The very slow

Spring came last Sunday and then it was gone. I went for a long bike ride with a girl named Holli. It was warm and sixty degrees out. We pedaled for miles, in short sleeves up a winding road to a junction of trails on the top of a mountain. From there we could see all of Asheville and the surrounding county, miles of bare trees beneath a blue sky.

The snow came on Wednesday, and the town shut down for days.
I loved the coziness, the park at night filled with people hollering and sliding on their odd assortment of makeshift sleds- cookie trays and canoes amongst them, but I no longer want school to be shut down. It just slow things down.

I want to go to school. I want to get through the text book as fast as possible. I want to finish this class and the next and the next, get into nursing school and then finish nursing school and become a nurse so that I can have a good income and be able to finally buy that really expensive blender that everyone has now.

You know the one.

But I'm at the bottom of the bottom of the bottom. I'm at the cellular level, chiseling away at things I learned in high school. Not that I can remember them, but I feel so thrown back. So completely humbled.

I'm starting all over with school, with my career, with these big pieces of my life. I go to community college in a mountain town in a state where I have no roots. The first day of class the professor asked if anyone had children, and just about every girl raised her hand. I have no children. And I have to study and study just to keep up. It feels surreal; I already went to college, I already have a degree. That doesn't matter. Being back in school is putting me in my place.

Silks is putting me in my place as well, which is to say it's kicking the shit out of me.
I love the nights spent at the aerial studio, with my instructor and a few other girls, the mirrored walls and the blue fabric hanging from the ceiling. It's been so cold at night and it's so nice to be in bright spaces. But it's hard, it's a harder sport than I ever imagined. And it hurts. It leaves angry burns behind your knees and across your chest. When Andrew pushes the knee of an upside down girl tightly against the silk you can hear her wince and cry out.

He'll say, "Don't worry, the spot will desensitize soon."

He told me I needed to wear cotton pants when I get to level two, because some of the drops are so fast they will cause polyester fabric to melt onto your skin.

When I first started, I didn't believe the twisted fabric could hold me up, so I clenched the silks in a death grip. I tried to fake my way through the climbs and poses by using all strength and no technique. The girls around me are doing mid-air splits and arching their legs above their heads, grabbing their feet.  I started waking up in the morning with stiff, swollen fingers. I would have to stop silks altogether if I didn't learn to let go.
I thought that because I already had a college degree, I'd never have to worry about registration dates and advisors and study guides again. I thought I'd already proved to the world that I was smart and responsible and that ought to be enough.

I thought that because I've been climbing for so long and people tell me I look strong, that I'd sail through aerial and blow everyone's mind and be asked to join the company. But I struggle with knee hooks and basic climbs, and I have to be reminded to breathe and to put my tongue back in my mouth, because it's an art, not a sport.

Starting is the most difficult part. Everything seems overwhelming and impossible. And I've started, thank goodness. But the long road to nursing school, the steady but so far paltry accumulation of knowledge, the painful practicing and tedious repetition of basic moves in the aerial studio, it all seems like very slowest process in the world.
I enjoy it mostly, even if it doesn't sound like I do. I love spending hours at the cafe in West Asheville, drinking coffee and coloring in sections of the human body. It reminds me of Seattle, of writing papers at Zokas at a huge wooden table with my friends studying at my side. But it's different this time, of course. And I feel like I need to rush, to get it done, like I've stared far too late and I'm already so far behind.

But there really is no speeding it up, there is only the very slow, the head down, the day by day.

The Gloom

The gloom landed right after Christmas, as it always does. I was back in North Carolina, but the cold followed me all the way from New England and kept us all shut up in doors for days at a time. I worked from my desk, but work was slow, and there was very little to keep my mind occupied. Studying would have made the time go by much quicker, but school didn't start till the middle of January.

The dog curled into a useless crescent on top of my feet as I worked, alternatively sleeping and glaring at me, as if the polar vortex was a plot I invented to keep her penned inside. I took her for two brief walks every day, each one screaming cold for me, although she didn't seem to notice the freeze. They barely counted as exercise- we went around the block once, twice at most, and to assuage my guilt once back home, I'd treat her to excessive raw hide bones. At five dollars a bag they started to add up.
So did groceries. This is what I did with myself most days- drive to the grocery store a few blocks away and buy whatever I wanted, mostly stuff to make soup and bake. I'd go home, make it, eat it, burn the muffins, burn the cake, I burnt everything I tried to bake, but the soups came out well.

That was always a pleasant few hours each afternoon, coming home with groceries and opening up a Porter or a Black Mocha Stout and starting to chop onions and celery, the radio playing in the background. Then the soup would be done, provide a good degree of satisfaction, then I'd eat it, clean up, and be back to nothing. Around dinner, I'd repeat the whole process.
I said to a friend, "I feel like my days are made of this: making little messes, cleaning up after myself, doing it again. I need school to start."

I really needed school to start. I hadn't been to school in seven years, since graduating college, with the exception of the EMT class. The idea of returning was making me fidgety, especially because I'm looking at three years of straight math and sciences.

Once there was a snow day called, and all the schools were cancelled. It wasn't really a snow day because there was no snow on the ground. It was a cold day. Due to unprecedented cold....the announcement began. It was below zero. My boyfriend got to stay home, and we played card games and drank orange liquor and whiskey out of little glasses. I hate the taste of whiskey but it seemed right for the situation. That day felt more cheerful than the others.
January is a gloomy month wherever you are. Here in Asheville we tried to break out of it by going skiing at Cataloochie mountain. We went at night to beat the crowds, but the crowds were there anyway. It was black and icy with people falling down the mountain all around us. It was like playing a game of human dodge ball. We decided not to go again. Save the lift pass money in a jar and one day have enough to build a cabin in the cascades. Or go out to a movie.
I've had a few more of those Seattle dreams, always the same. I'm back in my old neighborhood cafe, staring at my phone deciding who do call first. I'm overwhelmed to tears to be back in that city, but I can never get the numbers on the phone to work. I always wake up with wet eyes, feeling like I just cried for a long time.

