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Fear Conquering & Self Defense

I must confess I have anxiety concerning this GypsyNesting stuff. I have strong ideas about the way I want to live my life, but by nature I’m not exactly the bravest person around. I’m a bit of a worrier. Okay, a lot of a worrier. It doesn’t help that half of our family and friends think that this whole GypsyNesting thing is quite mad.

In order to alleviate my fears, I decided to take a self defense course to fight the urge to cop out and just “grow old gracefully.” I wanted to be able to protect myself in that dark alley that was… CONTINUE READING >>

Fear Conquering!

I must confess I have anxiety concerning this GypsyNesting stuff. I have strong ideas about the way I want to live my life, but by nature I’m not exactly the bravest person around. I’m a bit of a worrier.

Okay, a lot of a worrier. It doesn’t help that half of our family and friends think that this whole GypsyNesting thing is quite mad.

In order to alleviate my fears, I decided to take a self defense course to fight the urge to cop out and just “grow old gracefully.” I wanted to be able to protect myself in that dark alley that was setting up roadblocks in my mind. I saw huge growth potential there.

My friend Kate was on board with me, which was great, because when Kate gets on board about something she gets balls-out on board. A close call in a dimly lit parking lot last summer gave her more incentive. Her husband, a karate guy, knew of a class at his gym, so she signed us up.

I didn’t think that I would need to go so far as to order protective gear for this class, but I decided to check it out just in case.

Our instructor was Alda – beautiful, slight, middle-aged. My first reaction was “gimme a break with this women – even I could kick her butt.” We started off with some breathing exercises and Alda told us that the first line of defense for any women is to run away.

This made perfect sense to me — by nature I’m not a hitter, I’m a runner. We worked on body awareness, muscle memory and strengthening exercises. We talked about trusting our instincts and keeping our cool. This was good, this was very “me.” I found myself comfortable with it.

But this Alda chick was a wily one – as the classes progressed I learned some surprising (and slightly disturbing) things about myself. After throwing Kate to the mat in a rape-simulating maneuver, I found myself looking down at her in stunned confusion. Prior to this exercise, Alda had told us to use the momentum of the maneuver to spring to our feet and then run like crazy.

This was not what my adrenaline-charged brain and body want to do at all. All I wanted to do was rush at my fictitious rapist and kick him in the face. How DARE he treat me like a victim! Luckily for Kate, I absolutely adore her and I ultimately decided that kicking her in the face was not the nicest thing to do. I have manners, after all.

Being the card-carrying, militant pacifist (wimp) that I am, it was a total shock that I can have such a violent reaction to a circumstance that would normally turn me into a puddle of melted Jello. This was not the growth I expected. Honestly, I didn’t know I had it in me. It rocks, actually.

More importantly, in terms of growth, I am more confident about trying new things, being in new environments and stepping outside of my comfort zone. These are the gifts I most prize from the experience. And I don’t need to be afraid to kick a little butt if I need to.

But Kate may want to reconsider having me as a sparring partner.

Veronica, GypsyNester.com

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Hog Jowls & Throwed Rolls

Crossing the muddy Mississippi into southeastern Missouri, we were getting mighty hungry. When we saw the sign proclaiming “The Only Home of Throwed Rolls,” we knew this was the place to strap on the feedbag.

Lambert’s Cafe has been serving up home cooked meals to the fine folks of Sikeston since 1942. Legend has it that on an particularly busy day back in 1976, ole Norman Lambert couldn’t get rolls to his customers in his usual fashion, walkin’ ‘em around the restaurant. Fed up, an ornery customer yelled out

“Just throw the damn… CONTINUE READING >>

throwed roll at Lamert's cafe Sikeston Missouri

Crossing the muddy Mississippi into southeastern Missouri, we were getting mighty hungry.

When we saw the sign proclaiming “The Only Home of Throwed Rolls,” we knew this was the place to strap on the feedbag.

Lambert’s Cafe has been serving up home cooked meals to the fine folks of Sikeston since 1942.

Legend has it that on an particularly busy day back in 1976, ole Norman Lambert couldn’t get rolls to his customers in his usual fashion, walkin’ ‘em around the restaurant.

