I made this photograph yesterday morning.  Early.  Around 6AM.  Just after I kissed Robbie goodbye, told him to be careful, told him to take care of his bros, and sent him away to jump fire in California.  It was a resplendent morning.  Today feels the same.  The cabin sits on the edge of a small clearing.  Above the clearing the sky opens up.  Today, the sky is lightly washed with cloud wisp, like a veil waiting to be burned away, and there is a hawk, crying and circling.  It is very still.  The light pours through green on green until the underbrush is lit up and rejuvenated, brought back from the stroke of night with the width and breadth of branches reaching.  I can’t remember that it will be hot today.  I am made forgetful by the cool of the morning.

I say aloud to myself, quite often, at random, “It is summer.”  Because summer is fleeting and I want to use it all up, down to the dimes, nickels and pennies.  I want to spend my days like a woman obsessed with living.

It is summer.  While at the lake with a friend, a few days ago, I was bitten directly on the rump by horseflies, five times.  My friend said she could see the welts through my skivvies.  I’m convinced I have the itchiest bottom in the entire state of Washington.  I hope someone soon relieves me of this honorary title.  I was with two other friends the other night and I asked them, “Microcosmically speaking, what do you think it sounds like when a horsefly takes a bite of skin from a body.  Skin is tough. There must be a wild ripping sound that is somewhat delightful to them, like when we sink our teeth into corn on the cob and tear the sweet kernels away.”  It was obvious to me that they had never wondered about such a thing.  Then I felt a litle awkward but mostly gloriously weird.

Do you ever wonder about the tiny things?  I hope you do.  But not everyone does.  It’s not a place of curiosity a person can force the mind to travel to.

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In the open places, on the hillsides, the world trips its way, dizzy with heat, into the browns and yellows of late summer.  The bird songs have changed, the bug melodies too.  I don’t hear the frogs as often.  I saw a cicada for the very first time in my life, at least, I believe it was a cicada.  It had the cutest face I’ve ever seen on a bug, a pekinese face, with colorless stained glass windows for wings.

Sometimes it’s so hot I think I am losing my mind.  I am tired at night.  My words come out cross threaded and backwards when I try to speak aloud.

I have been running.  A lot.  Despite the heat.  Or perhaps because of the heat.  It’s almost unbearable at times, being out under the sun and moving fast.  When I pass through tall grass in sunny spaces, the grasshoppers cast themselves into reckless leaps.  I hear them all the time now, ratcheting their raspy tunes as they chew their tobacco cud.  There is an alfalfa field, ripe and fragrant, alive with a bevy of fluttering bugs, watered by sprinklers.  It smells fresh and farmy as I pass by.  The humidity of hay growing comes at me like a wall of water and I slog for a moment as my sweat suddenly appears and flows down my face, arms and back like spring creeks.  My skin doesn’t give way like the land does.  I don’t thin away under my own rolling waters.

There is a pond.  It is really a dugout.  But for the sake of the poetic, I’ll call it a pond here.  I have the dogs stop for a swim in it while we run because they begin to trip on their long red tongues and their sides heave so deeply that their ribs are xylophones.  In the trees there, I occasionally see an owl (disturbed from its day perch) fly low and swooping; the whomp of its wing beats whirls the tall grasses and clatters the aspen.  The woodpecker nest is empty.  The skies are a teenaged riot of birds.

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I feel myself reaching for something: obsessively, honestly, patiently.  I’m not in a rush.  Not for anything.  Even though it is summer, and summer is passing by.

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2013/07/27/6578/

A Handful of the Random:

My friends, I’m mad for the lentils lately.  They make such nice additions to salads. Let me show you what I’ve been whipping up:

Ingredients:  green lentils, red cabbage, currants, red onion, almond slices, olive oil, raspberry champagne vinegar, cracked pepper, salt and cumin.  SO SCRUMPTIOUS!  I make a huge batch so we can eat it for dinner, lunch and dinner again.

