IMG_0709elk good IMG_0722elk good IMG_0788elk goodIMG_0725elk goodIMG_0739elk good

IMG_0817elk good-2IMG_0827elk goodWhen we began walking, the valley was white with the frayed edges of a fog bank.  We walked long enough to watch the sun burn the clouds away revealing a brilliant sky, bluebird belly and red berries divine.

In the studio, all was warm and I built a few bare, sterling canvasses to be worked with and finished out tomorrow.  At the height of the day, I looked out the big studio window that opens to the West, saw Tater Tot sleeping in the sun and I joined him there for a bit, running my hands over the silk of his ears while hearing our heartbeats collide under the pleasant blanket of January light.

It was such a lovely day.  Now friends are coming for dinner and drinks and tea and talk.  Rob is in the kitchen making his famous sweet chili (The secret?  HONEY!) and I suppose I’ll go help out.IMG_0865elk good IMG_0922elk good IMG_0855elk good IMG_0947elk good IMG_0873elk goodIMG_0884elk goodIMG_0907elk goodI hope you are all better than well!

Items of note:

I am over here today with a dash of prose and some pretty photos — Dog Power.

I failed to mention this little interview last week.

You’ll love this, not just because the fellows strip down to their gitch for most of the film but because it’s awesome.

And how about this beautiful, online book — a quick read that will make your heart light and your soul yearn for the summer forest and the mountain meadows brimming with lupin and larkspur.

Tra la la!

 

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2014/01/23/7581/

Winter Waters

IMG_0339elk goodIMG_0298elk good IMG_0313elk good IMG_0334elk goodIMG_0344elk good IMG_0370elk good IMG_0381elk good

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We rafted the Snake River a couple of days ago.  It was beautiful.  I know I use the word beautiful a lot but it’s really true.  If I call something beautiful, it’s because it truly was.  My parents were down from Saskatchewan visiting this week and so we woke them up extra early one morning, injected my dad with coffee and a breakfast sandwich, and drove up to our put-in on a section of the Snake River that flows through the Fort Hall Reservation.  After juggling trucks to take-out and put-in points we were ready to launch.  It was a funny, misty morning that gave way to a hazy afternoon.  The river was running fast and smooth.  The wind was peppered with Canada geese, ducks and swans.  My dad was delighted to be an oar beast — he rowed, steady and sure, all day long.  Tater Tot was wicked excited about all the birds we were seeing and Robert was jump shooting ducks from the bow of the boat, trying to bring home a little dinner while we were out recreating.

Let me say that I love my dad but I love him best of all when he is in a boat.  I grew up canoeing Northern Saskatchewan with him and my sisters and friends.  He is the very best version of himself when he is in a boat crossing water with smooth sweeps of a paddle or oars.  He had a spectacular time and we did too, just being with him in a beautiful place, traveling slowly across a living body of water, counting moments in feathers and sun glimmers.

We saw 33 bald eagles, a variety of hawks, kingfishers, swans, multitudes of ducks and Canada geese, two bands of wild horses (the Shoshone wild horses in the bottoms country, not mustangs), whitetail deer and a lot of fish.  Rafting is a wonderful way to view wildlife.  Nothing runs away too fast or flys off to quickly when you peacefully drift by on a current.  Robert took two ducks out of the sky for future dinners here.  Tater Tot found three wounded Canada geese on a gravel bar, all with broken wings, unable to fly, barely able to run, and while Tater dispatched one, Rob ended the suffering of another.  I am actually somewhat against goose hunting, and I prefer eating upland meat but I’m going to find a way to cook up some delicious goose for dinner since we wound up doing nature a favor by ending a little needless suffering out there on the river bend.  It makes me sad to think of all the wounded ducks and geese out there during hunting season.  Nothing ever goes to waste in nature, every dead thing feeds other living things and eventually bones turn to wildflowers and willow, but it still strikes a melancholic chord in my heart when I see wounded wild things slowly die.  I suppose life comes with a little suffering, now and then, and that suffering is natural and good for exercising the compassion of our hearts as humans and tenders of the wilds.  But it still makes me sad, and frankly, I’m thankful it does.

Tater Tot also found a porcupine, most unfortunately, and we had to dedicate a little time to pinning him down and extracting quills from his paws, nose, lips, tongue and the roof of his mouth with a pair of fishing forceps.  Thank goodness my dad was there to help.  There was some wrestling involved but we managed to pull every single quill and Tater Tot was as spirited as ever once we had him doctored up.

We stopped for lunch and a fire shortly after I managed to fall in the river and soak myself up past my knees (I do it every time I am in our raft and am officially ready for a pair of neoprene waders…).  It’s not a big deal in the warmer months but it’s a bloody disaster in cold water and cold weather.  I dried off, cooked my socks, and warmed up by a lazy-mans driftwood fire on a lovely gravel bar while dad dozed in the sun and Robert watched ducks breeze by on squeaky wings.  After that, since my Sorel boots were entirely soaked, I bundled up in my sleeping bag and wool coat in the stern of the raft and simply watched the wild world pass by with a full heart, wide open eyes and a thermos of peppermint tea.  It was peaceful and relaxing.

I found duck feathers, goose feathers, beautiful river rocks for future jewelry designs, a full cow skull (top and bottom) and my dad found me a gorgeous, river polished, huge, natural agate!  What treasure!  It looks like the heart of the North, simply exquisite.

