Friday, November 17, 2023

Yurt Camping on the Northwest USA Coast

 

Yurt Camping on the Northwest USA Coast:
Information, Tips, Locations, Photographs, Adventures, Camping

Four Days in Grayland:
Guides, Information, Tips, Cities, Camping in the Northwest USA Coast

Memories of Pacific Coast Places
Travels on US Highway 101 and 1
Docu-Poem by Michael P. Garofalo


Yurt Camping Locations on the Northwest USA Coast:

Pacific Beach State Park, Washington
Bay View State Park, Washington
Dosewallips State Park, Washington
Twin Harbors State Park, Washington
Grayland Beach State Park, Washington
Bay Center KOA, Washington
Cape Disappointment State Park, Washington

Fort Stevens State Park, Oregon
Nehalem Bay State Park, Oregon
Cape Lookout State Park, Oregon
Beverly Beach State Park, Oregon
South Beach State Park, Oregon
Sunset Bay State Park, Oregon
Bullards Beach State Park, Bandon, Oregon


Yurts at Nehalem Bay State Park:




















Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Autumn in Southwester Washington State

We drove home from Twin Harbors State Park today.  We drove through Grayland Beach, Tokeland, Raymong, Pe Ell, Vader, Longview, and Woodland.  November 15, 2023.

When we got home we showered, clean up, and cleaned razor clams for storage.

Dramatic fall colors everywhere!!

For many photographs and more information go to: Four Days in Grayland by Michael P. Garofalo.

















Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Hunting for Mushrooms and Raxor Clams

 We enjoyed a beautiful clear day of camping at Twin Harbors State Park.   November 14, 2023

We went walking in search of mushrooms in the Park.

We ate Dungeness crab, Kumamoto oysters, Little Neck clams, homemade squash soup, fresh bread, and wine. Shopped at the fish market at Brady's Oysters.

Went razor clam digging at Grayland Beach Road. Caught 49 clams after 5 pm at low tide.

For many photographs and more information go to: Four Days in Grayland by Michael P. Garofalo.






















Monday, November 13, 2023

Westport, Southwest Coastal Washington

Today (11/13/2023) We drove to Twin Harbors State Park, between Westport and Tokeland, WA. This beach park is about 4 miles from the downtown and fishing docks of Westport.. We are camping and staying in small cabins at the park.

We (April, Karen, Mick, and I) enjoyed breakfast at the Blue Bird Cafe in Centralia, WA.  Mick and April then toured an abandoned mill in Centralia, and then the decommissioned Satsop nuclear power plant above the Chelais River. Karen and I dove WA 6 from Centralia to Raymond, and then WA 105 along Willapa Bay to Tokeland, Grayland and then to Twin Harbors State Park. Twin Harbors is located between Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor Bay along the Washington Coast. Then, at 4:30 pm, we all went razor clam digging at low tide.

For many photographs and more information go to: Four Days in Grayland by Michael P. Garofalo.



Chelais River Scenes




 Here is a repost of my report from 9/21/2021: 

Today, the beaches from Westport to Grayland (9 miles) were filled with people digging razor clams.  

From my yurt campsite at the Grayland Beach State Park campground the distance to walk to the surf is about a 2 mile or more round trip over sand.  I was the only person walking.  

I walked out to the surf at 7:30 am this cool morning, 55F light wind.  Surprisingly, the sky was clear blue and cloudless.  Most important, it was a low tide of  -0.2 at 7:30 am.   

I could see about 100 vehicles parked along the shore for about a mile.  Maybe 150 people were clam digging.  Others huddled in chairs around their vehicles and talked, or sat and sipped coffee in their truck, big RV, SUV, or sedan.  

I carefully walked in the digging area.  I watched the people digging up many razor clams - a first for me.  I did not dig - I observed.  

One couple told me they got their limit (15 razor clams per person) in 30 minutes.  Another old man was telling me about clamming at night at low tide at a full moon.  Children talked about how hard it was to get the tube in and out of the wet sand.  People seemed to like to talk.  

Then, while walking the mile back to my yurt campsite I continued my normal nature studies.  

I went back to the beach at around 4 pm.  It was a receding high tide.  
There were only 3 vehicles parked on the same one mile stretch of beach, nobody flying kites, nobody surf fishing, a few people walking - deserted compared to this morning.  

