Day 158: Burning Down My Memories

I was a new widow when I bought my first camper. A little 16’ job with everything I needed. I miss that little camper…the original TOW-Wanda. I still regret trading her in for the big behemoth I own now, but…water under the bridge, you know.

I always wanted a camper although I had never pulled one. I camped in a tent a couple of times and once drove cross country in an old VW Poptop Van, but actually having my own camper eluded me. 

I tried to get Hubby #2 to buy one and he refused. It never occurred to me to go out and buy one myself. I wasn’t brave enough to do such a thing back then. But Mr. Virgo understood my wanderlust and, while not an avid camper himself, was anxious to see that I got to do all the fun things I wanted.

When he died suddenly while we were looking at the camper for our retirement, I thought my dreams would end there. But, something stirred within me almost from the beginning of widowhood. I was determined to have that camper and found a way to make it work.

Little TOW-Wanda came into my life just a few weeks after the funeral. I carefully stocked her and as soon as the spring snows melted, I was off on The Grand Adventure through the wilderness and backroads of Colorado by myself.

I am so glad there were no forest fires to speak of that summer, or I might have lost the heart for this fun way of life. I traveled a circle clear around the state at least twice in those three months. One particularly beautiful stretch was heading west on Colorado Route 14 through Poudre Canyon. I hadn’t been through there since the High Park Fire of 2012 the year before. It was devastating to see the blackened vegetation…the trees standing like gnarled fingers pointing to the sky.

I drove to the far west end where the fire had spared the canyon. I found an empty campsite right on the edge of the Cache la Poudre River and backed in. It was early in the camping season. The kids were still in school, and I had just about every campground I went to all to myself. 

I had camped in Rocky Mountain National Park for a few days prior to my arrival in Poudre Canyon. I saw wildlife galore on that trip…elk, deer, turkey, mink, ermine, marmot, Bald Eagles, Great Horned Owls, moose, coyotes. Everything except a bear. The last morning at this campsite, I talked with Mr. Virgo…as I did most mornings. I thanked him for bringing all the beautiful animals to enjoy…I really appreciated them. But, could he please just bring me at least one bear???

I packed up and headed west on Colorado 14 and began the long, steady climb up to Cameron Pass. By the time I got to Joe Wright Reservoir, my engine was getting a little hot. I decided to pull in the parking area and gaze at the still frozen water. Signs of spring were coming to the high country as the fresh green leaves were popping out on the aspen trees and the undergrowth was beginning to show signs of life. Finally, when the engine and transmission were cooled, I took off to the tip top of the pass.

I had just crested the pass at 10, 249’ and began the slow descent down when I noticed the most odd thing. Someone had placed a huge statue of a bear, right along the highway where it makes a sharp bend to the right. I slowed down to look at it, then realized…to my sheer delight…it was a real, live bear! Standing on the edge of the road, the sheer drop off behind him. I stopped the truck and stared. Thank God there wasn’t someone coming along behind me! I tried to snap a photo of the bear, but the memory was full on my phone and by the time I reached for my digital camera, it had disappeared over the edge. I realized that memory was for me alone. 

I don’t believe I have seen another bear in the wilds of Colorado since that one magical morning on Cameron Pass. And now…Cameron Pass is burning, as is much of Colorado and points west. Climate change has brought increasing drought and prevailing winds so the fires continue to become worse and worse.

I don’t know when, or if, I will ever have the opportunity to go on an adventure like that again. But I must say…the memories of those three months pulling my camper through the majestic Rocky Mountains have never faded and remind me of God’s reckless love for me…to grace me with these memories that still fill my heart.

❤️

“God is the one who rules the whole earth, and we that live here are merely insects. He spread out the heavens like a curtain or an open tent.”

Isaiah 40:22 CEV

2 thoughts on “Day 158: Burning Down My Memories

  1. Pack up and go again! Your neck of the Woods is beautiful. She is beckoning you to come and visit the majesty that is yours. Each day is fleeting. Get out there while you have the chance.❤️

    1. Well, I can’t go to Colorado this summer…Covid and fires. And, I can’t leave Mr. FixIt alone just yet since he had his strokes this spring. But we’ll get out there this fall! Promise! ❤️

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