A wonderful day for Robbin and me touring Woolley Canyon with Chuck and Lesley Fry where Virginia and Ken Mckee run their cows and calves. Though wild and rough (it takes a week to gather), it’s the most diverse piece of ground, ranging upwards to 3,600 feet, I’ve ever seen. Lots of wildflowers new to me:
Out here in the California heartland beyond the peeling billboards that once announced every fruit and vegetable capital of the world removed from Highway 99, swapping crops for air conditioned shopping malls – neutered Valley towns given-up their figs to farm people instead, I can’t tell Turlock from Modesto.
Out here between the furrows where every Mom and Pop grocery store, fruit stand, bar, bait and tackle shop under one flat roof is boarded-up, old gas pumps frozen like soldiers from the Fifties waiting for a windshield or dip-stick to check or if the kids are over the mumps or chicken pox yet.
And Congressman, I know we can’t go back – that the rest of you must have great big plans we can’t comprehend, that you all have your own dream of what you can do with the harvest: your ledger of plastic magic debts – but what happens when the tree grows too far from its roots?
We are the tendrils burrowing in the dirt where what little water left is pumped into food we can’t sell at a profit anymore and I was wondering how do we fit your vision of the new millennium? How are you going to keep us producing like numb milk cows to stanchions without kicking down with a little more cash or bigger rations?
Or have you dealt us out for some fresh field workers not yet addicted to electricity or TV, never driven a tractor or new car or had to pay license and insurance yet with nothing to lose but their innocence?
Dear Congressman, I couldn’t sleep again tonight trying to figure how it’s going to work and thought I’d write and ask you before I invest another decade in the soil: how in the hell can we stay to pay the bills and still subsidize your consumption? You don’t need my vote and not enough will hear whatever good or bad I might say about you to matter, but I thought I’d ask one human to another: do you really have a plan?
Not much has changed. Written in 1998 and included in “Poems from Dry Creek” (Starhaven)