Flowers Can’t Mend Your Relationship

The Customer

A man and his wife have settled into their new modern home in the south of Scottsdale, but just across the border in Tempe. An area bustling with entertainment and activity. A valuable starter home crammed within inches of other homes. They met in a college bar on penny beer night. The man and his wife enjoy a life of relative ease with good jobs, no children and infinite possibilities for the future. They attend many parties and discuss their achievements among friends and strangers, comparing their lives with envy and pride. Their main topic these days is their new house in Scottsdale.

The husband is a heavy drinker and still likes to go to clubs with neon lights filled with young women in tight short dresses looking for free drinks. His wife quietly accompanies him to meet up with his college friends, his bros. They order bottles of tequila, obnoxiously party into the night. All while his wife stands in the shadows listening to them rate the fawns. 

She is a gorgeous woman with beautiful doe eyes, a fresh salon cut, and a body that fills a dress as if it was tailored just for her. An effort to keep her husband straying eyes fixed on her amongst a sea of early 20 somethings that barely fill their thick high heel shoes.

As the night rages on she leaves in a taxi. Her husband notices an hour later. Now in a fury as his possession is lost. He imagines she absconded with another more successful, much wealthier man to his mansion in the mountains overlooking Paradise Valley. He leaves his bros frantically calling and texting with no response. He returns to his bros for another bottle.

2 AM, last call, the man finds himself pissing in an alley before heading over to catch up with his bros for late night tacos. He vomits in an Uber on the way home. Too wasted to remember the gate code he jumps the wall catching his cargo pocket on a spike falling flat on his side. He tries a few doors before finding his home. Then walks to the bathroom; his gut twists the last of the clear fluids out with a finish of a yellow acidic glob of bile.

He rinses his mouth walking to the bedroom where his wife lays with her back to him pretending to sleep. Then attempts to massage her. She shrugs him off, but he continues his attempts anyway. He thinks his drunken antics are foreplay and will woo her into sloppy animalistic sex. The smell of his slime disgusts her further. A mixture of evaporated alcohol and vomit permeating from his heavy breath.

She jumps out of bed and reams him out for his behavior. Banishing him from the bed. They meet again late Sunday morning after missing their brunch reservation at a posh breakfast restaurant. Her trade off for his night out was a morning jog along the red mountains of Papago Park. The man, still sick and dehydrated, tries to find a way to apologize with words, but they are futile as her demeanor grows colder.

He makes himself a Bloody Mary to drink while scrolling through his phone watching Fox News in their living room filled with furniture from the Memorial Day sale. His bros are posting pictures of themselves on social media partying throughout the night. He’s tagged in a picture licking salt off a waitress’ cleavage. Then an ad pops up for DoorDash flower delivery. He acts swiftly picking out the second most expensive arrangement.

The Delivery Driver

A delivery driver wakes up and puts on his shoes for another long day of fighting traffic delivering food. He’s a Type-A burn out working on 7 straight days. A dropout with a torrent of flames trailing behind him in failed relationships and opportunities. He used to drive a taxi until Uber came along. He used to drive an Uber until the Corona Virus came along. His car is sweating oil and antifreeze, shaking in idle waiting for a green light. The air conditioning trying to keep up with a 115° day blowing in his face. It smells like garlic flavored garbage with a hint of mildew.

The Phoenix traffic on a Sunday morning is just as relentless as a Friday night rush hour with alcoholics frenetic for that first drink. Demons behind wheels ride his tail, flash by, swerve around limping people in crosswalks pushing strollers full of their former lives.

An annoying bleep goes off. Bleep bleep bleep bleep…bleep bleep. The driver, already going mad from the heat, the traffic, the same songs on repeat, quickly presses the button to stop the relentless alert. It’s an order from a flower shop with a delivery going to a wealthier neighborhood. He accepts the delivery even though it’s only paying $9 for a nearly 20 mile trip. Doordash likes to hide the true value of the order to encourage drivers into taking lower paying deliveries. The driver in high hopes accepts the delivery on the off chance the customer is generous.

