The first expression we learned, appropriately enough was “Some stunned”, meaning stupid but not in the sense of I.Q. points but more in the sense of caught off guard and frozen with ignorance.
Gliding along in a kayak, I realize that the trick to travel is to really see where you are. There are an infinity of lives ticking along in both microcosm and macrocosm. I sit in my place in the continuum and gaze with the sense of missing much but with joy at what I see. The kayak swings along and jelly fish perform an undulating dance, punctuated by the paddle’s arc. A minke whale circles, surfaces one, two, three and gone, the waltz of the species. Eagles peer into the depths and dive for a prize, puffins bob and seals snake in for a look at this awkward, stiff contraption that has joined the ocean choreography, uninvited.
There are cliffs topped with two hundred and fifty year-old evergreens called tuckamore, standing only 3 feet tall, curled in on themselves, the only way to survive the battering wind and cold. Not so for the people that inhabit this far northern wonderland; perhaps their open friendliness comes from the satisfaction of a life hard-earned and an understanding of their place in it. These are island people. The person with that designation has the sensibilities that come from living together in and with finite space and resources. The clear realization of interdependence that comes when standing on the deck of a canoe. “He wa’a, he moku, he moku he wa’a.”
Salmon jumping, a loon calling from across the water, robins on the lawn and a woodpecker outside the window. Add to this the pervasive fog formed when the warm moist air of the myriad ponds meets cool artic air and you are lost in a magical meditation of timelessness, much like the blanketing mists of the Hāmākua Coast on the Big Island.
Regular returnees to this mysterious kingdom are Kathleen Blanchard and master fly fishers Hans and Ina. Kathleen Blanchard, who heads a non-profit called Intervale which, “…takes its name from a heritage word used in rural areas of the Atlantic Provinces and New England. The intervale is a low meadow, by a river, that naturally produces hay in abundance. The intervale is harvested, enjoyed, and cared for. It is a metaphor for our work, which is about the beneficial relationship of people to the earth and its resources.
This organization specializes in community driven conservation efforts. Kathleen had a group of students with her who were engaged in a project to increase the eider duck population, whose numbers, like the cod, have been depleted by virtue of their usefulness to humans. With piercing blue eyes and wild red hair, she is almost in constant motion with the exception of dinner when she became a focused presence and turned her laser attention to her dinner companions.
We leave the mist behind and arrive in Rocky Harbor to brilliant sunshine. Our current hosts are island people as well. The first thing you see when entering the driveway is a greenhouse; the property has the feel of a working farm. When I mention this to Margaret, one of our hosts, she explains the multi-step process they must use to actually grow vegetables in this land of short summers, beginning under lights inside and moving in stages to the ground.
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