Every walk tells a story

Author: chris (Page 16 of 17)

where’s my hat? – Brown mountain via Dawn Mine

“Humans have entered the San Gabriels in almost every conceivable manner. We have come into the mountains for a multitude of reasons. And we have come in great numbers. Few mountain ranges anywhere have been so much viewed, swarmed over, dug into, and built upon by the human species.”

John Robinson, Trail of the Angeles

The southern foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains must have been bustling with activity at the turn of the twentieth century. Tourist attractions like the Echo Mountain resort and the Mt Lowe railway drew weekly crowds, dams were built for flood control, summer cabins cropped up in the canyons, San Gabriel valley cities like Pasadena, Sierra Madre, Monrovia, Azusa, Claremont were experiencing real population explosions, which meant construction, which meant extensive logging, and of course there was mining. Mining for gold.

Today, walking in those mountains is a welcome getaway from the teeming LA metropolis. The mines are abandoned, visited only by curious hikers. The Echo Mountain resort is just ruins, as is the Mt Lowe railway, and other oddities like the Bridge to Nowhere, the Mueller Tunnel are inexorably being reclaimed by the forces of nature. I can’t help imagine that, in due time, whatever that time is, human projects like, say, Los Angeles, will reach a stage where it makes more sense to abandon than continue, because the money runs out, it’s too dang hot, a killer bug decimates ninety percent of humanity, etc..(fill in your own doomsday scenario).

In the meantime, I’ll keep putting one foot in front of the other and hope not to fall into a sixty foot mineshaft filled with icy water.

The ‘B’ story for this walk is that the trail to the Dawn mine is being expertly restored by the USDA Forest Service. Thank you.

History of the Dawn mine and map.

Walking Project 014_lost in a goldmine or two from chris worland on Vimeo.

I make home movies walking – Mike Antonovitch trail, San Dimas

A thought jotted in a sketchbook somewhere, “I walk because it inspires me. Movement and creativity. Movement and ideas.”

A fragment of a thought by artist William Kentridge, “To let making jump ahead of thinking.”

And finally, a thought from filmmaker Jonas Mekas:

I live

therefore I make films

I make films

therefore I live

Light, movement

I make home movies

therefore I live

I live

therefore I make home movies

Jonas Mekas in “The Story of Jonas Mekas”, documentary produced by Louisiana Channel

 

a little scandinavian ditty – Mt Baldy via Ski Hut trail

“The Battle of Copenhagen”

Ten thousand Swedes ran through the weeds,
chased by one norwegian.
Ten thousand more ran to the shore
in the battle of Copenhagen.

Way, way back in history,
back when the world was new,
norwegian searched all over,
to find some snoose to chew.

They fished for Lutefisk and Torsk,
it helped to make them strong,
and you and me, we know a Norsk,
cannot do nothing wrong.

But swedes and danes were envious
of Viking trips and raids.
The Viking shields and helmet horns,
made all those folks afraid.

Throughout the world the Vikings sailed,
to Ireland and to France.
They even found America,
one afternoon by chance.

My grandpa says, and he should know,
the swedes made up the minds.
To beat the Norsky Vikings,
and kick a few behinds.

But history, so grandpa says,
show that the Norskies won.
They clobbered all the swedes and danes,
and made it lots of fun.

Ten thousand swedes ran through the weeds,
chased by one norwegian.

The dust from the weeds,
made snoose for the swedes,
and they called it Copenhagen,

E. C. Stangland

The full version of the ditty Frank, of Norwegian extraction, recited for me, of Swedish extraction, at the summit of Mt Baldy, is the source of much debate. “Chased by” or “chasing”? did it originate ‘back home’ or with immigrants in Minnesota? and most importantly, what was the Battle of Copenhagen? Hemingway wrote his own–expanded and globalized–version

A couple of touching eulogies to Sam, who recently passed away on Mt Baldy, by Edward Kim at Socalhiker.net, and Drew Robinson at Trailtopeak.com

Walking Project 012_ten thousand swedes from chris worland on Vimeo.

A Walk in the Park – Griffith Park

“The Cat’s Dilemma”, a short story

So I scrambled down a steep grassy slope on the northern face of Mt Bell, following a use trail that soon disappeared. I wasn’t lost. I knew the trail or Vista del Valle drive had to be just below, as long as I treaded downhill I’d be in good shape. But the brush was thick, the vegetation gone wild with all the rain this winter. Suddenly the landscape was savage, miles from anywhere, silent but for the sounds of nature, birds, a breeze whispering in the oak leaves and, the delicate but telling crackle of a twig snapped under a foot, or a paw.

I froze and turned around. He was there, under the shade of a low profiled gnarly oak tree, hidden in a thicket of laurel sumac. He was staring me down, not seemingly worried or nervous, but alert, confident. I recognized him, of course. He’s famous. I had read the feature the LA Times ran a few weeks back, “A Week in the life of P-22, the big cat who shares Griffith Park with millions of people”. I even followed his twitter feed.

I was a little taken aback when he spoke to me.

“Dude, can’t you read? It’s posted everywhere, “Stay ON the effin trail”.

