| TheTraveler |
| Tales of exotic adventures, humorous anecdotes,
and musings from The Traveler... The adventure awaits...
March 2002 * 03/20/02 |
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The Plan Is Point Lobos by Thomas Schueneman
Monday went according
to plan, quite by accident…
It was our last day at the little hotel on the quiet end of Cannery
Row, overlooking Monterey Bay.
Sun filtered through thick wooden shudders as morning broke – the sun
wouldn’t last, and, it soon seemed, nor would my plan. But as I lay there
in the cool morning air, listening to the eternal roll of the ocean on the
coast, the playful barking of wakening sea lions in the distance, I still
had a plan...
And ultimately, that plan was to walk along the shoreline of Point
Lobos State Park.
I viewed the pea-sized hail we were greeted with as we checked out of
the hotel as a sign that plans can change and evolve...
After making s few stops at shops and book stores on Cannery Row and in
neighboring Pacific Grove, the sun reemerged from behind the storm clouds.
We had not expected it, due to the earlier storminess of the morning, but
we were on schedule, according to plan, heading south down Route 1 past
Carmel and the infamous 17-mile-drive, toward Los Lobos State Park.
California is blessed with one of the most majestic and awe-inspiring
coastlines I’ve ever seen. Los Lobos State Park, just a few miles south of
Carmel on route 1, is an example of some of the best coastline California
has to offer. And with easy access to boot!
We love this place… Scampering over rocks, investigating tide pools,
standing on the rocky shore watching the waves break around your feet. Or
just meditating on the ocean…
Up and down the rugged coast, boulders are strewn like small islands…
Grace Cathedral in San Francisco is splendid; a forest of stone that
evokes the spiritual, but here is where God truly lives…
As we started out the sun was shining, and I was warm enough with just
a light shirt. Jayne was bundled a bit more sensibly, as if inclement
weather was still a possibility. As the magnificent cloudscape, beaming in
the afternoon sun, suggested, more weather was right there, hanging off
the coast.
But we were off trying to capture the sea and sky and coastline on
film, each looking for our own ways to try and get all this beauty inside
the camera.
I ran out of film and almost immediately started to feel the chill bite
through my shirt, as a solitary rain drop landed on the tip of my nose.
I met up with Jayne and we started to head back to the truck, almost
making it before the rain started to fall in earnest.
Thinking it was time to hit the road back for home, we drove down the
trail a short way to a picnic area in order to use the facilities there
before heading out.
By the time we had finished, the sun was back out and Jayne was taking
pictures of the rain drops hanging from the branches of fir tress, like
ephemeral jewels.
It was a beautiful combination of weather. Billowing cloudscapes,
pounding seas, rain, and then sun, all combining to make the park breath
with an effervescence; a cool, green lushness.
I found a trail that led up into the surrounding forest and followed it
a short way…
It looked too good to pass up, at least for a little while, so I
hurried back to the trailhead and motioned for Jayne to come hither…
We hiked back up into the woods for about three quarters of a mile
through tall, green forest, dripping from the recent rain. We walked into
a clearing high above the coast, revealing a fantastic view of the sea
crashing into the shoreline.
I stood and breathed the clean, crisp air and tried to soak it all in…
I wished we could have stayed a little longer, lingered a little more,
in this quiet, peaceful place…
But it was time to turn around and head back to the truck, to the traffic,
and to the hustle and bustle of the urban lives we call home…
-The Traveler
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