Three Waterfalls of Big Basin

May 3, 2009 at 3:58 pm | Posted in Day to Day, Mind and Spirit, Santa Cruz Commentary | 1 Comment

I’ve lived in Santa Cruz for more than twenty years and even though April is the best month to vacation here (yes, I do prefer it to October, and–honestly–don’t you?), it is usually the busiest month at work. This year I resolved not to miss April again and booked something fun to do every weekend. The third weekend of April I rented a tent cabin at Big Basin and hiked to the waterfalls. Did you know that Big Basin has waterfalls? Yes, there are several. The largest ones can be seen in a twelve-mile round trip hike. The hike I did is well-described on this page if you’re curious.

The best photos of the falls are already available to you on flickr.

Just like with shooting clay targets like I did yesterday, what I get out of hiking is the meditation. Long hours alone tend to inspire me to put my brain to sleep and practice sinking down into awareness of my body moving through the real world, a world of light and heat and matter and breath and fatigue.

creek

And yes, I do like to hike and camp alone. I like being with friends too, but the solitude is necessary sometimes, and yes, it feels safe and not lonesome. The tent cabins lock well enough to keep the ‘coons out, and the steep rental fees keep out the human riff-raff. Being nearly fifty years old helps too, as I find age gives a woman a cloak of invisibility that I didn’t have when I was younger.

In addition to hiking to Golden, Silver, and Berry falls, I found a memorial plaque and bench that I had been told about long ago by Haswell Leask when I interviewed him about the history of my house. Our conversation ranged far beyond the house, however, and our interview is on-line. Haswell’s father was Samuel Leask, a prominent Santa Cruz merchant for more than 70 years. He told me this story:

Haswell: Didn’t I tell you about the Boardwalk stock that my father had at that time? My father was — any money that he accumulated he put back into the business. And he was never interested in stocks or business operations that were different from his own. Well, you’ve heard about the famous Santa Cruz character named Fred Swanton who was a developer. Never made a penny out of anything he ever started; everything he was involved in went broke and he did it all on other people’s money–-though he lived in pretty high style. Well, he had a great reputation in Santa Cruz. He was important because he started things. They were all failures.

The Casino, the Santa Cruz Seaside Company, went bankrupt under Swanton and the greatest debtor was the utility company, the gas and electric people. At that time it was called the Coast County Gas and Electric. The Boardwalk used tremendous amounts of power. The man that constructed the Coast County firm was Waldo Coleman. Waldo Coleman’s family were early Californians and they had a very successful gold mine up near Auburn. And my grandmother was probably the first school teacher in Placer County and she was a friend of the original Colemans. [mother's mother.] Waldo Coleman was some of these people, and the families had always been friendly but not too closely involved.

Well, Waldo Coleman was stuck with this place in Santa Cruz and didn’t know what to do it. He came to my father and asked if he would become a director. And of course it was an important thing in Santa Cruz. He wanted to see if they couldn’t pull it out. And he was interested in getting his money back. Well, they did, and then management that they utilized, I don’t know who they were, but they were very successful right from the very beginning.

But father remained a director in the business although he had absolutely no interest in that sort of thing. He remained a director for 50 years and finally he made them let him out at 90. Eventually he died. We, in going over his effects, we discovered some Seaside Company stock. Evidently he thought that if he was going to be a director that he ought to have a little stock. Well, I can imagine that he hated to buy it, because he never went into anything of that sort. And then it developed, that he had purchased the stock at $6 per share. He bought it right at the rock bottom. At that time we ask what the stock was worth. It developed it was worth about $700 a share. What would we do with this stuff? We can’t sell it because it would all go to taxes. You know, capital gains. The family pondered about it, and we made up our minds. We will try the use this up for things that my mother and father would appreciate spending the money for. So, as Edna said, the first thing was the carpets at Dominican Hospital. We took some of the rest of it, and we bought some acreage of redwood land and added it Big Basin Park.

I had always wondered about the location of the Leask family donation and the bench. In another interview, Haswell had told me that the parcel and the location of the bench had been chosen because it had a nice view. I imagined that this bench would be along the trail somewhere–Big Basin park is full of memorial groves and memorial benches in random places. So as I hiked, I looked for this bench at every one I passed.

It was just like Haswell, in his humble understated way, to not say to me that the premier bench in all of Big Basin Park, with its stunning view of Berry Falls, (the highest and most spectacular in the park) is seen from the Leask bench and this little section of land that his family donated to all of us with the money that their father had invested in the Boardwalk when it was bankrupt and disreputable. The passage of time seems erased to me when I uncover these invisible connections that bind us to the people in Santa Cruz’s past, who loved it exactly the way that we love it.

leask-plaque

falls

Library Relic

March 25, 2009 at 3:43 am | Posted in Santa Cruz Commentary | 1 Comment

Perhaps it has been there a while, but I hadn’t noticed before today that someone has put the cornerstone of the Santa Cruz Carnegie Library out in front of the 1968 building that replaced it. library-cornerstone

Nice idea but I hope no one steals it.

