Mind The Moose (Springtime On Gibson Jack)

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What is it about moose in spring?  We call them “March Moose” around here.  I know.  That’s tremendously clever of us.  However, if you’ve ever run into a cow moose in the spring you probably know how insane they can be.  I ran into one tonight, while out gallivanting with the dogs on Gibson Jack (which is, to be sure, as pretty as anywhere — look at that wonderful view behind me in the above image!  Melt your heart and make your soul bones chatter).  That moose.  That moose!  Meeting her was a hot mess and I’m glad we all survived.  She charged me not once, not twice, but six times.  We were all pinned in place on a treed slope and I had to continuously howl at the dogs to get away from me and to run for the forest — ooh, she wanted to stomp them into smithereens.  She was growling at us!  Have you heard a moose growl?  It’s an unearthly sound.  Fortunately, I had a handful of stout fir trees around me and I ducked behind a trunk or two when she opened up her can of crazy, again and again and again.  She was close enough for me to pet a couple of times.  Finally, right before she charged me a seventh time, I had about enough and I charged HER.  I’m not joking, I really did.  The little girl in the woods in red corduroy pants waving her arms and hooting like a hyperventilating owl, that was me.  It was a purely reflexive response, not premeditated in any way so I am very glad the antic was successful.  I don’t recommend aggressively chasing a cow moose in springtime but I was going to be up there all night long and a dog was going to get squashed if I didn’t fight back and chase her off with my blond hair waving like medusa snakes in the breeze and my scrawny limbs spinning like windmills.  It was madness but it worked.  That moose took to the trees up slope of us, I hollered for the dogs to get on ahead of me, made sure we had Penelope and we galloped like heck down the mountain.  Back at the trailhead, we opted to head up the mountain on the trail opposite that dang blasted moose and boy howdy, it was one of those springtime nights that only Idaho knows how to do.  The birds were singing out their alleluias, the creek whistling show tunes, the aspen poofing with green fizz, and the grass turning shaggy beneath my feet.

Tater Tot found pheasant and they shot across the valley like rockets, cackling and streaming their tail feathers through the pink of dusk.

The balsam root is just starting to bloom here and patches of yellow grace the hillsides like sonnets woven with love ballads.  I would lay down and play “he loves me, he loves me not” with these simple yellow beauties but I know Robert loves me, I’m sure of it…and there’s the issue of ticks (get your dogs oiled up, people).  I still took my sweet old time photographing a few patches for you.  Balsam root is so merry and utterly irresistible.  A true harbinger of summer.

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It snowed this morning.  I stepped out of the house, first thing, to grab some cat food from the garage and noticed it was nippy out.  By the time I was back in the kitchen setting the kettle on the stove top, the sky opened up quietly and the flakes began their gentle descent.  It’s ridiculously beautiful here, as a result.  Fresh white caps on the mountains, conifer stands laced with the residue of the squall, the last of winter pressed up against the green turning and the green is radical, rule breaking, irrepressible in every way.  Spring is a sweet old badass that pushes on no matter what, a trooper bound to the no-nonsense orbit of our planet, bound to the laws of the universe!  Oh, she’s a stickler for the rules.

Onward, upward, forever the bloom, forever the sun, forever these long days trailing into the staccato of short nights. 
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If you want to be free, be free.

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A Little Mountain Romance

Go up to a high place, just to fall in love with the land, to meet the sky face to face, to run your fingertips across buds and blossoms, to press your soul against the green, to drink from the sun.  Take your time, your sweet old time.  Dawdle.  Sit in the sagebrush.  Listen to the birds and feel the wind.  Don’t come down until the half moon is strung up in the feathers of the fir trees, the dogs are hungry and your hands are cold.  I’m sure you’ll agree, it’s the perfect way to spend an evening.

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Winter Range

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I always say you can tell a lot about a person by the way they treat their horse (and you can tell a lot about a man by the way he drives his truck).  I came across this herd over in Arbon Valley, the next valley West of the Portneuf Valley, just a hop over a mountain pass from where I live.  I don’t know how I ended up in Arbon Valley yesterday except I was driving my truck, I had country music playing on the radio, the dogs and my ski  gear in the back, the world was covered in fresh snow and dappled with springtime sun — I felt like seeing some country so I did a little wandering on the blue highways.  When I saw this posse of horses out on their winter range, I pulled off, grabbed my camera and made some friends.

As I walked to the fence, they picked their heads up from grazing, looked at me from a far, and then the leader began to walk to me — an old swaybacked paint with wind woven dreadlocks in his mane.  One by one they wandered over, sweet and curious, eager to exchange scent with me.  They nosed my pockets for treats.  Let me rub their cheeks, press my cold hands beneath their wild, tangled manes as they draped their heavy heads over my shoulders.  I touched the softness of their muzzles and fell into the pools of their kind eyes.  These horses have a good cowboy and cowgirl.  I can tell.

Horses are good for the soul.

:::Post Scriptus:::

Doesn’t that buckskin have a beautiful tail?  It hits the ground!

Meadowlark

IMG_5070IMG_5099IMG_5106IMG_5100 IMG_5118 IMG_5130 IMG_5134For weeks I have had the urge to sunset hike but I’ve been so obsessed with trail running that I’ve opted for high gear and big distance over peaceful strolls with my camera and the dogs.  Last night I finally committed to walking instead of galloping and up the mountain we went, step by precious step.  Can you believe how long the days feel already?  It’s miraculous.  The seasons are miraculous.

One of my favorite things to do this time year is lay back in the bunch grasses when the sun is swooping low and simply unleash the power of my senses.  I smell the earth around me, damp with snow melt and rainfall, musty with decay, and pungent with the greening.  It’s delicious.  I watch the sun in the grass and sage, see it straddle the ridge lines as it unwillingly gives night the upper hand, the streaks of color that lash at the sky and paint the clouds, a slow moon rising, alpine glow on snow capped peaks and a line of geese leaning North while they pepper the sky with disorderly order.  I close my eyes and listen to the birds.  I hear my first meadowlark, an owl down in the cottonwood creek bottoms, numerous other chatterings and chirpings, a woodpecker hammering and squawking at the inconvenience of low light, the screech of a magpie and robins galore.  If I listen closer, I hear the breeze in the grass around me, the sound of the dogs digging for voles, snapping twigs beneath their paws, panting and smiling with their fierce little fangs into the cold air.  I spread my hands wide and push my fingertips into the dirt and grass roots, connecting as much of myself to the earth as possible, the wind turns cold, I feel it raking my cheeks red, my hair is my eyes, my soul is untethered and drifting away like a winged seed on an infinite silk string.

We all go up on the mountain and turn into wilder versions of ourselves.  It’s why we go; to be unleashed from everything that has a hold on us.

I heard the meadowlark last night, the song that is the bright sign of all that is to come with the stretching newness of light during these limber springtime days.  Every heartbeat that thumps through the cage of my ribs and into thin air reminds me of the goodness of life, here and now, and always.  I’m feeling it all.