But they're just dreams. As much as I miss that place, I'm so desperately happy that I moved here. January is January wherever you are.  My life is cranking away here, towards something tangible, it feels much closer then it ever has before. That feeling provides an overwhelming sense of relief.

13 awesome things from 2013

Here are 13 phenomena that I was introduced to, or happily re-introduced to, in 2013. 


Very different than 2012 I'd say, but still phenomenal. 
1. Rope swings. Cliff jumping, deep water soloing, and other ways to end up from air into water. With friends and dogs and cans of good Seattle beer. 
2. Blue glass. In the spring, I asked for donations for the blog. The response was stunning; I was overwhelmed with generosity and support of all kinds from readers. The next few months were spent searching for sea glass on the washington beaches and writing thank you letters at the anchored ship cafe.
3. Mountain biking. I dove into the sport as a beginner, and it has allowed me the endurance, exploration and independence I desperately needed in this new place. 
4. Writing. At the beginning of the year, this blog was my life. I wrote openly about almost everything and was rewarded with connections from across the world, the instant satisfaction that comes with daily publishing and reading all the comments as they pour in, all types of recognition, and a platform that always seemed a heartbeat away from springing me towards writing a book. It was thrilling.

When my friends and the people around me found good jobs, got engaged, bought houses and had kids, I had this blog. And even in the face of all their achievements, that felt like a real accomplishment.  I believed that if I could keep up the wicked pace I was writing, I could turn this thing, somehow, into a career. 

Sometime around my move to Asheville, which I intended to write about in great detail, things started to shift. Not everyone in my daily life wanted to be written about. The inundation of climbing and back county ski trips ground to a halt as I felt my way around a new corner of the country. I chose not to write anything about things that happened between me and other people, realizing for once that they were not entirely my story to tell. 

And while North Carolina is spectacularly beautiful, I'll say this: nothing photographs as dramatically as Washington state. 

By December, I realized I could not have a popular personal blog and a happy and peaceful personal life, so for now, I'm choosing the personal life. One that includes more fiction, and writing on the side that I really hope becomes a book some day. The blog is not going away, it's just getting scaled back a whole lot. For now. 
5. IRL. This year I met other bloggers in person. Jenn, Kelle, Melody, more visits with Nici and (virtually) Anna Lola. People who I can talk to about phenomenon #4, and they get it. Some people will tell you (right to your face, directly after you tell them you write a blog) that writing on the internet is a waste of time, but I can't agree with that. There are real people behind these sites. They are very funny and smart, and some of them have beach-side condos and really nice espresso machines that they are very generous with. 
6. Goodbyes. To a city I lived in for 11 years. To all the people who lived there. 

Although that one hasn't settled in yet. 

7. Road trips. Just the dog and I. Around March I realized if I moved around a lot I never felt to sad, so off I went: Whistler, the San Juan islands, Montana, Florida, and the ultimate American road trip, The Great Pacific Northwest to the Appalachian mountains in eight days. 
8. Skiing. A few friends and I, mostly girls, set about teaching ourselves how to ski in enormous powder- backcountry and lifts. We celebrated every day of Vajanuary at Steven's Pass, did our work from the lodge, filled four hours in the car together each day with talking and music and coffee. We met a lot of new people, studied avalanche conditions, skinned hungover into the Alpental backcountry, celebrated the New Year at Whistler, volunteered for races and festivals, slept in yurts, basked in sunny inversions, poached hot tubs, and ended up in the ER from time to time. 

I'm not sure anything has ever brought so much excitement into my life in one huge season.  
9. The Southeast. I moved to Asheville in August just to try it out. I spent a lot of time on front porches and ate a lot of biscuits, the sunlight appears to be year-round, the town is small, I fell in love with a North Carolina boy and there are more christian radio stations than I can count. 
10. Climbing trips. After a whole winter away from the climbing gym, I sort of exploded into the outdoors as soon as the sun returned. Every weekend from spring until mid summer when I left Seattle. We topped out in Squamish, Idaho and all over Washington. Mostly with my friends Amber and Rip, and with a roving cast of characters who were mostly new to me. I led a lot of pitches and read a lot of guidebooks and continued to fail at bouldering.      
11. Green smoothies. Actually more of a life changer than it would seem.  
12. I had a job. A real-life tech job that did not involve boats, kids, or kayaking. I visited Milwaukee, and fourteen other cities in less than a year. Microsoft Excel terrified me when I began this job, and it terrifies me only a tiny bit less now. This job entailed a huge amount of airplanes, hotels, stress and new stuff, but it enabled me to move to Asheville, to afford a season of skiing, and to go on a hundred road trips.   
13. Brand new people. Starting from scratch in a new place is lonely, but I got really lucky. Erich spent almost every work day studying next to me, and we took elaborate lunch hour field trips. I also re-met my boyfriend, who is a ridiculously awesome phenomenon in and of himself.  But he doesn't care to be written about. Or have photos posted. Which is too bad, he's gorgeous. 

FAQ - Round 2 - raw dogs and north dakota eludes me

Ladies & Gentlemen, boys & girls, lads "n'" lasses, here is round two of FAQ - Finally Answer the damn Questions. Round one is here, although I could sum it up for you right now: I have this job and I went to UW, go dawgs.

6. Have you been to all 50 states? 
When I was a precocious 19 year old, I began a quest I called '48 before 21.' My goal- to visit all the lower 48 states by the time I was 21.

