By James Moore
“The mountains, and the steady hills, the rivers, and the rocks, and all the everlasting broods that fill the landscape with a silent awe, dreams of mountains, as in their sleep, they brood on things eternal, keep a mute companionship with me.” – William Wordsworth.
The wind spun down off the Vermillion Cliffs and into the ancient rivulets of the sandstone and soft shale. Along Arizona Highway 89a, the heat seemed to accelerate the gusts as they rose up from along the roadside. There were invisible hands grabbing at the motorcycles, tugging the windscreens and pushing them sideways, hammering at our shoulders, turning a ride into a fight. The sky was Arizona blue, though, and we were hopeful that after we crossed the high bridge over the Colorado River at Marble Canyon the climb out to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon would ease our route of travel. The air stayed hot, though, and blasted us as if weaponized by unnatural forces.
The road rose beyond the desert and twisted through forests of ponderosa pines and conifers scattered among the white aspen trunks. The temperature dropped twenty degrees in the first ten miles at elevation and the great ponderosas took dominion over the scenery. High country on the Kaibab Plateau was starkly different from the more desiccated stretches of the tableland we had just transited at 80 miles an hour. Even passing through the stands of trees at highway speed, the tangy scent of pine filled the air and there was the unsettling feeling we had transitioned to another climate in an unknown location. The contrast from the desert reaches to the east was startling and almost incomprehensible.
We turned the bikes south at Jacob Lake and pointed to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Shaw and I were on a side trip of our 3400 mile motorcycle tour. I decided we had time and that he needed to stand before the canyon, which he had never seen in 46 years of living. We had been on the road in the American West for eight days and after riding through Monument Valley, concluded we were too close for him to miss one of the world’s great natural wonders. Shaw had just retired from the Army and wanted a bit of adventure before settling back into civilian life and seeking new employment. A half century earlier, I had taken my first trip to the canyon with another friend, who was from my hometown up in Michigan, and was also just out of the military. A piece inside of him had seemed broken after Vietnam and I thought a hitchhiking trip to the Grand Canyon, and a rim-to-rim hike, might be curative of his invisible ailments, and even my tortured discontent over the war. That first visit launched my compulsion to keep returning to the canyon.
“How many times did you say you’ve been there?” Shaw asked me on the helmet intercom.
“Not sure. A lot. Maybe twenty or more. I know I’ve done four rim-to-rim hikes and two rim-to-rim runs, and I never get tired of being there. You see something new and beautiful every trip, especially down on the river.”
“Wish I had the time, but I’m glad I’m gonna at least see it.”
“Me, too, buddy. Me, too, and that I get to show it to ya.”
There is no point in trying to describe the Grand Canyon. Words are rendered meaningless by the vision. No scenery more completely speaks to a human yearning for wonder and natural beauty. Shaw and I had, unfortunately, little time and needed to make Flagstaff by dark. Phone pics and quick videos were snatched at the tourist overlooks and we went inside the lodge for lunch, a magnificent structure of stone and timber set on the edge of the canyon walls. The sunroom and terrace offer stunning views and the great hall with a soaring ceiling serves as the restaurant. We ordered lunch and I became slightly emotional in the surroundings over my bowl of elk chili.
(Below is a pan I recorded of the view of the Grand Canyon from the North Rim Lodge)
“This place was the setting for a huge moment in my life,” I told Shaw. “When my buddy Butch and I came here the first time, we were totally unprepared with nylon backpacks on aluminum frames, no tent, heavy cotton sleeping bags, and not enough food.”
“Thought you said you hiked across?” he asked. “You ran out of food?”
“Yeah, after the first day. We hiked up Bright Angel Trail with nothing to eat and when we got up here to the North Rim, we came inside this lodge and spent most of our remaining money on a meal that would’ve ended starvation for a small town. I think we ate three loaves of bread before our orders reached the table.”
Fluttering bands of sunlight faded between the limbs of the ponderosas that day and there was a nice breeze of dry Kaibab air. Butch and I were almost staggering with hunger when we stepped off the trail. After eating, he waited in the lodge for me to find a pay phone and call my mother and let her know I was still alive out on the American road, a conversation I will never forget.
