The Wolfsies have returned from a week-long vacation to the Grand Canyon. It’s the only place in America where you’re allowed to drag your kid to the precipice of one the world’s deepest chasms, but they put you in the slammer if you feed a squirrel.
Any aspirations our small family had about making the descent to the bottom were squashed when I went into a gift shop on the South Rim. I asked the clerk to recommend a book about this National Park. Hold on to your hat—actually, hold on to anything you can. The number one seller is: Over the Edge: Death in the Grand Canyon. What a charming choice for fans of light summer reading.
The authors do not restrict their colorful travelogue to unscheduled plunges to the bottom. They want you to know that with a little bit of poor planning, you can also die of dehydration or starvation. Rattlesnake bites, driving off the edge and eating poisonous plants are more fun options to choose from.
Writers Myers and Ghiglier want you to know how safe the Canyon is if you are careful, but the book seems oddly misplaced in the gift shop so close to, well, the edge. There aren’t pamphlets relating the history of scaldings on the counter of McDonald’s or brochures about whimsical power tool mishaps attached to your chain saw purchases. I’m glad they didn’t think of this unique marketing gimmick when the Pinto was hot? (So to speak).
There are many other entertaining chapters in the book: bear attacks, drowning, and rock slides, to name a few. So many ways to buy the farm and still enjoy the grandeur of nature. Maybe I’m an optimist but I look at it this way: Just a few hundred deaths in six million years. That’s not a bad record.
You want to hear more, don’t you? In one touching chapter a man makes tea for his wife out of a deadly canyon flower and they both die within minutes. In another section, a woman tries to pet a mountain lion. There’s clearly a fine line between bad luck and stupidity. Then there’s the elderly couple who got lost in their 1996 Taurus on a back road. They were found dehydrated, but still alive. They had no water, but a week’s supply of Depends. I’d call that ironic.
The chapter on suicide makes it clear this really is the place to go if you have a flair for the dramatic. It is rumored that one guy who met his maker by diving off a cliff had complained at the gate that the entry fee was exorbitant and he would never come back again. No idle threat there.
Travelers from abroad love the Grand Canyon. Europeans winter in Arizona. Asians summer in the Canyon. Americans usually fall there. About 600 feet. That’s just an average, though; your actual plummet may vary.
The beauty of the Grand Canyon is overwhelming and we really did have a great time. When we left, I packed the trunk full of water and drove very slowly along the winding roads, our GPS leading the way. I enjoyed that book, but I didn’t want to be in the second edition.
Add a comment at www.rushvillerepublican.com.
Columns
Wolfsie: Grand vacation
- Columns
-
-
Legislation isn't a cure all for everything
As the presidential election season continues to unfold, which it started doing right after the last presidential election, I've been giving a fair amount of thought to the relevance of social issues as legitimate topics for political debate or, for that matter, as relevant issues for the federal government at all!
-
Grandpa says: The grand old game
When I was a very young boy, I became infatuated with the game of basketball. I don't know how young I was, but I do remember it kept me from getting my knuckles cracked with a ruler in the second grade.
-
Prom in Indy isn't all bad
This week I'm going to disagree respectfully with one of my fellow columnists, Jean Mauzy, whose work I admire very much.
-
Actions and their consequences
Consequences and the lack of them are one of the main problems our country faces today. There are so many different instances where the circumstances of an action are basically nil and hence no reason for the perpetrator not to do them again.
-
Farmers slow to embrace the Iron Age of agriculture
Grandpa says... Hart-Parr made the first successful line of farm tractors in 1904, but it was another 50 years before tractors outnumbered horses on U.S. farms.
-
Our real fake vacation luncheons
Would you believe that on our spring break trip to Orlando, Fla., we lunched twice in San Francisco?
-
The power of Internet persuasion
"The Internet is like having a world-wide central brain of knowledge that leaks and spills out into another's thoughts and dreams to either make a reality come true or crush it altogether." (Karen Gunn - Indiana Student)
-
Our Land O' Spring Break Fun (Vol. 1 of 17)
I received amazing inspiration this morning while fretting about how I would impart to you ALLLLL the wonderfulness of my spring break fun in Orlando.
-
Remembering the war years
When I was young my family was slightly different than most in town; both parents worked.
-
Old Floss: Horse power with a soft muzzle
Grandpa says... As I sit in front of my window looking out at my son and his help planting corn, my mind rolls back 80 years to how it was and how it is today.
- More Columns Headlines
-
Legislation isn't a cure all for everything



