Fall rising.

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autumn on pole mountain

 

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horses on fall pasture

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If nothing else, a slide show for you, sharing progress on the house, fall color, and this beautiful world we live in with you.

Only you know me. There will be more.  I’ll get to writing, to words, to sharing, rambling… and then I’ll be here longer than I planned, when really, you know, what I should be doing is getting back to work…

(please click on individual photos to see them larger if you’d like)

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as if the trees were not enough color

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early fall behind the new cabin

 

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various shades of trees

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On building our home together.

Some days I’m tired.  I think we can’t do it. We’ll never get it closed in by serious snow fly.  We’re in over our head. What were we thinking and when will it be over.  Not another day of getting covered in sawdust and wood chips and beetle shells.

Most days, though I think this.  We’re doing it.  Ourselves.  This incredible, beautiful home on the cheapest budget you can imagine.  Yes, I’m actually very proud of that part.  I’m a cheapskate at heart, it’s true, but it’s more than that.  I’m proud that we harvested the main materials from our own land, used salvaged and surplus when we could, and are doing the work ourselves. The three of us. By us, for us.  The only paid labor was help with the foundation, a worthy start to this project.  Yes, the borrowed equipment and expert advice and occasional helping hand from good friends is always appreciated, a tremendous help, and at times, just what we need.

It’s an odd work site. Sure, there’s a dog, usually a cat, and always a goose hanging around so watch your step and check under your truck before you drive away.  Lots of visitors, which although they bring much distraction, usually bring much encouragement and support and appreciation for what we’re doing too. (And groceries, seriously, which are a blessing as we haven’t taken much time to get to town to stock up!) And I come to realize realize that it is not in spite of these kind and caring visitors and distractions, but because of them at times, that we are inspired, fueled and lightened.

I tell one that this will be the first permanent home Forrest ever had. He’s twenty one.  That’s a lot of years of fluctuation. Twelve moves in his first three years; then he lived at a kids camp, then a guest ranch.  Finally, his own place.  He’ll just have to share it with us. After all, for me, there were ten years before Forrest came into my life that I too had my fair share of stories of being homeless or a vagabond and moving around at least once a year… so I must say, having a solid foundation that we can call ours is a thrill for me too.  Interesting to note that these roots do not tie one down, but give one greater to strength to fly.  But that too is another story.

Will we make it?  Get the roof on, windows in, sealed up by serious snow fly?

Wait and see.  We’re only a month away…

(Hey Al – That beautiful bottle of champagne your brought us is already on ice!)

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construction progress to date

 

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vega fest

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brayden milling

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boys working

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log wizard

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Autumn falls heavy.  Shorter days, cooler air, longer shadows, crisper light. Wool sweaters and warm work gloves and hot coffee at lunch break. For this fleeting season our world turns  so brief but fiercely to contrasting shades of vibrant gold with earthen browns and grays.

I’m ready to move on.  We’ve been camped out since the end of May. Down by the work site in a one room cabin without plumbing or power for a light, and finally I’m ready for running water, an indoor toilet and hot shower, a kitchen sink, an electric light that all you have to do is flick a switch to get results. Sure, I love my candles, oil lamps, outhouse with a view, the sound of rain on the uninsulated tin roof of the Little Cabin, and song of the ever present Rio Grande, but it’s time. Almost. Soon, I start to hope. Maybe I’ll miss standing under the stars and the brilliant swath of the Milky Way to brush my teeth, but I won’t miss having to run out into the rain in the middle of the night to squat in the cold wet grass.

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horses on fall pasture 2

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canella

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tres

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bob and bayjura

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As you walk down the dirt drive to the cabin, the silence of the mountain embraces you, hills rise on all side like a visual symphony glowing in the autumn glory of turning aspen blending with the browning beetle killed trees, rising to the golden grasses of the late season high country above tree line and the sharp contrast before steel grey sky portending another storm.

