Monday, September 17, 2012

Infinity beach

We spent this past weekend at a rented beach house in Ocean Park, smack in the middle of Washington's Long Beach peninsula. The name of the peninsula is apt, because the beach in question is 28 uninterrupted miles long.  From where we stayed, you could walk for a day in either direction and not reach the end.

I've always enjoyed the beach; as a teenager, I promised myself that I would never live more than a few hours drive away from the ocean.  I just liked knowing it was there if I needed it.  This particular beach vacation affected me somewhat strangely.  To begin with, I was amazed at how relaxing it was, in spite of still having to prepare meals and dress/referee/discipline/clean up after the children.  And then wow, that beach...  I'd walk out onto it and it was as if I'd stepped outside space and time.  If I looked straight ahead, I could see the sea and the slight curve of the earth.  If I looked to the right: empty flat sandy beach disappearing into a sea-mist horizon.  To the right: same view as to the left.  I felt swallowed up by it, and even when I tried, I couldn't put together any coherent practical thoughts.  I just *was*.  I moved and spoke and attended to the kids, but none of it touched me.  I've struggled since then to think of a short, sound-bite way to describe it (I considered "nirvana" but rejected it on philosophical principles), and the closest thing I could come up with was that it was an experience of infinity.

“The car shot forward straight into the circle of light, and suddenly Arthur had a fairly clear idea of what infinity looked like.
It wasn’t infinity in fact. Infinity itself looks flat and uninteresting. Looking up into the night sky is looking into infinity—distance is incomprehensible and therefore meaningless. The chamber into which the aircar emerged was anything but infinite, it was just very very very big, so big that it gave the impression of infinity far better than infinity itself.” -Douglas Adams

Exactly.  Illusory or no, it was a lovely experience, the weather surprised me by being beautiful, and I will now post more pictures that I ought to.

 The kids had more fun sliding down the dunes than doing just about anything else.

 On the path to the house

The main living area of our rental house

 The view from the house

 On a beach this big, you don't get much company.

 Eve really got into sand-castle making.

 Samuel, making a zen garden?





Saturday, September 8, 2012

Hot hot hot

Early September weather in the Pacific Northwest is always a toss-up. Sme years it is hot and dry, some years it is cool and dry, and some years it is cool and rainy.  This is one of the hot and dry years, for which I am profoundly thankful.  With any luck, my tomatoes and grapes will actually have a chance to finish ripening before the cooler fall weather shuts things down.

On a related note, we have peppers.  LOTS of peppers.  My two bell pepper plants are ripening at once just like they always do (why can't they space themselves out a little more?), and we have five plants of jalapeño peppers that are loaded down with ripe fruit, plus two Serrano pepper plants in the same condition.  The cayenne peppers aren't quite ripe yet, and the two habanero plants are definitely not ripe yet.  But those jalapeños, whew!  Last year, for reasons that could not be fully determined, all of my jalapeños were utterly mild.  I had bought the packaged labeled Hot!, but I now suspect it might have been mislabeled.  I soldiered on and tried again this year with seeds bought from another source and goodness gracious heavens to Mergatroyd, these jalapeños are volcanic.  I put five mostly seeded *slices* in a pot of tomato soup last night and it was almost too hot for me to comfortably eat. Now to find more uses for all this hotness. :-)

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Beginning of school, end of summer

Eve's first day of first grade was a half day ending at noon, so we drove a few minutes further south and had a picnic lunch on the banks of the Columbia River.

 Still in uniform

 Gazing

 Boy, it was a good day for a beach picnic.

A few days later, Brian scored a used kids' pool for cheap.  Thank goodness the warm weather is holding.



 Eve, practicing her swimming moves.


I agree, Samuel:  pools are awesome. Thank you, Daddy!

This one's for Brian


That's not a carrot.

THIS is a carrot.


....  [insert witty comment here, I'm at a loss]

I'd never seen this before, but since I took that picture I've found another pair of conjoined tomato-twins on my Sungold plant.  Nature is fun.