Blog re-boot, and touring in Wyoming.

Alright, about to take the jump back into blogging, ready…

GO!

Ok, some of you (probably not many) may remember my old blog, There Is Nothing That The Road Will Not Heal…, that served to document travels, post music I was into, etc. Yea, I got bad at keeping it up, and stopped posting altogether a little over a year ago. Go back and check it out if you want to see some travel/tour photos and whatnot from a few years ago.

Now, I want to do a re-boot with a different location, right here on johnstatz.com. Shorter web address, contained at one spot, etc., seems like a good idea. I was inspired to get back on the blogging train by my girlfriend and artist-extraordinaire Heidi Keyes. Her blog, The Outlaw Process, is incredibly well-written and entertaining, and probably better than this blog will be, so you should read hers first.

So I figured that I would pick up where I left off: some travel/tour blogging. At the beginning of May I took a four day trip through Wyoming and Utah to play shows in Laramie, Ogden, and Moab. Yea, it was a pretty huge journey for three shows, but it was also a good excuse to get out of Denver, do some hiking, and it was therapeutic, the road always is.

The picture at the top of the post was taken somewhere on the drive into Wyoming on Hwy. 287 between Fort Collins and Laramie. Might have been while I was still in Colorado, might have been in Wyoming, can’t really remember. It was a gorgeous drive punctuated by some scattered rain, and I was excited for some good times in Wyoming. Last summer I played a pair of shows in Laramie and Centennial and had a blast hiking and camping in the area. Needless to say after a few hours on the road I was excited to stretch my legs and get in some hiking before the show in Laramie that evening.

I figured, “hey, there is a big hill-like formation just northeast of Laramie, there most be places to get out and hike around there”, so I began to drive up what was called Roger Canyon Road. The weather was still looking rainy and not exactly the best for hiking, but I continued on down the road past some interesting-looking caves until I hit the gravel. I drove a bit further down the gravel road, having not yet found any trailheads…

The road started getting a bit rough for my poor mini-van, and the trailhead search wasn’t looking anymore promising, so I figured I’d turn back and check out those caves.

The caves turned out to be seriously creepy, probably more so in the cloud-covered light. As I walked up to the one in the picture I found tons of clay pigeon shards, and the inside was littered with empty beer cans and a few dirty sleeping bags. It looked like a mixed-use hangout spot for hunters and high school kids alike. And then I saw this…

Maybe this makes me a sissy, but, being the only human in sight, this + bullet shells on the ground + eerie lighting and caves + a memory of a previous outside-of-Laramie-horror got my move on back to town.

Played my gig that night at Coal Creek Coffee Company, a cool little coffee shop that always treats me super well. Also, my Wyoming buddy J. Shogren joined me on the mandolin. Jay is a great singer/songwriter who I met and played with last summer in Centennial, WY. His band J. Shogren Shanghai’d has a well-done/hilarious/awesome new music video out, dig it.

After the early Coal Creek show was done, Jay kindly invited me out to his place in Centennial, only a half-hour drive. How could I refuse? Centennial is a true western mountain town of 100 citizens, the kind of place you’d expect to feel like an outsider (you know, the record-skip type) but are in fact welcomed immediately. We played the late open mic at one of the couple of bars in town, had a blast, and some old local drunk dude told me at least three different times how he had to drop out of college because he went to too many concerts. I also heard him tell the same tale to two or three other fortunate/unfortunate individuals.

We retired back to Jay’s beautiful woodland home, stayed up for a bit drinking Dale’s Pale Ale and discussing the best Dylan albums, Prince’s rise to fame, and who can remember what else… It was a good night. As always, Wyoming never lets you down. The next day would be on to Utah for me, but more on that later.

Thanks for reading my novel, more to come!

John