Suddenly you are there, and you hear it. You have arrived. The Rio Grande. You are swallowed and consumed and it’s not with fear or loathing but clarity and purity and a sense of old wild ways knowing this river has been cutting its path so long before you were there, so long after you leave. And still you are seduced by the song of the river and absorbed by the eternal hum of autumn’s swollen course painted with dirt from higher grounds, blending our world with that of some place I have never been, so many places, down river, eight miles away, a hundred, or down to the Gulf of Mexico.

This is not the angry roar of spring melt out you hear but heavy rich milky waters bringing a melancholy song of primordial longings as the geese fly over head in formation in the early morning, and my meant to be wild one but oh-so-tame Rikki remains firmly planted in my front yard.

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rikki and forrest

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rikki on slabs

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gunnar

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Heavy rains in an early fall storm.  Finally some time to sit and catch up on correspondence and business and never enough time to write before heading back out there in between storms, grateful it’s only rain.  Winter is coming…

Between early mornings and those blessed rain storms, I managed time to reach my personal goal/deadline of finishing a revised copy of my third manuscript.  I am pleased. Now onto the next!

Meanwhile, the guest cabins are full, main camp is bustling, some wonderful folks around enjoying the fall color, to be followed by the camaraderie and excitement of hunting season, followed by the late season calm for the select few tourist game enough to give it a go before our world turns white… And then… Oh, don’t ask. Not now.  One thing at a time.  Today presents plenty.  More than enough.  Better yet, just right!

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grass seed

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cinquefoil

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aspen leaves

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untouched fall color

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As for book business…

I just received the good news that Barnes and Nobles has accepted The Last of the Living Blue.  This is a thrill and honor.  From what I understand, unlike Amazon who accepts all books (and sells the most too), B&N carefully review all books and watch progress of sales and interest before taking you on.  So this is great news for me, and I hope you might help by checking to see if your local B&N might be one of the select stores to carry my books – and if they do not, perhaps with your request, they will!

Much gratitude for the wonderful review of The Last of the Living Blue shared on Amazon and Goodreads by acclaimed author Gwendolyn Plano.

Finally, special thanks to friend and fellow horseman and blogger, Julian of White Horse Pilgrim, for actually coming (over the ocean and through one enlightening journey across this country) to visit us and our wild mountain.  As you can imagine, the world seemed a little smaller, closer and more comfortable when shared with good friends, good horses, and good food together!  Here are some of the photos Julian took of our work and shared. Thank you, my friend!

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julian 1

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julian 3

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julian 8

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julian 2

 

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julian 4

~

 

After words.

Yes, lots happening.  It’s Spring.  You know. Same for so many of you.

Among a lot of other good things, the final editing of The Last of the Living Blue is underway, and we’re now completing the Afterwards.  This may be part of it. And even if we cut it, I would like to share this with you now.

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friday

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friday 2

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I’m down at the building site where the snow from the latest storm just melted and the clay of the cut open earth sticks to my boots like concrete. The foundation is poured.  When the ground dries and cement cures, we’ll be back at it.  Next with the logs which have sat dormant for the remainder of winter awaiting their fate.  Becoming home.

At my feet is a gosling. A fluffy yellow and grey critter that at only a few days old swims across the creeks I jump. He showed up in the middle of the work site when we were setting forms.  With a steep cliff down to the river on three sides, and the gravel road and torn up ground on the forth, how did he end up here, on this high harsh bluff above the Rio with no sign of other geese close by? Forrest heads off to explore the ravines and finds no potential parents, siblings or nest.

You don’t want to interfere.  You want to let the wilds be wild.  But you can’t just turn your back, walk away, knowing what its fate would be. I think that’s why they make babies so cute.  You’re going to do all you can to care for them. Against all logic and principles and belief in non-interference. How do you draw the line at compassion?  You don’t.  So you have a baby goose in your house and find yourself cutting dandelion greens and walking to feed the horses very, very slowly so the little guy can keep up.

