Rocky Mountain High
by Mike Bliss, NIA #109
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", May 1995, page 5
It was the best of times and it was the worst of times..yes, I was a
teenager! An impressionable seasoned “veteran” collector of insulators for
six whole years, who actually knew seven people also inflicted with my “disease.”
The year was 1968.
On one particular summer Sunday, I had the great fortune to have enlisted the
use of a vehicle owned by a fellow purveyor of a daily social tabloid (paper
boy) who also happened to be entertained at that time with the hobby of
searching for glass. We were up at 4:00 a.m. on that Sunday delivering our
papers and then we drove in his 1952 pickup to the Central City area.
Little did I know that what was to unfold throughout the day would be a
religious experience that would stay with me forever. After we had our breakfast
at the wonderful Rockybuilt grease parlor, we flew (in many respects) to our
appointment 40 miles to the west, a section of the Colorado mountains rich in
history and gold strikes that demanded a ton of dial tone to be brought to the
area.
We arrived just before sunup at a pole on a small offshoot of the main
Denver-Grand Junction line. It had a odd unfamiliar color of Denver on it that I
had spotted a month previous to this trip, but I couldn't climb because of the
amount of activity at a cabin nearby. I quietly climbed out of the car trying
not to awaken the dog that is always assigned duty to any spot on earth wherever
a good insulator is on a pole, and began picking off one of my favorite Denvers
to this day--a very rare W.F.G. Co. in vibrant deep yellow green. I had no
sooner replaced it with a clear No. 10 than a set of headlights were announcing
their arrival through the trees a quarter mile away. After some nervous
conversation from my friend, I gaffed down in three steps instead of the
required number for safe nocturnal pole climbing, got in the truck and began our
escape.
Now to this day, I have never found the person in charge of placing the dogs
at those strategic locations obviously well scouted for the good glass that
makes a “James Bond” out of the pickers in the boggy, but I do need to thank
him for this particular choice in a job. The dog decided to chase that early
morning car coming towards us. We heard the gravel grinding and the car spinning
as he came swerving to a halt at the insistence of that attack muff. In the
years to come I found it necessary to bring that dog a table scrap or a bone
whenever I went fishing up that road, because the car he delayed was the county
sheriff responding to a call...we just knew the call had to be about us!
We drove by him and gave the traditional “wide berth” to the sheriff as
we drove down hill, at which time he looked us over pretty good.
Thinking that it was obviously a good time to go back to the mail line where
six cross arms per pole abound. The nearer to Central City, we beat a path to
the back road and took the old stage route. This road brought us to poles with
1871s, more Denvers, and some tramps that we thought should be liberated.
As anybody who has been deep in the mountains knows, the sun comes up late
and beds down early. We finished up our morning climb and were driving into
Central City for an early break and then it happened...we came around a corner,
and at a place where no one could climb, over a sharp drop off, next to a mine
that ran 24 hours, there stood the pole of poles. This was perfectly
choreographed for us. The sun was only half way up on the crest of the hill
behind it and the class #1 pole stood perfectly backlit. On the pole were an
array of color I’d never seen. Six full cross arms with 58 purple W.G.M. tolls
and two light green R. Good Jr. Tolls, not even one aqua in sight!!!
We jerked the truck to a halt, got out and just stood there in total awe and
disbelief for a full 15 minutes, and I cursed myself continually for the years
to come for not having a camera.
I never forgot that feeling of wonderment and exhilaration as to what it must
have been like to see an entire line built with nothing but 1898 goodies on
it... no aqua Am. Tels, no Hemi 42s, nothing clear!
This thought fostered a life long goal..to see what it would really look like
to rebuild a complete circa 1900 line, all coated with oldies. So in 1980, I
began to slowly pick up unusual line pins, and W.G.M.Co. tolls. Twelve years
later I had reached my goal of 200 mint dark ones (who wants to be stuck with
damaged ones) and began my search for a line to use that had no roads in view,
no new poles, and with the aspen, pines and scrub oak turning to fall colors. Of
course this had to be back dropped by some 14,000 ft. snow capped peaks, all
with phone company permission or I would have to build it from scratch. Piece of
cake, right?
After a year of looking, a film job near the “four corners” area took me
through Ouray. I discovered an original line still standing in perfect
surroundings and was made to order for the job. I then found out that an old
co-worker in Mountain Bell was the foreman over the area. He was actually so
enthused in the notion, he wanted to help build it. So now the wheels were in
motion.
Much to my dismay, six months later my friend was transferred out of state.
So in the 1992-1993 winter, I decided to have breakfast with the district level
supervisor to re-establish my intentions and “sell” the idea. I have to say
he didn’t know first hand how good a super-dark purple looked. At that
breakfast, I gave him one to seal our deal. He never let the ear to ear grin go
off of his face for a moment, let alone the three minute handshake of thanks! I
was in..really in. He was so glad to be a part of preserving on film a
recreation of history that he gave me two men and a bucket truck to accomplish
the feat, and of course, the use of the Red Mountain Pass phone line for three
days.
I emptied my Denver collection of the olive ambers, the greens, the
lavenders, the burgundies, and the clears. I took my best 1871s, Westinghouse
ponies, unusual tramps, all that I could imagine realistically on a line of this
vintage, installed them on a line with old and rickety poles, tied them in to
loose wire to recreate an “abandoned” look, tied them to the actual working
circuits that fed the mines on Red Mountain Pass, and proceeded to blow thirteen
rolls of 36 exposure film from all angles in a bucket truck for ten hours.
After all that anticipation, all the careful planning, all the memories, and
the euphoria or accomplishment and watching it unfold, after the greatest picnic
ever under a pole line “abandoned” in 1910, while lying on a blanket looking
at 250 sun drenched jewels overhead, I was attacked by a feeling, a real sense
that something was very, very wrong, The whole scene was incomplete. What was
it? What the heck could possibly be missing? The it dawned on me..in the quiet
solitude at 10,000 feet and only the sound of the wind rushing through the “quakies’,
and a babbling effervescent creek, I had forgotten to include the ever present,
ever barking DOG!
P.S. A choice of four different photographic views of this historical
recreation, framed and enlarged to 8 x 12 will go on sale at shows or order
direct. Mike Bliss, 2309 Nottingham Court, Fort Collins, CO 80526-5230
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