Behind us is a long dike, running for
miles: open grassy country, a little bleak. The bluff falls to the
beach, and where it reaches the sand, runs into a thicket of
blackberry. The September sun is low, and the blackberry casts a
shadow far out into the sand. We sit in its shade and watch the
river.
A long straight line of ragged silver
pilings runs out into the river on our left. Martha tells me it's
where the log booms used to tie up.
The wind is stiff and the river is
alive with sailboats. We talk idly of getting a boat – what sort of
boat? Motor or sail? We haven't been out on the river since Ernie's
death, and to talk of boats is to defy mortality. I wonder if we'll
ever get one. In the back yard, under a tarp, is the old dinghy,
which has moved everywhere with us, and which we have put in the
water exactly once. It's moldering away, and I even made so bold,
this Spring, as to suggest that we finally get rid of it. No.
It's a strange, barren beach, north of
the airport, looking across to Washington State. I'm not sure why we
go there. It's not a beautiful place, and the beaches are littered
with broken glass, cigarette butts and detritus; it's nearly as bad
as a beach on the East Coast. Airplanes roar up from the airport and
over our heads. The people who come to this beach are not the people
who hike up the gorge: they're immigrants, or working class kids
looking for a party, generally with an escort of big, untrained, but
good-natured dogs, who plunge into the chilly water, chasing sticks.
Not the sort of place your Nature Conservancy or Audubon Society
people go.
Three Mexican men fish from the beach
that's built up against the pilings. Their rods are too far away to
see except when they catch the exact angle to reflect the sun at us:
then they flash into existence for a moment, wands of brilliant
light, and disappear again.
Gulls, cormorants, ospreys. Bald eagles
come here at times, but not today. But as we're leaving we see a
hawk, or an eagle, that baffles us. Too bulky for an osprey, wrong
color for a redtail. And it's fishing. Could it possibly be an
immature golden eagle? We can't decide.
We'd worn our bathing suits under our
clothes, in the faint hope that we might warm up enough to find the
idea of swimming attractive. Not a chance. But we watched the
sailboats, the birds, the plunging dogs. It was a good day. The good
weather has stayed long past its time, and for all the sun, and the
bareness of Mt Hood – who ought to be in her new brilliant white
winter coat by now – it feels nothing like summer. There's an
uneasiness to the air and to the water. Sound won't hang properly in
the air.
We walked slowly back, picking up some of
the larger shards of glass, and fragments of styrofoam packing, and
dropping them into a cloth bag as we went. The instinct to pack out
more than you pack in is pretty entrenched in us, even here, where of
course there will never be a clean beach again.
October comes soon.
4 comments:
What a beautiful post this is. Filled with the bittersweet poignancy of autumn, for me. Autumn and broken glass and low-angled light.
As you tell this, I sit at the edge of the Detroit River, at the foot of East Grand Blvd. A park, concrete right up to water, cars parked with drivers still inside. I'm 17, on my bike, and I chat (uncharacteristically,) idly, with an old guy fishing - rather hopelessly I thought. It's cold, and the water isn't pretty, moves more up and down than through.
No matter, the lack of esthetics doesn't change the power of so much river, a bit of open sky in a city without a sky for months at a time.
so beautiful.
Thanks, all!
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