Wednesday, November 23, 2022

roadside frankfort/jim beam nature preserve

 10/27/2022

we're driving to frankfort, the hackberry trees, knobby bark by the roadside, are bare now. A dead deer lies in a ditch, takes me back to the the deer i hit driving home from TN at the tail end of fall break, down in clinton county. i screamed and covered my eyes and came to a standstill along an undriven country highway.

i dreamt of honey locust, i spotted a spat along the way.

in soils lecture today i was confused, confounded and consumed by the things within me.

this morning i woke at dawn to take my car to the collision garage, for no good reason honestly since all they did was take pictures for an estimate and send me on my way. the sunlight was warming the world, elijah drove to the farm in midway, i turned south from the stripmall segment of nicholasville to get a little time among the trees at Beam Preserve. I pulled up, past the reflective pool in the farm plot, past the old graves by the gravel road. 

i had thirty minutes, i was enamored at first by the fog in the channel of the kentucky river's carving. i took the more gradual side of the loop down, saving the valley view for later. thick leaf layer, lush litter underfoot. limestone set into the trailside like a weather-worn seat. I crunch along beneath the chinkapins, sugar maples, i scan the blanket of loss for clues as to who towers above.

the trail turns, i come to parallel the palisades. the fog is thick, i say valley full of fog full of fog-full to my self as i carry on. 

i stop for a moment at the lookout point, humble chunks of flat limestone at the head of a cliff, view of the river choked out by trees committed to a season of dormancy. 

i tighten my laces for the hike back up. i'll be back later, hoping when the leaves fall i'll get my eyes on the slow loving Kentucky. my georgia boots slip on the knobs of roots, i hop back in my deer-battered CRV. i putter back to lexington, to school, to do my silly little things in silly little buildings.

i went to soils lecture in an auditorium, i went to work in the greenhouse, i biked over to the geology building and got into a van for our lab field trip. we're split into two vans--one covered in stickers from its history: an appalachian trail sticker, so many from the gorge--the other only bearing one stating

black canyon

of the

gunnison

white font on a black background. late october, clumps of lilac flowers bob low to the ground. 

a kiss among the scrub pines.

i look out the window, past an old barn clad with a red roof, past the hills, to the palisades, a river valley shrouded by trees. good to see you again, baby.

when it's light out i see my friends, roadside. but we're driving too fast an i don't know enough to call out their names. 

i am on a hillside, exposed rock leading up to this ridge, i recognize patches of flakey bark before me, i look up--oh sycamore.

hall's. flow in june

(i better get back to the palisades)

Monday, November 21, 2022

pottsville escarpment

 when it rains in the hills somethin beautiful happens... mist rises from the creeks and snakes thru the valleys, leaves of sycamores and beeches and magnolias bob with the fallingwater. layers of stormclouds hang above the rolling landscape. thru the slate skies a slice of sunset peeks


Monday, September 12, 2022

the sun moves in the blue sky, time performs its duty

(little lady long lonesome day/sept 12 2022)

my window unit hisses groans whines tonight. two darknesses sandwiched against each other. i feel myself going away from myself and try to focus on the moon.

i am bobbing in a palette of shade. my life seems so far away. earlier, grey asphalt spooled up beneath my bike wheel. i cut an oscillating path down to campus and back, then back and back.

cryin dreams of kneeling down bfore the stilled pool into which falls lick creek from that break in the rust-stained rockroof. 

shining boulders they sneer before me

one parched creek bed to my self

this valley is a closet

this valley is an iron maiden

this valley is a cask lined with salt

barren like the amargosa barren like a dust bowl bitter girl

ac screaming hangnails bleeding. natalie im sorry i startled you coming back to camp from a smoke when the air was sweet and heavy with the sagebrush summer night. the pulsing hand. what i can never say and what i cant convey

(feb 25, 2022)

i play games of numbers with myself, like how many pages can i read today, how many days will i make my 20-some-odd spirits last, how can i pass the time til the days, or more simply weeks dwindle down from 4-3-2-1 then zero

i am listening to a playlist i made in may of 2019. i remember driving down meadow in my subaru, i am weaving the outback through the lane, cars on either side of the tight neighborhood, houses new and old, our house on the hill. we assign meaning to places--so many tenants, how many different meanings?

(feb 27, 2022)

early morning watched the first of the day's light kiss the tops of the hills beyond our campsite. i may hike up there today, since the work truck's out of whack. last night a tire blew right at the gates and we hiked up the rest the way to camp under the screen of stars, passed skittering coyotes, striding up the switchback

2:49 back at my smoke spot. days passing slowly. saw those little birds again as i come up to the water tank, theyre children laughing "cheep-cheep" as they flit to perch atop stalks of century plants. the strange desiccated plant shimmies as they land and take flight again, only to hop upon a nearby stalk.

its warm up here. a long-stalked, weedy stem ends in a yellow flower bud and bobs lazily in the breeze. lazy like these days at camp, where i sit in the sun, return to the shade, read, hide in the truck, perform some variation of this pattern as the sun moves in the blue sky and time performs its duty.

