Friday, February 12, 2010
Excerpt from the chapter "Edelweiss". Austria, 2009
Excerpt from the chapter "Eucalyptus". California, 1980
We arrived in San Diego in February of 1980, crossing through the Cuyamaca Mountains and stopping for an early dinner at the Lakeland Resort on Lake Cuyamaca. A heavy rain storm was sweeping through the valley, and sheets of grey water danced across the lake. The woods around us soared with mighty pine trees and the smell of woodburning stoves filled the air. Once inside, we watched it all from the enormous bay windows of the historic stone restaurant, eating our dinner and waiting for the rain to relent. It seemed like the kind of place that had been there forever, and one that I would most likely return to repeatedly over the years. In 2003, the Cedar fire ravaged the region though, and the resort was burned to the ground. Over 280,000 acres of woods were destroyed within the ten days that it burned, turning the once spectacular landscape into what was commonly compared to the surface of the moon. It was the largest fire in California history, and the loss was immeasurable.
When we finally arrived in Pacific Beach, the California air had that familiar smell of ice plant and sand; ocean foam and geraniums. Auntie Margot's 1920’s era, salmon-colored bungalow style home sat on a stretch of Riviera Drive just steps from Mission Bay and a few short blocks from the Pacific Ocean. The front of the house was enclosed with a white wooden fence, and patches of yellow flowered sour grass, bright red geraniums, iceplant dotted with tiny burst of lavender and nightblooming jasmine surrounded the front lawn. From the back door, a short flight of cement stairs, bright with red paint, ascended to a small expanse of reddish orange bricks which made up the back patio. Beyond that, a low wooden fence enclosed the bricks and separated them from the rest of the back yard. A small wooden gate, attached with a rusty spring hinge which had given up long ago, allowed access to a narrow brick pathway leading out into the lush green lawn. In the back right corner, a weathered white lath-house composed of wooden strips the size of paint stirrers did its best to contain the vines and shrubbery within, which had broken free in places and grown in thick, twisting vines up its walls and across its screen ceiling. Beside the lath-house, a small pond, about the size of a bath tub and lined with brightly colored tiles, held a few gallons of water which would slowly seep out of an unseen crack in its foundation. Birds would gather to drink and wash themselves; small black bodies with wet wings like cats in a bathtub. The edges of the yard were filled with clover, sour grass, and patches of mint, while two large apricot trees provided shade. In the first few years, they produced the sweetest fruit you’d ever tasted, but over the years they became fewer and fewer until one year they no longer grew at all. A high cinderblock wall across the back perimeter of the yard allowed time to stand still in our secret garden, as one by one the neighboring homes would succumb to new condominium construction, their sand colored stucco replacements peering enviously over the barrier of grey bricks.