The driver arrives at a worn building lacking the conventional signage of a brick and mortar business. Vinyl lettering requests pick-ups and deliveries be made to the double doors in the back. He proceeds around the building passing a cluster of discarded boxes forming a small hill missing the doors. Then gets out of the vehicle and calls the shop as he walks back around to the area. 

A person’s arm can be seen retracting through a door scooting an orange cone to prevent it from locking, when a lady answers the call. She directs him to stop as he walks through the narrow path created by discarded cardboard and the building walls. The lady opens one of the doors handing a bright bouquet in a vase to him. She suggests taking a box and the driver first declines, worried about the stability of the vase full of water and fragile flowers. Then she picks out the perfect one with boxes within a larger box creating firm stable dividers fitting the vase snug.

The driver finds himself back in the race among the demons first on the surface streets then on the I-17, where merging is more often a juke than a graceful change of lanes. A critical maneuver at high speeds with amateurs driving in the right lane as if they are lost in the blurry dust storm created by the turbulence of passing vehicles. He maintains a certain lane to avoid the lost on the right and the demons passing on his left as the junction of the I-10 and I-17 creates havoc among those not familiar with the elevated curving arches. Many catastrophes are made as the two worlds meet, not quite understanding which lanes go east and what direction east is. This time like many others the driver breaks free unscathed. 

The driver merges on to the I-10 East heading to the Deck Park Tunnel. Again he positions himself to avoid the confusion of the freeway as it narrows. The downtown exits jam up the right lane in the void of the tunnel, which in itself causes slowing as the timid brake and the wannabe race car drivers roar through in a display of bravado. As he exits the tunnel merging to the right in preparation for another battle of wills between those entering the freeway and those trying to figure out which lane departs the I-10 to Highway 51 or the Loop 202. This goes smoothly as well.

The merge onto the 202 East is coming from the right as it begins from it’s parent I-10 West. Google maps interprets the 202 poorly with a slight left to stay on the freeway just before the exit to 52nd Street. The savvy driver has taken this route before and maintains his lane until the exit approaches. He continues east on McDowell which splits the red mountains of Papago Park overlooking Tempe Town Lake. A dry lake bed is now full of water lined with a growing glass metropolis.

A red light allows him to check Google maps for finer information and the Doordash app for better instructions on the destination. They both are lacking, but he knows this must be the car dealership that was razed for overpriced condominiums squished together on a small lot of land. The new metropolitan look of the desert is not quite a house nor a condominium nor an apartment. Chicken wire boxes made of 2×4’s covered in stucco painted grey with thin windows and a garage held behind a cinder block wall and security gate, which he has no code for. Luckily someone else pulls in behind him and he circles around to tailgate them inside.

The Delivery

The delivery driver stops in front of the man’s house. He exits to carefully pick up the vase from the passenger side of the vehicle only to forget that it was locked. Unlocking the doors from the driver’s side, then walking back around as the man opens his front door. 

Disheveled with a puffy droopy face covered in 3 days of beard growth he stands in the doorway without as much as a hello. The driver pulls the vase full of flowers from the sheath the lady at the flower shop gave him. The man says, “thanks” and turns back inside his air conditioned home shutting the door. 

The driver completes the delivery on his app to his chagrin; it was just a $9 trip across the belly of the beast of Phoenix. A $46 taxi fare, a $17 Uber trip. (Based on 2016 rates) Now a $9 DoorDash delivery. Charity for the boy.

I decided I couldn’t just leave this as is. Part of the first short story was releasing the angst and frustration I personally have in life. It was not a wise decision to take a low paying delivery 19 miles and I had my fun expressing the negative feelings. It did occur to me that this may not have been what I imagined and could be a much simpler and more kind hearted event in life. So below is a diametric story of what happened.

Flowers Enhance Relationships

The Customer

A man and his wife have settled into their new modern home in Avondale. An area bustling with entertainment and activity. A valuable starter home in a new neighborhood. They met through friends of friends at a church picnic. The man and his wife have good jobs and are planning to have children. They attend church activities, play in a local coed softball league, and enjoy spending time hiking when they have the chance.