A friend tells me it must be a sign.  Neither of us know what he might symbolize but you get the feeling it must be something, for some reason, for you can’t help but wonder why here?  Why now?  After having him in our lives for several days and becoming rather attached to the little stinker, I’d say the message he brings us probably has something to do with patience, love, slowing down and nurturing.  He sleeps between Forrest’s feet at meal time and when I don’t feel like walking so slowly, Bob’s got him on his lap when I head out to take care of chores. I swear your blood pressure drops when he chirps sleepily on your lap.

I don’t have time for this, I want to say. Grinding chicken food, picking greens, carrying him about and cleaning up after him. Make time, my friend says.  I know. She’s right.  So there he is now, tucked into my vest, cheeping softly while I write.

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gunnar's goose 3

 

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gunnar's goose

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Another May comes, is almost gone.  The foundation for our home is laid.  Concrete in the earth.  A sense of permanence, wanting, needing to belong. These are my roots.  Solid, grey, thick footers.  Something to hold me down, connect me further with the land.  Something to remain long after I am gone, my son and his family, generations thereafter.  Long after the scattered seeds of the blue spruce turn into a forest of new growth, and the new some day turns old.

~

norman

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This season has been one of strewn spring snows. The river roars rich and brown and the reservoir is higher than I have ever seen it.  It feels healthy. The grass on pasture is already lush enough that the horses hesitate when I call them in for hay. We no longer talk in terms of drought and fire bans and fear of lightning.  We think we’re off the hook.  It’s over.  Long gone.  The treed hillsides even look green.  Am I seeing things?  Sometimes we see what we want to see.

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leaves 2

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The season begins. Traffic on the road (well, at least a few motors a day), summer homes dusted out, smoke from other chimneys, voices at the trailhead.  Even the UPS trucks drives in (and once again, a welcome sight).

I feel lost and need to find myself again.  It is hard after a winter of silence and solitude.  I try.  I want to try harder but then find myself worn thin because I’m so tired of trying and I am left wishing it would all come naturally and it never does.

There is an emptiness and detachment that comes over me as I lose the voice of the trees around this time every year when the air is filled with people things.

I think of the conversation I had with a colleague last week who tells me he finds equal beauty in man and nature, and is fascinated by the precarious balance and blending between the two.  A relationship, a dance of life.

Why can’t I see the beauty in this interconnection?  Why do I too often see the fault?

Finding balance in this land of extremes.

~

stellers jay

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A walk through the trees to Sweetgrass Meadow and I’m looking for the truth.  I’m looking for answers.  Is it over?

I stop to rest, sitting on a fallen tree alongside the edge of a small clearing.  If you look up to the top of the north facing slope, it’s a hillside of grey and brown blue spruce.  Down at the edge of the clearing, many trees are still green.

Here, I am close.  In them.  With them. Among my beloved blue spruce. I sit silently, look closely.

Behind green needles, I see clear fresh sap dripping from slipping bark like so many tears.

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sap

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Has it ended?  This wrath of beetles that devastated our forest. Has it finished its destruction?

Is the drought over?  Is the aquifer refilled? Fire danger a thing of the past? I know the million acres of dead trees won’t return to life, but what about the ones left living?  And what about the beetles? After such a mild winter, I wonder.

I want to believe it’s over.  The spruce trees around the ranch and at the edge of the opens meadows across river are still green.  I have not yet seen a bark beetle. With all this moisture, this beautiful spring, surely everything will be okay, I tell myself.

If I am to have blind faith, I shall find it in the wind and wilds.

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sunday morn 2

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sunday morn 3

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Letting loose.

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rose hips

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cinquefoil

 

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flag seeds

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A time of contradictions.  Harsh and raw. Revealing, emerging, exposing. An open wound.  Healing from the year before.

She has lost her hiding places.  And suddenly, she dances.

I wrote this describing spring.  But somehow it feels personal.  Maybe it is.  Interconnected as one becomes, our selves and our land. Changing with the seasons.

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spring aspen up lost

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spring snow 2

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One day she melts, then next she is covered again as a furious spring storm blows in, lets lose its load and leaves, only to return an hour later.

Up here, we expect it.  Heavy, wet spring snow and the choice to remain indoors comes as a relief, maybe, just for one day, part of a day, and already I’m itching to get back out there.

