My Favorite Places

Stairway Icefall

This week I’d like to share with you all some of my favorite places, ones I will miss this winter as I practice The Middle Way on Orcas Island. This week’s Lens-Artist’s Photo Challenge is Home Sweet Home. Tina Schell of Travels and Trifles asks us, ” If a foreigner were to spend a week or a month traveling your home country with you, where would you take them? What sights would you tell them to be sure to see? Where have you found some of your own favorite images? What is it you truly love about where you live, or places you’ve seen in your home country? ”

Southern Colorado
First snow in the Colorado mountains

Well, they would need at LEAST a month for all MY favorite places.  Although I grew up in Colorado and now live in Alaska, I feel at home throughout the West. I’ll start with Colorado. I was raised in Colorado, and lived there for many, many years after I went out on my own. It’s probably where I’ll end up when I get too old to live deep in the wilderness in Alaska. My family is there. Colorado is always close to my heart.

Petrified Forest National Park
Petrified Forest National Park

Although I’m at home throughout the West, I do have a few favorite places that I try to visit whenever I have the chance. One is the Colorado Plateau. This region covers big chunks of 4 different states: Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Arizona. I can’t narrow my favorite down to just one or two places in this area, it’s all so amazing. My advice to a foreign visitor might be to check out a few places that are not as well-known as iconic parks like Arches and Zion. Although I love them, too, they ARE getting loved to death and it might be good to try to spread that impact out a little. Lesser-known places such as Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and Petrified Forest National Park contain wonders, too.

Colorado Plateau
Grosvenor Arch in Grand Staircase-Escalante

Another favorite place is Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in central New Mexico. This is the best place I’ve ever been for birds. It is the winter home for vast flocks of Snow Geese and Sandhill Cranes.  Over 340 different species of birds live there. It is an incredible place to observe wildlife.

Sandhill Cranes
Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge

I spent 8 winters working as a ranger in Death Valley National Park. It is another desert that has captured my heart. The great thing about Death Valley is that because the altitude on the valley floor is so low (the lowest elevation in North America), the nights are seldom cold, even during the deepest darkest months of winter. Makes for great camping, and the rattlesnakes sleep in the winter! It’s an incredibly diverse park, with elevations ranging from below sea level to over 11,000 feet.

I did a little playing with LightRoom on this image. It was a daytime image and the background of bare dirt desert ground was a bit meh so I darkened it until it resembled the night sky, and tried to give a nighttime feel to the dunes, too. Since Death Valley is famed as a night sky park, and since one of my favorite things to do is to walk through the sand dunes under the full moon, I wanted to capture the feel of that experience in this image.

Mesquite Sand Dunes
I love to hike the sand dunes in the moonlight.

And then there’s the bloom. If there is rain in the desert, and if it is timed right, the wildflowers will rock your world. If it seems like it might be a good year for the flowers, I try to make a circuit that starts near the Mexican border in Anza-Borrego State Park, moving through Joshua Tree and Mojave National Preserve until I end up in Death Valley.

Anza-Borrego State Park
Love those desert wildflowers!

Further west on the California coast you will find another great wildlife phenomenon, the elephant seals at Piedras Blancas near San Simeon. Although you can find a few seals there at any time of year, December through February are the best months. Thousands of seals converge on the beaches, with the big strange-looking bulls battling it out for the right to own a piece of the beach, and all the females on it. The cows are birthing and raising their babies then, too. It’s an extraordinary spot to witness wildlife drama, so close you don’t even need binoculars to see it.

Piedras Blancas Elephant Seal Rookery
Sex on the Beach

From the campground at San Simeon I can walk to the beach and see some fantastic bird action on the sea stack that looms just offshore there. It’s an awesome place to catch the sunset.

Farther north along the California coast is Mendocino County. It’s my favorite part of the California Coast. I think the scenery is even more dramatic than Big Sur, and without the crowds. It’s got big trees, too.

Greenwood Beach
The beaches in Mendo are wild and uncrowded.

Speaking of big trees, I’ve really fallen in love with the tallest trees in the world, the redwoods, over the last few years.

Redwood National Park
Tall Trees

Sometimes I go straight up the coast into Oregon. Other times I head for the Siskiyou country near Grants Pass and Williams. The trees there are incredibly graceful and beautiful and it’s my last chance to see wildflowers as I head north.

Pacifica
Oregon has some incredible trees!

