Archive for the ‘Writing’ Category

Ledge Ability – Shelf Road Ojai Rescue

This is a piece I wrote for the Pink Minute paper edition in January 2006.

Shelf Road looking East

Shelf Road looking East. Photo by Mario Gonzalez via Facebook

My friend Todd and I are kicking it on Shelf Road. We’re following his two weimaraners and talking about his Pastease company, the subtle energy flow of the trail and lamenting the new pooper scooper invention, DISPOZ-A-SCOOP, Patent # 5280978. Sure it’s convenient, and spares hand-to-poo contact, but empty it doesn’t fit in any of your pockets and if filled and forgotten aside the trail, it reclines boldly as an ironic testimony to novel genious and half-assed responsibility.

When it comes to dog shit disposal, I say, flick it with a stick, stack rocks into a mighty cairn, or dig a shallow grave and give the dog’s last meal a proper funeral. But add a brown plastic bag, wire and colorfully labeled cardboard signage,
then the only thing missing from, ‘Ventura Countywide Stormwater Quality Management Program,’ are the bright and boldly stamped words “PROPERTY OF.” That’s Todd’s idea. He makes the cutest nipple stickers.

It’s distracting, but whatever. Shelf Road is a fine little hike, park at either end and stroll round trip for an hour or so, take in the sunny views of the Ojai Valley, and share pleasant “hellos” with other walkers. It’s no big sweat.

But this day is different. We aren’t half way from the Gridley Road gate when we hear a lone voice reporting from down in the oranges.

“Is someone calling for help?” We listen again, and definitely hear a man’s muffled cry calling from the forest of Valencias below. “Help…… help” the voice calls twice, then is silent. That’s surreal, and unexpected.

Between the trees I can see an old farm tractor, but I see neither body nor movement. Todd shouts back, “Do you need help?” But there is no answer until a few seconds later when we hear the voice again, calling in a hauntingly strong but
stationary manner. Someone needs a lift.

The hillside at this point is quite rough, steep and covered by a thick, scrappy chaparral. We continue on a bit looking for a place where we can barrel down into the grove. The voice keeps calling and I meddle with the what-ifs of the situation.
Just keep walking. Someone else can handle it. I’m afraid. It could be a bear, an OSL attack, or perhaps a phantom. Whatever, I’m going down into that grove and see who or what is calling for assistance.

Todd dials 911 on his cell, and I dial the local popo and immediately get transfered to dispatch. We’re in a race to describe where we are on the trail. That yonder road that leads up to the grove from Grand Avenue is probably Mercer, but
I’m not 100% from this vantage point. Ah, the vistas!

“We’re walking along Shelf Road and someone is calling for help down in an orange grove,” I boast. I see the house where they had that great New Years party that launched us into 2005. Snap back. I’m standing on a little berm at the side of
the trail looking down into a grove, talking to some headset at 800 South Victoria that doesn’t even have a computer screen map of Ojai to help me reference where we are. I want to shake my fist at the sky and cry like DiCaprio.

This is Ojai, a village, a town, a quirky mix of powerful women and lazy boys, a place where lost wallets are returned full of cash, and you never lose your lover, you just lose your turn. And the voice keeps calling, “help… help.” So I start
down the hill which is a slighter slope at this point, with softer grasses and fewer prickly things. The dogs grin and bound into the bush, they are in full adventure mode. They sniff things in this unknown world beyond the trails edge and pretend
to flush phesants out of the thicket. Todd follows, each of us nearly sprinting down the hillside. We’re talking to cops, on important business, oh you know… heros.

I get down to the level, I’m in full rescue mode. Gimme a challenge, I can take it. My adrenals are churning, “Let me call you back,” I say to the dispatcher and hang up. I side step a clump of poison oak like an enemy combatant. No matter,
over the stone wall, through the ancient leafless avocados trees and into the back of the grove. My Skechers can take it. “Help, help,” from off to the left. “Where are you? I’m coming.” Impatience competes with apprehension. I’m dreading blood,
crumpled limbs and rabid squirrels. I press on till I see the tractor. It’s one of those old red tractors, spotted with rust and big rubber tires in the back with opposing tread ridges for mud traction and little ones in the front with parallel tread for good tracking. A little trailer hitched to the back holds a small bunch of orange tree limbs. And there he was, grandpa farmer on his side with his right foot wedged under the big wheel. “What happened?” I huff, realizing that I’m getting some good exercise today. “I got my foot caught under the wheel. It rolled
a little when I got off and it just knocked me down and pinned me,” the old farmer groans.

It’s not everyday that you run down a hill into an orange grove and liberate a farmer from under his implement. But there are few things I find greater pleasure in than sensing the opportunity to serve and jumping on it. Which is precisely the
mission of the Pink Minute: I’m listening, I’m aware, call me, I can help.

This is Ojai’s gift: the typical is the extraordinary. Like anything I can do (see Seven Things – other side) I can handle  this. Todd is right behind me and he’s in good shape. He works out at the end of Fox Street. He does 50 pushups a day and he likes to help.

