The long push home! comments [6]

Howdy folks!  It’s been a long time since we added some content to the land of the blog-o-sphere!  We have some fun photos and interesting stories to share with you from the last few weeks of the project.  In case you have not been able to figure it out, the AFP is back in the land Virginia working on decompressing and sharing the project with the entire world!  Our extensive road trip has come to an end, but the life of the project lives on!  As we wrap posting about the last weeks on the road, stay tuned for more announcements about exhibits, speaking events, and when you can select your pre-ordered prints (don’t worry, we have not forgotten you faithful supporters)!

From our last location on the Bonneville Salt Flats, the AFP made a monumental hike across the vast state of Nevada, stopping only once to photograph a rodeo from afar.  We couldn’t stay long though.  The skies turned dark and threatened to release a mighty wall of rain and lightning.

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Our long trek southward put us in Mojave, CA.  On the way, we stopped at the base of Mount Whitney, the tallest mountain in California, and spent a night camping.  We woke to a glorious morning and decided on a hike up to some alpine lakes. That was some frigid water!

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In Mojave, we had quite the experience staying with a fellow Couch Surfer named Zach.  Unfortunately though, we never met Zach.  He called the day before we arrived and told us he had to go to a funeral.  But despite not being in town, he let us stay at his house anyways.  Zach rents an old adobe church in downtown Mojave, and has the entire cavernous space to himself!  It proved to be a great home base as we traveled back and forth to California City to shoot Our Lady of the Rock.

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The other interesting thing about Zach, as we learned through his lady friend (who was also crashing at the adobe church), was his involvement with the Virgin Galactic spaceship.  It turns out that Zach is the lead wing engineer on the mothership.  Amazing, yes.  Oh, and our roommate at Zach’s just happened to be Sir Richard Branson’s right-hand woman and is responsible for setting up the new airport where these futuristic crafts will soon launch into space.   It’s pretty amazing that this small team of people lives in the dusty desert town of Mojave, CA and is responsible for the future space travel.  (Notice the Chuck Yeager autograph in the photo above!).

The most remarkable part of our conversation was learning how commercial space flight is setting the pace to revolutionize international flights here on earth.  Within our lifetime, commercial flights will travel sub-orbital (where revolution around the earth takes only 90mins) which means we can be in Australia in about an hour.  be able to jump on a plane, launch into the earth’s first ring of orbit, circle around the earth, and re-enter the atmosphere above the desired location.  In other words, instead of taking eighteen hours to fly to Australia, it would only take forty-five minutes.  How far away are we from seeing humans pay for commercial flights to space?  Well, the first flight is scheduled to take off in two years.  Get in line though–there’s already a waiting list with 300 people.

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photos courtesy of Virgin Galactic

From Mojave, we drove north through California, stopping at Sequoia National Park where the world’s largest living organism resides…the General Sherman.

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After Sequoia National Park, we continued further north to San Francisco.  Before we drove into the heart of the city, we dropped our bags with Jessy and gang at the Rainbow Mansion in Cupertino.  The R.M. is a residence for eight highly educated and technically brilliant people who split rent for the multi-million dollar mansion overlooking Silicon Valley.  Jessy works for NASA and the others are Google engineers and computer wizards.   A french guy was building his own cloud computing company.  Even after a five description of what that actually means, we were still confused.  We’re keeping an eye on these folks because they will probably soon take over the world.

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Jesse, host extraordinaire and chef of green beans.

Despite the AFP’s first visit to the West Coast, our experience in San Francisco was short-lived and scenically disappointing.  We spent our only night in San Fran shooting the Drag King competition, and the day after required us to hit the road and make the long trek up to Montana.  As we were leaving town, Andrew suggested we take a small detour to actually see the Pacific Ocean and drive across the Golden Gate Bridge.  We had made it so far–why not add an hour to the trip to see the sights and smell the salty air?

Well, when we left Cupertino, we had clear, blue skies.  However, as soon as we came up the downtown of San Fran, a deep fog enveloped the city.  While crossing the G.G. bridge we could only see a few hundred feet ahead of us!  As we passed the large red towers above our head, we sensed the great Pacific swaying below, but we never actually saw the body of water.  San Fran held true to its stereotype of the foggy city!