Here it is on a bed of spinach with a side of cubed and roasted portobello mushrooms.  Are you drooling?  I am.

I found a banged up bird, a whippoorwill, I think.  I held it for a moment and then left it at the roots of a wild rose to meet its maker in peace and solitude.  Poor thing.  I’ve wanted to see one of these birds up close for a long while.  At night, when I am driving back to the cabin through thick forest, I’ll see these feathered fellows hunkered down on the road and I always think I’m going to drive over them!  But at the last moment, they flutter up like enormous moths , beat the dusty haze of my headlights with their wide wings, and disappear into the dark.  Truly mystical little birds that seem part tweeter, part owl and part toad.  I’m glad I was able to see this one up close.

Does anyone know?  IS it a whippoorwill?

It’s been hotter than a snakes rump in a wagon rut here.  Like, HOT, hot.  I want to spend each and every moment in the river or at the lake.  The past three weeks of my life have been merrily devoured by three batches of cabin guests.  My first friend to visit is South Carolinan and she has a sensitive and intelligent heart.  It was my first time meeting her!  I fell in love.  Another friend who was here visiting is a best friend of mine whom I have known since grade seven.  We are exactly the same and directly opposite.  We are sort of dark and light versions of each other.  You’d have to see us together to fully understand.  It was such a relief to be with her.  My connection with her is so simple, direct and electric.  My third batch of people was comprised of a girlfriend (and fire wife) from Idaho with her two blondo baby girls.  They just left this morning and I miss them sorely already.  Gosh.  How lucky am I?  Robert and I tend to live in remote places and I always feel blessed when people are willing to make the trip to see us where we are.

I was fishing with Robbie on the Twisp River a few days ago and I had the largest cutthroat trout of the day on my line.  He kept telling me that my casting was looking incredible which, naturally, made my heart feel like it was going to burst with pride. I told him, “You’re never around to fish with and I’ve been practicing on all the alpine lakes!”  I put out some smokin’ beautiful lines across fast moving mountain water and deserved that cutthroat, boy howdy.  I think river fishing is difficult.  I’m terribly lucky that I’ve been able to watch Rob work fast moving water with his rod for so many years now.

Lastly, I am the girl who is running a small business with the help of the free wifi connection at the Twisp public library.  Yup.  That girl upstairs by the houseplants?  That’s me.  The connection is so fast here I don’t know why I didn’t think of this sooner.  What was taking me a day and a half to do is now taking me 30 seconds.  I am so thankful for this internet connection.  I cannot even tell you how thankful I am.  It’s like my sanity has been restored.  I’ll be traveling in to town with my computer and thumb drive twice a week to do serious computer work.  It’s good to finally be back in the saddle.  Thank you all a thousand times over for being such patient little crawdads.  Things are going to hopefully and truly move at a more normal speed from now on.

I can’t believe how rapidly the month of July has trickled through my fingers.  Where did it go?  August looms.  I’m looking forward to settling into work for three solid weeks and finding a little rhythm in this new month and then a Willie Nelson concert in Boise at the end of the month with my darlin’ baby sister!

Did you see the moon last night?  It shot up through the gap at the end of our little hanging valley and I wanted to spend the entire night howling my heart out at it.

What a beautiful world we live in.

What a beautiful world.

xx

:::Post Scriptus:::

Look at this guy’s images from the fire line.  Perfectly photo journalistic.  Utterly inspiring.

And, on a night when there’s a full moon and your heart feels haunted, hear Daughter.

A Worthy Fish


[Worthy Fish Ring :: sterling silver]

It was my father who taught me to use a spinning reel.  Oh, I don’t know, I must have been four or five years old.  In return, I taught my dad how to catch Northern pike.  I schooled him.  I showed him how I could cast my trusty five of diamonds long and far, reel it in steadily, adding a little herky-jerky action with a repetitive wrist flick.  Reeling, reeling until the leader ran up fast to my rod tip and bumped into the smallest eye on the rod.  Then I’d cast again.  And again.  And again.  Until I caught a fish.  I had the patience and faith of a saint.