I see now the innocence, perhaps ignorance, of my intentions.  The intimate view of my first book, exposing an open wound. What was I thinking in sharing this?  Two more of a similar vein completed, and now I find myself bled out.  I’m starting a novel now.  Nothing about me.  I’m making the damn thing up.

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gunnar and forrest

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bob after face plant

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fg5

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forrest going into snow

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Trying to keep my head above water when some days I think it would be easier to just let go.  In my dreams I can breathe beneath the surface. 

Yesterday the mountain lets loose in a wild rage of passion and fury and brown waters, melting snow, exposed earth like pale flesh, and the first fertile signs of sprouting green.

The great big wash that is the great big melting of the mountain began gushing down pasture between the top layer of slushy pink snow and a bottom still of ice, a fine line from cutting deep trenches through our fragile sub alpine soils and stealing it down river.

Sun burn and sore muscles as you can’t call it quits when the air finally feels so good and the long days are hard to leave when the sun still shines.

Morning muses as the mountain thaws and soft pink spreads from the top down as the sun light emerges in the mornings. Geese on the reservoir flats, though there is little open ground.  The air is alive with birds and their songs as I feed the horses in the morning, and hear though never see those owls in the evening as I go out with the dog under brilliant stars and growing moon.

We press spring and push back her snows with Bob’s Cat and there we have mud and we’re not sure it is better or worse but it is spring and the change is always exciting.  Preparing to break ground.  Forgive me, Earth, for cutting into you as we do our best to live with you, lightly beside you. May we not take but give to each other in no other way than letting each other be.

Out on pasture with a couple of curry combs, one in each hand.  I’m going for quantity, not quality here.  Get off some of the dang mud.  Their winter coats are just beginning to shed.  Out in the wind, it becomes an inevitable pig-pen dust storm around each broad back blowing into my squinting eyes.

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tresjur

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tres

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lb and crew

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Stirring frozen waters.

Stirring frozen waters.

This is dedicated to the angry old man who was so afraid of noise all he could hear was his own shouting for silence. And for the folks so busy tooting their own horn they miss the symphony behind them.

I wrote this article a couple months ago for a magazine I thought would be brave enough to publish it. They were not. Am I?  Silly question.

This piece may break some peace, stir some waters, ruffle feathers, raise fur and churn up mud so comfortably settled at the bottom of the still forest pool.  My sincere apologies if I offend any individual and I hope to hear  your response and opinion if so.  You matter to me.  My intention is to share my view, and in doing so, open eyes.  Maybe even open a few hearts, minds and souls along the way, but that is asking a lot of a little article.   It’s long. Take your time. I hope you will enjoy.

~

so the other day...

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So the other day…

We’re at the Rio Grande Reservoir Dam. The westernmost edge of the nearly 110,000 acre West Fork Complex fire that burned deep into the Weminuche Wilderness last summer. It stopped here in part because of the powerful prompts of the powers that be.  The  District that owns and operates this dam, and depending on how you look at it, owns a lot of the mighty Rio Grande.  When the fires erupted in June, the crews were here working on the hundred year restoration of the dam.  Water is powerful.  Here in Colorado, powerful enough to hasten firefighting efforts, mechanized and otherwise, into the Wilderness and keep the fire from damaging more of the fragile water shed or dam restoration efforts.

In the snow, the charred trees to the south and east look like the pencil hatch marks of a black and white drawing.  The hills are somewhat sensual in their stark exposure, now revealing the undulations, curves and crevasses.  It’s beautiful in a different sort of way.

I forget about the burn some times.  Out of sight, out of mind.  Finally.  The scars on the land will last a lot longer than ones within me.  Left quite an impression on us in early summer as our family remained on the otherwise evacuated mountain while the hills below us burned.  And then later after the rains began we’d stare at the gathering thunderheads and wonder.  I remember friends in San Fran after the big shake up of ‘89 that would wake in a sweat when they felt a rattle for a long time afterwards.

