Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

AFTER THE SUN & PLANET TEARS

TWILIGHT COLORS
Once the grandiloquence of 
the sun's evening departure is fixed
in our mind, in the hour of 
myth and dreams, the land becomes a 
subtle scape of texture and hues.


The summit of the pass over the Santa Lucia range is a portal.

 A place of exquisite subtlety.
HISTORY WILL CARRY THE VERDICT
Imagine December 2111.  Is it possible that humankind
will look back to us and say we had a choice between
money and life and we chose money?  Children born
between now and the next 10 years will be the elders of that humankind.  What will they endure, because of our
devotion to economic structure as we know it instead
of care for the planet?
I don't believe our science, as good as it is, fully understands the continual changes, shifts and evolutionary forces at work on our blue planet. But some of the maladies are man made.  Poisons in rivers, lakes and oceans. 
Trash and debris that takes generations to degrade and 
often leaves an altered earth and water supply behind.  Global climate changes may not all be man made, but there are apocalyptic warnings about changing temperatures, animal and insect migration changes, extreme weather changes.  It is also undeniable that carbon emissions are rising. Maybe they don't matter. But what if they do?
10 Thousand government ministers and experts from 194 nations are meeting in Durbin for a conference on our 
planet's future. From the most rational and reluctant to the most strident, there is a consensus things are changing
and those changes will force biological and botanical  reactive change.  How we live will change, in ways 
we can only speculate.
But, because the planet is gripped by economic fear,
there will be no agenda, no plan of action, no
muscle to try to change the course we are on.
Socialist, Capitalist, Communist, Feudal, Tribal-
no matter how the nations of the world practice
economics, this age is too wed to evaluating
life and human endeavor by those standards to 
instead put a value on the life of the planet we
inhabit or the lives of our descendants.
December 2111.  Will they regret the choices 
we have made?
See you down the trail.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

REMEMBERING CHINESE ROCK PICKERS, GIVING TO CHARITIES & ACADEMIC SURF

RESPECT DUE
The striking sculpture in San Luis Obispo's
Rail Road Square pays respect to the Chinese
workers who made rail roads a reality.
Chinese influence on the American west coast has
been largely under appreciated.  Gavin Menzies book
1421 The Year China Discovered the World
claims Chinese sailors made it to the American west
before Europeans made their way to the east coast.
While that view is not universally accepted
it is clear that Chinese helped shape the
American west.
Chinese also worked in the Cinnabar mines of
the central coast. 



Generation of Chinese families harvested kelp on the
Central Coast.  The San Luis Obispo sculpture
is a beautiful reminder of what was back breaking
labor that helped develop the west.
SURFS UP
IN ACADEMIA

AND WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO?
Investigative reporter Will Evans of CALIFORNIA WATCH
is out with a timely and eye opening piece on 
Charitable fund raising.  
My own years of investigative reporting lead me to
find the charity's excuses a bit dubious.  When I contribute
I want to know the money is going for the said cause
instead of building a data base or brand recognition.

Monday, December 5, 2011

DECEMBER IN WINE COUNTRY & HUGO

A QUIET REST
An odd and even difficult year for
the Paso Robles appellation is nearing an end.
A late frost and bad weather conditions
has generally lowered the yield of
wine growers, but most say
the quality of the fruit and eventually
the wine will be very good.
But for now the vineyards offer
scenes of quiet, color and a meditative peace.








 Wine pick ups offer the beginning of seasonal feasts.
 A sunny afternoon and the honey display at 
Pipestone, made me feel like a kid.
 A noisy goose and quiet duck-
an animal variation of sweet and sour.  
No menu options intended!