The rest is history, as they say.  I brought them in little.  I brought them in big.  Those pike snapped their heinous teeth at me, howled at the moon like water wolves.  They bit me and drew blood.  Oh.  It was a wild battle every time I caught pike.  Every now and again I bonked one on the head, cut it to pieces with my little red Swiss army knife and cooked those white, shimmering fillets over a fire on an outcropping of rock, by a set of rapids on the Churchill River system of Saskatchewan or a quiet shady lake.  I cooked my fish.  Slapped at mosquitoes.  Listened to the wind in the jackpine and birch.  Then I ate that hot fish, picked the bones off my tongue tip, watched the rapids, heard the water thunder, and felt that wild pike in my belly willing me to reach up, shining and narrow, to snap at the clouds in the Northern sky.

That’s why I ate them, you know, especially the fierce little ones that tried to bite my fingers off.  I ate them because I wanted that wild ferocity inside of me, mingling with my DNA, billowing my lungs like the pedals on an old Anglican church organ.  I wanted the fuel of fierceness, the wild and insane fight of a pike in my belly.  I ate a lot of pike the first twenty years of my life.  It’s  probably why I’ve such a stalwart spirit of rebellion inside the cage of my bones.

After pike, I moved on to walleye.  You know you have walleye on the line when you feel them slam into your hook and then fall suddenly silent.  You wonder if you bumped a rock with your lure, or a big patch of weeds.  You wonder.  You wonder.  You reel in some line, carefully, tentatively and suddenly your walleye will begin to fight.  And it’s a good fight.

Walleye.  Pike.  The fish of my younger years.

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Somewhere in New Zealand, on a backcountry hike lit up at night by the Southern Cross and glow worms, I fell in love with a boy when I saw him fly fish for the first time.  Imagine A River Runs Through It, but cut and paste a handsome photograph of Robert’s face over top of Brad Pitt’s and you’ll be able to imagine what I saw.  I sat down in tall grass, biting bugs be damned, and I silently watched his manly poetics as his fly line flashed like yellow silk ribbon between 10 and 2.  Rhythmic.  Controlled.  Effective.  Oh, heck.  I was hooked.  That boy caught me a twenty two inch rainbow trout one day when I was very hungry and we were out of food while hiking the New Zealand backcountry.  That was the best fish I ever ate.

He loved fish.  I loved him.  The fish loved me.  It was a bizarre love triangle.  Eventually, I married him, because I knew if we were ever starving to death he would go out and catch us a fish.  Well, that, and he’s quite handy.

After I married Robert, we moved to Alaska to work for a rafting company.  We lived at the confluence of the Klutina and Copper Rivers — both wild and legendary waterways.  When the salmon started running, we ate fresh caught fish every single night.  Robert was salmon obsessed.  Oh, he had a terrible fish fever.  But me?  In Alaska I fell in love with trout.

It was never too late to go fishing in the land of the midnight sun.  We thought nothing of loading the canoe on top of the rafting van at 11PM, driving for two hours to a lake or river, and fishing until the tiny morning hours.  We were mad for fish.  Robert bought me my first fly rod and taught me how to use it.  He’s still teaching me but I no longer look like a ridiculous bumpkin while casting, as we all do, right when we get started with a fly rod.  Robert was patient and freed my hooks when they caught rose, alder, birch, black spruce on a sloppy backcast.  In point of fact, for the first couple of months, I caught many more trees than fish.  He coached my rhythm a bit, showed me how to give a little action to a wooly bugger as I stripped it in.  He taught me how to tease trout.  How to wiggle a parachute adams above their hungry noses.  How to set a barbless hook in a cold lip and keep tension on the line until I had a fish in hand. He taught me to read water on rivers and lakes.  He taught me so much and I loved landing trout.

