Four Corners: New Mexico

This week, a true road trip spanning hundreds of miles across state lines, has been a long time coming. In some ways, its genesis was in the Western landscapes of my youth, when I longed to escape the muted grey sprawl of suburban Los Angeles, the safety of childhood and home. In those halcyon days, climbing the chaparral hillsides behind our family’s house, I could look out and see, beneath the strip malls and golf courses and housing developments, just a glimpse of the majesty of the American West: open desert. Sage country. Mountain plateaus. The sweet fragrance of mesquite and yarrow, pinyon and ponderosa. Years later, the beautiful aspects of that landscape became the basis of my love of place - a desire to feel and live and connect genuinely with my surroundings, no matter where I might find myself. That yearning, in large part, has informed why I travel and photograph.

In 2019, wanting to return to the desertscapes of my youth, I planned a Spring 2020 trip across the Colorado Plateau, which was ultimately cancelled. At the height of the pandemic’s initial surge, self-isolating in a motel room between shifts at a nursing facility, I read everything I could find about the region: a book of Navajo oral traditions; archeological studies of the Ancestral Puebloan civilization; the journals of Everett Ruess (another self-absorbed young desert itinerant, writer, and artist with connections to Brookline and Los Angeles, who disappeared in the canyons of Utah in the mid-century). This milieu - the contrast between the changeable and the eternal, the known and unknown, the placement of self within a cosmos both orderly and chaotic - eventually developed into my second collection of poetry, a painful and emotional collection about love and loss heavily informed by my work during the pandemic. And meanwhile, the mesas and canyons of the Colorado Plateau continued to beckon like an old friend.

Two years later, in April 2022, Jane and I set out on a trip much like days of yore: a sprawling driving route across the Four Corners region of the Southwest, passing through four states and the Navajo Nation (Dinétah: “among the people”); a return to form for us, after many years of quiet, basecamp vacations. For a week, we caught sunrises and sunsets, wandered the desert, visited ancient homes and pueblos, and photographed one of the most beautiful and profoundly human landscapes in the country. The photographs, grouped by state, are presented here without further editorialization.

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April 9, 2022: After an incredibly early start in Boston and a brief layover in Chicago, Jane and I land in Albuquerque, New Mexico at 10 AM in the morning. We drive to the suburb of Bernalillo, where we eat lunch and shop for the week’s groceries. We stop at the Paleta Bar and get ice cream popsicles dipped in chocolate and fruit, just behind a mob of high school choir girls. After a afternoon nap in the motel, we drive to La Cienega and hike up to Cerro Seguro to catch sunset over the mesas and open plains just west of Santa Fe.

April 10, 2022: After breakfast and a long, early morning drive north from Bernalillo, we arrive at Chaco Canyon, one of the most significant sites of ancient architecture in North America. We walk around Pueblo Bonito and Chetro Ketl before taking a long hike through the desert to see the Supernova Pictograph. We end the afternoon by climbing the cliffs overlooking Pueblo Bonito and circling the Great Kiva at Casa Rinconada. After a long drive back out to the highway, over desert washes and gravel roads, we eat dinner at Tequila’s in Farmington and settle in for the night.

April 11, 2022: Another early morning drive through the darkness of northern New Mexico. From the road, we watch the first light of sunrise hit Shiprock (Tsé Bitʼaʼí: “winged rock”) before crossing the Chuska Mountains into Arizona.




Four Corners: Arizona

April 11, 2022: Crossing over into Lukachukai, we drive into Chinle along the northern rim of Canyon de Chelly, a network of canyons that form an ancient home for the Diné. After walking the canyon rim at several overlooks, we eat lunch in Chinle before driving the southern rim of the canyon. After checking in for an afternoon nap at the Thunderbird Lodge, we return to the canyon’s edge at Spider Rock Overlook for a magnificent sunset.

April 12, 2022: A cold morning with blowing winds, billowing dust, and dramatic storm clouds so typical of canyon country. We photograph a terrific sunrise on the south rim before leaving Chinle behind. Passing through curtains of rain showers, we cross the desert to the north, ascending the mesas surrounding Tsegi Canyon and hiking to an overlook of Betatakin at Navajo National Monument. After a picnic lunch, we retrace our steps to Kayenta and enter Monument Valley (Tsé Biiʼ Ndzisgaii: “Valley between the Rocks”). We spend the afternoon driving the valley road that winds between the tribal park’s iconic redstone buttes and mesas and hiking a loop trail around the West Mitten. The hike is desolate, beautiful, and all the more enjoyable after several hours cooped up in the car and bouncing along dusty roads. After a bone-chillingly windy sunset, we eat dinner and fall asleep at Goulding’s Lodge.


Four Corners: Utah

April 13, 2022: After catching sunrise’s first colors on the buttes of Monument Valley, we pack up our motel room and head east out of the valley, into Utah. We make a brief stop at the Goosenecks to see the impressive, deep meanders of the San Juan River before ascending a steep gravel road to reach Cedar Mesa. With the Bears Ears looming over us to the north, we enter Natural Bridges National Monument and begin a steep descent from the canyon rim to the bottom of Sipapu Bridge - a beautiful trail replete with reflected light on the canyon walls, towering ponderosa pines, and a series of ladders for climbing up and down the slickrock. We bushwhack about a mile up the White Canyon, crossing over the wash multiple times, to reach a series of ancient ruins and pictographs hidden against the canyon wall. After a grueling ascent back to the car, we drive east to Blanding and get burgers at the Patio Diner before passing into a deep sleep.

April 14, 2022: In the morning, we return toward Cedar Mesa. On the east side of Comb Ridge, we take a brief walk to see the ruins overlooking Butler Wash before crossing the ridge and hiking up Mule Canyon to see a beautiful group of ruins, which appear to be ablaze from sunlight reflecting off the slickrock in mid-day. In our hour sitting in front of the ruin waiting for the light, we meet an indigenous guide who shows us a group of pictographs and handprints near the ruin, as well as several groups of hikers who share an appreciation for the natural and archeological heritage of the Colorado Plateau. At noon, we exit the canyon and stop at the well-developed Mule Canyon Ruins before returning to Blanding. We explore the Edge of the Cedars State Park and museum before eating lunch in town.