We made our way to the spring equinox with a lunar eclipse, a St Patrick’s Day parade in the neighborhood; more knitting, quilting, home improvement, and reading; blooming plants in the neighborhood; three wildflower hikes in the Columbia River Gorge (next post), and a lot of rain…
Lunar Eclipse, March 13th
My photo, with camera set to fireworks…The sky is light because of the time delay, but the stars are out.My husband’s photo, with fancy zoom lens on tripod.
March 16th – Neighborhood St Patricks Day annual parade…
Knitting:
Hats for the Guild Service ProjectSock progressAnd a new scarf
Quilting –
I sewed together these quilt blocks. They may become pillows – I’m still trying to decide.
Home Improvement –
New dining room blinds and patched wallpaper
Reading –
I read six books in March.Nancy Russell and John Yeon, Columbia River Gorge
I learned so much in the two books about Nancy Russell and John Yeon, two conservationists who worked indefatigably for many years to create the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, and then to implement the plan. It was a huge political and fundraising challenge to cobble together all the different government and formerly private lands, preserving the ecosystems and creating many of the trail systems we hike regularly. I think grateful thoughts every time we drive through or hike in the gorge!
Neighborhood blooms –
Flowering plumHyacinthDaffodilsCamilliaRain, in puddlesCherry treesTulipsSidewalk of the monthYard sign of the month
A change of plans…
At the end of the month we cancelled our planned trip to the east coast to visit family in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, so that my husband could get surgery on his neck, where a bone spur on the C3 vertebra was causing neurological symptoms and weakness. The procedure will be during the first week of April. More on the outcome next month… ( Update – it went well, he is recovering as expected.)
Two final notes –
1) I still have not gotten the hang of blog editing in the block mode on this site, so it is taking me a long time to create posts.
2) We are trying our best to stay positive in a constantly chaotic, hateful regime, so I am posting a couple of positive internet memes here at the end, to remind me to stay hopeful…
The shortest month seemed very long. I went from skiing the neighborhood snow to admiring the early spring blooms. I knit, quilted, and read as productive activities to counter the political upheaval. We honored the boycots. I made progress on the recycle/repair/upcycle four-year home improvement project. And we went on two hikes.
Crafting/Home Improvement:
Another pair of socks completedHat for the Guild service projectI started sewing these quilt blocks togetherBack hall carpet installed, almost the last step in that project.
Reading – I read nine books last month, many by or about women: writers, artists, a river guide, a Supreme Court Justice. After watching the Bob Dylan movie last month (A Complete Unknown), I was very interested to read Suze Rotolo’s side of the story. She was a politically active artist. She made a lasting impression on Dylan and his music, but she wanted to pursue her own artistic and life goals, not be just another string on his guitar, his ‘chick’, who would wait for him while he did whatever, wherever in the world. I really admire her for that. There are many great, less celebrated women out there, and I plan to read more of their stories. Meanwhile, I have been listening to the early Bob Dylan music – it fits the mood of this time in the world.
March 2025 Books
The neighborhood:
February 14th – I always love a chance to get out my 35 year old cross country skis, and kick-glide for a couple of miles down the quiet, flat streets of Irvington. The snow was perfect this day! And almost completely gone the next day.
Skiing out the front doorJust enough snow…Sunny and calmNice flat streetsJapanese Maple
Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, our son and his fiancee were attending the Super Bowl Victory Parade! Wearing hats that I knit for them last year.
Around town – flowers and rainbows…
Yellow crocus are earlyDaffodilsPurple crocusLavender crocusWindflowersRainbow seen while driving north on I-5 in Portland
Hiking –
We hiked out in the eastern Columbia River Gorge twice in February –
February 20th – Crawford Oaks, WA – We hiked about 5 miles on the Lower Vista Loop, past the full Eight Mile Creek Falls, and around the lower plateau. We saw very few early flowers and just a bit too much wind that day.
February 27th – Memaloose Hills, OR – A beautiful, perfectly calm day. We could see the blue heron rookery on yonder cliff top and a few flowers. It was an easy, enjoyable 3.5 mile hike with dear friends.
Eastward view from the Memaloose OverlookView to the north, with a peek at Mt AdamsWestward view, heron rookery circled in redFuzzy zoomed-in heron rookeryTrail up the south approach to Chatfield HillView to Mt Adams from the topA few grass widows up thereColumbia Desert ParsleySpring Whitlow grassLunch at the top, and a view to Mt Hood (photo credit to my husband).