The old man is practically crying “ooooooh, oooooooh,” and struggling to pull his foot free. Todd appears from between the trees, still on speaker phone with 911, “Help me push,” I tell him. The old guy is wailing “ooooooh, ooooooh, almost,
almost, I can’t pull my foot out.”

Ben Mercer Ojai California Citrus Avocado Farmer Shelf Road

Ben Mercer - Ojai's Oldest Farmer

With both of us pushing we’re able to roll the tractor back far enough so he can slip his foot free of his shoe, which remained troublingly trapped and helpless beneath the massive treaded tire. The man struggles to his feet, wiggles his toes, refuses medical attention, announces that he’s 98 and his name is Ben Mercer. He climbs on his tractor, and drives away.

Later that day I ponder the relevance. And I realize other Ojai folk are calling for assistance. And with each Pink Minute I’m here to remind my community, I’m just around the corner, watching for sunset and ready for your call.

sparse, um, change?

The sun in the backyard is doing a preheat on the weathered canvas of my favorite sling chair. I’m itching to get out there, which probably means I’m due for a shower too. It’s Valentines Day 2010, we had a lovely dinner at Osteria Monte Grappa in Ojai last night with noodles, thin ham and chianti. Then we beat it out of town back to the safety of home. Made lemongrass, ginger, chamomile tea and then choked down a few Netflix before falling asleep.

Now, the next morning, I’m determined to draft up a few hundred words concerning the nature of love. I should probably post some quotes or something. Maybe stick up some romantic pictures of people getting all cuddly. I’m reluctant to even think about the idea that I’m about to mention kitten tube. The only quote that comes to mind immediately is “Love is the Law, Love under Will,” and there’s nothing romantic or Valentino about Aleister Crowley even in his attempt to sum up the brute forces of gnostic creativity.

Nope, not Crowley. I was thinking about Raymond Carver yesterday and hunting around from quotes on love from him. This one will do… “‘You see, this happened a few months ago, but it’s still going on right now, and it ought to make us feel ashamed when we talk like we know what we’re talking about when we talk about love.’”
Raymond Carver

I’m going for a walk in the morning sun.

Loving my new Ojai Face zazzle shop

Technically, the Cafe Press store for the Ojai Face still exists, but zazzle seems to be the current place to sell online creative merch, so I sat around on the couch with the lap top for a few hours yesterday and put together a starter Ojai Face shop

ojai face zazzle shop screen cap.

Who wants Taco Tuesday?

with several designs I haven’t even looked at lately and many of you, my tens of readers, surely have not seen. Sorry for calling you Shirley.

The xjxi face, my most recent design, as pictured here in the screen cap was inspired by the famous Poison Control Mister Yuck logo as seen in this 70s psa for household product child safety.

Now if I could only figure out my prestashop open source webstore on ojaiface.com. this is my new challenge.

John Gardner on the Fictive Dream

“In the writing state—the state of inspiration—the fictive dream springs up fully alive: the writer forgets the words he has written on the page and sees, instead, his characters moving around their rooms, hunting through cupboards, glancing irritably through their mail, setting mousetraps, loading pistols. The dream is as alive and compelling as one’s dreams at night, and when the writer writes down on paper what he has imagined, the words, however inadequate, do not distract his mind from the fictive dream but provide him with a fix on it, so that when the dream flags he can reread what he’s written and find the dream starting up again. This and nothing else is the desperately sought and tragically fragile writer’s process: in his imagination, he sees made-up people doing things—sees them clearly—and in the act of wondering what they will do next he sees what they will do next, and all this he writes down in the best, most accurate words he can find, understanding even as he writes that he may have to find better words later, and that a change in the words may mean a sharpening or deepening of the vision, the fictive dream or vision becoming more and more lucid, until reality, by comparison, seems cold, tedious, and dead.”

– John Gardner, “The Art of Fiction”

- via toomuchnick

the fun art of baking bread

whole wheat baguette sunflower golden flax seeds.

whole wheat baguette with sunflower and golden flax seeds. So nutty and delicious. Crispy crust and light chewy crumb.

In the past week or so, i’ve baked about a dozen loaves of bread. I was inspired to take on this challenge again from a reminiscence of some excellent artisan loaves that I baked about a decade ago while in college. I remember the process involved several doughy bricks before I was able to get to a tasty, hearty loaf. But once I had it figured out, I was all over the bulk seeds and nuts at the store, pouring through recipe books in the library and kneading my way into another, waistline expanding mass of carbs. So delicious.

Lately, my quest has been to create a decent french boulangerie styled baguette. It’s about the only kind of bread I’ll buy in the market these days save for a dark rye loaf we get occasionally at rainbow bitch that is loaded with sunflower seeds and other yummy denseness. But the final inspiration came from a $9 artisan loaf that we bought at the farmer’s market a few weeks ago. Yes, I was driven by fiscal conservation. And my love for hands on art projects.

I started, of course, with a google search for “best baguette recipe.” I figured there were probably scores of them and I needed google to help me sift through the chaff. I’m still working up to the ChewsWise award winning recipe, and I’ve ordered a kitchen scale to help in the accurate measurement of ingredients.

two of my early baguettes. good dimension but lacking in texture and flavor. nonetheless, quickly devoured.