I failed. By the time I could legally drink alcohol, I hadn't even been to Montana, which was two states away. Also, at the time, I was counting airport layovers as a legitimate 'visits' which I've since been told is truly reproachable behavior.

I'm almost 29 now, and I've been to every state except Hawaii and North Dakota. I keep hoping work will send me to North Dakota, but I don't see that happening. Still, a girl can hope! Come on, Bismarck public housing authorities!

7. What happened with the raw/vegan thing?
So I never intended to go completely raw or vegan.

I did think about eating primarily raw because at the time I lived in Seattle (it's big in Seattle) and I was rather heartbroken, and when I'm heartbroken I like to temporarily immerse myself in severe nutrition trends.

I quickly became disenchanted with the idea. The 80 dollar pan of raw peanutbutter and jelly bars put me over the edge.

Also, I'm completely un-heartbroken now and I eat whateverthehell. Absolutely whatever I want. It's become an issue. Just yesterday, I had to talk myself down from buying a bottle of champagne to drink while making dinner with my boyfriend.

I really think, said rational me, that you should save Champagne for when you have something special to celebrate. 

Something special to celebrate? Irrational me shot back.  We're making soup together! 

What could be more celebratory?

 Either way, I didn't buy it. Victory.

8. How did Hometeam get her name?
I once visited the distant island of Western Samoa. While I was there I built a toilet or something.

One of the islands was infested with cute puppies. The islanders spoke Samoan, but they had an English nickname for all the puppies- they called them all 'Hometeam.'

I decided this was the best name for a dog, ever. Hands down.

Five or six years later I had this terrible boyfriend. Just terrible. He had his moments, but still. Anyway, I told him my very special and secret dog name. He thought it was fantastic. When we broke up, he told me "I'm going to steal your dog name. And I'm obviously in more of a position to get a dog, so I'll probably get one first."

Three weeks later I picked out Hometeam.

Him: still no dog. I should add he's no longer so terrible.
That concludes round 2, thanks for playing everyone!

new england

I went up North for thanksgiving. I am perfectly happy in Asheville but in the last week or so, it had started to feel like a fist closing around me. I'm not exactly sure why - school stress, house worries maybe- nothing that a few isolated days in Vermont can't fix. 

My plane landed Boston and I was treated to that boiled blue New England sky, and a few inches of sifted white snow covered the hills around my house. It was twenty six degrees during the day. The land looked like it had been sugared, and was very beautiful. But a storm moved in one day later and spit grey, wet slush, and the Upper Valley lost that ringing look of pristine winter.

But even under this slightly haunted, weathered look, it's still got to be one of the most gorgeous places on earth. At least, I can't imagine any place better. 

FAQ - round one- do you work?

Finally Answer the damn Questions!

Thank you everyone who sent me questions for the very first FAQ, Finally Answer the damn Questions Section on the wild and often confusingly vague coast. They were fun to read, and they brought to my attention the gaps that exist in this business of writing down my own life, both the intentional and the unintentional.
Many of you asked more or less the same question: what happened to the dude who visited and then disappeared off the face of the blog seriously what the heck? And, you know, I'll do my best to answer that, although I can already assure some of you that you will be disappointed with my answer.

I'll get there, though, and address it to the best of my ability.

For now, some of you asked about.....

1. Do you work? What is your job?

Yes!

I am currently a 'consultant' for a Vermont-based consulting firm. I know 'consultant' doesn't explain anything, but that's what's printed on my business card so it's a good place to start.  The company is here in my hometown (I claim three hometowns, by the way.) This is the smallest of the three, a town roughly the size of my thumbnail. It's so small, in fact, that the Diner has a whole menu of sandwiches named after my associates.

The firm is fantastic, recently voted 'Best place to work in Vermont.' You can bring your dog to the office, you're given spontaneous days off to go skiing, and the annual picnic includes a company band and a talent show.

Of course, none of this relates to me as I work remotely. But in a way it does- I work out of my house so my dog is always there, and last year I brought my work to the ski hill on many occasions.

Somehow, sadly, I never got the company picnic invite. Although I lived in Seattle at the time; I suppose I could not have gone anyway.

I've had this job ever since I got off the ship about 15 months ago. My project involves the technical side of a study for Housing and Urban Development. I'm required to travel a lot. Just this year I've flown to Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, Duluth, Asheville, Ocala, Columbus and Milwaukee, and those are just the recognizable places, certainly not a complete list.
I've made a few important life observations during my travels. For example, the Orlando airport is difficult to navigate and the grass in Florida is not to be trusted (fire ants).

Maybe the only things I learned were about Florida?

When I'm not traveling, I'm sitting in front of the computer monitoring this website that looks like hundreds of tiny little dots. I can work wherever there is an internet connection, which is how I manage to travel a lot for fun, and how I'm able to live here in Asheville.

I've been given the luxury of almost total independence with my work. It's wicked.

I understand all the questions regarding not only the nature of but also the existence of my job, because I do not write about it except for a few vague "I'm in another airport" posts.
I chose not to write about it early on. I think, in general, you never regret not writing about work. It's far too easy to misrepresent yourself online, even when you have only the best intentions at heart.

So that's what I'm doing now, and I'm so grateful for the solid employment and all the flexibility of schedule and location. And I'm grateful it's a Vermont company, because our tourism and ski based economy is walking a thin, melty, rapidly warming line right now.

Here is some employment history that relates to some other job-and-school-related questions. 
Let's call these the answers to questions 3, 4 & 5.

In 2007 I emerged from five ultimate-frisbee-soaked years at the university of Washington, freshly armed with an English degree and two mysteriously still intact ACLs.

I loved my years at that gorgeous University, a place with a rose garden so rare that it was a felony to pick even one rose.  However, I would never in a million years suggest someone study english, unless they honestly dream of being a Classics professor. Actually, if that's the case, I'd suggest they study Classics, which is an entirely separate major.

