Sunday, August 31, 2003

August 31, 2003

August 31, 2003
Late afternoon
very warm

Took a drive over to James' and Janet's proerty - some day a retirement home will be here... wandered around and talked of plans, admired views.



This cluster of trees marks the property line at one point...

Back at Butch & Linda's I set off to wander again. Little cousin Edie wants to come along, so I sit down by the naked ladies to wait for her to put her shoes on.

Edie takes me for a walk and shows me the creek through the gate and just off the property. This is her grandparents' house and she knows her way around pretty well - as well as any 7 year old would. But I think Edie took me through poison oak... I was watching her instead of watching out for that.

We wander back onto the property. Edie finds her little brother's long-lost hat and her own long-lost doll. We camp out on the same big rock outcropping I stopped at yesterday. I let her shoot a few frames on the Izone, I shoot a couple with the Land Camera.




"Grandma & Grandpa's Woods" hold high adventure: Edie climbs a tree to fetch an old light switch plate made of clear blue plastic and adorned with silver glitter. Old treasures abound here, even hung on a nail stuck in a valley oak.

The light is fading - I'm guessing it's time to head back, probably dinner time or something -

Saturday, August 30, 2003

family reunion

August 30, 2003 - Family Reunion
Aunt Linda & Uncle Butch's
Shingle Springs
afternoon
clear blue skies, slight breeze
very warm, 90's

Sitting in the shade of a big bush while the kids build their "Animal Shack" 'research lab' for the wildlife they find and catch. So far they have a tiny tree frog carefully kept in a peanut butter jar, named Goldie for her color. So far they have a table and the outline of walls.

Their activity has sent any other obvious wildlife into hiding. Of course, the gunshots from the back porch target shooting have a way of leaving utter silence in their wake, as well.

As human activity quiets I can hear the faint peeps and chirps of birds some distance away, the occasional buzz of a passing insect and the far off call of what I presume is a donkey. Wandering away from the house, I happen upon three ro four birds - I think they're young wild turkeys - with perfect tawny camouflage in the dry brown grasses. They slowly wander away from me but don't seem bothered by the constant noise of the children at play that echoes out over the land. (The gunshots have ceased, as the men like mose to look at and hold the antique guns they've exercised.)

The sloped land is uneven with plenty of creature holes to step in. I'm not sure I want to know who lives where. A rodent here, a rodent there, and a reptile over there for sure. Where the grasses haven't been mown for fire safety they stand two feet high, alternating with patches and paths where weather or feet have pressed them down. I watch carefully where I put my feet for holes, poison oak and creatures. Stepping on a rattlesnake would make for a very bad day.

This part of the property where it hasn't been cleared of trees to build, is an open oak forest with an occasional struggling pine. Here the oaks rule.



Everything here is dry now except for the trees and the oak seedlings. Pine seedlings look like they may not survive, at least not well. I've made a perch of a large outcropping covered in dry crunchy moss. I guess it must hold the hidden potential to come alive once the rains start. Next to the outcropping is a small bushy plant that reminds me of the sage in my herb garden. Long dusty green leaves that seem impervious to drought.



("I caught a grasshopper!" echoes down the hill amidst other excited cries...)

I better get back up to the house to clear my negs - I forgot to bring along baggies & I'd cry if they dried out and were a loss...