May 1, 2012

My dog has taken a fancy to putting her paws on the sink and watching the flies wander around the window. They are easy to see from her angle, black against the Oregon grey or white sky. It is a bad habit but it's so cute so I have difficulty negatively responding.

April 8, 2012

Happy Easter!

Happy easter everybody! We decided to try making eggs with found natural goodies + onion skins as seen here. It's pretty simple- you take an un-boiled egg, put wet things on it, wrap in onion skins and tie with twine and boil!


We used our chickens' green, blue, and brown eggs and red and yellow onion skins. 
We tried it with

leaves



flowers



lichens


buds


feathers


and many other goodies!



It is really fun to open them after they've boiled because they turn out so differently. Even the easter bunny approves!


March 3, 2012

Micro Worlds

I spent several long sunny hours in the sun today, turning compost and coffee grounds under the soil to prep the ground for artichokes. For the first time this year it really looked and felt like Spring. Not only did the chickens lay their first eggs, but the sky was cloudless and blue, daisies were blooming on the lawn and the cherry blossoms were pink and alive! I also noticed some smaller things starting to bloom... Lichens and mosses that looked like tiny landscapes! So I took advantage of the beautiful light and got out my camera.













Moss fingers





In this tiny jungle, a giant lady bug grazed

February 28, 2012

Home things

So my exciting gap-year adventure train has briefly slowed to a halt with the news that I would have to do several weeks or months of intensive physical therapy because of a foot injury. (Which is going well- just discovered I'm allowed to go on 1 hour hikes! wooo) I was bummed to hear this at first as I was planning all sorts of cool things, but have really enjoyed some time at home, catching up on 4 years of sleep, to-do lists, doing lots of reading, studying, mixed martial arts, tutoring etc... Here are a few images that I have taken in this period of rest and recovery! 

Carrots: I planted all of these (in addition to many other root veggies, lettuces, peppers, fruits etc...) back in the late summer. We've started harvesting them and they are SO weird! Very tasty and healthy, but of course, the carrots I plant would end up looking like chubby orange fingers:

Or in the case of this one, fat little gnome legs!!!


I've enjoyed exploring the woods I used to play in every day when I was little. 


I've been working intermittently as a slave administrative assistant for my dad's office and have taken pictures of some of their properties. Here is a spooky picture I took by accident!


I stepped backwards into this hole, further complicating my recovery process...


Went to the Oregon Logging Conference where they had a cool photo archive of Oregon logging!


Woke up one day last week and noticed flowers have started blooming! I went out to take a nice picture of Lila but she just wanted to eat them


and play with her ball


We had several hundred kiwis sitting around that my mom harvested a few months ago (they take a bit of time to ripen after harvesting). We got a new blender so I spent several hours opening every single kiwi, testing them and pureeing them. We have about 5 pounds of frozen kiwi mush that I make into smoothies. 


So that is what my January/February are looking like. Pretty simple, but restorative and nice.

February 25, 2012

An homage to the austere beauty of central oregon

This last fall we decided to take a drive we virtually had never done for fun. My brother went to school in Sisters so we drove over there often when I was younger, but rarely with enough time just to muck about. This time it was purely on a whim, fed by the aesthetic desire for vast openness and the late summer panic when you make sure you've done everything you can before the freezes come. We brought our roadside geology books and tracked the geologic history of the road-cuts and gravels and buttes from start to finish. It was wildfire season, which made the trip more exciting, but scary. Luckily the fire we saw wasn't in an inhabited area and was near several lakes.

We drove up the winding, switchback laden Old McKenzie Highway (Route 242) and stopped at the familiar Dee Wright Observatory. Earlier in the summer, some friends of ours took their bikes on the highway as snow had been cleared from part of the road, but not enough for cars.


The Dee Wright Observatory was built at McKenzie pass during the depression by Civilian Conservation Corps workers. You can still see the old wagon trails from the 1860s there. That might be Belknap crater there but I'm not positive. I remember scampering across the lava and hunting for chipmunks with my Girl Scout troop here. That is the smoke from the fire in the image above. It would've filled the frame in another few minutes.


This image shows the Middle and North Sisters, with the Collier glacier between them. Everything is so open out there. I've always thought it looks like another planet because of how the skeleton trees just can't seem to thrive.





We finished our day at a road-side burger joint where I had a blackberry shake so thick I had to eat it with a spoon. We set off for home but stopped when we found a great vista of the fire. Many people were gathered at this wide shoulder taking pictures and saying over and over "Did you see that?!". If you look really closely in this picture you can see a few sparks- the fire was right over the highest point in that ridge. Helicopters were dipping into the lake in the middle of the image. As we drove home, the moon hovered directly in front of us, shining blood red through the haze.

February 4, 2012

My Year So Far: Jamaica, mon

After several days at anchor in Samana bay we set off once again, this time for our last stop, the Errol Flynn Marina in Port Antonio, Jamaica. On our way there we caught a 22 pound mahi on the line we always had set up on our stern. Actually I can't quite remember if that happened then or earlier, but according to the order of my pictures in iPhoto it happened after we left the DR.... 

It changed color so quickly! That was the most surprising part. Look at these photos in chronological order: 



I love this picture, because of how you can see the anticipation just in our feet!

As in San Juan, the colors were very vibrant in Jamaica, although of a different palette. More saturated and dark than the pastel stucco of San Juan's townhouses. 

