by Laura Crum
This
last series of posts that I’ve written about “My Life With Horses,” has focused
on just that—my life with horses. I’ve deviated only enough to explain how and
why my life with horses has changed over the years. But there is an aspect of
my history that did not come into the story (as I told it) that has a big
influence on how I see my future “life with horses.” So I thought I’d explain
it now (for those readers, however few, that are interested in how my life with
horses has evolved).
When
I was twenty-two years old and in my third year of college as an English major,
I became fascinated by Henry David Thoreau’s book, Walden. I read and re-read
it and slowly I became determined to give his idea a try. (For those who
haven’t read this classic, the book tells the story of how Thoreau spent a
couple of years living alone in a cabin he built by Walden Pond, and the
insights that came to him there.) I knew I wasn’t going to be able to build a
cabin, or try Thoreau’s experiments in self-sufficiency, nor would I be able to
live this way for years. But I came up with a concept that I thought was
workable.
Those
who have read this series of posts about my life will have figured out by now
that I was a pretty determined person in my youth, and when I had a goal, I
didn’t let go of it easily. And my goal became spending a summer living alone
in a tent at a remote Sierra lake. My version of Walden.
Easier said than done, of course. But I persevered. My
boyfriend at the time lived in the town of Sonora, in the foothills of the
Sierra Nevada Mountains. He knew a woman who was the daughter of one of the
original forest rangers in that region. He told the woman of my goal. I needed
a lake that was enough off the beaten path that I could be alone there, but it
needed to be close enough that I could walk out and get supplies once in
awhile. The lady said she knew of such a lake.
And one spring weekend the mountain
lady hiked with me and my four month old Queensland Heeler pup, Joey, to
Burgson Lake, near the Dardanelles, in the Clark Fork Wilderness. Getting to
Burgson Lake involved five miles down a dirt road to the trail head, five miles
hiking down a well marked trail and one mile off trail to the lake. Burgson
Lake was sort of a well-kept secret. It was relatively easy to get to, and a
little gem of a lake. It was marked on maps. But there was no trail that led to
it and no signs, so very few people went there (at the time—this was thirty
years ago).
I loved Burgson Lake at first
sight. I can envision it perfectly all these years later, cradled in gray
granite, rimmed with pine trees, poised on the rim of a great silvery canyon,
with a view of the big volcanic cones called the Dardanelles. I found a campsite
at the far end of the lake, protected by a little grove of pine trees, and made
my plans.
One month later, I moved in. I had
packed up enough food for three months (granola, nuts, dried fruit, beef jerky,
trail mix…etc), to be augmented by weekly trips to town for fresh food. This
load took one pack mule. I had enough books for three months of solitude, and
following Thoreau’s guidance, I took the “greats”—no summer romances here.
Plato, Aristotle, the Bhagavad-Gita, War and Peace…you get the point. This load
of books took another pack mule. And I had an old African safari type canvas
tent that I had borrowed from friends (thinking it was as close to a cabin as I
was going to get), a folding cot, and all the usual camping gear. This took
another mule.
And one early summer day, I rode a
rented horse named Tex ahead of a packer and the three mules and guided the
string into Burgson Lake (where the packer had never been before). And the
packer unloaded my mules and helped me set up the big tent and left me there
with my young dog. And so began what was perhaps the most interesting summer of
my life. A time which is shaping my future to this day—or so I believe.
I still have the journals I wrote
during the time I spent at the lake, and they begin with my impassioned desire
to get away from the busyness and turmoil of every day life and have “the time
and space to watch the sunset die out of the sky.” I envisioned many long hours
sitting by the lake just watching whatever came to pass, reading, writing, thinking.
Along with days of solitary hiking and swimming. And all these things happened,
just as I planned. And yet it was nothing like what I had thought it would be.
To begin with I was very excited. I
set up my camp, and I took a swim in the lake. Burgson Lake was a perfect
swimming lake in the summer—cool, but not too cold. As evening drew in, I built
a fire, had a glass of wine (or two) and some trail mix and beef jerky for
dinner and watched the light die out of the sky, just as I’d hoped and planned.
My young dog pressed himself close to me, not yet used to the big wild world
where we now lived. And when it got dark, I crawled into my sleeping bag on the
cot (quite comfortable) and went to sleep watching the orange-y shadows of the
firelight flicker on the canvas walls of the tent. And I had a very odd dream.
One that I remember to this day.
In the dream I was right where I
was in reality, in my camp on the shore of Burgson Lake. I recognized the
boulder strewn granite terrain instantly. Crossing the granite, in full view of
me, was an animal that I immediately recognized as a snow leopard. And this was
odd because I had never seen a snow leopard in my life, never even seen a photo
of one. But somehow I knew it was a snow leopard, and in retrospect, since I have
now seen many photos of this animal, I can say that it looked like a snow
leopard. But how my brain created that image is beyond me. Anyway, this snow
leopard paced along a granite ridge in the Sierras, where it certainly did not
live in real life, looked back at me once and was gone. I have a vague notion
that I tried to follow it. That was it.
