Rainier to Pacific

Running the Rainier to Pacific Relay in 2008 was a bit of good fortune. It started with a phone call from my daughter asking if it was okay that she run the relay. Since she was 17, she needed permission and my reputation around the house is Mr. Softee - the kids know it as does the dog.

DSC02062"Sure," I said, "but if you don't really want to, tell them I'll run."

"I told them you would," she said. "They need two runners."

So we ran the Rainier to Pacific relay together. It was the first of four relays that I ran with my daughters - the youngest daughter ran Spokane to Sandpoint with me last year. The first couple of years my middle daughter was in the same van as me. The last year we ran together, she needed space and ran in the other van, hanging with folks closer to her age.

No worries, thinks the dad. I was tickled that we got to share these relays. I ran with them when they were little waifs and cheered at their cross country meets. I was always their biggest fan...

Funny thing - when you run with your babies, they keep growing. You run with them as young kids, then as young adults and the next thing you know, you're cheering for them from a distance. Now, I'm looking at joining Lyn in the stroller division...and it's just...wow...

 

Take What the Trail Will Give You

When I first started teaching my girls to run on trails, I taught them to take what the trail will give. I've watched so many runners, facing a rocky, technical hill, decide that they will impose their will on the hill. Good luck with that. The hill doesn't care. Nary a bit.

Which brings me to my run yesterday. The hill - in this case, the climb on the Headwaters Trail on Moscow Mountain - was kicking my butt. Yes, I'm out of shape. Yes, it was hot and it was humid. Those were the least of my issues.

I stood at a trail crossing a couple of miles up the hill and contemplated turning around, not finishing the loop. It wasn't a physical issue - I wasn't far from the top as it was. Thanks to the folks at MAMBA!It was mental - I was overloaded, overheated and under-motivated. I was feeling a bit whiny if you really wanted to know.

So I did what I often do. I had an honest discussion with myself...

You can turn back now, Paul. It's all downhill. Feel fast as you cover ground back to the car and it's still a great addition to the week's running. It's just not what you said you were going to do.

And all you have to do is explain to the family how the hill was kicking your butt and you chickened out from the rest of the trail and ran for home.

Or you can keep going, finish the loop. Take what the trail will give, give what you've got ... and be happy with what is.

Your choice. What are you going to do?

So I kept going. For those that don't know me, I have a habit of talking to myself so the above conversation isn't either new or unusual. More importantly, I listen to myself and what I heard was disappointment. Not that the hill was clobbering me - but that I was giving up on me. I still had enough juice to get over the ridge.

About ten minutes later, the trail rewarded me. I know, I said the trail doesn't care but sometimes I just feel like things happen for a reason even if they obviously don't. But I got to see that big bull moose with the massive rack because I hung in to the end.

If I had quit, I would have missed him and the loss would be entirely mine. For those keeping track at home by the way, that's moose, elk, two types of deer, bear, bear cub and a fox seen this summer. Not bad and no cougar sighting except on the WSU campus.

Once I crested the ridge and started down, I was right - I would feel fast. I was whipping through the woods and the foot work started to come back. Little hesitation steps to rebalance past a tree root, quick stepping a downhill. The signs that I'm gradually relearning how to run, aware of the roots and rocks and ruts, the whole body making the adjustments to handle each little change, moving on a more instinctive level again.

The trail may not care but I do so I will take what the trail will give - and I'll honor it by giving what I have.

It's a fair enough trade and I got to see a moose. That's a pretty good run.

 

 

 

The First Rule of Story Telling

The first rule of story telling is to have a story worth telling. I'm currently working my way through Dwight Swain's terrific Techniques of the Selling Writer and enjoying it enormously. Unlike most books on technique, Swain starts with the idea that you must tell a story - something that seems to get lost in some other books that I've read recently which seem to focus on the mechanics as though the engine makes the voyage.

Anyway, I was perusing book blurbs on Amazon. It was a moment of weakness - on a good day, I have an ego the size of Texas. Average days, probably the size of mid-western state like Ohio. Today, I'm cowering under the bed.

What I was looking for where books similar to mine and discovering, no surprise, that there are darned few. Blowing up Manhattan or blowing up strange planets or bodice rippers are recognized genres with their own rules and expectations.

Running books fall into the how-to category or the terminally bad with a few exceptions such as the incomparable John L. Parker's Once a Runner and Again to Carthage - both fine, fine books with great insight into both running and people. Most writers that use running as a part of their novel seem to have avoided the first rule of story telling. Or, maybe I just don't get it.

And that has me wondering...

What the heck is a story worth telling?

Sharing

If you look at the menu bar above, you'll see a link for 'Sharing'. In my posts on my posts about the short story, A Walk with Rose, I mentioned that I would be donating 25 percent of the proceeds to the local Humane Society - this tells you how I plan to do that.

