Monthly Archives: January 2024

MOM AND POP GROCERY

                                  How I wish to sail away in my little skiff
                                  And high on the waters, live out the rest of my life.

                                                 – Su Tung-p’o (“Immortal at the River”)

Harold and Nettie kept accounts of all the local

farmhands in a shoebox, cashed their checks

and paid their bills on Saturdays,

the balance spent behind the neon blue

Burgie sign in the dark-half of the store—

worn men glancing-out into the blinding light

at the wagonload of soda pop bottles

we gleaned from weeds along the road

to trade for Cokes and candy.

They offered ‘Flying A’ gasoline before

they moved the grocery to the Yokohl

when they widened the highway,

keeping busy into old age until

a week after Harold retired

to his skiff on high waters.

Atmospheric Rivers Clean-Up

 

With a couple of “burn days” between rain showers this week, we’ve lit the piles of debris and deadfall that settled here where the canyon widens that were brought down with last spring’s atmospheric rivers.  With air quality a concern in the San Joaquin Valley, burn days can be hard to come by.  Not only are we reducing hazardous fuel in the event of a wildfire, but eliminating the limbs, mostly sycamore that burn quickly compared to oak, we saved our watergap fences between pastures and neighbors when Dry Creek rises again.  Lastly, we’ve eliminated a potential logjam at McKay’s Point where part of the Kaweah River is diverted to the St. John’s fork that ultimately passes north of Visalia.

 

 

REVERBERATIONS

Voices lift above the rhythmic drum beats

from Elko, Nevada—dear friends claimed

for over thirty years and seven hundred miles:

 

a ‘Cowboy Disneyland’, I declared having found

my tribe in ’89, Ian rising on the wind and Jack,

rambling from the Ashgrove, ever-ready

 

in my mind to fly the thin, clean air

over sawtoothed peaks of frosted snow

like sharp, white teeth gnawing at the sky—

 

at heaven, a high desert ascension between

here and there where nothing stays the same

but hugs, handshakes and easy camaraderie.

 

 

https://www.sweetrelief.org/news/sweet-relief-musicians-fund-presents-a-tribute-to-ramblin-jack-elliott

 

 

 

NATE VISE’S FORT

(c) Tulare County Library

Kentucky native Nathaniel Vise was born in 1810.  He voted in the election to form Tulare County 1852 and led the competition between Woodsville and Visalia (named after him) for the new County seat.  In that same election, my mother’s great-grandfather, John Cutler, leading the contingent for Woodsville, became the County’s first elected judge.

 

 

An outsider, I imagine timbers

between me and town—

now an amoebic city flooding

 

its values onto orchard ground:

big box stores, stucco cathedrals,

and condos stacked like cordwood.

 

Ramparts only in my mind

to keep the natives safe

from the shiniest attractions

 

as sleepy-headed commuters

race 198 to stew in tail light gridlock—

impatience rising with their exhaust.

 

 

https://thesungazette.com/article/visalia/2021/10/13/housing-project-hopes-to-reveal-remnants-of-visalias-first-structure/


https://www.tularecountytreasures.org

Another Bunch Branded

Beautiful day on Dry Creek, good friends, good help.

CRUSADES

 

Caravans of SUVs, militarily spaced in case one gets lost,

race up our pocked-marked and decomposing mountain road

on Fridays to Hartland and Hume Lake Christian camps

to thin, clean air and worship exposed to cedars and pines

only to return Sunday afternoons as if God were driving

 

irresponsibly—an ascension of modern day crusaders

sprinting with a gang of jeeps, retrofitted for climbing rocks

and spinning hookers in the melting snow, the whir

and hum of mud-grips from miles below. Always

casualties, strapped to the backs of tow trucks home.

 

RIDGELINE

 

A bustling world of change

with all its shenanigans beyond

the renewed green after rain,

 

beyond the ridgeline that has stayed

the same for a thousand lifetimes,

ever since Tro’khud, the Eagle

 

and Wee-hay’-sit, the Mountain Lion

shaped a body from clay

and baked it in the house of tules

 

they had set afire. Then put a piece

of him in a basket and set it beside

Sho-no’-yoo spring to become his mate.

 

They made mistakes like paws for hands

they had to change—but for a moment

they were safe this side of the ridge.

 

 

HAPPY NEW YEAR

 

I’s been a great week between Christmas and New Years with Robbin’s brother Joe here to help out cutting wood, splitting oak, hanging gates, cleaning-up the Horehound, Turkey Mullein and tumbleweeds along the driveway, not to mention vehicle maintenance while getting 0.34″ slow rain that has revitalized our green.  We’ve taken time-out around the BBQ fire pit with Bloody Mary’s and a Mexican Coffee to celebrate our accomplishments.

 

Though I would have liked the rain to come a month earlier, the weather’s been perfect, rain spaced well with warm temperatures as the canyon has turned from blond dry feed to green.  The cows and calves have moved to the softened ground uphill to get a bite of both as we watch the virgin Red Angus bulls, close-by, fumbled their way to breeding postures.  As Robbin quips, “It’s a wonder we get any calves at all.” 

This is what we work for, an uncertain future, and wish you all a joyful 2024 !!