Most of the saguaros I had seen were lone creatures standing
tall against a brilliant sky. Here was a massive shadeless forest. I had to stop
to take it all in. This was the beginning of the Saguaro National Forest of
which the pass is a small part. It was glorious and unexpected. So out of the
car I went.
Speedway has its own unique Wild West history. It
stretches from one end of Tucson to the other – from the Tucson Mountains to
the Rincon range some 20 miles away – and is as flat and straight as a board.
Back in the day, the fine citizens of Tucson conducted auto races upon that
stretch of road, hence the name ‘Speedway.’
When the road hits the foothills, it begins its gently winding
rise toward the mountains as a single lane highway. When it hits the mountain
canyon, the road narrows significantly with no berm and clings to the side of
the hills until it reaches the crest and drops over the edge at a 90 degree
angle, plunging back down to the desert floor on the other side. A truly harrowing experience the first time
over!
This is Gates Pass, created in 1883 by one man’s search for a shortcut
through the Tucson Mountains to his carbonate mines in the Avra Valley below. That’s
what they say. But to me it is one of those spots that showcase the natural
beauty of an unspoiled earth.
The overlook provides a great view of Tucson’s sunsets.
People are drawn by this common purpose in the evenings, much like they are
drawn to Lake Erie in my old stomping grounds in Erie and Ashtabula Counties,
back east. The sunsets are sometimes quite dramatic.
I lucked into a simultaneous sunset/moonrise one time. I
went up to the pass with some friends visiting from Pennsylvania. We watched
intently as the sun lowered behind a distant mountain range only to turn around
and see a glorious full moon rising up behind us, lighting up the city below. We were spellbound. None of that crowd rushed away.
I have taken my life into my own hands out there, too. The rugged landscape of the cliffs overlooking the pass lured me in one time. When driving down the steep decline on the west side, it is impossible to take it all in. So one day I set out on foot to really get a closer look at it. Probably stupid as the only place to walk is that winding road with no berm, and at the edge of the road is a fairly steep drop covered in cholla cactus and with their long nasty spines. But I did it anyway. I am glad I did. I have found many times that hoofing it is the best way to really experience the desert.
I return to Gates Pass again and again. Each time I try
it on for size and it fits differently. I go there to acclimate when I first
arrive. I go to absorb its beauty and energy one last time before I leave the southwest.
I know it will sustain me. I take my friends. I go alone. Each time I try to
explore or trek some part of it where I have not yet been.
There’s the gate house and the outlook post. There are
washes and trails, huge rocks to sit on, and mountains to climb. There are
winds and to be felt and heard. Bird song to hear. Skies to watch. Shadows to
play in. And each season with its own flavor and color. Sometimes it even snows,
though I have yet to see that. It is a place of great beauty… and mystery.
I have heard more than once that there are UFO sightings
in these mountains. A friend of mine described a ship the length of three city
blocks and three stories high which he saw hovering over the Tucson Mountains
one night. He was surprised at the level of fear he experienced at the sight of
it as he was a firm believer in ET presence in the area. As if they heard him,
he received their transmission of enlightenment saying he was more accurately
afraid of something within himself. They merely mirrored – metaphysical stuff.
I had my own mystical experience one winter day when I
drove out to the pass alone, to regroup after some challenging personal stuff.
The area was deserted. I was investigating the gatehouse and took my time
observing the landscape and feeling its calming pulse. I finally landed myself on
a rock and began to talk to the cosmos as I am inclined to do when I’m sorting
through my life.
It was then that I noticed strange things happening over
my own head. The sky up to that point was clear and blue. But now, as I sat there,
a web of wispy white clouds was forming overhead. It happened quickly. The sky took
on the appearance of lace spreading out in an almost rectangular space and not
only that, but these clouds soon began to dance, weaving among themselves with
no regard for the prevailing winds. I was witnessing a sky ballet of a most spectacular
sort. I felt the presence of some great sentience behind it. This display was
not random. It was personal. It was for me. I was not alone.
I have seen ‘cloud ships’ over Tucson many times. I have
a friend who says they come to bear witness when something of a high or
spiritual nature is happening. By luck, a group of us watched in amazement as
they appeared one, two, three overhead soon after we arrived at the pass one rainy
evening. I am not sure what was high or spiritual about our visit, except
perhaps the joy we felt to be out there at all!
I leave you with one of my favorite Gates Pass sunsets.
This was the last sunset I took in before flying back to Pennsylvania this past
spring. I was amazed at how far the sun had moved from when I first came out to
the pass 2 months earlier. The alignment of the sunsets is always changing, and
occasionally things line up in a most delightful way.
This last time, as I stood on the mountain overlooking
the valley, the sun setting in the distance was passing though a little
outcropping in a mountain half way between. Sitting in the dip of this
outcropping was a little grove of saguaros. The effect, with a little
imagination, was of a saguaro family watching the sunset, complete with the
little dare-devil kid who won’t stay with the group.