If you haven't read Act I of A Walk with Rose and would like to, just click here and it will take you to the page.

I expect to have the story finished in the first week of August and published by the end of August.

Running During the Dog Days with Your Dog?

Running during the dog days with your dog can be done if you apply a smidge of common sense and understand two things.

First, you are biologically engineered to be an efficient running machine in heat. Your a pro at sweating, you provide a small profile to the sun and you're not covered in fur.

Second, none of these apply to your pooch. Given an option, dogs will elect to siesta during the worst of the heat and, if they do venture into the heat, don't have the same mechanisms to reduce their heat load that you do.

For starters, your dog does not sweat. Most animals don't. They eliminate heat by panting which is why even a fit dog will huff and puff in the Free-Download-Dogs-in-Summer-Windows-7-theme-Dogs-Water-Playbackyard following you as you garden. Short-nosed breeds (think pug or bulldog) have a harder time reducing heat.

Dogs (and most animals) also present a very large portion of their body to the sun. This leads to a bigger surface to absorb heat  - especially in direct sun. The darker the fur, the more heat they'll pick up.

Speaking of fun, did you consider throwing on that heavy jacket before a run in a triple digit heat wave? Didn't think so (unless you're training for Badwater)! Your dog has no choice...

So, here's a few tips for you and your dog.

1. Run during the early morning and late evening hours. It's cooler and the sun is far less direct which will make both of you more comfortable.

2. Plan on slowing down. The faster you try to run, the more heat you generate and the harder it is to bleed it off. That doesn't just apply to the dog - you're body is sending a lot of extra blood to the skin to try to cool it. Give your body - and your dog - a fighting chance. Walking breaks are fine for both of you.

3. Take lots of water for both of you. Put ice in it before you leave.

4. Run in shade whenever possible. This is a great time to get off of the hot pavement and get onto trails.

5. Remember that the dog doesn't have fancy training shoes - hot pavement can literally burn their paws.

6. Keep it short - longer runs increase the risk to your dog as the heat builds up.

7. Going near some clean water like a lake or a river? Think about letting them splash around. Splash with them - it was fun when you were three and it's still fun now.

Enjoy the summer, you and your dog - just be safe.

Run gently, friends.

Swimming in the Snake River at Asotin

Asotin is separated from the state of Idaho by the Snake River and, with summer weather baking the valley, it has been a popular destination for boaters, jet skiers and rafters. I don't own any of the above so I opted to swim. There are little inlets up and down the riverbank, some set with safety markers to keep the boats out. Paddling about in the safety of the cove isn't my style though. Someday my style  is likely to get me killed.

I made my first attempt to swim down the river, starting two miles upstream from Asotin. I will admit that I am more than a touch rusty on my long distance swimming since it has been nearly a decade since I used to swim in the La Jolla Cove in San Diego, which has a protected marine preserve.

Long distance swimming at the Cove was always play time - a good workout while admiring the fish, kelp, sharks - whatever came along.

The river is a totally different environment from ocean swimming - far more challenging and, I think, much more dangerous.

The water temperature was a comfortable 72 degrees when I slipped into the Snake River at a little sandy beach but was much murkier than I expected - recent rainfall had added a lot of silt.

The plan was simple - take off from the beach, check in with my wife at the first mile if I made it that far and out of the water at Chief Timothy Park in Asotin if I continued. That plan, as they say, was good until contact with the enemy - the Snake River.

First, I chose to enter the water above the lake. What we call a river is actually a dammed lake separating Idaho and Washington, Lewiston and Clarkston/Asotin. As you move further from town, you get closer to the river in a more primitive state.

It's faster and sneakier - rock outcroppings hint at the turbulence below the surface but slamming into a boulder - pushed by the weight of the whole river - is a shocking reminder that you only have partial control.

At the time of impact -I bounced off more than one submerged rock before getting braced against one to puzzle out my next plan - I was already getting tired. Muscles that were neglected for too long were running up the white flag.

Sensible people pay attention to such things. I headed for the channel and the choppy current, mindful of the boaters ripping past, prows in the air as they headed up river at speed.

I almost preferred the boulders. Getting sucked into the flow of the river as it heads for Portland. Escaping it required a lot more work with already tired arms and lungs that were severely over-taxed.

In salt water, especially with a wetsuit (I was wearing it for buoyancy - my mother was right when she said I have lead in my ass), you can rest, slow your stroke count, take a breather.

Try it in the river and you'll drown.

So no breathers - I drew an imaginary diagonal to a beach and started to swim to the upstream side of it, expecting that the river would push me toward it. Darn near pushed me past it but I did manage to get my feet down and, gulping some much needed air, had to decide whether I was going to re-enter the water or finish up on land.

