Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Gardening Information for Vancouver, Washington

Repost from 2000:

It is now raining heavily in Vancouver, Washington.  The Cascades will get some heavy snow at the higher altitudes.  Temperatures in the 40's.  

The annual average rainfall (AAR) in the different places I have lived is of note for me:


1946-1967  Unincorporated East Los Angeles, Bandini Neighborhood/Varrio,
                  City of Commerce, Southern California   
AAR = 15”
1948-1958  Karen grew up in Alexandria, Central Indiana   AAR = 42"

1969-1973  Biloxi, Mississippi   AAR = 65”
1973-1983  Bell Gardens, Southern California   AAR =  15”
1983-1998  Hacienda Heights, California   AAR = 15”
1998-2017  Red Bluff, Northern California   AAR = 25”
2017–         Vancouver, Southwestern Washington, Northwest USA  AAR = 42”


Vancouver, Washington, is rated as USDA Agricultural Zone 8B.

Zone 8b means that the average minimum winter temperature is 15 to 20 °F. 


Gardening Information for Vancouver, Washington:  

Understanding your gardening environment is essential to success.  What are the climate conditions in your area during a year's cycle?  What is the soil like?
What kinds of plants are grown successfully in your area?  What nurseries are nearby.  

Vancouver, Washington, USA, Zip Code: 98662

Hardiness Zone:  Zone 8a: 10F to 15F
Average First Frost:  October 21 - 31
Average Last Frost:  April 1 - 10
Koppen-Geiger Climate Zone:  Csb - Warm-Summer Mediterranean Climate
Ecoregion:  3a - Portland Vancouver Basin
Palmer Drought Index:  Extremely Moist
Average Annual Rainfall:  43.55 inches
Heat Zone Days:  Rare Over 86F 
Elevation:  171 feet above the Pacific Ocean

Soil:  

Nurseries:  Yard and Garden, Shorty's, Tsugawa in Woodland, Lowe's and Home Depot.  
General Geography: 
The Pacific Ocean and Astoria, Oregon, is 100 miles to the West from Vancouver.
The south side of the City of Vancouver is the Columbia River, and across the river is Portland, Oregon.  The Cascade range and Columbia Gorge is to the East.  Looking north: 165 miles to Seattle, 494 miles to Vancouver, Canada; 105 miles to Olympia, and 45 miles to Mt. St. Helens.  
January Average: 33F low, 46F high, 6" Rain
February Average: 35F low, 50F high, 4.99" Rain
March Average: 37F low, 56F high, 4.38" Rain
April Average:  40F low, 60F high, 3.28" Rain
May Average:  45F low, 67F high, 2.67" Rain
June Average:  50F low, 72F high, 1.88" Rain
July Average:  53F low, 79F high, .8" Rain
August Average:  57F low, 82F high, .5" Rain
September Average:  49F low, 75F high, 1.91" Rain
October Average:  42F low, 64F high, 3.41" Rain
November Average:  38F low, 52F high, 6.49" Rain
December Average:  34F low, 46F high, 6.68" Rain


Monday, April 21, 2025

Slouching Towards Incoherence

 

Slouching Into Incoherence

By Mike Garofalo


Incoherent poems of word salads
mis-mashed onions and beets mixed
with an obscure metaphorical dressing of
vinegar and bile, croutons of confusion,
tomatoes of nonsense thrown in.
I can’t figure Robert Creely out:
or from CA: Philip Whalen or Larry Ferlinghetti either}
[or from NY: John Ashbery or e.e. cummings either]

Brief excursions on bouncing backroads
of wordy mud puddles of randomness

closed the brittle door on hinges of sounds

read out, read out louder,
rant, whisper, shout out,
the spoken word; ritual tails
wagging like memories lost

flocks of vocabulary typhoons
smashing, yelling, broken cocoons
bursting butterflies of spinning sounds

Read out, read out louder
in a dank smoky coffee house
Hip precursor of Hippie clout

However,
Both Sides: Then and Now.
Hip Zen or Square Zen.
Clear as Sky or Clear as Mud,
Coherent as winter Logic or Obscure as summer Fog;
Throughout the Golden Gate...

