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Authors: Bill Graves

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Across the street is a yellow-wheeled stagecoach complete with a load of baggage on top. It's in front of Denny's Wigwam, which caters mostly to groups and bus tours. Denny's feeds them a “chuck wagon cookout” and in a side yard gives them a cowboy show rigged with abbreviated western movie sets. Tourists like to stand next to the movie sets and click pictures.

Wigwam owner Denny Judd, a fifth-generation Kanab rancher, said that Americans travel in cars while foreigners travel in buses. He figures those foreign visitors to his place outnumber Americans three to one. During my visit, a busload of Germans made it more like sixty to one.

All the handmade Indian items sold here come from tribes in Utah, neighboring Arizona, or New Mexico. It was satifying to shop where “Native American” work is not done in China or Turkey or Mexico.

Kanab conducts the business of tourism like it should be done but seldom is. Obviously, residents have had decades to re fine and perfect it. There are no garish, rough edges here, no tasteless promotions, no callous facades. Things are clean
and tidy. People smile and are willing to chat, even about local trivia that they have been over hundreds of times. This freshness, hardly the norm for a tourist town, may be because Kanab is so remote. Unlike Orlando or Anaheim, where vacation-hungry families cram a month of sightseeing into three days, hurried tourists do not overwhelm the residents of Kanab. Their is also a special breed of tourist. Visitors to Kanab have come a good distance to see and experience some of the most spectacular places on the planet. They want it at their pace, which is usually unhurried and deliberate.

Even today, this is a wild country, one of largest expanses of wilderness in the lower forty-eight states. A hundred miles east of here are monoliths of crumbling rock brooding over a windswept desert. Under this lunar landscape is a vast amount of coal. So much coal, in fact, the ground has smoked for centuries from spontaneous combustion, and the cliff walls have turned scarlet from the heat. Known as the Kaiparowits Plateau, it contains 5 to 7 bill ion tons of coal, making it one of the nation's most valuable energy reserves. Were there to be change in this wilderness, it would likely happen there. But in September 1996, the Kaiparowits and 1.7 million acres around it were set aside as a national monument.

Almost everyone in Kanab had wanted a proposed coal mine. It would have created hundreds of jobs and tax revenue. Then again, Kanab now has another wonderland, a wilderness this time, that Washington will open, promote, clean, and protect. And a road from Kanab leads to it.

47
Maybe America's Only Ant Hunter
Hurricane, Utah

I
f you ever visit Zion National Park, you will probably drive through Hurricane. Upwards of 2.6 million people do every year. In the summer, 4,000 to 5,000 cars pass through here every day, all headed for the park and its 400 parking spaces.

I was not one of those bound for Zion. I was just looking for the Ace Hardware store on the right side of Route 9 coming into town. There I would find the sonin-law of Afton Fawcett. At age seventy, Afton is probably America's only ant hunter. His sonin-law would certainly know where Afton lives.

So far so good. In the store, Afton's sonin-law was helping a lady select paint for her kitchen. She was con fused—I couldn't blame her—by all the different names of paint colors that all look white.

“Is your wife's dad still in the ant business?” I asked, when my turn came.

“Oh, ya. He and my brother-in-law, too.” Hel told me how to find the house. “I ought to know. I live next door.” If fact, four of the six Fawcett children live in the same block
Afton and his wife do, along with most of their twenty-five grand children.

I located Afton's house at the end of a wide street. There was plenty of room to park my motor home. Wide streets are one thing you can depend on in Utah. Brigham Young, who brought his Mormon followers to Utah in 1847, drew the layout for towns in the state that is still followed today. Young insisted that streets be wide enough for a horse and buggy to turn around.

Afton's twenty-one-year-old daughter greets me at the front door. She called her dad from the basement, where he and his wife work much of the day. It's probably best described as their window less sorting-assembling-packing-mailng room.

Waiting for Afton to climb the stairs, his daughter told me that she was just days away from going to Japan on an eighteen-month missionary assignment. A book she was reading said that Japan, not quite twice the size of Utah, has a population density of 863 people per square mile.