I value everything that I learned at UW, but I think (from a professional standpoint) that I am the only one who values everything that I learned at UW.

If I could do it again, I'd study graphic design or communications, or at least throw in a few science classes.

Despite the relative worthlessness of my degree, (argue with that sentiment all you want, but besides brightening a bit when listening to the Prairie Home Companion 'professional association of english major' bits I really don't think it has given me much of a boost) I have managed to string together a fair compilation of employment. I've been the PR manager of an epically failing kayak shop, a waitress at a tiny Vermont diner, desk person at a bouldering gym, a high school teacher, sea kayak guide, ship medic, and naturalist. (I was undoubtedly the world's most uneducated and ill prepared naturalist, but an enthusiastic one.)
I've also worked as a nanny, outdoor educator, blogger, ultimate coach, photographer, writer, editor, gear reviewer, secret shopper and storyteller.

My job now, 'consultant', is probably the least exciting job, but also the one that pays enough to live. So, give and take, I'll take it.

I have my side projects, including writing for various online outdoor websites and photography. I will always have these projects, for money, trade or just for fun. But I doubt I'll ever try and piece them together into a steady income like I once did. While it is possible to do that, it involves a fair amount of luck, an enormous amount of self discipline and a bone-crushing amount of work. A writer friend of mine said that to make ends meet, she needed to have an average of thirteen serious projects going on at once.

Forget it.

I'm a very lucky person with an adequate amount of self discipline, but I honestly do not want to work at that punishing and unpredictable rate for the rest of my life.

I'm a contractor right now, meaning my employment at bring-your-dog-to-work-place won't last forever. In January I'm taking a few science classes to prepare myself for grad school in something health related. Like I said, I wish I'd have knocked out those sciences during my undergrad, but someone had to drag UW out of college-ultimate-frisbee anonymity, and I'm proud to say, that person was me. And a few others.

And that concludes round one! Thanks for playing!

little blocks

It's not that I want to stop writing. Just the opposite, in fact. But I've had to learn a new language lately. For many months I've been embedded in the minor keys of sadness, disconsolate chords of discontent. I shed that when I moved to this funny little town, and the grand flip of my life has left me mute.
I promise you, my own happiness is a thousand times more musical than sadness. I just haven't learned how to transcribe it yet.

the wilder coast photo sale

Bring some wild to your wall! These photos are now available as 12inch x 12inch canvas prints. Canvas is a very cool, unusual way to display photos. Each print is 1.5 inches deep. 

Right now for the holidays, each print is only 65 dollars. This INCLUDES shipping if you live here in the US.

Simply pay via paypal by clicking the yellow button on the side, and let me know in the comment section which photo you would like. Order is placed within 24 hours of your purchase. 

If you'd like to discuss alternative payment options, print options, or photos, please email thewildercoast@gmail.com

I hope you're gearing up for a wonderful holiday, and thank you for supporting this small-time artist and one woman operation! 

Click on each photo to enlarge.
1. bicycle 
2. fair bird
3. fair pastel
4. fair mystery 
5. picnic
6. puget sound
7. cloud sea with frost
8. midwest in winter
9. bird lift
10. ski bird
11. sun storm
12. ski chaos 
13. fun slide
14. the corner
15. tornado
16. wheel
17. glass seattle
18. the cafe
19. bright citrus
20. found love
21. take off

the mini-mini vacation

In the past few weeks, life has felt like I've entered every race and contest in the "adult olympics", and more than often I'm coming in last.

I'm trying to decipher the new health insurance. I'm trying to register for college classes and finding that each prerequisite comes with its own set of prerequisites. I'm squinting at massively complicated websites for the tiny 'contact us' number and then waiting on hold for hours, searching for high school records that do not exist from a high school that evaporated.

I'm putting my head on the table and yelling at the dog.

And so it was declared that a mini vacation was in order. We left on a Friday evening, leaving behind the coinsurance and the deductibles and the math placement tests.

A 5:30 post-work departure, driving south in darkness, watching as palm trees floated past the windows on 1-95. The two boys indulged in the sugar-high-madness of roadtrip glee as colorful bags of sour skittles and X-TREME sour patch kids accumulated on the floor of the car. This was followed by the predictable post-sugar crash, the restless sleep, and I took a very quiet 11:30-3:30am shift that took us all the way to Ocala, Florida.
The next day we found ourselves floating in Rainbow Springs, me and Erich and my boyfriend who magically does not appear in photos, looking for the gators we'd been promised. Finding none, we asked the incredibly bored ranger where to go for something to eat, and he told us, essentially, "Don't eat around here."

We found a local place called Swampies. It was on a swamp.

Don't eat there.
We parted ways the next afternoon, the boys and the dog heading back home, me pointed South to Naples. 
A few days before, I'd texted my friend Kelle "I have this crazy idea..." And now here I was, rolling up to that familiar, chalked up driveway littered with tiny scooters and plastic cars. Kelle greeted me at the door holding a baby and choking on candy, grabbed her bag, and we were off to the races. 

Post sunset, still light on the gulf:
What followed is exactly what you would expect from a visit to Naples: beer, limes, a piece of chocolate malted pie which I now want 100% of the time, sneaking into a hot tub late at night, a riotous trip to the grocery store for more beers, Kelle trying to hide her horror when I suggested a six pack of the non-refrigerated type. We had that giddy, anything-goes-into-the-cart, no subject is off limit, stay up as late as we want, sleep sideways in a giant bed feeling of vacation. 

The morning brought us more beach, coffee, the promise of a little breakfast joint called Heavenly Biscuit:
Which proceeded to break our hungry, light and flaky craving hearts:
But we managed to find love again, with wild cats roaming.
Kelle took me to a white sand beach, and the sand felt as soft as pastry flour. The water was so clear and soft it almost had the properties of light, the horizon so clean and straight.    

