Day 47: Carlsbad & Caverns again (Saturday 15 May 2004)
MORNING: Just south of Carlsbad New Mexico. We took it easy this morning, rolled out a little bit after noon, heading down to Carlsbad Caverns again for our afternoon and evening program - going to the Kings Palace tour and then watching the bats emerge. On our way thru town we passed a restaurant with the sign, SOMETIMES YOU TAME THE TIGER AND SOMETIMES HE HAS YOU FOR LUNCH. I wonder if that applies particularly to Carlsbad.
Last night at the feast we sat at the long feasting table. Next to us were a couple couples who were from San Jose California either past or present, and we talked a bit with a couple who had moved here from Michigan. We talked about this'n'that, and how it's a small town (with all that implies). I asked, "What brought you here?" And in answer we got a tale of misery. Which leads me to conclude that, if you meet someone who has come to some place as inauspicious as Carlsbad from out of state, DON'T ASK THEM WHY THEY'RE THERE! You'll be sorry. Ask them how they LIKE it, nothing more.
Between dance programs we took a break in the Visitors Center at Living Desert. As we were heading back out to the ceremonial ground an old fella collared us at the door, said, "You ain't from around here, are ya?" and then told us about how much he liked the area, how much he liked the Guadelupe Mountains, "Ya can find ancient Indian artifacts up in the mountains and ya should go see Sitting Bull Falls." Rolling now, we just passed one of the turnoffs to it, 36 miles away - don't really have time right now. The books say it's a 180-foot falls. This fella says, "Yeah there's still some water in it." I guess that's one of those things we'll save for the next time we come thru.
CARLSBAD: Let's see, there's a business in Carlsbad that specializes in fixing dents and hail damage - PAINTLESS HAIL/DENT REPAIR. A neomodern concrete window-tinting shop with a large PRAY-4-U banner on it. And then there was the aqueduct. Yesterday after doing the laundry and before heading out to Living Desert we needed a place to cool off and have lunch. The only shade we found was under a 100-plus-year-old aqueduct, which is a historic structure - at the time it was the largest concrete structure in the world. And it drips. So we sat there in the shade with water pitter-pattering down upon us. Very cool, out in the middle of the desert. Oh yeah, signs refer to it as THE FLUME.
So what are the attractions in Carlsbad? Uh there's the big hole in the ground, some miles to the south. There's the old concrete aqueduct. There's the Mescalero dances once a year. There's a long growing season and low prices. Oh yeah there's the waterfall 50 miles away. And there's the Pecos River that you can jump into when there are outflows from the dams upstream. Other than that it's not exactly what I'd call an attractive place. Oh, why not damn it with faint praise? OK, it's not as bad as we expected! But I do want to come back - in the monsoon season, that waterfall should be good. And I'd like to get into Carlsbad Caverns after my camera is fixed, get in there with a good tripod with control over tilts and turns, and take a number of panoramic underground shots.
Alas! We get to the Caverns and find that the tour we wanted takes reservations, it's all booked up or today. So we got tickets for the early tour tomorrow. We'll see the bats this everning. In between we'll wander around shops down at the highway junction. Take it easy, avoid the crowds, yes this IS Saturday, it IS crowded.
MID-AFTERNOON: We perused the gift offerings at the shops at Apache Canyon Trading Post and Whites City. PATHETIC PATHETIC tourist crap, stuff of quality too low to make it into the gift shop in the National Park. We're now ascending the grade back to the Caverns entrance, and it is raining. We were hearing thunder, there are dark clouds swirling overhead. We will get to smell the Chihuahuan Desert when we get out. Ah! We can run inside the building and go up to the Observaton Deck! And observe! We hear that this storm dumped snow in Colorado, now it's shedding a few drops of rain here.
Walnut Canyon, the entranceway to the Caverns, is quite beautiful in the rain, the colors are richer, more saturated - birds flying, some big raptors right at the top of the butte there. The Chihuahuan Desert is the largest and wettest of the North American deserts, doesn't get a LOT of rain, what it does get is mostly in the summer. So I don't think this is monsoon season yet and if the weather came down from Colorado then no, not monsoons, just another anomoly. Blame it on Global Warming. Blame it on Bush and his friends. Blame it on ET UFOs. Blame it on the Bossa Nova. Remember, every time it rains, the angels are pissing all over you.
BAT FLIGHT?
SATURDAY EVENING at the mouth of the Caverns. We are awaiting the Bat Flight. It has been storming, the lightning has moved away. We were given a wonderful entertaining informative talk by a ranger who turned a schoolgirl into a bat for educational purposes. A few miles to the north the Apaches are starting dancing again. O the feasting tonight was outside, heh heh heh. Are the rain gods propitiated?
Except for the smell of the crowd, I mean the roar, it's a quiet evening. The swallows stopped swooping around. We are told that the mouth of the cave is a bad place to be in a lightning storm, that more lightning strikes here than usual, perhaps because of the mineralization of the rocks.
The ranger says, "If you see me running, I hope you're not too far behind.
We were told to speak quietly, but a couple hundred people speaking quietly adds up. More and more are coming into this little stone ampitheatre set at the mouth of the cave. (sounds - speaking, murmuring)
After a bit, someone thinks they see something come out of the cave. People start going SHHHH! The crowd dynamics change, everyone gets quiet. Except me. People sit down, kids aren't running around now. It's quiet waiting - not silent, but quiet. I hope to use the word 'swirling' when the bats emerge. We more easily hear the thunder in the distance.
FIRST BAT: And the first bat just fluttered overhead. Only one, no swarm yet. These are Mexican freetail bats, they weight about half an ounce with a wingspan of what, ten inches? One more bat or another, fluttering down not up. Another is coming up. And another and another. A few more. And now the swarm starts coming out like dust against the clouds, or is that just my bad vision in the weak light?
Flash photography is banned here, the recharging of the flashes hurts the bats. But I see the glow of many camcorder LCD screens. Flashes of lightning over the hills in the distance are of a different order.
The bat flight still seems very intermittant, only a dozen or so bats flickering by at any one time. Some quitters are marching out but there are still a couple hundred people here, waiting waiting waiting.
The entrance to the cavern is thick horizontal layers of limestone, the ampitheatre in front of it is like an ancient temple with a public space in front. The crowd is waiting for a manifestation, natural or divine, it doesn't matter. And this manifestation is very dribbling.
More and more people are climbing the stairs to exit, fewer and fewer bats are emerging. The colony size is supposed to be 150,000 or maybe many more, and everybody MUST come out at night to feed. Are they kept in by the weather? Will they order a take-out pizza? Fortunately we have no urgent appointments so we can wait.
Now there are more bats coming out but not a thick cloud. They come out in puffs, they're hard to see against the dark clouds. Every now'n'then a stroke of lightning will illunimate them. More and more of the audience are giving up.
SURRENDER: Ah, finally we give up. But we'll come back again, the same bat-time, the same bat-station.
So we regretfully exit and roll back down Walnut Canyon and get to the highway - where there are highway lights. And highway lights attract insects. And insects attract bats. So we see our batflight under the streetlights in the tourist trap of Whites City. At last.
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