Wednesday, January 11, 2012
The High Peaks and A Portrait of a Reminiscent Youth
Who's probing? Lyon's Falls, NY |
I drove to Burlington, VT yesterday to begin a semester of work, work, and more work. Hopefully there will be some fun in there too, but no promises.
I don't think I've seen so much brown in january...ever... Not even while watching Demshitz videos |
I left bare ground and flowing water in Lowville and took the scenic route through the High Peaks where I was greeted with snow and frozen lakes.
This is more appropriate. Not to mention gorgeous. |
I took the opportunity to check out what a few of the Empire stars consider "The Promised Land" and would have to agree. Hurricane Brook in Keen, and several further east along Rt. 73 all look incredible, and they're well within reach of a weekend trip from Burlington.
Sadly, this was one of the areas hit hard by Irene in the fall, and the damage to rivers and homes alike was an unpleasant surprise.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is my misfortune to present to you John's Brook |
Despite the damage, I was happy to finally get a glimpse of some of these runs that I've heard so much (or so little) about. The Keen Valley area has definitely captured my attention.
As I transition into my new living situation, I find myself mentally escaping to the adventures I've had, and the ones I wish I could do right now. On one such adventure, I was inspired by a reminiscent youth.
A Portrait of a Reminiscent Youth
The remains of my chocolate-strawberry pancakes dry and
crust to my plate in the early-summer morning. We sit bare-chested on the
porch, basking in the shriveled and spent fireworks containers that litter the
streets.
“I miss my childhood, is what it boils down to. Those were
the best days of my life,” he says.
There was the heat, the immovable blanket that kept him in
bed until noon. There were long nights spent in galaxies very far from here,
defending earth from alien invasions with friends. There were hiking trails lit
by the green-tinged hue of sunlight cascading through a canopy of ancient
douglas firs and prehistoric ferns. These are the things he tells me of summers
past in the State of Jefferson. These are the things he tells me of the best
days of his life.
His tone isn’t morose as mine would be, knowing the best
years of my life had already been lived, but there was no gleeful recollection
of some punch line to a joke either. Instead he continues reassembling his
childhood before my eyes, tapping into memories like so many kegs he had tapped
so many summers ago. Dutifully.
A thousand-yard-stare sweeps over his visage as the Illinois
River flows off of his tongue and he remembers the steep black gorge walls and
crystal cold water. The bridge was seventy feet high, but that wasn’t enough.
The rope would arc beneath before swinging up, up. Up he would fly before
whirling through the air, dancing in gravity. And then the pumice of icy water
would scrub the summer heat from his body. It couldn’t be colder at the source,
and even now in the heat of the summer sun, goosebumps spring up on his arms
from the thought.
Then there was the beer, the cold, crumpled cans of beer
that piled up in basement corners and burnt out firepits. And the camping
beneath the stars with the snow-capped peaks hanging in the distant darkness,
and hours spent gazing into a dancing bonfire. The road trips too. Waking up at
dawn and arriving at the coast, just in time to smell the salt in the air and
see the great yellow orb of sunlight dip below the horizon. And then pack back
into the car to retreat, like the tide. For him, it was never about the
destination. All that mattered was the road, the people, and heat of the
summer, driving him to explore.
Slowly, his eyes focus, rising up from the depths of the
river of time. There’s new hope dancing in his voice.
“A full tank of gas, and all the time in the world…that’s
all you need.”
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2 comments:
So ILL!
We'll be waiting for you in the summer. You can take the Scourge out of Tug Hill, but you can't take Tug Hill out of the Scourge!
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