Between New England and the Northwest, I don't see much of these things. 

When I wasn't swimming and gaping West, we sat on the shore and watched Dash crawl towards the water like a newly hatched sea turtle. 
And the no-longer-ship flask came too, finally adding sunny Florida to its list of states visited. It's seen its fair share of Canadian rocks, Montana mountains, Dakota Badlands, the moody Puget Sound and the butterfly hills of North Carolina, but this was the first time it spilled whiskey on white sand and warm salt water.  
And then it was afternoon, and we were sitting on the floor in her living room floor. Nella was pulling book after book from the shelf and then collapsing into my lap as Lainey drew stars and her favorite phrase - I love You!- on my legs in shimmery pen, and Dash was just crawling into whatever space he could find between the three of us and wiggling around. That house is a happy place. 
Then goodbye, fifteen more hours in the car alone, watching the digits drop on the dashboard as the air grew cooler and palm trees turn into Spanish moss-draped oaks turn into the bare limbs of red maples. It was 28 degrees when I got home to Asheville, and I was grateful for it. I slept well in the cold, dry air, back at home in the bed I love so much. 

And the next morning I picked up the phone, got back online, called the health insurance place, the office of registration, picked up where I left off. 

Long drives to visit friends are always, always worth it. Especially when friends live here:

Florida Bound!

It felt time for a little road trip. We're off to Florida for a long weekend! 

That's right. I live in a place that looks like New England but is driving distance from Florida. 

What.

all in a week

1. the green race 2. brilliant biking weather 3. visit from Seattle friends on a cold night 4. a new trail through the experimental forest 5. boot camp workout inside....getting too dark to bike after work 6. sunny West Asheville afternoon 7. ready for a road trip....leaving tomorrow! 8. bright creek boats clutter the bottom of rapid transit at the end of the race 9. halloween circus performer 10. asheville brewing company with ultimate players after a long, cold, windy, miserable double loss 11. tiny dancer for halloween

And a bonus- Gorilla Safety:
If you enjoy the all in a week photos, follow me on instagram at @melinadream. Get ready for trails, trees and one particular dog.

what we did

So here is what we did for those four deep blue days, gold fringed by turning trees, chilly in the afternoon and frosty at night. We kept very busy, active till we dropped, exhausted onto the front porch each evening, wrapped in sleeping bags, drinking the aforementioned beers and bourbon and champagne.

There were moments of stillness, however, moments where this girl from the Northwest had to stop, and do nothing but soak in the sun, Seattle's scarcest commodity this time of year.
::
Amber is pure power, and I promised she'd absolutely destroy on a mountain bike. "Enjoy your new addiction!" Said the girl at the rental shop as we rolled the bike, ours for 24 hours, towards my car.  

"I don't know...." Amber replied, cheerfully unconvinced, "I'm already pretty addicted to bouldering." I exchanged looks with the shop girl. I am admittedly newly in love, and hard in love at that, which renders my opinion utterly biased, but for me there's no comparison. Cold rock and crushed fingertips versus long, undulating single tracks that whip through forests and across fields, and you're out there alone, at top speed, face stinging with cold as your legs burn. Getting ten miles under your belt as opposed to a few inches of granite. No comparison. 
I was right, my friend killed it. She walked nothing, at one point banging down the biggest drops of the the trail (picture a big, rooted stair case) while holding my cell phone in one hand and calling out casually, "did you want me to be taking pictures?" 

It took me a week of biking that trail every day to have the confidence to ride out the steeps. So it goes. Amber is four years younger than me and built out of iron. 

"How long till we have to return this thing?" She asked in the parking lot as we hoisted the bikes back onto their clumsy racks.

"5pm tomorrow." 

Amber opened a can of Ninja porter. "Yeah, we're riding that trail again before bouldering tomorrow."
 
::
The next day, on to the cold rocks and the split fingertips. We drove to Rumbling Bald, winding through Bat Cave and through Chimney Rock, flanked by apple orchards and SAV MOR food stores and dilapidated houses. Amber, brand new to the Southeast, was glued to the window.

I felt a jolt of pride, playing country music loud over the stereo, even though I wouldn't call this place mine yet, not the way I claim Washington or New England. Still, it's this secret world that I discovered, a place I found so compelling and mysterious that I left everything for it. I left everything fast. 

This girl is so strong. 

 ::
And then we drove to Tennessee, to a huge field surrounded by the blues or the smokies, I'm not sure which. A cold wind was whipping over the bald, and thin grey clouds mostly smothered the sun.   
::
And on her last day, we did nothing.  
More accurately, we wandered over to the Wedge in the river arts district, ordered a pitcher of beer and played a game of Corn Hole which lasted all evening. 

Corn Hold champions won a food truck dinner. 
Amber left at 5 in the morning on Tuesday. She went home and trained in the rock gym for five hours straight, woke up at six for work and did it all again. I slept for three days. 

Asheville would be perfect if it bordered Washington and all the girls that live there.  Now and then I get lonely for them.
All the time I get lonely for them. 

what we drank

My friend Amber flew across the country holding a 60 meter climbing rope to come visit me in Asheville.

One year ago I was sitting at a bar in Montana with my head on my plate. It was the beginning of a long stretch of sadness.

If you've ever flown from the West Coast to Asheville, you'll understand just how much of an endeavor it is, how many planes and Chicago-Midway layovers it entails.

If you've ever stood at the starting line of a Seattle winter, waiting for the gun to go off, the first rain to began that never ends, and you're already heartbroken, you know what a grueling and dismal place it is to be.

