Friday, December 6, 2013
Mid-point check in!
Good evening friends and family!
I'm currently sitting at the Coffee Cantina in Frazier Park, CA sipping some hot cocoa and thinking about my childhood visions of California as one big sunny and warm state. We've been working indoors around a big cozy fire all week due to freezing temperatures that give even my Wisconsin blood a chill! California is definitely one big state and I learned that its size accommodates at least 24 different climatic zones (most states have less than four, according to Allan Schoenherr's book A Natural History of California). Working in the mountains, along what's known as the Tejon Pass, has taught me how to be flexible and pack many layers!
We have already passed the mid-way point for round one and are starting to wrap up a couple of different projects. Over the past few weeks, we've renovated over 30 outdoor windows and stairwells on the original adobe barracks building and on the reconstructed officer's quarters at the fort. We've also applied wood sealant to several indoor floors and have spent the colder days inside fixing up reenactment clothing and polishing weaponry and accouterment. Today, we worked with another team to weather-seal a new fence at a state natural area called Tule Elk. The park is open to the public and preserves land for a herd of tule elk, a species related to reindeer and endemic to California. (pictures hopefully coming soon)
Exciting news: we recently learned the details of our round two spike! After winter break my team will head even further south to work with the River Park Conservancy on various conservation tasks. I couldn't be more pumped for this project! I'd like to work with native species preservation in the future, so I'm really looking forward to gaining some hands-on experience.
Time to go. Thanks for reading and happy December!! :)
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Infrastructure Improvements at Fort Tejon State Historic Park
Hello and warm greetings from California's Grapevine Canyon Region!
I'm currently sitting in a cramped Starbucks - the only Sunday internet access available within 30 miles - listening to countless drink orders as they are shouted from the counter. Just a brief update...
My team has moved into our first Spike housing near the small towns of Lebec and Frazier Park California. Both towns are small, friendly, and seems to possess the mountain spirit of all high-altitude places. We wake up every morning for physical training and arrive at work by 8:30. Yesterday, our first official workday, we chipped and scraped old paint from the windows and doors of an original adobe building that once served as the barracks for dragoon soldiers posted at the Fort back in the 1850s. Original adobe. I don't know if any of you have ever touched 150+ year old adobe, but you better not have because it CRUMBLES. As we strip paint and apply primer, we work desperately not to breathe on the building. The slightest touch causes clay particles to fall: pieces of history hit the ground and mix with today.
My favorite thing about this Spike is living in a desert-like climate. I step outside every morning as the sun is just beginning to warm the frosted land. Day-time temperatures reach the middle 70s, but as soon as the sun goes down the temperature drops at least 15 - maybe 20 or more - degrees. The nights are quiet (except for the constantly busy highway 5 traffic in the near distance) and the desert seems to sleep. We hear reports of mountain lions, bobcats, and bears in our area. The mountain lions are known to stalk humans and we see their big tracks in the dusty trail outside of our home base. I hope to see one.. from a safe distance, of course. Most of all, I love the smell. There are large yellow shrubs that cover the soil around us. Whatever they are, they smell like the most heavenly smell you can imagine. Mixed with the beautifully potent scent of sagebrush, my body is always reluctant to exhale. Each breath in is joyous. I could never live in the desert because I am a child of water and winter, but I do find great pleasure in the unique spirit of the dry and ever-enduring land.
I've also found a potential career path. At Fort Tejon, we're working with a couple of park rangers. One is a Peace Officer - an actual law enforcement ranger who serves to protect the park and carries a gun. The other one is an interpretive ranger. He serves to teach and preserve the park's history. Both rangers know a lot about the area and work with school groups and park visitors, but the non-law enforcement folks are employed for the sole purpose of learning and educating. I can definitely see myself in this role.
Time to head back to camp. Thanks for reading and take care!
I'm currently sitting in a cramped Starbucks - the only Sunday internet access available within 30 miles - listening to countless drink orders as they are shouted from the counter. Just a brief update...
My team has moved into our first Spike housing near the small towns of Lebec and Frazier Park California. Both towns are small, friendly, and seems to possess the mountain spirit of all high-altitude places. We wake up every morning for physical training and arrive at work by 8:30. Yesterday, our first official workday, we chipped and scraped old paint from the windows and doors of an original adobe building that once served as the barracks for dragoon soldiers posted at the Fort back in the 1850s. Original adobe. I don't know if any of you have ever touched 150+ year old adobe, but you better not have because it CRUMBLES. As we strip paint and apply primer, we work desperately not to breathe on the building. The slightest touch causes clay particles to fall: pieces of history hit the ground and mix with today.