I chickened out and the folks in the fancy houses overlooking the river had the opportunity to laugh at the skinny guy trail-running in a wetsuit through the wildlife refuge south of town.

My feet? No problem. I had picked up a pair of boat shoes to swim in just in case I needed to exit the river on rocky surfaces. They handled the surfaces - broken rock, sand, brush - without a problem.

Challenging myself (and Mother Nature) means planning. I knew that I was getting in over my head - literally - and built my contingency plans for that. Taking risks doesn't mean being stupid - though that is sometimes a point of discussion in my household - it means pre-planning what you can, adapting as best you can and accepting your control is imperfect because life and nature just don't care.

You do get to chose risks. Sitting on the couch eating potato chips carries its own risks - I'll take a trail or river, bear or rapids, any day.

Run gently, friends.

North Asotin Creek Trail and the Bear Family

I posted last week that I was going to go play with the wild things along the North Asotin Creek Trail - I hadn't planned on getting quite so close to the bigger critters out there. The conditions were nearly perfect  - weather about 68 degrees at the trailhead and high clouds. The recent rain had softened the ground without turning it into a mud hole. The only footprints out there were mine and the deer - the trail isn't open to motorized traffic for a bit yet. North Asotin Creek Trail #3125

I only cover 8 or 9 miles, an out and back along North Asotin Creek, starting at the open fields that abut the creek and following the trail into the canyon and up into the woodlands.

During my various runs here I've seen bighorn sheep, deer, elk and bears - and the occasional rattlesnake.

Cougars have been reported in the area but I've never seen one and not sure that I'd like to - they're awfully bashful creatures that are most comfortable introducing themselves with a firm grip and shake - on your throat.  Admire from a distance, that's my motto...

North Asotin Creek Trail follows alongside the creek for several miles before swinging out into forest land. The first miles before you swing wide is on Washington Fish and Wildlife land and a part of their Wildlife Areas. This is the narrowest part of the trail with the creek defining one side and the basalt cliffs the other.

The trail is very runnable for even an average trailrunner - there are no truly technical sections, no bomber climbs or descents. It's a wonderful place to just enjoy the afternoon, covering some ground and sightseeing. With so little traffic this early in the season, the trail is a bit overgrown - that will change later when the four wheelers hit the trail.

The Wildlife Area transitions in the Umatilla National Forest trail as you start climbing up to the Pinkham Butte Area - I didn't go nearly that far. Once you cross the boundary into the National Forest, four wheelers are prohibited.

That was my turnaround point and the run back was literally all downhill - there is a steady climb from the trailhead as you head into the mountains. It isn't steep but it is noticeable.

Momma bear must have crossed the creek after I ran by the first time because I didn't see her or her very cute little cub on the outbound leg. The crashing in the brush to my right was my first indication that another large animal was out with me and, silly me, my first thought was deer, especially since it was running away.

The scratching sound on bark was when I noticed Cutey, the cub, climbing the tree about 15 feet away. Always part of the quick thinking club, I was in the midst of an "Aw, how cute!" moment when it dawned on me the crashing was Momma bear. Probably.

Might have been Brother bear. It so, where was Momma bear? Paranoia is such a useful survival skill....

I scanned the trail, the open side to the left, the dense brush bordering the creek to my right. No Momma bear. Unsure as to whether that was good or bad.

Looked again and made started to make tracks towards the trailhead, walking first - ho-hum, just me, non-threatening, probably not very tasty human, leaving now - then getting some distance between me and Cutey bear. Cutey watched me go.

Very bummed that I didn't have a camera out to take a picture of Cutey but lingering was not on the agenda. Still, it's hard to have a better run or day plus I get to add it to my collection to trail memories.

 

 

First Drafts

101121SP-KJ-cc9_t60792,423 words and the first draft of 'Finishing Kick' is done. Finito!  I celebrated with a glass of wine last night and a couple of hours of mindless television. This morning, still slightly brain-dead from the marathon writing session, I am starting to do the first re-write to fix problems I know are in the first draft. I only have a couple of hours since the real job will be calling soon and I can't work this evening on the first draft because I will be working then too. Long day....

I expect the edit process to flow pretty smoothly at least until I get results back from my beta readers. Once I get feedback from others, we'll see how thin-skinned I can be and defensive over my work.

Which is foolish, of course. Writing gives you the opportunity to aim for perfection while you blunder through life. You can revise and rewriting and refine until the pitch is exactly what you need, each word of the story does its own work and the reader gets to live a different life.

Meanwhile, back on the farm, I still have some metaphorical chickens that come home to roost. I don't get to airbrush my mistakes, tweak the fabric of life until it's just so. Life is much messier and many of the events that knock me sideways are beyond my control.

So, I focus on what I can control and then I call a 'do-over.' Not a revise and rewrite since I don't have that level of control but a dust my pants off and try again attitude and aim for a better results the next time.