Meanwhile, the news is worse every day – we are doing what we can, and trying to hold on to the glimmers and small victories. The daily reports of the shredding of the constitution by anti-empathic billionaires is trying every nerve, but I try to stay positive…
I went on a few hikes, knit a little, read quite a few books, and embarked on what I have decided is my personal four year project.
New Years Day was the last day of Hannukkah. We had a small gathering, with latkes.
Menorah and latkes
Neighborhood walks – the low sun position intensified shadows and sky…
Shadows in windowsShadows on wallsShadows on sidewalksLow light lit treesIndoor and outdoor lighting and shadowsThe first snow drop of winter
Hikes
Early in the month, we spent five days on the sunny southern Oregon Coast (see previous post), where it was cold, but not windy! We took several long beach and headland walks. More locally, we hiked in the eastern Columbia RIver Gorge a few times:
January 13 – Klickitat River Bald Eagles and Lyle Cherry Orchard Trail, Washington – Our annual trek to the bald eagle nesting area on the Klickitat River began with disappointment this year. We saw no eagles along the river in the morning, other than one down on the delta just as we were moving along.
Seagulls and salmon in the Balfour-Klickitat Lake, no eagles in the trees.Osage oranges scattered on the slopeOne bald eagle on the Klickitat River Delta
We then took a short hike along the lower benches of basalt at the Lyle Cherry Orchard site. It was a beautiful day out there, calm and cold! We saw a pair of eagles flying along the cliff face. We also saw a hawk on sitting a rock, then devouring prey that it pounced upon as we watched. Circle of life…
Hiking up through oak woodlandOak treeLooking down on the Convict RoadEastward viewLunch view toward Lyle and the Klickitat River DeltaOne of the eagles flying along the rim rockOn the return hike, my husband spotted a hawk perched on a rock.Closer viewHawk in the grass, after finishing their meal
We stopped back at the Klickitat River later in the afternoon, and were rewarded with seeing about a dozen bald eagles – a few perched in the trees, and others flying up the canyon, past us and farther up river, beyond our view, seemingly heading home after their day’s outing.
The bright white of an eagle head, across the lakeCloser viewEagles perched in a snagEagle, with the sunlit Oregon slopes beyond the riverCloser viewAnd another angle, with Osage oranges still clinging to some of the trees.
January 22 – Wind Mountain, Washington – a short, sharp hike. I hadn’t been up this one in a while, and was looking for a test for my hip bursitis rehab, after about four months of steady focused exercises. This trail goes up about 1000 feet in a mile, leading to the top of this conical mountain at a bend in the Columbia River.
Reference photo – May 2013. View of Wind Mountain from Dog Mountain. Our trail zigs and zags up the back side of the peak.
It was quite windy up top on the river side, so we didn’t spend much time looking at the river and Oregon view.
Windy westward viewWindy westward view
We found a windbreak on the landward side, so ate our lunch looking at Mt Adams and Dog Mountain – also nice landscapes to admire. It was cold, but a good short hike, and a good work out for my legs. Progress!
Lunch view toward Mt Adams and Dog MountainCloser view of Mt AdamsCloser view of Dog Mountain (where the above reference photo is from), and the river, looking east.
January 30 – Catherine Creek – Rumors of a few blooming grass widows drew us out east in the gorge, on what will probably be the last dry hiking day for the next week or so. We did not find any blooms while wandering several of the lower elevation trails. We visited several vernal ponds that were frozen, and saw foliage of blooms to come…just not yet.
Catherine Creek Trailhead on a cold day in JanuaryMt Hood across the riverBitterroot and grass widow foliageFrozen pond on the lower trailCatherine Creek FallsIce along the upper trailFrozen fairy pondsIceWider viewThe archAnother frozen waterfallwith iciclesFrosted moss and leavesTrail for the day
Knitting
Unfortunately, I overdid the knitting action on a pair of socks – right around the time I needed knitting the most to keep my hands busy while my brain was exploding with the national news. I reactivated an overuse/arthritis knitting injury in my right thumb joint. Blah! I wore a brace and knit not at all for two weeks. I am now allowing myself a few rows per day, and it really helps! I’m trying not to overdo it again. Here are the guilty socks, in progress. But I don’t blame them.
Wanaka SocksBlue gradient socks
Less Knitting = More reading…
I finished all these books in January.