At first, I fished with Robert.  After a while, if he was out running errands for our rafting company, I started driving to the small lakes outside of Chitna, just to catch a fish or two, just to see them rising during the dusking hours.  No fish leaps for joy like trout.  I fell in love with their shining, shimmering, silver joy.

We eventually moved, that fisherman and I, from Alaska to Northern California to Arizona — where Robert was a fish biologist for the federal government.  Life in Arizona was pure fishes, every hour, every day, every month, for almost four years.  Robert was growing and researching a crop of 60 000 threatened and endangered fish in outdoor earthen ponds.  At night, while the Arizona sun was setting, I would watch him walk out on the levies with his fly rod.  He’d fish for his endangered fish, in order to inspect them for disease and record their growth.  His casting was as lovely as ever, even in a waterless, troutless land that man found something to catch on the fly.

Eventually, we moved North to Idaho, land of rainbow trout, cutthroat trout, steelhead and salmon.  And then we began to divide our life between Idaho and Washington, a state made of the same kind of fishes.  I am happy to be here.  The fishing is very fine, indeed.

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It occurs to me that my life could be measured in fishes.  I can remember fish I have caught in specific places, the weather of the day, the mood of the water, what I was wearing.  Robert is similar.  We can hike a river together and he will point out the eddies and deep bends he has taken fish from.  I wonder sometimes if Robert loves to see a trout in my hand, the way I love to see a trout in his.

Trout.  They’ve been a steadfast part of our life.  A reason for travel and adventure.  A cherry on top of the desserts of life.  I think they’ve made me a better woman and Robert a better man.  Maybe it’s a slippery, rainbow flanked trout between us that ties and binds us like a golden band on a ring finger.  They are noble things, trout, a worthy fish.

When life gives you limes…

Let me tell you all about the craziness of the Little Cabin In The Woods.  Since we moved up for the fire season, every single day of my life here, something hasn’t worked.  I’m in a position, on a daily basis, to freak out, grow terribly frustrated or give in to a storm of anger.  Here’s a list of things that don’t work or break on a regular basis or have broken and been fixed:  power outage to the Airstream, a fried hard drive in my desktop computer, broken plumbing, power outage in the cabin, patchy internet connection, patchy phone service, broken internet connection (as in, my actual hot spot device is currently broken…I’m not even going to go into how awful it has been dealing with Verizon…) and last but not least, no hot water due to a lack of propane.

Yup.  I’m taking ice cold showers.  It’s brisk!  It’s good for a frustrated soul too.  I’ve had such a short fuse this week…too much emotional strain.  Cold water helps me keep it real.

Life has been jolting about like a 1960 Volkswagen Beetle that is being driven by a kid learning to drive a stick shift for the first time.  Some days I don’t get anything done because I’m trying to solve problems in the cabin or with my connectivity to the outside world.  It can be exasperating.  Instead of pitching a hideous tantrum every single day, I’m trying to view all the troubles I’m having as opportunities.  For instance, when the electricity quits flowing into the Airstream and I can’t work, I view it as an opportunity to walk out into the forest and paint or go bike riding or take a box of beads down to the lake and swim between crafting bead strands.  Or I sit down and practice writing in the heat of the afternoon when the Airstream is like an oven.  All those moments of inconvenience can be turned into life experience, one way or another.

I am master and commander of the chaos.  If I tell it to bug off, it does, and then I can proceed to have a lovely time doing something unrelated to the chaos.

Having to take a cold shower is another thing altogether but when I am in there, I imagine I am under a pretty cascade on a lovely, wild river, in the backcountry.  I have a nice fire going in my campsite and am washing away the sweat of the day.  I caught a couple of beautiful trout earlier on and am looking forward to reading a book in the dusk of the evening.  The water is fresh and cold, pure snow melt from the high country and it makes me feel alive.  You see?  I transported you for a moment, didn’t I?  If I keep my eyes shut while in my cold shower, I can take myself some other place and it seems lovely instead of darn terrible.  In point of fact, when Rob comes home eventually and helps me to load the propane tank into the back of the truck to take to town to be filled, I might miss my cold showers and the wild living of my imagination.  I know.  This is all so disgustingly optimistic.  What can I say?  I’m like a sunflower.  My face follows the light.

