Archive for ‘August, 2008’
A peachy morning
Why on my doorstep?
Almost two weeks ago I wrote about my enjoyment of the blog Daily Coyote by Shreve Stockton. Shreve’s blog is a photo and essay chronology of “life with the coyote and beyond”. The coyote is Charlie, who was “dumped on her doorstep” when he was 10 days old.
I was walking up my driveway early one morning while Karl was doing his perimeter walk – our daily habit. Cup of coffee in hand, I was watching his neon blue lighted collar bob through the woods and my mind just wandering – looking forward to whatever Shreve would choose to share on her blog, thinking about my own, questions floating through my head… I got to wondering, “How did Charlie come to be left on her doorstep? – as in why her, by whom? Was it intentional to leave the pup with her or was her cabin just convenient to whoever found the pup or ??? These questions were just drifting lightly in my head along with wondering what she would disclose in her forthcoming book.
I kept coming back to “why on her doorstep”? And that led me to “Why do things get left on any of our doorsteps?” – as in – metaphorically, “Why do certain things happen?”. But that is not really the intriquing question – nor the intriguing answer… in my mind. The really interesting thing, the life-shaping “answer” is the answer to: “What do we do with what is left on our doorstep?”
What do we do with the crossroads-opportunity-decision required events that occur in our lives? For me, it is the “What do we do with it?” that makes the difference between existing and living and further, potentially shapes our lives in ways we cannot imagine at the time of the decision.
In a post titled “This needs to be said”, Shreve writes:
Charlie has changed my life in incredible ways; he has brought me joy and wonder and wisdom and has provided me with lessons I probably would not have learned any other way. However, it is not all peaches and roses.
….Charlie was – and is – a divine gift to me and he is a gift to the world. Would I make the same decision if I had it to do over again? Absolutely. Will I ever raise another coyote? No way.
Obviously, a lot more to that post and there are other posts that provide a bit more insight, but what I saw in the writing (and I have no way of knowing if I’m accurate – please read this as my perception) was that at the time of needing to make a decision there was a certain amount of understanding of the potential difficulty, heartbreak and challenge of taking care of a wild animal, while at the same time an unwillingness to let the creature die. Further it seems that she was open to the idea that despite incredible difficulty, the experience “could” be of unknown blessing and beauty. And maybe all of those thoughts did not consciously pass through Shreve’s mind, but I don’t think you get to a point of “he has brought me joy and wonder and wisdom” without being open to that when accepting the responsibility of the decision.
The more life experience I have (read the older I get!), the more easily I recognize the potential joy, wonder and wisdom there may be to gain in what I do with what gets left on my doorstep. Whether it is the attitude, perspective, or actual decision that needs to be made – it is in making the choice of how to see, perceive or what to do that is, in reality, the only “control” I may have. Being open to the ensuing direction that my life takes – listening, watching and learning from the consequences – that, to me, is living.
The topic of this post has been rolling around in my head for a week or so and I have had a draft with the title and enough of a blip about the topic sitting in a file, waiting to be written. Yesterday, something landed on my doorstep that was initially disappointing, discouraging and a bit challenging. The thing has happened – “why” is of no real consequence. The adventure, the potential wisdom, joy and opportunity – those lie on the path of what I choose to do with what landed on my doorstep.
And this morning, I opened a devotional that I reread from time to time: “Mighty is Your Hand” – 40 day’s writings by Andrew Murray, a South African missionary/minister in the mid 1800’s. My reading for this day is titled “God Goes with Us”… just in case I had any doubt, that surely set the tone for my attitude and perspective.
Why on my doorstep? – I don’t know. What will I do with it? What wisdom, joy and wonder might come down the path I choose to take?
***And for additional inspiration, Shreve noted on Daily Coyote that her nearly 90 year old grandmother was blogging and provided the link: Svensto. It is magical story telling – and like granddaughter – making the choice about what to do with what landed on her doorstep.
A summer of blue and green
This spring was full of sky blue and grass green and this summer it continues. There have been no fires close as yet and very little real heat. Although a mini-heat wave of 3 days above 90 is forecast for this week, we have maybe had 3 days all summer where the temperature went above 90. Mostly it has been a very pleasant mid to upper 80’s during the day and 50’s overnight – theoretically our seasonal norm.
