We shared the site with Ms. Benjamin, and I hope she was as placid about it as we were. I was touched by how optimistic her family was in mentioning the "living" tree, and I prefer to think that she lives on in that optimism rather than the nearby stump.
You can't see us here. Look through that hill. |
Osborne Wash |
We're back in Quartzsite to meet up with Charlene and to refill our tanks. Maybe we'll even buy another Chinese stick if the Stick Man is still open. Then, like the Terror that Quacks in the night, we're gone again until we find the next pond.
20 comments:
So ZEN! I feel totally transfixed. Thanks, I needed that.
BLM rule: 14 days from the day they find you. Keep the rubber down.
That WAS just a memorial right, not an actual grave site??? I would hate to think that people could just be buried in the desert any-ole-where. Anyway, it looks like Myra was loved and I'm sure she enjoyed your company while it lasted.
Aw, thanks Sherry.
We'll keep that rule in mind and the shiny side up, Gaelyn.
Donna, I don't know. I sort of assumed she had been cremated, and perhaps it was her actual resting place after being scattered there. Being an extremely-amateur genealogist and a Find-a-Graver, I was thinking more that I hope her descendants know where to find the memorial. I think I may post this site there, since I couldn't find her elsewhere.
Where to next ?
Sassy, likely Yuma and Algodones.
If you find yourselves wandering in the vicinity of Tucson at some point, do give us a holler! Unless it's in the next two weeks. We won't be here then. And it would be a CRYING SHAME to miss us! :)
Will do! I think we'll do our shame-crying around here and south for at least two weeks, so no danger of missing you then.
How are the kitties doing in your travels? I'll be packing mine up with the pupsters soon - hopefully!! And yes, keeping the rubber down & the shiny side up is a very, very good idea ;-)
Cyn, they do really well. They go to their preferred spots (the "kitten" under Annie's seat and the rest to the bedroom) as soon as the engine fires, and as soon as we stop they're back out like it was all just a bad dream. While we're parked they're just doing cat stuff. They get used to stuff. Yay! You've been working a while to get on the road.
Cats are artists at doing cat stuff. :)
Guess we have the same kind of curiosity... I found your post on "Find A Grave Memorial" while googling .... couldn't locate an obit. One thing we do now when recording gravesites is also recording the GPS coordinates. Myra died really young... makes me want to know more about her....
To die so youg, so sad. I keep hearing about Quartzsite, the wife and I will have to visit there some day.
Have a great weekend!
Erik
Love your blog and have put it on my blogroll. :) Chinle
Looks like you had a great time in the desert, i look forward to all the things you'll make us chuckle about at your next stop. :)
Aren't they, Rose? Nobody does it better.
Sharon, that's a great idea. I thought of it, too ... as soon as we were in Quartzsite. I also Googled her and found no mention at all.
Erik, she was very young. Quartzsite: yes, you'll have to try it. You can have any kind of RVing experience you want around here. X-treme boondocking to resort, and several stops in-between.
YAY! Chinle. I'm glad I found your blog (via the Bayfield Bunch), and I LOVE being on blogrolls.
Oh great, Janie, now I have chuckle anxiety.
What a great memorial stone setting!
I like it, too, Ish. I wonder what significance the place had for her.
Are you going to go into Mexico to Los Algodones? Have you tried Mexico yet? I'm looking forward to hearing about your adventures there. I definitely want to get down to Rocky Point before we head back to Truth or Consequences, which will probably be sometime in April. (I get mixed up by references to Algodones because there's a town by that name in NM, too.)
Sue, we're going to the Old Mexican Algodones rather than the New Mexican one.
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