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A Bear Market

Like I mentioned previously, there were a whole lot of art shop in Santa Fe. They specialized in Southwest Indian art. There were also some native artists that sold their stuff on the street in the plaza. (We bought a cool sand painting from one guy.) One of the main themes in this art (and also the cheesier souvenirs) is the bear fetish. There are pictures of bears, and little bear figurines. It’s a symbol that’s supposed to represent strengh. There was a tile with a bear like this on the outside of our hotel room. One of the most common motifs on the bear fetishes (and the one on the bears at our hotel) is this arrow across the bear’s side that points downward.
bear1.gif
Because of this, we called it the Stock Market Bear.

Nice day for an adobe wedding

Sorry I didn’t elaborate more about the trip yesterday, but I was very, very tired. As in basically no sleep tired. So I didn’t write very much, since I wasn’t sure how much sense it would make. However, now I am fully awake and ready to give you the full scoop on the trip and the wedding.

The trip out to New Mexico was rather uneventful. On the way to Denver (where we had a layover), the Michigan Men’s Lacrosse team was on the plane with us, which I found interesting. I guess they’re not a big enough and important enough team that they get to charter their own plane. Also, there were these people sitting behind us (this might have been on the flight to Albuquerque, I don’t remember) that apparently hadn’t been on a lot of plane flights. When we were landing they were completely freaking out and saying things like, “This is the bumpiest landing ever,” or something. I was just laughing, because it really wasn’t that bumpy at all. Believe me, if it’s bad, I know it because I get very, very miserable.

We landed in Albuquerque early afternoon, got our rental car (a convertible!) and drove straight to Santa Fe before getting lunch, so I didn’t really see any of Albuquerque. It seemed like any old city from what I saw, just with a lot of adobe and adobe-colored buildings. The convertible was fun. It was really windy when driving on the highway, but not as bad as I had expected. And the weather was beautiful, so it was nice to be sort of outdoors while we were driving. It was kind of weird driving through New Mexico. Apparently there’s nothing there. No farms, no cities along the highway like there would be in Michigan. It was just reddish mesas with these scraggly green bushes all over them. Kind of scenic, but not really all that pretty.

We didn’t do much of anything Thursday after getting to Santa Fe. We walked around a bit, but it seemed to be almost entirely art shops, and I didn’t really want/can’t afford expensive art. EVERYTHING in the city was adobe — or at least fake adobe. There was an adobe Gap, an adobe Banana Republic, and of course an adobe Starbucks. There was even this adobe ATM that we saw (picture will come later). There were a couple of cool churches that weren’t adobe — the cathedral and this little chapel that was apparently the first gothic structure west of the Mississippi. The little diag-like square was cool, and like the diag it had a lot of weird people there (usually smoking — ick!) So, after a little bit of looking around we went back to the hotel and watched the Michigan hockey game. (So unfair! We should have taken the lead late in the third, but the stupid ref blew the whistle too early! It was tragic and irritating.) We met up with Sara and had dinner with her, and then we got everyone (me, Dan, Sara, Meg, Jason, Greg, and Michelle) together afterwards in our hotel room and just hung out.

Friday was a little more interesting. After having lunch at the Haagen-Dazs store (which is also a cafe, not just ice cream), we all went out to Bandelier National Monument. On the way there we passed a couple LANL (Los Alamos National Laboratories) sites. Sara says that someplace in Los Alamos there’s a nerd crossing sign, but we didn’t have time to go looking for that. Bandelier was cool. It has these ancient Pueblo ruins. It’s nothing huge, like Mesa Verde, but it was neat anyway, and they had some ladders you could climb to go up into some of the cave rooms, and there was this one section where there were a bunch of petroglyphs carved in the rock. We also climbed up to this place called the Ceremonial Cave, which you have to climb 4 ladders (and 140 ft.) to get to. The ruins are in this place called Frijoles Canyon, and there’s this little stream running through it called El Rito de los Frijoles (the little river of the beans). I thought that was a really funny name, so I took a picture of it.

Finally, we come to Saturday and the wedding. (We did some souvenir shopping in the morning, but that’s not really important.) The wedding was very nice. Steph looked beautiful and very, very happy. The ceremony itself was strange because it had this weird mix of different traditions, and lots of symbols like dropping a circle of rose petals around the couple and ringing some sort of little bells. The minister had to give detailed explanations about all the symbols before each one, though, and that was a little annoying. The reception was pretty typical. They did that thing where you have to sing a song with “love” in it to make the bride and groom kiss, though, and I hate that, so I didn’t participate. But I did help think of inappropriate songs with “love” in them. “O, Canada” is still my personal favorite, although Greg did sing the really inappropriate Tom Lehrer song “I Hold Your Hand in Mine”, which was hilarious. Other than the love song thing, the reception was really nice and we had fun. The food was good too (it was Mexican), although I avoided eating a whole lot of it because I wasn’t supposed to eat spicy foods on account of being sick. And the wedding took place on the top floor of this hotel that was right near the plaza, and it had a really cool view of the cathedral. (I would have saved film and taken a picture, but I didn’t know about this ahead of time. However, Sara took a few pictures for me and said she’d send them to me.)