We made another epic drive from San Francisco, putting the pedal to the metal while breezing through Nevada, Idaho, and Montana.  No matter the driving shift, we hit road construction in every state.  On one of the windiest and scariest roads that we experienced on the trip, we were stopped at 2am by a ghostly construction worker.  She probably hadn’t talked to anyone in hours, and we became the victims of her life story in the black of the night.

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Why was the AFP blazing through the night on the back roads of Montana?  Well, we were headed to Missoula.  This is Andrew’s old stomping ground for two summers, and we were scheduled to meet up with friends and then spend a few days exploring Glacier National Park.

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Andrew in front of Ze Fun Haus on Front St where he lived for a summer in 2003.


Homemade ice cream before the 2 hour jaunt from Missoula to West Glacier, MT


Jenna and Buster at Frita’s in West Glacier after a day on the Middle Fork of the Flathead River.

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Sally Thompson, Rich Thompson, and Rossaroo at the Glacier Raft Company end-of-the-year party.  Could there be nicer people than the Thompsons?

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At Triple Divide Pass in Glacier Nat’l Park.  Water drains to the Gulf, the Pacific, and the Hudson Bay in Canada from this point.


Medicine Grizzly Lake.

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Walking the Red Eagle trail through a forest burned in 2006.


Tiny Andrew leaps into a waterfall.


After all that grueling hiking in MT we soaked our bodies in the Goldbug Hotsprings outside Salmon, ID.


Wyoming delivered a fantastic rainbow, which made Buster instantly rip off a herky like she was back in Mississippi cheering on the football team.

In a recent talk at National Geographic live, we commented on how America has some distinctly beautiful places, but one must drive a VERY long way through depressing, poorly-planned, or arid landscapes.  It was very refreshing ending a year-long road trip in such a beautiful place as Glacier National Park.  It redeemed our hope in America.  Let’s take care of the pockets of paradise that still exist across our great country.

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What a beautiful farewell to the West and the AFP’s 13 month journey!

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Posted by Ross, posted on 11/05/2009 at 10:07pm. Bookmark this post | post a comment

The AFP on NG’s BLOG WILD! comments [0]

This past weekend in D.C., we had the privilege of meeting, Ford Cochran, National Geographic’s editor of BLOG WILD.  He was really into the story behind the AFP, and featured us on HIS BLOG.  We met a great deal of kind folks at NG–allof whom are encouraging, interesting, and highly entertaining.

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Posted by Ross, posted on 11/02/2009 at 1:41pm. Bookmark this post | post a comment

The AFP at Nat Geo Live! comments [0]

In just two days, Ross will be representing the AFP at National Geographic auditorium for an event called “Exploration: The Next Generation.” Ross will be joining three other young explorers as they present their projects from the last year.  If there are any AFP fans in the D.C. area, please come out for what will most likely be a great evening!

This will be a live Twitter event.  You can submit questions for the speakers by directing your tweet to #nglive.

The event also has a FACEBOOK page!

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Posted by Ross, posted on 10/27/2009 at 10:20am. Bookmark this post | post a comment

Drag King 2009, San Francisco, CA comments [1]

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That’s right.  Drag kings, not drag queens.  As the AFP drove from the arid landscape of Southern California and headed towards greener pastures, we brainstormed about what kind of event to document in the infamous city of San Francisco.  The hilly city is known for all types of notable things: Alcatraz, Bay to Breakers, Techy computer parties, Chinatown, and a large LGBT community.  We decided to focus on the latter, only because our Google searching led us to a wonderful event that we just had to check out.

The San Francisco Drag King competition is in its 14th year, and claims to be the largest of its kind in the world.  The AFP showed up before the event and set up a portrait studio in the second floor balcony.   We watched from above as a number of drag kings strutted their stuff and showed off their talents in the steep competition to become the King of em’ all.  We scouted the crowd and asked people up to our photo backdrop for a little portrait action.  And action there was!  This bunch was ready to party!  Let’s just say that there were a few photos that we could not show on this site.

