You can’t accuse California scientists of making their work mysterious and inaccessible. They’re much more likely to throw open the doors for a science party. Last week we had Impact Night, an all-night bash at NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View to watch the LCROSS satellite smash into the moon. This cross between a slumber party and the iPhone’s midnight product release allowed as many as a thousand curious people to watch the impact on a vast outdoor screen. They also watched movies and listened to guest speakers.
Today at 10:15AM, science will strike again when millions of Californians participate in the Great California ShakeOut, the largest earthquake drill in history. (I’ll be at the DMV. I wonder if I’ll need to drop, cover, and hold on.) Many schools and museums will have special activities as well as participating in the drill.
On Saturday, October 17, we’re celebrating the twentieth anniversary of Loma Prieta, the earthquake that struck during the World Series.San Francisco will hold “Where Were You in 89?” neighborhood block parties as well as resource fairs for disaster preparedness. You can also play Beat the Quake online.
All this frivolity over a serious subject—is it appropriate? People have died in quakes—at least 3000 in the great 1906 earthquake, 62 in Loma Prieta. We’re all at risk. Yet in my opinion, staying aware without staying terrified is the best way to handle living in a seismically active zone. (Or anywhere else, really.) And the games, fairs, parties, and drills allow people to learn and stay aware while having some fun.
California. We dance on the edge of destruction.
Once again, I have gone deep into the desert for my annual writing retreat. I’ll spend the next 16 days in a couple of rooms, writing, reading, listening to music, meditating. I’ll cook myself simple meals in the galley kitchen. With a few necessary exceptions (obtaining food supplies and the like), I’ll go out only in the cool predawn hours. Away from the distractions of my home, I’ll be able to clarify my thinking and choose a productive direction for the year ahead.
Why yes, I’m in Las Vegas. And no, I am not alone. I’m sharing the hotel room with Alan, who is here to play poker, and I am sure that we will not limit our activities to poker (him) and writing (me).
But the rest is true, too. My forays into Sin City are generally a lot closer in spirit to the Desert Fathers than, say, late-stage Elvis. Assuming any Desert Father had a comfortable bed, something to read, and an iPod.
We started after midnight, in the early hours of Monday morning. The roads were nearly empty. Joni Mitchell’s Court and Spark on the CD player, followed by the first couple discs of Citizen Steely Dan. Then Chris Squire in an album I hadn’t heard before, and we talked about progressive rock.
We stopped for a meal at 3AM — scrambled eggs and tea served in a ceramic pot that miraculously did not drip. I loathe those cheapjack aluminum teapots with the ill-fitting flat lids. The ones that spill half the tea on the table.
At a Denny’s off I-5 near Coalinga: A small black-and-white truckstop cat is patrolling the strips of grass and shrubs, hunting the mice that feed on dropped munchies.
Despite the caffeine in the tea, I fell back to sleep as soon as I got in the car.
Heading east from Bakersfield toward Tehachapi. (Pronounced Teh-HATCH-a-pee.) Torn-paper hills and a sky paling toward sunrise. Quarter moon at zenith.
Me: I know Bakersfield is universally regarded as ugly, but these hills [oak-dotted, east of the town] are gorgeous.
The hawks were hunting in the pre-dawn stillness. I put on Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run and mentioned to Alan that the title song had once been seriously nominated as the official anthem of New Jersey youth.
Alan You mean by the state?
Me: Yeah. I guess they couldn’t figure out what the lyrics meant.
Ridge after ridge of wind turbines. Alan says: Don Quixote, eat your heart out.
As we reached the high desert, the dawn bloomed brilliantly pink and clear. Mojave and Marvin Gaye’s Number One Hits. Oh yes.
California towns that sound like Discworld troll gods: Monolith, Boron. Boron would be god of duty and etiquette. Or paperwork.
We passed the turnoff for Twenty-Mule Team Road in Boron, CA. Then we stopped for gas, and I took over the driving. The roads were relatively level here, mostly straight, still almost deserted. The only risk (other than falling asleep at the wheel from sheer boredom) was that there was so little close-in scenery — so few landmarks to measure one’s progress — that even 80 mph felt slow. I eased back on the throttle whenever I noticed we were at 90.
Even at that speed, I kept an eye on geology. The Mojave, the high desert, is not much like the iconic deserts: the sand dunes and palms of the Sahara, or the wind-scoured rocky Garden of the Gods, familiar from a thousand Road Runner cartoons.
The granite hills were weathered into fantastic shapes: knifelike serrated ridges, curves, pillars, volutes, needles, as fanciful as chocolate meringue. (The occasional volcanic cinder cone blended right in.) The ridges rise randomly from drifts of weathered dry ravel, like icebergs in the sea. Fat round cushions of sagebrush are scattered over the level valley floor, and the spiky Joshua trees, which look like clustered bottle brushes.
