Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 30: Eudora — The Sierra of the South“Whether you think you can, or think you cannot, you are right.” This was Grandma Ollie’s favorite saying, and one of the few stories my dad ever told about her when I was growing up. How she went from being a cotton sharecropper in Arkansas to the first black woman…Arkansas12 min readArkansas12 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 25: Death Valley — From the mountain top to rock bottomI’ve been to the mountain top, I text my parents, resting against the hotel headboard as I look over pics. Of the 10,000 feet bristlecone pine grove. But also of the last two weeks. The dark red sun setting over the endless forest of Kings Canyon’s bright orange sequoias. The…Death Valley9 min readDeath Valley9 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 23: Bristlecone Pine — Stumbling towards the world’s oldest treeI’m driving north on 395. Lake Isabella is behind me. Red structures of the volcanic Coso Ridge are to my right. And to my left, jutting out of the brown grass fields along Owen’s Valley, is the towering granite of the Sierra, climbing higher than any other mountain range in…Bristlecone Pine12 min readBristlecone Pine12 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 22: Isabella — The anchor of the SierraWe shall not cease exploring. And the end of all our exploration will be to arrive at the place where we started and know the place for the for first time. The poet’s words flow through my left headphone as I drive along the right lane. 42 miles per hour…California7 min readCalifornia7 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 19: Sequoia — Climbing towards the world’s largest treeI follow the smoke across the mountain, towards the Great Central Valley, scaling the side of the Sierra, along Highway 49, through Bullion Knob and Indian Mountain, Bear Valley and Ponderosa Basin. …Sequoia8 min readSequoia8 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 16: Yosemite — Nature’s most precious mountain mansionAt first, I think the eruption is a gunshot. An explosion. A semi-truck collision. But it’s the middle of the night. What could possibly be this loud? Then I recognize the unmistakable cry of the wind, like an unleashed floodgate, an invisible chariot of horses, galloping across the moonlit forest…Yosemite11 min readYosemite11 min read
Published inMy First Winter in the Sierra·Dec 1, 2022Day 1: Auburn — Elevation 1234The Sierra Nevada: the most divinely beautiful of all the mountain chains I have ever seen. I think about John Muir’s 150-year-old words, from his book My First Summer in the Sierra, as I come towards the end of a 4,000 mile journey across America, in search of the divine…Sierra Nevada6 min readSierra Nevada6 min read
Published inSummer in New York·Nov 10, 2022That’s a fire dogThe maple leaves in Seward Park haven’t started to senesce, but the Tai Chi regulars are bundled in sweaters and the high schoolers are back-to-school, huddled around the trash bins with New York hip hop — the type I might run to but am no longer cool enough to name…New York1 min readNew York1 min read
Published inSummer in New York·Nov 3, 2022White hair blue hairThe heritage oaks lining Henry Street block the August sun as I sip a morning coffee. Behind me, a woman with white hair scoots on a walker up the sidewalk. Across the street, a woman with blue hair dashes with a terrier through the crosswalk. …New York City1 min readNew York City1 min read
Published inSummer in New York·Oct 28, 2022Spike“His name was Spike. He died last year. In a house fire.” She sighs into her chair, adjusting her purse on her empty table as she looks down Ludlow. I want to ask what happened, where, how, but I don’t. …New York1 min readNew York1 min read