Monday, June 29, 2015

Some Midwestern favorites

Minneapolis, MN

Really?

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Duluth, MN

From Anna's we continued on Route 2 across northern Minnesota
to my cousin Dan's in Duluth.  There he lives in a cool old house

with Waldo, a happy yellow lab and miraculous retriever of tennis 
balls.

Duluth elbows it's way up from the shores of Lake Superior with 
the topographical audacity of San Francisco.  In need of an ocean 
fix, Megan and I had been looking forward to the Great Lakes.  
There was the biggest of them, surf and all, but "America's third 
coast" didn't smell like . . . anything.  Alas, our longing only 
deepened without salt in the air, absent wafts of yarrow and the 
briny decay of beached seaweed.

Dan's a gentle hearted, amazing man, his actions apace with his 

ideals.  There isn't a screen in the house.  (I still remember his
letters from
childhood, the envelopes carefully turned inside out
and reused, each
stamped "Kill your television!").  His only electric
appliances
are a few light bulbs and a small CD player, all powered
by a
solar panel in the back yard.  His is a sharp, critical mind, 

surrounded by books.  He's long been without a car and gets to work 
on foot, by bike or on skis.  

His commute follows 
a trail he's voluntarily maintained for over 30
years.  It's quite beautiful and is treasured by locals, running along 
both sides of a lively creek near his home. The city of Duluth
named it in honor of his work.  

Dan the baker at Positively 3rd Street Bakery, which he's 
cooperatively owned and operated since 1982.  We stocked 
ourselves for the culinary uncertainties to come with fabulous 
breads, granola, and cookies.

We were out exploring Duluth on foot the next morning when rain
began to fall.  We quickened our pace, scanning for shelter as it
intensified over the next minute. It swelled suddenly to a deafening 

pitch and we broke into a run, bolting blindly to the porch of the 
nearest house.  We kept near the steps, shy to be on a strange porch 
but trapped there by the onslaught.  It was then that Megan noticed 
the door yawning ajar.  The house looked abandoned.  Dust and a 
few tipped over chairs, some wadded cloth.  Now that we were 
looking, we saw the front windows were boarded up.

Megan, very much out of character, stepped inside, gleeful of the
discovery.  A little spooked but alive from the rain and delighted
at her boldness I followed. Debris, some beer cans.  Hello?

Nobody.  We picked our way around into a larger room and saw
the staircase.  It looked as if it were being restored.  In fact it
wasn't a work in progress at all.  It was beautiful, heartbreakingly
beautiful, immaculate in almost frightening contrast to the dust
and broken glass around it.  The wood was of a fascinating, wholly
unfamiliar grain, hatching and spiraling like drops of ink in tea. 
As we moved between them, each bannister's graceful, irregular 
curves resolved into human profiles, exquisitely worked faces ripe 
with joy and sorrow, anger and bemusement.

The stairs themselves were more plainly shaped, but of the same 
mesmeric wood, its grain almost hallucinatory.  They descended 
a single swift flight to a small landing and a door, the most, 
well . . . the door . . . How do we begin?  The only way to–– The 
important thing is that we're going to stay here.  Live here, in this 
house.  Near it.  Ushers?  WE'RE FINE.  We won't be in 
communication . . . that goes without . . . but we want you all to 
know how much you've–– What we mean to say is we're . . . we 
can't.  Goodbye is what we are meaning to be singing.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Blowin' stuff up in Manvel, North Dakota

Here's what happens when you wrap 12 boxes worth of sparklers
tightly in electrical tape and attach a fuse.  When the tape is red-

orange and the fuse is green, the neatly wrapped bundle looks like a 
huge carrot, a carrot that's kind of a bomb.  It gives you a little shove 
in the chest from a hundred feet away.

Other great stuff about Manvel:

-  Massive piles of meat, say 36 venison sausage patties for a four-person breakfast
-  Venison bacon, similarly portioned.  These are my people.
-  If we'd had another person roll into town with us, we would have increased Manvel's population by a full percentage point.
-  A wild night where Megan skillfully defused a bar fight and I quite soberly raced a passenger-laden four wheeler through town
-  Our cousin Anna and her boyfriend Aaron, wonderful hosts and the latter in possession of a miraculous ability to remain on a careening off-road vehicle.  Great-hearted people.
-  Simultaneously a severe thunderstorm warning, an advisory for golf-ball sized hail (capable of decimating crops), and a deafening tornado siren!  Aaron's reaction?  Pile us all in the truck, drive out and take a look.  He and the town so nonchalant.  Anna finally convinced him to head home after a sheriff commanded us to immediately seek shelter.  It was all fabulously exciting. 