But no matter which way I go, I try to hit the coast at Bandon. It is so much fun to shoot the sea stacks there!

Bandon, OR
Sea stacks at Bandon

The Olympic Peninsula is my next favorite place. The old-growth forests redefine green and the wild beaches are phenomenal.

Olympic National Park
Ferns and feathers

And then there’s Alaska. It’s where my heart is, my community, my job, my life. My first love in Alaska was Denali National Park and I try to go there whenever I get a chance.

Dall's Sheep
I love Denali!

But home is McCarthy, in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park. I truly believe it’s the most spectacular place in North America. Case in point – check out my daily commute! And the feature image was taken while I was standing on my front porch! It doesn’t get much better than this.

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
My daily commute to work

I hope you’ve enjoyed some of my favorite places. As Jim Morrison of the Doors said, the West is the best!

The Perils of Petsitting

Cormorants on the Mendocino Coast, California

For the last couple of years, I’ve spent my winters pet sitting. It has truly been a win-win situation, with me getting free rent and a place to write, and the homeowners getting love and care for their precious pets while they get to travel, too.

Occasionally, though, I run into one that’s a bit more high maintenance than I would prefer. I’d like to share the story of one of THOSE housesits.

I knew I was taking on a lot, but I couldn’t ask for a better location. I was on the northern California coast for a month. Think redwoods and rocky shorelines, just south of the Lost Coast.

Waves crashing on rocks in Northern California
The wild northern California coast

The challenges started the very first night, before the owners had even left. We were sitting in the living room chatting and sharing a bottle of wine. Mike and Susann marveled at how well their pets were adapting to my presence, with even the traumatized rescue puppy creeping out to lick my hand. I was petting one of the cats in my lap and he was purring loudly.

It all seemed to be going so well when the kitty, still purring loudly, casually turned and sank his fangs deep into the back of my hand. Shocked and surprised, I jerked my hand and inadvertently flung the contents of my wine glass all over the living room. Couch, carpet, all stained with red wine. Ouch. Embarrassing. “Oh, that was just a little love bite,” Susann said. “He just wanted to show you how much he likes you.”

The Cats

There are two cats, both black. It’s hard for me to tell the difference. The owners say you can feel the difference – one is more muscular and the other fits a little looser in its skin. But I have trouble discerning which is which, so instead of allowing each to have a few bad habits or annoying mannerisms, I combine them into one truly wicked black cat.

Black Cat
Evil black cat ready to pounce on my head

Now I know why black cats are perceived as evil. I can feel the malevolence and it’s scary. Witch’s familiar? It seems like this cat is definitely housing a malicious human presence.

When I’m on the computer, he jumps on the desk, positioning himself between my keyboard and me. He tries to chew my pen out of my hand if I’m writing manually. Jeez Louise.

Uh-oh, now he’s not content anymore with just chewing on pencils. He has graduated to climbing up the back of the chair and sinking his fangs into my head.

Black cat & tiny dog in bedroom
My 2 favorite animals – NOT!

When I try to get him to scat, the cat holds its ground and snarls at me. Raurrr – Razor sharp claws, needle sharp teeth – there’s only so far I’m willing to push it. This ferocious feline could probably murder me in my sleep.

I finally banish it from the bedroom and close the door. THUD!! He throws himself on the door and starts scratching and wailing. You know that sound you hear just before a vicious catfight? RAUW_OW_AWRRR! Oh dear, now I’m trapped in the bedroom! I simply can’t go out and face that crazy demon!

One day while perusing the homeowner’s bookshelves, I notice a title– “How To Tell If Your Cat Is Trying To Kill You”. Hmmm, I guess I’m not the first. Perhaps this has happened before?

The Dogs

2 dogs sitting on a couch
Yoshi & Jasper

Then there are the dogs. One, Jasper, is a rescue – the owners got him from the Humane Society, who rescued him from a puppy mill.

He’s the smallest dog I’ve ever known, a miniature Yorkshire terrier, about the size of a squirrel. He looks like the sweet tiny creature from the Gremlins movie.

He was incredibly traumatized when his doting mistress dared to leave and abandon him with me. I really had to work on my dog whisperer skills. It broke my heart those first couple of nights. He would go into her office and curl up and cry, howling out the most pitiful moans. He wouldn’t eat at first, either, and I was very concerned, because he was too tiny to miss many meals.