Four Year Project
Sometime after the disastrous election outcome last fall I decided I would need a four year project, something I can do in my own home, when the outside world is too much to take (more than sitting on the roof.) It is time to edit, sort, rehome, recycle, and organize the lifetime of belongings we have accumulated during the 33 years we have lived in this house. Three children have grown up and moved out and left behind many things they ‘might want someday’ but don’t have room for yet. I had a career as a geologist before I settled into family life, and I still have boxes of rocks, maps and books (that apparently nobody wants because it is all digital now). Photos and slides, both professional and personal; quilting fabrics and textile art materials for my creative life; personal writing and memorabilia. We have already made some progress during recent renovation work. We recycled all the old paint, thinned out our shelved books in the rooms where we got new carpet, and delivered usable items to new homes. We gave the unplayed banjo to a local music school, and have recycled many magazines that we were shelving for no good reason. A little action every day will make a big difference in four years, and be much more productive than doom scrolling. I plan to find a means of more outward action/resistance, in addition to donations we make to human rights and environmental organizations. And I will knit more hats (thumb permitting) for the guild service project.
Right now it is difficult to think this new year will be a good year, given the chaos at the national level. I call to mind a passage from the novel, Dune, by Frank Herbert, which I first read in the 70’s, as a teenager. Potential future leader Paul was given a test to prove he was human. There was a good chance he might not be, and would not be made leader. The fictional character passed the test. But I can’t believe the current ‘leadership’ ever would – there has been no sign of human empathy, only selfishness and cruelty. Yet we will resist in the ways we can, and hope that our actions in our own lives will contribute to persistence of human rights beyond the next four years…
Instagram memes I collected in January expressing gratitude, encouragement, and hope:
Honoring Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.I will miss these humans.Reminder to be supportive…More words of encouragement…Keep trying…Music might help…
We celebrated our 40th wedding anniversary with a trip to the southern Oregon Coast. We stayed just south of Bandon, in a room with a view.
View southView north
We had easy access to the wide sand beach south of Face Rock, and took several long walks north and south over the next few days. We also drove south to Cape Blanco, and north to Cape Arago. Other than a bit of rain the day we arrived, we had fabulous weather – sunny and calm.
Locations of hikes and beach walks on the southern Oregon Coast near Bandon.
1/6 – Bandon Beach and Cape Blanco
We walked north to Face Rock in the morning.
South view, Bandon BeachNorth toward Face RockOyster catcher Rock pillars off shoreThe tunnel near Face RockLooking south from the Face Rock overlookLooking north from the Face Rock overlook
After lunch, we drove south to Cape Blanco. We walked down to the beach, then along the strand line to the north, at approximately low tide.
Looking west toward the Cape Blanco Lighthouse,and northward from the bluff above the beach.Cape Blanco beachLots of wave action in the rock garden,Tide going out…And another view of the beach on the north side of Cape Blanco.
Later that evening I watched the sun set from our room…
Sunset
1/7 – Beaches to the north – Sunset Bay, Yoakam Point, Blastendorff Beach, Seven Devils Beach
We drove north to Cape Arago, but a recent washout closed the road, so we could only go as far as Sunset Bay. We started with a short walk there, then explored a few locations to the north.
Sunset Bay at low tide
We walked about a mile around Yoakam Point, looking at the view from various cliff overlooks:
Looking east toward Blastendorff BeachYoakam PointCape AragoCape Arago LighthouseNatural arch
We ate lunch and then took a walk at Blastendorff Beach.
Blastendorff Beach, and jetty to the Coos Bay inlet
Driving back south, we took a side trip to the Seven Devils Wayside, and walked on the beach there. We even saw someone panning for gold.
Historical uses of this area…Looking south from Merchants BeachPainterly sky and water
Back in Brandon, we took a walk along the pier. It was mostly deserted, with most shops closed. I was fascinated by the mosaic installation on the boardwalk.
Bandon pier
Spiral Mosaic
Mosaic center
Mosaic detail
So many great little details – I looked at it for a long time!
Later, we walked out onto Coquille Point again, to watch the sunset. We met a large puffin sculpture there.
Coquille Point overlookLooking southPuffin made of flotsamAnother view of the Puffin sculpture
1/8 – Low tide near Bandon – Face Rock and Coquille Point
With low tide in the afternoon, this was a perfect day to walk north toward Face Rock and then beyond Coquille Point and look at tide pools, water, sky, and all the reflected permutations.
Bandon Beach, looking north…Looking south – reflections – water – skySea stacksLogs north of Coquille PointMore reflectionsLow tide beachBlue sand and skySea stars and anemonesCloser viewMore reflectionsFace Rock tunnelTide poolsSky and water…
Later, we enjoyed another sunset from the Coquille Point Overlook…
South viewSun just dipping below the horizonThe flotsam Puffin glowing in the sunset.
We enjoyed our few days of calm weather and beach walks, a break from the ‘real’ world, and what was to come next in January.