Sunday, September 4, 2022

february, 2022: living in a tent at castaic lake state park

[January 17th-March 26th I worked on a conservation crew in the angeles national forest, my first time visiting california. ive been re-reading journals lately from this time and I wanted to throw some of this writing down here. why? i dont really know. maybe i shouldn't be looking back on things like this and maybe im too sentimental, but this kind of hurts my heart. but in a good way i think.]

Friday, February 11th, 2022. 7:53 PM

    A gentle evening breeze that sounds like someone sighing deeply, or drawing breath sharply. Feeling roses bloom of gratefulness for this simple life I lead, where my work feels enough. For my daily routine of watching the sun come up over the mountains on the other side of the lake, and for watching it hide again in the evening behind the ridgeline beyond my tent. For acknowledging nightly the big dipper, and betelgeuse, and the whims of the wind, and the heat, and open water and crashing waves of water and water dried up.

    For being myself again, it feels. For being stronger every day, and conscious of the subtle slow ways of the Earth beneath, around, above me. 

    This battle in my mind for control over my own life and what my mother would want for me. (I started weeping. I couldn't sleep.) I live such a crazy, free, cosmopolitan life. I bare the length of my legs in the daytime, the front of my thigh is pocked by ink. Things I would never let my mother see.

    Today we went to the beach. I undressed and Taylor and Jacob and I laid on one blanket in the sand and watched a tide pull in and out. Oh wide blue sky, hot february sun over Santa Monica, the numbing ocean water lapping at my feet first, then slowly anesthetizing, the rest of my legs, then the trunk, then daring myself to be fully swallowed by the Pacific, bobbing playfully with a wave rolling in, rolling out, pushing, sweeping me up. 

    My glasses are off, distant laughter, blunted worship of simple touch, hazy sight. Licking my salty lips. Turning back towards the sand, your eye catching on your own shadow spilled upon the beach foam. And then I know I'm not done yet--I turn back to the wave.

Saturday, February 12th. 7:23 AM

Little birds in the morning by my tent that sound like children screeching in glee, playing and shrieking.

10:52 AM

    A little nomad girl stands at the gates of a city. She flees for the wide-open plains. 

    Here at Castaic, the gentle hill where I've set my tent is graced by shrubby green where the earth isn't eroded through to the dirt. A bed of lupines, little violet flowers, little lacy weeds that remind me of the spleenworts and meadow-rues of home.

2:52 PM

    Now the afternoon sun is high and hot overhead, yet the breeze chills the skin slightly and the moon is sighted faintly in a very nearly perfect blue sky. To growth, to burning, to reaching, to broadening vocabularies--of movement, of knowledge, of ways of strength.

4:50 PM

    The eye of the sun shines through the leaves of the eucalyptus trees, beyond the stairs to the campground, sending our shadows long across the pavement where Jacob and I sat basking in the warmth. Ravens swoop and cast their shadows upon the hills. Their coats are shiny and they bob lackadaisically, claws scratching over the fissured earth. Two sat by the stairs, heads close together like teenagers gossiping in a highschool hallway. 

    To the left of the lake, the shadows gouge deep into the sides of the hills, running down towards the water. Above, the sky's blue gently turns from a pale yellow to a deep lilac, which will only grow as the day goes. In between the moon beams brighter. It is a perfect time now, like sugary jasmine tea, like a warm smiling embrace, like a lover brushing his lips upon the space on the back of your neck.

    As ravens swoop, the tinier birds (whose names are not known to me) frighten me as they stir in a bush or low among the grasses. They flit up, and flee, flapping in little bursts, bouncy, choppy flight.

February 13th.

    Hot sun falls onto Castaic, heat that steals your strength, that leaves you content to lie atop your sleeping bag in your tent and watch the shadows sway and dance over the taut fabric as a light, teasing breeze barely ruffles the eucalyptus leaves. Beyond their sparse canopy, the blemishless blue sky, and two ravens in flight, wings parted proudly to catch the air. A gasp of chilling water would hit good right about now.

February 15th, 3:06 PM.

    Today I unzipped my tent and saw looming dark clouds and felt the cold. The lake seemed moody, enchanting. Stray sunrays filtered through the dense cloud cover. The rain began lazily and weakly. Ravens still swooped and perched atop branches. We got our trailwork assignment, did some tool cleaning, then went climbing.

7:07 PM

    The moon is making its bright path through a night sky swirled with the remainder of this rainy day's clouds. My tent vestibule is a mudpit. I went down the slope behind my tent to smoke and saw her light come boldly through the eucalyptus trees.

    We made chili for dinner on the coleman stove and sat in the truck, seeking refuge from the cold and wind, and talked of our dreams, goals, fears. The sun was setting: as the stew cooked down we witnessed gold hillsides framing the bright blue lake, sun finally fully revealing itself, indigo mountainsides, on the other side of the sky, in the direction of the tents, a sunset enhanced by the diffusion of clouds, light divided up by leaves + branches. 

    Now I am warm in my tent, listening to Townes Van Zandt. The promise in her smile shames the mountains tall. 

    I will learn, grow, and love.