I wish every day of my life could be this beautiful.  And I wish the Earth, everywhere, could be this robust and healthy (even that is a relative thing though…).  Do you ever think about how different the face of our planet must have been 100 or 200 or 1000 years ago?  Before our oil spills, mine tailings, clear cuts, sprawling cities began to bite away at the skin of our Earth?  I think about that all the time.  I get lost in my daydreams when I let myself drift into thinking about the way our world used to be.  I’m a good daydreamer, I can take myself to those old times, drift there on the breeze like a seed in a time capsule.  But still, the imagination only lets us travel so far.

I want to get in my raft sometime and run from the mountains to the sea — from the Tetons to the Pacific Ocean.  Right now, it’s just a dream, but I’m going to find a way to make it happen.  Just you wait and see.

Life is so good and I’m always grateful for the way Robert and I are able to spend ours, so grateful.  When the sun sets on days like these, I can’t hep but thank God for every breath I took while out in the wild places.  I fall to sleep tired, transformed and healed by creation.  Everything is just the way it’s meant to be.

 

Live To See Another Day

IMG_8570 IMG_8579 IMG_8591 IMG_8621 IMG_8636 IMG_8651 IMG_8717 IMG_8731 IMG_8734 IMG_8745 IMG_8793 IMG_8812 IMG_8837 IMG_8865 IMG_8878 IMG_8889 IMG_8916Robbie and I spent December 23rd and 24th hunting on the rim rock over in the Bennet Hills and King Hill area of Idaho.  The weather was gorgeous on Christamas Eve, simply incredible.  I spent the morning hiking around in a button down shirt until the wind came up, and when I say wind I mean wind — wild west wind, gusts of what felt like 50mph strength, ripping across sage flats and turning into purely vertical columns of current once hitting the volcanic rubble benches we were hunting.  Oh!  It was brisk!  I put on more clothing when the wind came, a layer of down and my big wool scarf.  The hiking was glorious.  We were alive.  The dogs were working their tails off and the chukar were plentiful.  It was a good day to be Idahoan.

On one of Farley’s points, on the edge of a basalt cliff, I stood still for what felt like forever waiting for my birds to grow nervous enough to flush.  I imagined that little partridge down in a crevice of black rock, breaking a cold sweat, eyes beady, toes twitching, wings begging to fly.  It’s hard work scrambling down through volcanic rubble to find and flush the bird your dog is pointing.  Robert taught me that if I stand long enough in one place, aware of the direction of my dogs point and in faith of my dogs point, the birds will eventually flush out of sheer nervousness, saving me the tricky, ankle breaking work of climbing down a cliff face and the annoyance of taking a terribly off-balanced shot on wobbly rock.  Rob is a good teacher.  Sometimes I have to climb down cliff faces anyway and I don’t mind the hard work; a good hunter is an efficient hunter (but not a lazy hunter), and a hardworking point from a dog must always be honored and pursued, no matter what.  At least that’s what I’ve been taught by the man I love and respect.  So there I was, standing still and alert, patiently waiting for my birds to go, shotgun ready in my hands, the wind biting at my cheeks and lips, Farley holding a staunch point when suddenly my bird went; a single chukar against a bright blue sky.  I mounted my gun to my shoulder, pressed my cheek to wood while simultaneously pressing the safety off, rested my finger on the trigger and drew a bead on my bird when out of nowhere and I do mean that, out of nowhere a hawk came out of the sky to take the very same bird I was gunning for.  I gasped aloud.  I pulled my cheek off my gun and lifted my head.  The chukar spiraled in mid-air, the hawk, too, matching acrobatics for acrobatics.  There was a flailing of feathers, talons, beaks and eyes, a flash of stripes and red legs.  It was nearly too much for me.  I yelled an unintelligible sound into thin air and the hawk and chukar broke apart.  The hawk was taken by the strength of the wind, sailing off to land on a branch of sage and continue its hunt.  The chukar gave in to gravity, dove low and tucked itself away beneath black rock.

I turned to Robert who was behind me by a dozen steps and I said, “Did you see it?  Did you see the hawk?

He smiled big at me and said he had.

I told him, “We were after the same bird!  We were in competition for the same chukar!

It was the first moment in my life, while hunting, that I realized hunting puts me in competition with other predator animals.  When I take a chukar or quail or grouse from the land, I take a meal away from a hawk or coyote or any other numerous predators stalking the rim rock and aspen stands, likewise, they take a meal from me when they have a successful hunt.  I might not use tooth and claw to do it, I’m a poor pathetic biped with crummy senses of sight, smell and hearing compared most all wild animals, I get my meat with the help of a gun.  But getting is getting and getting is rarely easy.  This time, both the hawk and I missed our bird, but I know there will be times when the hawk gets my chukar, just like there will be times when I get the chukar and the hawk must keep hunting and there seems to be something sort of holy about that, to me.  Knowing this makes my honest efforts all the more honest, knowing I may have lost before I even begin.  Also, I think this realization whittles away, even more, the unwild parts of my life that I am sometimes ashamed of.

A brush with many wings.  A shotgun lowered.  A wind too strong for all of us.  A winter sun shining.  Three of us living to hunt and be hunted another day.  It was a moment to be remembered.

IMG_0092elk good IMG_0095elk good IMG_0111elk goodI’m living to skijor right now.  Nothing feels more alive.  Nothing can compare to the beautiful things I am seeing when I am out on my skis, cutting through snow and wind, passing by stone and creek bend, gliding out of the shadows of the douglas fir and into the vertical sweep of the willow, watching my dogs kick the ice from their heels and work their hearts out for me.  And my heart?  My heart is unfolding like a hymn right now, four part harmony, a steady bass line, twittering soprano giving all the high notes a little grace — all praise and gratitude and my human wildness howling up a savage little storm beneath my skin.  On the very best days, days like these, I fully realize I truly belong right where I am.

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2014/01/10/7509/

Trying to throw my arms around the world…

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