Saturday, March 27, 2010

Creative Writing Wander in Fremont Canyon


Today's writing wander in the mouth of Fremont: memorable due to the 30 mph gusts of Santa Ana wind, which made the oak canopy sound like a waterfall if you closed your eyes (thanks Sueanne for that accurate comparison). I began a poem about it:

Airs Poetica
Fremont Canyon, Santa Ana wind

In my low
front row seat
I am sheltered
by the crumbling
yellow sandstone
cliffs that amp-
lify this morning
concert: oak
choirs rise
up canyon, sway
branch arms, rattle
hallelujah leaves,
roar out windsong—
I am crushed
under the air's
crescendo.
We found our places on the sand and sandstone banks of the shallow creek that made another kind of music when the wind paused. Then, after writing almost an hour in the canyon, we hiked a short way up the steep road toward the Irvine Lake overlook. Time ran out, though, and we had to turn back before we got to the lake view.

What we did get a glimpse of: a whole miniature world of biological crust--including moss and lichen and liverworts--on the northfacing roadcut along the washed-out red dirt road. The photo above is a liverwort called Asterella californica. I spent over an hour looking up info about them after I got home. It would all probably be TMI for anyone not wholly fascinated with these weird life forms that have no veins to carry water and nutrients. In other words, what looks like a leaf is not a leaf; it's a thallus.

And what looks like a tiny flower on a stalk in the photo is actually this: “When the gametophyte has become fertilized and is ready to produce its sporophyte generation it may grow a tall green umbrella-shaped structure called the carpocephalum. The sporophyte grows on the underside of this structure, often completely hidden from view.” TMI for some, absolutely fascinating for others. If you fall into the second group, see

Shoe notes: (and what outing is complete without them?)
After last week's painful re-introduction to running shoes on the Dilley hike, I decided to just wear socks and sandals on today's short outing. This was fine except on the steep downhill—I slipped several times. (The bottom of the sandals has zero tread.) I wished I were barefoot . . . I've been on some tilted and slippery sandstone trails in the last couple of months, and my bare feet have not lost their grip yet.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Equinox afternoon at James Dilley Preserve, LCWP



Led a nature writing hike* yesterday, at the flowerful and birdelicious James Dilley Preserve, part of the Laguna Coast Wilderness Park.


Four writers joined me; it was fun to first sit around and discuss our favorite wild places in Orange County, and then go out and absorb a little of the lemon-scented-everlasting beauty of the Canyon Trail (also known as the Bea Whittlesey trail).


(*the first time in two months I've worn shoes while hiking . . . and my toes hurt at the end . . . which does not happen when I am barefoot . . . )


Bloomers included a mysterious and tiny yellow lotus (see photo above), popcorn-colored popcorn flower, blue dichlostema, monkey flower in soft shades of orange and salmon, and at the top of the ridge along the Mariposa Trail: billows of yellow and reddish deerweed blossoms (the flowers change color after pollination).


Speaking of deerweed . . . it's a favorite hangout for ticks—they're waiting for deer to come by for a bite. I had to brush a few off my shirt after sitting trailside for a “close-your-eyes-and-soak-it-all-in” exercise.


We admired, and wrote about, a gigantically ancient coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) about a half mile up the trail on the left. You'll recognize her when you see her.


“I am the oak” was our refrain as we made up lines to a song she might sing when no one is around . . . I worked on my notes some more at home last night . . .


I am the oak. I allow some sun

to dapple past, but most of the light

I devour, transform, to pink whispers of sharp

new growth, yellow catkins that promise a harvest.

I am the oak, raining down generations

of acorns on woodpecker, squirrel, and deer.


I am the oak. Orbits of insects

revolve around me, on me and under.

Where is the center of life's universe

for a California Sister? Wait through the winter,

find her eggs hidden in my curled leaves,

which Sister larvae nibble, somehow translate

from toothed and waxy sunlight refractors

to black, orange and blue-blushed butterfly wings.


I am the oak. Whole forests of lichen

march over my branches, pattern on pattern.

I am the oak, providing for thousands

even in death. Hawk will perch, owl nest

in my bare silhouette until the small workers

feast with the fungi and turn me to sponge—

enriching the soil in dark crumbled dampness.

I am the oak. You are all welcome.



Sunday, March 21, 2010

New shoes and shoe-less adventures



This is a picture of me & my new "barefoot" shoes I wear to work. But first, a story (I got out for a trail run yesterday: trailhead, Santiago Oaks Regional Park\)


Mountain biker getting his breath at the top of Mountain Goat Trail: “No shoes?”


My reply (over my shoulder, as I left him in a very tiny cloud of barefooting dust): “Not today.”


