Saturday, July 16, 2011

Motherland

Where in hell can you go
far from the things that you know
far from the sprawl of concrete
that keeps crawling its way
about 1,000 miles a day?

O, Motherland, cradle me;
close my eyes;
lullaby me to sleep.
Keep me safe;
lie with me;
stay beside me.
Don't go. Don't you go.

O, my five and dime queen,
tell me, what have you seen?
The lust and the avarice,
the bottomless, the cavernous greed?
Is that what you see?

O, Motherland, cradle me;
close my eyes;
lullaby me to sleep.
Keep me safe;
lie with me;
stay beside me.
Don't go. Don't you go.

It's your happiness I want most of all,
and for that I'd do anything at all.
O, mercy me!

Now come on shotgun bride.
What makes me envy your life?
Faceless, nameless, innocent, blameless
and free.
What's that like to be?



O, Motherland, cradle me;
close my eyes;
lullaby me to sleep.
Keep me safe;
lie with me;
stay beside me.
Don't go. Don't you go.

"Motherland," by Natalie Merchant

A Midsummer Day's Trek

This bucolic scene is the valley of Buffalo Creek in Washington County. State Game Lands #232 is a large tract of wooded land along neglected country lanes that used to be public thoroughfares.

Once again, photos are taken with my lame-arse cell phone. Although this is the notoriously polluted country of coal and shale, there were many fish in the stream, darting in deep pools dappled with the afternoon sun. I tried to imagine a day in their lives, their world, but I couldn't.

The solitude is glorious in the game lands in midsummer. I was a little dismayed to find that the goldenrod are already in bloom, since I associate them with the ripening season of late August and early September.

This trek had a wild feel to it, almost like being back up in the North Country. The road wends through dense forest, occasionally running along the edge of a long-fallow field and frequently running parallel to the creek. In the meadow stretches, the scent of clover lingers in the air.

The old road passing through this segment of the game lands is called Buffalo Camp Road. There are side roads that meet up with it at certain intervals, and they're all worth exploring.

I wanted to stay out there till darkness fell, to immerse myself in the wild lands and the clover smell, to construct a sleeping hut out of grasses and limbs, to swim in moonlit pools with those living fishes.

But tomorrow calls, with its duties and demands. Tomorrow beckons, with its formalities and its rites. Funny how, when the summer is in full swing, you forget what winter was really like.

Monday, July 11, 2011

The Uneventful Things

It's typically the uneventful things that make a life full and happy. Or at least that's what I tell myself in the absence of anything more interesting.

As one who has newly discovered the wonders of hiking the state game lands, I've taken to planning my excursions mostly in the counties to the south: Washington, Greene, Fayette. I usually go for Washington County. It's the closest, and it's a place where history looms in every hollow and around each bend. It's a mysterious place of beautiful hills and valleys, old, old houses, almost-quaint-but-slightly-seedy villages, cemeteries with weathered brown headstones.


This past Sunday's trek took me to State Game Lands #245, just south of Claysville on PA231. The excursion was low key. The gamelands there are pleasant enough. There's a grassy green road that runs up a valley wall. My old digital has finally given up the ghost, so these are cheapo cell phone shots. Not much to see. At the top of the valley, there's a lot of industrial noise from some Consol Energy site located within the gamelands, but down near the valley floor, silence and solitude could be found. Also, note to future self: there's a free shooting range at SGL 245, so if I ever want to practice with the .22, this is the place. Also, I liked the series of fields joined by grassy roadlets. There was a murky pond, and come August, the place will be overrun with apples and elderberries.

The best thing about this excursion is that on the route home I took PA231 north through the intriguing village of Claysville (might be worth an hour's visit someday). I was avoiding I-70 because of outrageous construction delays, and along the minor roadway, I discovered the fabled SGL 232: the wonderland in the valley of Buffalo Creek. With all the creeks and streams, the place looks spectacular.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Wheeling and Lake Erie

A few local railroads still exist, though many have long since been converted to "rail-trails," a favorite outdoor venue of suburban soccer moms and Mr. Moms pushing those two-seated baby strollers.