The husband is a hometown sports fan and has made plans to watch a Suns playoff game with friends. His wife, not quite as interested in watching sports, but enjoys the company of friends, joins him at a local hot wings joint. 

They spend the night laughing, joking, and cheering as the Suns beat the Lakers. The night is getting late and they head home in good spirits. Her husband makes dessert, ice cream and a slice of apple pie he heated up in the microwave. They enjoy their late night treat watching Netflix and cuddling, which later turns into foreplay and passionate copulation.

In the morning the wife feels sick and she has missed her period. She takes a home pregnancy test with positive results. Her husband making breakfast is unaware until she enters the kitchen with a glowing smile holding the test strip. They embrace hugging and kissing the joy of the revelation.

The husband secretly opens up his DoorDash app in the dining room and orders a dozen roses. He writes on the card, “For the most beautiful and gracious woman. I am lucky that someone like you would have me as your baby’s father.” Then they go on a hike as they had planned earlier in the week enjoying the fresh cool morning air.

The Delivery Driver

A delivery driver is woken up by his cat kneading on his side. He’s a hard worker and only delivers on the weekends to help pay for his children’s college tuition. It’s a Saturday morning with relatively light traffic. The vehicles seem to almost be in sync as they catch green light after green light, when his phone bleeps a couple times alerting a potential delivery. He’s surprised to see it’s for a flower shop and accepts it in curiosity. It’s not everyday he gets to deliver flowers, so this sounds like an opportunity to brighten up someone’s day.

He arrives at the flower shop and is greeted by a bright smile by the florist. She hands the arrangement over in a neatly designed box, which he carefully places on the passenger seat. The drive to the customer is along surface streets and a sleepy neighborhood with green island parks. Local families on their morning walks wave as he passes by.

The Delivery

The GPS gives an early warning, “Your destination is on the left in 100 feet.” as he pulls over verifying the house number. He parks near the sidewalk leading to the door and pushes the lock button to make sure the doors are unlocked. As he exits and circles around the back of the vehicle the husband greets him. They exchange gratitude as the husband slips a $20 bill into the driver’s hand. 

The two couldn’t be happier as they part ways. The husband quietly returns inside, placing the bouquet on the kitchen island for his wife to discover. The driver continues on knowing how his effort was integral to making someone’s else’s lives better that day.

Grand Canyon and Meteor Crater

I decided to knock a couple things off my bucket list this week. For a guy who has lived in Arizona over half his life now, it was time to visit the Grand Canyon. For some reason it’s one of those places I kind of expected to visit with someone special, but no point in waiting.

I was looking into the trip a couple weeks in advance to coincide with dark skies for some Milky Way shots. It was tough making up my mind if I should go to the North or South Rim. I had picked some places that would work for a really long day into the night. A few days before I was thinking the South Rim would be best. There are a few areas to peel off east for camping and great foregrounds for a night shot of the Milky Way.

The day of I just woke up and Googled Grand Canyon. It came up with the Skywalk. The Mitsubishi Outlander was loaded up for a night of photography and I headed out. And once again proper planning was not happening. I just got out of Phoenix when Google Maps directed me to Arizona State Highway 74. I was thinking, “Hmmm that doesn’t seem right…” Then continued anyway thinking it wouldn’t be that big of deal. I needed to kill time until the afternoon casted shadows along the canyon anyway. When I arrived I realized this was more suited for tourism.

Despite what it looks like zoomed out on a digital map the Grand Canyon is pretty large. I ended up turning around to make it to the South Rim before dark. Honestly this is how I like operating anyway. It’s exploration and scouting for future trips. One day I will give it a go again.

Please check with the Navajo Nation Parks for guided tours on sovereign land.

