Thursday, June 19, 2025

Rain, worms, bears, oh my!

                                                       

View from Mt. LeConte 

The walking I’ve done these last weeks has been either in rain, just before rain or just after rain. My garden is still under water. I ate one red tomato, but I can’t get to anything else easily. The grass and the corn are fighting to see who is the tallest. Hopefully this mornings heavy rain was the last for a bit. My yard is squishy, and earthworms are fleeing in mass. I played tennis with a few friends in the indoor courts, and a wave of earthworms slithered towards the courts. We picked them up and moved them back, and by the end of a game, they were slithering towards the serve line again. It felt like a low-key slow horror movie, Attack of the Worm. At one point, chasing a ball, I felt a squish underfoot, but I said nothing to my animal loving teammate.



                                        walking in NC by flooded river

One of the walks I enjoyed was in NC, while we were gathered for a family reunion. I love visiting with family, cooking and catching up, listening to others visit, all the chaos and warmth of family. But, the day after, I always need a quiet time, a recalibration of sorts, so dog and I drove over to a local park and walked. We started on a wooded path bordered by a large river. The river was high, brown, full of rapids, and very noisy. Once out of the wooded section we walked along the busy road, and turned into a swamp area with cypress trees, with their wide trunks and knees sticking out of the settled water. We walked to another park in town and turned back. Dog was extremely interested in every squirrel we passed, but as we finished the last mile she stopped trying to chase them. She drank water at every opportunity. Back at the truck, sweat dripping down my face, I gave her more water to drink. She was breathing harder than normal, and felt hot, so we cut the second part of the walk and drove home.  

                                        Walking by swamp in NC

Another walk I did during this time was short, but hopefully impactful. I created 6 postcards, addressed them to various senators and to the White House, wrote short notes about the importance of due process and saving National Parks, clean air and water. I walked from my house across the city park and to the post office, mailed my complaints, and walked back. I felt like a cranky old lady in a British mystery. I am happy to live in a country where I am allowed to express my opinions, to walk safely to the post office to mail my opinions and to not be afraid of the consequences of such. I hope it stays that way.


On the AT I would be on mile marker 259, just past Roaring Fork Shelter in NC. Soon I’ll be in Tennessee, if the rain holds off, anyway. Last week I wrote about some hiking memories in the area I was walking in, and this week I want to share a bear story. It took place on Mt. LeConte, just off the AT but near Ice Water Springs and Clingman’s Dome.  I was on a backpacking trip with my mom and dad, and we were staying in the Mt. Leconte  lean-to. We had just arrived, and set up our sleeping bags. The lean-to is a three sided shelter with benches for sleeping on, and usually a fireplace. When I was in high school the fourth wall of the shelter was simply a chain link wall, and we had to enter through a door, like the gate of a fence. I was tired after the hike and laid down on the grass in front of the shelter, closed my eyes and enjoyed the sun on my face. Nearly drifting off, I heard my mom say softly, “Shell, get up slowly and come in here.”  I stood, saw nothing but joined mom and dad inside the shelter. They had seen a bear in the meadow, not far from where I was resting.  We waited a bit but didn’t see anything else and relaxing we moved back outside. Two young men hiked in and joined us, and perhaps a couple more, I don’t remember. As we were chatting we saw the bear moving in among the trees, then he moved back out of sight. The two men decided to walk down to the spring and fill their water bottles. After they left the bear poked his head out from behind the lean-to. We moved back inside.  He disappeared, then poked his head out from the other side of the building. After a moment he disappeared, and poked his head out from the first side. We didn’t stop to think how strange it was one bear was moving back and forth behind our little shelter, we were just thrilled with watching. He poked his head out from the left side, and dad decided to take a picture. He opened the fence door and stepped out into the “yard,” camera held up to his face. Dad moved around, trying to get a good picture, and stood in front of the door, with the door hinged so it opened from the opposite side from where he was standing. Just at that moment the bear looked towards dad, stood on his hind legs a moment, fell back down and ran right at my father. Dad backed into the door, couldn’t get in, had to swing it open, mom and I grabbed his shirt and pulled him inside. The bear ran on by, and then we heard the loudest growling and snarling, like a giant dog fight. There had been two bears. We were caught in the middle, and my dad had walked outside right between them. Luckily the first bear was only interested in the second bear. After a few moments the losing bear ran out of the woods and took off down the trail. We struggled to calm down, and we all talked at once. “There had been two bears!  They were only interested in each other! I thought you would never get back inside the shelter!”  It had been very exciting.