One year later. What a slog it's been. And always there was Amber, pushing me outside, laps around the lake with our dogs, dragging me to riotous tuesdays at the Tin Hat on Phinney Ridge, whiling away dark February mornings at Fiore while I drank my coffee and waited for the jolt of caffeine to hit, the 20 best minutes of my day.

Then when spring came and I was feeling a little better, she sort of upped the ante. She pushed me up rocks and off of cliffs (into water), we swung off rope swings and lead harder and harder routes, at one point she with a broken ankle climbing them one legged. She took me to Spokane, Canada, Idaho, Squamish, Leavenworth. She never worried too much about my sadness, my silent moods or long (agonizing) soliloquies about how I'd be broke and alone and living in the shitty apartment forever. She just figured I'd feel better in time, but for the time being could benefit from some company and from being outside.

She was on to something.

And then I got my act together, in no small part because of friends like her, and I packed up and took off. A year since leaving the boat and breaking up with Andrew and living in a small string of places not worth living in, and now I'm here.

Here is Western Carolina. Here is Waking Life in the morning with Erich, my boyfriend's front porch as he bangs on the piano, the trails at Bent Creek. Here is drinking cider at the bar with Yonton. Here is happy. Here is missing my friends in Seattle, thoughts of them a shimmering feeling, gilding every minute that goes by.

::::
So Amber visited me, and we did too much and took too many photos for one post, so I'll begin by writing about the most important things, which are of course, the things we drank.
The coffee in Asheville, and this shouldn't surprise you, does not live up to the coffee in Seattle. My friends here make wicked fun of me for what a snob I've become. Erich may be the only one who understands, although he keeps a low profile, preferring to choke down the bad stuff than blow his cover.

More than once he's dragged me to a nicer place downtown and whispered, "You're the only one I can go here with." Through a painful process of trial and error and weak espresso tossed into trashcans across town, we've found a few places that can rival a few of the best spots in Ballard.

I took Amber to Waking Life in the morning before mountain biking.
And High Five Coffee (which we both kept calling High Five Pie, obviously, anyone from Seattle ought to understand) to be treated with some of that classic barista attitude worthy of Fremont or even Capitol Hill, and a stunning wait time for anything, but the Chai is spicy and the cappuccinos are delicious.  Here, slow mornings rolled into afternoon for poor Amber as she read with the dog, waiting for me to finally rise and stagger down the hill to join her. 
One evening, after cold trail riding and fried chicken at homegrown, we went over to the newly opened Urban Orchards in West Asheville, owned by my friend Josie and her husband Shilo. We sat in that beautiful, warmly lit bar full of glowing maple and cherry, wrapped in fleece, red cheeked from the wind and nearly too tired to speak. 
In a fantastic twist, a few of our good friends from Seattle were visiting Asheville at the same time, up from Atlanta where they've relocated to. They invited us to dinner out in the country and told us to brings something to drink. Feeling festive and indecisive, we went overboard, and showed up at their doorstep with red wine, two bottles of white wine, a bottle of champagne and a growler of Pale Ale from Pisghah brewing.

But mostly, we drank beer. 
Black Ninja porter in the parking lot of Bent Creek and underneath the boulders at Rumbling Bald, pitchers of Orange Wheat Ale over rounds of Corn Hole at the Wedge, cold bottles around a table as we carved pumpkins, in a field in Tennessee wrapped in blankets in a freezing wind. Fitting, as Asheville is nicknamed Beer City, with more breweries per capita than any other town in the country....except Portland, maybe. (We care not about Portland.) 
And on our last night together for a long time, we drank chocolate. Smoked maple and sea salt drinking chocolate and Indian Kulfi hot chocolate with rose water, pistachio and cardamom from The Chocolate Lounge. 
I'll be back in a bit for a post about what we did between the ubiquitous imbibing, but until then, thank you for making the trip, Amber. And for everything else as well. Cheers. 

All in an (amber) week

Amber visited me all the way from Seattle. She brought my climbing rope as a carry on just to return to me. That's a true friend. Here's a glimpse of our week. 
1. sweater weather at max patch 2. champagne ginger cider at the newly open Urban Orchards in west asheville 3. Amber's first sun-soaked mountain bike ride 4. monday afternoon corn holing 5. disgruntled with the Gneiss at Rumbling Bald 6. just what it looks like 7. after the Wolf Branch trail....she might be hooked 8. a portrait of our afternoon the day we did very little 9. me and Erich at the Wedge 10. she can absolutely crush 11. girly finds downtown 12. running through Tennessee 

If you like the all in a week photos, follow me on Instagram @Melinadream. Get ready for some sickly sweetness, 'tis the season. 

Tiny Planets


Lately I've been accused of being on my own planet. Which, I believe, is very astute, a keen observation. My life has shrunk sweetly down to a little ball, with a field and a pile of books and some very colorful sweaters. A bicycle and a small handful of friends who roam in and out.

When I leapt across the continent, I downsized to a much smaller life that is pleasantly, perfectly furnished, for the time being. There are no birds, no planes, no silverware strewn across the floor. No big walls, no beaches, no market price coffee at the tragically hip cafe.

There are absolutely no flopping fish with their wide mouthed gasped, as they are not allowed.

"I know you're doing well Lina, do you want to know how?" says Lisa on the phone, 2500 miles away in the rain.

"How?" I'm sitting on my planet in the sunlight holding the phone to my ear, throwing the ball for the dog.

"Because I never hear from you anymore."
My roommate says, "You were at dinner last night, but you were in your own world."

My mom says, "Well I know you're busy, but call the mom when you can?"

I don't think it's good to be on your own ball for more than a few weeks, but for now, here I am. Clam-happy, ignoring the news. And I was thrilled to discover this app, which seems very pertinent at the moment. It takes your photos and swirls them down into teeny tiny planets.

You know by now that I love photography more than perhaps any other realm of art or communication or documentation or figmentation or whatever it is. And further warping my photos to make them a little more abstract is wild fun for me.

