Posts Tagged ‘nature!’

Congo: Close Encounters With Mountain Gorillas

July 8th, 2010

Our lead tour guide Norbert was a park ranger who spent every day tracking gorilla families through the jungles of the Virunga National Park, keeping tabs of their movement throughout the rolling mountain range. We would be tracking the largest gorilla family in the region, called the Kabirizi, spotted in the area in the past few days. The family consisted of 34 gorillas including one male silverback, two male blackbacks, and 10 adult females, nine of whom had babies. The rest of the family were juveniles of various ages.

Dani, Serena and I set out with Norbert and two other guides (whose names, embarrassingly enough, I’ve forgotten, so I’ll call them Tracker Guide and Rear Guide). We walked for about half an hour across a peaceful rolling green steppe, dotted with bright multicolored clusters of wildflowers, until we reached the edge of the jungle.

We’d been told to wear long-sleeved shirts, long trousers and even gloves, to avoid stinging nettles and insects; we knew this would be a tough jungle hike. But as Serena and Dani and I entered the jungle, we were still surprised at how dense it was … no paths, just Tracker Guide bushwhacking through the vines and branches with a machete as Norbert followed, trailed by me, Dani, and then Serena, with Rear Guide last.

Tracker Guide soon found evidence of the gorillas’ path through the forest … torn-off bamboo shoots, broken branches and flattened vines the main clues. We got on the gorillas’ trail and began tracking them in earnest. Every once in a while the guides would stop and Norbert would take GPS readings, log them in a journal, and call the coordinates in to the ranger office to enter in their computer system. They did this kind of tracking at this altitude every day, and subsequently were waaaaay fitter than we three mzungus huffing and puffing behind them. None of the rangers carried a pack or even a canteen, and they tramped through the jungle with ease in their canvas uniforms and rubber boots. Every 45 minutes or so, Norbert would say, “Let’s take a pause,” and the guides would stop and let us drop to the ground and gulp water while they waited politely, not out of breath in the least. If they were annoyed at us for slowing their regular pace, they didn’t show it.

To be fair, this was a brutal trek. We slogged through vegetation dense enough to make us regularly lose sight of one another just a few feet apart, branches hitting our faces as we walked on a carpet of vines so thick our shoes rarely touched the jungle floor. Vines snagged our feet, ankles and legs, making it necessary to yank loose with just about every step. Large stinging ants attacked regularly and mercilessly, able to inflict pain even through denim, swarming into shoes and up trouser legs. Stinging nettles slashed at my gloveless fingers, shielded behind the daypack I carried in front. Our gear wasn’t optimal; for instance, none of us had the correct waterproof footwear. I wore rubber-soled walking shoes, and Dani and Serena had athletic sneakers without much traction. Our unplanned travel style had, yet again, come back to bite us in the ass as we slipped and slid over vines, slick logs, and mud. Had we known we would be gorilla trekking, we’d have prepared better … maybe. Probably not.

After a couple hours we came upon a spot where all the branches and vines had been flattened over a broad area; Norbert said this was where the gorilla family had spent last night, or perhaps the night before. Big piles of fly-covered poop confirmed that theory. Norbert checked the ground for stinging ants and, finding none, invited us to sit in this recently abandoned gorilla nest for a break. The rangers waved away our offers of water or snacks. Tracking Guide and Rear Guide went ahead of us to evaluate the gorilla path and take coordinates. Norbert stood above Dani and Serena and I, watching blankly as we passed around hand sanitizer, energy bars, Red Bull. “We’re from the city,” Serena explained lamely.

Since our path had been forged by gorillas, there was no rhyme or reason to the way it wended and switchbacked up and down. Our patience started to wear thin, and we became more vocal. “Any time now, gorillas, any time,” became a refrain, the cussing and complaining more frequent. We understood clearly that no one could predict where the gorillas would be, that we could be trekking for hours before we found them, but that didn’t stop us from whining, “When are we gonna find them?” or “They’ve got to be close now, right?” Norbert tried to explain to us what we already knew: “Gorillas are not cows. They must move, constantly, to find food. They always are moving. We never know where they might be.”

“Right, right,” we’d respond. “We know that. We’re just bitching.”