I must have laughed or smiled, anyway I relaxed a little.

“What? You think that’s funny?” You think I’m funny?”

I made a conciliatory gesture, not knowing what to say, or not able to say it.

He squinted and gave me a long, silent, meant-to-be-threatening gaze.

“You don’t look so tough. Probably a vegetarian…” He swatted the brush in front of him as he bellowed “but you woke me up man!”

I blurted out, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” And took a step back, ready to dart.

“Don’t even think about it dude!” He laughed. “I hope for your sake you know you can’t outrun me.”

“I wasn’t trying to run. It’s just…”

“What? A little scary? Your adrenaline’s pumping? Your palms are sweaty?” At each phrase P-22 took a step, circling around me. He barely made a sound, but he kept talking, “Your legs want to run, but your brain’s telling you different?”

I nodded. I was trying to inconspicuously scan my surroundings for a rock or a stick, something to throw or hit with.

“I didn’t hear you.” P-22 said, singsong like.

I nodded more visibly and replied, “Yes. I’m scared. I want to run but I know better. I don’t know what to do?”

“Welcome to my life. You may think I’m like, guided only by instinct, that I’m programmed. That, whatever I do, I’m just ‘being a wild cat’. He lifted his right paw and flicked it up and down twice to illustrate quotation marks. “Not so dude. Uh Uhm! Every time I get close to one of your lot, I have to do some serious thinking, e-va-lu-ate the situation. Like I’m doing right now. Kill, not kill. Threat, no threat.”

“I mean no harm I promise, I could just…” I pointed down the hill.

“Not so easy man! Not SO EASY.” He raised his tone, which did concern me.

“Okay. Okay.” I tried to appear calm and steady since there was no fooling this cat. “I…I’m not moving. I’ll stay right here.”

“Good. Now look. I just want you to know. I’m not going to eat you. Think about it. You look like you got half a brain. If I so much as scare you the wrong way, they’ll be on me as quick as flies on a fresh turd. You’re lucky that way, plus I’m not hungry today.” He looked up at the sky, grinned as if recalling a fond memory. “I had myself a deer last night”, he licked his chops, “tasty and fat. Even got some leftovers.” He reached a spot above me, with the sun in his back, and stopped. He was now silhouetted so I couldn’t read his expression, but when he snapped out of his reverie, his voice had lost its edge.

“What was I saying?”

“Leftovers…”

“No, before that.”

“You’re not going to eat me.”

“Hah! Yes. Kill not kill. See, here’s my problem. I have no one to talk to. The rangers, they’re cool, but if I start blabbering with them, I’ll end up in a lab somewhere, like a freaking experiment. And there are no other cats around, not that I can relate to anyway. The truth is, I’m lonely.”

He sounded genuinely depressed so I made an attempt at flattery, “I don’t believe you. You’re P-22. People worship you. You’re famous. You have thousands of followers on twitter. You’re the King of Griffith Park.”

“King? King…I get it. Lion, king. Clever. Nice try.” He shook his head slowly in sorrow and said, barely audible, “More like an emperor with no clothes. I’m a king in a cage, that’s what I am. And you know what’s even worse?”

“What?”

“I’m a virgin dude. A king without a queen. Let your instincts deal with that.” P-22 slumped down in the grass. “I wish they’d just shoot me.”

Flattery fell flat, so I went for reverse psychology. “You know what? You don’t sound like a king to me.”

He perked up.

“Pick yourself up! You’re better than this.”

“Huh?” He raised himself to a seated position.

“What do you think people are going to say when I post this all over?”

“You wouldn’t?”

“What’s keeping me? You? You’re nothing but a pathetic overnight media star, looking for a few more likes. Look at you. You’re so sorry you’re trying to scare me into listening to your sorry story. Get a life.”

Quick as a flash, the cougar leapt forward with a loud roar. I’d anticipated his move though, by ducking sideways, and then letting myself roll down a patch of tall grass. The fall lasted what felt like an eternity and I went crashing into a dead fallen oak tree. I was dazed for maybe two seconds but managed to curl into a ball and roll behind the tree trunk. I was fully expecting to get mauled and laid my hopes of survival on the angry puma getting bored with tossing a lifeless corpse around, and maybe being truthful about not being hungry.

A moment passed. Another eternity. Silence. No blows. Nothing. I didn’t dare look up. This smart cat was probably just waiting for me to offer my head as a target. I steadied my breath, and waited. I surveyed my body mentally. Nothing feels broken, I thought. I could try another leap downhill. The road must be really close. I inhaled deeply, and, fighting the instinct to stay curled up, on the defensive, jumped again, and rolled again, eventually landing on my feet. Without looking back I scrambled down the slope, on the verge of loosing control at every step, hoping a tree wouldn’t plant itself in my path. A branch I couldn’t avoid, ripped, snagged my t-shirt and the recoil sent me tumbling again. Finally, I came to a stop on a flat surface. This time it took me considerably longer to gather my thoughts and take toll of the situation. I was sitting on a dirt road, alone. Not a living soul in sight. I kicked the dust and scampered away, nervously scrutinizing the hillside.