Doesn’t seem very significant or
memorable does it? But from the moment when I awoke the next morning to the
present day, more than thirty years later, that dream remains vivid in my mind.
I knew it meant something. I just didn’t know what.
It was only when many years had
passed, maybe twenty years, that I read a book about totem animals and vision
quests. And to my amazement, I recognized what had happened to me all those
years ago. Because completely unknowingly, I had more or less fulfilled the
criteria for a vision quest, moving heaven and earth in my determination to be
alone at the lake. And as is said to happen, on the first night I spent alone
there I dreamed of my totem animal. The fact that I had no idea what a vision
quest was, or what a totem animal was, or even what a snow leopard was, makes
this seem pretty magical to me. I couldn’t have projected these
concepts—because I’d never heard of them. Judge for yourself.
Anyway, there I was, twenty-two
years old, alone at Burgson Lake, having had a dream I knew had some spiritual
significance, even if I didn’t know what it meant, and ready to begin my
“Walden” experiment. And this is where I got my comeuppance.
Here I am with my dog, Joey, on the
shore of Burgson Lake. Photo taken by a friend who hiked in to visit me.
(To be continued)
Also, tomorrow is the last day to
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through tomorrow, July 11th.
Hoofprints, the second in the series, is currently just 99 cents. Click
on the titles to find the Kindle editions if you'd like some very affordable, fun, horse-themed summer reading.
Can't wait to hear more . . .
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kate. I've got a couple more posts on this subject. Glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteThis may be the single coolest blog entry I've read all year. I am not even remotely kidding.
ReplyDeleteDom--thanks so much. I had a feeling this would resonate for you. I could see you doing it, too.
ReplyDeleteOh and one other thing - I'm envious/admiring of you doing things like that, and taking risks, at 22. When I was 22, I was working the worst summer job in the world - employee benefits department in a large company - and getting ready to start law school in the fall. I was in desparate need of security and stability, financial and otherwise, and managed to get those things for myself, but a lot was sacrificed along the way. I'm sort of living my life backwards, I guess . . .
ReplyDeleteKate--I was lucky, no two ways about it. My parents sent me to college and my father, somewhat of a quirky, independent individual himself, first gave me Walden to read and then supported me in my desire to give living alone in the mountains a try. I later found out that all my relatives thought my father was nuts to allow/help me to do this. I'm sure if it hadn't been for him I would have had a hard time making it happen. I justified it to some degree, by making it my "senior project" as an English major, and I did indeed write a lengthy paper titled "Burgson," which chronicled my experiences and the similarities and differences I found between my time at Burgson Lake and Thoreau's time at Walden Pond.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I do think the reason I am quite content with a relatively peaceful, non-adventurous life now is that I did have a lot of adventures when I was young. After the summer at the lake I spent another summer working for the pack station that packed me into the lake and two years working for a commercial cattle ranch as a "cowboy." Then came the years working for horse trainers and training horses that I wrote about in the "My Life With Horses" posts. So, yeah, I'm ready for a peaceful contemplative old age, I think.
What Dom said. Many years ago, I had a dream that I knew meant something. I was living by a small lake with hills all around it, and I was naked. I stayed there for a year, built a shelter out of sticks and grasses. I found a plant on the edge of the lake that I could chew and find the fibers in it, which I used to weave fabric and make a dress, then I walked over the hills into a town. It was a very vivid dream and I haven't forgotten it.
ReplyDeleteThat's cool that you did it in real life, and saw a snow leopard in your dream. I think my dream was influenced a little by Walden Pond. I hope your comeuppance wasn't too bad, and that your little dog was okay.
redhorse--I'll post about my comeuppance next. And my dog was fine. He lived to be fifteen years old and always enjoyed going back to Burgson Lake for a visit.
ReplyDeleteYour dream has that same "vision like" quality. They are dreams you don't forget, no matter how many years go by. I've had two dreams like this in my life, and both were very much "totem animal" dreams. So I wouldn't know how to begin to interpret your dream, but it has that feeling of being a powerful guide--to me.
My gosh! Just when I thought it couldn't get any better :0. I am so happy you are sharing your experiences, it's magical to me.
ReplyDeleteI was thinking vision quest as soon as you described the dream.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mary! I do believe there is/was magic involved.
ReplyDeleteAnd Val, you know, when I read about vision quests and totem animals many years later, it just hit me like a hammer. I almost couldn't take it in, it seemed so undeniably magical. But I have told it exactly the way it happened, and I do believe that, unknowingly, I was on a vision quest and saw my totem animal. The fact that I had no idea of these concepts and had never seen a snow leopard just makes the magic more convincing.
Everything makes more sense in context. I was going through a rough time and I think my dreams were telling me "get out of here! Be self-sufficient, forget the shallow stuff."
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for the next chapter.