On and on, up and down, step after yanking step, the path growing steeper and steeper until we found ourselves climbing a vertical wall covered in vines. Though our protests of “This CANNOT be the only way to get there,” and “This is f’ing RIDICULOUS” we had no choice but to follow our stoic guides up this insane path. We had to grab onto vines, test their strength first and then haul ourselves up, our scrabbling feet rarely able to find a decent hold on the wet vegetation. Even Norbert was having trouble with it, his feet giving way on occasion just like ours did with almost every step. My daypack, transferred to my back now, swung from side to side, tipping my balance. The occasional small ledge offered no rest; we could simply never let go of the vines, or we would fall.

I stopped climbing for a moment and looked behind me and then down. I shouldn’t have. The mountain wall dropped down … far down … the valley below yawned endlessly, the rest of the mountain range vast and distant. We were nowhere near solid ground. Two things occurred to me: one, that if any of us should fall, she’d take out everyone below her; and two, that I was in perhaps the worst place on earth to suffer an injury. We were three hours by foot into a foreign jungle. There was no freaking way I could get hurt here; none, period. My only possible exit from this was through my own power. Fear adrenaline propelled me in the only direction I could go — up. By the time I got to the top of the wall and could stand without clinging to a vine, my hands were shaking so much from exertion and shattered nerves that I could barely uncap my water bottle.

“I hate these sodding gorillas,” Serena panted. “Why can’t they just pick a nice normal path?”

About an hour passed (still uphill, but none that dramatic again) before Tracker Guide doubled back to tell us the gorillas were straight ahead. We didn’t fully believe it; we’d been walking and climbing for so long after these elusive gorillas it seemed like we’d never find them. But when Norbert told us to put on our surgical masks — supplied at the beginning of the expedition, to prevent disease passing to or from the gorillas — we knew this was really it. And then the sky opened up and the rain started to pour down as, I guess, only a Congolese jungle rainfall can.

We had one hour to spend in the gorillas’ presence, in accordance with the rules of the tour, aimed at limiting their exposure to humans. Norbert asked us if we wanted to wait until the rain stopped before we entered the area and the clock started ticking. “To protect your cameras,” he said. “So you won’t be taking pictures in the rain.” Thunder rolled in the distance and the rain had soaked through my daypack, my jeans, and pooled inside my surgical mask. It seemed like a good suggestion. Then we could hear the unmistakable low, bellowing grunt of a very big animal. “No,” we all said at once. “We want to see them now.”

We followed Norbert down a short hill and turned a corner. About 10 meters away, under cover of low spreading branches, sat two big black gorillas. One was cradling a baby, exactly like any human mother I’ve ever seen. The rain glistened on the tips of her shiny fur; it seemed to just bead up and roll off, and even though my teeth were by now chattering, the water running in rivulets down my pant legs and into my shoes, I would bet anything that baby was as warm and comfortable as he ever had been. We stood transfixed, not wanting to move or even breathe. I fished my camera out of my rain jacket and took some blurry pictures.

Branches rustled and three young gorillas came galloping over, between the two adult gorillas and us. They swung on vines, tackled each other and rolled around, acting goofy and loud and pretty much like any human teenager I’ve ever seen. They came right up to us, hooted and beat their chests; Norbert shooed them back, but they did that a couple more times. Though they were young gorillas, half the size of the two adults behind them, they could intimidate. “Don’t be scared,” Norbert told us. “They want us to play with them. They are happy to see mzungu.”

When we mzungu didn’t accept their invitation, the young gorillas resumed running and jumping and rolling around with renewed vigor. It seemed like they were putting on a show for our benefit; they’d charge right past us, close enough at times that we could have reached out and touched them. To watch gorillas play like that in the jungle — now four, five, six gorillas swinging and climbing and rolling and romping and chasing and swatting each other and beating their chests — didn’t seem real, like a production staged for our benefit. But, no, this is really how gorillas act in the wild.

We could have stayed there and watched them all day, but Norbert urged us to walk a bit farther in to see more. Our lead guide really came into his element around the gorillas; he began talking to them in a low throat-clearing grunt, a pretty great imitation of how they sounded. Norbert pointed out the gorillas all around us … in the treetops, climbing across branches, slinging themselves heavy-armed along the ground on their knuckles. Since the jungle was so thick, most of the time a mad rustling signaled their presence well before we could see them. Their chest pounding echoed around us like drumbeats. We were surrounded by gorillas.

