Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Of Earth and Altar and Lake

Mr. and Mrs. Bread joined us at My Lake for a few days. We canoed and hiked and ate a lot and sat by the fire. On the Lord's Day we sunned ourselves on the deck while singing hymns to The God of Earth and Altar, praising Him for his Wondrous Love that flows Like a River Glorious.


In the top photo you can see on the left margin the brown needles of a dead tree that was the subject of some discussion between Mrs. B. and me.

There's a lot of philosophy and theology in a dead tree, did you know? But I spent so much time doing the nature study while barely tackling the philosophizing, that my time-bucket is empty. Maybe next summer I'll look at it again and write, and figure out what I think.

manzanita



Another dead tree (above), growing out of a hunk of granite that we christened Gumdrop Dome, was more strikingly beautiful. According to G.K. Chesterton, "Anything beautiful always means more than it says." As I was saying....?

A baby manzanita bush was hugging a rock in a most endearing manner. It's amazing how often I find a new and lovable manzanita bush in my view.

One night Mrs. B. was working out on paper what she thought about the meaning of things, as the dinner she crafted for us stewed in the oven, and we all enjoyed the fire her mister had built up to a controlled inferno. The thermometer got up past 60 in the daytime but at night dropped to freezing.

Wax Currant - Ribes cereum
Last year Mrs. Bread and I were roughing it alone up there, without our menfolk. I took more pictures then, though now I am finding that so few images in my Lake collection satisfactorily describe the lake itself. Next trip I'll have to climb to the top of Gumdrop, as I haven't done in years, and get the wide view with my camera. In the meantime, here's a picture we took from there Once.



For me the most blessed part of our stay at the cabin was when Mr. Glad and I paddled our blue canoe for a long time, early in the morning when the surface of the water was smooth. The sky was deep blue, and most of the time the only sound was of our paddles dipping. Peace.

13 comments:

Mark said...

Reading this, I'm there again. Thank you and thank you.

Gumbo Lily said...

What a glorious time celebrating nature and the God who made it all.

DebD said...

it's beautiful, simply beautiful. And your time away seems so relaxing.

Martha said...

I would love to join you on a canoe trip. Looks like a wonderful time...and the cozy fire, smelling the stew.

M.K. said...

I LOVE reading about your trips to the mountains and the lakes. How fun to see it through your eyes! Your friend by the fire -- that's where I would be.

Leslie said...

Sounds like such a lovely and relaxing time. I think I'm envious of your cool temps.

Jeannette said...

Such a lovely post!

margaret said...

You do take lovely photos. And you make me feel quite ashamed of my Italian lakes dotted up and down with espresso places... what would I do with real nature? ;)

Gigi said...

Such beautiful photos of such beautiful country!

walking tours nyc said...

I truly love those images! Absolutely amazing.

Cathy said...

You make it come alive with your words. I would love to see your part of the country ( I know I have said that before). You ended it well...Peace.

Sara at Come Away With Me said...

It's been too long since I've visited your blog and now I'm catching up a little bit. I love the Chesterton quote on this post! I must remember that one. And the thought of paddling a canoe in the early morning over the smooth, glassy water sounds divine to me, in every possible way.

Unknown said...

Except now you've made me positively impatient for summer. (sigh)

I haven't heard that GKC quote before- thank you for sharing it with me!