Miniature Yorkshire Terrier
Jasper

Eventually, though, he got used to me. Then he turned into the tiny tyrant. Remember what happens in that Gremlins movie?

I’m used to treating animals as friends, companions, buddies – but I expect them to be able to entertain themselves at least part of the time. These dogs, however, are uber spoiled and unbelievably demanding of attention.  I don’t mind hanging out with them part of the day, but they want 24/7. I didn’t sign up for a full time job, but that’s what this one is turning into.

When I try to work they come in and paw at me because they think I should be hanging out in the living room with them instead of working in my bedroom/office. I move their doggy beds into my bedroom so that maybe they’ll be more comfortable hanging out. It helps a little, but it doesn’t take long before they get bored and interrupt me again.

Chihuahua & Terrier
Yoshi & Jasper

They look up at me with that expectant look, like Puss in Shrek trying to turn on the charm. The little one makes a growly whine to try to get me to stop what I’m doing and devote all my time to him. It sounds just like a creaky door that needs its hinges oiled. It’s kind of funny. I’m unmoved, simply annoyed.

“Is that a creaky door I hear? Creaky door, creaky door, someone ought to oil the hinges!”

Mike warned me that most of these animals had stepped out the back door when God was handing out brains. They’re not the brightest stars in the firmament, but trying to get the leash on – or off Jasper really takes the cake. He squirms and wiggles as if I’m attempting to tear him limb from limb. I know he’ll really appreciate the walk – if he’ll only let me put the damn harness on!  It’s exasperating. I feel really bad for Yoshi, who desperately anticipates his walk but can’t go anywhere until I can get Jasper suited up.

Chihuahua
Yoshi

Yoshi is my favorite of all the animals. He is a Chihuahua. He’s an old dog and the mellowest Chihuahua I’ve ever known. I didn’t really like Chihuahuas until I met Yoshi. He’s not as yippy as most, although he does have his moments. Instead, he’s lived with chickens so long he clucks. Literally. I keep looking around for the chicken, but it’s Yoshi. Pretty funny.

The Chickens

Then there are the chickens. I like the hens just fine, especially Goldie. Goldie looks exactly like Big Bird on Sesame Street. Goldie, like most of the chickens, is a Silkie. Silkies are frumpy, big and awkward looking, feathers always in disarray, constantly rolling around in the dirt. The Silky hens are sweet chickens, mellow, friendly and good-natured. There are 2 black hens, 2 gold and one hen of a different breed, a French Silkie.

The French Silkie is the styley girl. She’s much smaller and obviously a different breed. Her attitude aloof, her sleek black feathers are always perfectly groomed. She wears a jaunty red cap upon her brow. She moves about smartly and swiftly, not at a saunter like her bumptious country cousins.

French Silky
Styley girl

Simon, the rooster, thinks she’s the hottest chickie in his harem. Although he’s possessive of all his hens, she is obviously his favorite.

Oh yeah, Simon. What a jerk. He’s the main reason this is a high maintenance housesit.

When the owners are home, Simon sleeps in the house. He even has his own chair that he roosts upon. Extremely territorial, he would not abide an intruder like me sharing his space. We agreed that Simon would have to sleep in the henhouse during my stay.

Silky Rooster
Simon

I would have liked to get to know the hens better, but whenever Simon saw me, he would fly into attack mode. This made it very difficult to feed and water the chickens, and as for entering the henhouse to gather eggs, well….

Susann said to use the broom to fend him off. Simon LOVED the broom. YES!!! A new enemy to challenge! Jousting with the broom was his favorite game. I still could not get near the henhouse.

The next-door neighbor finally gave me the key to dealing with Simon. She raised chickens, too, and she said that even though most roosters are jerks, Simon was the nastiest rooster she had ever met. Gave me some validation. She said, “Get the hose.”

Silky Hen
Goldie

I didn’t spray him. Chickens have delicate constitutions and if I got him wet he might catch cold and die. But after the first time a drop splashed up onto his foot, he got the message. After that, all I had to do was shake the hose at him and he backed off. Way off. Secret weapon if you ever have to deal with a nasty rooster.

We had a rough beginning, but we all survived our month together. I didn’t get much writing done, but I did get to experience many of the wonderful wild places found along the northern California coast. Yoshi and Jasper became my friends and I even tolerated the cats. I still share a friendship with Susann and Mike, and would be happy to take care of their pets again. Well, all of them, that is, except for Simon.

Mendocino National Forest, CA
Redwoods