    As I was finishing my day, doing my silly little human tasks, I saw the moonlight spill broadly into the black lake.

February 16th.

    These off days I've been skipping early sunrises but this morning I still felt the moment when my tent's fabric lit up warmly, suddenly. Last night was strong winds that flexed by tent, driving the walls flat, roaring and flowing through and up the valley with abandon.

    The sun and the clear skies surrounding her promise the mud will dry, and one day again the earth with be cracked, parched, dusty, begging for rain.

    We worked on the trail today and got home a little after 5:30, tail end of sunset. I looked out the F250 window and the big beautiful bodacious moon was rising out of the cover of the hills framing the lake. She is casting a shimmering spotlight onto the dark water. I feel like maybe, if I tiptoed, I could dance upon its surface.

February 17th, 4:24 PM.

    It's been a month now, on the job, sleeping in that dank little tent. At the very present moment we're verging on golden hour, sun creeping closer and closer to the horizon, warm light spilling onto the trees, cement, lake, hills. 

    When we were working in that patch of forest the late afternoon light was spilling onto the leaves of the eucalyptus. That young frail foreigner, and so many needles of pine. I cleared brush from the path, pinecones impaled themselves upon the tines of my McLeod. I unearth another potato bug, pleased to see its silly grubby body. I found an earthworm and smiled, picked it up and saw its ridged length flecked within by excreta, pulse with digesting decomposition, the shed waste of trees, looming high above me, animal droppings, insect casings, whatever finds a resting place in this soil.

    A recent burn zone, the dirt smelled healthy, conducive to life. I raked and listened to Flora Purim and thought about the ego. Playing in the dirt, daydreaming of the future. 

    Come across the stump of a pine, glazed with sap, adjust your trajectory, rake on. I set my nalgene on a wide stump perspiring with the sticky fluid of this tree's life. When I placed my gloves on the stump the sap soaked into the leather, leaving little dark spots like tears on a pillow. 

Friday, February 25th.

    I was accepted into the PCT rock crew for the summer. So all that is left to my decision. To be on the road again.

    I was sitting under the waving eucalyptus trees, at the wooden bench onto which daylight filtered through leaves swaying in the wind. A wind that is not violent, but still chilling, a wind that tugged the hoodie off my head, sent the strands of hair that escaped my bun flying free.

    Earlier I walked up to the water tank. Everything is changing, blooming. First the only flowers were the little magenta ones scattered amongst the clover, peppering the scrubby low-laying greenery, spreading over the earth, protecting it from growing barren and dry as it is in patches where once many feet danced, or paced or walked upon it. Families, scouting troops, trail runners and their dogs. Now me and my lonesome. No child, no husband. I thought I felt my womb stir, but no blood has yet spilled forth.

    But now lupines everywhere bloom erect in worship on the sun, where once I saw only the delightful seven-pronged starbursts of their leaves. There too are yellow buds, and from bushes with little succulent-like leaves grow bursts of pale-pink tiny flowers, fringed with delicate hairs, and of course the bush-mallow buds. As I walked back down from the water tank I saw a little yellow butterfly that seemed to be bouncing on waves of wind, past to flowering shrubs, descending into the valley.

    The lake is deep blue, in constant rhythmic movement. The pulse of the water never seems to die. Ravens swoop over it, graceful. But the wind is not kind to me, it hurts my hands to write outside, so I am hiding in the truck. 

    How I forget to, or avoid writing some days, instead letting my experiences pass through my perception like sand filtering out from between my fingers. They say it is enough to be in the moment. But my obsession with writing, my disappointment in myself when I do not record, or depict what I can see stems from my greed for life itself. 


 


Monday, May 23, 2022

Pilgrim at Clemons Fork

Pilgrim at Clemons Fork

May 9th - May 21st  




Tuesday, May 10th, hydrology day. We were standing on a fern-covered slope in Falling Rock watershed. A caterpillar hung out on a drooping lousewort leaf. Who will you become? A fly buzzed as it landed on my hand and crawled about frenetically. I flicked it off. A jumping spider leapt from wood fern to mayapple leaf. Heart-leaf foamflowers burst like puffs of white confetti. Palmate veins of a violet leaf furrow out from the base to meet again at the tip. Eastern hemlock needles seemed to sparkle, charged with sunlight. A swallowtail flitted just above the water where waterbugs glided to and fro on its surface. 


    I thought back on the day before. Shelby and I hurtled down the mountain parkway, past Clay City, past the Red River, east-bound and down to Breathitt County. We walked and learned about trees and played in the water. After dinner we decided to take the rough, steep route to the fire tower. As we traveled forth to upland forest, far above camp, the sun came to kiss the crown of each tree, electrifying the canopy with a warm glow. We went up into the orange and found the Forestry interns, Chase and Tucker, already up on the tower. They came down, said, “It’s all yours,” joked about the brutal trail and how the tower swayed a bit in the wind. 


    Hands tight on the railings, scaling level by level. The platforms get smaller and smaller as we ascend, changing perspectives, getting a glimpse of the forest as a whole family of trees–like a sea, undulating over hills, swooping into valleys. A world tinged gold because of a dying sun. I’ll have to go up again to try and note the nuances of the forest family surrounding us. Are those white oaks? I can’t make out the margins, the eye fails to discern venation and individual shapes from so far up.