An hour ago, my husband, Bob, rode his snowmobile here to meet his cousin, Ty, who is coming up from the farm on the valley below to play in the mountains for a couple days. He’s also delivering the Cat tracked skid steer.  Bob’s new toy. Yes, you could say, Bob’s Cat.  And our big splurge.  The secret weapon for building our new log cabin.  We’re cutting down all the beetle kill, which I guess means all the trees, on our land along the Rio now while the river is frozen, dragging the timber back across, and stockpiling, all in preparation for building our new little family home this coming summer on the bare bluff above the Rio.

That’s why I’m here now.  I need to ride that snowmobile back with Gunnar on my lap, the almost eighty pounds of semi-feral- almost-four-going-on-like-six-months-old German Shepherd dog, while my husband slowly follows in that Cat.  Otherwise, I’d manage pretty well to stay away from even this white ribbon that hints of leading to civilization.  It’s not that I’m anti-social; it’s just that I like to be alone.

On the way here, Gunnar and I alternate between running and walking along the six and half miles of packed snowmobile track from our home to this spot.   Just past Halfway Hill, there’s a dead moose spread across what would in summer be a road.  The head, spine, and a few legs are still intact.  It’s like a speed bump in the snow.  I can see from the tracks that Bob drove the snowmobile right over it.  I lift it up and drag it to the side of the road.  Gunnar sniffs.  He does not care for rancid meat.  Not much remains.  The spine is already speckled with bird droppings.

Just past the pile of bones, I feel it before I hear it, and hear it before I see it.  I’m like Radar.  By the time the helicopter comes round the mountain, I’m standing there pointing my big old SLR camera with telephoto lens (no, I do not own a smart phone with built in camera, or any phone for that matter, there’s no cell service around these parts anyway; and yes, I do run with this big beast of a camera around my neck). I recognize the yellow. Same one that came up two weeks ago in a storm looking for the Big Horn but I think when he got this far, they were happy to leave.  The pilot flew directly over our house and all he got to see was my horses huddled against the fence and maybe some crazy woman running around in the snow. Wild life indeed.

There’s not a lot of noise around these parts in winter.  You learn to recognize motors. We’re at the kitchen table at breakfast and walk outside if we hear an airplane. Funny thing, funny for lack of a better word, is my horses get buzzed a few times every winter.  They no longer flinch when the copter flies over head.  Let alone run like we watch the moose do from the kitchen window, out there across the deep white pasture trying to seek shelter in the trees.  I don’t know if the needle-less timber provides much shelter anymore.

Now, the pilot sees me and does a quick 90-degree maneuver, high tails it over Finger Mesa and out of site.  I wonder what he thinks when he sees some woman way out here ready for him before he knows I’m there, with a camera pointed at him? Better that than a shot gun.  I’m guessing he’s heard of me.  Not a lot of other half-feral women live out here.

I continue on, Gunnar blazing the way, following Bob’s track to the dam. This is where the plowed dirt road that eventually leads to a plowed paved road that after a while leads to a little town ends.  And this is where the snowmobile track that leads to our cabin and then into the great white yonder up to the Continental Divide that may seem like the end of the world to some and the big back yard to us begins.

There are people around in summer. An abundance of Texas tourists, ATV riders, fishermen fixed up in Cabela’s finest, hunters in camo and blaze orange with big diesel trucks that they drive even to their office in some flat land town but here actually might get dirty and kick into four wheel.  Maybe.

I live for winter.  That’s our time.  Me, my husband, our four legged and feathered friends.  Our son, when he’s not off to university or like this winter, working at the South Pole. (You might say growing up here was in preparation for such a position.)  No one has lived here before us, and probably, no one would live here after we move, if we ever do.  High and harsh as this mountain is, I’m in no rush to leave.  And it’s not summer now. Those tourists are a long ways away right about now.

Only, here they come.  One, two, three, four, five, six… a parade of big diesel trucks moving up the mountain and pulling into the little snow packed parking area at the dam. Safety in numbers. Only that’s not why I live here.  The wildlife would probably say the same if they could speak, or if we would learn to listen.

