Low tide, Manomet Bay, Plymouth, MA |
While the Manomet beach front expended most of their fireworks the night before, we got to see what I found much more spectacular. As John helped explain, we sat at the thumb joint of a fist with an index finger curved out in the air. Cape Code bay is an approximate circle 40-50 feet in diameter. From where we sat on the darkening beach, fireworks shows pulsed along the entire horizon. Their base explosions resounded across the Atlantic ocean. Steady beams of bonfires illuminated the peripheral horizon extending from our feet. The moon eventually rose through the center of it all, casting its blood orange beam across the water to our summer fire. The moon rose and grew larger while the famous fireworks of Massachusetts pulsed steady and small at the edge of our world.
We talked about the Fitzgerald, O'Donnell, Fitzpatrick, and Flaherty families. I listened to them banter in a familiar Fitzgerald fashion I could never keep up with. I learned more about the Manomet Conservation Center, originally gifted in pieces from around the world. It was co-founded by a wife who lay headstones for her dogs. As we spoke, the moonbeam inching towards our feet with the tide, it was all washing away. Slowly, but with the same permanence as the bonfires that would disappear by tomorrow morning A grand show before us, and an infrequent, audible peanut gallery of dry bluff eroding behind us.
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Dogwood dream Manomet house. |
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Dream stream downslope from Uncle Mark's cabin. |
Toll road run up Burke Mountain on John's birthday! My kind of road running. |
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Rocks were more common but these ladders up Mount Liberty at least gave a semblance of rhythm. |
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Mount Lafayette. People always tell me they don't run because it hurts their knees. We weren't really running much, but my knees HURT on these rocky trails. |
I was definitely not smiling by the end of this run. John tried to get me to stop and smell some pine needles and I think I just ran by with my claws out. |
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Double fun day with double Fitzcereals! |
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Photos are "worth a thousand words" but they do not describe how sweet Grannie Annie and Gramps are. |
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Last night of our trip, back in Brockton, MA. A couple of Johnny's at Johnny Macaroni. |
Before there was much of anything, there were plenty of fireflies.
"Are you a firefly?" Asked one, looking for a mate.
But it was only a campfire. Few and far between, but cherished for their warmth, cooking abilities, and light.
"Are you a firefly?" He asked again. Not all firefly genders light up so obviously.
But it was only a candle. More common now than the campfire, but cherished for their mobility and brilliant light so luminous that paranoia still mistook it for yesterday's fire.
"Are you a firefly?" He kept trying, lighting his most unique signal.
It was only a porch light, enjoyed for its immobility and everlasting signal of home. Definitely not a firefly.
"Are you a firefly?" He asked again, ready to give up.
But it was only a cell phone screen. Unbelievably cherished for all its cracks and nonsense. It was the first cold light he had even seen, so he'd been easily fooled.
Cold light is 100% efficient and emits no heat with its glow. But the firefly learned that no light was coldest light of all.
"Are you a Lampryinae?" Asked the microscope.
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Good bye beautiful trails. This is a shot from Mount Pisgah near Lake Willoughby in Vermont. One night at home with my Murph dog and shnuggs then the rest of the month in the field for me. |
Beautiful, Hannah! Thanks for sharing a wonderful trip!
ReplyDeleteThe lives you two live - with so much joy! Looking forward to reading more.
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