 

Fifteen minutes later, I was hiking down the road back to my car when a park ranger drove up in a truck. She stopped, rolled down her window, shouted at me.

“What happened to you? You look awful.” She got out of the truck, looking me up and down. I noticed she carried a service weapon because she put her right hand to it when she approached me.

“Do you need assistance sir? You look pretty beat up.”

“I’m fine. Thanks. Just took a tumble. Nothing broken. I’m fine.”

 

I’m not sure why I didn’t tell the ranger about my encounter with P-22. They would want to know so they could track his behavior and act accordingly, and then who knows? Was it misplaced pride? Maybe. Disbelief? Definitely. Though I would like to imagine that I simply preferred to leave him in peace.

 

 

 

 

Walking Project 010_signs from chris worland on Vimeo.

Walking with number five – Mt Lukens via Rim of the Valley trail

“It’s time to get up

and stomp your feet

to this great foot-stomping

Transylvanian beat

Start nice and slow     (chorus): One, two

then speed up more    (chorus): One, two, three, four

’cause we’re about to find out

the number of the day!

(chorus): What’s the number? STOMP, STOMP

What’s the number? STOMP, STOMP

What is the numbeeeer?

The number of the day (chorus) haha!

scheduled to arrive (chorus) haha!

the number of the day is

FIVE!”

Sesame Street: Number 5 song (number of the day)

Listen on YT

It all started on this chilly, windy morning when I set off on the Crescenta View Trail, in Deukmejian Wikderness Park, when I noticed a big “5” spray-painted on a dam where the trail crosses a dry river bed. I had approximately five miles to go to reach my destination, Mt Lukens, and when I got there, amidst the antennas and adjacent structures was this cinder block building with six conveniently numbered doors.

Yes, six, it’s not a mistake, I didn’t film the sixth.

 

Untitled. Battery Park, NYC

Meandering around lower Manhattan, Ground Zero, Battery Park. Sensory overload. I feel that every time I visit New York City. The story here is, there are too many stories. My imagination cluttered, overcrowded, traffic-jammed, unable to focus on a narrative thread. Result: the eyes don’t react, don’t record, and I resort to tourism. And yet this city is so open to walking…

“The site was a palimpsest, as was all the city, written, erased, rewritten. There had been communities here before Columbus ever set sail, before Verrazano anchored his ships in the narrows, or the black Portuguese slave trader Esteban Gómez sailed up the Hudson; human beings had lived here, built homes, and quarreled with their neighbors long before the Dutch ever saw a business opportunity in the rich furs and timber of the island and its calm bay.”

Teju Cole, Open City

Walking Project 009_liberty from chris worland on Vimeo.

walking with music. Central Park, NYC

prana moving through time signatures

bop blown through a wormhole

aimed at the earlobe of God

pondered DNA in saxophones solos

rising over the hills of the lips

whirling wonder

articulating the language of bruises and bliss

in urban lit fires of spirits

places and spaces of being

if you been there

you know there…

*prana, the breath of life, the vital force

 

excerpt from The Language of Saxophones, poem by Kamau Daáood.

listen to the entire poem.

Walking at the pace of a duck swimming upstream. Charles River, Cambridge

Having walked along the Charles between the Anderson bridge and Boston harbor on numerous occasions, it seemed necessary to venture upstream, in the other direction, away from the boathouses, the colleges, the views of downtown Boston, Beacon Hill, MIT and the Harbor. Once the site of mills, dams powering local industries, and even a military arsenal, today the shores of the Charles between Watertown and Auburndale offer a woodsy getaway for hikers, bikers, joggers, birdwatchers, and a thriving population of ducks.

The google map itinerary.

Memory lane – Charles River, Cambridge

A pleasant evening walk along the shores of the river that separates Boston from Cambridge. Early childhood memories of feeding ducks and swans and then later, in high school, crewing, on the Lac Léman, Switzerland. And the night a band of miscreants to which I may or may not have belonged,  may or may not have ‘borrowed’ the school motor boat for a night sail.

 

Walking Project 006_Sunset on the Charles from chris worland on Vimeo.

Tongva country – Mt Wilson from Bailey Canyon

As I climb out of Bailey Canyon looking back at increasingly distant views of the Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center and the San Gabriel Valley beyond, I imagine how a Tongva indian looking down at the San Gabriel Mission would have had a similar view, minus the suburban sprawl, of course, but a dramatically different perspective.

“Since Southern California was the area of most intensive Mission activity among Indians, it is interesting to note the consequences of Missionization. From a total of 30,000 in 1769, the number of Indians in Southern California declined to approximately 1,250 by 1910. The seeds of this decline were sown by the Franciscans….So far as the Indian was concerned, contact with the Missions meant death.

With the best theological intentions in the world, the Franciscan padres eliminated Indians with the effectiveness of Nazis operating concentration camps.”

Carey McWilliams, Southern California, An Island on the Land

Combine this trail guide to Jones Peak with this one for the section from Jones to Hastings to Mt Wilson.

 

Walking Project 005_the bells of bailey from chris worland on Vimeo.

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