Vacation is not a strong enough word.
Yes, I vacated the premises in San Diego and the road that brought me North. I cleared my
mind: took a virtual rag through one ear, out the other, carrying all
thoughts of chores out of reach from all six senses.
I could smell the low tide before opening my eyes that first morning. Thick
wet sands studded with clams, oysters and mysterious mud worms lay revealed in the
morning glow as the resident Canadian geese squawked the dawn.
And the Rabbit cars. Those pesky multipliers were so
plentiful, locals humans would literally ride shotgun, snagging the long eared
lopers with a net. At the fair, this year however, the rabbits had the upper
hand, a pair of Barbie dolls were symbolically tangled in the nets of giant
rabbits perched in the driver’s seat of the 1949 Rabbit Buggie. A less than
subtle suggestion of which species has multiplied out of control in modern
times.
The volume of deep breaths began filling that
cleared space in my mind. Fresh air was followed by colors, infinite possibilities,
unnatural combinations. The forever memories created by spontaneity.
A walk down the road with empty pockets gave birth to a tart
of wild plums: a gift for the local French teacher. A read through the local
paper sent us scurrying to catch the last night of the local production of
Midsummer Night’s Dream, with an 80s flare. The moon was dressed in a turquoise
body suit and Elton John glasses.
My loving friends humored me by kayaking with me around part
of the island they call home. I had brought my favorite kayak up with me, so
the next time I visit I can fly, and spend more time playing, less time
driving.
Their preferred method of getting around is on two wheels: motorcycle
with sidecar, scooter, and bicycle.
This allows for stopping and smelling the roses. And this year there
were many. Everywhere. Among the groves of pine and madrona: roses, dahlias, sunflowers, wild things. Along with the usual inhabitants: eagles, osprey,
kingfishers, oyster catchers, seals.On a cool day I borrowed a bicycle, caught the ferry to the next island and rode for hours among the trees and vast pastures of Orcas Island. The ferries encourage pedestrians and bicycles by granting free passage. Can it get better?
Yes, I could spend more time laughing uncontrollably and soaking
up inspiration from talented friends who can’t help but paint, draw, grow
unheard of flowers, build homes and dance.
Tearfully leaving my Legend behind, I had one last paddle
with her, knowing that since she was built here in the Pacific Northwest and
she was being cared for in good hands, I was leaving her in a good place.
One last night in Seattle, we watched the glow of sunset
soak into the snows on Mt. Rainier form the porch, myself and my wonderful
college friends, Melinda and Jan.
Leaving Seattle after breakfast at the Sunlight Café with creatively brilliant photographer friends Betty Udesen and Alan
Berner, both the car and I ran out of gas 11 hours later in Cornish, CA. I got
the very last room in town, at the Quality Inn ($49), because of the insanely
popular Olive Festival there. Who knew?!
The brochure touted the breakfast
gathering the next morning. Olive waffles? I settled for fig newtons and
coffee, my road staple. And found a Southern Nevada radio station playing
anything other than church that Sunday morning. Irreverent in fact, I
discovered “Cows with Guns.” (Check the original animation on YouTube!) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQMbXvn2RNI&noredirect=1
Some 1,500 miles later, back in San Diego I dredged up a 33-year-old
photo of Melinda and I… back in the day. It won’t take me 33 years to get back
up there to be sure.
And that space in my mind? There’s still room. You know it
was more transformation than vacation if you are still calmly saying to
yourself, “It will get done,” or you stay behind the slow moving tractor
trailer for the last half mile to your exit. I’m still smiling. I have a
feeling there was something permanent in this one.