Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Shores, Forests & Music



Putumayo has some Great music.

While we have been charging around the Olympic Peninsula here in the greener than green Northwest I have been taking care of a music organization task that started when we were in Mazatlan, Mexico. We had taken the hike into the artsy district of old Mazatlan and there was a book and music street fair going on. We browsed the selections and I found a vendor with Putumayo items covering the table!! Oh, gosh, I think I need a few of those. Well, when I loaded them onto the computer to put into the iPod it seems they were missing the titles and details needed to keep them organized and recognizable. Hmmm, after some trial and error I finally came up with a way to get that accomplished without having to reload everything. Now that it's done I can happily listen and know what it is I am listening to. I had already known of this lable from the "Music from the Coffee Lands" CD I had heard some few years ago but had not realized the connection until I saw it at this fair. (The link is above).

Otherwise, we have spent time in the Hoh Rain Forest, a temperate area of western Washington state. This is as close to "magical" as it gets for me. The deep greens in so many shades and textures are amazing. Simply as shocking to the senses as the barreness of coastal Baja California must have been for Sandy. We have taken time, too, to explore the area where Sandy grew up and as a tour guide she has been finding ways to bring her childhood memories to the front. This would have been very different from the ways and places of my youth. It's about as different from Tucson, Arizona as you can get!!

Overall we have had a lot of fun checking all this out. No internet much of the time and spending time with family and friends along the way. Another thing we have done as we go is to read (together) a book about aging... that is, Sandy reads to me as I drive to the next stopping place. The book is, "You Staying Younger, The Owners Manual For Extending Your Warranty" by Dr.'s Michael F. Roizen & Mehmet C. Oz. It is well written and updates a lot of facts and myths about the aging process. This is between my current regular read, "The Wauchula Woods Accord" by Charles Siebert, which as the subtitle says, is "Toward A New Understanding of Animals". Today or tomorrow I am hoping to stop at the same bookstore in Port Townsend where I got Siebert's book to pick up a slightly related book that I should have gotten when I was there. We had helped a friend (Sue... maybe that's Surfer Sue) move her boat there. Anyway, the long and the now of it all is that we are having a bunch of fun while avoiding traffic accidents (like the guy in a motorhome, yesterday, who came around a corner waaay too fast in our lane). So there has been a bit of adrenalin from time to time but nothing worse than the old commute to work a few years back!! The rest of the day passes without nearly the stress that I was under at that time. The back drop of total "green out" makes this a reality I have never known before. The thing that makes all this so incredible is the amount of water there is here. Remembering that I am a desert person at heart, there is more water here for me to see than I have seen in my lifetime to date (that is by rough calculation a fact)!!

2 comments:

beisbolfan2007 said...

As a contrast, I drove out to Vail, Arizona on Sunday, and thought it was really green. I'm sure rain forest people wouldn't appreciate it, but this desert rat sure did! Keep on enjoying -- lots of us are vicariously traveling with you.

DMC Friend said...

So, to really experience the green and the mega-water of the Northwest can we assume that you will stay at least part way through the Winter to see where this all comes from? Nah! It is amazing though, isn't it.