Jumping off the ground,
falling up Meanings; or,
standing up Clarity...
Hanging around San Francisco City:

"Coits Tower still screws the sky"
Gregory Corso freed St. Michael from Alcatraz
Moscone and Milk: justice denied
Rexroth translated Chinese verses
Maya Angelou Let the Caged Bird Sing
Jefferson Starship wandered into the White Rabbit's hole
Thomas Cleary translated Taoist prose
Alan Watt’s old houseboat was sold
LSD glasses clearly unclear besmirched
Robert Hass pruned apple trees in Olema
Deng Ming Dao's Scholar-Warrior arose
The Summer of Love amplified Hippie Fun
Edward Espe Brown baked bread in Zen Robes
PhD's from UCB and Stanford ruled the roost
Wendy Johnson gardened the Green Gulch grounds
Tony Bennett left his heart in San Francisco
Isaac Bonewit's magic arose from Neo-Druid lore
Mike McClure centered Beast Language INCANTATIONS
Silicon Valley kids coded new languages with Fortran lines
Amy Tan put SanFran Chinatown folks on the map
Allen Ginsberg’s Berkeley Sunflowers chanted
Steve Job's last words were "Wow"
Jerry Garcia lifted up the Grateful Dead
Philip Whalen helped the dying and bowed
Robert Creely gave a brief, succinct, convoluted scowl
David Brautigan went lingcod fishing in the Bay
Lawrence Ferlinghetti turned the lights on at City Lights
Eric Hoffer loaded boats and warned of True Believers
Zen Master Suzuki taught what Not to Think
UCB students sat-in & shouted out
Hitchhiking poets cried like clowns

Eyes of my Ears: Mystified
Beat poets died. City Lights sighed.

Befuddled by
some poet's words
repeating rereads
increased the blur.
No pearl in the oyster.


25 Steps and Beyond:
The Collected Works of Mike Garofalo

Sunday, March 02, 2025

Maps of the Northwest USA

Maps of the Northwest USA

Yurt Camping in the Northwest

Information on the Cities and Towns in the Coastal Northwest

Washington, Oregon, California, British Columbia


Olympic Peninsula WA



California



Highway 99 & Interstate 5




California





Highway 101


Monday, January 27, 2025

Killer Smoke- Choke!


Killer Smoke- Choke!

By Mike Garofalo


Black skies filled with Wildfire smoke
From a Racing Tsunami of Fire and ash;
Putrid Smog, Killer Smoke- Choke!

Firetrucks loaded and ready to go
firefighters getting some hard-earned cash,
Black skies filled with Wildfire smoke.

Flaming chaparral and trees all aglow
houses burned to cinders in a flash;
Putrid Smog, Killer Smoke- Choke!

Just cut the trees down, heave-ho.
Obey King T, or FEMA funds slashed.
Black skies filled with Wildfire smoke.

People, pets, and animals all died below
the roaring scorching blaze so fast;
Putrid Smog, Killer Smoke- Choke!

Fires in the hills and mountains we know
are the West Coast’s nemesis at last:
Black skies filled with Wildfire smoke
Putrid Smog, Killer Smoke- Choke!

A Requiem for Tragedies

West Coast Firestorm Disasters:
Astoria WA in 1922..
Pacific Palisades in 2025..
San Francisco in 1906..
Bandon in 1936..
Seattle in 1889..
San Diego County in 2003..
Tillamook Forest in 1933..



Also, by Mike Garofalo

Highway 101 and Hwy 1

25 Steps and Beyond: Collected Works

At the Edges of the West, Volume 2

Thursday, June 20, 2024

"The Slow Pacific Swell" by Yvor Winters

The Slow Pacific Swell

By Yvor Winters (1902-1968)

Far out of sight stands the sea,
Bounding the land with pale tranquility.
When a small child, I watched it from a hill
At thirty miles or more. The vision still
Lies in the eye, soft blue and far away:
The rain has washed the dust from April day;
Paint-brush and lupine lie against the ground;
The wind above the hill-top has the sound
Of distant water in unbroken sky;
Dark and precise the little steamers ply--
Firm in direction the seem not to stir.
That is illusion. The artificer
Of quiet, distance holds me in a vise
And holds the ocean steady to my eyes.

Once when I rounded Flattery, the sea
Hove its loose weight like sand to tangle me
Upon the washing deck, to crush the hull;
Subsiding, dragged flesh at the bone. The skull
Felt the retreating wash of dreaming hair.
Half drenched in dissolution, I lay bare.
I scarcely pulled myself erect; I came
Back slowly, slowly knew myself the same.
That was the ocean. From the ship we saw
Grey whales for miles: the long sweep of the jaw,
The blunt head plunging clean above the wave.
And one rose in a tent of sea and gave
A darkening shudder; water fell away;
The whale stood shining, and then sank in spray.