Fed up, an ornery customer yelled out “Just throw the damn thing!” The only home of the Throwed Rolls was born.

throwed roll at Lamert's cafe Sikeston MO

At midday on Friday, the joint was jumpin’. Just as we sat down, a guy came ‘round with a Jethro bowl full of fried okra and a big ole spoon.

We declined his offer, noting our lack of plates. He simply pointed to a roll of brown paper towels on the table and said, “You’ve got your paper plate right there.”

How could we to argue with that? The hot, sizzling delicious balls of gooey goodness crackled between our teeth.

The okra is just one of the many “pass arounds” carried though the room in massive silver bowls and offered in addition to the already substantial sides included in the meals. Macaroni & tomatoes, black-eyed peas and Ole Norm’s fried potatoes are all served up while hot rolls are flying overhead.

Lambert's Cafe Presents Geneva Bolen

When the call “Hot rolls, anyone want a hot roll?” rang out, the slightest signals sent fresh piping chunks of baked dough soaring across the room.

Right behind them was a fella with a bucket of sorghum molasses. Adding to the mood were the piano stylings of Geneva Bolen.

Her stream of consciousness ragtime versions of old standards and modern favorites helped make the whole scene seem rather madcap and silent movie-y.

We asked our waitress if there were special credentials required to become a Roll Thrower. She said that there weren’t any — she took a crack at it her ownself a couple times — but was obliged to quit after she beaned an old guy in the forehead.

Soon after our conversation, David was unsuspectingly clipped by a soft, yeasty missile. We figured it happens a lot.

This nonstop show had all taken place before we’d even placed our order. The menu is as down home as the whole feel of the establishment, and being in the Boothill of Missouri, David felt compelled to order the hog jowl.

Veronica opted for the four vegetable plate and was tickled that somewhere between Wisconsin and Sikeston cottage cheese had become a vegetable.

Hog jowl and crazy amounts of food at Lamert's cafe Sikeston Missouri

Hog jowl is exactly what it sounds like, sliced jowl of hog. It’s a lot like bacon and who doesn’t like bacon?

However, it looked like at least four pigs gave up their cheeks to make the pile of cured pork heaped onto this plate.

David did his best but there was still plenty left over for at least two days’ breakfast even after he ate over half of it. He noted “if I ate all that, I’d of throwed up.”

The vegetables were cooked in the southern tradition — long and hard — but very tasty. Some part of the pig was included in most of the veggies and Veronica was sad that her white beans were more ham than legumes.

This, apparently, was not the place for kosher eating.

huge beverages at Lamert's cafe Sikeston Missouri

Beverages, all non-alcoholic, are served in mugs and glasses that rival the town water tower in their ability to hold liquid.

Refills are included and the bathroom is by the front door.

Be sure to bring your folding green cuz they don’t take credit cards at the only home of the Throwed Rolls.

Toward the end of the meal the okra fella came around again, pimping his wares. Taking one look at Veronica’s face he proclaimed her “full as a tick on a dog’s back.”

We reckoned he was right.

David & Veronica, GypsyNester.com

Throwed Rolls and Hog Jowls!


enlarge video
Legend has it that on an particularly busy day back in 1976, ole Norman Lambert couldn’t get rolls to his customers in his usual fashion, walkin’ ’em around the restaurant. Fed up, an ornery customer yelled out “Just throw the damn… CONTINUE READING >>

Legend has it that on an particularly busy day back in 1976, ole Norman Lambert couldn’t get rolls to his customers in his usual fashion, walkin’ ’em around the restaurant. Fed up, an ornery customer yelled out “Just throw the damn thing!” The only home of the Throwed Rolls was born. Want more info? https://www.gypsynester.com/tr.htm

Visit our GypsyNester YouTube Channel!

Facebook and Memory Lane

About a month ago, a thought popped into my head. What ever happened to Tamera? Where did that gangly, sweet and truly unique little girl with the pig tails and big glasses that I went to Junior High with end up? What did she become?

We were the original Valley Girls. We hung out with boys who skateboarded, went to the beach every weekend and said “Like” and “You know” like, way too much, you know? I wonder if Tamera finds it ironic, as I do, when she hears today’s college girls speaking like this, while most of us old school Valley Girls don’t anymore? Actually, I’ve managed to completely kill off the “likes,” but the “you knows” keep sneaking in… CONTINUE READING >>

Veronica Writes!

