Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Coastal denouement

Wind-sculpted vegetation
On Sunday, June 12th, Brother Calee and Kris Ross deposited me in Portland, where I picked up my beautiful and sweet wife, Maty.  The two of us drove that night to Otter Crest, where we'd reserved a room.

Looks sharkey to me
The unrivaled beauty of the Oregon coast provided the perfect denouement for a rewarding week in which I reconnected with my two brothers and the country in which I have spent so much of my life.

Colors
The colors of the coast are cooler and more vivid than those of the desert.  While high desert country is stark and sun-baked, coastal terrain is wind-sculpted and somehow less harsh.

Coastal rock near Devil's Punchbowl
The coast seems more forgiving of human frailty, although only a fool would discount Pacifica's fierce temper.

Rock at Otter Crest
Frigid water and treacherous tides have claimed thousands of lives over the years. Barnacle-covered bones litter the deeps, forever beyond human knowledge.

Devil's Punchbowl
From the sea, all life began.  And to it, all must return someday.

Stony strata tally the eons
On the beach at Otter Crest, I scrambled around the rocks admiring the tide pools.  They are fascinating and perhaps provide a fractal model for the Universe.

SeƱor Ardillo contempla la eternidad
Each tide pool is a self-contained world, with its own laws and hierarchy of powers.

A diversity of life within a hollow in a rock
But when the tide comes in, everything is reset. Old worlds are obliterated and the seeds of new worlds are planted.

Seaweed forest
All of it reveals the impermanence of our little human reality.  Someday, the tide will come in on our tide pool and our world will reset.

Tide pool:  A self-contained reality
Until that day, live!

1 comment:

Say what you will.