by Laura Crum
Some readers expressed an interest in a series of posts about the way I found and developed my little horse property. I'm going to attempt this series now. I fear it may be boring to most people, and you can feel free to tell me so. I am writing this more for myself than anyone else, and I don't need to put it up on this blog. So feel free to vote yay or nay on this subject.
Also, these posts may have a bit to do with horses, but they also will have lots of passages that have nothing to do with horses or writing about horses. Designing houses and gardens and landscapes, my own whims, my feelings about land and the particular sort of flora and fauna that are found here in these coastal California hills....all this will come into the story. Again, let me know if you find this boring.
So here goes.
This
Place
Here
is the story of this place that I live, that I call home.
There are so many strands woven
into this little hollow in the hills-- my past, the past of the land, the
magical wild world that surrounds me here. I want to braid the strands together
and make a plait that shows the whole. Just for the delight of doing it,
putting it down in words.
Creating this place, where I hope
to live until I die, has been one of the most joyous experiences of my life.
And so I begin with my past, the experiences which formed me and caused me to
want to live here and to shape this place the way I have shaped it.
The
Past
The
Ranch. This simple phrase was the magic in the child’s world. She did not live
on the Ranch. She lived in a quiet, upper middle class, suburban neighborhood
on a golf course called Pasatiempo. As suburban neighborhoods and golf courses
go, Pasatiempo was pleasant. Both the course and the neighborhood were older
and graceful, with big established trees, and when the girl was young, there
were still many undeveloped areas left. But the child found Pasatiempo boring.
From
her earliest memory, she had lived to go to the Ranch, where there was magic.
Ordinary magic, to be sure, but magic nonetheless, in her eyes. There were horses,
and barns, and barn cats, and piles of rusting junk, and orchards, and
crumbling dirt roads, and old wood and glass greenhouses full of plants, and
little shacks covered in rambling roses, and everything was ragged and a bit
messy. The Ranch was wild, where her home seemed tame.
The
girl could not explain why she felt this way—she just did. Perhaps it was
mainly the horses. Her uncle lived at the ranch and had horses, and from as far
back as she could remember, horses had moved her as nothing else did.
The
Ranch was a family ranch. Four generations of the child’s family had lived and
worked there. Her great grandfather had purchased the land at the turn of the
century, coming to California from Indiana, to start a new life. Her
grandfather had been born here, and so had her father and his brother. And now
her uncle lived here with his children, her cousins. The girl was deeply
envious of her cousins, who lived in an old adobe house on the ranch that had
been built by her grandparents.
Both
her grandfather and her father still worked at the ranch, but they had moved
away to the more upscale environment of Pasatiempo to live. The child’s father
would (sometimes) take her out to the Ranch on Saturdays when he went to work,
and leave her there to ramble around all day. And she lived for this.
It
wasn’t that she was never bored at the ranch. She often wandered aimlessly,
wondering what she should do. It was just that she didn’t mind being bored
there—the air always felt alive with potential, as if something interesting
might happen next. In contrast the air of her suburban neighborhood seemed
still and stagnant. And so she wandered the dirt roads of the Ranch and went in
and out of the barns and sheds, and picked fruit from the neglected orchards
and wild berry vines, and stared wistfully at the horses—for hours.
Nobody
paid much attention to her. She was quite young, maybe five years old, when she
was first allowed to “play” at the Ranch, and the various people who lived and
worked there cast a benign eye on her, and would certainly have helped her had
she been in trouble, but nobody felt any obligation to entertain her. She was
(mostly) left to her own devices.
In
her memory of the Ranch, she is always alone. Wandering and exploring, and
later when she was older and had learned to ride, riding her uncle’s horses
through the fields. In truth, she was not always solitary. She played with her
cousins, and her uncle let her ride with him when he wasn’t too busy, and
sometimes she was with her brothers and sister. But in her mind, she was always
alone there. Aloneness was part of the magic.
Besides
the magic of the horses, there was the magic of the place. Those particular
fields and barns and dirt roads, the hundred or so acres of good flat ground on
the edge of the little town of Capitola, itself on the edge of Monterey Bay,
which swept out into the far Pacific Ocean—this ranch which had always been her
family’s ranch. The girl located herself by the Ranch. The tallest local
mountain, Loma Prieta, was visible from the wide plain of the Ranch pastures,
and the girl would memorize this landmark—this is my home, she told herself.
Just here.
When
she was a teenager and could drive, the Ranch became more of a refuge than
ever. She had a part time job out there, packaging flower bulbs, and she fell
in love with a succession of boys who lived and/or worked there. She spent as
much time as possible out at the Ranch. Warm summer evenings talking horses at
the barn while eating apricots and plums, plucked from the trees. Gathering the
cattle on horseback, laughing with the young cowboys, with the breeze bending
the fields of grass and lifting her hair. Innumerable foggy mornings, huddled
in a jacket, walking to the faded red barn to begin another work day. She loved
it all.
She
would have been happy to live on the Ranch forever, and often imagined this,
but it was not to be. From the beginning, her family had been entrepreneurs,
more than ranchers. Her great grandfather had first sold buggies, then farmed
strawberries and flower bulbs, and next began a dairy. The dairy of purebred
Guernsey cows, producing high quality milk, was the mainstay of the Ranch for
years, and then, when high fat milk went out of fashion, the main business of
the Ranch became growing and selling tuberous begonias. Under her grandfather,
the family began importing all sorts of flower bulbs from Holland and reselling
them, and by the time she was born, it was a “bulb ranch.” The horses and
cattle were incidental; the cattle kept to provide the family with meat, and
the horses because her uncle loved horses.
Her
grandfather and her father, like her great grandfather before them, were not
sentimental people. They saw the Ranch as a way of making money. From even
before she was born, her grandfather had determined to sell the Ranch at an
enormous profit—when development came its way. He had planned for this. And so,
when the first shopping centers and banks and housing developments grew up
around the Ranch, the writing was on the wall.
As
far as she could tell, the girl was the only one who was saddened by this.
Piece after piece of the Ranch was sold off; soon it was just a small cluster
of remaining buildings, and a few acres of pasture. Next door was the beginning
of a huge mall—the land purchased from her family. The girl, a teenager now,
hated this from the bottom of her heart, but even as a teenager she understood
that there was no point in fighting and arguing. She had nothing to say about
it, and her father and grandfather and uncle were quite determined to sell the
Ranch.
And
so, little by little, her beloved Ranch disappeared. The fields and barns and
roads were demolished and swallowed up and paved over and built upon until she
could not even tell where the horse barn had been, or the old adobe house. It
was all gone, completely gone, as if it had never been. All that was left was a
giant shopping mall, indistinguishable from any other shopping mall.
The
girl learned quite a bit from this. About not trusting people and not falling
in love with a piece of land that did not belong to her, principally. Also
about understanding that one could NOT control what happened on the land next
door. And these lessons came in very handy later.
The
girl was in her twenties now, and lived in a small house in town, and kept her
horses at her uncle’s new horse ranch. She was ready to find a home. The Ranch
was gone forever. Her uncle’s little horse ranch was HIS place, not the family
ranch, and she did not feel welcome there. So she began to look for a place of
her own. And so begins this story.
4 comments:
Can't wait for the next installment!
The destruction of the Ranch is so heartbreaking.
Thank you, Jennifer and Muppet. Glad you enjoyed it.
Val--It still breaks my heart--to this day. I miss the Ranch. I can imagine it just as it was. I've tried to recreate some aspects of it here on my own place.
I can't wait for the next 'chapter'...
Post a Comment