About a month ago, a thought popped into my head. What ever happened to Tamera? Where did that gangly, sweet and truly unique little girl with the pig tails and big glasses that I went to Junior High with end up? What did she become?

We were the original Valley Girls. We hung out with boys who skateboarded, went to the beach every weekend and said “Like” and “You know” like, way too much, you know?

I wonder if she finds it ironic, as I do, when she hears today’s college girls speaking like this, while most of us old school Valley Girls don’t anymore?

Actually, I’ve managed to completely kill off the “likes,” but the “you knows” keep sneaking in no matter how hard I’ve tried to subdue them. I fear it will be my lifelong homage to my California roots. Maybe I should just like, embrace it, you know?

I performed a quick scan of my life since Junior High, and wondered if Tamera’s life paralleled mine at all.

Was she one of the “supermoms” that many of us, for better worse, became? Did she struggle to balance career and family? Or did she become a career-first woman, living the life of “Sex in the City” on Manhattan?

Maybe, she is on the high seas chasing down illegal whalers with Greenpeace. The more I thought about it, the more I HAD to know.

Initially, my Facebook use was limited to keeping up with my daughters, 24 and 22, who were part of the site’s original college demographic. When David and I left St. Croix to become gypsies, Facebook allowed me to stay in touch with the island gang.

Soon, things blossomed a bit — people from my recent past found me. Suddenly I was receiving friend requests from folks I had known during our years in Nashville, students from the school where I had worked — all in college now and scattered about the country — even our buddies in Europe.

I am now “Facebook friends” with some of 24 & 22’s chums and even a few of THEIR mothers, none of whom I’ve ever met face-to-face! It’s a remarkable tool. (At this point, I must add a little jab at The Boy, my 19-year-old college student, who STILL hasn’t “friended” me. — I must remember to harass him a bit… for my own enjoyment, of course.)

Now that I had become Facebook literate, it was a simple process to see if Tamera was a Facebookite. To my delight, she was! I sent her a friend request and while I waited with bated breath for her reply, my mind wandered down memory lane…

Little incidents popped into my head. Like the time Tamera and I stayed up until three in the morning doing a left-off-until-the-last-minute  history project — fashioning the Pyramids out of paper-mâché. The details are unclear, but the next morning, one of us groggily stumbled out of bed and smashed them flat! We turned in what had to be the ugliest project in the history of man.

Back then, Monday mornings were spent with the gang recapping and spoofing the hilarity of the last weekend’s Saturday Night Live, brand new to the airwaves. When the Eagles released “Hotel California,” it changed our lives. “Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret” was THE book we discussed while anxiously awaiting the onset of our first periods. We got the lowdown on R-rated movies from the kids with the “cool moms.” I experienced my first kiss, my first slow dance, my first heartbreak. I learned to shave my legs and paint my nails.

As with most people, I suppose, Junior High was a defining moment for me, a mixed up bundle of hopes and hormones. I was learning who I was, and the kids around me were a big part of who I would become. I learned through their action and inaction. We were a small, tight knit group at a tiny private school. Ours was a family-style dynamic.

We didn’t always like each other, but woe to the outsider who tried to put any of us down. Junior High gave me my first glimpse into how I would fit into society.

Tamera turned out to be a beautiful, passionate supermom of two — who just dropped her oldest off for her freshman year of college. Our lives were eerily parallel in some ways, strikingly different in others. “Stalking” each other on Facebook was so much fun.

In the space of a month, things have snowballed. Tamera is Facebook friends with Jason, who I caught up with in an hour long Facebook chat. Jason sent Mike, Tina and Tyrone my way. And so on.

Facebook walls are being written on: “Remember Christine? What was Gary’s last name? Has anyone heard from Lisa?”

Dusty yearbooks are being cracked: “In seventh grade you said you wanted to be a doctor. Are you a doctor?”

A reunion is already in the works. It’s incredible.

As a group, we are still a little society, a microcosm of the world around us. We are academics, artists, doctors, lawyers, studio heads (I am from California, remember) and peace officers.

Together we have raised a small town’s worth of children, are happily married and happily single, are Republicans and Democrats, have paunches and wrinkles and, most importantly, have a shared past. And, sharing we are!