A landsman, I. The sea is but a sound.
I would be near it on a sandy mound,
And hear the steady rushing of the deep
While I lay stinging in the sand with sleep.
I have lived inland long. The land is numb.
It stands beneath the feet, and one may come
Walking securely, till the sea extends
Its limber margin, and precision ends.
By night a chaos of commingling power,
The whole Pacific hovers hour by hour.
The slow Pacific swell stirs on the land,
Sleeping to sink away, withdrawing land,
Heaving and wrinkled in the moon, and blind;
Or gathers seaward, ebbing out of mind.


The Selected Poetry of Yvor Winters. By Yvor Winters and R. L. Barth. Swallow Press, 1999, 176 pages. VSCL.


California Poetry: From the Gold Rush to the Present.  Edited by Dana Gioia, Chryss Yost and Jack Hicks.  Santa Clara University, 2004, 376 pages. VSCL.


Four Days at Grayland by Michael P. Garofalo  Pacific Coast travel and camping adventures in Washington, Oregon, and Northern California. 
Guides, Links, Bibliography, Research, Photographs, Commentary, Notes, Travel Information, Hiking trips, Outdoor Fun, Natural History. A special emphasis on Native American People of the Pacific Northwest.  Focus on US Highway 101.  Yurt camping tips and techniques.














Thursday, April 27, 2023

The Oldest Living Being

The Curse of the Methuselah Tree
The Oldest Tree on Earth, 4,800 Years Old
The Bristlecone Pines
White Mountains, 11,000 + Feet, California


Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Memories of Pacific Coast Places

Memories of Pacific Coast Places
By Michael P. Garofalo  
 

"Exploring Willapa Bay today,
From Tokeland Marina to Raymond's river beds that stray,
And huge stacks of Douglas Firs waiting to be cut up a dozen ways;
To South Bend's grassy sloughs, piles of shelled oysters white and grey,
To the cliffs and river near Bay Center’s docks, where oystermen work away. 
Memories of this Pacific Sea and my septuagenarian life swell up today:  

Our photograph of the young surfer remains in hand, long after the teen has become a man.
The razor clams sucked the food from the foaming sand, for ten million years following an identical plan.
At low tide the muddy Willapa Bay, scary like quicksand, keeps me away. 
A dead whale in the sand near Orick rots, the carrion birds eat and happily squawk. 
The Baja beachlands baked bone hard dry, from the endless summer sun on high. 

I listen to the sounds of the surf from the shell over my ear, the sea so far and yet so near. 
I rest by my simple yurt by the sea, and light a campfire at dawn and just be. 
I used to smoke, now I don't, stopped making my weary lungs cough and choke.
I body-surfed till tired and cold, and ended it at age 50, just too damn old.
My memories of the ocean will hang on, long after my few big footprints 0n the wet dirt trail are gone.

Lots of fishing but no catching, so the old diner's dinner menu was very fetching. 
The high tide left a flotsam line, and I walked along and picked up a lovely agate find.  
The crowds are all gone in winter, and the incoming driftwood piles up and splinters.
Tsunamis ready to unroll from the offshore Cascadia earthquake zone, that indeed could
   erase hundreds of homes. 
Summer kites in Lincoln City, crowds galore, sunburnt children playing at the shore.    
The lingcod fed around the breakwater rocks, avoiding our hooks in the seaweed’s tangled locks. 
Fishermen at the pier, baiting their hooks, waiting, waiting, baiting, staring at the sea swells, waiting. 

The Ex-Dharma Bums at Big Sur are gone, a few clever word-smiths of drunken sad hip rambling songs.
“All life is suffering!” so some Zen men say; but I’m an Epicurean anyway:
   Find ways to suffer less and enjoy more Today. 
Esalen hot tubs and philosopher’s seminars at the edge of the sea, and the smell of cannabis in the breeze.
In a San Diego hillside temple Paramahansa Yogananda preached for one’s realized being,
   bowing in Child’s Pose and clearly seeing.
The high Santa Barbara Mission walls gleam white in the sun, and the priest raises the Host of the Son. 
In a stone house by the Sur shore, Robinson Jefferson lamented the presence of mankind and more.
The Beatnicks in Venice still laugh and listen, mixed with Yuppies and Hippies and musclemen.
San Francisco still hugs the hills, and the Golden Gate’s Bridge whistling moan has been stilled.
I walked to the beach from the Green Gulch Zen Farm, thinking of Alan Watt’s reminders and alarms. 
In McKinleyville, playing under the gray clouds from the sea, Grandmaster Yang Jwing Ming enjoys his Tai Chi. 
The surf fisherman released the fat pregnant surf perch, a considerate donation to the Fertility Church.   