Four Big Buildings

March 25, 2009 at 3:38 am | Posted in Santa Cruz Commentary | Leave a comment

This aspect of downtown from in front of the library shows very well the post-earthquake Santa Cruz. That’s the Cinema 9 on the left, on the Leask’s lot. The “that which was the Cooper House” building in the middle, and the Rittenhouse building where the… um… Rittenhouse-owned buildings once were. And that one on the right? That’s the empty Santa Cruz Sentinel Building.
three-big-buildings

Saturn enduring

March 23, 2009 at 12:00 am | Posted in Santa Cruz Commentary | 5 Comments
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The Saturn Cafe is 30 years old this month. How many local restaurents are that old? Even Tiny’s and Portola House is gone. I still like the Saturn but I get I to a different part of the menu now. More salads. And like riding the Tilt-a-whirl at the Boardwalk, I’ll never experience the Chocolate Madness with chocolate chip cookie dough instead of ice cream ever again.

Downtown hubris

February 24, 2009 at 2:58 pm | Posted in Santa Cruz Commentary | 5 Comments

First, everyone knew that a cafe specializing in cereal was a bad idea. Even pot heads can make their own cereal.

Shuttered cereal cafe

Shuttered cereal cafe

Second, the Rittenhouse building. Perhaps he picked out one too many items from the gewgaw catalog.

Rittenhouse Building

Rittenhouse Building

It has rams.

Rams

Rams

It has laurels.

laurels

laurels

It has columns and eagles.

columns-and-eagles

And…. a clock.

a-clock

No tenants yet.

Rittenhouse waited so long to rebuild after the post-earthquake recession that he ran into another one twenty years later. oops.

I am a little torn though. As silly as it is, I like the Rittenhouse building better than the post-modern effort that houses Paper Vision next door. This one was one of the early replacements, where Lily Marlene’s ice cream and Shockly’s jeweler’s was.

Post-Modern neighbhor

“Isn’t it nice after a long time apart to come together?”

February 20, 2009 at 3:55 pm | Posted in Santa Cruz Commentary | 2 Comments

Last night I did that thing that I say I need to do more of and went to a live-music concert at Don Quioxte’s. I happened to be looking on that club’s web page and saw the ad. Do you remember Gretchen Phillips? She founded two bands in the late-80s, “Two Nice Girls” and “Girls in the Nose.” The concert was so fun: Her intellect, her guitar skills, her beautiful voice, her clever and explicit lyrics. She put out so much and the fifteen of us in the audience loved it.

I bought her new CD, and a release of the first Two Nice Girls LP. I think it was the last LP I ever bought, back then. Gretchen writes in the CD booklet:

The Two Nice Girls years, 1985 to 1992, were a special time in the UC Gay liberation movement. Before there was lesbian chic, there was lesbian weird. We were that. But we were also beautiful in some ways that were new to the mainstream culture. I’m proud of any role we played in making it easier for other queers to come out and be themselves and to know tht they’re not alone and isolated. All we ever wanted in Two Nice Girls was to “Make Lesbianism As Attractive As Possible.” I like to think we did our part.

That’s for sure. I don’t think that two straight girls could have seen the Two Nice Girls concert I saw at the Kuumbwa in 1991 and not gone home and tried something. They would have, at the least, not been curious anymore. This music video sort of gives a hint of what those concerts were like.

Both CDs are on iTunes if you want to hear them, but the snippets don’t give enough of the songs to appreciate them, especially the humor of the seduction in “Swimming.” The title of this post is the first line of “Honey, I Feel So Good,” which she introduced as “a song about some great sex I had at NYU” so I’m going to be a gossip detective and guess that this song is about her and Kay Turner, the other founder of “Girls in the Nose” who is a professor there. But what do I know?

Oh, and the NAME of this blog? that’s a title of a Girls in the Nose song. Here’s their myspace. And, (hint hint) many of my passwords are based on their lyrics too.

Update: I remember when I saw Girls in the Nose at “Rhythmfest” in Georgia, I was astounded that band members included go-go dancers. Why doesn’t EVERY women’s band have go-go dancers! This video of one of Gretchen’s other bands, Lord Douglas Phillips, in 1998 gives a flavor of what that performance was like.

And here’s what you missed last night. Except. um. None of the 15 of us had ever heard this song before. We weren’t Brittany Spears fans and couldn’t sing along.

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