Life doesn't give you an edit function. It's a first draft written every day.

You do get to write the ending though - unless you step in front of a bus. Then all bets are off and you might not get a chance for a 'do-over.'

 

Milestones are Better than Benchmarks

Milestones are Better Than Benchmarks

We live in a society that obsesses on dates and benchmarks, checkpoints on the path through life instead of enjoying the milestones as they go past.

Life isn't contract law - it doesn't operate the same way. At work, we have benchmarks when a project needs to be complete or, in my case, when an inspection will be performed and the report delivered. There are usually penalties associated with these missed dates chiefly relating to money. Even when a performance bonus is included in the contract, it is subject to date certain provisions that will take money away if the targets are missed. That's the way contract law works, all stick and no carrot.

It's a lousy way to live.

Thirty years ago, a lady said 'I do" and has been stuck with me ever since. As we shared the years together, we've celebrated birth of children and anniversaries. We've suffered the loss of jobs and survived being flat broke. Each event, large and small, was a milestone in our journey and added to our memory of our lives.

Thirty years is a milestone, not a checkpoint. Tomorrow will be another anniversary, thirty years and one day but nobody I know of  celebrates that. There are no commercials to buy flowers or chocolate or diamonds. Even Hallmark, reported to have cards for every occasion, seems to have missed that one.

But we will note the milestone, the same way we've noted the milestones in the past and the many in our future.

With a kiss and an "I love you."

Late for Dinner?

I might be late for dinner...I'm taking the scenic route!Late for dinner - again. I was a chronically late for dinner type of kid - constantly curious and easily distracted.

Theoretically, things  changed with adulthood.

Living up to responsibilities and helping raise kids while growing a business.

I'm still constantly curious and easily distracted - but now I schedule time for it.

Or at least, on my nights to cook, throw something in the slow cooker before I bug out.

Off to go play where the wild things are.

Run gently out there....

The Inn at St. Gertrude's Monastery

Inn at St. Gertrude'sVisiting the bed and breakfast at St. Gertrude's Monastery is like wandering into the kitchen of your favorite grandma. The one that would bake you a chocolate cake for dessert - and serve it warm from the oven - just because. And would pull out the ice cream to go with it because warm chocolate fudge cake with cold ice cream is nearly heaven. Sister Chanelle met us at the entry to the Inn at St. Gertrude's. It was perhaps the nicest welcoming I've ever experienced. There was no registration card to fill out, no corporate hustle and forced pleasantry. Instead, Chanelle guided my wife and I through the Inn and offered insights into the grounds, little tidbits of history, and put us at ease.

St. Gertrude's Monastery sits just outside of Cottonwood separated from the highway by four miles and a century of memories. The grounds of the Monastery overlook the Camas Prairie to the east - wide, sweeping vistas - and, with a short hike to the upper meadows, the snowcapped Seven Devils Mountains to the south stand against the blue sky.

Monastery of St. Gertrude in Cottonwood, Idaho at Dawn

The Monastery itself, fitted into the hills like a natural outcrop of the blue porphyry quarried on site, was started in 1920 and finished in 1924 though there have been new additions - a school, a spirit center, the Inn - throughout the years. Channele was kind enough to show us the Monastery after breakfast our first morning.

For the structural nerd like me, the three foot thick walls of stone were impressive but the woodwork and detail of even the hallways was beautiful and modern conveniences like the new elevator are blended into the architecture so skillfully that they appear to have always been there.

And, since the Inn at St. Gertrude's Monastery is a bed and breakfast, a word about food. You have a choice for breakfast - either a continental in the Inn or breakfast with the nuns. The fare for the nuns is basic and satisfying but the atmosphere can't be duplicated. I enjoyed their hospitality after spending an hour sitting in the Adirondack rocking chairs bluebirdon the patio of the Bluebird room, sipping coffee and alternately reading and admiring the view.

Later in the morning, I spent more time in the rocker, napping, before we went to the museum. An eclectic collection is waiting in the museum, an early baby incubator sitting a few feet away from the religious relics and, at the back of the museum, a collection of Asian artifacts dating to the Ming dynasty donated by Sam Rhoades in honor of his wife, Winifred Rhoades.

The Inn at St. Gertrude's Monastery has all the technology you would expect in a upper class hotel - wifi access, large flat-screen television. We didn't use any of it. We didn't miss any of it either.

Here is the link you're interested in visiting the Inn at St. Gertrude's

A Walk with Rose, Installment IV

This is the final installment on Act I of a little novella, A Walk with Rose, that I’m working on.  Act II is started but on hold until I get done with my novel - which should be done by the Fourth of July. Once I finish that, I’ll be finishing this novella and put it up on Amazon as a Kindle book.