“How does that compare with Utah?” I asked, expecting a wild guess.

“Utah has 20 people per square mile as of the 1990 census,” she replied, as if I had just asked for the time of day.

Afton appeared in the kitchen and invited me to take a seat at the table. Only after he knew me well enough, that is. Having lived his entire life in this small town, he knows everybody who knocks on his front door. I was an unknown, a curiosity as much as anything. Not that Afton did not trust me. I think by nature he trusts everybody. It was just that I was somebody new to get to know.

After hearing about my travels in the motor home, he pushed aside a stack of mail and began telling me about the ant business. “This whole thing started over twenty-five years ago. We were collecting biological specimens for laboratories, which expanded into packaging different kinds of rocks and fossils for school science classes and the like. Then some big retail chains were looking for someone to supply ants to folks who bought ant farms in their stores,” Afton explained.

I interrupted, “I remember buying one of those for my kids. It was a plastic box, about the size of book, right?”

Afton nodded. “Some are bigger. Anyway, packed with every farm is a coupon good from some ants. So they send that in, and I air-mail them a package of ants in a vial. We get flooded with orders at Christmas when kids get these ant farms and want them all up and running at the same time. Ants go out of here by the thousands. I even have to go out of town to find ‘em on cold days.”

Afton shuns publicity and has turned down attractive invitations from a long list of TV talk shows. He got up from his seat to pull a letter from some cookbooks on the kitchen counter. Postmarked 1991, it was from The Tonight Show. I suppose Afton was flattered and probably amazed that people find his work so interesting. But he told Johnny Carson no, and Jay Leno, too. And many more since.

As we talked, little kids passed silently through the kitchen, one at a time, headed for the basement. Afton paid no attention. One came up the stairs munching the remains of a cookie, which explained the stream of small-foot traffic.

After we toured the basement, it was time for an ant roundup. I was about to watch one of the few people in the world who does it.

We took off in Afton's pickup. During the summer, he does his collecting early in the morning when it is cool. During the winter, he gets what he needs in a couple of hours before noon. He collects only red harvester ants. They are the most active and plentiful ants here. If kept cool, they can survive without water for about three days, the normal shipping time.

Afton knows all the anthills around Hurricane. Each one, he said, shelters 5,000 to 50,000 ants. The first one we stopped at looked quiet to me.

On his hands and knees, Afton leaned forward and inserted a soda straw into the hole of the anthill. He then blew on the straw, which apparently created breezy turmoil in the ant colony. Out poured the ants. He rounded up a bunch, blowing them gently with his straw into a tin scoop. He took
only a few before we moved to the next anthill. We returned home with maybe a thousand ants in mason jars.

With Afton's ant harvest in for the day, he now must ready for shipment some pressed wildflowers and tadpole-shrimp eggs. School science classes are the primary customers for those. So I headed into town. Afton pointed me toward city hall, where his son Clark has been city manager for the past thirteen years.

Clark answered the question that has been gnawing at me since I first heard of Hurricane.

“Hurricanes, as in weather, do not occur around here. What happened was, a gust of wind blew away the top of Erastus Snow's buggy, which was being lowered off the cliff behind me.” Clark pointed over his shoulder. “That was in 1865, so who knows for sure what really happened. Anyway, Snow said something about the wind being a hurricane.”

Since Snow was an important elder in the Mormon Church, what he said was considered noteworthy. Apparently, someone thought the “hurricane” comment was too. So the cliffs got the name, and the town picked it up later.

Curiously, people here don't pronounce the word like you and I do. They call it “Hurrican,” with a soft
a.
In fact, many other words here sounded strange. A tongue-in-cheek glossary someone gave me was of help: People “pork cores in coreparts” and never put the “court before the harse,” eat “cormel carn,” shop at the “morket,” or visit Disneyland in “Califarnia.”

The accent is obvious and makes it easy to tell the natives from the newcomers. It is linked to the colorful potpourri of people who sett led here. Among the first were cotton growers, who were bonafide Southerners. Add to these the Europeans—Swiss, Scandinavians and English—who settled nearby St. George. Then came the miners at Silver Reef, who added mixing Chinese, Irish, Scottish, Cornish, and other languages and dialects. All melted into one culture, local speech sounds like it was “barn in a born.”

