Guest guest Posted October 13, 2005 Report Share Posted October 13, 2005 , " Tom " <antipreophogistiii> wrote: > I definitely feel that way. Some people are puzzled about me moving > out of that place near downtown Ashland to my tent up in the > woodlands, especially this time of year, and in part it is this > being in the flow of natural life that I missed.... ~ How wonderful. Do you get cold up there in the mornings? Are you planning to stay there through the winter? > Manzanitas are definitely like what their name means: Little apples. (A picture of one variety, more > like what's around Shasta: > http://www.bahiker.com/pictures/eastbay/losvaqueros/071700/websize/07 > 6manberries.jpg) Mostly, they taste > like sweetened iced tea with lemon, though last year they got more > fully ripe and they had a taste that was very apple like. ~ That is a great picture. i have seen these before. i just never knew they were edible. Thanks for sharing the info. > I think it was a false spring last winter that got all the manzanita > trees to blossom early, but then there was a wind storm that > stripped off most of them. We are also just getting more bears, so > they may be just cleaning the trees off that much quicker. I'm also > wondering if they sprayed up there out of fear of west nile > mosquitoes, but getting the pollinators in the same swoop. ~ Oh how i do hope it wasn't due to spraying! > This is already happening here. Last year, from what I could piece > together from different sources, a momma bear was killed because she > was standing her ground with people. It's > clear to me that bears are very sophisticated animals with a > culture... ~ That happened here a few years back. The mom bear was doing the garbage thing and then in fear climbed up a neighbor's tree. We saw a bunch of cars and people across the street all looking up, so my son went out to see what was going on. Now if everyone had just left that poor bear alone, she would have eventually climbed down and wandered away. Instead they had some animal control folks tranq gun her and she fell quite a long way to the ground. She was taken to Wildlife Images, but from what i was told by staff there, she had to be put to sleep. They are amazing creatures; so intelligent, and i agree with your thoughts on their culture. > Last night, I was up towards my campsite. I happened to have my > laptop with me, so I stopped at a spot to see if I might be able to > find a wifi hotspot there (two networks showed up, but I wasn't able > to connect to them). While sitting there, a fox barked east of me > some ways off. Before I knew it, a fox barked to my more immediate > west, giving me a startle. I was blinded by the screen glow, so I > couldn't see it, but I held my hand out and spoke welcomingly. The > fox was satisfied, apparently, and went off. A little later, I was > going up to my site. I clap to let mainly the bears know I'm coming > through to avoid close encounters. I ended up startling a bear cub > who was up an old apple tree and came down with a crash, startling > me. It ran off across the field away from me - I could see it in the > moonlight. I looked warily around for a mom, but I didn't see any > sign of one. Otherwise, I got up to my site just fine, and it was > mostly quiet until some bird landed on my tent and called around > this morning.... ~ Great stories about your animal encounters! i almost hit two grey foxes when i was driving home last night. i saw the first one, so i was slowed and let him pass in front of us. i had just stepped back down on the gas, and another dashed out of the bushes; thank goodness my daughter saw it and yelled to me so i could stop in time. Such small, swift, and sleek creatures. Again the intelligence just exudes from them! Now i think i would have been scared had i been in your shoes in regards to your bear encounter. i think you are a very brave soul! *lol* > > A sacred being cannot be anticipated; > > it must be encountered. > > ~ W. H. Auden, 'The Dryer's Hand' > > Nice quote... > Peace and love, > Tom ~ i love this quote, too. Jenni was good enough to email me to tell me that i had mispelled the source. It is from 'The Dyer's Hand', not dryer's. Thanks, Jenni! ~ pt ~ The purpose of culture is to enhance and intensify one's vision of that synthesis of truth and beauty which is the highest and deepest reality. ~ John Cowper Powys, 'The Meaning of Culture' Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2005 Report Share Posted October 14, 2005 , " ~ PT ~ " <patchouli_troll> wrote: > Do you get cold up there in the mornings? Are you planning to stay there through the winter? It hasn't been that cold yet. We haven't even had our first frost yet. This morning, in fact, there was a warm wind, and now people are out in shorts and tees. I do plan to stay up there until March, and then I will see where I'm at with things. There are a few techniques I've learned to deal with the cold. One, it's an advantage to have a basically clean diet, like a vegan whole foods diet. That allows better circulation and healthy metabolism. With extra fats sources - like nuts, avocados, and soy-based ice creams - you can keep up a