I will be donating 25 percent of the proceeds from publication to the local Humane Society.

Please feel free to share with your friends…if you want to cut and paste it into an email, I simply ask that you include a link back here. Many thanks!

A Walk with Rose

Everybody makes mistakes. On January 13th, Laura Fitzpatrick made two. The first, made at 2:47 PM, was forgetting her purse. She remembered before she left the driveway and rushed back into the house, leaving the driveway one minute late. She made second mistake after picking up her daughter from elementary school. At the only stoplight on the street, she braked to a hard stop in the left hand turn lane when the light turned yellow, a light that she could have made it safely. Eighteen seconds later, at 3:18 PM, an elderly man driving north blacked out, swerved and, his car accelerating under his convulsing foot, smashed into the front passenger side of her car. Laura was uninjured.

Her daughter was not; her right foot was mangled by the crushing steel of the oncoming vehicle. Paramedics arrived swiftly, gasped, and started feverishly working to save the girl’s right foot. She was loaded into the ambulance and rushed to the hospital. Left at the scene of the accident was one small pink shoe, blood-soaked.

********

On January 13th, Mrs. Joy Williams passed. Roy, husband of 52 years sat on one side, holding her hand, not crying because she had asked him not too. On the other side, resting her head on the bed sheets was Joy’s dog, Rose, friend and helper as she met this last stage of life.

Her son, James and daughters, Anne and Marie, waited in the living room, sitting on the dated couch and love seat, eyeing the knickknacks that lined shelves, recognizing gifts given in childhood, the wall of pictures, faded blacks and whites in old-fashioned frames, color pictures of the kids as they grew, marriage photos, and grandchildren’s school pictures. Joy always brought visitors to the wall.

A gentle squeeze on Roy’s hand, a single finger lifting on the other hand to give Rose one last scratch under the chin, she passed, quietly.

********

“That’s an awfully brave girl you have.” said Shelly above the racket from the kennels. The dogs, seeing people and wanting out, barked and whined. Somewhere in the back, a hound howled, the deep “Ahhhhwoooooo” echoing through the building. They watched as Emily, brown hair pulled back in pigtails, leaned on her crutch as she made her way down the aisle between the dog kennels.

“Yes, she is.” replied Laura.

Her voice was soft and Shelly had to strain to hear her. Months ago, Shelly’s statement would have led to tears but Laura had no more. Eleven year olds should not have to be brave. Four surgeries in six months had exhausted her and Galen as they watched their little girl, tiny in the hospital bed, go through each procedure. The doctors had explained, choosing their words with care, that they, the doctors, could do no more for Emily. They asked if the family prayed.

“She doesn’t cry anymore.”

Shelly looked at her sympathetically while watching Emily. The young girl stopped at each kennel, peering through the chain links of the gate.

“You took the survey?” she asked Laura.

“The one they gave us up front?” replied Laura. “I let Emily fill it out. It’s going to be her dog.”

“Is Emily going to be the one taking care of the dog?” probed Shelly. Too often, the shelter had gotten dogs returned because the parents discovered that the kids didn’t follow through with the work of caring for a pet and the parents were already overwhelmed with careers and children.

“She says she will. If not, I’ll help.” Laura smiled at Shelly. “But thank you for the warning.”

Shelly nodded. Emily might be different, she thought, but it never hurts to bring it up.

Emily reached the end of the kennels and started back to her mother in a rocking hobble across the concrete, swinging her right leg but unable to support any weight on it.

She looked up when she reached the adults.

“So which one do you want?” asked her mother.

Emily paused, brown eyes looking up to Laura. She shook her head.

“My dog isn’t here yet.” And she turned to leave.

********

The day they lost Rose, Roy suffered his first stroke, a minor one. The stroke scared his daughter, the eldest. It was her week to be his caretaker. Since Joy had passed, one of them occupied the house every day and most nights with him, trying to replace memories with bustling activity.

The weather was hot and very dry that September. Roy was puttering in the flowerbeds. He was a large man, a block of weathered gray granite, more broad than thick, and tall. He and Joy had separate gardens, with separate rules. Hers was filled with a profusion of color, oranges nasturtiums, white peonies, pink pincushion flowers, Mount St. Helen’s coral bells bursting into reds above the bed. Joy’s garden welcomed their friends, escorting them blossom by blossom along the walk, up the steps to the front door.

Roy’s was orderly, squashes and peppers and peas, the little cherry tomatoes that delighted Joy, cucumbers – picklers and slicers - all set in the back yard, little popsicle sticks with tags marking each row. Roy tilled the soil by hand each year, blending in the new compost and laying out each row and rotation. Joy would watch as he would turn the soil with his bare hands as he planted a seedling, gently setting into a hole, tamping the rich earth. Each harvest, from early summer to late fall, filled little baskets shared with the neighbors, fresh vegetables topped with fresh flowers from Joy.

