what a strange creature, it looked like a limping dog
for a while a few years back, the wolverine was my power animal.
i had never seen a wolverine , but Don said i did
in Vancouver last weekend i saw a wild looking kind of dog. was it a coyote? do big grey coyotes live in urban Vancouver?
Monday, August 26, 2013
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
here there
peak to peak gondola
people people everywhere, while i look for pink panties. in the stores aimed for obviously bigger women, size small is way too big for me, getting closer to down town, the small sized panties are for little girls. I noticed that first in a down town store here, the female clerk appalled by a sex related question, yet she was selling red crotch less panties too small for me. you didn't even care about my panties, you did not care about me, yet you fucked me beautifully against that tree, on the blanket in the bushes, in the car, kind of wherever we were that moment.as long as there were no people around. you were afraid of people. not quite shimmering in the far distant i see a mountain top, it took me hours of lonely rock to get there,.rock and ice. one tiny purple flower blooming in that big world. If i had to look at all the flowers that i saw in vancouver, so closely, i would be there for a life time, and then all the faces. of all the people. in vancouver people look at eachother, do whitehorse people know that? in whitehorse people do not look at eachother on the street. and i here, all day long, my gardening consist of keeping the wilderness at bay, where i know that many yukoners actually do get around growing things. did i write how you made love to me? how i loved it and then i thought, being fooled by society, that we actually had to be friends, that we could hold hands. I felt it the first time we held hands, you pulled away gently, subtle. I should have realized there and then that i was quite happy, the wild woods on fire. why did i want a garden that actually grows roses. when i knew you were lily , the tiniest lily, a tofildia. winter on it's way i know that the first green i will see after winter is the green blades of that lily. hesitating were to post this, can i talk about your cock, no better not. I know that i do have one friend with whom i can discuss penisses, a female friend at that. i was very old before i discovered these treasures. we knew that the scramble up the scree would take two hours, and with that in mind, one step at the time, slowly, deliberately, for me it is still my lungs that keep me in check , or my heart? which is it breathing or beating? 2 hours later, i can pull my self up on big boulders, and there she is, vaguely but distinctively. what is the difference by being carried to the top in the gondola, or not. a garden and a wilderness, girls becoming women, women being little girls. you and me, there or here, your place or mine? there is no question. you are gone, so suddenly, half a world away.
anime
Monday, July 29, 2013
it's water under the bridge
obviously not, because even in this heavy rain yesterday, there was no water under the bridge
the creek had redirected it self and taken a path over the road
and the next picture was the day before
enhanced saturday
subdued sunday
yesterday running naked through the rain and today i lay sweltering in the hot sun sweat dripping on the book i am reading.
still summer
Sunday, July 21, 2013
gabbro
I walked over to the neighbor this morning, a geologist, Don Francis, and he was quite happy to answer my questions.
ahhhh what did i learn? darker rock is heavier, basalt for example and found lower because of gravity
and light rock like granite is lighter, hence higher.
What else?
that little spot of LTrgS has gabbro in it.
That spot is not necessarily related to the one at Bennett Lake
It is more the way it is formed, Don said ( i think) it could even be the mother rock of our batholith here
Which is the Annie Ned one. (not the Ruby Range one)
Because when basalt is remelted again it forms granite. Yes?
And our Coast Plutonic Complex... is just a belt. i do start to understand it, but can't explain it. Island or not it was formed underneath the Earth, but here now it is exposed, where we see the rocks, the batholith.
and where i live on, on the clay, that is what is called unconsolidated sediments.
I think brought here by the glaciers covering up the batholith.
This whole post is more a question then solid facts. really they are unconsolidated sediments.
oh and one thing Don said, now after having come together the different belts are starting to move....ehhh linear? like they came together but nowhere to go anymore they start sliding along eachother. Don said at Ross river, they actually have slid over 400km.
I will try to find a photo again which shows some of what i am trying to understand
ahhhh what did i learn? darker rock is heavier, basalt for example and found lower because of gravity
and light rock like granite is lighter, hence higher.
