today
9 a.m. T-ball Registration Boys and Girls Club Teen Center
read >9 a.m. Grantwriting Basics for Nonprofits Humboldt Area Foundation
read >9 a.m. Doris Niles Humboldt County Science Fair Humboldt State University
read >10:30 a.m. Josephine Johnson (folk/soul) Has Beans
read >3 p.m. End the War on the Poor Humboldt County Courthouse
read >5:30 p.m. Childbirth Education Classes See Event Description
read >6:30 p.m. Open Mic with Sky Miller Old Town Coffee & Chocolates
read >6:30 p.m. Tournament Tuesdays Humboldt Brews
read >7 p.m. North Coast Jazz Six Rivers Brewery
read >7 p.m. Open Jam Blondies Food And Drink
read >7 p.m. David Rovics Duck House
read >9 p.m. Blues Night Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. Karaoke/Dance Party The Playroom
read >9 p.m. Blues Night Jambalaya
read >10 p.m. Hit the Breaks!: Grasshoppa and Itchie Fingaz Red Fox Tavern
read >previous columns
July 16, 2009
summer
tall the grass green tickles velvet the horses' noses ...
read >The Flumes
By Kirk Gothier
As we walk together for the first time,
Suspended high above the Feather River
On ancient architecture designed to carry
Logs and men towards a more prosperous future,
We wonder aloud about the wisdom of male bonding.
Two generations of brothers-in-law
Focused on the 12-inch metal grate
That separates us from the flowing water.
Surely my son is not going to float back beneath us,
And I am not going to look down towards the river.
Too late, as I take the visual plunge
And try to comprehend the enormity
Of loggers and pioneers, fathers and sons,
And the generations of genetic resonance
That now move our feet above the earth.
Why us, why here, why now?
As we use all 5 points of contact
To make our way down the last 200 feet
Of what vaguely resembles a trail,
I can feel how matter bends space
To discourage such foolhardy treks.
My son dismisses the last 30 feet,
As we scramble to the water's edge
To immerse ourselves in the clarity
That always surfaces in the minds of men,
When swimming together in unknown waters.
On the way back up the hill
We walk and laugh above my bobbing son,
And stop when we are most exposed
To admire the way water moves calmly
Towards its final resting place.

















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