Tuesday 30 September 2008

Sfunny

Y'know life is a funny thing.

I was looking at a friend's blog and she linked to another blog where the writer has written a book on Colorado's Scenic Byways.

And I thought, as I looked at the cover of that book, how much I regret that we didn't get to see even more of Colorado whilst we were there, and how I actually miss the place almost as much as I miss Home. California is nice, the weather is great, the people are fine, it's great to be near the coast and see the redwoods and whathaveyou, but Fort Collins and the Rockies really took me (and DH) by storm. Yes we didn't have to deal with winter and a very fickle spring but we miss the place. It is sorta saddening to think I will probably not go back - we wanted to go for Estes Park wool festival but the timing was all wrong. It was so very pretty and relaxed, not all stressy and hurried and so chock full of cars that you can't get away from the things....

So here's to you, Fort Collins and the Rockies!

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(and goodness me, there are MANY pictures that never made it onto the blog or Flickr1 About two months worth! Let alone the tales that go with them...)

Harbingers

Look at this for a forecast:

WEDNESDAY
MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGHS IN THE 70S TO LOWER 80S. WEST
WINDS 5 TO 10 MPH.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MOSTLY CLEAR IN THE EVENING THEN BECOMING
MOSTLY CLOUDY. SLIGHT CHANCE OF RAIN AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOWS IN THE
50S. WEST WINDS 5 TO 10 MPH. CHANCE OF RAIN 20 PERCENT.

THURSDAY
MOSTLY CLOUDY. SLIGHT CHANCE OF RAIN. HIGHS IN THE
70S. SOUTHWEST WINDS AROUND 5 MPH
BECOMING WEST 10 TO 15 MPH IN
THE AFTERNOON. CHANCE OF RAIN 20 PERCENT.

THURSDAY NIGHT
PARTLY CLOUDY. LOWS IN THE 40S TO UPPER 50S.

FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT
MOSTLY CLOUDY. CHANCE OF RAIN. HIGHS
IN THE 60S TO UPPER 70S. LOWS IN THE 40S TO UPPER 50S.

SATURDAY
PARTLY CLOUDY. CHANCE OF SHOWERS. HIGHS IN THE 70S.

There's TWO words in there that I have not seen for ages:

a) cloudy, and
b) RAIN! (albeit a slight chance of)

Golly, the season might be changing. It is nearly October after all.

Then on the shop hop, I saw this tree in a car park at Los Altos. It was a little enthusiastic about changing I reckon.
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Enjoy your weather and spring or autumn wherever you are!

Sunday 7 September 2008

A walk in the woods

(Or on the second day, our calves were sore!



On the American Labour Day, this year on the first of September, we went for a walk in the woods with our Aussie mate who was visiting for work. We also met up with an old friend who now lives in SF and his four year old daughter. She's a real sweetie and is going to be a handful when she gets older - pretty and bright! We all were given sticks that had a very special import, though lord knows what it was....

We didn't go to just any old woods, nope, we were off to Muir Woods.

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Sequoia sempervirens is the star of the show at Muir Woods.

This is the centennial year of the woods. They've been around for much longer than a hundred years but not as a national monument. These are The Woods to many San Franciscans, but they are lucky to still be around. The April-June edition of Bay Nature outlines how the woods could first have been logged and now be under water - only a freak of topography meant the valley they lie in (Redwood Canyon) was spared from the loggers in the mid to late 1800s and then a dedicated battle by a conservationist by the name of William Kent, who ended up buying the woods for the princely sum of $45,000 in 1905.

Two years later the local water company decided to acquire the land. This was on the 2nd of December 1907. Kent sent a barrage of letters to Washington DC, offering 295 acres to the US government in exchange for turning the land into a national monument, permanently inviolable. By New Year's Eve, the gift was accepted, and President Theodore Roosevelt declared the woods inviolable on 9th January 1908, a day before the water company took possession.

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When you think about it, it is truly impressive that such an exchange could take place so quickly. There was no internet in 1907. No faxes either. No planes or automobiles, only trains. The Wild West was barely tamed. SF had been devastated by a major earthquake the year before. The quickest way to correspond was by telegraph. And then there is the government - these days getting a national monument declared would take reams of paperwork and months, if not years, of hand-wringing and bureaucracy...

But what Mr/Congressman Kent left us with was this:

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And goshdarnit, we should be grateful and we are.

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Muir Woods is not his only legacy. The whole area north of SF is covered in parks that are all thanks to him. He bought land and gave it to the public. The public seems to appreciate his efforts.

