Anniversaries, Snoqualmie Falls, Upcoming Poetry Events – and Continued Uncertainty
- At July 09, 2022
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
- 2
Anniversaries and Snoqualmie Falls
Glenn and I celebrated our 28th anniversary today and spent the day at Snoqualmie Falls and Ollalie State Park. It’s a wonderful thing on a warm sunny day to drive into the somewhat cooler mountains, watching the skyline turn into massive rocky cliffs and forests. We stopped by a lavender farm – not open til next week to purchase lavender, but still beautiful – on the way up, and there was a farm stand selling a quart of cherries for $3. Which is a much better deal than you’ll get at, say Whole Foods, and they taste better. On the drive up, we noticed the wildflowers – foxgloves or lupines – that grew along the sides of the mountains.
The larger falls were mobbed with tourists but Ollalie’s smaller falls had only one other person, a teen throwing rocks into Snoqualmie river. I bought some local honey – I’m always tempted by the Twin Peaks stuff (Salish Lodge, where we stay, is in the credits of the opening of Twin Peaks, and a lot of the town staples.) I didn’t turn on the television once the whole day, and I’m only now sitting down at the computer.
This whole week has been lovely, mostly sunny and in the seventies, and we’ve visited two wineries and been enjoying our birds and our garden. We are really like old people, aren’t we? Glenn’s birthday is coming up next week so we plan to do a low-key celebration of that. It got me thinking about my own 50th birthday next year. Will it be safe to have a real party?
Upcoming Poetry Events at Hugo House
My friend Lesley Wheeler is coming into town and I’ll be doing a reading and discussion with her and several other poets at Hugo House on July 20. This is the first in-person poetry event I’ve done since February 2020 – which, ironically, was also with Lesley, at Open Books!
Lesley’s promoting her excellent book of poetry criticism/memoir, Poetry’s Possible Worlds, which I continue to recommend to everyone. I’m looking forward to it/feeling anxious about it – covid is still a threat, I’m on the approved list to get Evushield (a preventitive monoclonal antibody treatment for vulnerable individuals who have allergies to the MRNA shots, among others) but haven’t been able to receive it yet – but I miss human interaction, and that is the truth, especially other writers. And because this is a discussion and reading, it’ll be a little more relaxed and conversational than just a reading alone which is a nice way to slide back into public readings. Because, after all, my new book will be out before you know it – next spring is not that far away anymore. I keep wondering – will covid still be a threat? Will things in America be better or worse? The song says, “Que Sera, Sera”…but I find it hard to be that sanguine. Anyway I hope to see some of your friendly faces soon!
denisecalvetti michaels
So funny to read your blog and consider what it means to become a couple of old people. As an elder, I find myself doing things that I feel do not belong to the habitat of older folk, as though I’m trespassing when I spend hours, day after day, in the ravine to adjust a fern newly restled into its little terrace I spent time teetering to adjust. So, maybe as we live this crazy, blessed journey, we – at least, for me – are trespassing daily on the notion of what it means to become elders. May you and Glenn share many years as old people.
Margaret
So true what Denise says. I’m 71 but still don’t feel as I think an older person feels. I remember my mother saying to me when she was in her 50’s…I still feel young…I’m slowly filling her shoes. Jeannine I hope you’re able to get Evusheld soon! I’ve been getting it for about a year now and feel very confident being in crowds. As you probably know it’s repeated every 6 months.