It’s not tourists.  Not really.  It’s the Colorado Division of Wildlife.  I wonder what they’re here to chase down, shoot, tranquilize or trap today.

The herd of trucks drive up and stop dead in their tracks.  They’ve arrived at what they may think is the end of the world, but for us is just the beginning.  I can be sure my presence is not a welcome sight.  My support, or lack thereof, is not unknown.  It’s kind of fun being a little woman intimidating a bunch of big men.

Turns out to be the moose’s unlucky day.  We cringe to hear this.  Last time they went for the moose, four were killed in one day.  The tranquilizer didn’t work very well.  Oops.

One more cow moose was left for dead a mile below our ranch.  We watched over a span of several days in sub zero weather as she lay there still in the open snow, and then she was gone.  She was one of the lucky ones.

Before that, there was the lynx project which I understand they finally tiptoed away from with their tail between their legs.  It’s 1998. Global Warming is getting hot in the headlines.  But hey, let’s see what happens if we trap some lynx from up in Canada and bring them over 1500 miles down to the Southern San Juans!  There might be a few that remain.  Most starved to death, or high tailed it back north where they belong.  I hear a few got hit crossing a highway on their way. Several years before they scrapped their attempts, I read the program was called a success based on numbers.  That year, they counted more kittens born in the litters than they recorded deaths.  I always wondered: how many dead did they count?

Today, they’re here to collar the moose, they say.

Right.  So, I’m thinking, the plan is this:  they’ll chase down the already taxed moose from the air, sharp shoot and tranquilize it, hope the tranquilizer works this time, strap on a collar, and hope the animal makes it so they can go back to town and watch the wilds from the comfort and convenience of their computer on their desk in their office.

Today, I keep my mouth shut and fire up the snowmobile instead, call the dog who jumps on board and off we go, back up the mountain to the safe haven of our home, wait for my husband to slowly follow in the Cat, and then sit back and watch the helicopter fly back and forth for the rest of the afternoon, right over our house or across our pasture.  I know my horses won’t be any more bothered than me. But I worry about the moose.  I hope they get the tranquilizer right this time.

~

Revealing.

~

leaves

~

Another big moon comes

and goes as

the season of life

and death that is

spring unfolds

somewhere, maybe

here,  maybe

tomorrow today

as the cat lays in

the grass planted

last fall inside

the kitchen window

and waits.

~

front lawn

~

And I wait impatiently for the horses to begin shedding their shaggy coats just so I can have reason to spend more time with them as they bustle about on dry dirt and vie for the attention of my curry comb and close breath.

~

tres above reservoir

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feeding time

~

A mourning dove shows up early, lured by warmer air only to find no more than small patches of open ground, not ideal for a ground feeder, and the seeds I throw out daily are of no interest.

Down at one of the few open places where the Rio Grande runs clear and black like licorice beneath her otherwise still white ribbon, a pair of Mallards swims from one end of the open place to another and fly off as the dog and I cross river, me on snow shoes, he on broad feet with long fur between his pads that have only rarely touched bare earth in so many months.

Spring approaches the high country like a chrysalis revealing.

~

emerging

~

After weeks of crunching more numbers that I have since… ever… and straining my eyes where by my reading glasses no longer seem strong enough, I’m done playing architect, done with our house plans. We await the opening of white pasture and the cutting into ground, and in how long, too long, not soon enough, we will be in there living, breathing, walking around,, parking muddy boots by the door, sitting at the kitchen table with burning candles and full plates, watering house plants, baking bread, making love, kicking back in my claw foot tub and writing while the sun comes up in my nook.

~

bayjura

~

So much for the simplicity of a little log cabin.  These drawings, ten pages from the bottom of the concrete footer to the top of my writing nook, seem so complex.  Does it help or hinder to have plans drawn up by those who have built, not just those who have planned it on paper?  I do not know, but I’m ready to put down my pencil and pick up my draw knife.  I’m ready to build, to break ground and pour cement and peel and stack logs and with tired muscles and sore hands sit back at the Little Cabin and watch the new one come to life.