So that was the trip. To sum up, the wedding was very nice, New Mexico was interesting, even though it was way too full of fake adobe, and overall it was a good trip.

Signs of the times

I always forget just how different each state in the union is from the others. I tend to assume that since it’s all the same country, everything is pretty much the same. But every time I travel to another state I realize just how much variation there is. One thing that always catches my attention is the signs (road signs, street signs, etc.) Here are a few of the more interesting ones that I noticed in New Mexico.

Along the highway: “Gusty winds may exist.”
Well, duh.

Also along the highway: “Jake Brake use prohibited.”
This one just confused me, because I had never heard of a Jake Brake. Apparently, it’s some sort of braking system (usually used on big trucks) that allows you to use the engine to slow down, thus saving wear on the normal brakes. Apparently you’re not allowed to use these in New Mexico.

So, if you’ve travelled anywhere where there are mountains, you’ve probably seen the signs that say “Watch for falling rock.” New Mexico has signs like this too, but they also have signs that show a picture of a car next to a mountain, with big rocks falling on the car. They’re among the funniest signs I’ve ever seen.

In a diner in Santa Fe: “Minors are not permitted in this area unless accompanied by a parent, adult spouse, or legal guardian.”
This sign was just disturbing. The fact that they expect there to be enough teens married to adults (or older teens) that they put it on the sign is very weird.

Would you like wireless with that?

Well, it looks like I’m going to have to start carrying my laptop with me everywhere. Here I sit, in the Denver International Airport, connected to the internet, using Dan’s new wireless card. Coffee shops already have wireless internet, and I’ve heard that McDonald’s is even possibly going to jump on the bandwagon at some point. With access to the internet everywhere I go, it’s probably going to be worth it to start taking my laptop places. Right now I’m using Dan’s laptop (which has much too large a keyboard for me to properly type on). I haven’t made a habit of taking my laptop when I travel, because most of what I would do with it (i.e. listening to music, writing stories) I could do with other, less cumbersome devices — inadequately, of course, but good enough to do for vacation. But with wireless internet, suddenly all those things that I think of and say, “I’ll have to look that up on the internet when I get home,” I can instead look up wherever I am. Plus, I’ll be able to read the comics and check my email. In short, the more common wireless internet access becomes, the more likely I am to want to carry my laptop around to take advantage of it. (Good thing my laptop is tiny and light.) I am going to turn the computer back over to Daniel, since he has a gazillion emails to read (whereas, I will be lucky to get one). Next time I’ll bring my own computer and not have to share.

trip to NM

Well, tomorrow morning we’re leaving to go to New Mexico for Stephanie’s wedding. We won’t be back until Sunday afternoon, and I don’t think I’m going to be bringing my laptop (though I will miss it), so there won’t be any more entries until then. Also, I’m going to be going to bed very early because we have to get up really early to go to the airport. I never like going to bed early because it always messes with my whole sleep schedule and I can’t sleep well at all, and then I’m all miserable and tired the next day. I’m hoping that won’t happen tonight because I’ve been sick so 1) I need sleep and 2) I’m tired, so maybe there’s actually a chance I’ll fall asleep.

I guess I should probably go and pack soon. It never takes me more than a few minutes to pack everything, but I always stress about it and go over everything I need in my head a million times both before and after the actual packing. At least that makes it so I rarely forget anything.

Since it’s been so long since I did anything in HTML, I don’t remember much about it except that it uses angle brackets for code. Consequently, I don’t remember how to make italics or insert links or anything like that. Daniel suggests that I should look into the windows program that Leo Laporte (from The Screen Savers) uses, because I guess it’s really nice and easy and then I wouldn’t have to remember any HTML. But I’m not going to do that now because I have to pack and then go to bed, and I won’t have time to play with more software and install it and everything before then.

So that’s it for this edition. I’ll be back on Sunday, and let you know all about the wedding.

hi

Okay, so now I have a blog. Guess that means I have to write stuff in it. I don’t promise that it’s going to be particularly profound or anything, and since I don’t imagine a lot of people are going to read it, that doesn’t really matter, but I will try to not be too boring or stupid just for my own piece of mind. Basically, I’m just going to talk about things I find interesting, such as Buffy, Red Wings hockey, Michigan hockey and football — all in season, of course — writing stories, etc. Okay, I have to stop for the moment because I am doing too many things at the same time, and I want to get this first entry up.

Ick! I just killed a mosquito. I HATE mosquitos. Especially when they’re in my house! I think they’re probably the evilest bugs on the planet. (Is it evilest or most evil?) So, one less mosquito in the world at the moment. I hope it didn’t bite me before I killed it.