One middle aged lady emerged barefoot from her big RV, walked to the surf, and got wet.  She was thrilled, shouted, and threw her arms in the air.  











I ate a good bowl of clam chowder at Long's Bar and Grill on WA105.  Everything in Grayland is located on WA105.  Some knowledgeable guy at the bar was telling us about how he would grind up the foot of the clam and cook in a flour recipe patty then freeze, and other clam cooking and digging tips.  Some old fellow told me about his USA travels, his Air Force days, his stroke, and his love of Westport.  His wife was very cute and flirty.  Both were drunk, as people often are in bars.  

Yesterday, I enjoyed delicious Portuguese Bella canned smoked sardines in olive oil with fresh French bread.  For me, I have made tasting seafood dishes a regular part of my beach travels experiences.  


I keep a fairly detailed hypertext notebook on Gray's Harbor and Willapa Bay in Washington State.  Activities at Westport, Twin Harbors, or Grayland Beach (e.g., surf fishing, clam digging, crabbing, jetty fishing, beachcombing, kite flying, camping, walking, reading, nature studies, photography, sit/stare/listen, your favorite hobbies, etc.) are covered in my:

By Michael P. Garofalo 


Westport South Jetty



Westport docks, boardwalk, and fishing pier.






Surf casting for redtail surf perch.


Here are my notes about Westport and Grayland Beach. 

I am camping at Grayland Beach State Park in a yurt.   

Saturday, November 11, 2023

The Fireplace Records by Michael P. Garofalo

 The Fireplace Records (TFR) Indexes


The Fireplace Records: Index of Chapter Titles
. Links to the Cloud Hands Blog Posts. By Michael P. Garofalo. 40 Chapters as of 11/10/2023.


Cloud Hands Blog Posts of the Fireplace Records. The Cloud Hands Blog posts of The Fireplace Records include illustrations, photographs, book covers, paintings, links to resources, reading suggestions, comments, capping verses, notes, asides, and a Google Translate drop-down menu. By Michael P. Garofalo.


Subject Index to 40 Chapters of The Fireplace Records. November 10, 2023. PDF, 14 pages.


Numerical Order List
 of 40 Chapters from The Fireplace Records. November 10, 2023. PDF, 2 pages.


Alphabetical Chapter Title List
 of 40 Chapters from The Fireplace Records. November 10, 2023. PDF, 2 pages.


Subject Index to 1,975 Zen Buddhist Koans

Keys to Collections of BSL/Koans Databases

 


Fireplaces, Kitchens, Stoves, Campfires, Ovens, Pots, Kettles, Wood, BBQ
Literary reflections and flashes of insight around the fireplace
Compiled by Michael P. Garofalo


Quotations: Light, Sun, Fire, Sunshine, Heat, Vision Shadows, Shade, Flames

 

Michael P. Garofalo
Cloud Hands Blog

Biography

 

Friday, November 10, 2023

Complexity is Closer to the Truth

 

        The Fireplace Records, Chapter 40


Complexity is Closer to the Truth

 

In my experience, life is rightly characterized as diverse, complicated, varied, rich in multiplicity, saturated with the 'ten thousand things.'  Personally, I find little need to seek or to find or to have the "experience of unity."  This state of "unification," when actualized, is in most cases rather fleeting.  It may be profound, but no more so that the beauty of complexity and the fascinating reality of diversity.  I do not find the experience of the multiplicity of things distressing, disturbing, or disheartening.  

Just because all of the eggs today are in one basket does not make the colored basket more real or more interesting or more valuable than the eggs.  

Ignoring the facticity of the complexity of the natural and mental realms seems to me a more serious ignorance, not very sensible, and ultimately unwise.  I long ago gave up on any quest for "enlightenment" (in Hindu or Buddhist terms) and prefer the ordinary state of mind grounded in a world that is not simple, not one, not unified, complex, and rich in details.  To claim that our normal experience of complexity and variety is an "illusion" or "ignorance (avidya) seems to me a form of incorrect judgment.  

No doubt, trying to simplify one's life has its benefits, reducing sensory overload can reduce stress, and not becoming overly infatuated with novelty can be helpful; but, pushing on this strange path towards the "enlightenment" or "realization" of a pure and uncluttered "Unity" can produce its own distressing and disturbing predicaments for a person.  