Desert View Watch Tower

So after another 200 something miles I ended up at the Desert View Watch Tower. Along the way I noticed the Slate Fire billowing smoke. The smoke was dissipating over the Navajo Nation along Route 64. It created some interesting filtered light as the afternoon sun shone through. Eventually I was on the other side of the smoke at the Grand Canyon Desert View Watch Tower entrance.

Image taken from Desert View Watch Tower viewing area. Smoke from the Slate fire can be seen in the upper left of the photo.
Image taken from Desert View Watch Tower viewing area. Smoke from the Slate fire can be seen in the upper left of the photo.

The crowd was light since it was a week day, but still required some patience to get in position for shots. I have to admit my issues with vertigo kicked in. What was weird though is when looking through the view finder of the camera the feelings went away. Only to come back with a vengeance soon as I pulled the camera away. I was sure I was going to lose balance and bounce off canyon walls to a brutal demise.

View of the desert watch tower over the Grand Canyon with cloudy smoke filled skies
View of the desert watch tower over the Grand Canyon with cloudy smoke filled skies
View southwest of the watch tower with the afternoon sun setting
View southwest of the watch tower with the afternoon sun setting

I tested my gut a few more times along the southwest side of the watch tower with no guardrail. I had to squat to keep from feeling wobbly, but still managed to get this photo above.

A crow happened to fly by as I was setting up for a stacked image of the Grand Canyon and Colorado River
Purple Majesty - Composite image with colorization and layer blending
Purple Majesty – Composite image with colorization and layer blending

As I was walking back to the parking lot I came across some Apache Plume. And a Tarantula Hawk… Not sure what it is, but seems like I have been seeing a lot of these insects lately. This time I was in a better position to get a great shot of the feather like flowers with the dark shades of the the ominous insect.

Apache Plume close-up
Apache Plume close-up
A Tarantula Hawk in Apache Plume with curled antennae
A Tarantula Hawk in Apache Plume with curled antennae

Desert View Drive

It’s funny how quickly the sun sets when you have things to get done in daylight. I continued along Desert View Drive to see more spectacular views of this amazing chasm cutting through the earth. The next stop was Navajo Point, which was a little less crowded.

View form Navajo Point of the Grand Canyon
View form Navajo Point of the Grand Canyon
View of sun over a hazy Grand Canyon from Lipan Point
View of sun over a hazy Grand Canyon from Lipan Point

I continued on to Lipan Point where the wind and sun created a view DaVinci would love with an endless atmospheric perspective. Looking at my map, I knew I didn’t have much time to spare getting the best pictures. I was pleasantly surprised with how well these images stacked for a high definition resolution (HDR) without using a tripod.

Western view of the Grand Canyon from Lipan point.
Western view of the Grand Canyon from Lipan point.
The sunsets behind the clouds and trees from an unnamed scenic viewpoint
The sunsets behind the clouds and trees from an unnamed scenic viewpoint
A juniper flower catching the last of the sunlight.
A juniper flower catching the last of the sunlight.
Duck on a Rock scenic Viewpoint of the Grand Canyon
Duck on a Rock scenic Viewpoint of the Grand Canyon

The view of the Duck on a Rock was a quick stop. I noticed along the way people were using drones. The kid flying one here mentioned if it went sideways he would lose it. It makes me wonder how many drones and other objects rest at the bottom of these scenic outlooks of the Grand Canyon.

Unknown viewpoint of the Grand Canyon during the Blue hour

The last picture I took I think gives a better idea of the scope of the Grand Canyon. First of all Evil Knievel ain’t making that with out some wings. This was created by water over millions of years. Millions of years! It makes you think about how brief our lives are in the grand scheme of it all. Also it made me think about how nice it would be to sleep in my bed and I drove back to Phoenix for the night.

Meteor Crater

The next day I woke up and started working on the Grand Canyon images. I was a little miffed about the Slate Fire and clouds. But both were out of my control. I kept taking a look at the evolving weather along Baja, Mexico to see if there was a chance for clear skies that night. I figured it was worth a try and headed North again.

