05582387432624"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-118.23588250455148"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Los Angeles is all about the car. Shiny, air-conditioned comfort, gliding you soundlessly from one place to another without the need to interact with anything in between. But I have discovered that if you abandon the car for the subway and your own two feet, the illusion that L.A. is just a model train set world &mdash; tiny, plastic and devoid of any ground beneath the ground &mdash; fades and you find yourself, for a time, in a real city.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/04/death-valley" title="(There&#39;ll Be) Peace in the Valley"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/deathvalley.jpg" alt="(There&#39;ll Be) Peace in the Valley" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/04/death-valley" class="u-url" title="(There&#39;ll Be) Peace in the Valley">(There&#8217;ll Be) Peace in the&nbsp;Valley</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-04-24T11:45:59">April <span>24, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Death Valley</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">California</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="36.42090257717807"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-116.80985925955854"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    Sometimes you ignore the places close to home because, well, there's always next weekend. Which is why I never made it Death Valley in the twenty-five years I lived in California. It took being all the way across the country to get me out to Death Valley. Which might explain why I actually got up before dawn just to watch the sunrise at Zabriskie Point. 
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2010/03/so-far-i-have-not-found-science" title="So Far, I Have Not Found The Science"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2010/okeefenokee.jpg" alt="So Far, I Have Not Found The Science" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2010/03/so-far-i-have-not-found-science" class="u-url" title="So Far, I Have Not Found The Science">So Far, I Have Not Found The&nbsp;Science</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2010-03-13T12:50:48">March <span>13, 2010</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Okefenokee Swamp</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="30.913415518451895"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-82.1832228795993"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    A canoe trip through the Okefenokee Swamp down in the southern most corner of Georgia. Paddling the strange reddish and incredibly still waters. Begging alligators, aching muscles and the kindly folks of Stintson's Barbecue all getting their due.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even first">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2009/05/how-to-get-your-butt-and-travel-world" title="How to Get Off Your Butt and Travel the World"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2009/traveltheworld.jpg" alt="How to Get Off Your Butt and Travel the World" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2009/05/how-to-get-your-butt-and-travel-world" class="u-url" title="How to Get Off Your Butt and Travel the World">How to Get Off Your Butt and Travel the&nbsp;World</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2009-05-03T19:39:16">May <span>3, 2009</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Athens</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.95763520280544"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-83.40871809752001"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    How do you make the leap from cubicle daydreams to life on to the road? You want to travel the world, but, like me, you have a million excuses stopping you. How do overcome the inertia that keeps you trapped in a life that isn't what you want it to be? Here's a few practical tips and how tos designed to motivate you to get off your butt and travel the world.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry odd second">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2009/04/strangers-on-a-train" title="No Strangers on a Train"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2009/strangersonatrain.jpg" alt="No Strangers on a Train" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2009/04/strangers-on-a-train" class="u-url" title="No Strangers on a Train">No Strangers on a&nbsp;Train</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2009-04-13T19:36:13">April <span>13, 2009</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Athens</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Georgia</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.95818694160937"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-83.40824602873336"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    We mythologize trains because they harken back to an age of community travel, a real, tangible community of travelers, not just backpackers, but people from all walks of life, people traveling near and far together in a shared space that isn't locked down like an airplane and isn't isolated like a car; it's a shared travel experience and there are precious few of those left in our world.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
        <article class="h-entry hentry even third">
            <div class="post--image">
                <a href="/2008/12/leonardo-da-vinci-and-codex-bunnies" title="Leonardo Da Vinci and the Codex on Bunnies"><img src="https://images.luxagraf.net/post-images/2009/codexofbunnies.jpg" alt="Leonardo Da Vinci and the Codex on Bunnies" class="u-photo post-image" /></a>
            </div>
            <h1 class="p-name entry-title post--title"><a href="/2008/12/leonardo-da-vinci-and-codex-bunnies" class="u-url" title="Leonardo Da Vinci and the Codex on Bunnies">Leonardo Da Vinci and the Codex on&nbsp;Bunnies</a></h1>
            <p class="p-author author hide">Scott Gilbertson</p>
            <time class="dt-published published dt-updated post--date" datetime="2008-12-09T18:18:33">December <span>9, 2008</span></time>
            <p>
                <span class="p-location h-adr adr post--location">
                    <span class="p-locality locality" itemprop="geo" itemscope itemtype="http://data-vocabulary.org/Geo">Birmingham</span>, <a class="p-region region" href="/writing/united-states/" title="travel writing from the United States">Alabama</a>, <span class="p-country-name">U.S.</span>
                    <data itemprop="latitude" class="p-latitude" value="33.521441993672646"></data>
                    <data itemprop="longitude" class="p-longitude" value="-86.81079982502803"></data>
                </span> &ndash;
                <span class="p-summary hyphenate">
                    A few pages from Leonardo Da Vinci's notebooks make a rare trip outside Italy, to Birmingham, AL, of all places. But the Birmingham Museum of Art is home to far more alarming works of art, works which depict the eventual, inevitable, bunny takeover, after which all the elements of our reality will be replaced by bunnies. Seriously. You heard it here first.
                </span>
            </p>
        </article> 
    </main>
    <nav class="pagination">
    
        <ul class="pages">
            <li class="current page">1</li>
            <li><a href="/writing/north-america/2/" class="page">2</a></li>
            <li><a href="/writing/north-america/2/" class="next">Older</a></li>
            
        </ul>

    </nav>

    
    <footer role="contentinfo">
        <nav class="bl">
            <ul>
                <li><a href="/rss/" title="RSS feed">Subscribe</a></li>
                <li><a href="https://twitter.com/luxagraf" rel="me" title="follow luxagraf on Twitter">@luxagraf</a></li>
                <li><a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/luxagraf" rel="me" title="luxagraf on Flickr">Flickr</a></li>
                <li><a href="/contact/" title="contact luxagraf">Contact</a></li>
            </ul>
        </nav>
        <p id="license">
            &copy; 2003-2014 
            <span class="h-card"><a class="p-name u-url" href="https://luxagraf.net/">Scott Gilbertson</a><data class="p-nickname" value="luxagraf"></data><data class="p-locality" value="Athens"></data><data class="p-region" value="Georgia"></data><data class="p-country-name" value="United States"></data></span>, except photos, which are licensed under the Creative Commons (<a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/" title="read the Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 deed">details</a>).
        </p>
    </footer>
    <script src="/media/js/hyphenate.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">var _gaq=_gaq||[];_gaq.push(['_setAccount','UA-1186171-1']);_gaq.push(['_trackPageview']);(function(){var ga=document.createElement('script');ga.type='text/javascript';ga.async=true;ga.src=('https:'==document.location.protocol?'https://ssl':'http://www')+'.google-analytics.com/ga.js';var s=document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga,s)})();</script>
</body>
</html>