The mothers went up in the treetops with their babies and mainly stayed there. The others were alternately on the ground or climbing trees looking for food. They really tore apart the jungle, pulling huge limbs loose and tossing them aside as they stripped them of their fruit, and sending branches or treetops crashing to the ground with their weight. It seemed like they were completely trashing the place, but I guessed it all would grow back in no time.

The rain petered out and a humid steam rose up, and there they were, the Gorillas in the Mist, just as Dian Fossey had described them. Some of them passed us so casually, just a few feet from us, we knew they didn’t consider us a threat. Still, every close encounter with a big gorilla — particularly the gigantic steely-eyed silverback alpha male (who, in one goosebump-raising instance, crossed within five meters of me) — gave us a thrill of fear.

Norbert said it was time to go. I stood there for a minute longer, trying to take at least one or two final photos that weren’t blurry (as my camera by now had gotten very, very wet). The big gorilla above me sprang to a neighboring tree. A thundering crack and, boom, down came the top half of the tree, gorilla and all. He had fallen pretty far, and for a good half-minute I heard nothing but silence. I wondered if he’d been hurt, and if so, how badly. But then a rustling, and a furry black head popped up through the branches and leaves. The gorilla hoisted himself onto the log of a fallen tree that crossed my path. He walked on it until directly in front of me, then he sat down and fixed his gaze on me. It took every bit of control I had to stay there. I snapped a few pictures and lowered my camera, looking at his face for real, not through the lens, at his absolutely human eyes. Then, photo time over, he got up and kept climbing, leaving his momentary diversion standing in awe as he continued on with his day.

Rwanda: Kigali and Lake Kivu

July 3rd, 2010

We stayed in Kigali another day and night, visiting one of the rural genocide memorials — a Catholic church in nearby Nyamata. There, about 5,000 people had been killed while hiding in the church, believing it to be their only safe haven. Serena, Dani and I hired a taxi driver and drove out of the city, into the gently undulating hills, about 45 minutes south. It was close to dusk and the caretakers were closing up when we pulled in. They agreed to give us a quick tour, and really that’s all we needed.

In the main sanctuary the screeching of bats punctuated the stillness. A statue of the Virgin Mary, mounted just under the bullet-hole-pockmarked ceiling, presided over wooden pews covered in mounds of moldering clothing … that of all the victims murdered there. Downstairs is a white-lit room with glass shelves containing skulls and bones, the former lined up row by row and the latter piled up neatly, femurs and tibias carefully stacked.

To see all these remains on display is, of course, disturbing, and one wonders why the memorial planners chose to lay the victims to rest in such a public manner. But this is one way to really understand the scale of the carnage that took place here, the sheer numbers of people all killed at once. Lots of the skulls show how their owners succumbed … small round holes meant bullet wounds, while jagged holes in a spiderweb of cracks and fissures meant death by bludgeoning.

Outside the quiet still church, we could hear the rhythmic calls of large birds swooping through the trees and the distant singing of another, very much alive, church congregation nearby, punctuating the quiet and deepening dusk. Two more mass graves are outside, sunken cement pits with steep staircases leading to barracks-like corridors. These are lined with shelves three deep of skulls and bones, arranged in the same neat symmetry. Row after row, skull after skull, one set of empty eye sockets after another that seem to stare back at you.

We left a donation to the memorial and tips for the two caretakers who had stayed late to tour us around, and got back into the car for the journey home. Night was falling fast and we realized no one around here had electricity, so it had became eerily black. Only the bright full moon, and our headlights falling on the winding mountain roads, lit our drive back.

The next day we got on a bus and bounced about three hours west to Lake Kivu, which spans the border of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That was really a spectacular drive — Rwanda has been called the “Land of a Thousand Hills” and “Africa’s Switzerland,” and all the picturesque towering green hills and valleys do live up to the nicknames. We passed other genocide memorials … these are evidenced by purple bunting and signs in the local language which contain the words “Jenocide” and, in English, “Never Again.” I remembered what our friend Adollphe had told us a couple of nights earlier: that in the capital city of Kigali, the victims had mainly been dispatched quickly and neatly, by shooting — but out in the provinces is where the real sick stuff took place. Slow, torturous butchery by machete or club or knives or rocks. I had to shake this knowledge away and try to appreciate the haunting and endless beauty of the landscape. It wasn’t possible, though; both the sweeping majesty of Rwanda and its tragic history have become inexorably intertwined.