A few tips on getting started down Facebook Memory Lane:

Ladies, when signing up for Facebook, include your maiden name as your middle name. Explaining who you are all the time gets old — quick. This also makes it easier for long lost pals when searching for you.

Searched for someone and received multiple results? Let’s not kid ourselves, at our age, NO ONE looks the same as they did in school. You are not going to be able to tell who they are by their profile picture. Unless they are using their 8th grade school photo. How great would THAT be? The best way to ID someone is by stalking their friends list. Chances are that you will see siblings or parents on there.

Once you have made contact, stalk everyone’s friend list. See who else is out there.

 Send a little message along with your friend requests. If they don’t recognize you, they aren’t going to “friend you back.“ Sometimes people need their memories jarred.

 Facebook “Groups” are another great way to find people. My elementary school has a group. 24’s community dance troop has a group. I bet you can find Boy Scout Troops, dorm floors — who knows? I’m a hacker at heart and I love digging around. Start by using the search box on the top of the page.

If you’ve kept them, keep your yearbooks handy. Mine are packed in a storage unit a thousand miles away due to our GypsyNester lifestyle. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve wished I could have something more than my memory to rely on during this process! A small price to pay for the freedom of the road I guess.

Now that you have a little group together, be active. Post to their walls, comment on their statuses. That’s when the REAL surprises happen. As diligent as I was combing through friend lists, I missed quite a few people.

Why? The most common obstacle is not knowing married names but one guy has an alias he uses just for fun. Another guy uses a new last name because… he somehow got adopted after high school? Has a stalker problem? Maybe he’s in the witness
protection program. Oh, I know, he must have married a rich widow and decided to take HER name. By commenting, Facebook shows your message to others and voila! someone recognizes your name. New contact.

Automate things a bit:

 Facebook has a “find classmates” feature. From your “Home”, click “Friends” on the top menu bar. Once there, scroll down the page and click on “Find former high school classmates.” There is also a feature for college (no Junior High, unfortunately!).

 To automate further, go to your profile page and add your high school and/or college. On the top menu bar: “Profile”, then “Edit My Profile” under your picture, then “Education and Work.” This enables your old buddies to find you when they use Facebook’s “Find Classmates” feature.

As an added plus, every time I connect with someone new, the old ticker gets a little jolt. That has to be good for at us at our age, like, you know?

Veronica, GypsyNester.com

Music of The Ozarks

Join us in a magical musical journey through the Ozark Mountains, where the melody is pure and simple.  View amazing videos of Christmas caroling in a cave (can’t beat THOSE acoustics!), traditional folk music and a guy that plays spoons. All while learning about the area, its people and how washboards and washtub basses are… CONTINUE READING >>

Music in the Ozarks is many times performed in a circle

The Holidays may be the best time to catch some of the mountain music in the Arkansas Ozark Mountains, and we just happened to be in the area right as the season kicked off.

Even though the weather sometimes puts a damper on the outdoor impromptu jam sessions that the town of Mountain View has grown famous for, it is easily offset by the fantastic Caroling in the Caverns.

This incredible combination of music and geology is now in it’s ninth sell-out season at nearby Blanchard Springs Caverns.

We were lucky enough to be invited to a dress rehearsal – normally reserved exclusively for the big-wigs – as every last ticket for this year’s shows had been snapped up well before Thanksgiving.

The Cathedral Room in Blanchard Springs Caverns

These caverns formed over millions of years as an underground river carved out an amazing system of caves through the limestone here in Stone County.

What was left behind is an astonishing three levels of caves stacked upon each other.

We were escorted into the caverns by a ranger who took us down over two hundred feet in a crowded elevator.

Ears popping, we walked down a damp, dark hallway that opens up to the spectacular, and nearly acoustically perfect, Cathedral Room. This “room” is the largest part of the caves, a thousand feet long, and makes a pretty darn good underground auditorium.

A small set of bleachers rises up one wall of the cathedral, so we found a seat and settled in for some traditional folk music Christmas carols. Guitar, mandolin and mountain dulcimer accompanied superb hillbilly harmonies on classic pieces, as well as some local favorites written by area artists.

