I have been living at sea level for four years. Well maybe a few feet up, because we live on a granite cliff, not a beach...but still not too high up.
I was delighted in catching up with my friend ( I just found out she linked to this blog, so I've added a link to her blog at the end...no longer anon she is Gretchen) and watched mile by mile the environs change. At the town of Madera where you can access highway 41 to Yosemite we turned to Highway 168.
*Note to Grandma Beth: Click the photos to enlarge them, then use your back arrow to return to the blog.
This last week a lovely woman kidnapped me and took me to the mountains for a few September days. I have beautiful pictures, or perhaps I should say I took pictures of beautiful places. My photos are but a faint reminder of the beauty in it's fullness, but come along and I'll share what I can. Here's the area where we headed...a cabin in Courtright Village near the southern tip of this map. This picture I took of the sign at the Le Conte Divide...but I better not get ahead of myself.
Leaving the Monterey Peninsula , the central coast of California, we crossed through the hills that lie between coast highway 1 and the inland 101 and then headed east through the mission town of San Juan Bautista past the golden grasses, brown soil and green crops of California's central valley. The Pacific Ocean now behind us, the air grew hot and hazy. In the air conditioned car I had a sack of raw almonds to munch and cold bottled water. We passed almond and fig tree groves and dusty vineyards, as well as many field crops and always there were people, working in the fields.
I was delighted in catching up with my friend ( I just found out she linked to this blog, so I've added a link to her blog at the end...no longer anon she is Gretchen) and watched mile by mile the environs change. At the town of Madera where you can access highway 41 to Yosemite we turned to Highway 168.
This neighborhood of redwoods, sunflowers, and grasses is in downtown Shaver Lake in the Sierra National Forest, elevation 5500 ft. It's the town of last supplies.
We already had everything, and then some, that we needed for our four nights,
so we didn't stop in town.
past little roadside rocks...
One day we checked out Dinky Creek. I am not kidding, that is its name.
" Bark," I have read, is not a technical term.
~ what small part of this tree I pictured ~
The foot of a large tree in the McKinley Grove where the biggest Giant Sequoia currently measures 20.3 feet in diameter.
As we made our way up the road the moon rose in the sky.
~young trees on the edge of the road scramble down roots for a spot~
A wonderful tree that made me read trees books in the night. While I do know the basic distinctions...
some of the trees I met reminded me that is all I know.
I did remember that the cones of a true Fir Tree are always upright.
Rocks of immense dimensions roll and slide and slam their way to where they come to rest, the angle of repose. So many of the rocks on the uphill side of the road demonstrate this law of physics, but other laws could as easily be on display if given variables change.
Angle of Repose is the title of a Wallace Stegner novel that takes place in California terrain. The term lends itself to much metaphor.
After considering many possibilities
We decided that the species of small coned pines are Lodgepole.After considering many possibilities
Dark behind it rose the forest,
Rose the black and gloomy pine-trees,
Rose the firs with cones upon them;
Bright before it beat the water,
Beat the clear and sunny water,
During our visit we had clear sunny days and
beautiful clouds too.
This is subalpine country...we were at about 8200 feet elevation.
It's a real fine place to be.
Of course as soon as I got home to the cool coast
I had to take a picture of the last light of that day on the sweet blue sea. It too, is a real fine place to be. I took lots more pictures in the mountains...153 to be exact...but I'm not going to show you all of them. But just imagine... rocks and trees and water and sky and trees and rocks ....there's lots of them "up there"and I am glad for that, and glad for a friend that shared her family's special place with me.
Gretchen took pictures too and here's one I took of her.
~~~
6 comments:
It's just beautiful. Did you say almond tree groves? Mmmm. I wish I could've come...
Jeannette ~ you are an amazing photographer and live in a beautiful part of our great country. A winning combination!
Fondly,
Glenda
Your photos are stunning Jeannette...and what an amazing holiday you had. You are so lucky....
PS Re: your comment - I haven't seen the bottom of my basket for years!!! Never seem to get that far :-)
So beautiful! Our family visited there a little over a year ago. Looking at your pictures makes me miss the beauty.
All the photos are lovely.....but I was especially drawn to the first one of the water and boulders. What a great watercolor that would make.
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