At the gaping Mouth of the Columbia, stands Astoria, dank and old, with harbor seals
   barking loud on the docks so cold.
Chinooks and Chelais Peoples once camped near the Grayland strand, diseases erased them all from this land.
Eureka Bay, wasting away in the plywood papermills’ scum with the old nuclear plant’s abandoned concrete core
   sort of undone.
Whether in Oakland or Tacoma, ports so busy, docks unloading, 24 hour bustling cities.   
The Quinault River flows to the sea, through a rain forest Olympic born, so very very green as far as you can see. 
Grays Harbor for a change is in clear skied sun, fishing boats hustle to get into the King Salmon fall run.
Coos Bay darkened in the fierce wind and rain; while the Indian Casino was bright and gay,
   slot machines running night and day. 
Quiet Brooking, a humble seaside place, with the Pelican Bay Prison nearby locking up
   the worst of the human race. 
Malibu beach surfers wait for the best right swell, then launch for a long ride feeling so damn well.
My brother lives in Carlsbad, high above the sea; he walks slowly below the crumbling cliffs
   feeling somewhat free. 
Taking the Gold’s Beach power boat ride up the Rogue, spinning and splashing and speeding along;
    nevertheless, it seems like somethings wrong.   
From the dark depths of Monterey Bay, two whales came up by our boat to breathe one day. 
   
A pelican rested on a Westport dock post, looking for a feathered lover or
   a run of the eulachon smelt that he liked the most. 
All alone with the roaring surf, and hungry sea gulls gathering close on nearby turf. 
A tin of Ekone smoked oysters and French bread for lunch today, and a coffee latte to let my palette play.  
I looked at more pictures of the Pacific, my inner feelings plotted against external criteria, trying to be specific. 
The redwood groves soaked up the fog, intertwining their octopus roots for centuries, confident of a long slog.   

Flocks of birds fill the Spring sky, and that some salmon are not running up the John’s River is
   a tricky fisherman’s little lie. 
Dip netting for crabs from the Westport pier, the harbor waters were strangely clear.
More fir tree trunks were piled around the Aberdeen mills, cut daily from the distant lush Willapa Hills.
The Bandon cranberry bogs are fruitless now, but my Ocean Spray juice cup carries their essence anyhow.  
The sand dunes near Cape Kiwanda, Florence or Pismo still creep up and down with the wind;
   ORVing on them seems to me a sin.
The tides and long swells are the epic poem, the waves are the rhymes, images, and metaphors chosen. 
Hecate Head tide pools unflooding slowly: limpets, mussels, chitons, anemones,
   urchins, even crabs revealed – a scene that’s holy.      
The mammoth winter surf at the Mavericks at Monterey or at Shore Acres near Coos Bay,
   both scare the shit out of anyone in their crushing crashing way.   

L.A. is sandwiched between the Palos Verdes cliffs and Mt. Baldy’s stones, for 50 years it was my home.
On Ventura Highway, over the haunted Hotel California, just one eagle flies alone. 
My mom loved Carpenteria, and she held our hands tight, as we walked together in the starry 1950 night.
San Onofre’s concrete beehive nuclear dome is locked tight, a memento to ideas not yet right. 
Navy destroyers in the San Diego docks are loading tonight, sailor’s readying for a fight.
The Capistrano swallows return, again and again, a sure as the sun creates seasons for women and men. 
The tourists at the two Newports, one north one south, watch the slow yachts moving about.
Seattle’s high-tech millions make Puget Sound home, settled uneasy at the base of Ranier’s snowy dome. 
U.S.Highway 101, El Camino Real, from border to border, carrying trade and traveler’s under a funded Federal order. 
Three impressive Pacific States in a row, where I’ve lived so long and watched them unceasingly grow. 