By the time the undulating hills had given way to craggy mountains spiking up through the clouds, we rolled into the lakeside border town of Gisenyi. Because we’ve utterly failed at planning anything on this trip — which is both exciting and stupid, depending on how you look at it — we got to Gisenyi after dark with no room booked and only a few vague ideas of the local accommodations. After a few inquiries, we found a rather pricey but gorgeous place right on the lake called Hotel Paradis, which would do for one night until we could find more reasonable lodging in town in the morning. It turned out to be some great fortune that we did this, as our next-door “neighbor” was an absolutely fabulous, interesting and fun woman named Sharon who came to Africa as a retirement gift to herself after years of teaching English as a Second Language at UC-Berkeley. It also turns out she knew my cousin Sue Conley and her Cowgirl Creamery business partner, Peggy (is there anyone in the Bay Area who doesn’t know Peggy and Sue?). We had nice tilapia dinner in the hotel’s rustically lush open-air common room, drank Primus beer, and watched Ghana beat the USA in the World Cup match before Sharon went to bed early, as she was getting up before dawn to go gorilla trekking.

The next day the three of us spent the morning outside the hotel being thoroughly charmed by some local kids, playing with a blow-up beach ball and plastic kite we’d brought along for just such an occasion. We moved to a less luxe but serviceable guesthouse in town and went exploring through Gisenyi. At first glance, we really didn’t like the town much … the streets too rocky and dirty and rutted, the buildings too ramshackle and depressing, the people eyeing us suspiciously. We trudged along a hot dirt road looking for the lake beach until a local guy came out, took pity on us, and corralled two boys walking by to guide us to the lakefront. Twenty minutes later we crested a hill and saw the vast Lake Kivu rolling out before us, its sandy beaches alive with people sunning and swimming and playing in the water.

Along the lake was some sort of public expo, sort of like a fair without rides, just a lot of booths with crafts and food and a DJ on a stage blasting dance music. Our attitude toward Gisenyi brightened considerably as we sat by the water and feasted on grilled corn on the cob and goat kebabs and fried potatoes, washing it down with lemon Fanta. Then we walked over to the nearby Hotel Serena to watch the World Cup game, England vs. Germany.

While at the hotel we met another very cool person, an English guy named David who has been living/working in Rwanda and the next-door border town in the Congo, called Goma, for years. After lamenting England’s loss to Germany, David ended up convincing Serena and Dani and I of two things: that we should check out the Congo, because Goma really kinda/sorta does not apply to all the travel advisories warning us otherwise; and that we should go gorilla trekking come hell or high water, because that would be one of the most unforgettable experiences of our lives. We made plans to cross the border the next day and see what Goma is like, and figure out how to get ourselves signed up for a last-minute gorilla trek.

Uganda: Kampala and Lake Bunyonyi

June 24th, 2010

After a good barbecue dinner at Red Chilli on Sunday night, Serena, Dani and I woke before dawn to get to the Kampala bus station for the second leg of our journey, a 7-hour trip west to Uganda’s mountain region. Since we’re doing a lot of fly-by-the-seat-of-our-pants travel, we decided to once again follow our friend Nick’s suggestion and stay in an eco-lodge outside the city of Kabale, on an island in Lake Bunyonyi along the Rwandan border.

The Red Chilli staff had told us the bus to Kabale left at 8 a.m., so when we arrived at the hot, crowded, noisy bus station an hour in advance, we felt rather irritated to learn it actually departed at 9. We had no other place to sit but inside the stifling bus, and we had to claim our seats anyway, but those first two hours crammed together on the vinyl bus bench — in front of a TV screen blaring African music videos and graphic, violent, badly overdubbed Chinese martial-arts films — reeeeeally took its toll on our mood. After what seemed like way longer than two hours, the bus driver finally climbed in and the engine coughed and shuddered to life, rolling us out of there and hitting us with a merciful blast of cool moving air.