metabolism to generate heat to push out moisture through the layers - something I learned from looking at a field mouse's nest when I was helping a friend with his garden up near Mount Tahoma (Mount Rainier) and we pulled up a board that my friend had put down to suppress weeds uncovering her nest. Two, I spend some focus on keeping my bedding dry. I'll even delay going up to my site if it's raining, in order to be able to arrive at my tent relatively dry (I produce lots of drying heat going up). There was only once last winter when I had to bring my stuff down to dry it off at the laundry mat, and that was because I had to move my site and I didn't have my new site entirely set up right yet when some wet weather came in. There was one other time where it rained all night - like 14+ hours straight - and I spent that night in the laundry mat, but mostly I haven't had to wait out the rain for more than an hour or two. When it freezes, things dry out, and the bedding insulates better, and those can be some of the most comfortable nights during the winter.... > ~ That is a great picture. i have seen these before. > i just never knew they were edible. Thanks for sharing > the info. The manzanitas are one of the most nurturing plants. They feed just about everybody, including hummingbirds and bees when they flower. That peely red paper thin bark holds a treatment for poison oak exposure - poison oak also growing well where manzanitas grow well. Low laying manzanitas create an environment where little oaks, pines and firs can get their start shielded from browsers and drying sun, while the manzanita leaves can pull dew out of moist air and water the young trees. The older trees support lichens, which are important nitrogen fixers. The wood is nontoxic when burned, so it's great for cooking. And the wood is tight grained, which makes it great for carving - there is a woman closer to you than here who makes the most beautiful spoons out of manzanita wood.... > Now if everyone had just left that poor bear alone, she > would have eventually climbed down and wandered > away. Poor bear. She definitely would have taken off if she saw the chance to.... > Now i think i would have been scared had i been in your > shoes in regards to your bear encounter. i think you are > a very brave soul! *lol* Ok, ok. I have to tell you this story. Two years ago, the Monday after the full moon in November 2003, I encountered a momma bear on the trail up to what was then my campsite. I had just come from a green party meeting and thoughts were spinning in my head, and I wasn't following my usual protocol of tapping these sticks together while going up the trail. I then heard some big animal off the trail to my immediate left just a few feet. Next I heard a snort - like a dog snort, only this was like a really big dog's snort - a little further ahead of me, but still to my left off the trail. About 20-30 feet ahead of me, a large momma bear came out on the trail, and she just stood there looking sideways at me down the hill, and I get a good look at her because the nearly full moon is behind me to my left and she's in the moonlight. Her cub was behind her mostly in her moonshadow. I was both in awe and in fear for my life. I banged my sticks over my head and spoke to her with both that awe and that fear in my voice, telling her how beautiful she was, but also how I didn't want any problems. We had this face off for a couple of minutes, and then she moved up the trail. I then had to decide what to do. My campsite was up that trail. I thought about whether I had an option back in town for that night, and I couldn't think of one. So after about a minute, I continued up that trail behind the momma bear and her cub. I saw them once more turning off the trail to the right (towards town) where I turn off the trail to the left to go to my site, but they were much farther ahead of me than that earlier few minutes. This was the first time clearly seeing a bear in the wild since I was 4 years old in Yelm, Washington. My neighbor friend, Jeff McCloud was over at my house and we were playing in the yard. He notices the bear first, over at his house across the field, and the bear is standing on the ground reaching up into this apple tree. Jeff and I go into my house to tell my mom, but by the time we get her out to see, the bear is gone. Jeff's mom was Janet McCloud, a Native American activist whose activism lead to the famous Bolt decision in the 70s where the Native American tribes of the 1855 Medicine Creek treaty regained their fishing rights. I remember both taxi cabs and police cars frequenting their house, and in my child's mind I imagined them to be the same car that they just changed around depending on what they were going to do with it. Two weeks after my encounter with that momma bear, the Friday after Thanksgiving, I found Janet McCloud's obituary in the Oregonian. She had died earlier that week. The timing of it all felt like a message. And I've had a few encounters with bears since then. Each time it feels like a reminder..... Peace and love, Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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