There wasn’t much more to the evening in terms of what we could photograph, so we’ve stuck to showing you our best portraits.  We are very grateful to the organizers of the event who allowed us to come in and take portraits.  We were warmly welcomed and appreciated the hospitality from Fog City.  Here’s to Drag King 2010!

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Posted by Ross, posted on 10/26/2009 at 11:25pm. Bookmark this post | post a comment

Our Lady of the Rock, California City, CA comments [8]

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“I think we passed the turnoff.”  As Andrew uttered these words, I realized how many times I had heard the statement during our year of driving 45,000 miles around the United States.  This time, however, Andrew and I were neither in a city nor a suburb.  We were deep in the heart of the Mojave desert, and we were, literally, lost.

We had driven 25 minutes north of Mojave, California, searching for a Catholic religious gathering in the middle of the desert.  The location we were hoping to find was called Our Lady of the Rock, where Mary is said to appear on the 13th of every month.  There is no local church connected to OLOTR, no directions online, and when we asked around town, virtually no one had heard of what we described.

After days of searching for directions, we finally struck a chord when getting the oil changed at Valvoline.  I just happened to ask an attendant if he had heard of the mysterious Catholic gathering in the middle of the desert, and by chance he had!  He and his friend had taken dirt bikes out to the site, where they discovered three crosses that stood in the middle of the desert.  All we had to do was go straight on this certain road, and then look for a water treatment plant.  What–water out in the middle of the Mojave desert!?  I was afraid we were doomed.

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A beacon in the desert for lost photographers.

Turning down a dirt road that eventually became deep pits of sand, Andrew and I knew we had gone the wrong way.  The Champe Champ, our newly-acquired Ford Focus station wagon, did not have the four-wheel power action that the Dodge Lodge once delivered.  It was 10:15 AM, and we were late, hot, and frustrated by being lost in a place that threatened a slow and painful death by dehydration or mutant lizards.

After turning around and continuing on what felt like the correct road, we found a remote ranger station. A gentleman appeared from behind a trailer and pointed us in the right direction.  “Oh yeah, Our Lady of the Rock.  Those Catholic people get together every month.  Just down the road another two miles, then turn left.  You can’t miss it.”  We were relieved to have found our way.  It was 10:30 AM, and we drove the Champe Champ like a bandit out of hell.

Surprisingly, the scene at OLOTR was more subdued than what we expected.  As we watched people setting up tents and a sound system, it was clear that we had made it in plenty of time.  Looking around, and noting the barren landscape and general proximity to nothing at all, I thought that we may have already experienced a small miracle in finding the location.  Back where the men were setting up the sound system, a small wooden structure marked the center of the gathering.  Attached to a white picket fence were dozens of colorful streamers that marked the enclosure.  Inside the structure sat a statue of the Virgin Mary, surrounded by flowers.  This was clearly the altar, or center of the service, where something–but what we did not know–would take place.

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Ross adroitly inserts himself front and center into the ceremony.

The origins of OLOTR date back to 1989, when Maria Paula, a mother of six children, was praying fervently for one of her daughters who had fallen ill to leukemia.  Maria Paula drove out to the desert, and was praying in a canyon.  At 5:00 one morning, Maria was suddenly enveloped by a white fog and she heard the sound of birds and smelled the sweet aroma of a garden.  A woman appeared within the cloud of white, with a rosary in her hands.

She said, “I am your Lady of the Rock, Queen of Peace of Southern California.  I come to bring you the peace and love that is so needed.  I will visit the homes, and I will form one family for the service of the Lord, Our God.  I will form an army, and we will work together.  I will bring my angel from faraway lands.  In him you will confide and tell all that I am indicating to you.  Go in the peace of God.”

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Maria Paula emerges with her entourage in some seriously hip shades.