The Café by the Edge of the Sea is hidden faraway, somewhere on the lonely south shore of Tillamook Bay. 
The Bolsa Chica tin-can beach years ago was cleaned, but now the smell of oil stinks up the scene.
The Huntington long pier was swept asunder, yet rebuilt again and again, despite the costly numbers.
Our sunburnt hands from Laguna once stung and blistered, decades later skin cancer took her sister. 
The glass beach at Fort Bragg glistens at dusk, the remnants of a trash dump, just broken colored husks. 
We watched the whales from that Port Orford cliffside café, eating oatmeal and berries to start the day.
The smells of myrtlewood from the foggy seaside canyons still linger, as I twist their dried leaves in my fingers.    

Yes, I’ve heard the Memaloose Ghosts in the Sitka swamps all talking, and I also left quickly in fear fast walking.
I dreamt of skulls and skeletons, graveyards of broken canoes, Islands of the Dead,
   creepy Clatsop Chinook stories in my head. 
In the Nehalem rain, with a deep dark dripping forest all around,
   a Memaloose Spook spoke to me with whispered words:

‘The tide comes in, the tide goes out, that’s the essence of what It’s All About.
Your tide flows out, old man, so best now to smile and shout and stroll bravely out.' ” 

 -  Michael P. Garofalo, Memories of Pacific Ocean Places, 4/26/2022 

 

Reflections of Beachcombers    
Poems and quotes about the ocean, seashore, waves, beachcombing, marinas, Bays, fishing, tides ....
Selected by Michael P. Garofalo  

                                                    

By Michael P. Garofalo














Sunday, January 23, 2022

My Birthday


Today is my 76th birthday.  Michael P. Garofalo, January 23, 1946 -  



My daughter, Alicia, and I, 2021



My two grand-daughters, Makenna and Katelyn, and I, 2021



My parents were Bertha June (1921-1994) and Michael James Garofalo (1916-1997).  My two brothers were Paul (1948-) and Phillip (1952-).  



My parents and I in 1947
In South-Central Los Angeles



My maternal Grand-Mother Mabel Ast Blaize on the left,
and my Paternal Grand-Mother Lena Garofalo in 1947.  


Paul, Big Mike Dad, Philip, Me, Mom
Circa 1958



I grew up in East Los Angeles and attended St. Alphonsus Catholic Grammar School, Cantwell Catholic High School (Honors Diploma), California State University at Los Angeles (B.A. Philosophy), and the University of Southern California (M.S. Library Science).  

I worked for the City of Commerce Public Library System from 1963-1969.  

Blanche Karen Eubanks and I were married in 1967.  We celebrated our 55th wedding anniversary in 2021.    




Karen and I in 1970
Biloxi, Mississippi


Served in the United States Air Force, Air Training Command, from 1969-1973.  Honorably discharged as a Staff Sergeant.  

I worked for the County of Los Angeles Public Library System from 1974 to 1998.  I retired as a Library Administrator, and Regional Administrator for the East Region in the San Gabriel Valley.  I worked at offices in the Compton library, Bell Gardens library, East Los Angeles library, Norwalk library, Huntington Park library, and West Covina library.  

We lived in Bell Gardens and Hacienda Heights - both in the East Los Angeles  metropolitan area.  

Karen and I, and our families and community, raised two children, Alicia June and Michael Delmer.  We now have two grandchildren, Katelyn and Makenna. 




Alicia June, my daughter, and I in 1976.




Alicia, me, Karen, Mick, circa 1990





My colleagues in East Region at our
Community Library Managers Meeting, Circa 1993
For 15 years, I was the Regional Administrator for 22 libraries
in East Region of the County of Los Angeles Public Library System




I started creating websites in 1995, and a blog in 2005.       

Karen and I lived in Red Bluff, North Sacramento Valley, California, from 1998-2017, in a rural area on a five acre parcel.  We both worked part-time for school districts.  I was the Technology and Media Service Supervisor and District Librarian for the Corning Union Elementary School District; and Karen was a Special Education Instructional Aide.  We both enjoyed gardening and landscaping projects. 
 

Red Bluff, California, Sunny Garden




Yosemite, North Dome, 2005





Sean, me, Mick
Alicia, Karen, April
Circa 2007





Karen retired on June 14, 2014, after working part-time since 1998 as a Special Education Instructional Assistant for the Tehama County Department of Education in Red Bluff, California.  

Mike retired on July 1, 2016, after working part-time since 1998 as the Technology and Media Services Supervisor and District Librarian for the Corning Union Elementary School District in Corning, California.  