May 11th. Wednesday morning, heat rising quickly, hitting the tops of the ridgetop trees, filling this valley. The base of a tree is a cradle of life. Mosses, clover, little sprouts of shrubby weeds. 


    Tiny flowers of lyreleaf sage like faerie bells. Like if I ran my finger gently over these stalks, a sweet chime would issue. They grow in a shaded patch behind the men’s cabin. I plucked a bit off the top to crush and see if it’d smell nice, and more little flowers tumbled to the ground. I stole one from the dewy grass to take to the sun, to get a closer look. I imagine a puckered mouth, with light purple lips hanging over the fluted opening. As the flower narrows down it deepens into a shade of lilac. Stamens grow up out of the mouth, ending in delicate dark anthers.


    We went back into the depths of Falling Rock. Stalks of stonecrop flower like stars bursting, growing heavy to topple over. Wiry umbrella magnolia, broad leaves fanning out from slender branches. My beloved rue anemone growing right alongside poison ivy. Sitting on a carpet of fallen, half-eaten leaves, high above the intermittent stream. The green of maple leaves electrified under the sun. Hemlock needles struck white in the mystic daylight. Light. It falls in channels onto aged bark, down trunks of tall, proud trees. 


    Sitting silently, trying to decode the music that birds weave. A patient ant crawls over a broad, rounded trillium leaf. Bloodroot lobes. Tendrils of moss holding firm to the decaying, fallen tree I sit upon.


    Then a barren field of rocks that was once a surface mine. Some oak saplings trying to hold on in this valley fill once tossed out as waste, as a consequence. Tadpoles eking out some sort of existence in turbid pools of rainwater. What do you eat, little ones? Swimming to and fro with oblivion in this razed, upturned landscape.


    A succession of landscapes. Today after dinner Shelby and I headed up that graveled road following Clemons Fork, then took a left to mount the ridge. We climbed and found ourselves higher and higher away from the water. We stopped to straddle a large, decayed fallen log, stopped in its roll down the steep hillslope by thick trunks of trees that soared up from just beside the road. This we saw beyond the trees: Gold-red going up into the sky to overthrow the reign of the azure blue of the day.




    We continue on up the road to the fire tower. Succession–the clear-cut area we passed, with its skinny new trees straight and proud. A field site, now overrun by forest. We leave our scars, but the whims of the world absorb our marks.


    I want to know the name of each weed and wildflower that makes up these families of undergrowth. The moss, the ferns, other gentle forms of being we mindlessly trample as we walk these hallowed corridors. I see myself in the shy, delicate flowers of miami mist, emerging from wiry stems off the side of a gravel road. She who hangs on. The way partridgeberry holds steady to a mossy boulder, across the rich forest floor. The vast wealth of detritus. 


    “Who are you?” I muse as I stare down at the sea of trees from above. When you look down at a valley and wish it would swallow you whole. Phacelias rise from the dirt wherever I go. Trills, songs, chirps. What do they call me? My name is sweet thing.




    May 12th. It’s Thursday and the great white flowers of the umbrella magnolias are unfurling from their buds. Shelby and I noted one by the weir where we took samples and Annie saw them splayed out over the water as we left camp in the vans. We are sitting in a shady 18-year-old Loblolly stand. I pick up a needle bundle, 3 dried strands brittle like straw. They fit together, like they split apart from one strand. A thick, rich layer of pine needles, light splayed out and playing among the fallen needles.


When I was peeing in the bush across from the road from the oak saplings I surely picked up a gaggle of ticks. But I also saw a snail shell set into the thick carpet of pine needles. I picked it up, and inside the barely translucent shell was something bubbling, something alive, a shimmering membrane pulsing weakly with a trace of life. Mayapple flower hanging heavy–with shame? Christmas ferns of old weighed down and speckled with the pain of exposure to many seasons changed. 


    Today Shelby and I went to throw our clothes in the dryer and she noticed a lizard skitter into the dank room. It had a rich blue tail that it shook proudly as it ran away. Walking down gravel Clemons Fork Rd, fleabane tottering on the shoulder. A clump of Appalachian Tiger Swallowtails gathered around one spot in the mud. We look up at parasols of umbrella magnolia leaves.


    I was on a rocky bank in Clemons Fork, overturning some rocks to make a space for my mug of tea. I uncovered a two-lined salamander, sitting quietly, calmly, unperturbed by its loss of shelter. Wet little body amongst sandy shady rocks. Sharp lobes of maple falling down from the branch. 



A crawdad with a clutch of eggs. A sheet of water crashing over black layered rock that comes off in flakes. An empty gall, the rattlesnake carcass that Shelby pointed out in the road. Its skin was withered and fragile, like if I gathered my hand up in a fist around it it’d shatter into hundreds of delicate pieces. 


The pale moon comes through a window in the canopy to say “Good Evening.”