Then I asked Alan to put on an Oliver Messiaen CD he’d brought. I like Messiaen a lot, but I hadn’t heard his Quartet for the End of Time, written and first performed in a Nazi POW camp. The quartet instruments–piano, cello, violin, clarinet–were what the imprisoned musicians happened to play and the camp had available. Spare, complex, demanding, with moments of unexpected beauty. Rather like the high desert, in fact.
Last year we drove through Yosemite on the way down, and I made a spontaneous sunrise excursion that landed me in Calico Canyon. This time we’ll be here for the new moon, and I want very much to go out into the desert to look at the stars in true darkness.
I brought a stack of books and the entire Internet with me, and I’ve been stuffing my laptop with CDs. I also want and need to get a good bit of work done. I am also planning to stop by the Clark County Library book sale, where I bought a box and a half of books last year for an indecently low price. It’s the best used bookstore in town.
I am planning to continue my record of never having wagered a cent in Las Vegas. I don’t play poker anyway, Casinos have too much cigarette smoke and too many random perfumes for my allergic, asthmatic self, although I like the decorations — Chihuly flower ceilings, giant aquaria, white tiger cats sporting in waterfalls, fountains pretending to be volcanoes, and duplicates of classical statues that I’ll never get to Europe to see.
So. The adventure begins.
For April 18, anniversary of the great San Francisco Quake, we have one of the great poems of geology:
Lay of the Trilobite
A mountain’s giddy height I sought,
Because I could not find
Sufficient vague and mighty thought
To fill my mighty mind;
And as I wandered ill at ease,
There chanced upon my sight
A native of Silurian seas,
An ancient Trilobite.So calm, so peacefully he lay,
I watched him even with tears:
I thought of Monads far away
In the forgotten years.
How wonderful it seemed and right,
The providential plan,
That he should be a Trilobite,
And I should be a Man!And then, quite natural and free
Out of his rocky bed,
That Trilobite he spoke to me
And this is what he said:
‘I don’t know how the thing was done,
Although I cannot doubt it;
But Huxley – he if anyone
Can tell you all about it;‘How all your faiths are ghosts and dreams,
How in the silent sea
Your ancestors were Monotremes -
Whatever these may be;
How you evolved your shining lights
Of wisdom and perfection
From Jelly-Fish and Trilobites
By Natural Selection.‘You’ve Kant to make your brains go round,
Hegel you have to clear them,
You’ve Mr Browning to confound,
And Mr Punch to cheer them!
The native of an alien land
You call a man and brother,
And greet with hymn-book in one hand
And pistol in the other!‘You’ve Politics to make you fight
As if you were possessed:
You’ve cannon and you’ve dynamite
To give the nations rest:
The side that makes the loudest din
Is surest to be right,
And oh, a pretty fix you’re in!’
Remarked the Trilobite.‘But gentle, stupid, free from woe
I lived among my nation,
I didn’t care – I didn’t know
That I was a Crustacean.*
I didn’t grumble, didn’t steal,
I never took to rhyme:
Salt water was my frugal meal,
And carbonate of lime.’Reluctantly I turned away,
No other word he said;
An ancient Trilobite, he lay
Within his rocky bed.
I did not answer him, for that
Would have annoyed my pride:
I merely bowed, and raised my hat,
But in my heart I cried: -‘I wish our brains were not so good,
I wish our skulls were thicker,
I wish that Evolution could
Have stopped a little quicker;
For oh, it was a happy plight,
Of liberty and ease,
To be a simple Trilobite
In the Silurian seas!’–May Kendall
* He was not a crustacean. He has since discovered that he was an Arachnid, or something similar. But he says it does not matter. He says they told him wrong once, and they may again.
I have no idea if May Kendall is a relative; she was an English poet and reformer, and my ancestors of that ilk came to this side of the Atlantic four hundred years ago.
Also, go buy a copy of Earthquake Weather, a stunning collection of poems by Janice Gould.
For April 19, one of the great poems of American history
Concord Hymn
Sung at the Completion of the Concord Monument,
April 19th, 1836By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world.The foe long since in silence slept;
Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
And Time the ruined bridge has swept
Down the dark stream that seaward creeps.On this green bank, by this soft stream,
We set today a votive stone;
That memory may their deed redeem,
When, like our sires, our sons are gone.Spirit, that made those heroes dare
To die, and leave their children free,
Bid Time and Nature gently spare
The shaft we raise to them and thee.–Ralph Waldo Emerson