We had to smile, even laugh in spite of ourselves, at their Ozark version of The Twelve Days of Christmas, with gems like: “12 stills a brewin’, 9 fiddlers fiddlin’, 8 banjos strummin’, 6 hounds a bayin’, 4 razorbacks, 2 hickory nuts and a possum in a gum tree,” the whole crowd was laughing like a bunch of Santas. Ho, ho, ho and a bowl full of jelly.

You can’t swing a cat around these parts without hitting a folk music theater with a holiday show going on. The venues may not be as awe inspiring, but then water won’t be dripping on your head either.

The White River Hoedown, Sons of the Ozarks Music Theater, Brickshy’s Backstreet Theater, The Leatherwoods and Jimmy Driftwood Music Barn all deck them halls.

While most of these artists are not widely known outside The Ozarks, James Corbitt Morris, better known as Jimmy Driftwood, scored major hits as a songwriter back in the fifties with songs recorded by Eddy Arnold, Johnny Cash, Johnny Horton, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Homer and Jethro and Doc Watson.

Driftwood’s hit, The Battle of New Orleans, was written when he was teaching at a local high school in an attempt to get his class interested in history.

Folk Music players in Mountain View Arkansas

Speaking of history, the history of traditional mountain folk music runs deep in these parts. As far back as 1941, a big weekend musical was held at a camp built by the Civilian Conservation Corps near Blanchard Springs.

In the fifties, paved roads arrived in Stone County and folks started coming down out of the hills to perform in town. Mountain View embraced these hootenannies, and in 1963 the first Arkansas Folk Festival was held. By the seventies, 100,000 people were showing up for the festival.

More festivals followed, the Arkansas Beanfest and Great Championship Outhouse Races, two Mountain View Bluegrass Festivals, An Old-Fashioned Fourth of July, and the Ozark Mountain Christmas. Soon folk music and crafts became the town’s main economic engine.

In the eighties, The Ozark Folk Center was built to help continue the growth. The center hosts several events, including the Arkansas State Fiddle Championships, and workshops teaching banjo, dulcimer, and crafts.

Washtub Bass

Fiddle, banjo and dulcimer are all integral parts of mountain music, but the dulcimer is somewhat unique to it.

Of course even these traditional violins need to be in tune, so check out the best ways to keep them in perfect pitch at sound-unsound.com.

Up at The Dulcimer Shoppe here in Mountain View, they are glad to fill folks in on some of the history of dulcimers. Technically a fretted zither – zithers are a stringed instrument, but without a neck like a guitar or violin, and date back to 1560 in Denmark.

Over the years dulcimers migrated throughout northern Europe, then to Appalachia with immigrants, and finally to the Ozarks.

The other music store in town, Mountain View Music & Gifts, stocks all the traditional instruments as well, but is probably best known for their front porch jam sessions that spring to life anytime the weather permits.

All the usual suspects join in, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, dobro and guitar, but we saw several homemade additions to a few bands. Wandering through the groups we saw musicians throw down on spoons, washboard and a cool washtub bass.

Missile Defense and Possum Smoker

Another favorite spot for jammin’ is the courtyard in front of The Snack Shack right across the street, or any open patch of turf around the town square.

The city has set up several gazebos to act as bandstands for the get-togethers. These don’t really serve as stages since the players tend to form circles and just play to each other for the love of the music.

But we can certainly attest to the fine musicianship of the participants after just one Saturday afternoon of meandering around from group to group.

We heard tell that these Saturday jam sessions used to get pretty raucous, until the city of Mountain View, and even the whole county, went dry in an attempt to get things back under control. Now days when folks get a hankerin’ for some hooch, they just have to “make dew.”

We didn’t stick around to see, but we’d bet that the moon was shining right bright somewhere around town that night.

David & Veronica, GypsyNester.com

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Why? Could it be the Cacti?

Everybody has to ask “Why?” from time to time. Our time came on the drive to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. On the northern edge of the park, along the only road going in, lies the miniscule town of Why, Arizona.

Wondering why, we figured we should ask around. The Why-Not Travel Store seemed a good place to inquire. Actually, it was the only place to inquire.

It seems there are two main stories as to how the town came to be named Why, one more likely true than the other.

Some folks say that… CONTINUE READING >>

Why Arizona

Everybody has to ask “Why?” from time to time. Our time came on the drive to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

On the northern edge of the park, along the only road going in, lies the miniscule town of Why, Arizona.