Rose was lolling under the shade of the dogwood tree. Its shade was her retreat when Joy and Roy, her people, were out front, a place she where she would watch them, tail wagging a greeting to the little children flitting past and the old ladies out for a walk. They all knew Rose and called by name, the same as they did with Roy and Joy.

It was almost noon and Roy was too long in the sun, bent mulching and weeding the flowers, fertilizing the last of the late season irises. He tried to stand, and discovered he couldn’t, his right leg unresponsive, then his right arm. Rose saw him take a short fumbling fall to hands and knees. She stood and went to his side, snuffling in his face, sensing, with that intuitive knack that every good dog has, that her master was in trouble. She wouldn’t leave him so she faced the house and barked. No response. She barked longer and louder but not letting Roy out of sight.

Roy heard the screen door finally squeak open – he had meant to oil that hinge – as his eldest daughter, Anne, came to the front porch, intent on shushing the noisy animal. She paused, framed between the pillars and, in her matronly silhouette, Roy saw his little girl again.

He heard her say, “Dad.” He could see, could turn his head as she came tumbling down the walkway. He heard everything. He looked at her, but his efforts to say, “I’m fine” came out as gibberish. He saw the fear blossom in her eyes and sadness. It’s alright, little one, he thought as he continued to struggle to his feet.

What Roy remembered most of the ambulance was the embarrassment. The paramedics were professionally considerate while his daughter flitted from one side to the other before fleeing to call the other two children. Gently, they made him lay down, to stop trying to upright himself. It vexed him, that he was crushing Joy’s flowers and that the paramedics were walking on them. The crushed flowers released a sweet perfume and memories of Joy.

They loosened his pants and removed his shoes, exposing the hole in one sock. They stripped open his shirt, attaching filaments with tape to the gray hairs and skin, peeled his eyelids back to blind him with bright lights that hurt, quieted him when he tried to talk.

Friends and neighbors came to their porches, watching everything and recording the details for gossipy dinner-time conversations. Passersby on the road slowed, rubbernecking to see the source of the commotion before they sped away.

They loaded him into the ambulance and his daughter rode with him to the hospital.

From under the tree where she retreated when Anne came down the steps, Rose watched the ambulance arrive. She carefully watched the very precise actions of the paramedics took to saved Roy. She saw the neighbors on the porches. Some, the closer friends, gathered in small pockets to worry together. She watched the doors of the ambulance close and Roy driven away. The neighbors faded back into their homes.

Roy tried to remind them to take care of Rose as they loaded him into the ambulance but the paramedic, very professionally and sympathetically, quieted him again.

It was a full day before the children remembered Rose; by then, she had moved on.

********

“Back again?” Shelly asked Emily. Laura and Emily had come to the shelter once a week since August. Shelly had tried to guide Emily to dogs, good dogs, some trained, all sweet-natured and gentle. Emily would lean into her crutch, inspect the dog Shelly suggested before trekking over the concrete, kennel to kennel to look at each of the other dogs, the unruly, the unmannered, the loud, the shy, the happy-go-lucky goofballs, each dog getting a chance. Each week, she walked out alone with her mother.

“Yes ma’am.”

“Well, I’m fresh out of suggestions for you, young lady.” Shelly told her over the racket of anxious dogs. Laura gave her a sidelong glance; Shelly had called earlier to make sure they were coming. Emily nodded and labored off, stopping at the first kennel for a moment, making polite sounds to the dog inside before moving to the second.

“So why the mystery?” probed Laura. “You wouldn’t have called if you weren’t excited about one of the dogs.”

“True enough, but your Emily has a mind of her own. She’s turned down all my recommendations so far. I didn’t want her to turn this one down just because it came from me.”

“Emily wouldn’t.”

They watched her travel down the aisle, stopping at each one with a dog, passing by the empty stalls.

“How many dogs do you have this week?”

“Eight. Three of them Emily’s already seen. We have a family interested in the black lab you saw last week so hopefully he finds his forever home today. They’re supposed to be in around four.”

Emily approached the fifth kennel. Shelly’s body stiffened as her eyes followed Emily.

“The dog is in that one?”

“Um-hunh.” Shelly flashed a look at Laura. “I think this is the one. She’s a sweetheart, just has a good soul. She doesn’t belong in here.”

“None of them do.”

Emily stepped in front of the gate and looked inside. Sitting quietly, waiting for her turn, was a golden retriever. Her coat was matted in spots and she wore a dirty green collar with a heart-shaped tag but her eyes were bright and warm and patient. The dog cocked her head to the side as if inspecting Emily, seeing the slim form, the crutch, the foot.  The dog seemed to make a decision and leaned forward to put her nose at the chain-link of the gate. The girl, balancing on the crutch on her right side, stuck a delicate hand through the opening and began to scratch the dog on the side of the neck. Rose licked the inside of the girl’s arm.