The heavy winter snow pack gave the mountains a good drink as they have remained green above the tree line…a good sign I hope as we head into the worst time for wildfire starts. The cool nights and moderate days have kept the skies that clear shade of sky blue that provides for a beautiful background for the fluffy clouds that build up afternoons as well as the green of the mountains.
I caught a bit of the blue and green yesterday morning when Karl and I walked. We’ll be away from this path after today as our neighbors are to arrive this afternoon and we will be off the ridge path until they leave in a week or two…
This summer of blue and green and moderate temperatures, a bit of rain, soft breezy days … it is a summer to enjoy and remember.
Fire in the hole!
Oh, not really…
But, yesterday – August 1 – the chimney sweep, Doug Heil, was here and swept the chimney. I am ready for fall fires in the woodstove.
But, January, 2006, I DID have a fire in the hole…chimney. It was frightening on several fronts…
I was sound asleep at all of 10:30. The living room smoke detector went off and before I even jumped out of bed, the bedroom one chimed in – the wood burning stove chimney, well actually the stove pipe, was glowing red and the stove was trying to “breath” and smoke started pouring out so I grabbed Bob’s carrier and literally threw him in it, called to Karl to “load up”. Karl was out the front door and by the garage door before I got to the garage. We were in the Jeep and down the driveway toute suite… but – no flames so I left the Jeep running (down past the house!) and tiptoed back – things looked a little calmer. It was VERY smoky but the stove had stopped heaving so I grabbed computers and small electronics – still no flames… opened windows and doors, took down the smoke alarms and removed batteries – they were all going off – it was pretty dramatic and VERY loud.
So… what to do. Ironically I did not call the Fire Department. I was due at my first meeting later that week, it was Sunday night and knowing the department is all volunteer – anyway, stupid but I thought, well, no flames and those guys are all home with families. So…. Moved the Jeep to a spot off the driveway by the road – came back to the house – moved the motorhome down the driveway past the house – moved pets and all stuff and me into the motorhome. About midnight, the smoke had cleared so I put fresh batteries in all the alarms and reset them – none went off. About 1:30 a.m. the stove was stone cold so we went back in the house.
While I was sitting in the motorhome listening and expecting my house to burst into flames, I had a long think about whether I had made the right selections for fire insurance and what I would do if the house burned and it wasn’t as fun as it sounds. It took me the better part of the next week to “recover” – I realized after that I should have called the Fire Department right away. They have a chemical they use plus I would have had company, i.e. less stress versus sitting on my own and thinking about worse case scenarios. I would have been back in the house several hours sooner AND probably saved my chimney which was a $600 hit to replace.
The good news is I learned some things…
Doug Heil is a nice man, knows chimneys, knows wood – he inspected my wood source, was more than fair on charges and got there lickety split.
I need to be vigilant about the condition of my chimney and clean or have it cleaned regularly.
The local fire department crew LIVES for “the run”…don’t hesitate to call again!
My fire insurance is good, I KNOW what it is and what is covered and that I could rebuild and replace the “stuff” if I had to.
My dog and cat…and me as well – we do fine in an emergency…although Bob was a bit miffed at being literally tossed into the carrier.
…maybe not as miffed as I thought. I left the carrier open on this daybed and he went in on his own, not 2 days after the fire drill…
At any rate, neither pet panicked or ran which was a mini-“back of the mind” nightmare I had had on occasion when thinking through what I might need to do in event of a fire.
August 1 – the chimney is clean and ready for Fall.
**in response to questions about the 2nd chimney and the other “thing”…the 2nd chimney is for a wood cookstove in the kitchen. Previous owners had the cookstove but took it with them – I hope – someday to get one so have left the chimney. The other thing is the top of a “light tube” – like a small skylight.
After the front
Wednesday morning was blustery as reported yesterday…and although forecast to clear, it continued dark, then rainy ( wonderful!!!) and topped out at 63 degrees with a breezy “wind-in-the-pines” all day long and into the evening. The house was cool enough that I closed all but the bedroom windows – it was a wonderful (to ME!) reminder that Fall was next.
Yesterday morning dawned with not a cloud in the sky and the temperature hovering near 40 and dipping slightly below before starting up for the day. The cool temps, moisture from the day before and cloudless sky at sunrise set the mist forming in the valleys.
Sun, Blue Sky, Karl in the woods…
Karl and I returned to the house to find Bob waiting…annoyed at having his breakfast delayed by our walk…
Does and a fawn had their breakfast on the new grass!
It was a lovely, cool, beautiful day…after the front.