I taught yoga, taijiquan, qigong, pilates, and other fitness classes at the Tehama Family Fitness Center in Red Bluff from 2002-2016.

In 2017, we moved to Vancouver, Washington.  We are now both retired.  




Family in Oregon in 2013




Vancouver, Washington, 2017
Our New Home



Flinn and Garofalo Family Gathering
Vancouver, Salmon Creek, Washington, Summer 2021




I am very fortunate in having fairly good health, a positive attitude, and stamina for work and play for all of my long life.  I was fortunate in being able to be productively employed for 54 years, and earning good medical insurance for Karen and I.  

I am a philosopher by inclination and practice.  

I have been active with various sports, physical conditioning programs, walking, fitness, Taijiquan, Yoga, hiking, etc., during my entire healthy long life.  

However, during this past COVID epidemic period I did not walk each day, kind of huddled in my home office and read, smoked too much cannabis, daydreamed, lolly-gaged, goofed-off, and acted like a lazy depressed retiree.  Therefore, I was very out of shape at the end of 2021.  

My personal goals for 2022 are to:  

1. Maintain a dietary habit that reduces my blood sugar. 
2. Reduce my body weight to 225 pounds. 
3. Walk and exercise every day. 
4.  Read and write:  
  Four Days in Grayland     Cloud Hands Blog

5.  Help and take care of my wife, family and friends. 
6. Support humanistic and environmental causes. 
7.  Explore Photography using my Canon SX740 camera, Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop; and work on our Family Photo Project😊 with Karen. 

8. Enjoy old age. 
9. Travel to the Coast and Yurt camp each month for four days.  
10.  Yet to be Determined, New Opportunities, Unknown

That about sums it up!


Sunday, September 13, 2020

In Any Balm or Beauty of the Earth



Vineyards near San Luis Obisbo, California



Yosemite National Park, California


"What is divinity if it can come
Only in silent shadows and in dreams?
Shall she not find in comforts of the sun,
In pungent fruit and bright, green wings, or else
In any balm or beauty of the earth,
Things to be cherished like the thought of heaven?
Divinity must live within herself:
Passions of rain, or moods in falling snow;
Grievings in loneliness, or unsubdued
Elations when the forest blooms; gusty
Emotions on wet roads on autumn nights;
All pleasures and all pains, remembering
The bough of summer and the winter branch,
These are the measures destined for her soul."    
-  Wallace Stevens, Sunday Morning, 1915


"The point in life is to know what's enough - why envy those otherwold immortals?  With the happiness held in one inch-square heart you can fill the whole space between heaven and earth."
-   Gensei (1623-1668), Poem Without a Category
    The Enlightened Heart, 
Edited by Stephen Mitchell, p. 86 



"The secret of beginning a life of deep awareness and sensitivity lies in our willingness to pay attention. Our growth as conscious, awake human beings is marked not so much by grand gestures and visible renunciations as by extending loving attention to the minutest particulars of our lives. Every relationship, every thought, every gesture is blessed with meaning through the wholehearted attention we bring to it. In the complexities of our minds and lives we easily forget the power of attention, yet without attention we live only on the surface of existence. It is just simple attention that allows us truly to listen to the song of a bird, to see deeply the glory of an autumn leaf, to touch the heart of another and be touched. We need to be fully present in order to love a single thing wholeheartedly. We need to be fully awake in this moment if we are to receive and respond to the learning inherent in it."
-  Christina Feldman and Jack Kornfield, Stories of the Spirit, Stories of the Heart




"A virtuous person comes into being only according to the Tao.
Tao is something which is obscure and indistinct.
Indistinct and obscure —
yet there is an appearance.
Obscure and indistinct —
yet there is a substance.
Vague and dim —
yet there is an essence within it.
This essence is genuine.
There is truth within it."
- Tao Te Ching, Chapter 21



How to Live a Good Life: Advice from Wise Persons


From a 2015 post to the Cloud Hands Blog.  
  

Saturday, March 14, 2020

ZZ Top


A documentary about the band ZZ Top is now available on Netflix.  This "Little Band from Texas" has been playing together for 5 decades.

I purchased the album Eliminator in Bishop, California, in September of 1984.  I played it first while driving to Mammoth Mountain from Bishop.  Ah, the memories.








