Monday, June 8, 2015

To The Woods - Day 10 - June 8, 2015

No post from last Friday, we spent all day creating photo journals and weren't required to post anything. This morning, there was no field trip, and we spent the morning reading and writing a short story personifying something living. The short story we read as an example personified a field mouse, and the short story I wrote personified a pinyon tree. Here is my story:

Pinyons
By Jacob Penick

He is a tree which can survive in places no other trees could. His group of trees, a wide carpet of pinyons on the desert floor, stretches and fingers its way through the sharp, rocky top of the Colorado plateau before dropping off into the Grand Canyon. He is young, living for a mere 50 years on this earth while his neighbors around him grow near 250 years old. The pinyons are a quiet bunch, living in a peaceful solitude amongst one another. Being young, he grows tall and straight, reaching his thick needles out as far as he can in any direction. His surrounding, more ancient counterparts grow stout and twisted, constantly barraged with strong wind and wood-warping lightning. Lightning strikes really do a number on desert pinyons, twisting them beyond recognition, and he knew it was only a matter of time until he was struck.

It has been a while since the last desert rain, and although the desert pinyon is accustomed to a drier climate, he longs for a nice, cool rain. Rain is not common in his home, but when it does bless the parched ground, it falls fast and hard, eroding the soil away from him. This makes rooting troublesome for him and his neighbors, as the rain constantly moves soil away from their roots, exposing them to the environment. Pinyon Jays often visit him, plucking endlessly at his branches to gather the seeds he produces. Every fall, he drops cones full of seeds, spreading them out on the orange, rocky ground in hopes of producing new pinyons. Hope. This is his emotion. All he has is hope. Hope that the rain will come, hope that his seeds will be successful, hope that the lightning doesn’t warp his trunk, and hope that fires don’t take his life.

This afternoon is particularly dry. The hot sun blazing overhead makes him feel as if the drought will never end. The memories of the last rain are gone, and each tree struggles to pull nutrients from the dry air and sap them from the equally dry ground. He feels the distress of his ancient neighbors, but they have persevered through many droughts before and will likely survive this one too. He himself also worries. He worries that his beautiful teal needles will wither to a sad yellow, worries that the Pinyon Jays will not have any nuts to eat. He is a selfless creature, whether he is conscious of it or not, constantly producing food for the Jays. His hope for rain declines as his needles vainly test the dry air for any moisture. Night would soon fall, placing the harsh sun beneath the rocks and cooling the air. This was a constant comfort to the pinyons, knowing that a cool night always follows a horribly hot day.

The sky got darker than usual as evening fell, turning wonderful shades of blues and purples and even some greens. These colors could only mean clouds. Clouds out of the Southwest. He hoped the clouds would fall from the sky on his pinyon forest, drenching him, his neighbors, and the soil in a sweet night rain. The clouds grew taller as they rode the westerly wind, but he and his neighbors could hardly tell from the pitch blackness of the new-moon night that surrounded them. All they could see were the stars in the wide sky slowly disappearing as the clouds approached. They knew tall clouds meant rain, and with tall clouds and rain also came lightning. The stars directly overhead quietly disappeared, and the rain came. The rain violently streamed down, and for a moment, he and his neighbors basked in the wonderful wetness. His needles and branches grew heavy with moisture. For an instant, the sky was illuminated in white light as lightning found its way to the ground nearby.


He was unsure if any of his neighbors had been struck by the beautiful white light, but it didn’t matter, the rain had finally come, and he was going to enjoy it. But he couldn’t. The lightning had struck a neighbor of his, another young pinyon, permanently warping their trunk. This threw sparks in every direction. The rain had only been coming down for about a minute, so the sparks found a way to catch, spreading their fiery influence throughout the forest. He eventually noticed the orange glow nearby. If he could hear, he’d hear the crackling of wood as fire ripped through his neighbors. If he could smell, he’d smell the wonderfully sweet scent of burning pinyon. If he could taste, he’d taste the smoke and ash and constant waterfall from the sky. If he could feel, he’d feel the heat radiating from his burning brethren and the newly loosened soil between his roots. Before he knew it, he too was engulfed in flames. He knew this could happen. He feared the loss of his life for many, many years. He wanted to grow old like his neighbors, warped by the weather, having the wisdom only an ancient tree could have. He died slowly in irony amidst the pleasant rain and the painful fire. Some branches had a hard time catching due to the recent wetness, but they too inevitably went ablaze. Each teal needle burned, taking his pride away in a cloud of smoke. Hopefully from his remains would sprout a new pinyon, eager to grow and age like him. 

There is an accompanying image, but it won't load in for whatever reason. This is my last blog post, as I have to turn in my netbook like right now. 

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