Wondering why, we figured we should ask around. The Why-Not Travel Store seemed a good place to inquire. Actually, it was the only place to inquire.

It seems there are two main stories as to how the town came to be named Why, one more likely true than the other.

Some folks say that back when this place was known as Rocky Point Junction (the turning point for going to Rocky Point, Mexico) a post office was needed, but the postal service felt that there were too many towns with Junction in their names.

Needing a new name, the town held a meeting to come up with a good one, but some smart alec asked “Why would anyone live out here?” After some discussion, they all agreed. Why?

The Why Not Travel Store, Why Arizona

The more likely truth is that the town is named for the junction of State Routes 85 and 86 that meet in a “Y” intersection here.

Arizona law requires that town names have at least three letters so Y became Why.

Having found an answer to the ultimate question, we took the Highway 85 stem of the Y south to see the Organ Pipe Cacti. Legend has it that State 85 was donated to the federal government during Prohibition when it was a mere dirt road.

Why? The hope was that the road would be improved, making bootleg liquor easier to smuggle in from Mexico.

Guess the feds forgot to ask “Why?” when Arizona offered it to them.

Saguaro Cactus

Driving into the park we spied the classic, arms-in-the-air Saguaro cacti, but soon noticed something new – the clumps of long pipe-like limbs of the Organ Pipe variety.

We chatted up a Park Ranger to find out that the park is here because this is the only place in the U.S.A. where this particular cactus grows, so in 1937 the area was officially protected as Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

That got us to wondering, what is the difference between a National Monument and a National Park?

The difference is mainly in the manner that they are created. A National Park can only be established through an act of congress and can consist of both public and private lands, while a Monument is designated by Presidential proclamation and can only include existing public land. Now we know.

Organ Pipe Cactus

A part of the Sonoran Desert, 95% of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument is a wilderness area and is among the hottest and driest places in the country.

With this in mind, we didn’t want to stray too far off the beaten path, but we did want to do a little hiking to see the desert up close and personal.

The two and a half mile excursion to the old Victoria Mine looked to be the best option to do some sightseeing without worries of dehydration or becoming food for wildlife.

Gold and silver mining began in this area in the late 1800s and continued for nearly one hundred years. The Victoria Mine was active for about forty of those years, around the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries. Those miners had to be hardy souls.

Desert Cacti Assortment

We headed out across the foothills of the Sonoyta Mountains to do a bit of prospecting of our own. Along the trail we got a taste of the desert flora and fauna.

Several types of cholla grow like crazy out here, as well as creosote bush, ocotillo, paloverde and many cacti, including the park’s namesake, organ pipes.

Wildlife is less obvious during the daylight hours, but we did see a few small birds, hawks and a couple of the little desert mice they were hunting.

As we climbed a bit higher, a beautiful panoramic view of the Sonoyta Valley spread out below us to the south. We could see all the way to Mexico. Of course Arizona was once part of Mexico, and back then the trail we were following was the old Mexican road that ran between the towns of Sonoyta and Ajo (yup, it means garlic!).

Arizona Desert

The colorful rock tailings along the mountainsides, left from the removal of the ore, let us know we were close to the mine.

At the top of the last hill we found the remnants of a stone structure next to one of several shafts. The small ruins are all that’s left of Levy’s store, which supplied the little settlement that grew here a century ago.

The only merchandise left inside the store is an old rusty bath tub. We didn’t see a price tag, but didn’t really want to drag it back to camp with us anyway.

Old Mine Shaft

Outside the store, a good bit of the mining machinery has survived. Much of it has been moved away from the holes and the mineshafts have been covered.

We still managed a peek down the shafts, carefully looking down the dark holes through cracks in the coverings.

Not much to see but pure blackness past the first few feet, still, we’d bet every single person to come up here has done the exact same thing.

Arizona Sunset

If we wanted more mining exploration, we could have continued south another two miles to the Lost Cabin Mines, but the trail gets a little spotty and we didn’t have a very good map.

At least that’s the excuse we settled on as we set out on the return trip back to the park headquarters.

Back in the middle of the desert again, we started to rethink our opinion of how the town of Why got its name.

Maybe they are here for the cacti. Why not?

David & Veronica, GypsyNester.com