We felt nervous about this particular bus trip, since all the travel forums and blogs we’d checked the night before had warned us it would be horribly difficult. “Hellish” is a word we’d read more than once as traveler after traveler online described death-defying driving, godforsaken rutted roads and disgusting bus conditions. This journey would “challenge even the most seasoned travelers,” the Lonely Planet forums had told us, and so we felt more than a little trepidation as the bus got moving. But the trip really wasn’t bad at all … the three of us had experienced far worse in other countries. (See “Overland Through Laos” on this site for one example.) The roads didn’t seem particularly awful, nor did the driving, and the bus was a typical developing-country public bus, no better or worse than any others on which we’d ridden. We decided that either the conditions had radically improved since those forum entries were posted, or that the people who’d written them were total wimps. Most likely the latter.

We drove past green fields, crops, villages and roadside market stalls, marveling at how all developing countries, no matter the continent, share so many of the same qualities … corrugated-tin or thatched roofs, open metal-grill windows, local ads painted in faded colors on the sides of squat buildings or on cement walls, burning piles of trash. Rolling past acres and acres of banana trees punctuated by the occasional fruit stand or row of shacks, I felt like I could have been anywhere in Southeast Asia. That perception only came in waves, because in other ways there are huge differences. The buildings here have brick foundations instead of the concrete you see in Asia, owing to the red clay/dirt that’s so prevalent here and good for brickmaking. Different animals, too: the cattle used on Ugandan farms are steers with long curving horns, not the bulky caribou of rural Asia. Goats are everywhere here, and I saw one absolutely mammoth bird soar by that reminded me of a pterodactyl (I’ve got to Google it and find out what that was). The people here make the biggest visual difference; they are big and strong and sturdy, the opposite of the wiry, compact Asian body type. I loved watching Ugandan women walking down the road balancing heavy tubs, boxes or baskets on their heads, or with babies strapped to their backs, clad in vivid, regal dresses that reach their ankles.

Though the journey wasn’t the jostling nightmare we’d been warned about, we still rejoiced when the bus pulled into Kabale seven hours later. Exhausted, hungry and covered in a layer of red grit that infiltrated hair, teeth and clothes, the three of us staggered off the bus only to be accosted by at least a dozen taxi drivers trying to get our business. I’ve dealt with this before, but it still is unsettling to be grabbed at, pulled, jostled, and have several men shouting in your face and yanking at your bags in a tug-of-war over your tourist money. We chose one of the more polite cab drivers, a guy named Jackson with whom I chatted while Dani and Serena popped into a grocery store. He’s a really nice man who gave us some helpful info, and we’ll be calling on him again for rides. Always Ask A Local.

Jackson dropped us off at a boat dock on Lake Bunyonyi (“place of many little birds”) where an employee of the Byoona Amagara eco-lodge waited with a motorboat to drive us through the picturesque glass-smooth giant lake ringed by rolling, terraced green hills. Byoona Amagara is on one of the lake’s many little islands, which are home to other buildings, homes, schools, even an ancient exile island where unmarried pregnant women were dumped to die … hard to believe such a sinister place could ever exist in this gorgeous lake (it’s a museum now). Byoona Amagara is truly eco-friendly with limited solar-powered electricity and where everything (and I do mean everything) is composted. A hostel dorm, 4-person cabin, luxury cottage and two thatched “eco-domes” are the accommodations here; we have the cabin since our first choice, the eco-domes, were booked. The menu has truly delicious food, there is cold beer and good coffee and tea and Internet access, a cinema room and library, and a tiny gift shop in the cafe area selling woven basket items, African textile placemats and t-shirts. It’s from here that I’m writing this now, watching the sun go down over pink-ringed clouds behind the distant mountains. We spent the day walking up and down the surrounding hills, swimming in the lake and lying in the sunshine on a little private floating dock, listening to the musical calls and hoots and shrieks of the birds that live here, none of which I’ve ever seen or heard before.

(One of the staff just came over and wanted to know all about this iPad … I just gave her a little tour of it and she’s amazed and wanted to know how much it costs. Apple comes to Lake Bunyonyi.)