Even vines deserve a rest.
REEL THOUGHTS
HUGO
We loved it from the first frame.  Full disclosure here-
I'm a Martin Scorsese fan.  Still this is a masterful work and in 3D-his first use of the tools.  It's a wonderful
story, perfect for the Christmas season and a very
old fashioned film in the best sense.
Ben Kingsley, Sacha Baron Cohen, Asa Butterfield as 
Hugo and Chloe Grace Mortez as his friend are all
superb. The visual look and texture is pure magic, and
enhanced by the 3D optics.  But there is even more
to this Scorsese cinema art, and it is a tribute to
film itself.  Without giving away too much,
there is a brilliant celebration of the films
of George Melies, an early and experimental French film maker.  For that that element of the film alone
Scorcese deserves the gratitude of all film fans everywhere.
It is marvelous and enchanting. Brian Selznick's book gave Scorsese a chance to go where he has never gone before as a film maker, and we are the beneficiaries. 
Want to enjoy a film like you did when younger
and less world wise?  This is the ticket.
See you down the trail.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

THE WEEKENDER :) SWAN LAKE AND KITTENS

TIME FOR PLEASANT
Thanks to all of you who have posted comments,
sent e-mails or called to see how we are doing.
We are just fine and it was gorgeous day today.  I spent a lot of time with a broom and power blower and as I worked
I heard others joining the chorus along with chain saws.
We were lucky. All I had to do was go after pine needles and small twigs.  We've heard of a few cars and homes
that were damaged by the falling Monterey Pines.
Hats off to the PG&E, Charter Cable, and CCSD road crews for their great work during and in the aftermath 
of the historic winds. 
In keeping with our WEEKENDER :) attitude
here is a nice departure and something
spectacular.
DAY BOOK
KITTEN BREAK
They seemed "nervous" during the wind storm
finding places to hide, even inside. They
appreciate the sunshine.



See you down the trail.

Friday, December 2, 2011

AFTER THE WINDS

GETTING BACK INTO THE 21st CENTURY
 The moon was the brightest thing on Main Street last
night during what was supposed to be the annual
village "Hospitality Night."
 Revelers were either detoured by or working at
sites like this.
 No official count yet, but many trees were felled
by the highest winds in more than a decade. Some say
more trees than any time they can recall.
 This is a block from our home. The scene was repeated through out Cambria.
 I can't tell you how many times in the last day and half
that I've walked into a room and flipped the switch.
We are dependent on that convenience aren't we?
 I read by lantern light, we used the fireplace for 
heat and hoped the refrigerator would hold it's cold.
 All evening we waited to be surprised by the return of
of power.  But when it was time for the
festivities to begin on Main Street, we were all
in the dark.  Merchants provide treats and snacks as 
the locals stroll through the stores.  It is a village 
tradition to kick off the gift buying and party season.
 But the combination reunion, party, social event
was illuminated only by headlights.
 As always when there is a power outage,
there was one place, powered by their huge
emergency generator-The Main Street Grill.
 You've surmised where people headed.  It was said several
times last night, if we sit here long enough we'll see 
everyone in town.  That was almost a literal truth.
 TODAY, BACK UP IN THE AIR
 Some were lucky to get power last night, but many
woke without toasters, coffee makers, radio, TV
and the Internet. It was also chilly in unheated homes.
 These signs were all over the village.
Ice for powerless refrigerators was flying out of the Cookie Crock Supermarket.
 PG&E guys told me they had been at it 30 hours
non-stop and have a 4AM call to head to Santa Cruz
tomorrow. I'm not sure the overtime pay is enough. 
 These scenes will explain why I'm at Mike and Jacque Griffin's sending this post.  That stuff you see on the downed line is the Charter gear.  Looks like cable, phone and the Internet will down a while.  
Great idea of "bundling" the services eh? 
Wondering now why I bought it. 
 This is a bundle of another sort.
Once the PG&E crews depart, the Charter guys
will have to jump it.
 WE LOVE OUR TREES, BUT
 Cambria is one of only a handful of places in the world
where the Monterey Pine grows naturally. They are a
unique tree and as you can see very shallow rooted.

 It doesn't take much to send them over.
Cambria in the Pines is one of the historic names
for our village.  Our friend Robert quipped today
we should change it to Cambria in the Pains or the Monterey Pain tree.
After 30 hours the power came on at our home on the 
ridge.  Nice to have lights at the flip of a switch, 
heat, a washing machine.  And soon, I hope, Internet and 
cable.  Spoiled aren't we?
Oh, and if you are out this way, the Hospitality night
will apparently be re-staged as a Friday night
sigh of relief.  The historic winds are gone but
so are some of the trees.
See you down the trail.