STOCKTON AND BIG TREES
While in the Austin airport waiting to fly to CA, we saw a bunch of people lined up at the window. We smiled at each other, pitying these cowboy simpletons so mystified by human flight. But more people kept looking, so we moseyed over and took a gander and a look-see (I’m pretty sure that’s how cowboys talk).
Oh. Sorry that we made fun of you fine cowboy folk while you were watching one of our young citizens being loaded up in a pine box for political causes that no one can really adequately explain. Juli thought it was in poor taste to take a picture of this, but it seemed really resonant and important to me at the time. No disrespect intended.
So after that delightful interlude, we loaded up into our tin bullet. Just so you people know, the breaking point for the 6’1”/250lb weight class on an airplane averages around 3 hours. My own personal record is approximately half that, so we started a wonderful trip to CA by taking a flight that lasted approx. 57 hours.
The flight crew shoved us into the baggage storage compartment with a broom handle to make more room for the cadre of middle-aged, bleached, plasticked, almost-women on their way to “VEGAS, BABY!” for their collective 600th birthday. During the disembarking, the guy behind them finally lost it and tried to push through them. They attacked, and he parried with an under-the-breath “Bitch”. Their response? “Freako!” That’s right. “Freako.” Score one for the under-the-breath guy.
So we arrive in Oakland around 11pm to find that somehow, the rental car that I reserved wasn’t cleared for a Seattle drop-off. Big problem seeing as how we were flying out of Seattle 10 days later. So I frantically call Travelocity to see what the problem was (most likely my own fault) while Juli dug out some cleavage to talk to the guy at the Budget counter. After some tense negotiation with a machete, we got a rental from Budget for a decent price—decent being a relative term, of course. Relative to me saying, “Hey, I just bought a space shuttle for a decent price.”
At the tail end of our trip, I would try to drop the Budget car off at the Hertz parking lot in Seattle because I SWORE that we had rented a Hertz car—Reason #1,692 why I will undoubtedly end up in a jail cell or six feet under if Juli ever divorces me, as I have fundamentally become a non-functioning member of society. I do have a cute mad-scientist appeal to me, though, so no worries.
So we get to Stockton, where my teacher, Tanya, lives. The next few days were quite important and productive, but we don’t really have pictures of them. Suffice to say that Juli discovered she was a mermaid, I realized that I continually stab myself with ten swords, and Tanya was severely scolded for waking up her neighbors by pounding away on a drum. You can’t tell if I’m making this up or not, can you?
Here’s a shot of the University of the Pacific campus, where Tanya corrupts young minds now. These are her six sisters:
I don’t get it, either.
This is a shot of a house with a garden/yard that Juli took for Beth. I don’t know why, but maybe some of y’all like this kind of stuff:
This is the kind of stuff I like. These trees outside of Tanya’s apt. were incredible:
So after a few days, Tanya says (in Russian/Chinese/Italian/something-or-other accent): “You should take day-trip to Big Trees.” So we’re all, “OK. What are the Big Trees?” And she goes, “They are Big Trees.” I’m pretty used to this kind of roundabout talk, so we just get the road we’re supposed to follow and head out into nowhere, figuring there must be some big trees an hour or so outside of Stockton.
So we start driving and somehow end up in the middle of Ireland (possibly Scotland, I can’t be sure):
Absolutely beautiful area, and as soon as I figure out how to make money while living out in a place that looks like the Shire, we’re relocating to Copperopolis. You can’t tell if I made that name up or not, can you?
So then all of the sudden, I’m like, “Holy shit! Snow!” and I get all excited and keep trying to take pictures of it out of Juli’s window.
We figure we’ll see some snow on the side of the road, a few redwoods or something, and then head back to Stockton to drink wine and eat cheese like normal people.
Before we know it, we’re in Big Trees State Park (that’s what that blurry sign says).
There’s also signs everywhere screaming at us to put snow chains on the car, but the sunny Budget desk an hour or two away definitely didn’t give us those.
Needless to say, we weren’t dressed for snow.
A bunch of near-toddlers were smarter than us, though, and they bundled up appropriately so that they could take out their aggression on each other with hard water:
So we spent an hour basically peeing ourselves giddy over our little winter wonderland.
Like befuddled rainforest monkeys dropped off in Antarctica, Juli and Conor discover that snow is edible.
Brain freeze!
I am a sly trickster in the snow. And by “sly trickster” I mean “dumb ogre wearing a t-shirt under his coat, yet jovial about the basic physical properties of snow”.
So yeah, the trees are big.
It’s like we’ve never seen the color white before!
An opportunity like this doesn’t come along every day, so I do the prudent thing and make a snow angel. Be glad that I didn’t go w/ my first inclination of, “Hey, you know what would be REALLY cool? To do it NAKED!”
Then I split my pants. Seriously.
This is the Warming House. Allegedly, it is very warm. We never found out because it was locked. We did see burning embers through the window, though.
At this point, the crotch of my pants are ripped open, I’m bare under my suddenly inadequate jacket, and there’s an inch of snow in my Birks:
The temperature dropped over 20 degrees in ten minutes on the way to Big Trees. So to warm up, we went here and got drunk.
I walked out w/ two pints of beer in my stomach and around 100 paper towels in my shoes.
Juli fell in love with this place Angel’s Camp. It was quaint.
I fell in love with their Star Trek bathrooms. It was the future (check the upside down faucet).
These are my ladies.
2 Comments:
Ok, to clarify, I took that picture for Beth not because it was the best garden ever, but because it seemed like every house in Stockton was landscaped all cute like that one. Beth likes it when people care about that.
Also, I knew snow was edible. It's all I want to do whenever I see it. I taught you.
4:43 PM
Please do not talk to ourselves on here. It makes us look odd.
9:59 AM
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