Monday, January 27, 2020

Watched His Excellent Basketball Work


Like millions of Los Angeles Laker NBA basketball fans, Karen and I were shocked and saddened yesterday to learn that Kobe Bryant, star player of the Lakers for 20 years, and his 13 year old daughter died in a helicopter crash near Calabasas, California.  Nine people on the way to a girl's basketball game were killed in the accident.  Our heartfelt condolences to all affected by this tragic accident.

Kobe, the Mamba, the Black Mamba, #8 and #24.  He played for the Lakers for 20 years.  He helped lead a Laker's team to the NBA Finals 7 times, and won 5.  He helped lead a Laker's team into the NBA Playoff series for 15 seasons.  What Lakers fan could ask for more?  His basketball skills on offense and defense were among the best I have ever been fortunate to have watched.

Kobe was an interesting, intelligent, multi-lingual, and creative man.  Reports portray him as a good father.  After his retirement in 2016, we have seen other sides of Kobe as a man and businessman.  His International connections, his Chinese popularity, his wealth and fame, his fluent Spanish language skills, his Academy Award, and his entrepenurian ventures all pointed toward success in the future.

Unfortunately, sadly, a helicopter mountain crash ended it all for him, his daughter, seven others, and for millions of us basketball fans.

Kobe Bryant, 1978-2020.   Among All Our Laker Memories    Thanks Kobe!  You helped make us proud as a City.







I have enjoyed watching and playing the game of basketball since I was a child of 8.  I was a tall and skinny boy, and 2nd team sub on my Cantwell high school basketball teams.  I enjoyed light-duty casual pick up basketball games with guys untill I was 40 years old.  It was always fun to play and to watch good players show their game.

I lived in Los Angeles for 52 years.  I started listening to the Los Angeles Lakers NBA Basketball Team on AM radio with Chic Hearn in 1962.  I also followed UCLA Bruin championship basketball back then.  I watched Laker away games for decades with Chick Hearn on KTLA television.  After 1998, I watched on national TV or on NBA League Pass televison on DISH or XFinity.  I have been to games at the old Forum in Inglewood.  My father-in-law was a Lakers fan.  My co-workers in Los Angeles were Laker's fans.  So, I have been an LA Lakers fan for 58 years.  Here is blog post of mine in 2009 when our team won another NBA Championship, and I was living in Red Bluff, California.

We are very hopeful that in 2020 the Laker's team (James, Davis, Green, Pope, Cuzma, Magee, Howard, et. all) will be the top seed in the upcoming playoffs.

[Naturally, I watched most of the Oakland Golden State Warrior games on NBA League Pass from 2014-2019.  They were the best in the Western Conference, went to 5 NBA Finals appearances in a row, and the Lakers did not make the playoffs.  I also now watch more Portland Trail Blazers on NBA League Pass since I now live about 20 miles north of Moda Center.  Basically, I root for college or professional teams on the Pacific Coast.  The PAC12 is the Conference of Champions!!]

I have watched on television, or listened to, or read about, or talked about, or cheered for, or lamented (2014-2019) about 58 Laker Teams during 58 NBA seasons.  I have watched and cherred for, or all hung our heads in dignified defeat, the Laker 1st Team Greats: Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O'Neil, Magic Johnson, Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, James Worthy.  Add in guys like Pau Gasol, Gail Goodrich, Michael Cooper, Wilt Chamberlin, Jamal Wilkes, A C Green, Derek Fisher, Rick Fox, Luke Walton, Michael Thompson, Horace Grant, ... the list goes on and on ... 2nd Team, 3rd Team, rookies, veterans, Kobe at 18!  Add in this exciting mix are key people like Jerry Buss, Jack Kent Cooke, Jeanie Buss, Phil Jackson, Pat Riley, Jerry West, Chick Hearn, Stu Lantz, trainers, media people, writers, and celebrities galore.  The LA Lakers were and now are "Showtime."

Players come and go, decades pass.  Who is the greatest of the All?  Who is the Lakers GOAT.

The NBA Finals is the Super Bowl or World Series of professional basketball.

The Lakers have been to the NBA Finals 31 times, the most of any professional sports team.

Laker's Teams are the GOAT!






Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Mossy Grave


"The smell of the sea hugged the fog in the redwood trees,
All cool and dank, dimly lit and rank with green,
And in shadowed limbs the Stellar jays jabbered free,
And me, standing silently, an alien in this enchanted scene.