Panoramic view of Meteor Crater
Apollo 11 test capsule

As a kid it was a dream of mine to become an astronaut, when I saw the Apollo 11 test capsule was there I had to go. Meteor Crater is a private facility that was also used to train astronauts for the moon landing. To me it’s an engineering feat that we did so much with so little at that time in history. Notice how this looks like a diving bell, which is a 400 year old invention. The difference between water and the layers of the atmosphere is density along with other gases. So basically this is a really sturdy balloon.

It’s also where scientific advancements were made in determining what a meteor crater looks like in comparison to other similar geological phenomenon. Now think of the crater by the Yucatan Peninsula, yikes! But this is the knowledge we need to develop technology to prevent future catastrophe. As pessimistic as I am at times, I believe humanity will transcend all the politics and grievances we have with each other to survive millions of years.

View from the top of Meteor Crater of Humphrey's Peak and the Slate Fire smoke
View from the top of Meteor Crater of Humphrey’s Peak and the Slate Fire smoke

Chavez Pass Road

Sunset through ponderosa pine and dust along Chavez Pass
Sunset through Ponderosa Pine  (Pinus ponderosa) and dust along Chavez Pass

Along the way in to Meteor Crater I saw a nicely grated road heading south. Part of my visit was to see how a shot of the Milky Way might work out. I had called earlier in the day to see about staying late, but was informed I would have to wait for the next event still being planned for this fall.

I asked the person in the ticket booth about the road and was told it goes to Highway 87. He warned me I would need a 4×4 to get through the river, but I gave it a try anyway. There are cattle and the land on both sides of the road is posted private property in most parts until the road gets rough.

I made it through some pretty rugged areas and once again had to turn back when the going was too much for my front wheel drive vehicle. For the most part it had the clearance, but getting up hills with loose dirt and rocks was beyond it’s capabilities. There was a couple times I had a white flash of fear run through me thinking I might be spending the night out there.

Sun setting on Chavez Pass Road

After turning back I stopped a couple times to capture the setting sun. This area is also grounds to a herd of elk and by the smell of it a mountain lion.

South of Meteor Crater Panoramic Sunset with Humphrey's Peak in the distance
South of Meteor Crater Panoramic Sunset with Humphrey’s Peak in the distance

Milky Way

Milky Way Core with clouds and light pollution from Payson, AZ
Milky Way Core with clouds and light pollution from Payson, AZ

I planned on using the road to get to Jacks Canyon or a place I could be without being disturbed in some dark skies. I stayed up until about midnight getting my shots in before taking a nap. The dark skies were amazing. I could see the Milky Way like it was a ring around Earth. But that’s not actually what it is. That would be like saying the sun revolves around Earth. Our Solar System is just one of millions of stars floating in the Milky Way Galaxy.

I woke up around 1:30 in the morning and started to take more photos. I’m still learning how to adjust my equipment to line up shots. Basically, it’s like taking a vertical panoramic photo from the inside of an orb. Like an artist translating a 3D object into a 2D canvas from inside it.

I was using a 50mm for this final image, which later I stacked three images each to reduce camera noise and a final panoramic of three images for this result. The Milky Way continues 180 degrees and I knew then it would get a bit confusing in production since I wasn’t meticulously keeping shot notes.

Milky Way at 10:30 PM PST Jacks Canyon June 8th, 2021
Milky Way at 10:30 PM PST Jacks Canyon June 8th, 2021
Sunrise through junipers in the high desert of Arizona
Sunrise through junipers in the high desert of Arizona

I wasn’t getting the best of sleep that night, but I was grateful to wake up to the rising sun. The trip was successful in my opinion. When I go out like this, I just want to come home with at least one good image. I achieved what I set out to do with this time. Despite the folly and physical and mental pain. This is about doing things I didn’t have an opportunity to do before. And mostly for the challenge of living life outside of the bubble, I live in Phoenix. Get out for some sunsets and Milky Way photos.

Please check with the Navajo Nation Parks for guided tours on sovereign land.

Check out Grand Canyon West, where you can walk over the Grand Canyon on a glass bridge!