Many philosophers, ancient and modern, have made a sharp distinction between appearances and Reality, the many and the One, the phenomena and the Noumena, and multiplicity and Unity.  For me, it is muddled thinking to call all of our experiences "just fleeting illusions" and fabricate a true realm of being outside of our personal and social and practical experiences.  Indeed, we can't "see" in any ordinary sense of "see," the cells, molecules, atoms, and the subatomic particles that constitute the objects of our macro-cosmic world; but, this in no way means the multiplicity of objects in our ordinary environment are in any way "illusions."  The meaning of "objects" is much more complicated, varied in linguistic usage, and functional in many practical contexts.  Again, complexity is closer to the truth. 


Comments, Sources, Observations, Koans, Poems, Quips:

Now is Real, a Unified Instant, but Fleeting.


Time

Complexity and Diversity 

Nature Mysticism:  Resources, Quotes, Notes

Gardening and Mysticism


Riddles (200+ Riddles, with No Ads.)

Refer to my Cloud Hands Blog Posts on the topic of Koans/Stories. 

Subject Index to 1,975 Zen Buddhist Koans

Zen Buddhist Koans: Indexes, Bibliography, Commentary, Information

The Daodejing by Laozi

Pulling Onions  Over 1,043 One-line Sayings, Quips, Maxims, Humor

Chinese Chan Buddhist and Taoist Stories and Koans

The Fireplace Records (Blog Version) By Michael P. Garofalo




Thursday, November 09, 2023

Twin Harbors State Park, Washington

We are going to camp at Twin Harbors State Park next week: Karen, April, Mick and I.

We plan to visit Centralia downtown and the Satsop decommissioned nuclear reactor along the Chehalis River as we drive into Aberdeen and then Westport.

I will be walking in the Shifting Sands Nature Trails inside Twin Harbors State Park.  

Clam digging from 4:30 to 7 pm. 

My Atrial Fibrillation heart disease has been acting up after 6 months of remission.  Hopefully, I can enjoy the activities at the beach.  I have a cardio conversion scheduled the day before Thanksgiving this month.  We shall see.  Studying the excellent book by John D. Day, MD, and T. Jared Bunch, MD, titled: The AFib Cure: Get Off Your Medications, Take Control of Your Health, and Add Years to Your Life. 2021.


Up before daybreak at our wood cabin C3.























Four Days in Grayland
By Michael P. Garofalo

Tuesday, November 07, 2023

Tao Te Ching, Chapter 50, by Lao Tzu

Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu
Chapter 50


"Exiting life, we enter death.
The followers of life are three out of ten, the followers of death are three out of ten; in the lives of the people, the dying grounds on which they are agitated are also three out of ten.
What is the reason?
Because of the seriousness with which they take life as life.
It has been said that those who maintain life well do not meet rhinos or tigers on land and do not arm themselves in war.
There is no way for rhinos to gore them; there is no way for tigers to claw them; there is no way for weapons to get at them.
Why?
Because they have no dying ground."
-  Translated by Thomas Cleary, Chapter 50 



"Men go out of life and enter into death.
The parts (proportions) of life are three in ten, the parts of death are also three in ten.
Men that from birth move towards the region of death are also three in ten.
Why is it so?
Because of their redundant effort in seeking to live.
But only those who do nothing for the purpose of living are better than those who prize their lives. For I have heard that he who knows well how to conserve life, when travelling on land, does not meet the rhinoceros or the tiger; when going to a battle, he is not attacked by arms and weapons.
The rhinoceros can find nowhere to drive his horn; the tiger can find nowhere to put his claws; the weapons can find nowhere to thrust their blades.
Why is it so?
Because he is far beyond the region of death."
-  Translated by Ch'u Ta-Kao, 1904, Chapter 50  



"Men go forth from Life and enter into Death.
The Gates of Life are thirteen in number; and the same are the Gates of Death.
By as many ways does life pass quickly into Death. And wherefore?
Because men strive only after the Sensuous Life.
It has been said that one who knows how to safeguard Life can go through the country without protection against the rhinoceros and tiger.
He may enter into battle without fear of the sword.
The rhinoceros finds no place wherein to drive his horn.
The tiger finds no place wherein to fix his claws.
The sword finds no place wherein to thrust itself.
Why is this?
It is because he has overcome Death."
-  Translated by Walter Gorn Old, 1904, Chapter 50  