The big deal around here is mountain gorilla trekking, and we naively thought we could just come on in and find a gorilla trek to join at the last minute. Nope, you have to book way in advance, so it looks like we’ll be missing the mountain gorillas. Disappointing for sure, but it’s hard to feel too bad when we’ve already seen so much and the trip has just begun and there is so much more ahead of us. Tomorrow is Dani’s birthday and we’re moving across the border to Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, to celebrate where it’s more cosmopolitan. After that we’ll make our way somehow to Port Victoria, Kenya, but those exact plans are yet to emerge. Right now all that’s certain is this deepening grey-blue sky that sinks into purple behind the silhouette of trees atop neighboring hills, and the rhythm of cicadas, and chirping of crickets, and trilling of birds, and the kitchen helpers chattering and laughing and singing along with the radio, and the flickering of lanterns that they’re lighting now that night falls.

Visible in tonight’s partly cloudy sky: Saturn, the constellations Antlia, a little bit of Centaurus and Lupus, and a 3/4 moon.

Cry for the Cajuns

June 11th, 2010

I haven’t been writing lately, aside from some rather soulless sales and PR gigs. Really I’ve been too sad about the Gulf of Mexico horror and other personal shiz to say much of anything fun and travelly, so I just post pictures and wait for things to change.

Today I read that the BP oil spill has claimed P&J Oyster Co. in New Orleans, the country’s oldest oyster supplier, which had to shut down after 134 years because most of the oyster beds that had been supplying it for generations are dead. The rest are being killed by fresh water being diverted from the Mississippi River in a desperate bid to flush some of the oil away from the shorelines.

This is just one story, one company. Before too long there will be thousands more like it.

Those families down in south Louisiana are among the most decent and wonderful people I’ve ever met: hardworking, tough, fun, smart, creative and expressive. Everything about them is rich and full and lively: their music, their food, their language, their art. And while there are people on earth who probably deserve to be driven into hardship and see their homes turned into a toxic graveyard, it sure as hell isn’t them. Nobody deserves to have one’s heritage taken away, relegated to museums, not died out over time but killed.

That south Louisiana way of life, woven into those marshes and bayous teeming with life — it’s being irretrievably changed, and possibly destroyed forever. As resilient as those Cajuns are, how can they survive a death blow like this? How do you put a price tag on an entire culture? And why, for the love of God, do they keep getting screwed?

See, this is why I don’t write much these days, because I can’t think far beyond this. Next week I leave the country. Maybe I’ll write more then.

~
~

The Lost Argentine Diaries Part 5: Glacier Photo Edition

June 8th, 2010

A few photos of the glaciers at El Calafate, Argentina. Taken in May 2007. Waayback.

Death in the Gulf

May 4th, 2010

I’d love to post something fun from this sunny weekend in California, but I’m too saddened and sickened by the oil slick the size of Delaware that’s threatening to destroy the Gulf of Mexico, as BP’s oil well continues to spew 5,000 barrels of crude per day, unchecked, into the water.

As a scuba diver, beach lover, nature enthusiast, environmentalist and person who will always consider Louisiana her home, no matter where in the world she is — I am at a loss. These photos were taken on the beach at Waveland, Mississippi, this weekend by resident Jenny Lindsay Bell. The rest of her photo series is on Facebook.

You may or may not know that Waveland was one of the towns most severely destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005; after the storm I wrote an article about Waveland as a freelance journalist for the Jackson Free Press (sorry bout the janky character problems in the story; hope it’s readable). The people of Waveland went through horrors that you and I can’t imagine … and now this.

It’s not just the gruesome and massive loss of life that’s occurring in the Gulf of Mexico right now as I type this; it’s the unprecedented losses to the fishing/shrimping industry that is the backbone of that region’s culture and economy. It’s the toxic fumes and seepage that will surely displace people yet again from their homes and businesses and daily lives. It’s the fact that these middle-class, average people are five years into an agonizingly slow recovery from being hammered down by Katrina and now there’s this looming threat that could make the aftereffects of that storm seem like nothing.

This is a slow-moving, relentless toxic hurricane barreling into an already pummeled land and people and wildlife. Its effects will be felt for years, perhaps generations, to come.