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We were there on a sunny day. Sunny days in summer are rare in redwood country - they need the sea fogs to survive as not enough rain falls, particularly in summer, in the Bay area to sustain redwoods. They are only found near the coast - if you visit the Bay area, you'll see that the hills and ranges along the coast are clothed in trees whilst the ranges on the inland side of the Bay are clothed in grasses/herbs/forbs and the odd oak. Redwoods simply do not do well when they don't get rain or fog year round. They happily "breathe in" the water droplets in fog. They are ancient trees, gymnosperms dating back many many millions of years.

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(Do not adjust your eyes - those shadows really are doubled yet there was only one sun in the sky.)

Noone knows how old these trees are. We can make guesstimates based on their girth and rate of growth, but there is very little genetic variation between the trees of the Muir Woods. When a new seedling manages to get a hold on life (and that ain't easy in a mature forest that is not allowed to burn), it grows and grows for many years. It has little offshoots at its base that eventually take over as the old tree fails. There are lots of "fairy rings" of coastal redwoods. They grow so closely together in their family groupings that it would be hard to sidle in between the trunks of some groves. Individual members of the group may only be a hundred or so years old but the parent tree could be much, much older.

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If a tree falls over but manages to survive, a row of trees can grow from its trunk, making lines of redwoods. Here's one we prepared earlier:
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We took the road less travelled up above the redwood canyons. We saw groves and dells similar to those that inspired the forest moon "Endor." We saw light and dust and many special things. And we walked up an awfully steep hill and then down the other side of it. It's been a while since we walked up any hills - we live in a flat part of the Bay.

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(Up out of the canyon)

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We didn't just see redwoods - there are other trees and plants there too up on the hills surrounding the redwood canyons. The lack of fires has reduced the biodiversity some - only recently has US national forest management concluded that little fire is good for the forests - Smokey Bear's policies of no forest fires equals no regeneration of old forests. (I'm not saying people should go round burning forests to the ground but a widespread area of old, even moribund, forest is not good for the forest or any of the critters that rely on it. It is good for water catchments though.)

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At the end of the day, we came home with very dirty legs. LOL

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Hopefully we will get a chance to visit these woods again (less traffic would be nice too!) and see them in a different mood - autumnal maybe or misty or early spring with leaves just at leaf burst.

Friday 5 September 2008

Feeling wistful

I was reading Crazy Aunt Purl today and her comments about Tennessee having real seasons made me sorta wistful. Where I come from, we have winter (should be "cold" (50sF, 13C) and wet/damp but has just been mostly cold and vaguely miserable for the last 10 or so years), spring (should be four seasons in one day, still living up to its reputation), summer (often blasted hot, rarely miserably cold, ie only 20-25C, generally balmy nights, the odd thunderstorm, cool changes every week or 10 days) and autumn (dry start then cool crisp mornings with sunny, warm days).

We've been here in SJ for over 9 months now. We arrived on 30 December. So far we've had the weird winter here - relatively cool days (warm compared to Canada though!), once every two or three weeks it RAINS for three or so days, non-stop. Then it clears up for a week or two with heartbreakingly blue skies. It rained and rained and rained for Stitches West, only stopping in the last afternoon. I am told that is usual. The rain events wound down over March, the last shower was in April, and we had lots of blue skies. LOTS and LOTS of blue skies. I waited impatiently for it to start to warm up. It stayed around 15-20C for AGES, or so it felt.

At the end of May, it suddenly heated up. We had a few days of nearly 100F, which killed off my pea plants (and they had been bearing so well!). Then it cooled off some, thank heavens cos I was afraid I'd have three or four months of 100F temps. We had one lot of showers in late June. The locals freaked out cos it doesn't usually happen. The clouds brought dry thunderstorms to many areas, triggering a heap of wildfires and things got pretty dire for a while. The whole Bay area was smoked out. Can't imagine what it was like for those living in the areas/fighting the fires...

Since then the weather has been up and down. Mostly 80sF (high 200s/low30s C), but for a while in August I wondered if fall had come early cos the temps were around 25C for a few weeks and there were CLOUDS in the sky. Yep, white fluffy things. I'd almost forgotten what they look like.

One thing that often keeps temps bearable here is the sea breeze. The north end of the Bay calls it the Delta. I call it the sea breeze. It kicks in most days, bringing cool air from the Bay. It also means that most evenings are surprisingly cool - even if it is 38C out in the arvo, one must take a cardi or jacket out cos it will probably be quite cool in the evening, especially if the sea breeze keeps blowing.

This week? HOT! 100F or nearly. Gack. So hot that I am not getting stuff done. I've been warned that September and October can be rather warm. The average temps for SJ say 82F and 76F (28 and 25C). I'd like to know what the standard deviation on those figures is. 25C sounds marvellous but not if it is 15 one day and 35 the next... Time will tell!