"Death might appear to be the issue of life,
Since for every three out of ten being born
Three out of ten are dying.
Then why
Should another three out of ten continue breeding death?
By use of sheer madness to multiply.
But there is one out of ten, they say, so sure of life
That tiger and wild bull keep clear of his inland path.
Weapons turn from him on the battle-field,
No bull-horn could tell where to gore him,
No tiger-claw where to tear him,
No weapon where to enter him.
And why?
Because he has no death to die."
-  Translated by Witter Bynner, 1944, Chapter 50 




出生入死. 
生之徒十有三.
死之徒十有三.
人之生動之死地亦
十有三. 
夫何故?
以其生生之厚. 
蓋聞善攝生者.
陸行不遇兕.
虎入軍不被甲兵.
兕無所投其角.
虎無所措其爪.
兵無所容其刃. 
夫何故? 
以其無死地. 
-  Chinese characters, Tao Te Ching, Chapter 50  



ch'u shêng ju ssu.
shêng chih t'u shih yu san.
ssu chih t'u shih yu san.
jên chih shêng tung chih ssu ti yi shih yu san.
fu ho ku?
yi ch'i shêng shêng chih hou.
kai wên shan shê shêng chê.
lu hsing pu yü hu.
ssu ju chün pu pei chia ping.
ssu wu so t'ou ch'i chiao. 
hu wu so ts'u ch'i chao.
ping wu so jung ch'i jên. 
fu ho ku?  
yi ch'i wu ssu ti. 
-  Wade-Giles Romanization, Tao Te Ching, Chapter 50  



"From coming out to life to going back to death:
Those companions (t'u) of life,
They are one-third (shih-yu-san);
Those companions of death,
They are one-third;
Those living but moving toward the place of death,
They are also one-third.
Why?
Because of the intense (hou) life-producing activity.
I have heard that one who knows how to nourish life,
On land meets no tigers or wild buffaloes,
In battle needs to wear no armors or weapons,
A wild buffalo has nowhere to butt its horns,
A tiger has nowhere to sink its claws,
A weapon has nowhere to enter its blade.
Why?
Because such a one has no place of death."
-  Translated by Ellen M. Chen, Chapter 50  



"Vivir es llegar y morir es volver.
Tres hombres de cada diez caminan hacia la vida.
Tres hombres de cada diez caminan hacia la muerte.
Tres hombres de cada diez mueren en el ansia de vivir.
Esto es porque viven sus vidas frenéticamente.
¿Cómo puede entonces sobrevivir el décimo hombre?
El hombre que sabe vivir
viaja sin temor a los búfalos y a los tigres,
y va desarmado al combate.
El búfalo no encuentra donde hincarle el cuerno,
El tigre no encuentra donde clavarle su garra,
El arma del enemigo no encuentra donde hundir su filo.
¿Por qué?
Porque este hombre desechó sus puntos débiles,
burlando así su destino de morir."
-  Translation from Wikisource, 2013, Capitulo 50




"Men, in being born, emerge; in dying, they enter.
There are thirteen organs of life, the four limbs and nine openings.
There are thirteen causes of death: the departure of the three souls, the seven spirits, the vital force, the Yin and the Yang.
There are thirteen seats of death in the active life of men, the eight extremities of the compass and the five elements.
And why is it thus?
It is that the succession of births is a substantial property of Tao. 
Now I have heard it said that a man who understands how to protect his life will never meet with rhinoceros or tiger while travelling by land.
I he enters the army, he will not shrink from the weapons of the enemy.
Thus the rhinoceros has nothing for his horn to attack, the tiger has nothing on which to stretch his claws, the soldier has no use for his blade.
How is this to be accounted for?
It is that the man keeps out of the reach of death.
He never meets wild animals because he avoids their track; he is not slain in battle because he is brave, and does not fear the enemy."
-  Frederick Henry Balfour, 1884, Chapter 50





Chapter and Thematic Index (Concordance) to the Tao Te Ching



Taoism: A Selected Reading List










Saturday, November 04, 2023

The Sorry-Go-Round Goes Round (1951) and Round (2020)





The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety.  

By Alan Watts. (1915-1973)
Vintage, 1951, 153 pages.  

I first read this short collection of essays in 1962, then in 2000, and again in 2020.  His ideas and recommendations in this short book, and many other books and recorded lectures by Alan Watts, influenced me greatly in high school, college, and my adult life.  I heard him lecture while in college and I remember just laughing a lot with the young audience, and somehow being lifted up into intellectual sophistication.  His use of metaphors, analogies, examples, and humor is quite clever.  He is full of pithy, wise, and accurate observations; and, his thoughts are relevant in 2022.  His popular explanation of various philosophical and religious views sometimes wavers, falters, and misses the mark; however, he hits the mark more often than not.  