“Hey you.” she said. “Are you ready to go home?”

Beware the Path Most Travelled -

Seven Devils Turn off to Baldy LakeBeware the path most travelled - it just might add lots of bonus miles! In this case, I was running the loop around the Seven Devils, part of the Hells Canyon National Recreational Area, which is about a 30 mile run.

I was bombing along and, with the exception of tripping on a tree root while trying to get a picture of a herd of elk, everything was running according to plan.

Until I burst (okay, jogged) out of the trees and saw a gorgeous lake in front of me. That's Baldy Lake outside Riggins Idahowhen I took this picture. That's Baldy Lake and the only problem with it is that it wasn't on the loop route - it's off a spur.

So, the first thing I did was snap the picture - no sense in letting a little mistake distract me from the beauty of the lake.

Then I yanked out my topo and figured out where the heck I was. I did an eyeball triangulation off the peaks to dial it in and figured out where I missed my turn.

If you look at the first picture, there is a tiny trail on the other side of the log on the left side. That's actually the main loop trail but nobody makes it past Baldy Lake coming this direction.

I ended up turning about 35 miles that day and my feet were very tired puppies by the time I was done. But I did get a great picture that is still my desktop background and a wonderful memory.

The path least travelled may make all the difference but sometimes you can do both - the beaten and unbeaten paths - and each can have it's rewards.

 

A Walk With Rose, Installment III

I'm going to post installments of a little novella, A Walk with Rose, that I'm working on. Every couple of days, I'll put up a new piece of the first act. Act II is started but on hold until I get done with my novel. Once I finish that, I'll be finishing this novella and put it up on Amazon as a Kindle book.

I will be donating 25 percent of the proceeds from publication to the local Humane Society. If you want to purchase a copy of the whole work then, send me an email at thatguy at paulduffau.com and I'll put you on the list.

Please feel free to share with your friends...if you want to cut and paste it into an email, I simply ask that you include a link back here. Many thanks!

A Walk with Rose

Everybody makes mistakes. On January 13th, Laura Fitzpatrick made two. The first, made at 2:47 PM, was forgetting her purse. She remembered before she left the driveway and rushed back into the house, leaving the driveway one minute late. She made second mistake after picking up her daughter from elementary school. At the only stoplight on the street, she braked to a hard stop in the left hand turn lane when the light turned yellow, a light that she could have made it safely. Eighteen seconds later, at 3:18 PM, an elderly man driving north blacked out, swerved and, his car accelerating under his convulsing foot, smashed into the front passenger side of her car. Laura was uninjured.

Her daughter was not; her right foot was mangled by the crushing steel of the oncoming vehicle. Paramedics arrived swiftly, gasped, and started feverishly working to save the girl’s right foot. She was loaded into the ambulance and rushed to the hospital. Left at the scene of the accident was one small pink shoe, blood-soaked.

********

On January 13th, Mrs. Joy Williams passed. Roy, husband of 52 years sat on one side, holding her hand, not crying because she had asked him not too. On the other side, resting her head on the bed sheets was Joy’s dog, Rose, friend and helper as she met this last stage of life.

Her son, James and daughters, Anne and Marie, waited in the living room, sitting on the dated couch and love seat, eyeing the knickknacks that lined shelves, recognizing gifts given in childhood, the wall of pictures, faded blacks and whites in old-fashioned frames, color pictures of the kids as they grew, marriage photos, and grandchildren’s school pictures. Joy always brought visitors to the wall.

A gentle squeeze on Roy’s hand, a single finger lifting on the other hand to give Rose one last scratch under the chin, she passed, quietly.

********

“That’s an awfully brave girl you have.” said Shelly above the racket from the kennels. The dogs, seeing people and wanting out, barked and whined. Somewhere in the back, a hound howled, the deep “Ahhhhwoooooo” echoing through the building. They watched as Emily, brown hair pulled back in pigtails, leaned on her crutch as she made her way down the aisle between the dog kennels.

“Yes, she is.” replied Laura.

Her voice was soft and Shelly had to strain to hear her. Months ago, Shelly’s statement would have led to tears but Laura had no more. Eleven year olds should not have to be brave. Four surgeries in six months had exhausted her and Galen as they watched their little girl, tiny in the hospital bed, go through each procedure. The doctors had explained, choosing their words with care, that they, the doctors, could do no more for Emily. They asked if the family prayed.

“She doesn’t cry anymore.”

Shelly looked at her sympathetically while watching Emily. The young girl stopped at each kennel, peering through the chain links of the gate.

“You took the survey?” she asked Laura.