Today I am going to a flea market down on the Columbia River.  I might pick up a delicious lunch on the way.  When I get back this evening, I’m going to work on some earrings in the cool of the evening and watch, with gladness, as my forest falls into night.  The stars have been magnificent lately, something to ponder on while I fall asleep in my cozy nest up in the cabin loft.

Life sure can be annoying, but it’s still wonderful.

When life gives you limes, make gin and tonics.

That’s all I have to say about that.

Happy belated Canada Day and Fourth of July to all my beloved Canadians and USA-icans.  I belong to two very beautiful countries and it’s always wonderful to celebrate these awesome lands with friends and family and friends who are like family.

Be well, little saplings,

X

::Post Scriptus::

Cutest overalls ever, right?

A handful of the random and a dash of trees.

 Last week was a nice week.  I finally feel truly settled in here, and know I am because Robert and I spent the weekend together driving back roads in our truck, hiking into little lakes, fishing, reading, kayaking, sipping iced tea and simply enjoying being together and being in love.  We’re still in love, you know?  Really in love.  We’ve been married for nine years but I still feel like I’m nineteen and seeing him for the first time, every single day.

Speaking of love, I am head-over-heels-rump-over-tea-kettle crazy for the woods.  Stark raving mad.  Cuckoo!  Berserkers for the forest.  I was like this last year, too.  If I see a big ponderosa pine tree, I have to hug it, or stop and gaze up at it, dumb in its marvelous presence.  I am filled with such deep appreciation.  Laying my palms against the trunk of a tree makes me feel close to God.  It’s like I’m completing a circuit, there with my feet on earth, my hands on a tree, the tree against the heavens.  It’s electric.  Sometimes it makes me cry, the very aliveness of it, the smallness and hugeness of it.

Tree jottings from this week past:  

When we live here, I am continually dwelling on the idea of trees, the very essence of them, I mean their steadfastness and nature of servitude.

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Why can’t people be more like trees?

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The forest is a boisterous place.  It’s often described as a bastion of quietude and peace but I should choose to more clearly define it as a place free of human racket.  Isn’t a respite from humanity what we are truly seeking when we go out into nature?  I write this from the loft deck at the cabin and all around me is bird racket, the various pitches and frequencies of buzzing bugs, a raven shouting at the wind and beating his wings on the thinness of air, the rapid fire rattle of chipmunks and squirrels, the watery sound of the tree tops surfing the breeze.  It is loud here.  There is sound swirling all around me, tinged and punctuated by the pizzicato of  many living things, but I am not made weary by it like I am the sounds of traffic or the spill and shrill of humans in conversation.  Here, in the forest, it is anything but quiet.

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This is mid-June.  I see and feel the forest cresting, reaching and stretching for the climax of full bloom.  The green is still fresh and new, rich with the effort of merit.  The trees don’t speak, but I know what they are saying, up there, up high, when they clap their leaves and chime their emotions under moon and sun.  I pin a bright badge of respect to the bark of every tree I pass.  Oh, good, tall, stalwart friends.

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Trees for president!

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A forest is a fortress, the very thing to hold me safely in.

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I’ll never get over the ways a ponderosa pine tree wraps its bark, branches and needles around the wavering curves of daylight.  A pondi is a wrangler of sunshine, a true cowboy of a tree, a tall stout thing that gentles the sky, draws it in, makes it into a brave partner and friend. In the kind and splaying hands of the pondi, the spirit of the sky is never broken.  Every needle is a fragrant feather, a remembrance of earth and stone, a glimmer of ground and a tiny defeat of gravity.  How I love the ponderosa pine.