Friday, June 26, 2015

The Highline

Heading east away from Glacier we took Route 2, known as The
Highline, a nickname borrowed from the northernmost American
railway which largely 
remains within sight of the road.  Where
the approach to the park
from the west climbed through foothills 

and gradually loftier mountains, leaving to the east was an abrupt 
drop into the plains.  The mountains in the mirrors formed a dramatic
skyline behind us, a purple wall erupting from the 
prairie.  

In western Montana, the vertical vacuum left by the mountains is
immediately filled by a spectacular display of towering clouds in
every direction, painting the land in great drifting patches of shadow
and sunlight.  In that vast flatness we were clearly able to mark a
storm's mountainous crawl across the land.  When 
its black 
downpour at last crushed over us, we could just as clearly see 
through to an advancing bath of sunlight, stark and cleansed beyond 
its borders.

"Ohh yaahh,"  said the North Dakotan gas station attendant, "If yuh
dohn't lake thuh wayther heere, weet fave minutes."  The truth is, I
love everybody with that accent just a little bit more.

The sky rules this stretch of highway, but the route is marked too 
by the steady presence of trains, some with lazily long strands of 
double-stacked cars.  Countless graying farmhouses, schools, and 
churches, abandoned and listing, are known as The Ghosts.

The sun was setting behind us just we as crossed the border into 
North Dakota and we drove into the heart of a storm we'd been 
watching swell before us for hours.  The rain was too much for 
the wipers, and the lightning bolts far too engorged as they arced 
onto radio towers.  Neither of us could believe the violence of the 
hail left the windshield intact.  In the midst of this uniquely 
midwestern fury, a dense double rainbow anchored itself to the 
plain on either side of the road.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Three Glacier timelapses


(Moms, click the bracket in the lower right corner of the player
to make it full-screen, then the gear icon, also on the lower right, 
to improve the quality to 720p.)

I would have liked to host this on Vimeo, but their software 
recognized the Philip Glass as being copy written.  The quality
suffers, but luckily Youtube's more back-alley policies allowed
me to post it there instead.


Wednesday, June 24, 2015

St. Mary Falls Trail, Glacier

Our last full day in the park we hiked the St. Mary Falls trail, down 
in the valley east of Logan Pass.  The trail passes by numerous 
waterfalls on the St. Mary River and on Virginia Creek, terminating
at Virginia Falls.

St. Mary Falls

Disney again overdid it with the blue-green dye.

This guy before Virginia Falls was nice 
enough to let me take his picture.  I didn't 
get a close up of his painting, but you can 
zoom in.  Nice little rendering.

The uppermost foot of Virginia Falls.  The 
cool misty blast was delicious after a hot 
uphill hike and made us literally hold onto 
our hats.

Sculpted strata beneath Virginia Falls.


Megan spied this gal hopping around in the froth of the creek.  
The American Dipper, Cinclus mexicanus, rare species which 
nests only in vigorous mountain streams.  moment later she 
flew up to . . .

. . . her nest!  I think this is just about the loveliest home I've ever
seen.  Go back a couple of pictures to see if you can spot it
from afar.

On our way back to camp we stopped for this mama crossing the 
road with her two cubs.  We got to watch them for a while tearing 
up plants and munching on the roots.  Best traffic jam ever.

After a bit she lumbered off down the hill, and her little ones
eventually followed.  One . . .

. . . two.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Hidden Lake Trail, Glacier

Our second morning in Glacier we set off for Logan Pass, accessible
via another engineering feat of the WPA, Going To The Sun Road.
Many regard this to be the most spectacular stretch of highway in 

North America.  It bisects the park from west to east, and takes one 
yawning switchback up the canyon wall toward the pass, from which 
one is either treated to or (ahem) terrified by the bottomless, epic 
expanse to the west.

Looking west along Going To The Sun Road. 

Looking east, a mile up Hidden Lake Trail from Logan Pass.  
Patches of the trail were still covered with snow, including a 
harrowing corner where one of us may or may not have clung 
to the snow for her very life.