Although he had started up the trail with a 20-yard lead, I caught him right at the top. Was this because I took the “shortcut” route? I still love that old path, the pre- “let's get a bulldozer up here and make a freeway up to Barham Ridge” trail. It's got one awesomely steep sandstone section where I have to use my hands to crawl up the almost-vertical eroded yellow rock.


Rock crawling = fun.


Especially when you're 50 and can't run so fast any more. So the rock-scrambling turtle caught the two-wheeled hare. And, weirdly enough, I was hardly breathing, while the biker guy (OK, he was probably 10 years older than me) was panting quite a bit.


My ongoing barefooting research has turned up the interesting factoid that shoelessness means about 5% less effort (the weight of the shoes, etc.). Is that why it's been so difficult to get my heart rate up since I began leaving my running shoes at home? Or just the fact that it's hard to get any kind of speed up when the trail is full of )$(@*! chunks of rock just waiting for me not to see them . . .


But really, that's actually why I like the whole idea of going barefoot on the trail—with speed out of the equation, what makes my runs challenging is having to pay attention to the trail surface so as not to overdose on arch bruises. Ouch. Even a smallish rock, if it's sharp enough and I land wrongly, brings me back out of any daydreaming and back to Painville.


I don't live there long, though. Next door to Painville is Flowerhaven, and as I scan uptrail and around I note some of my new neighbors in the Barham Ranch subdivision (inventory as of yesterday): wild hyacinth, three kinds of lupine, Catalina mariposa lily, purple nightshade, popcorn flower, bush sunflower, and more whose names and faces I'm forgetting.


Kinds of “barefoot sensation” shoes I researched recently: Feelmax, Vivos, Skora, Tod's, Softstar, Vibram Five Fingers.


What I ended up with to wear to work: Soft Star Grippy Roos in chocolate suede ($63 + shipping, with the added plus that the Oregon Elves who made them included a little handwritten thank-you note). www.softstarshoes.com


I wear these with any outfits that don't involve black pants...the brown suede is just too noticeable then. I hope to invest in a pair of Softstar Ramblers in smooth black leather...my next discretionary $75.


I tried to just listen as fellow hiking and biking volunteers discussed the Vibram Five Fingers shoe during breaktime at our recent CPR/First Aid class. What I wanted to say: try NOTHING. Just your bare feet and the trail. But I didn't.


However, to the new docent (who told me about how he needed different boots, as his feet were bloody after a recent hike to the weather station on the Fremont dirt road) I did offer some advice: “Just wear those running shoes you've got on right now. Unless you're carrying a 40-pound pack, you don't need hiking boots.” Less shoe = more comfort. Now I've taken that to the (il)logical conclusion: NO shoes = total and complete awesomenemnity on the trail.


What made the 9-5 of CPR and First Aid training day (including the module “When Help is Delayed”) completely worth it? (Besides of course Louie-the-trainer's funny and useful presentation about all things lifesaving. . . )


. . . The young lady sitting next to me for the afternoon session had a story (these classes are often de-railed by story, but not so much of that yesterday) about being bit by by a rattlesnake while hiking alone.


This scenario, more than being devoured scalp-to-toenails by a mountain lion, is probably my biggest concern.


There are lots of rattlers in our wild hills, and I can't count the times I've surprised one lying on or next to the trail. (Or do they surprise me . . . it might be a toss-up . . . )


Anyway, she said she spent 10 minutes trying to work the suction device she'd packed for just such an occasion. (The device is called a Sawyer Extractor.) She finally gave up on that and slowly hiked the mile back to her car at the trailhead, then drove herself to the emergency room, where they told her she had wasted her time with the attempt at venom extraction. What they really wanted to know, at the emergency room, was what kind of snake it was. She did not have a positive ID, but since there were only two venomous snakes native to the area (I forget where she was...somewhere in the dry Southwest), the ER docs were able to adminster the appropriate anti-venin.


She said the bite area on her leg was painful for weeks, but she recovered completely.


Then Louie-the-CPR-instructor had a similar story: he knew of another solitary woman runner who had been bit in the OC backcountry—she panicked, and sprinted back to the trailhead. Yikes. He couldn't remember if she died, but from what he could re-call she at least was in serious condition for a while.


What I learn from this: stay calm. ID the snake. Get back to the car slowly.


It all reminded me very much of the article in Backpacker magazine a couple of years ago . . . I looked up the link . . . if you want to read about the #1 killer in the backcountry, here's the info:

(Spoiler alert: it's NOT hypothermia, but you'll have to read the article to find out why one young hiker "mercy-killed" his companion only a mile from the trailhead . . . )


http://www.backpacker.com/gear/11044?page=7


After the CPR class there was still time for a run . . . that's when I hit the Mountain Goat trail on the mountain-biker-chasing-adventure mentioned previously.


