John & Anne Wiley

2012/05/25

Perches

People like perches. High places with a view. Some like this place I call the Castle are presumably just wonderful places to Be and Look.

0107 SYV Castle

0107 SYV Castle

It has a commanding view of Santa Ynez Valley, and is designed to make the most of that with tiers of windows in a turret capped with skylights. I enjoy imagining being there and looking on sunny days and starry nights, or when a sudden storm rushes across the valley.

Not far away is this hole in a rock wall that was surely a perch for earlier generations. How many people lived there, looking out at the smaller view or climbing to the “roof” and taking in the panorama across to the islands?

0128 Keyhole Cave

0128 Keyhole Cave

2012/05/15

Imagination

I like how fog and low clouds along the coast stimulate my imagination. Right after takeoff I imagine the fog coming in quickly and preventing our return to SBA so we end up landing in Santa Ynez.

1822 Fickle Fingers of Fog

1822 Fickle Fingers of Fog

Then I see familiar favorites like “Lake” Los Carneros and forget the fog to imagine strolling there as we’ve done in solitude or with groups. Or I recall the time we paddled a new inflatable kayak there. I also imagine spotting the cute bobcat family reputed to live there.

1823 Imagine Los Carneros

1823 Imagine Los Carneros

I enjoy seeing what people do with “their” property (in quotes because many cultures use rather than own land). Not just buildings and landscapes, but secret gardens like this one above the Loretto Plaza back lot. Imagine the wonderful fresh vegetables, and puttering with your hands in the earth.

1828 Secret Garden

1828 Secret Garden

As everyone who’s read many posts on this blog well knows, my imagination is strongly stimulated by rock formations. Also by features like these.

1836 Imaginary Nooks

1836 Imaginary Nooks

Allow yourself a moment to study the above pic, looking for round holes in the sandstone. How many can you count? So imagining geological processes that would create holes like that, I come up with river flow. I imagine the rocks horizontal rather than tilted up to nearly vertical as they are now. Water rushing past deposits a small boulder in a crevice, and over many years the boulder is joined by others that swirl in an eddy until they wear a hole down into the sandstone. Problems with this theory: eons since the rock face was tilted vertical; and some holes that are arch-shaped. Here’s a closer view of the area just to the right of the above pic.

1836 Nature or Culture?

1836 Nature or Culture?

Imagine some ancient culture(s) that would use harder stone to hollow out holes like these. They’d be safe from predators and invaders, close to a good water supply, and have a spectacular view of the ocean and lands below. Imagine if they built wicker platforms and even roofs out from the holes, so that entire groups or tribes could hang out there to hunt and fish while supplementing the invader early warning system for their comrades on the plains below. When I fly past features like these, I often imagine such things. I’m a stone age warrior there, or a condor gliding past. 🙂

2012/05/07

Mountain Castle

If you were a superheroine, could you choose a better mountaintop fortress than this one above the now-pricy settlement of Topanga Canyon?

1787 Mountain Castle

1787 Mountain Castle

You stand at the rail on the little rounded second floor balcony next to the saucer and survey your realm. You wander those private paths and walking trails. Entertain guests in the gardens or the great rooms. This is your castle. Your sanctum in between heroic deeds, sheltered by the massive boulders with their immovable sandstone softness. But in my comic moment the image pops in of that saucer detaching like the old Men In Black movie, and whirling our heroine off into space. 🙂

2012/05/05

SoCal Glacier

Most times when we fly past La Conchita, I glance at the quiet little enclave near Carp and recall the headlines about the fatal landslide that took out some homes. The day of this pic I was also looking at the distant snow-capped peaks.

1778 La Conchita

1778 La Conchita

You can see the slide area at the bottom-right, in the missing rows of homes in the rectangular grid pattern. The distant snow got me pondering glaciers, and the glacier-like aspects of some landslides. Rather than race suddenly down the slope, many SoCal slides happen over several minutes, hours, or even days. This one was relatively fast, perhaps due to the fact it happened after a long period of heavy rains and was at least partly a mudslide. Looking at the aftermath, a heavy feeling in my heart mingles with a serene sense of the inevitable. Each of us and all our possessions will be buried in time, and I hope the examples set by our fathers will help me greet the end with a peaceful and dignified spirit.

2012/05/04

Seeing Eye

I hope someday soon we’ll have cameras that see as the human eye does, and creates photos that can evoke the same bliss in the human heart. Standing on the bluff looking at Torrey Pines and La Jolla yesterday brought back many fond memories of past times there.

2149 Mixed Use

2149 Mixed Use

The bike route ended here, but this guy didn’t mind. There were people jogging, walking and sitting along the dirt path. Others were doing the same things down on the sand. A few more were swimming, skimboarding, sufing and body surfing. Across the road all sorts of critters were flying, wading and swimming as occasional trains rolled by. Dabbling her feet in the water was a beauty who delightedly pointed out another popular activity here.

2157 Anne & Cessna

2157 Anne & Cessna

She literally squealed with delight as she noted what we’d be doing today. Sure enough, we passed quite near this spot at a similar height to the Cessna she’s pointing at near the top of the pic. Sadly, the weather wasn’t as good when we went by so this pic of a similar scene out Tripp’s window looks hazy.

2179 Breath Trigger

2179 Breath Trigger

Fortunately for us, this pic triggers a deep delicious breath as we recall how moving and magnificent this view was in person a few hours ago. Our hearts completely remove the haze, and the pulse quickens with immeasurable joy in the memory of a flood of moments on our journey home. Life is Sweet!

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