“I was so worried, son, and I’m relieved to hear from you. But now you need to go tell Butch his mother died.”
“What? Oh god. His dad didn’t…”
“No, she had a heart attack. Poor thing worked two shifts every day since they got to America. It’s a wonder she lasted this long.”
“Yeah, I suppose. Ma, I have no idea how long it will take us to hitch home and we don’t have money for bus tickets.”
“I know, son, but Butch’s brother said that he would send you both money by Western Union to rent a car and drive home. That’ll be faster than busses could get you here.”
“Ok, I guess I better go tell Butch. We’ll probably see you in a few days then.”
I got my friend outside of the lodge before I relayed the news. Butch was very close to his mother and had witnessed her being abused by his drunken father. He wailed and hit things and ran and then fell on the ground and rolled on his back in the pine needles and he screamed at the sky and he cried loud sobs that sounded like he was dying, too. Tourists stared at a mad man. After a few hours he was able to call his brother for the money. We learned there was no car rental office near the North Rim, and we needed to charter a small plane to fly back across the canyon to get a car at the park’s airport. Butch’s brother wired the extra money after I told a ranger what had happened, and he drove us out to the dirt airstrip. Butch sat in back of the Dodge and sobbed, softly.
The ranger stopped next to a single engine Cessna. A man, presumably the pilot, was circling the fragile looking craft and examining the fuselage, wheels, and prop. Butch and I dropped our packs in the dirt. He just looked off to the tree line and a group of cabins as I walked up and introduced myself to the pilot. The sky had turned a dark gray to the west and a wind was raising dust clouds and I began to wonder if my first flight in a plane was going to be in a thunderstorm over the Grand Canyon.
“Is it okay to fly now?” I asked.
“Yeah, it’s fine. We just need to get outta here now so we can beat that squall line coming up the canyon from the west. You got the money?”
Butch was counting out twenties as he shuffled through the runway dirt. The pilot pocketed the cash, opened a latch behind a door, and told us to stuff our packs into the cargo hold and climb into the cabin. I got in first and let Butch set up front and hoped that being around a stranger in a tight space might help keep him from crying. I did not know if the pilot understood our circumstances but as we rolled toward a cliff at the end of the strip he pulled back on the yoke and the plane rose as he yelled.
“Yee haw, ride ‘em cowboy!”
Wind hit the side of the fuselage right then and the plane slipped sideways while continuing to climb. I saw the pilot’s face from where I sat behind Butch and he was expressionless, but the plane started to bounce, and slam, and he was working very hard at control. A few thousand feet above the rim, he leveled off and talked to us in the headsets.
“Gonna stay here below the clouds,” he said. “Too tall to get above the rain. Shouldn’t be but about another ten minutes and we’ll be on the ground at the airport over there. Real short flight.”
Butch and I looked out the window at the curving brown switchbacks that marked the trails we had followed across the canyon. The river made a clear blue line between the walls of rock and when I looked up there were yellow flashes of lightning sparking against a purple castle of clouds. Butch did not seem afraid, but he had been on helicopters and troop planes in Vietnam. We hit a pocket of unstable air and the plane instantly dropped several hundred feet and sounded like it was going to break apart until the wings finally regained lift. We tilted sharply to the left and I thought we were going down in the canyon when a gust of wind hit us but the pilot lined up the paved strip on the South Rim and we floated down to the ground with the prop feathered and the wind settling. I resolved I was never again going to get on a plane. Instead, I spent much of my professional life flying as a journalist.
“This place is great,” Shaw said as we left the lodge for our motorcycles. “I’m gonna come back with the family.”
“Yeah, come here, though, to the North Rim. In the summer, the South Rim is a giant traffic jam with car campers from L.A. and Phoenix and Vegas. Not easy to get up here so it will never be crowded.”
