sunflower drive-in in old fair oaks, classic vegetarian fare. |
nut burger...OHMG. oh dear, i wolfed my down. |
north fork american river, near codfish falls. |
we came at sundown, on these long golden days. we'll be back in the heat to refresh ourselves in this alluring water. |
i could drink you all up. |
hit up the farmers market, and you got yourselves a stew, baby. ;) purple potatoes, yellow and green squash, tomatoes and shallots, rice noodles. yuuuuum. |
i recognize it. tears come
as i round the corner
down my street
the crickets are singing their
purple
evening
song
(once upon a time i ran wildly through the front door,
searching for this song
so desperate.)
keeping tabs on the local elderberries, which are quite prolific in my town. (wow, how far i've come..."my town"?? the presence of ripe elderberries does that to a girl.) |
the hedges of jasmine yearning
their final yearns
with that heady
scent,
soon to be
brown.
the roses
wag their ruffled
exquisite
heads
of orange
fucsia
magenta,
lining the sidewalk,
our
cool walkway.
my best friend, the chicory flower. |
take a break for these wild artichokes, electric purple giant thistles. |
i live in this place,
when i enter the subdivision
it's like removing myself
from earth, (all native things plowed over and away.)
like walking on to some
scientist-crafted mothership:
here, life is pre-constructed!
see: the proximity to food,
educational centers,
recreational play structures!
we take your trash away!
"you mean they cleared a whole potato field for two hundred houses, all the same, just maybe a different color here or there?" "yes, enough for two hundred families but there's 700 families on the waiting list!" "who could ever want to live in such a place?"
last summer i made a chicory flower essence without really attuning myself to the flower, i was hasty. it did not go so well, lesson learned. |
easy like a summer morning. |
afraid that in time i wouldn't be me---
so afraid that i would shrivel up and die,
somehow.
and become complacent,
stuck in some
trivial
soul sucking
consumer
vacuous
rut.
like randle patrick mcmurphy getting a lobotomy.
coffee berry matching it's name. |
be jubilant, my feet. |
little teddy wades across. he has a loose tooth...this is one of those parenting milestones that i've been looking forward to. i have a genuine kid. |
anyone going to the kate wolf memorial music festival? i realllly want to try and go with my kids.
i have become so strong:
i have never been truer to
the wonder
of my true self.
even more wild and beautiful because of this contrast.
my favorite color. it's like singing. |
the pits.
it deserves every single criticism.
(an unholy desert dedicated to the gaping maw of convenience, an artless land devoid of creative expression.)
but
i have a house filled
with
pure
love.
a bike that flies down the sidewalk.
i planted two more fruit trees in the lawn, soon it will be a little orchard.
blue vervain |
she's a pretty cool cat
once you know well enough
to look behind
the mall
and parking
lots.
she settled out small, like any other town, with a thriving unique heart and purpose.
a train yard connecting the tracks that reach the sierra summits, an auction market, fruit growers.
a community of musicians and artists
and laborers.
every place starts with a small dynamic core
that sort of spirals and whorls out,
subdivisions at the edges
to house the masses
as the town grows.
some parts of roseville feel so destitute, gritty, and real
that i can't help but feel so vulnerable when there.
wild dill. a cowboy. |
the best little helper. |
losing elderberries on our score thrifted turkish rug. |
simmering away. the finished product (not pictured, for reals?) is in a pint jar in the fridge, lovely as a garnet. |
little sidekick:
coloring. |
here, mommy, i'll put the crayons away. |
home life. |
my little skipper rode 8 miles without a complaint. |
a basket full of musky mugwort. |
loves the shopping cart at the library. this kid is one pint sized party. i can't help but laugh from joy being around him. every thing he does cracks my mother heart with his cuteness. |
this little cutie had knee surgery, he's been real brave, doing more than he probably should. he's just waking up in this pic. |
the last celery (and biggest?) of the season. poor baby. |
it's funny the way things work out. ty and i talk about moving a lot, getting a teeny bit of land for goats and gardens, and we're saving..... i want to stay in this area. i love the yellow prairies and the green winters and the view of the blue sierras from the hot valley and the endless green fingers of winding creeks.
and so, ahem, a truce. :)
flower eater. |
i'm curious to know what others will do!
xoxo
ps: teddy is going to school! (it's been a long road making this decision, and while i 100% subscribe to every tenet of home schooling, we learned in the last year that there are some major personality differences, resulting in a painful abundance of frustration.) i'm really excited for him, so far it seems like a tree-house dream school.
ugh you say so many things dear to my heart i don't know where to begin!!! your color is so you, true and pure under the radiant sun, when you talk about the fear of losing yourself there is something in me that shouts to you, YOU WOULD NEVER!!! NEVER FEAR!!! but the journey those fears put you on is so amazing and mind expanding and this truce is just one more beautiful, vast, rewarding and deeply blessed/blissed part of it all. i love your love for roseville. when we were little we went to the roseville library and the older parts of roseville all the time, although i can't say we ever explored your luscious creek. i so admire the home you've made, inside yourself and out. fruit trees and celery-laden babies and bicycles and handsome husbands ALL wrapped up into such a beautiful dollyland of nature and magic.
ReplyDeletefor a moment i thought you were calling a truce against the heat! i grew up in the foothills and the central valley, and i never won the battle!
ReplyDeleteyes, where you are is magical. i miss it sometimes, especially in late september when the clouds roll back in up here in the pnw.
i love your story about the berries! thank you for sharing it!