Goats everywhere

Rainbow building taken from our bus

Rainbow town where we stopped for ting and sandwiches
Even the mud was rainbow!


The field trip I opted for in Jamaica was a hike through the agricultural land. I initially expected we would stroll across vast fields of grains and bananas. However, as we quickly found, Jamaica is very mountainous and most farmers farm on extremely, dangerously steep hillsides. We would be walking on a small path right by a cliff and I would look over the side and see Scotch Bonnet peppers or tomatoes clinging to the hillside. We also saw bananas and cacao and giant versions of every single house plant I've ever seen. Chocolate is not what we think it is. Cacao pods look like yellow squash and are filled with sappy white fat packets containing the beans. 



Looking down at the Rio Grande river from the hills


And the people of Port Antonio were welcoming and kind. (Except for the building code man who was angry with me for not sending in a letter of introduction, which I had....) Everybody said hello and wanted to know more about us- not to sell us stuff like in the DR, just to know what we were doing there. They were so proud and delighted that we chose their part of the island to visit. I met many people with neat stories and most of them asked me to take their picture! 

Here's Noel, who was born on Christmas. He got in trouble 5 years ago for selling blank CDs, but now he is "no bullshit!". So I bought one of his CDs and went back to the boat and put it in the galley CD player and it was a good roots reggae collection!


Then there was Rock Bottom, a wood carver. He's been carving for 30 years and said this is his favorite piece:

Then I met Norma, a nice lady in the market. She said she's an all-natural girl. She gave Beth and I a taste of her spice- as though she knew once we tried it we couldn't leave without buying some. It was so good even though it was 10 in the morning. I almost wanted to keep munching on it. A spice! I went back to take her picture and she told me about her family and showed me pictures of her many offspring and their children.


An old man came up to our boat and sold us some spiny lobsters and a crab! I drew this guy. Half of it is from memory because my model was turned into ceviche by the chief scientist before I finished!



Ian and I wrote this when we left Jamaica:
Goodbye Jamaica! You’ve treated us well, but the time has come to head towards Key West. We woke up and were thrown straight into intensive cleaning when a “Field Day” was called. As part of A-Watch, we had to clean the galley! I (Dylan) spent several hours in the small, dark corners of the galley scraping “mung” (not quite solid, not quite liquid) off the soles, walls, and nooks and crannies while I (Ian) washed and wiped down every dish, jar, and container from the galley. After cleaning belowdeck, we had a deck wash and then met for the gear adrift auction. During the auction, items strewn across the boat are “auctioned” off in exchange for displays of talent. I (Dylan) won back my bag of Blue Mountain coffee by licking my elbow while Ian won back his rash guard by leading us in a very silly dance. Then we motored away from the \marina and set sail! Class was canceled, which gave us a chance to relax and get our sea legs back. Dylan slept through lunch, dinner, and breakfast, a total of 14 out of 24 hours. But back in the throes of seasickness, it is pretty much the best thing to do to restore yourself. We did wake up, of course, for midwatch, from 2300 to 0300.
The last leg was very fun, even though I was seasick and had a stomach bug I probably picked up in Jamaica and I couldn't eat or even drink much water. For a few days, I had constant pain all over my body and walking was a challenge and all I could do was sleep, which was unfortunate as we had several projects due. But it was still fun! We exchanged secret Santa gifts on Christmas. I received a lovely hand-made wooden boat from Laura and gave Ellie an embossed leather journal. We spent much of our time off the coast of Cuba. We didn't have research clearance in lieu of our regular scientific deployments we sent several dozen styrofoam cups and two foam head-forms down to 2500 meters! My smallest cup which reads "XMAS CUBA 2011" is now thimble sized. We were a very crafty crew and enjoyed coloring our cups, making incredible secret Santa items, cutting out snowflakes and decorating Christmas cookies. I was really bummed at first about missing Christmas, but it was neat to experience it in a whole new way! I didn't miss it after all. 

During this leg another watch started doing theme days. They did pirates, mustaches, a few others including nerds:


 I joined in once or twice:


The last leg was the best for wildlife collecting and sighting. One night I was steering and spotted a couple sperm whales! We saw many dolphins the entire trip, but I rang in Christmas eve (literally, I was on watch from 2300-0300) watching dolphins playing in the bowsprit illuminated by bioluminescent plankton. So cool. 

We saw hundreds of jellies in the Florida Straits. We caught this Man Of War for a genetics researcher at Brown University: 



I drew it:


We also caught a Nudibranch (named Nudie I think). It's hard to see!


A moon jelly we caught to look at.


I climbed all the way up the mast on this leg. It was very scary. The winds are much more perceptible a hundred feet above the sea! My camera was strapped to my chest so this shot was fired aimlessly!


Lastly, sailing into Key West!


SEA was a wonderful experience and I can't recommend it to anybody enough! Even if you are prone to seasickness, the non-sick parts make it worth it! (They have medicine, it just didn't work for me).

It probably wouldn't be a stretch to say it's changed my life. Immediately afterwards, I missed the benefits of polyphasic sleep patterns and I still prefered navy showers, and I'm sure I will notice more subtle but significant ways that my perspectives and ideas have changed in the future as I travel, explore, and study more. I am glad also to have followed in the footsteps of my great-grandfather and father and to have become a capable sea-woman. They both kept wonderfully written sailing logs and I'm sad I was too sick to write much, so this blog is my modern literary contribution to that family tradition! I hope you've enjoyed reading it and let me know if you have any questions about the places I visited or living on a boat!