I was glad to find the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway alive and well on a recent trek in the wilds of Fayette County. In fact, the W & LE is doing so well that they're replacing railroad ties on the line that runs along Jacobs Creek. Just across the tracks you see the long trail that winds up the valley wall into SGL #296.

I don't consider myself a "railroad buff." Too young. Too disinterested in technical things. But I do love the sound of a train on the tracks when I'm trekking through the forest. Some of my fondest childhood memories entail railroad tracks running alongside rivers and streams, the smell of creosote and ragweed. A train track is a powerful symbol of escape.

Of course, now that I've accomplished most of my life's goals and attained almost everything I've ever dreamed, there's nothing left to escape...except the realization that I aimed so damned low. Besides, the W & LE doesn't take a drifter anywhere except Ohio. Ohio and I have a long and sordid history. Where else can you wake up in a dumpster smelling of Amaretto and wearing a neckerchief?

Sorry, Ohio. If you weren't a colony, you're not a state...

Monday, July 4, 2011

Jacobs Creek

The Fourth of July spent in the silence of the forest. There's nothing better. You can have your fireworks, your picnics, and your watermelons. Spare me your sanctimonious shows of patriotism. I'll take the wooded valley of Jacobs Creek, a far-flung tributary of the storied Youghiogheny River, which is itself a tributary of the Monongahela.

For this trek (the first outing I've had in a month) I decided to avoid the state parks and their holiday revelers. Instead, I chose to explore State Game Lands #296 in Fayette County.

Before there were factories or mines, before anyone cared about iron ore, or coal, or oil, or natural gas, long before Marcellus Shale, there were streams and rivers: perfect avenues for the march of empires. The French and Indian War of the 1750s is the original story around which Southwestern Pennsylvania is formed. Braddock and his ill-fated band. Forbes the successful successor. Jacobs Run was used as an avenue for settlement in the 1760s, when the Treaty of Fort Stanwix reopened the western marches of Penn's Woods to white settlers.

State Game Lands #296 is divided in half by the lovely brook. This is a large, wooded expanse of land descending gradually toward the stream. There are the requisite oil derricks pumping along gravel roads, and I was surprised to find that raspberries were already ripe beside the roads. But if you trust your instincts to lead you into the more interesting parts of the forest, it's well worth a few hours leisure.

It's not very clear in the second photo, but upon descending the walls of the valley, you begin to sense a deep chasm on the other side of the trees. It's tantalizing and frustrating at once; you know that if there were only a break in the endless leafage, you would have a spectacular overlook to a steep valley above Jacob's Creek. But there is no break, no overlook. You just have to make your way along unmarked hunters' paths to the bottom.


One thing I like about hiking the state game lands is that very few others ever think to do it. And I had some trouble finding this spot despite the research I did on Google Earth and Mapquest prior to setting out.

Upon wending down to the bottom of the valley, you'll cross the requisite railroad track before reaching the streambed. And these tracks rumble with passing trains several times a day, too!

This is definitely a different region from the one where I live, though it's exactly an hour away. Plant life tends more toward sycamores, and poplars, and sassafras, trees with rounded, hand-shaped leaves. But even more different are the human settlements. The village of Jacobs Creek--at the place where the stream meets the Yawk--is nearly a Third World kind of place. There's a reason they call Fayette County "Fayette-nam." Abandoned houses, abandoned churches, a strange old general store that looks abandoned but has hand-lettered signs recently tacked to its wooden front. Many people here live in trailers, and the post office is in a rundown little house adorned with odd garden tools. I wanted to take pictures, but it felt voyeuristic...and I felt as if I was being watched.

But it was beautiful and very long overdue. Note to future self: I-70 to exit 49, Smithton. From Smithton, follow road marked Jacobs Creek (2 miles). From Jacobs Creek, follow the only full-sized road leading out of town. It bends many times, leads uphill and out into the countryside (passing a fantastic abandoned farm on the right, perhaps worth a visit) until you see the unmistakable state game lands signage at a parking area on the left.