My favorite thing about this Spike is living in a desert-like climate. I step outside every morning as the sun is just beginning to warm the frosted land. Day-time temperatures reach the middle 70s, but as soon as the sun goes down the temperature drops at least 15 - maybe 20 or more - degrees. The nights are quiet (except for the constantly busy highway 5 traffic in the near distance) and the desert seems to sleep. We hear reports of mountain lions, bobcats, and bears in our area. The mountain lions are known to stalk humans and we see their big tracks in the dusty trail outside of our home base. I hope to see one.. from a safe distance, of course. Most of all, I love the smell. There are large yellow shrubs that cover the soil around us. Whatever they are, they smell like the most heavenly smell you can imagine. Mixed with the beautifully potent scent of sagebrush, my body is always reluctant to exhale. Each breath in is joyous. I could never live in the desert because I am a child of water and winter, but I do find great pleasure in the unique spirit of the dry and ever-enduring land.
I've also found a potential career path. At Fort Tejon, we're working with a couple of park rangers. One is a Peace Officer - an actual law enforcement ranger who serves to protect the park and carries a gun. The other one is an interpretive ranger. He serves to teach and preserve the park's history. Both rangers know a lot about the area and work with school groups and park visitors, but the non-law enforcement folks are employed for the sole purpose of learning and educating. I can definitely see myself in this role.
Time to head back to camp. Thanks for reading and take care!
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Game on!
Day 4 in sunny Sacramento! As many of you already know, I made it to California a week after the government shutdown ended. My first day was Thursday, October 24th, but I feel like I've been here for multiple months! I'm settling into my dorm, meeting tons of new people, and have even completed a full day of service working in community gardens in the Sacramento area!
On my first day, I was exhausted and a little nervous. I departed from the Dane County Regional Airport in Madison at 5:50am and landed in Sacramento before noon west-coast time. It was a very full morning of travel and by the time I arrived, I just felt like going to bed! It was surreal getting to campus after all of the delay and uncertainty. I think everyone felt the same way. I spent my first afternoon feeling a little awkward and shy. I was also worried that I had made the wrong decision. I missed home and I missed Kelly and I just felt out of place. That evening, however, we had a community meeting where the region's director, Jose Philips, spoke passionately about our program's mission and our place within that mission. He really made me feel hopeful and inspired about this year. I remind myself everyday that I'm here to get things done for our country. It's totally a personal journey, but it's also a personal challenge that I willing gave myself: work with and for the team to make a difference. Since then, I've been enjoying the unique experience of living and working as one small part of a larger unit. It's not necessarily easy for me, but I love the intentionality of the challenge and I keep in mind that this is a 10 month commitment to service...not a vacation :)
Yesterday, my team spent the morning at a beautiful horticulture garden. I learned about so many cool Californian plants. Did you know that pomegranates grow here!?? It was beautiful. There were herbs and flowers and fruit trees everywhere. There are also so many hummingbirds all around here! I've seen at least five of them and I've also seen a couple black phoebes, which are pretty spectacular little birds! After the horticulture garden, we moved on to spend the afternoon at a church where members are working incredibly hard to develop a huge community garden space. We hauled decomposed granite all afternoon to make wheelchair-accessible paths through all of the raised beds. My forearms are burning as I type this from all of the wheelbarrow loads I carried, but it really felt good to do some physical labor with my team. I love community gardens. It was amazing to see how a dry, empty, gross-looking lot can be completely transformed by a few garden beds full of vegetables. The space looked beautiful and welcoming. I want to return to the church for a service someday just to meet the community that will work in the gardens. It was also very touching to know that if I ever return to this area and drive by that church, I will know that my steel-toed boot prints are in the granite pathways forever.For the next ten months I'll be traveling around this region doing similar projects and I love knowing that I'm leaving a piece of myself at each site just as they are sending a huge part of their selves with me.
I'm getting kicked out of the computer lab in a minute so I have to cut it short, but thanks for reading and I'll try to update again soon...at least before we leave on our first spike on November 14th!
