I apologize for the delay in posting updates from the trip (now 3 weeks hence). I promise that this post will make up for it!
After arriving back in Phoenix, we rested for a bit but were still restless. Ituri had suggested earlier in the day it might be fun to drive out into the mountains just outside of Phoenix to see if we could find some night-time mammals. I wouldn't get this opportunity everyday, so I jumped at the chance.
I was hoping to find mule deer, collared peccaries, ringtails, and anything else that might show up.
Night fell.
We warmed up the car again (ok a different car this time - one with working suspension), and drove out of town.
Not knowing the lay of the land, I really didn't know where we were going. I left that in the hands of our driver (Ituri). I think we headed south.
Slowly, the city faded away. Shadows of mountains appeared in the distance, and we climbed.
The road narrowed. We were hugging the wall of a mountain. Being from flat-as-a-pancake Texas where the women have more curves than the landscape, I was like a kid at Christmas.
I kept my eyes opened.
Ituri - "This is the bridge where I found some Gila Monsters back when I was into herping."
jbnbsn99 - "Think we'll find any tonight."
Ituri - "Have you been outside?"
jbnbsn99 - "Oh right, it's cold out. They're reptiles..."
I decided to keep looking out the window.
Nothing appeared.
After miles of driving, we approached a small lake used for fishing. Next to it was a tiny village (population under 10 I believe). Ituri can fill in that detail.
Still no mammals. We turned around to head home. Maybe something would turn up.
"Ituri, stop!"
'"Why, what's wrong?"
"Nothing just stop."
"You ok?"
"Yeah, I just want to do something."
"What?"
"You'll see."
I smiled. There was something I had wanted to do for years.
All along the drive, I had noticed the blackness of the scenery. Blackness I couldn't ever recall seeing in Texas.
We got out of the car and looked up.
"Ituri, turn off the car's headlights."
Pitch black.
Except it wasn't.
The sky was open before us. The stars had finally come out.
I looked in awe at the heaven above.
My soul wept at the beauty of the universe. My eyes watered. It was a spiritual peace that I had never known. As a non-religious person, I felt what other people feel through their belief in a deity. I saw it in the glory of the knowable universe, and I was glad.
I soaked in the sight. But, I knew we had to head back.
"I'm ready to go back now," I said.
"Me too."
We made our way back to the city. Back to the man-made. Back to the lights.
Our night drive yielded no mammals.
It did yield a sight better than any animal I could possibly imagine.
I was happy.