The app is called Tinyplanets. Here are some of my favorites, and thank you for bearing with me as I get this out of my (solar) system.

My friend Erich with the dog at his feet is a frequent visitor to my planet.

My oldest friend Cassie, walking through my family's snowy land in Vermont on my birthday, is about to have a kid on Christmas. I believe that she may be on her own small ball very soon as well.

An entire tiny planet of birds and fish! Here in the Bay of Pillars, sea birds flock around a captured school of fish moments before ten whales emerge, mouths open. Do you see the fin in the middle? 
 Kayak guiding through the same waters, later in the day.  Floating towards the bergie bits.
 Megan and I spent the winter learning to ski through trees. It was a very slow and difficult endeavor.
Here's Molly and I, ringed by the blue ridge mountains, a tiny planet play date. 
A tiny Ammen flings a giant Ella.  
The North Carolina Mountain State Fair. 
I used to walk the dreary beach of Golden Gardens every afternoon in Seattle, with the dog and coffee, wondering where to go next.  
  She enjoyed those walks. I found them a bit tiresome by the end.
The wasteland of Baird Glacier in the inside passage near Juneau, Alaska. 
 Andrew and Kirsten take in a passing train in the holy land of Index.
Amber and I lived a few blocks away from one another in Greenlake this summer. We went swimming every evening. She's coming to visit me in Asheville in three days.
Now that's a hell of a rescue, boys. Green River Narrows.
Nici in my very favorite Gentlemen's Intermission shot. Montana planets are always good ones.
My best friend on the entire planet, not just my small one, and her husband Colt, standing on the dock in Bellingham, Washington just one week before they were married.
And finally, me on Dolly Parton, the summer project I never finished and probably never will. Thank you Ms. Jackson for the original shot. 
Wild world, isn't it. 

All in an (autumn colored) week

1. the trails here feel endless 2. cold enough for hand warmers and morning cappuccinos 3. she can sprint full speed for three laps of the beginning trail, then she'll fall instantly asleep in the car  4. Saturday morning 5. mid-week work days at Waking Life 6. camping coffee 7. at this month's book club, we learned to Twerk from an instructional video 8. bon fire in a big field for the full moon 9. bath time 10. easy winding trails and shorter days 11. Wednesday night ultimate- we won a game wearing matching lime green socks. 

If you like the all in a week photos, follow me on Instagram @Melinadream. Get ready for my corgi and lots of pictures in big fields, those are my favorite. 

Tag your fall adventure photos with #wildercoast for a chance to be featured in the All In Your Week section. 

As they say on The Moth, I hope you have a story worthy week.

Bracing for the rain that isn't coming

It's another brash blue day here in North Carolina, and it's finally autumn. The trails through Bent Creek and Richmond Hill are soft and slippery with wet leaves as the trees slowly shake themselves bare. 

Mornings are often heavy with clouds and I settle into them, expecting each day for the fog to remain, closing in on the town, blurring the view of the backyard. I keep thinking that one day soon the rain will begin, and the darkness, and it will stay for the rest of the year and for months after. 

But by early afternoon, the mist has burned off, the sun is high, and even though the leaves are dreary and decaying on the ground, each day is bright and blue and warm enough. 

My photos look so different now. The color palate of my entire life has changed- it's become deciduous, sunlight pouring through spring green forests, the white spray of rapids against a light blue sky.  I spent over a decade enveloped in the rich tones of the Pacific coast- dark green and heavy pearl, espresso, mist, a dozen different grays of the sea in the afternoon. Now that October is falling away, I'm bracing for those colors. But they won't come. 

Everything is different now. Look where I used to be. 

Look where I am now.


All in a week

1. hometeam and the lucky lady 2. sunshine Rapid on the Green River 3. arlo misbehaving 4. autumn stroll after work with Erich and Kristen 5. wednesday night ultimate, lately losing a lot 6. inversions at Max Patch with Molly, after this I kicked her in the face 7. meeting Melody Joy for beer and music in Black Mountain 8. tuesday late night silks, learning knee hooks and mid air inversions 9. wet trail and green sunlight 10. one of my favorite Heel Click Around The World outtakes. 

If you like the all in a week photos, follow me on Instagram @Melinadream. Get ready my dog, water, rocks, and anything outside. 

Tag your fall adventure photos with #wildercoast for a chance to be featured in the All In Your Week section. 

Have a happy, active, hyperbolized week everyone, I'll try try and do the same. 

I don't know how to do this when I'm happy

Ay. It's been a long time, hasn't it. I took a hiatus from writing, for excellent reasons. I put away the computer and went off and explored with the dog and a boat and bike.
At first I was thinking a lot about the blog, what it was giving me and what it was taking away from me, but then my thoughts wandered into Bent Creek and got completely lost and I went on without them.
I kept on exploring without a worry, day after day, through this new town laced with rivers, rolling with mountains, criss-crossed with trails, chattering with secret spots and breweries and mysteries and all sorts of new and interesting things.
But then I woke up the other morning, just around dawn, and it was raining. My first thought, still dream muddled, was 'It's raining, I get to write today.' 

I know what to do when it rains. Feeling very at home, I wrapped the quilt around myself and fell back asleep, and when I finally woke up and tumbled down the front porch steps into the day, the rain was gone. The leaves mutely brandished the flame colors of autumn but the weather was as sunny and warm as any summer day in Seattle. 

I'm so far from the Northwest now. I have this ridiculous image of myself in my head: two cartoon legs in a green field, upside down, kicking, the rest of me disappeared into the ground, happily entrenched.