    May 13th. A freaky Friday. 6:40 AM. I dragged myself out of bed today to begin the climb to the fire tower in the dark which was: Light coming in as I passed the sign for the upland oak habitat. Streaks of cloud’s adding drama to the sky’s stage. Opposite of where the sun would take its place, a band of purple held vigil for the night. The moment she lifted her eye over the tree-swathed horizon, pouring her light upon the crowns of the forest. Sublimity. 


    Wind too that pours past the beams of the tower. I hurtle back down to camp. It takes half the time it does to mount the ridge.


    Later, sunset. We had followed Clemons Fork upstream. Thunder growled low and distant. Rain prickled down, but it felt good on our skin. Twice we stopped to stare at some creatures. Two efts, and snail. Those distinct-looking yellow poplar leaves, a nubile shade of green. The sun flooding in between trunks of trees. A sky primarily clouded, with spats of blue. A rainbow spotted in a window where the canopy thinned. We ran to the ridge-top, to get to the vantage point of the tower. 


    Shelby got to the stairs first, and I could see the whole arc stretched across the sky. I was scared we’d miss it, that as suddenly as it appeared it would be gone. 


    As the sun lowered in its slow descent the colors intensified, a second rainbow appeared to faintly frame the first, which seemed to rise straight up out of the understory. As if we could grab some survey equipment and make some measurements and calculate where the pot of gold was. 



    The gold was gleaming opposite of the rainbow. Molten light smeared into the clouds of a moody, humid afternoon. The sun dipped down into the low clouds guarding the horizon, like a yellow eye settling into a shroud of red-violet. Then the show was over, where once a rainbow took the stage was now an idyllic landscape, valleys swirled with fog, wan evening light finishing up its residency on the crowns of the upland oaks and maples. Darkness crept in, so we set on down the gravel road again, admiring the last of the colors beyond the trunks of Robinson Forest. An underpainting to this freaky Friday’s work of art.


    Tonight the near-full moon shines from behind a translucent veil of clouds. The world’s majesty. The real unreal, the real surreal. 




May 14th, Saturday. Done with class early, so I drove with Shelby down to Bad Branch Nature Preserve, whose waterfall I’d been wanting to visit for a while.


An American giant millipede is curled around the bud where a cluster of young rhododendron branches emerge from the wiry trunk of a younger tree. I saw two others on the trail down to the falls, both lazing on mossy wayside boulders.


We’d ambled down KY 15 to this gorge where aged limestone cliffs lead the way to Bad Branch Falls. Water rushes past an incision in the cliff above, tumbling down with a roar into the boulders below. I go down the slope to sit among them and let the mist engulf me as I contemplate the volume of water crashing before me. The water collects in deep pools, only to cascade further downstream. Shelby and I sit on huge boulders, speckled with toadskin lichen and sprightly moss patches and decaying hemlock needles and patches of black fuzz. Well-loved rocks, planes of biodiversity. The canopy has opened up for the sky to pour in some afternoon light. I heard low-rumbling thunder this morning, and now sheets of clouds still roam across the blue. Arms of hemlock and beech extend into the scene. I’m going to the wet base of the cliff right by the falls for a look at the locals.


It’s little fingers of bright green moss and ferns and a family of little bluets, and scattered violets, white, with those lovely heart-shaped leaves and long stems. A life spent trembling in the mist. And I knew I’d find my favorite little mountain meadow-rue here too–the delicate little rounds of green connected by dainty little stems staked their claim in the bottom of a crevice running up the length of the cliff.



Crouching over rich soil next to a baby hemlock. Will you be spared the scourge of the adelgid? A stalk of wild yam drops out from the crevice between the knobby knee of a rhododendron root and a lichen-speckled boulder. Tufts of grass, ferns bobbing in the breeze, even what looks from here to be a bigleaf magnolia all grow from mossy divots in the boulders by the falls. Lichen of all creeds plastered over these boulders in patterns like a Mandelbrot set. A swallowtail dances among the big white flowers of a magnolia on the other side of the falls. Little windows of light upon the bark of an older hemlock. Behind it stands the red stone of the cliff, brushed with striations and patches of green-tinged lichen. Shelves of wet-loving plants grow behind and right next to the falls, all along its length. 


The visual cacophony of the woods. A slim birch trunk studded with an even armor of turkey-tails. 



There’s rain coming in over the Cumberland Mountains.




May 15th, Sunday. Yesterday we saw a rainbow as we pulled into the Dollar Tree parking lot, a pitstop on the way back to camp. Now we are at the fire tower again, admiring a moody sunset draped with blue and purple clouds, pink streaks interspersed in the sky above these forested hills. 


Now the sun has fallen behind a wall of ash-blue clouds. Only a sliver of the blood moon is visible through evening clouds. I pause to listen. Birds call out, frogs croak, insects chirr and flit among the trees. A whippoorwill whines to the moon. It’s lifting up higher now, glowing red. Magenta streaks lay low over an island covered with deep green trees. Tune into the clamor below. 



As the moon breaks through a field of billowing clouds it casts out a reddish tint on the clouds framing it. A streak of dark cloud segments the moon unevenly; it slowly squeezes out of its grasp.