The main thrust of the book is that our lived experience, always in the present, does not provide us with evidence for an enduring self or soul.  That ideas and concepts are useful, but are not to be confused with the reality of our current experience.  That thinking and language can separate us from our existential body-mind.  That memories of past experiences or anticipation of future experiences may be misleading us about our true identity.  That since we cannot loose what we never had (an eternal, enduring, essential self/soul); our anxiety and insecurity should be dissolved by awareness of our actual experiences.  That science and technology are indeed useful, but may condition us in ways that cause more stress and anxiety.  That the fact that uncertainty and death are real, and how we should abandon hope in life being otherwise and being fundamentally insecure.  That American society is stumbling towards insecurity and unhappiness.  

His critiques of American social views and practices are very insightful, and still quite relevant:

     "Thus the "brainy" [over-emphasis of thinking over immediate direct experience] economy designed to produce this happiness is a fantastic vicious circle which must either manufacture more and more pleasures or collapse- providing a constant titillation of the ears, eyes, and nerve ends with incessant streams of almost inescapable noise and visual distractions.  The perfect "subject" [viewer, customer] for the aims of this economy is the person who continuously itches his ears with the radio, preferably using the portable kinds which can go with him at all hours and in all places [smartphones in 2020].  His eyes flit without rest from television screen, to newspaper, [to Internet], to magazine, keeping him in a sort of orgasm-without-release through a series of teasing glimpses of shiny automobiles, shiny female bodies, and other sensuous surfaces, interspersed with such restorers of sensitivity - shock treatments - as "human interest" shots of criminals, mangled bodies, wrecked airplanes, prize fights and burning buildings.  The literature or discourse that goes along with this is similarly manufactured to tease without satisfaction, to replace every partial gratification with a new desire.
     For this stream of stimulants is designed to produce cravings for more and more of the same, though louder and faster, and these cravings drive us to do work which is of no interest save for the money it pays - to buy more lavish radios, sleeker automobiles, glossier magazines, and better television sets, all which will conspire to persuade us that happiness lies just around the corner if we will buy one more."
The Wisdom of Insecurity, p. 62.  





Friday, November 03, 2023

Primacy of Sight

"Sight is valued above all other senses.  True, we can be persuaded that touch and hearing are more basic─the one to survival, the other to the acquisition of language.  Nevertheless, sight enjoys primacy.  It immediately gives us a world "out there."  Self, without a world, is reduced to mere body.  All senses give us a world, but the visual one has the greatest definition and scope.  This expansive visual world is both sensual and intellectual.  It is sensual, not only because of its colors and shapes, but also because of its tactile quality: we can almost feel what we see─smile with pleasure as we look at a fluffy blanket.  It is intellectual because somehow to see is to think and to understand: sight is coupled with insight, and to exercise the mind is to see with "the mind's eye."  Perhaps most important of all, the primacy of sight rests on a simple experience.  Open our eyes, and the world spreads before us in all its vividness and color; close them, and it is instantly wiped out and we are plunged in darkness.  One moment, the world is an enticing space inviting us to enter; the next, it collapses to the limit of our body and we are helplessly disoriented."
-  Yi-Fu Tuan, Passing Strange and Wonderful: Aesthetics, Nature, and Culture, 1995, p. 96. 

Wednesday, November 01, 2023

The Colors of November


The autumn colors are very dramatic in Vancouver, Clark County, Washington.  The four maples in our back yard are quite colorful at present.



"Then summer fades and passes and October comes. We'll smell smoke then, and feel an unexpected sharpness, a thrill of nervousness, swift elation, a sense of sadness and departure."
- Thomas Wolfe


"Lo! sweeten’d with the summer light,
The full-juiced apple, waxing over-mellow,
Drops in a silent autumn night.
All its allotted length of days
The flower ripens in its place,
Ripens and fades, and falls, and hath no toil,
Fast-rooted in the fruitful soil."
- Alfred Lord Tennyson, "The Lotus-Eaters"


I walk with my dog, Bruno, for 40 to 60 minutes in our neighborhood.  Here are a few photographs of our walking environment.