[sterling silver & various Idaho agates from local claims — available later this week]
I’m just getting warmed up! It’s so good to be home.
The Life and Times of the Plume
I Love Your Soul
[sterling silver & various Idaho agates from local claims — available later this week]
I’m just getting warmed up! It’s so good to be home.
We live for those fantastic and unreal moments of beauty which our thoughts may build upon the passing panorama of experience.
[Rockwell Kent]
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We woke up one morning and suddenly found ourselves leaving the Little Cabin In The Woods. The sun was shining for the first time in weeks, the trees dripping dry in the breeze, all the animals and birds squawking for joy [stellar’s jays, redtails, ravens, crows, various song birds, chickadees, squirrels, chipmunks, the hum of the frogs in the marsh]. I imagine the deer were on the move and my darling little black bear might have been blundering about in the wild roses, nibbling on rose hips with his belly growling. I felt like Cinderella with all my animal friends, humming to myself as I cleaned, the birds chanting out exact harmonies, oh! The swish of the trees! The cabin slowly emptied out and I thought I could see the walls shivering in the absence of the warmth of all my little things. The road out was wet and slippery and we crept along, nearly rolling our entire rig on a sharp corner — thank God we made it down the mountain without a gruesome disaster. Higher up, in the sun, the snow was sloughing off the timber and stone of the North Cascades. I felt sad to leave the mountains behind, and our lonesome woods. As we soared down the Methow Valley, I watched the glorious forests roll back up into the high places until we reached the Columbia River valley where the hills are bare and brown and the stone suddenly turns mafic with the black dust of so many ancient volcano flows.
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At Moses Lake, it rained most of the night. Sleeping in the belly of an Airstream trailer in stormy weather is like sleeping inside the curving frame of a harp. The raindrops pluck at all the metal edges of your glimmering cradle and suddenly you hear melody in everything. The wind moves in arcing falsettos. Sleep is some sort of deeply resonating thrum that drones in waves of slow vibration. The wind howl gently rocks you into long winks.
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We watched, two nights in a row, a huge, orange moon rise up over mountains, the warm light of night pooling in soft illuminations as far as we could see, malleable shadows brushing the sage in slow swoops.
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There’s something I have to tell you about being an Airstream owner, which is sort of like being a caretaker of a family estate, there’s some tenderness required for the caring of old bones. We delight in it. We like old junk with history, it’s why we live in a 106 year old farm house in Idaho — some part of it seems to be on the brink of falling down around our ears, at any given moment in time, but there are echos that resound in those dry old bones, in the solid points of the gables and the decrepit brick chimney, that hold the soul of these antique things that we cherish so dearly — the knowing that others, before us, built and loved the very frames of these things makes for a little holiness in unexpected places. I like to roll down the highway in my silver truck with our Airstream following us like a glad puppy dog, the smudge of gleam it leaves behind in every landscape, the way it refracts exploration. There’s more history being made with every mile we roll over now. I wonder, sometimes, how often the previous owners had their nails painted red (I want to dress like a cute little 50s housewife in floral print, suede and a silk scarf to hold my hair out of the tussle of the wind), how often a they craned their necks to watch the brilliance of transitional cottonwoods along stony flanked, brimming rivers, how often they looked out the windows as they raced trains over wide distances, whether or not they sighed at the beauty of a ponderosa pine and tamarack forest in fall. Oh glories! Oh, take to the highway!
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Back in my darling little house now, there is the grandiose pleasure of cooking on a gas range in beautiful pots and frying pans (oh, the simple pleasures), our view of Scout Mountain lightly crusted with a dribble of snow, long hot baths in the morning with randomly selected books from my various book shelves and hot coffee made with water that boils on the stove top in four minutes instead of twenty. There’s the comfort of the glorious mattress we have on our tall, tall bed! I can barely make myself rise in the morning, it’s like I slept all the summer in the rolling curves of a canoe (I grew used to feeling rumpled and kinked)! I can’t even imagine leaving my little house again in six short months when a new fire season presents itself, so I don’t look that far ahead. Today, I begin to patch and prime my studio space before I paint it tomorrow. I’m looking forward to fresh new starts in my holy little territories. Being away from everything has made it all the more dear.
I hope you’re well, little spruce beetles. More soon.
X
Last night, Tater and I stole up the mountain for a couple of hours of forest walking and stream bending. For the interior West, it’s tremendously lush and fresh feeling up on the mountain at the moment. Every step deeper into the woods has a gal swimming in the clean and musky scents of a forest unfolding. The creeks are running thick and crystal clear with the last of the snow melt. As I walked past all the green unfurling, I think the fiddle head of my heart managed to fan out into a broad green, wind capturing face of delicacy and bright.
I love everything about my forests here. I love the shushing of the tallest sentries, catching the breeze in fine fir needles and stomping their roots deeper into the earth. I brought home some Douglas fir branches last night, they are settled in vases around the house, slowly releasing their fine spice into the tranquility of my home. I love the easiness of the spreading wildflower patches, the promise of color and food for the bees. Last night, I loved that funny little male mallard that came zooming out of the dusk, flying directly down valley with the creek flowing beneath his beak and his flight feathers squeaking in the wind. I love being out there with a dog by my side, so I have someone very quiet with whom I can share a sense of exploration and wonder. I like to sneak around, because everything in a forest is kind of sneaky. Sneaky moose on stiletto legs. Sneaky elk with bugle hearts. Sneaky beavers chewing on their cottonwood tree trunks. I get sneaky too and walk softly in my little cowboy boots.