Drill, baby, drill … Where are all the Teabaggers who chanted that lovely mantra like drones? Are they volunteering for cleanup duty?

Road Trip – San Francisco to Oregon

April 9th, 2010

Despite all the traveling I’ve done in the continental U.S., I’ve spent relatively little time in the Pacific Northwest. I aim to fix that now that I’m spending a prolonged period of time in the Bay Area, and my first road trip involved a six-hour drive from San Francisco to Ashland, Oregon, a beautiful little town right across the California-Oregon border.

As we drove up I-5, the topography took the turn from lush rolling foothills to spiky, towering mountains, reminding me why I need to continue exploring the Pacific Northwest. Mountains have a way of conveying majesty in a way that the ocean, with its impossible vastness, cannot. A mountain is at once humbling and inspiring — finite, looming proof of how small and impermanent we are.

As much as I wanted to keep on driving up, up, up north, I was with other people and couldn’t just follow my whims as as I can when I’m traveling solo. Not that I’m complaining too loudly; Ashland is lovely and worth a few days’ time to stop and take it all in.

Spontaneous Sonoma Drive

April 1st, 2010

Today I drove out to Petaluma to pick up some stuff I’d left there during the weekend. I had my day all mapped out in my head: what errands I had to run, where I needed to go to do them, what time I should stop and get some work done, little projects I had to finish … such a superproductive day this was shaping up to be! The rain had come earlier in the morning and dim clouds lingered on the periphery as a distant threat, but for the most part the blue skies won out, peeking from behind giant billows of white. As I drove into Sonoma County the landscape began unrolling around me in towering verdant hills dotted with lush trees, and I saw a sign that said OLD REDWOOD HIGHWAY.

Driving is a guilty pleasure of mine in which, for lots of reasons, I shouldn’t and don’t indulge much lately. I’m not talking about the get-here-go-there driving; I’m referring to highway driving, road-tripping, relaxing and listening to tunes and watching the outdoors roll by. Aimless drives without worrying about traffic signals, pedestrians, bikes, directions. So I passed the four Petaluma exit signs and — inner dialogue by now a shouting match between You Shouldn’t and You Should — turned onto Old Redwood Highway and drove into the sunshine. Hills. Wind. Trees, flowers, river crashing through a gorge down below the road. The Old Redwood Highway can get twisty and hilly and close, through ridges and between winery after winery, the hills rippling out on both sides lined with grapevines.

I didn’t get a chance to take many pictures; holding a camera up to the window for a few seconds while driving yielded the predictable results. I didn’t try this method at all on some of the more winding parts of Old Redwood Highway, because I didn’t want to end up in a ditch at the bottom of a hill, all for a bunch of blurry photos. I don’t suppose the camera could have captured the overarching peacefulness of the place, anyway. There’s a preternatural calmness about vast rolling hills made for cultivation.

On other parts of the highway, the hills expanded a bit and not all were wineries; I saw a fair number of horses and cows and other crops. It occurred to me that aimless cruising on a sunny day gives me that sense of travel that I crave when I’m settled in one place. Maybe, even though I was unquestionably blowing off some obligations, this was good for my General Sense of Well-Being. Which is essential for quality work, anyway, right? I was feeding the muse, dammit.

One photo I, regrettably, didn’t get: the billboard I passed that said MEDICAL MARIJUANA CONSULTATION, with a local clinic’s phone number. It made me wonder what such a consultation would be like. …

DOCTOR: “Do you get headaches? Neck aches? Back aches? Any combination of those?”
PATIENT: “Yes.”
DOCTOR: “Do you sometimes have trouble sleeping? Suffer from anxiety?”
PATIENT: “Why … yes. And yes.”
DOCTOR: “Do you find that you don’t eat enough Fritos, and are missing too many episodes of South Park?”
PATIENT: “Yes!”
DOCTOR: “Here’s your prescription.”


Ba-dump bump.

Maryland in Winter

March 4th, 2010

Some photos taken February at Rock Creek Park bordering Maryland and Washington DC, and in Ocean City, MD. Photos were snapped during and after severe winter storms of 2010.

Coney Island in winter

February 3rd, 2010

Taken at Coney Island Amusement Park and beach in New York, Jan. 22, 2010. A vast, empty, lonely, eerily beautiful place.