On my first day, I was exhausted and a little nervous. I departed from the Dane County Regional Airport in Madison at 5:50am and landed in Sacramento before noon west-coast time. It was a very full morning of travel and by the time I arrived, I just felt like going to bed! It was surreal getting to campus after all of the delay and uncertainty. I think everyone felt the same way. I spent my first afternoon feeling a little awkward and shy. I was also worried that I had made the wrong decision. I missed home and I missed Kelly and I just felt out of place. That evening, however, we had a community meeting where the region's director, Jose Philips, spoke passionately about our program's mission and our place within that mission. He really made me feel hopeful and inspired about this year. I remind myself everyday that I'm here to get things done for our country. It's totally a personal journey, but it's also a personal challenge that I willing gave myself: work with and for the team to make a difference. Since then, I've been enjoying the unique experience of living and working as one small part of a larger unit. It's not necessarily easy for me, but I love the intentionality of the challenge and I keep in mind that this is a 10 month commitment to service...not a vacation :)
Yesterday, my team spent the morning at a beautiful horticulture garden. I learned about so many cool Californian plants. Did you know that pomegranates grow here!?? It was beautiful. There were herbs and flowers and fruit trees everywhere. There are also so many hummingbirds all around here! I've seen at least five of them and I've also seen a couple black phoebes, which are pretty spectacular little birds! After the horticulture garden, we moved on to spend the afternoon at a church where members are working incredibly hard to develop a huge community garden space. We hauled decomposed granite all afternoon to make wheelchair-accessible paths through all of the raised beds. My forearms are burning as I type this from all of the wheelbarrow loads I carried, but it really felt good to do some physical labor with my team. I love community gardens. It was amazing to see how a dry, empty, gross-looking lot can be completely transformed by a few garden beds full of vegetables. The space looked beautiful and welcoming. I want to return to the church for a service someday just to meet the community that will work in the gardens. It was also very touching to know that if I ever return to this area and drive by that church, I will know that my steel-toed boot prints are in the granite pathways forever.For the next ten months I'll be traveling around this region doing similar projects and I love knowing that I'm leaving a piece of myself at each site just as they are sending a huge part of their selves with me.
I'm getting kicked out of the computer lab in a minute so I have to cut it short, but thanks for reading and I'll try to update again soon...at least before we leave on our first spike on November 14th!
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Titles and Shutdowns
Naming intangible things
has always been a challenge for me. A puppy, a car, a person...easy: Edgar,
Sheila, Francisco. Simple as that. But a blog. I can think and think for ages
and never decide on a clever title to catch the eyes and minds of readers everywhere.
I've been wanting to start this Americorps blog to chronicle my 10 month term
with the National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC) for many months, but the
first step in creating a new blog has postponed the operation until this very
last minute: "Title:"
I decided to go the
simple route. I'm one of many young adults who choose a year of volunteer
service before, after, or instead of college. I'm one of many who will serve
our nation and address various community needs to the best of our abilities. One
Americorps journey in a sea of others. Some of us will come from similar
places. Some will be as different as squirrels and birds. Fortunately, both
creatures spend a significant amount of time rustling around in trees, eating,
and squawking amongst themselves. None of us are all that different, after all.
We've joined the same program and committed – at least for a year,
but maybe a lifetime – to the same goals and guiding principles.
One other thing we all
have in common: this government shutdown is messing up our plans!! For the
Pacific Region Class XX of Americorps NCCC, October 9th 2013 has
been a countdown date for months. We have
received our duffle bags, said our goodbyes, and mentally prepared to leave our
homes for the great unknown. With eight days left on the countdown clock:
SHUTDOWN rings across the nation from local Daily Heralds to the New York
Times. We wait. Americorps is a federal program that can only afford to help
the nation if it is funded by the nation.
We’re beyond party
politics at this point. We have become an ungovernable nation pulled into a wildly
burning building by a small group of old hypocritical white men (and Michele
Bachmann) who would rather destroy our country than not get their way. Are you
reading the news about the World War II Memorial? The very same republican
(sorry, I know I said this was beyond party politics but there’s no denying
that the republicans are to blame for this disaster) congressmen (and Michele
Bachmann) that – for years – have been celebrating the
possibility of shutting down the federal government are now posing for photo–ops
with World War II vets saying that the shutdown “SHOULD NOT close their
Memorial: Cut that tape, gentlemen.” Hypocrites, the lot of you.
In many ways, I’m sick
of this country and would like to leave it for a more normal place that takes
care of its citizens and actually has a working
democracy. Yet, in my heart, I know that there are more beautiful, wonderful places
and people here than there are bad. “Love it or leave it,” the long time slogan
of so many close–minded individuals could not be more ridiculous. Love it. Be
critical of it. And FIX it, I say. Now open up the government so I can start to
do my part with Americorps, please!
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