A few weeks after we had visited, the Grand Canyon Lodge at the North Rim no longer existed. The stone chimney and foundation were all that remained after a wildfire had swept up from the Dragon Bravo drainage complex that fed water into the canyon and the Colorado River. A lightning strike had lit the sage that had been dried by lingering drought, and wind sent flames racing across the Kaibab Plateau. Seventy thousand acres of forest have been destroyed. The lodge had already been consumed by fire in 1937, only nine years after construction was completed by the Union Pacific Railroad. The project was designed to attract more tourists to the North Rim. The Dragon Bravo fire’s erratic behavior, pushed by wind and fed by dense, dry vegetation, caused firefighters to concentrate on saving lives instead of structures. The remote location, wooden construction, lightning, extreme drought, and fierce wind made unlikely any hopeful outcomes for the iconic structure.
Our way south took us back out Highway 89a and we passed near the location of the White Sage Fire in Coconino County, a blaze that would blow up at almost the same time as Dragon Bravo and was still burning after taking 40 thousand acres in flame. On July 19th, the National Interagency Fire Center estimated 50 wildfires were out of control across the American West and 1.8 million acres had been burned. There are more than 15,000 personnel deployed, using air tankers and helicopters. The Dragon Bravo Fire, riding the high country wind, has only been 40 percent contained. Walking the rubble of the Grand Canyon Lodge, National Park Service officials are contemplating what they expect to be a five-year project to rebuild the landmark hotel. More fire resistant materials are likely to replace timber, though there is a sullen acknowledgment that everything burns when the fire delivers sufficient heat.

There are troubling politics in fire management, too. Arizona’s governor and other state leaders are calling for an investigation into what resources were deployed and how the flames were able to reach the historic lodge. A tactic of containment was used, initially, and the National Park Service indicated it was working until the wind roared across the high desert and pushed a wall of flame beyond their fire lines. An estimated 60 structures have been destroyed and the North Rim of the Grand Canyon National Park has been closed for the season. The Chinese climate hoax appears to have been effectively deployed. Droughts last longer, winds blow harder, rain falls longer and in greater volume, blizzards turn colder and snow gets deeper, hurricanes and tornadoes spin up stronger and more deadly as American policy makers reduce environmental regulations on fossil fuels and pollution.

Every summer now the American West seems set to flame by an invisible arsonist. Many fires are caused naturally by lightning or wind borne sparks from camp fires or barbecue pits. The amount of dried fuel, though, made dense and dying by drought, is almost without precedent. We take the fight to the flames with planes and engines and courage but the efforts often seem to lack great effect and the damage becomes as epic as the landscape that is ravaged. Forests and undergrowth grow back green and strong after fires but much is lost to the decades of waiting on recovery. Something more than just a forest or a lodge is burned to the ground, though. The image of our country and our memories are scoured by flame and the hopefulness and beauty of our shared national landscapes is charred and darkened.
And we act as if nothing can be done to stop the loss.
This article was originally published on Texas to the world.

James Moore is the New York Times bestselling author of “Bush’s Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential,” three other books on Bush and former Texas Governor Rick Perry, as well as two novels, and a biography entitled, “Give Back the Light,” on a famed eye surgeon and inventor. Mr. Moore has been honored with an Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his documentary work and is a former TV news correspondent who has traveled extensively on every presidential campaign since 1976.
He has been a retained on-air political analyst for MSNBC and has appeared on Morning Edition on National Public Radio, NBC Nightly News, Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, CBS Evening News, CNN, Real Time with Bill Maher, and Hardball with Chris Matthews, among numerous other programs. Mr. Moore’s written political and media analyses have been published at CNN, Boston Globe, L.A. Times, Guardian of London, Sunday Independent of London, Salon, Financial Times of London, Huffington Post, and numerous other outlets. He also appeared as an expert on presidential politics in the highest-grossing documentary film of all time, Fahrenheit 911, (not related to the film’s producer Michael Moore).
His other honors include the Dartmouth College National Media Award for Economic Understanding, the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio Television News Directors’ Association, the Individual Broadcast Achievement Award from the Texas Headliners Foundation, and a Gold Medal for Script Writing from the Houston International Film Festival. He was frequently named best reporter in Texas by the AP, UPI, and the Houston Press Club. The film produced from his book “Bush’s Brain” premiered at The Cannes Film Festival prior to a successful 30-city theater run in the U.S.