~

rio grande

~

The adventure of standing still.

~

picnic spot

~

Morning, warming by the fire, with coats and hats and mittens hanging, dripping, drying. Outside, the snow continues, amasses, piles a heavy load.  Just back from feeding horses. They  are worked up, snorting and running about because there’s a big old bull moose out there who doesn’t get that he’s not welcome.  Now safe and warm inside, I watch from the big south window at them milling around, but they’re still upset and won’t put their heads down to eat.  All but Norman, who has his head down and wastes no time on such silly things that the others can take care of.

~

Evening, warming by the fire, with coats and hats and mittens hanging, dripping, drying.  Just back in from a ski with Gunnar along the river, oddly still open and full and shiny black against the flat white landscape. Blurred lines in heavy snow. Soft silhouettes of geese, duck, hawk and eagle.  Now warming my hands and pulling out dry clothes before heading back out to feed again. And still it snows.

~

cabin this morning

 

~

Winter.  So far, so good.

A big one rolled in and has remains with us for days.  White sky, white ground, white on the horses backs, the dog’s nose, deep up to our knees.  The truck is out.  We are in.  Here with a deep winter world. 

The horses don’t particularly like it.  It’s a warm wet snow which is harder on them than a cold dry one.  It won’t last, but the next couple of days might be not fun.  They are grouchy, short of temper, snip and snap and one another.  I will not work with them now, but feed quickly, and walk away and wait for this to pass.

~

norman and cody

~

The adventure of standing still.

Remaining.

Time to write.

And to keep up with friends.

“A very simple life.  I make it full yet not stuffed and filled, if that makes sense.  Time to walk, think, write, watch the snow fall, and feel the cold outside then the warmth of the woodstove inside.  We all rate success differently.  I wouldn’t trade my life for anyone’s.  And still a creation in progress, as you too show me, life always is, always changing.”

~

steller's

~

“I need seasons.  Here, there, where ever.  I need that balance of time like putting your garden to bed, letting it be, fallow and dormant, and then reawakening after a deep slumber.  In summer I work.  In winter, I dream.  I know that’s kind of weird, and very extreme, but it works for me, and connects me more to the land.” 

~

geese along rio grande

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“Professionally, as a writer, I do not know.  What is my responsibility?  As writers… what matters most?  A wonderful challenge presents itself. Truth or beauty? Responsibility, environmental concerns, social ethos, pathos, or simply… entertainment?”

Except for my love of my family and four leggeds, my love of the land is my greatest passion.  Unlike Mr. Berry, who said, “I have never not known where I belong,” I have spent a lifetime searching.  I have been on this mountain only a dozen years.  I tried to leave her.  I could not.  Now I watch her standing strong in this volatile time when the trees are dying – not just a few, patches here and there – but mountain after mountain after mountain in these great big waves that turn blue and green into red and brown.  And then I saw her burn.  A hundred thousand acres up to a few miles away from my front door.  Not much press.  Not much people around here.  Just trees.  And trees don’t scream. 

So… I’ll write.  (No, I don’t scream much.) I’ll carry the burden of the world we love because we are here, we see, we feel, we are intimately connected with the land.  And because the land can’t speak for herself.  Or maybe she does.  We just need to listen.

I’m no greenie, no environmentalist, in fact, I don’t want a label and don’t want to side up with anyone from behind a desk who likes to call me names.  Maybe mother, wife, horsewoman, fencer, builder, baker, cook and cleaner… Mountain Mama. That’s about it.

Now it’s time this woman wrote about what she sees.

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gunnar in snow

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Final thought to leave you with.

On aging. 

Forever looking forward.

When I was a little girl, I used to flip through the fashion magazines and say, “When I grow up, I want to look like that.”  By the time I was twenty, I did.

Now at nearly fifty, I see a picture of a beautiful, classy older woman, like Doris Lessing at 90, and still I say the same. 

“When I grow up…”

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gunnar in snow 2

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A quiet voice from a high, harsh mountain.

And yet today, she feels so soft.

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snow ice rock branches

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