Now it’s past 11. The super flower blood moon is in eclipse. We are watching a sliver of moon slowly disappear behind the earth’s shadow. A thin blade of light straggles as the shadow snuffs out the moonglow. Stars shimmer brighter now, uninhibited by the growing darkness. Waiting for the shade to clamp shut. A segment to a sliver. 




May 16th, Monday. Fog pours into these valleys. A foreboding front of clouds rolling in. I went down to the creek to grab my hammock on the far bank, hiking up my pants as I waded through the riffle. The serrated, maple-like leaves of a hairy alumroot spread out along the creek’s brink, some speckled with black radiating from the center. What genetic quirk causes this discrepancy, this diversity within one species? Their flowers shoot up in a raceme, white buds emerging from a stalk. 


Kneeling on a hillside by the sawmill piled high with leaf litter. A delicate network of veins on two long wings folded over each other on the back of a stonefly. Wading through streams to find little beings throbbing among the rocks. Later, on a ridge: a red eft on the forest floor sits on a little rock covered with wispy moss and diminutive partridgeberry leaves, surrounded by a rich layer of decay. A tiny red maple seedling rises beside. Oak saplings, licorice bedstraw, Christmas fern in festive bundles. Mature trees rising high to shade us. Cycles of life on the quiet slope. Clemons Fork babbling somewhere below. Opulent yellow light streaming through gaps in the canopy. 



May 17th, Tuesday. Over a week we’ve been at Robinson. 


I woke at 5:30 to meet once more with the dawn at the fire tower, walking at first by headlamp-light, shining up beads of dew and spiders’ eyes along the trail. A quiet, breathless race against the sun. I beat her to the tower, and I’m full of glee and I climb the stairs to see the valleys below full of fog, winding with the contours of the land. I am paying my respects to the unfoldment of the day. 


A full moon paling above soft blocks of cool pastel hues above bowls of mist. Opposite in the sky, neon colors spread out, making way for the coming sun. Then a red eye rises above the horizon, casting warm rays and shafts of light upon the canopy, the pooled fog, my skin. 


A dance for the dawn. On the way up, I was heaving and gasping for mercy to the tune of birdsongs, my artificial light caught on a single strand of silk falling from the apex of a beech leaf. Then I was blasting down hill, stumbling over my own two feet, away from the upland oaks and back down to the coves, the seepage, the bottomlands, my comrades.


And that brings us into the light of a day, where we hurtled out of Robinson Forest, past a little post office in Ary, KY to an exploited plot of land churning out hordes of coal yearly. Earth denuded and torn apart, gravel fields stripped bare for passage of precious cargo. A high cliff of bare rock, a seam exposed where there should be slopes, valleys, homes for squirrels, newts, saplings, deer, magnolias, roots tapping deep into rich soil. Land succession–fields thick with tall grass, new oaks taking root in once-soured and scorched earth. The consequences of progression.


Now at the moment I am swinging in my hammock by Clemons Fork. Water babbles through a riffle, the sun throws down its light through gaps in the canopy, ever shifting with the fancies of the breeze. Debris–little curled up leaves or needles–falls from above onto me and the scoop of fabric I’m sitting in. Before me on the sandy bank is nettle, ferns, and alumroot with its vertical tail of flowers. On the other bank is a wall of exposed roots, a web linking together the beeches and the hemlocks. 


I waded up Clemons Fork, getting into the water by steep, gravel Ridge Rd. Quickly the water deepened, soon it lapped at my thighs. I looked down and saw fish hectically flitting in and out of view, a frog with its hind legs outstretched, mid-stroke, then simply gone. 


A little bit further downstream, I stopped to notice a gnarled old beech tree, its bark flecked by fungal growth and Virginia creeper. A thick, hearty tree.


When I was walking upon the gravel I played a game with a black swallowtail, the kind with brilliant teal splashed across the bottom of its winds. I would come up to try and take a picture once it landed on the rocks, and it would rise gleefully, flutter away, and pick another spot to land, repeating this along the road, entangling flight paths momentarily with a tiger swallowtail. 


Microbiomes. The life curled upon a tree’s trunk, life perched upon a boulder, an island of life in the middle of a gravel road. Slender grass stalks that end in little blue flowers, invasive lespedeza, fleabane, these recurring characters I’ve come to note. 


The day ends. I lay on the footbridge and look up at the stars. A studded, darkened skyscape. 



May 18th, Wednesday. It’s soil day with Dr. Matocha. 


We’re hiking up the Boardinghouse Trail to the firetower as a class, taking soil samples, measurements, rolling the earth between our fingers. A maple leaf devoured by caterpillars. Little scrolls of fresh tulip poplar leaves emerge from the bud at the end of a slender stem, to join the broad leaves already unfurled for the summer. The alternating leaves of a wild yam vine, tendrils curling off of the thorny branches. The smaller, newer leaves near the tip are glossier, with a brown tinge. 



May 19th, Thursday. Yesterday we got to see the hills from the firetower midday. I went on a little splash down the creek while I was on the phone and I found a baby salamander slithering about in the water. I scooped it up, felt its little limbs and belly frantically flit across the palm of my hand. I am wading through riffles, over rocks and waves in the exposed bedrock, under sycamore branches, by the gravel road. 