Mr. Moore has reported on the major stories and historical events of our time, which have ranged from Iran-Contra to the Waco standoff, the Oklahoma City bombing, the border immigration crisis, and other headlining events. His journalism has put him in Cuba, Central America, Mexico, Australia, Canada, the UK, and most of Europe, interviewing figures as diverse as Fidel Castro and Willie Nelson. He has been writing about Texas politics, culture, and history since 1975, and continues with political opinion pieces for CNN and regularly at his Substack newsletter: “Texas to the World.”

James Moore laments, appropriately, with regard to the fires that burn, seemingly continuously, across the western American landscapes…. “and we act as if nothing can be done to stop the loss.”
Without seeming to be needlessly insensitive to these phenomena, but… but… if you keep pouring billions of tonnes of heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere, and if you keep on doing this and keep doing essentially nothing about the issues… well, this is the outcome, this is what you get.
There are literally thousands of voices speaking to the concerns and outcomes but for now, mostly, those who have the power & capacity to institute the appropriate changes & responses seem to have earplugs stuck in their ears whilst flubbing their lips then pausing to chant ‘Nothing to see here. Move on.’
Exactly Kanga.
And why are we not protecting the globe? Our home? The only one we can ever have?
Because it’s more important to protect our financial system.
Kill the system.
Worried about fire? How about everything outdoors being toxified or made moribund, even the food brought inside to eat?
There’s almost no natural potable water. Most potable water consumed now comes in a plastic bottle, and there’s some that’s used to pump-up meat and scant for irrigation. The putrid water in streams, including Ag run-off, either sits stagnating or via storms rushes to the sea to pollute it too. As for fire-fighting water …. good luck.
Via the quest for glamour, bling & celebrity, everything supposedly alive is becoming moribund, dull and stupefied. No wonder there’s a nostalgia for the vivacity of old.
Yet the very many incautious and ignorant politicians screech that all can be fixed via a ‘healthy’ economy wrought from fossil-fuels and war. It’s the shouty low-spark of the high-heeled boys riding high in the saddle on an old nag.
Steve, re. Kill the system, we’re lemmings, albeit naked and two-legged. Nonetheless, we’re heading for the cliff and apparently, there’s no stopping us. And after a few billion plunges into the abyss, the ‘system’, as you term it, will be well & truly knackered, Hanrahan’s prophecy fulfilled.
Is this an apocalyptic overstatement? Perhaps… we’ll see in time. My rudimentary appreciation of scientific principles suggest that existential stressors will be the key to the great reduction; greater in some regions, less so in others, crop failures, severe fresh water challenges, intolerable heat, the four horsemen and so on… it won’t be pretty.
There’s a lovely Canadian movie, an indie called Last Night, where folks get to deal with the literally last night of their lives in various ways. It’d be good if we adopted an outlook somewhat along those lines.
Kanga, I’d forgotten about Hanrahan’s “We’ll all be rooned” — it took me back a few years.
One really annoying aspect to all this is that the elites know of the dangers, they accept the consequences, but believe that their wealth will protect them from the worst and leave them still as the elite class of whatever is left.
Which is why they are buying up big in NZ.
It really is a sick attitude.
But it’s also revealing.
It shows us that liberal economics, the economics of unlimited acquisition and climate ruin, is actually a product of infantile thinking.
We spend our first 9 months of life warm and cosy in the womb, then we’re born into a world where our every need is provided for, then as toddlers we start demanding more with great success until parents put the brakes on to a certain extent.
But we have a taste for selfishness by then. We find it hard to come to terms with the slowly dawning realisation that we are not the centre of the universe. So we start to manipulate adults to get what we want, and when that wears thin we beg borrow and steal.
Then we reach an age when we realise that all this is not giving us much satisfaction, and so we start to grow up. Our attitudes mature. We see that it is society that is the source of fulfillment in life and that fitting in and contributing is a worthy ambition.
Except some do not.
They do not mature.
They do not see society as something to be cherished.
They see society as a resource to be manipulated, details of which were given recently by John Lord.
A book could be written on how these misfits managed to get control of the political system, but that’s what we are dealing with.
And even as their world disintegrates around them, they’re still manipulating.
Infantile thinking.
So your lemming analogy is pretty good, but we can change direction.
Elite power lies in the financial system.
Kill the system.