Every time I go up the mountain, I see the same things, but I’m always amazed at the small changes, the growth, the flux in chroma, the deeper bends in the river curves. I wonder, if all those trees look down at me and notice the small changes that take place in my heart and soul on a regular basis?
Night came on quick and the air became cold. I found myself wishing I didn’t have to go home, that RW could come out to meet me and we could cook hot dogs over an open fire and drift to sleep under a blanket of starshine falling through ponderosa pine. But last night, such a thing was not to be. I hiked back out to the truck with Tater and we drove home to hot dinner and warm beds, but that expansive space inside my ribcage that I keep open for beautiful things that widen the soul felt illuminated and fresh.
Happy Friday to you merry little beauties. Have a rich weekend.
xx
On Sunday night I told RW I needed to do a short camping trip — I wanted a little break, away from civilization, out in the Idaho I know and love, before we fly through the last few weeks before our move. He sweetly acquiesced to my demands and on Monday afternoon, I found myself driving West with Tater Tot at my side. By early evening we reached City of Rocks, oh what a sight for sore eyes. We had our choice of camping spaces as there was hardly a soul to be seen for miles. I strapped my runners on my feet and Tate and I took a sunset run through, up and over the granitic formations that have made this little cove of stone famous within climbing circles. It was gorgeous. The sagebrush was painted moon silver and high up on a ridge a pack of coyotes sang at us in their swooping falsettos. I felt romanced half to death by that big country, wobbly in the knees, wide of soul and bright eyed.
That night, I made a nest beneath my truck canopy, read by headlamp for three hours before drifting to sleep while the music of raindrops slapped at the sides of my Tacoma. It was pure heaven.
I’ve felt due for a little adventure for some time now. RW and I have been hunkered down for months with the Airstream and general work demanding most of our time and energy. Time off has been spent in our local mountains or most lazily with a book on a couch. To take myself out to brush up against Idaho was the perfect way to celebrate spring and my love for this state. I must also confess, I’ve felt a bit of seperation anxiety over the idea of leaving Idaho this summer. I’ve been a touch sentimental about my aspen groves and a very special stand of juniper that bends around one of my favorite sections of mountain that I run frequently. I dig deep into memory and recall what those spaces look like and feel like at the height of summer, when the sun is so long in setting and the grasshoppers are scratching at my knees when I pass through tall grasses, and I feel a bit sad. I love it here. I’m going to miss it.
So I suppose, this little jaunt to the City was also my fondest attempt at saying farewell to my stomping grounds until November. Oh, Idaho, I’ll miss you.
In the morning, I brewed a cup of coffee and blinked at the power of the sunlight pouring down out of the sky, the granite grew warm beneath my palms and the birds were magnificent. They began their singing as the night sky turned from star-prickled black to midnight blue and what a lesson is there for humans — to rise each morning with a song on our lips, so eager to begin a new day, hearts bursting with anticipation for what every moment might hold. To strive to live with hope, with the start of every day. Then at night, to sing the sun down to sleep and revel in the magic of the daylight hours before tucking head beneath wing and nodding away to the downy comfort of bird dreams.
I strapped runners on my feet again and ran a lower trail before making breakfast and some delicious coffee. I sat there quietly, alone, listening to the world turn, the breeze in the conifers, sniffing at the hot scent of sage warming and feeling the slow hope of green in the aspen buds. Pure magic. Later in the morning Tate and I did some wonderful scrambling to the top of the Breadloaf formations, looked out over our valley and simply gave our minds and hearts space. We wound ourselves down and squandered some of our life minutes up there, basking in sun and twirled by the wind. In the afternoon, I made a nest in a granite hole and there I sat with a book and some iced tea, for hours, reading, sipping my nectar and watching the ravens and vultures ride the updrafts between granite slabs — their victorious wing spans glinting in the high sun.
Dinner was easy and I continued to read while the water was boiling. With the sinking sun came a resounding chill, after eating I rallied and scrambled up to the top of Bath Rock to watch the final strains of day turn the world brilliant and soft. Sunset here is likely better termed moonrise. The white of granite in any direction seems to reflect any and all celestial light so the landscape glows at night, like a thousand ghosts gliding up from the earth. The coyotes seem to sing the shadows into shades of blue and I think the stone grows a faint pulse and slinks taller in the night light. It’s an enchanting place, to be sure. I feel changed in the summer months when I sleep out on the rock under the moon, perhaps newer too, in some soul-sense, like the space of that place peels away some of the crust of age and leaves me in a new sort of youth, radiant and goosebumpled in the night wind. It’s like something straight out of a Narnia book!
Night came on, I made my nest in the truck, read for a few more hours and once again fell asleep to the song of rain.
I rose early, as early as the birds in the morning. As the night faded into day I could see low heavy clouds that didn’t seem to promise any lifting. I was chilled deep in my bones. I packed up and Tater joined me for a final hike before we hopped in the truck and made for Pocatello. I arrived home just in time to clean the bathroom and bake bread before one of RW’s rookie brothers arrived for a visit on his way North.
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