Chapter II We Get a Taste of the Desert Chapter III The Real Thing in Deserts Chapter VI The Dixie Country of Utah Chapter VII Along the Rio Grande Western Railroad Chapter X Green River to Grand Junction Chapter XI Grand Junction, Colorado Chapter XIII The Plains of Colorado Chapter XIV Our Party Grows Smaller Chapter XV Alone in a Prairie Schooner SUNSET ON THE MOJAVE DESERT THE CRUISE OF A SCHOONER By Albert W. Harris With Illustrations from Photographs Privately Printed Copyright, 1911, By Albert W. Harris Arranged and Printed by Charles Daniel Frey Chicago To My Friend Dr. H. W. Lancaster PREFACE Years ago, no matter how many, my head was filled with queer notions. Probably there are still a few queer thoughts and notions left there. I refer to them as queer from the point of view from which the reader will look at them. Personally, I have considered them very sane and serious, and quite worth working out. To begin with, when a boy, I had a great yearning for a pony. I had all sorts of notions about ponies, but when I didn’t get one as a boy, I planned to have more ponies when I grew up, and better ones, than any one ever had before. In fact, I built a “pony” castle in the air. I had another notion that I wanted to be a farmer, and have a big ranch with horses and cattle, but when I could not, as a boy, see any chance to work this out at once, I proceeded in my mind to make it come true, and pictured and planned it all out, and built such a fine castle of a farm that I could see it almost as plainly in my mind’s eye as though it were a reality. The nearest I ever got to my castle for many years was when riding over the plains on a cow pony, the cattle and the pony belonging to some one else; the fun, however, was all mine. I still worked on my castles and added another. I pictured myself some time riding or driving overland to California, crossing the plains and mountains with a party of congenial spirits, and following the old Santa Fe trail to the Pacific Ocean. When I talked seriously of these things to ordinary mortals, they smiled, and said, “You think you will do these things some day, but you never will; they are all air castles.” Similar expressions greeted any reference to ponies, farms, or overland trips, as the years went by, till they began to take some such place in my own mind, and I found myself saying, “Air Castles, nothing but Air Castles.” Still, as these castles began to crumble and grow mossy with years, I resolved to repair them, and in so doing awoke to the fact that two of my castles had materialized. They had come to earth, so to speak, and I found myself actually possessed of the farm and the ponies; the identical ponies, it seemed to me, I had seen in my mind’s eye when a boy. It took me some time to actually realize that the farm and the ponies were really mine, but, when I finally came to accept them as realities, I knew my other castle could not be far off, and I began again planning to take the overland trip. I had planned this trip in my mind so many times and in so many ways that the only new sensation was that now it would surely come true, but I kept on planning it annually for five years before I actually started on the trip itself, and then I started from the Pacific Ocean and drove east. The following account of this trip may be of sufficient interest to make it worth reading, at least, and if any one who reads it feels more hopeful of finishing the building of the castles he is now engaged upon, it will have answered its purpose. CONTENTS I. Getting Started II. We get a Taste of the Desert III. The Real Thing in Deserts IV. Kelso, California V. Off Again VI. The Dixie Country of Utah VII. Along the Rio Grande Western Railroad VIII. Salina Canyon IX. Castle Valley X. Green River to Grand Junction XI. Grand Junction, Colorado XII. The Mountains XIII. The Plains of Colorado XIV. Our Party Grows Smaller XV. Alone in a Prairie Schooner LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Sunset on the Mojave Desert Cacti Forest Provisioned for the Desert Entering the Mojave Canyon Emerging into the Desert A Desert Camp The Business Section of Kelso, California Joshua Palm, or Giant Cactus We Stop for Water Our First Camp East of Las Vegas A Sample of Mormon Architecture Mormon House and Irrigation Ditch A Ranch in Bear Valley Salina Canyon A Glimpse of Castle Valley The Clay Buttes near Green River We Abandon our Water Barrels A Camp on Black Mesa The Two Normans The Black Canyon of the Gunnison A Camp Site on the Gunnison Continental Divide Camp Below the Divide A Log Cabin on Bailey’s Mountain Nearing Civilization The Outfit Coming into Denver The Cook The Hostler Norman Bradley and Kate Norman Harris and Dixie Our Horses on the Open Range East of Denver A Mid-day Camp We Arrive at Kemah The Last Anchorage of the Prairie Schooner We turn Kate Out to Pasture Bess also is Turned Out: “Good Old Bess” THE CRUISE OF A SCHOONER |