What else?
that little spot of LTrgS has gabbro in it.
That spot is not necessarily related to the one at Bennett Lake
It is more the way it is formed, Don said ( i think) it could even be the mother rock of our batholith here
Which is the Annie Ned one. (not the Ruby Range one)
Because when basalt is remelted again it forms granite. Yes?
And our Coast Plutonic Complex... is just a belt. i do start to understand it, but can't explain it. Island or not it was formed underneath the Earth, but here now it is exposed, where we see the rocks, the batholith.
and where i live on, on the clay, that is what is called unconsolidated sediments.
I think brought here by the glaciers covering up the batholith.
This whole post is more a question then solid facts. really they are unconsolidated sediments.
oh and one thing Don said, now after having come together the different belts are starting to move....ehhh linear? like they came together but nowhere to go anymore they start sliding along eachother. Don said at Ross river, they actually have slid over 400km.
I will try to find a photo again which shows some of what i am trying to understand
Saturday, July 20, 2013
LTrgS
something Late Triassic in the Stikine suite, made up of gabbro, quartz diorite, diorite and granodiorite.
Whatever that all means, but do you remeber wanting to study the plantlife on Stony Creek mountain, because a phlox grows there, and that phlox grows nowhere near here for 1000 km. ( a rough estimate )
Now studying this geological map, i do see that that Stony Creek Mountain is a peculiar spot on the map.
It has a big fault line ( picture one) and north of it a magenta dot, which might be that color for these letters LTrgS where all the rest is what i spoke of in my previous post, intermittent by unconsolidated sediments.
The gravel pit on the bottom of the mountain also has an odd spot btw PzS, ask me if you do want to know, what it stands for.
Anyway PzS is part of a bigger slice which runs along Aishihik Lake
But i can only find another spot of LTrgS at the South western tip of BennetLake.
Now i do wonder if that Phlox grows there? is there anybody that knows?
Whatever that all means, but do you remeber wanting to study the plantlife on Stony Creek mountain, because a phlox grows there, and that phlox grows nowhere near here for 1000 km. ( a rough estimate )
Now studying this geological map, i do see that that Stony Creek Mountain is a peculiar spot on the map.
It has a big fault line ( picture one) and north of it a magenta dot, which might be that color for these letters LTrgS where all the rest is what i spoke of in my previous post, intermittent by unconsolidated sediments.
The gravel pit on the bottom of the mountain also has an odd spot btw PzS, ask me if you do want to know, what it stands for.
Anyway PzS is part of a bigger slice which runs along Aishihik Lake
But i can only find another spot of LTrgS at the South western tip of BennetLake.
Now i do wonder if that Phlox grows there? is there anybody that knows?
the fault
a photo of the phlox is on my wildflower blog
why i call myself batholith
I love you being a geologist, you studying the separation of land, i living on a compressed 'island' i do not know geology, it highly confuses me. And on many occasions i have tried to figure out where i live, i know behind the house there is exposed batholith.
I would love to know more, and as my field is botany ( only through interest, i am not an academic) what does it mean me living on the Coast Plutonic Complex, i am copying these words from a study being done. And is my place really on an island or is it batholith pushed up from underneath while the world was being compressed here. And does it have an effect on the botany, which is basically undisturbed here, hmmm this summer i still have to hike up to the closest by 20 miles nunatuk, which should have ancient plant life, older then what is scraped of by the glacier not so long ago, bla bla, I hope you know a little of my neck of the woods and understand what i mean.
I live in the Coast Plutanic Complex (paleaocen eocene) on the Ruby Range Batholith, our property is slipped in with clay from an not so ancient glacial lake, we have a beachline, and above there is the bathlith:) so why do i call myself that because i love to lay on those rocks i will send you a photo, they are the Nisling Range Suite, granite, granodiorite and diorite
and i will post this on my blog, because i always meant to write it.
And i call my self Batholith, because.... it feels true, i am all, i am 24/7, i am strong. i am ancient and yet none of these things, being one grain of granite deteriorated.
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