Rain threatened after dinner, we go out to look for salamanders anyways. The simple glee of life in the palm of your hand. 


Now we are measuring trees. Splotches of light falling upon us as we stand beneath a red maple. Last night, rain splattered to the earth. It let up for a moment and I went out into the starless dark to brush my teeth. How quiet and anonymous the night is without a moon. 


This morning I woke late to fog filling the valley. It’s later but morning still, and sunlight is flooding the valley, the mist is rising off the roof, the eyes squint. 


Today, looking up at the bright flowers of a yellow poplar, the swooping margins of the unique leaves. Yesterday as we walked back to camp before the brunt of the rain, I noticed the little cases, light colored and translucent, sheltering little leaflets, already developed with that striking shape and a couple of deeply furrowed veins. They fold upon themselves to fit into the little cases. And at the base of this delicate new life is another tinier case, with an ever smaller leaflet. And when the leaflets unfurl and break free the split cases lay open like slack wings, all around the stem. 


Yellow poplars grew everywhere, each with these new growths, the delicate buds, the ever-smaller cases. I was awed by the infinitesimal possibilities for life–everywhere flowers, leaves and fronds unfurl and reach out for want of the sun.


We stand beneath an eastern hemlock and I peel off a chunk of fragrant bark, which is speckled with moss. The asymmetrical trunk of a magnolia behind a chain, flat on one side, too covered with moss and parmelia. A snail, mucousily making its slow, gentle path across a stair step. Virginia creeper wraps about the base of a sweetgum tree like a scarf. A life along the bark. The lyreleaf sages are losing their little flowers. Gnarled mossy mulberry branches that twist up to support a heavy crown. 


A meadow of cushion moss spreads from the base of a chestnut oak. The meandering path of some insect in the bare trunk of a peeling, sickly tree. Furrows upon an oak tree’s trunk, studded with lichen that curls out like a fractal, and lichen that bursts with boils like the skin of a toad. Minute lives among the leaf litter. A sticky speckled salamander, many spiders, a worm snake beneath a promising rock.


The bullseye marks of insects upon a maple leaf. Gazing up at the crown, straining my neck, trying to discern what sort of oak soars above us. Allegheny blackberry among the trail. Thin, splindly growths amidst a clearcut. An acre of the ones left behind. An ant crawls upon the surface of a wild yam leaf, with its strong veins running the length of the surface, like marks of longitude coming from the tip and meeting again at the other end. A beech leaf graced with silk-thin hairs that gleam in the sun. Consumed by something, patches eaten out between veins that look like ribs. 


A redbud tree, forked near the base, trunks colonized by turkeytails and another orangey fungus, guarded by a lanky long-legged spider. The new leaves by the base are speckled with some disease, but the other leaves are tender hearts of a lively green. New ferns growing right atop washed-out, fallen fronds. Hickory nut shells, fruits of mulberry trees, a carpet of organic litter scattered upon this road. 


I was kneeling upon the soft, cushy earth in a fragrant pinegrove and saw spotted wintergreen, alias pipsissewa, AKA ratsbane or striped prince’s pine. The many names of this curious-looking understory plant. St. John’s wort sprouted nearby, its little opposite leaves growing tall, a sure sign of summer. 




May 20th, Friday. I woke up this morning and gazed out from the porch to see rolling clouds and the sun peeking through. I heard distant thunder from somewhere in these hills. Today we watch a dead ash fall. Its bark is striated with deep furrows, somewhere in those groves an insect bored to spell its doom. In its death moss grows still at the base. 


We’re on a slope and at my feet bloodroot’s flower is closed tight like a fist. Why do you lobe so? I find a tiny white bug on my wrist, whose arrival upon my skin I never noticed. 

Later, sunset. My last time up at the fire tower for a while. The light leaks down upon the polars, maples, tupelos, hemlocks, filtering down to the midstory, then the understory, to the wild gingers and azaleas and rattlesnake-root and ferns growing low to the ground. This cloudless sky beaming down upon us. My love is as abundant as the violets in the woods. As abundant as crawdads swimming at the bottom of a creek. A veil of maidenhairs grows like a collar, a dainty curtain. 




May 21st, Saturday. We’re headed home today. I sat by the bank of the creek for a final time this morning and had a memory of dancing in my dreams. When I walked back from the bathhouse for the last time a red-spotted purple landed on the gravel just ahead of me. 



Well I wipe my slate clean. I wash my feet in the clear waters of Clemons Fork, I bid farewell to the smooth and shiny dark boulders, gleaming in the light of day. But some things will just stick in my mind. Speckles of light moving across my classmate’s faces as the stood beneath a tree, a lone horse in a field at the former mine site, the sensation of a sprinkle of rain while hiking on a hot day, a swallowtail with one wing torn off, presumably by a bird. Even now the smell of campfire seeps into my mind. 