Currently, I am sublimely unbalanced.  My room is a mess, I haven't been to one of the box stores yet to pick out the basic things I couldn't take with me- clothes hangers, for instance. Yonton looks at me sometimes when I'm in the kitchen. "I cannot understand where your spectacular messes come from," he says, cheerfully, "so sometimes I like to observe you."

I was sad one night- one night since I've been in Asheville and the circumstances have since reversed themselves. Yonton made me Halva to comfort me, sesame paste mixed with honey, and after that night I was never sad again.
Our friends were missing in Asia for three days. For us at home it meant three tough nights of lying awake, blinking, trying hard not to let our imaginations get the best of us. I thought too much about the look on my parents face when I was lost for two days, and that was New Hampshire, not Tajikistan. Remember my mom throwing up, my dad weeping, those thoughts make me sick.

Each morning I'd dive head first from the bed to the floor to check my phone for any information. On the fourth morning I found this on the screen, from Charles' best friend Sarah: They all been rescued.

That night we had friends over for dinner, we toasted to the paddlers and to us, and then we went out to a climbing movie and the paddlers, with the exception of the injured, went straight back into that river to keep kayaking.

I have mixed feelings about the whole thing.
I've been boating a little bit too. Erich and Yonton and I drove to Tennessee, to a shady playspot on the Pigeon river. It had been two years since I got in my boat, it was crawling with spiders but the first time I went over I rolled right back up, the muscle memory remains. I suppose when your body figures out a way to go from underwater back into atmosphere, it does not readily forget.

So I went in all confident and excited, got window-shaded and rolled four or five times, surfed long enough to remember I have no idea what to do, I got exhausted underwater, finally flushed out and managed not to swim, although when I finally got upright Yonton was right next to me, ready to pick up my pieces. Those two played in the hole all evening. I decided once was enough.
Just a few days ago, Erich and I went down to the ledges on the French Broad and played around in the eddies. It was seventy degrees, pure sunlight, warm water, class two. It was my lunch hour. We wore nothing but life jackets. It was the day we found out that Charles and Cooper were alive, that there would be another day on the river with Cooper singing all thirteen minutes of Alice's Restaurant Massacre. 
On Saturday the dog and I hiked into the Green River Narrows on a steep trail lined with fixed ropes. We climbed up the boulders on the riverbank and took pictures of our friends running Gorilla. It was shit show, yard sale kind of a day.I watched swim after exhausting, painful, helmet cracking swim, rescue after rescue.

"When are you going to run the Green?" Asked Michael. I answered, "The day I am told that I'm going to die tomorrow of a terminal illness, that's the day I'll run the Green."
And yet.

And yet....there's something about the crush of sunlight and white water.
Later on I got a text from my sister, I'm dead serious if u keep kayaking I will kill you myself. No fucking joke lina.

My sister, it turns out, she doesn't fucking joke around.
We've been spending a lot of nights out in the country, my friends and I. It seems like everybody knows somebody who has a cabin with a screened in porch and a fire pit. The nights are growing a little cooler, finally, and we sit around the flames and play guitar, we make up songs, try to remember country songs, re-write lyrics.
We fall asleep on the ground, or on the porch swing, or on the couch. Wake up in the morning, throw our things in the back of a truck and drive out to Saluda, to someone else's cabin in a clearing in the woods. There is coffee and homemade sausage and grits.

I stare at the grits on my plate. I want to be polite and eat them but I don't know what they are.

I tell my sister I'm not kayaking really, mostly spectating. No crying when someone drowns, she says. She's bitter about the whole scene and I understand. She used to paddle, long before any of us did, part of a tight band of kids in a weird world that became a nightmare, a long and painfully twisted story. She'll never kayak again, never want me to either.

So instead, I've started mountain biking, learning the art of high speed self preservation in the form of hopping off the bike just before the obstacle, walking the steep shit, catching my body as it flies forward on the palms of my hands, elbows bent. I right myself, lean my body against a tree and breath hard, heart ready to explode. I bike with the same person every time, Izaac the fire fighter, currently the furloughed fire fighter.
The government shut down and the firefighters are laid off, right in time for fire season. Izaac explained to me how all the shedding leaves are drying up on the ground and becoming tinder.

Once we went on this trail that was so overgrown that we were just pumping through big fields of thorns. I went as fast as I could, which wasn't too fast because the flowers formed a net holding me back, and the thorns completely shredded my arms and legs. I loved the blood and scratches, loved that I'd been torn up by flowers. We found a turtle and a toad on the trail. We ate BBQ and tubed down the French Broad river to the Bywater, soaking our stinging limbs.
I thought I'd get to writing about that day with all the biking and the BBQ, so quintessential Asheville, but the next day I went out to the orchards with Erich and we passed a few peaceful hours picking apples and throwing them for the dog, and I realized I'd better write about that day, too, because obviously it couldn't get any better.
And that's where I got lost, with the writing. I keep waiting for things to slow down a little bit so I could sit down with a cup of coffee and dutifully record them.

But I don't like coffee anymore. I can't explain it, I just woke up one day and it turned my stomach. And the days aren't slowing down, and they're only getting better. 

Here in Asheville, there's no traffic and no rain, no reason to stay inside. 

So we don't.
It's so easy to move here, in such interesting ways, there's no reason to sit still. So we don't. 
In the evening, exhausted and slightly injured and thirsty, we see no reason not to reward ourselves for such a fine day. So we do. Then a heavy sleep, wake up, and do it all again.
And then one morning I woke up to the rain, to cool, wet air rushing in through the windows. And I got to thinking about how I used to write everything down, how moody the light on the Puget Sound was, with grey clouds sitting heavily over slate water, how simple it was to write and write and write in such a place. 

This blog turned five years old a few weeks ago and I was sitting up in a field somewhere, ignoring it. 

I don't know how to do this when it's always sunny. I don't know how to do this when I feel so happy. But I figured I'd better start to learn.