The center of town is the Pioneer Heritage Park and Museum, a first-class exhibit. It is typical of what I have seen so
often in Utah. Steeped in the traditions of the Mormon Church, people here demonstrate a deep respect for their pioneer ancestors.

The early explorers of the West—Lewis and Clark and others—have been given due credit for their brave accomplishments. Towns, rivers, even babies have been named after them. The pioneers were different. They were ordinary folks who left relative security to settle this country. They risked everything they had, including the lives of their families. Drawing the first map certainly took courage, but filling it in took much more. That's what the pioneers did.

In the park, I sat among flowers in the shade of a tall monument topped with the statue of a pioneer family. I wondered if future generations in Utah or anywhere else will create monuments to my generation and others of the twentieth century. Perhaps they already have, if war memorials are to be our monuments.

48
“Catfish” Charlie on Butch Cassidy
Leeds, Utah

“B
utch Cassidy died right were you're settin'.” I squirmed in my chair. “No way!”

“Well…a log-cabin inn was here then.” “Catfish” Charlie Scott rapped the table with his cigarette lighter, as if to pinpoint the spot.

“I saw on PBS one time, some anthropologists were looking for his bones in Bolivia.”

“But they didn't find him, did they? Because he's not buried there. He's buried around here somewhere.”

Were we playing poker, I would peg Charlie as a poor bluffer with a good hand. He had this smirk on his face. It's probably always there, like the straw hat that he never takes off. His wife tells him the hat is worn out and should be thrown away. But Charlie won't, saying it is just now becoming him.

I played into Charlie's hand. “I was told that he is buried up near Beaver, and that's less than a hundred miles from here.”

“Could be. Butch was born in Beaver, you know.” It was too early for Charlie's dinner house to open, so we engaged in a good bit of uninterrupted talk. He left the
table once to put potatoes in the oven. Catfish Charlie's, the only place around here to buy a meal, does not open until 4:00 P.M. He cooks the dinners. his daughter serves them. A few people order chicken tenders or buffalo shrimp, but everyone else eats deep-fried, farm-raised Mississippi catfish and hush pup pies.

“Two houses down,” Charlie continued, “is where the Sundance Kid was livin' at the time. His real name was Harry Loungabaugh, but he didn't use that here.” Charlie pointed over his shoulder with an unlit cigarette he had been holding for a long while. “He used the name Hyman Beebee. People tell that he would pull a six-gun on kids if they got on his lawn.”

“When was that?”

“Late thirties, I guess.”

Since he moved to Leads three years ago, Charlie has been researching Utah's best-known outlaws. Butch Cassidy and his gang, called the Wild Bunch, became infamous around the turn of the century. They robbed banks and trains in south-central Utah and elsewhere.

Charlie has an 1877 Colt 45 that he claims belonged to Kid Curry, one of the Wild Bunch. “I'm gunna have it in a nice glass case and put a price on it: $29,995. I know I ain't gunna sell it, but folks always want a price on things, especially things they can't have.”

Although he has lived in Utah most of his fifty-five years, Charlie brought his accent with him from Oklahoma, where he grew up. Charlie says he “loves people to death,” which may explain his immediate acceptance here in Leeds and his status as acting mayor.

Pointing to a row of fourteen cups hanging over the door, he started reciting the names of each owner. Charlie comes in every morning at 6:00, even Mondays when the restaurant is closed, to make coffee for them. They don't all show up, of course. Some live here only in the winter.

This town, like many others in the United States, took its name from somewhere else. A Mormon named it after Leeds, England, where he did missionary work.

There is one store here for everything. Cassidy's sells earrings, nachos, magazines, firewood, fishing tackle, and more. It rents videos and a Rug Doctor and provides coin-operated entertainment, principally pool and video games. Around noon on Mondays and Saturdays, owner Brant Jones hauls out a charcoal grill and makes buffalo burgers out front.

BOOK: On the Back Roads
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