When I was in middle school I started to feel like I was always running out of time. I would grow despondent and stressed when any season of my life was nearing an end. I cried on the schoolbus home on the last day of my sophomore year and I dreaded the end of each summer break and the coming bitterness of each winter. I constantly felt like the sands of time were slipping through my fingers; I was standing paralyzed at a fork in the trail, unable to move, unable to settle on any decisions or actions. 


As I get older (and I realize this sounds silly because I’m not yet 21) I lose my fear of the exchange of seasons. Once my anxieties forced me to feel as if I should be squeezing as much juice from the fruit of the world as possible, lest opportunity fall away from me, into cold, into desolation. With every hike at Robinson I sensed the earth shifting before my eyes. I know the loss and dearth of life that is winter is a necessity for the bloom and fertility of spring, for the waters to swell the creeks and falls, for the coming of sumptuous, stifling summer heat. 


The world takes its time. Jewelweed lies in wait all summer before its stunning flowers bloom. A newt crawls through the understory of a holler for years, biding time ‘til its metamorphosis. Young trees fight in slow, slow motion for a dominant spot in the canopy. Water weathers waves and whorls into the bedrock of Clemons Fork, a millenia in the making. 


I go back home content with this cycle of growth and culling. I live to honor and trust the whims of the world, wherever they take me.


Friday, January 14, 2022

Detour: The White Castle Cheesecake on a Stick


    There's a lot of time to think when you're in waiting in a drive-thru. I was at the Bryan Station White Castle, on a mission to try their rather frugally-priced cheesecake. I was sitting there for maybe 10 minutes waiting on my dollar order, but such dysfunction is simply a hallmark of working fast food. I spent 2 years working in a drive thru. When we weren't busy, I would gaze out the window, at the sunrise if I was working a morning shift, at a blemishless blue sky if it was midday, or sometimes at whorls of clouds and the vivid colors of sunset. Working fast food is an American Experience. There is the cult-like language of family that corporate encourages between its employees, the stress of your managers barking at you to keep shaving minutes and seconds off ticket times, the whirlwind of rushes. Working at any restaurant, really, is a sisyphean task. You open, you put all your little boxes of ingredients in order, you curse whoever the fuck closed last night 'cause they forgot to stock thisorthat, you work breathlessly through the rushes. When the last car in line pulls away from the window you look around at the havoc wreaked. Fallen utensils and food and crumbs and paper lie everywhere, amongst spills of sauce or drinks or soup. You tidy up the disarray or close and wait for it to begin again. And over and over. 

    Someone behind me honked and I realized an employee at the next window had stuck his arm out and was waving at me to pull forward. We transacted and he said have a nice day with warm eyes. I wondered if he was living paycheck-to-paycheck, if he had kids he was worried about, if there was love in his life. Maybe I am a creep to wonder about the lives of other people. But I feel like anyone working in a drive-thru has dreams or passions they feel are being crushed under the panic of the rushes and drowned by mopwater. What else do you have to think about when it's slow? Musicians and artists and writers who are too tired after a double to create. Students whose grades are slipping as they pull full-time workweeks to make ends meet, smoking a blunt in the parking lot every night after they clock out to clock into another state of mind. 

    Once I was eighteen and lonely and I'd dropped out of school for the spring semester and my life was working in a drive-thru 40 hours a week. I got of a particularly raucous morning shift where the stress had made my cry (I am very sensitive) and came out to this side of town to get to Hisle Farm Park, just down the road from the White Castle. I was drawn to a field of high grasses, and I danced in a downpour with my earbuds in. The cloud cover broke. Sunlight burst and blue poked through, though the rain was falling still. A rainbow born of the storm unfurled before me. 



    I had shit all to do this morning, so I took a right out of the White Castle parking lot and found myself heading out of town on Bryan Station Rd, the road to Hisle Farm park, tenderly unwrapping the baby cheesecake slice from its crinkly cellophane at a red light. 

    The fudge coating cracked into rich little shards as I bit into it, disturbing the flawless deep brown surface. It felt like cheekily taking the first footstep into a blanket of fresh snowfall in a big yard, or smearing your finger into the perfectly smooth surface of a new tub of vaseline. The substrate beneath had a creamy mouthfeel and appealing taste, evoking the joy of being enveloped by a lake whose waters the sun has warmed all day. I nibbled a bit of the graham cracker crust just to try it on its own and found it lacking, but who would judge a home simply on the discount $15 Target rug its owner has placed in the living room? Nay, it is simply one part of a whole, a team that feeds off of each others' energy, the rich chocolate that plays with the subtle tanginess of the simple cream cheese body, and the graham crust grounding these bolder elements. 

    When it's over you feel like you've just said goodbye to a dear friend who's about to clock into work, but you wish you could spend the whole rest of the afternoon together. I was so deep in the throes of the cheesecake I missed the turn-off to Hisle Farm Park. I made a u-turn at Windy Corner Market having finished my funny little snack, and headed back to town. It was a foggy morning, and the Kentucky countryside splayed out all around, lightly cloaked by mist. It loaned a mystique to the farmland, the barns, the quintessential black wood fencing and the stone dykes along the road that spoke to the bluegrass' rich history. 

    Life is full of beautiful silly little things, like White Castle's Fudge-Dipped Cheesecake On-a-Stick.