To this day, Maria Paula returns to the desert on the 13th of every month to receive a message from the Virgin Mary.  Throngs of supporters and miracle-expectant spectators drive from hours away to take part in a rosary service and receive blessings from Maria Paula.  Over the years, Maria has gathered a following, but it’s hard to determine why OLOTR has turned into such a phenomenon.  Most gatherings attract 200-300 people, but when the 13th falls on a Saturday or Sunday,  2,000-3,000 people descend upon that barren spot in the middle of the desert.  Apart from the general public, Maria’s following includes several other women who travel with her to OLOTR.  Like Maria Paula, they are dressed like nuns. However, it’s not certain that the women, or Maria, are actual Catholic nuns.  Due to the official response from the Catholic church, it’s very likely that they are not.

The Associated Press reports, “Catholic authorities have officially suggested there is no Mary at Our Lady of the Rock. After more than a year of investigating, they found it to be due to somebody’s imagination, not anyone’s bad will. The diocese in Fresno, which has immediate authority over California City, has concurred with Los Angeles officials, but has placed no restrictions on people gathering at the site.”

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Most folks are there to pray but hardly anyone (including the boy on the left) can resist a snapshot of the sun when the moment calls.

Despite the position of the Catholic authorities, thousands of faithful believers return each month seeking blessings and healings from Maria Paula.  People also flock to OLOTR hoping to see their own vision of the Virgin Mary.   The format of this has taken an interesting form.  Instead of looking for the Virgin Mary with their own eyes, these religious spectators come with polaroid and digital cameras, snapping away at the sun in hopes of seeing Her appear in their photo.  It’s unclear how this phenomenon was started, but someone must have taken a picture of the sun at some point, spotted the Virgin Mary in their photo, and showed it off to everyone at the event.  Now it seems to be the norm.

Behind the main structure, under a large tailgate-style tent, we met a family who had traveled three hours to come to OLOTR. The parents had first come to OLOTR before anyone knew about it and they spoke of their first sighting of the Virgin Mary.  Two storm clouds blew in from opposite directions and when they converged, the clouds split, a bright light appeared, and the Virgin was standing within the clouds.  They said everyone there saw it.  Even little kids were pointing up in the air and saying, “Look, the Virgin Mary!”

The parents now return with their son and daughter-in-law almost every month.   The entire family comes to witness potential miracles and wait for visions of the Virgin Mary.  They were eager to talk about their experiences and the holiness of the site.

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An OLOTR faithful holds up a print of a photograph where clouds resemble St. Francis and a dove at his fingertips.

But this family was not the only one claiming miracles at OLOTR.  Even the construction workers, who were building a grotto on the site, were converted believers.  They told us about the first time they visited the site with Maria Paula to spec the job.  As they were approaching the site of the grotto, Maria Paula stopped, knelt down on the ground with her other sisters, and looked up at the sky.  The two men followed her gaze, and saw streams of gold light descending upon the head of Maria Paula.  They claimed it was a miracle, and since then, other kinds of miraculous things have happened on the job site.  When the two men told us their stories, their eyes were wide with wonder, and they could hardly hold back their smiles.  Truly, these men had witnessed something miraculous.

Andrew and I heard a great number of stories that day.  From healings to prophecies to sightings of the Virgin Mary.  But our experience that day was rather un-miraculous–if that’s a word.  We witnessed the rosary service, the procession of a statue of Christ, the blessings by Maria Paula, and people taking pictures of the sun.  But the only thing out of the ordinary was one woman who broke out in loud cries during the service, and had to be taken to the back of the group.  She might have been overcome by the Holy Spirit, but she may also have been struggling with some serious issues.  Or possibly, she was overcome by the heat.  We were, remember, in the middle of the Mojave desert, at midday.

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Andrew gave his best shot at finding the Virgin Mary with his Nikon. We don’t see her…do you?

The AFP certainly isn’t trying to disprove OLOTR.  But as journalists, we report what we see.  And for someone who has grown up in church, the events we witnessed that day were not foreign, or even bizarre.  Had we hoped to see more excitement, more drama, and more people?  Yes, certainly.  We wished we could have come back the following month to see the crowds and a potential sighting, but the AFP had more miles to cover.  We encourage you to make the journey out there and witness it yourself.  If you do decide to go, we can help you with the directions.

Our Lady of the Rock from American Festivals Project on Vimeo.

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Posted by Ross, posted on 10/19/2009 at 9:21pm. Bookmark this post | post a comment