I saw two of the first snake tracks of the season crossing the trail. It's time to be on the lookout.


Not freakout.


Happy Spring Equinox!




Sunday, February 21, 2010

Barefoot beginnings


Blogs seem like a lot of responsibility. It's been almost two months since my first and only post. Blogs are weird . . . with no followers (yet...ever?) this will be like a journaling journal thingy. But I have benefited a lot from reading some barefooting blogs in the last weeks, so I feel obligated to add the enormous wisdom I've gained in my three weeks of barefoot hiking/trail running.


In no particular order:


The soles of my feet feel a lot more alive these days. They sort of tingle, pulse, vibrate . . . maybe that's a little too melodramatic, but they definitely radiate some kind of sensation even while I'm sitting at my desk at work or doing other non-trail stuff.


Each time I go out hiking/jogging barefoot, my feet feel more comfortable on the trail. My eyes are getting better at unconsciously picking a rock-free route—although on a really washed-out trail, it's almost impossible not to step on an evil grimace of a sharp pebble now and then. The recent rains have washed away the silky dust and left firm under-clay covered in a scattering of marshmallow-sized (but not marshmallow-soft) rocks. So sometimes all I can do is slow down and tiptoe through the non-tulips.


It's still better than wearing shoes. My feet feel alive, both during and after the run, and all times in between. On the drive home, they feel all glow-y. Which is good, because out running in the cold they sometimes feel numb-y.


My feet are reluctant to wear work shoes now. (Yes, my feet are becoming a little demanding these days. These dogs don't bark, but they somehow know how to get their point across.)


So I did a lot of online researching last week, and ended up on the Soft Star web site, ordering a shoe from a bunch of elves in Corvallis, OR. http://www.softstarshoes.com/ A couple of days later, my chocolate Grippy Suede Roos appeared in a box atop my mail box. I love them! A little bedroom-slipperish, in the suede, but I was going to buy a pair of Minnetonka moccasins from Zappos.com for $40, and my Soft Stars should last longer, with their special non-leather sole. I need a pair in smooth black leather, though, for those fancy occasions.


They are lined with a bit of sheepskin, but the ground feels fairly unobstructed. No padding or stiffening in the sole. Won't be heel-strikin' in these elf shoes.


Speaking of heel striking—when I'm out hiking, and the ground turns to sand for however long or short of a patch, my gait immediately goes back to heels first. And it feels really good and soft. Back to the hard-baked clay/rocks, and I'm back to the “normal” mid-foot/ball-of-foot landing.


Yes, walking barefoot makes one hyper-conscious of how the foot is landing at all times. That can get a little old, but it's becoming more automatic. At different times in a hike, though, the feeling will come back of “how am I supposed to be foot-striking again?” Then I relax at the hips and try to glide more (if I'm walking). Jogging seems to be more natural...as long as I remember to lift my foot and not push off. And to keep the cadence up. And to imagine I'm riding a bicycle in terms of uprightness and foot-lift (which tip I got from one of the blogs I read).


So far I've been out 14 times (yep. I'm counting) in mud and streams and dust and sand and lots of rocks. It's all challenging fun. Gravel does get old fastest. Mud is squishy cool. Aged piles of horse poop are like golden-bleached pillows. Leaping good times.


It's kind of bothersome to run into people on the trail. Sometimes I don't (like yesterday at Irvine Park, running the Horseshoe Loop. No one.). But when I do, either they stare at my feet and say something, or stare and don't say anything. I can't decide which is better/worse.


Friday, January 8, 2010

New Year, New Blog

Since my web site never really worked (it was a do-it-yourself project with Microsoft Publisher, a disappointing program that only allowed viewing by people using Internet Explorer), I'm converting my Orange County Nature Writing journey into blog format.

My hope for this blog: to raise awareness of the natural beauty and value of our local wild lands.

During my training as a volunteer naturalist, we learned about what it means to be a good docent: it's all about interpretation. I give you a multi-syllabic definition from the National Association of Interpretation web site: "Interpretation is a mission-based communication process that forges emotional and intellectual connections between the interests of the audience and the meanings inherent in the resource."

In other words: I want to let folks know how amazing our Orange County wild lands are, and I hope, as people experience these places for themselves, they will feel a connection and want to preserve them . . . ( . . . whatever "preserve" means . . . as with all environmental issues, it's complicated. Complicated, but definitely worth the discussion.)

As 2010 launches us into a new year of opportunity, I'm also hoping that this blog will help give momentum to the Orange County nature writing anthology that I plan to work on this year.

Do you have a story to tell (in poetry or prose) about your experiences in Orange County's wild lands? (loosely defined as containing at least one native plant, critter, or rock)?

Write away!