Camera Roll: Lake Talquin, Quincy, Tallahassee

Today’s perambulations took me from the shores of Lake Talquin, where the wind bringing in the next layer of December cloud cover whipped the water to a hard chop–which is the only way I’ve ever seen Lake Talquin, to be honest–to the crisp winter understory of the Lake Talquin State Forest, where the pines are awaiting the distant spring in silent resignation. State Road 267 then carried me north to Quincy, where the clouds ruined my original plan (I’ll be back another day) but cleared enough for me to grab a few shots of a beautifully-restored Gulf Station on the Old Spanish Trail, US 90. A couple shots in Tallahassee caught my eye in the late afternoon and evening.

Sketch Book: Abandoned House in Cape Sable

Today’s notebook entry is based on this photo of an abandoned house in Cape Sable hosted at Florida Memory. If you’ve never visited Florida Memory, it’s a wonderful resource full of photographs, documents, audio, video, maps, and other gems from the Florida Archive. It’s a bottomless source of inspiration for me as a historian, artist, and information geek.

Based on a 1925 photo in Florida Archives.

St. Johns Meditation

Source: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:St._Johns_River_in_Downtown_Jacksonville_with_John_T._Alsop_Jr._Bridge_-_panoramio.jpg

This is not my photo. Sometimes, at the end of a long day, my mind turns homeward, back to Jacksonville, and I find myself looking at pictures of the river I love. I look out over this river and I see my own history running through the current.

Sometimes memories of my dad’s fishing buddies flow in ripples and eddies on the far shore. One of the waves washes a brief but rich memory over me of riding in the back of a pickup truck, one interminable summer Saturday afternoon, beer cans rolling around the bed, hair tousled and burnt by wind and sun. Over and through countless bridges and marshes we rode to the mouth of the river, where I rolled with languid Atlantic waves on the ocean side of the jetty listening to them talk about work.

Dad’s friend asks me to manage the fishing pole while he walks down the beach for awhile, and I take the rod from him with gravity, eager to stand in the surf with purpose. I feel a tug on the line. A joyous weight pulls against the end of the line and I know the fish is hooked. I let out a little yelp as I reel the fish in from the surf, turn by turn, until I see a silver flash just beneath the roiling surface a few feet away. I did not know then that I would remember that little Whiting 25 years later, so I simply took the fish off of the hook and put her back in the water as I had been taught. Some people say it’s not right to catch a fish and throw it back. I don’t have an answer for them all these years later. This is how I was taught, over and over again, right here on this river.

Later that night I felt the waves in my body as I fell asleep on the couch, the warm tones of a PBS documentary and the struggling air conditioner laying down a pattern of white noise that was suitably oceanic in its own way—a way that continues to whisper home in my ear whenever I stop to listen.

Hurricane Michael

I’ve been back and forth across the panhandle on I-10 this weekend. The destruction, just from the interstate, is unbelievable. Forests along the road are barren of leaves, or flattened as though a malevolent giant swung an enormous dull axe across the landscape. The crowns of giant pine trees hang on precarious strips of bark alongside the trunks from which they were wrenched. Leaves and sawdust and other debris litter the shoulder. Signs have blown away. Billboards hang in tatters. What a mess.

On the bright side, convoys of utility workers, law enforcement, and National Guard soldiers were still making their way west this afternoon to aid people in desperate need. I choked up riding behind a convoy of JEA linemen Friday night, overwhelmed by the kindness of strangers from my hometown heading into the wreckage to bring a measure of peace and comfort to those in need. Coming home this afternoon, I saw JEA trucks on my street, too, and the power is on. What else can I say, but thank you? Thank you! I am ready to help anyone who needs it if I can.