        Shelter on AT like  the one in the story, but no longer with chain link fronts

After a few moments the guys returned from the spring with a story of their own. The losing bear had run into them on the trail. They knew nothing about the bear fight. One of the men said to the other, “”I read that the best way to handle a bear is to make noise and seem bigger than you are.”  They banged their tin cups, and yelled. The defeated, angry bear stood on his hind legs, and the two men scurried off the trail to make way.  We shared our stories, each group cooked and ate their suppers, and then settled down for the evening. One of the men said, “I'm going to step outside and look at the stars. Anyone want to come?”  I joined him, and as we looked around we saw, in the top of a tall tree, a young bear cub.  Here was the reason for the bear fight, and the reason we were quick to go back inside.  



                                             Backpack in shelter on AT

I’ve been watching videos of AT hikers, and I haven’t noticed any bear encounters or bear stories. I wonder if that is because hikers do a better job of storing food than in the past. It is regulation now to hang your food or use a bear box. I hope there are still lots of healthy bears out there.  Enjoy rain, enjoy sun, enjoy earthworms and bears. Protect and love the great outdoors, and especially our National Parks, the wild lands that belong to each one of us. 

Thursday, June 5, 2025

gardens and waterfalls

 


This month we have had a lot of rain, to the point my garden was flooded. For a time the garden rows were little islands of plant and weed, surrounded by deep standing water and clay bog like material. Finally the rain stopped, and my husband and son created drainage canals.  I still had to wait for the clay to harden enough to stand on. Two days ago I was able to get in and weed and check on the plants. It was a mess, but I have a handful of little green tomatoes and two pretty tomatillos. I haven’t walked as much as I would like, with the rain and then the garden work, but I got in a couple of really good wa


lks. On Saturday my husband and I explored the Bankhead Forest. We walked in heavily grown up woods, with poison ivy growing up the trees and climbing hills like kudzu. We found a beautiful swimming hole, but didn’t want to scramble down the muddy track to reach the water. We also found a walk that led to a lovely Middle Earth feeling landscape with a waterfall that my dog and I enjoyed standing in. The water felt good, and the air was cooler.  It was hard to find the hikes, nothing was well labeled and the maps were difficult to read. We had stopped at a parking area labeled Sipsey Picnic area. We walked down to the water, again more poison ivy and mud, and watched some folks fish. We followed a trail but it seemed to be more of a fishing path, and it ended in mud. We returned to the parking area filled with cars. Where were all these people?  Finally I asked a woman standing beside her truck, and she pointed the opposite direction than we had explored. This turned out to be a nice trail, and the location of the waterfall. I hope to go back when we can walk further.  







More than walking I have been reading a batch of great books. I love it when that happens, when book after book is worth reading. First I read Art, Birds, Life. This book was written just for me. A woman writer and artist facing pending grief decides to take up and learn about bird watching. She follows another guy who sort of teaches her, and her biggest surprise is the discovery that some of the best places to find birds are in industrial areas, not deep in wilderness. The birds find the places most likely to feed and protect them, and they don’t care if the landscape is lovely. She learned to find beauty in the simple, in ordinary birds, and to listen carefully because a bird is often heard before it is seen. Her writing was beautiful, and I felt like she was writing to me. She reminded us the importance to “just be with nature.” I read a couple of memoirs, one by a woman who gave up a traditional life to work in the Tetons, and another who grew up very untraditional to become a food critic.  I also read The Darkness Outside Us, which was one of those sneaky books that looks like a simple fun story but is so much more. What is life, what is the point, how do we chose to live and find value in life? It was marketed as kind of a YA LGTBQ+ romance, but that is such a limiting description. It is a mystery, a sci fi book, and a thought experiment on how to face challenges on the meaning of life. Some deep reading. After these books I’m going back to some soft murder mysteries.

Since my last blog I have walked 36 miles. Some of the miles were here in the community I live in but some were on trails along the TN river. My dog loves river walks since she likes to jump in and drink the water.  On the AT I would be at mile 239, or near Davenport Gap. This means I have covered all the sections I actually remember walking on, such as Tri-Corner Knob and Ice Water Springs.  Next blog will have a story about a bear encounter, but today I have run out of space.  Enjoy, get out there and walk, and read a good book!

36 miles to a total of 239 this year.

Rain, worms, bears, oh my!

                                                        View from Mt. LeConte  The walking I’ve done these last weeks has been either in rai...