Death march traversed, we could attend to rumors of a mountain 
goat herd somewhere up ahead, near the trail.  There was a rustling 
and we strained to make out wooly forms through the trees, when 
this scampy little character trotted out onto the snow.  Really, a 
frickin' wild baby mountain goat, right there, no problem.

Six pictures forming about a 240º panorama, with Hidden Lake to
the left.  The continental divide, from here all water flows west into 

the Pacific or east into the Atlantic.

These guys acted like we didn't exist.

Having picked a spot for lunch, I was burrowing into my backpack 
when this lady clacked by, casual as can be.  I could have reached 
out and run my hand along her side as she passed. 

Returning from the lake, we heard what sounded like a baby bleating
through the trees.  This teen-goat emerged, continuing its little call
as it picked its way down the mountain.

The Columbian Ground Squirrel!

Returning down Going To The Sun Road in the rain.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Avalanche Creek trail, Glacier

Our first morning in Glacier we took a trail leading right out of our 
campground.  It began in the shade of cedars, hemlocks, and birches
and climbed along Avalanche Creek, a roaring blue-green torrent.

Moss-carpeted forest flanked the trail to the south.  Returning hikers
seemed to have a joyful secret, their faces flushed and exultant.

After the density of the forest, we emerged to a staggering scene.
All sense of self melted away as we stood gaping: three—four!—five!
waterfalls slowly tumbling into Avalanche Lake.  As 
we adjusted a 
little the immensity before us, countless smaller waterfalls resolved 
into view, each a marvel, the snowmelt finding ways down from 
bony heights.

After basking for a while in the view, we made our way further up 
the trail along side of the lake, red cedars to our right, this absurd 
water to our left.

Undulating algae in a creek bed at the east 
end of the lake.


Sunday, June 21, 2015

Glacier National Park

Summer solstice, just east of the continental divide, Glacier National 
Park, MT.  It feels so silly after seeing even a small corner of this 
place to have ever casually used words like majestic, grand, 
awesome, or magnificent.  Every picture we snapped here is a 
cramped window, and the pursuit of words to describe such 
impossible beauty is a doomed endeavor.  If a person yet to visit 
could somehow know what they were missing, I can't imagine 
anything but a restructuring of all their resources toward journeying 
to this holy land on top of the world.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

The Columbia River Gorge

Day ?.  Heading east from Portland up the Columbia River Gorge.  
The shore to the left is Washington, to the right is Oregon.  We 
kept to the Oregon side, following the Columbia River Highway, 
segment of Route 30 engineered as part of the WPA to feature
the natural beauty of the gorge.  It banks up past broad vistas, 
scoops into deep primordial forest, tiptoes under weeping 
overhangs, sneaks past mighty waterfalls, and tunnels through 
great jutting elbows of mossy rock.  Further east the land dries out, 
the grass golden, the landscape marked by large-scale energy 
projects: several intimidating dams and ridge after ridge of 
churning wind turbines.


Multnomah Falls, which our Portland pals 
scoffed at us for planning to visit.  It was 
indeed crowded and we were indeed tourists.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Silver Falls

Day 7.  Silver Falls State Park, OR



Tuesday, June 16, 2015

That's not funny, guys . . . guys?

Day 6.  This morning we went to the studio for Abe's weekly radio 
show on KBOO, Portland's listener-supported community radio 
station.  Megan spotted this uneasy character in the bathroom.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Nephews

Day 5.  Two good-lookin' fellas, nephews Finn and Alex, and
two of our favorite people.



Sunday, June 14, 2015

The wee hours

Day 4.  Abe and Tam's in the wake of Jon Snow's "death",  St. John's,
Portland, OR.

Saturday, June 13, 2015

OSU graduation


Day 3.  A lone attendant at our niece Audrey's college graduation, 
Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR.  Congratulations, Audrey!

This guy, OSU graduation.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Prairie Creek

Day 2.  Prairie Creek Redwoods, Humboldt County, CA.  This may 
be a familiar scene to Sonoma County people, but really, the scale 
of the redwoods in Humboldt and Del Norte Counties is awe-inducing, 
even awe-restoring to a Russian River regular.  Reagan was wrong.  
The most celebrated (and rightfully so!) trees in Armstrong Woods are 
commonplace along Prairie Creek.  The ones that stand apart up here 
are impossibly large, great, mythical titans.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Farewell to friends, family, the wide-armed Pacific, and predictably good burritos.

Day 1.  Sebastopol, CA