“The one they gave us up front?” replied Laura. “I let Emily fill it out. It’s going to be her dog.”

“Is Emily going to be the one taking care of the dog?” probed Shelly. Too often, the shelter had gotten dogs returned because the parents discovered that the kids didn’t follow through with the work of caring for a pet and the parents were already overwhelmed with careers and children.

“She says she will. If not, I’ll help.” Laura smiled at Shelly. “But thank you for the warning.”

Shelly nodded. Emily might be different, she thought, but it never hurts to bring it up.

Emily reached the end of the kennels and started back to her mother in a rocking hobble across the concrete, swinging her right leg but unable to support any weight on it.

She looked up when she reached the adults.

“So which one do you want?” asked her mother.

Emily paused, brown eyes looking up to Laura. She shook her head.

“My dog isn’t here yet.” And she turned to leave.

********

The day they lost Rose, Roy suffered his first stroke, a minor one. The stroke scared his daughter, the eldest. It was her week to be his caretaker. Since Joy had passed, one of them occupied the house every day and most nights with him, trying to replace memories with bustling activity.

The weather was hot and very dry that September. Roy was puttering in the flowerbeds. He was a large man, a block of weathered gray granite, more broad than thick, and tall. He and Joy had separate gardens, with separate rules. Hers was filled with a profusion of color, oranges nasturtiums, white peonies, pink pincushion flowers, Mount St. Helen’s coral bells bursting into reds above the bed. Joy’s garden welcomed their friends, escorting them blossom by blossom along the walk, up the steps to the front door.

Roy’s was orderly, squashes and peppers and peas, the little cherry tomatoes that delighted Joy, cucumbers – picklers and slicers - all set in the back yard, little popsicle sticks with tags marking each row. Roy tilled the soil by hand each year, blending in the new compost and laying out each row and rotation. Joy would watch as he would turn the soil with his bare hands as he planted a seedling, gently setting into a hole, tamping the rich earth. Each harvest, from early summer to late fall, filled little baskets shared with the neighbors, fresh vegetables topped with fresh flowers from Joy.

Rose was lolling under the shade of the dogwood tree. Its shade was her retreat when Joy and Roy, her people, were out front, a place she where she would watch them, tail wagging a greeting to the little children flitting past and the old ladies out for a walk. They all knew Rose and called by name, the same as they did with Roy and Joy.

It was almost noon and Roy was too long in the sun, bent mulching and weeding the flowers, fertilizing the last of the late season irises. He tried to stand, and discovered he couldn’t, his right leg unresponsive, then his right arm. Rose saw him take a short fumbling fall to hands and knees. She stood and went to his side, snuffling in his face, sensing, with that intuitive knack that every good dog has, that her master was in trouble. She wouldn’t leave him so she faced the house and barked. No response. She barked longer and louder but not letting Roy out of sight.

Roy heard the screen door finally squeak open – he had meant to oil that hinge – as his eldest daughter, Anne, came to the front porch, intent on shushing the noisy animal. She paused, framed between the pillars and, in her matronly silhouette, Roy saw his little girl again.

He heard her say, “Dad.” He could see, could turn his head as she came tumbling down the walkway. He heard everything. He looked at her, but his efforts to say, “I’m fine” came out as gibberish. He saw the fear blossom in her eyes and sadness. It’s alright, little one, he thought as he continued to struggle to his feet.

What Roy remembered most of the ambulance was the embarrassment. The paramedics were professionally considerate while his daughter flitted from one side to the other before fleeing to call the other two children. Gently, they made him lay down, to stop trying to upright himself. It vexed him, that he was crushing Joy’s flowers and that the paramedics were walking on them. The crushed flowers released a sweet perfume and memories of Joy.

They loosened his pants and removed his shoes, exposing the hole in one sock. They stripped open his shirt, attaching filaments with tape to the gray hairs and skin, peeled his eyelids back to blind him with bright lights that hurt, quieted him when he tried to talk.

Friends and neighbors came to their porches, watching everything and recording the details for gossipy dinner-time conversations. Passersby on the road slowed, rubbernecking to see the source of the commotion before they sped away.

They loaded him into the ambulance and his daughter rode with him to the hospital.

From under the tree where she retreated when Anne came down the steps, Rose watched the ambulance arrive. She carefully watched the very precise actions of the paramedics took to saved Roy. She saw the neighbors on the porches. Some, the closer friends, gathered in small pockets to worry together. She watched the doors of the ambulance close and Roy driven away. The neighbors faded back into their homes.

Roy tried to remind them to take care of Rose as they loaded him into the ambulance but the paramedic, very professionally and sympathetically, quieted him again.

It was a full day before the children remembered Rose; by then, she had moved on.

The last installment of Act I of A Walk with Rose will be posted on Monday, June 17th. I'm working on Act II....promise!