From behind the mossy grey stumps
the sounds of footsteps crunching fronds of ferns
caught my suddenly wary mind ...
What?

"Hello, old friend," said Chang San Feng.
"Master Chang, what a surprise," said I.
Master Chang sat on a stump, smiled, and said,

"Can you hear the Blue Dragon singing in the decaying tree;
Or is it the White Tiger roaring in the wilderness of your bright white skull?
No matter! The answer is in the questioning; don't you Chan men see?

In the red ball flesh of this decaying tree
Sapless woody shards of centuries of seasons
Nourish the new roots of mindfulness sprouting.
Yes, Yes, but how can it be?
The up-surging waves of life sprout forth from the decaying tree,
As sure as sunrise rolling over the deep black sea.
Coming, coming, endlessly coming; waves of Chi.

Tan Qian's raven roosts for 10,000 moons
in the withered branches of the rotting tree;
then, one day, the weathered tree falls,
nobody hearing, soundlessly crashing
on the forest floor, on some unknown noon.

Over and over, over and over, life bringing death, death bringing life,
Beyond even the miraculous memories of an old Xian like me;
Watching, watching, sequestered from the strife,
Turning my soul away sometimes because I cannot bear to see.

Even minds may die, but Mind is always free
Bounding beyond, beyond, far beyond you and me;
Somehow finding the Possibility Keys
And unlocking the Door out of the Voids of Eternities."

Master Chang somehow, someway,
slowly disappeared into the red brown heart of the decaying tree.

Then the squawk of the jay
opened my mind's eye to the new day -
Namaste."

- Michael P. Garofalo
  Meetings with Master Chang San Feng
  Remembering Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, California









Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Outside in a Cool Dream


Outside in a Cool Dream

I yanked off my shirt and toweled off the sweat,
Tossed off my shoes all smelly and wet,
Stretched out my back on the cool tile floor,
Freed from the smoky heat outside the door.


I slipped into dreaming about walking in fog
With mother and brothers in sand we did slog,
Along the spit to Morro Rock one March day,
Relaxed, exhilarated, refreshed, and at play.


We sat on the dunes with the waves in our ears,
And sipped our sweet coffees all in good cheer,
Our toes in the sand, we laughed till we cried,
Then all sat in silence as the years drifted by.


I stirred, awakened, wondered where I could be;
Inside or Outside; a dream, or faded memory.


Michael P. Garofalo,  One Short of a Baker's Dozen


Monday, May 14, 2018

Forest Epiphanies



"The smell of the sea hugged the fog in the redwood trees,
All cool and dank, dimly lit and rank with green,
And in shadowed limbs the Stellar jays jabbered free,
And me, standing silently, an alien in this enchanted scene.

From behind the mossy grey stumps
the sounds of footsteps crunching fronds of ferns
caught my suddenly wary mind ...
What?

"Hello, old friend," said Chang San Feng.
"Master Chang, what a surprise," said I.
Master Chang sat on a stump, smiled, and said,

"Can you hear the Blue Dragon singing in the decaying tree;
Or is it the White Tiger roaring in the wilderness of your bright white skull?
No matter!  The answer is in the questioning; don't you Chan men see?

In the red ball flesh of this decaying tree
Sapless woody shards of centuries of seasons
Nourish the new roots of mindfulness sprouting.
Yes, Yes, but how can it be?
The up-surging waves of life sprout forth from the decaying tree,
As sure as sunrise rolling over the deep black sea.
Coming, coming, endlessly coming; waves of Chi.

Tan Qian's raven roosts for 10,000 moons
     in the withered branches of the rotting tree;
     then, one day, the weathered tree falls,
     nobody hearing, soundlessly crashing
     on the forest floor, on some unknown noon.

Over and over, over and over, life bringing death, death bringing life,
Beyond even the miraculous memories of an old Xian like me;
Watching, watching, sequestered from the strife,
Turning my soul away sometimes because I cannot bear to see.

Even minds may die, but Mind is always free
Bounding beyond, beyond, far beyond you and me;
Somehow finding the Possibility Keys
And unlocking the Door out of the Voids of Eternities."

Master Chang somehow, someway,
slowly disappeared into the red brown heart of the decaying tree.

Then the squawk of the jay
opened my mind's eye to the new day -
Namaste."

-  Michael P. Garofalo
   Meetings with Master Chang San Feng
   Remembering Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, California, 2012