Dude. Chill, will ya? You’ve been cat napping, as you do, pretty much all day, rising now and then to stretchhhhhhh and scratch a little.
You are a study in repose, belly up, somehow balancing on your keel of a spine, bow to the sky, stern splayed, well, to the sky, too. a vessel ready to launch.
Let your sleeping cat-self lie, float your pea-green boat, dream pussycat dreams, then return and tell me what you saw—
perhaps an owl with whom you paddled away for a year and a day, then, hand in hand, on the edge of the sand, you danced by the light of the moon.
In my part of California, spring rains end in April. If we’re lucky. Then we usually don’t see precip
till late fall, one reason why we’re the golden state, March’s greening going to straw by May.
Still, the breeze is redolent with millions of nose and throat ticklers zinging around outside,
aiming for our mucus membranes. But I can’t complain, my allergies merely annoying compared
to those of the late husband who suffered mightily, aggravated by cats at home and tree pollens
in the greater world. Which he moved through, fishing rod in hand, hand-tied flies piercing his vest,
never happier than when invested, wading thigh-deep in a stream on a sunny day, nothing resembling
a raincloud overhead, which is how I imagine him in the after—breathing easy, casting and casting
to his great heart’s content.
In memory of my husband Cliff Polland (1952–2001) with one of his first fish caught with a fly rod—gently returned to the stream—on the 74th anniversary of his birth.
Martha Reeves, Betty Kelly and Rosalind Ashford were Martha and the Vandellas (who are all still living). The song was written in 1964 by Marvin Gaye (who played drums on the original recording), William “Mickey” Stevenson and Ivy Jo Hunter.
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With thanks to the marvelous Shelley Burns (left) and her dear friend Amy Shamberg-Pero (right) for leading and hosting us Tuesday morning exercisers. / Photo: Jan Haag
The tall, wind-pummeled giants line up parallel to the sea,
lean benevolently over the always-cool pathway serenaded by birds,
lulled by waves, some extending long limbs graceful as ballerinas
low to the ground, which also turn out to be roots,
interlacing with the next tree and the next one after that,
weaving a wood wide web underground, sinking their
anchors deep, stabilizing the fabric of their existence,
sharing nutrients and water with shaded and struggling relatives.
As a two-legged guest, I walk this corridor of greatness
reminded how gentle and quiet cooperation can be,
eavesdropping on conversations I can’t possibly understand,
inhaling what is exhaled by this community of brethren
assembled for the benefit of all, the living and the dying,
remembering what has passed, wind and birds singing them on.
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Monterey cypress groves, of which there are many on the California coast, are physically linked by vast mycorrhizal networks—underground systems that share nutrients and send chemical signals that allow the whole network to, among other things, activate defense mechanisms against disease.
Monterey cypress trees, The Sea Ranch, Sonoma coast, California / Photo: Jan Haag