I started with the Food Network baguette recipe. Its pretty basic and straightforward, and gave me a good grounding in what to expect from rising dough and what I could get away with, like letting it rise all day while I worked out in the barn studio and letting what’s left – after the first few loaves have been baked – rest over night in the fridge.

Tonight, while munching on the loaves in the pic at the top of this post, I mixed up a little poolish with yeast water and all purpose flour. Got to keep this dough coming daily until I tire of getting fat, then I’ll go back to steamed vegetables, soup and daily walks.

What are you making in your kitchen?

The Ojai Face Manifestote

I wrote this a while back to elevate consumers beyond the disposable plastic shopping grocery bag…

The Ojai Face Manifestote

Ojai Face Organic Cotton Tote Bay

When you find yourself shopping — I mean really find yourself — do you feel proud because you remembered your tote bags? It’s a really great feeling when you remember to be a part of the solution. That’s why the Ojai Face now comes printed on a quality, organic cotton tote bag.

Super Sweet Organic Ojai Face Tote Bags empower you to manage your consumption footprint while elevating your hunting and gathering experience; blasting you past the plastic paradigm.

Soft and sturdy organic cotton caresses the skin. It breathes and feels alive. It develops character as it rides on your shoulder shuttling your library, your bottles, your candy and your private things.

With Ojai at your side, glowing in wide-eyed, organic wonder, you’ll find yourself — I mean really find yourself — as a bigger part of a world community both lazy and powerful, ordinary and magical that you’re actively making better.

Enjoy!

An homage to the Pinkness.

Originally published in Pink Minute 2.1 December 2007.

Take 60

by Chris Wilson

No true soul can deny their lover at sunset. Not in a place so amorous, that on the verge of night, even the obstinate sand-stone bluffs ripen like cherries and smolder and giggle and say, “Stop, you’re embarrassing me.”

Like an Arcade waffle cone, The Pink Moment is fleeting, butter-cream sweetness. Pink Moment’s Production adheres to a strict schedule — arriving daily 10 minutes before sunset — Pink wows Ojai rookies and comforts village lifers alike. Pink is steady, reliable, and entirely lovely and has a daily exclusive showing on the Topa Topa screens through late 2012.

Pink takes itself quite seriously, despite its ephemeral nature. Early on in its career, Pink secured representation from a cosmopolitan agency and has since become unbendably stubborn and obsessively narcicistic. Would-be partners stumble back down Sisar Road, after three days max. Their stories all the same. They say The Pink Moment spends the entire day preening in front of the bathroom mirror, then just before dusk dashes out onto the stage all snappy and stressed that the show is getting stale. After a brief, but captivating routine – that never, ever includes an encore, Pink is back, asking if the gig was OK, if the tim- ing was off, and complaining that its face is blotchy and cracking from too much late-afternoon sunbathing. Pink then downs a bottle of Jim Beam, smokes half a pack of American Spirit Yellows, and passes out watching reality television. And we love it. We rave about it. Big Pink is our muse, our call to worship, our reminder that we’re scheduled to catch a flight at the Ojai Beverage Company.

Despite our blend of deliberate creation and subtle groveling Big Pink has yet to return any of lil’ pink’s requests for an interview. And that’s okay, we all have habits; we all resist change to some degree. And after 40 million years (give or take) of the same gag over and over and over and over and over, Big Pink has miraculously avoided carpal tunnel and detox.

For in the end, cliché as it is, we covet The Pink Moment’s schooled nonchalance, blanketing the foothills and draping over the bluffs. I am resigned to recognize that I want Pink more than Pink wants me. We know that the Minute in its youth is green more than anything. It shows up at its own leisure, naps on the couch and has conversations with its imaginary friends in the front yard.  Until next time use your brain and not your back.

The Pink Minute is back – the universe rejoices.

Call it a 2010 resolution, a spark of creativity, call it anything you want. I’m Chris Wilson, I invented the blessed Pink Minute a few years ago and have published a few one-sheet paper editions of the Pink Minute and had a blog for a while that got a little attention (very little).

Gosh, so I’m all trying to figure out how to thematically focus this post and I’m not sure that focus and me updating the content of this site go hand in hand. Like a lot of us, I’m a thoughtful, interested, caring individual who gets bored very quickly and has to have several obsessions at play at any given moment. So the Pink Minute then will be my virtual playground and when I get a hankerin’ to share what the obsession of the moment is, then I’ll update the site. My plan is to do this regularly, I mean, that’s the idea behind online posts, right? Keep them moving, keep them fresh and fun and funky. Plus you’ll get to see my experience with Wordpress and php and css and all that other digital fantasy crap get relearned, updated and upgraded as each moment passes. Oh, you’re gonna want to subscribe to this blog where we’ll share in everything from shoes to socks and other musings. What I’m not likely to publish a lot of ranting about is religion and politics, that’s being handled already, and I’m far too lazy to caress that learning curve or seek to compete with the likes of Ariana et al. but I may link to other blogs that do offer insight and commentary that I find pleasing or crass. I may swear and curse on occasion so hide your children.

with love,

chris wilson

upper ojai

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