A Handful of the Random:

My friends, I’m mad for the lentils lately.  They make such nice additions to salads. Let me show you what I’ve been whipping up:

Ingredients:  green lentils, red cabbage, currants, red onion, almond slices, olive oil, raspberry champagne vinegar, cracked pepper, salt and cumin.  SO SCRUMPTIOUS!  I make a huge batch so we can eat it for dinner, lunch and dinner again.

Here it is on a bed of spinach with a side of cubed and roasted portobello mushrooms.  Are you drooling?  I am.

I found a banged up bird, a whippoorwill, I think.  I held it for a moment and then left it at the roots of a wild rose to meet its maker in peace and solitude.  Poor thing.  I’ve wanted to see one of these birds up close for a long while.  At night, when I am driving back to the cabin through thick forest, I’ll see these feathered fellows hunkered down on the road and I always think I’m going to drive over them!  But at the last moment, they flutter up like enormous moths , beat the dusty haze of my headlights with their wide wings, and disappear into the dark.  Truly mystical little birds that seem part tweeter, part owl and part toad.  I’m glad I was able to see this one up close.

Does anyone know?  IS it a whippoorwill?

It’s been hotter than a snakes rump in a wagon rut here.  Like, HOT, hot.  I want to spend each and every moment in the river or at the lake.  The past three weeks of my life have been merrily devoured by three batches of cabin guests.  My first friend to visit is South Carolinan and she has a sensitive and intelligent heart.  It was my first time meeting her!  I fell in love.  Another friend who was here visiting is a best friend of mine whom I have known since grade seven.  We are exactly the same and directly opposite.  We are sort of dark and light versions of each other.  You’d have to see us together to fully understand.  It was such a relief to be with her.  My connection with her is so simple, direct and electric.  My third batch of people was comprised of a girlfriend (and fire wife) from Idaho with her two blondo baby girls.  They just left this morning and I miss them sorely already.  Gosh.  How lucky am I?  Robert and I tend to live in remote places and I always feel blessed when people are willing to make the trip to see us where we are.

I was fishing with Robbie on the Twisp River a few days ago and I had the largest cutthroat trout of the day on my line.  He kept telling me that my casting was looking incredible which, naturally, made my heart feel like it was going to burst with pride. I told him, “You’re never around to fish with and I’ve been practicing on all the alpine lakes!”  I put out some smokin’ beautiful lines across fast moving mountain water and deserved that cutthroat, boy howdy.  I think river fishing is difficult.  I’m terribly lucky that I’ve been able to watch Rob work fast moving water with his rod for so many years now.

Lastly, I am the girl who is running a small business with the help of the free wifi connection at the Twisp public library.  Yup.  That girl upstairs by the houseplants?  That’s me.  The connection is so fast here I don’t know why I didn’t think of this sooner.  What was taking me a day and a half to do is now taking me 30 seconds.  I am so thankful for this internet connection.  I cannot even tell you how thankful I am.  It’s like my sanity has been restored.  I’ll be traveling in to town with my computer and thumb drive twice a week to do serious computer work.  It’s good to finally be back in the saddle.  Thank you all a thousand times over for being such patient little crawdads.  Things are going to hopefully and truly move at a more normal speed from now on.

I can’t believe how rapidly the month of July has trickled through my fingers.  Where did it go?  August looms.  I’m looking forward to settling into work for three solid weeks and finding a little rhythm in this new month and then a Willie Nelson concert in Boise at the end of the month with my darlin’ baby sister!

Did you see the moon last night?  It shot up through the gap at the end of our little hanging valley and I wanted to spend the entire night howling my heart out at it.

What a beautiful world we live in.

What a beautiful world.

xx

:::Post Scriptus:::

Look at this guy’s images from the fire line.  Perfectly photo journalistic.  Utterly inspiring.

And, on a night when there’s a full moon and your heart feels haunted, hear Daughter.

Comments

  1. Love the new header photo! You and your blog inspire me to go camping! So this weekend I am finally making it happen . . . love!!

    • Yeah, girl!
      Get out there!!!
      Have a beautiful time.
      Don’t even set up a tent. I never do. I just sleep out. It’s the best way to see the stars. XX

  2. Aimee Charbonneau says

    I think the bird is actually a poor will, not a whip-poor-will. They’re in the same family. But I’m pretty sure whip-poor-wills are only more eastern birds. Poor wills are western. Hard to tell for sure from the photos, but if you look in a bird book, both the head and the tail have defining features that might help you out.

    Love love LOVE your blog.

  3. and what a great handful of random it is. it looks like a whippoorwill, but to be honest i’m not familiar. incredible find – even if it may not have survived, at least you got to spend some fragile last moments admiring its beauty.

    • Totally. Last year, I would have brought this one home and tried to save it. I get so sad when I lose them though…I get so hopeful…such tender loving, fragile, precious moments when I find them broken. Yes. X

  4. I love lentils too! How extraordinary to share your life amongst the pines with such good friends. It makes for an amazing adventure for all parties doesn’t it. Thanks for sharing your bits of random. Your posts are inspiring.

  5. bless your tender heart: you da best. and i send you all my alpine hinterland love.

    xx

  6. Willie Nelson=secret boyfriend….!
    So happy to see this little bit of random-ness and your shiny soul!
    besos,K

  7. What beautiful little snippets Jillian, thank you. And how do you manage to find every darlin’ little bird with a hitch in his wings to rescue?

    I saw that NPR article and thought of you and RW straight away. Beautiful work he does, your man too.

    Xoxo,
    Cathy

  8. Hi Jillian:
    Being a birder, amongst other things(!), I looked up the bird for you. It is a Common Poorwill. The behaviour you described is noted in my guide book! It’s too bad the little fellow was injured, but that is an experience of a lifetime to be able to hold one of them. All those years I lived (and birded) in BC I never did manage to see one!

    Love the photos of the snake as well. Keep up the good work!! 🙂

    All the best,
    Valerie

  9. I love your math problems (firstly). Just noticed the header photo and love that one too (secondly). Love the recipe (thirdly). Glad you are sharing these colorful recipes. I don’t like food a lot unless it is colorful…truth is that I wish I could develop a taste for dry cat food. What a weird bird (fourthly). Nice that you have visitors… July has slipped and that has made me sad but I don’t think about it…what a relief you have internet connection…enjoy the hot summery days…I have a full day of work on my plate and happy about it.

    xx

  10. Aimee & Valerie — Thanks for helping out with my bird query! I debated between poor will and whippooorwill… 🙂 Glad for your input!

  11. I also wanted to add, about the poor will, that it had the most incredibly wild plumage I have ever seen on a wild bird. It looked like lichen covered douglas fir tree bark. Feathers wilder than grouse feathers! SO BEAUTIFUL!

  12. I’m chiming in with poorwill, although others have already. Whippoorwills are closely related, but Eastern. I too wanted to remark on the beauty of this little bird’s plumage…and her amazing eyes! Also, the photos of the snake are marvels.

  13. Amazing photographs! The whippoorwill is adorable, if in fact that is who he is. I don’t know enough about Western birdies to make a guess. Poor dear. 🙁

    I love the bright light teal color you wear in the bottom photographs- so delicate and the cut of the top is so fun. The snake, oh my, how did you get that shot? Fantastic!!

    Lentils are on my to try list – I need more culinary adventures lately!! Enjoy the cool water in that crazy heat. We have a tiny cool spot here alongside the Appalachians.

  14. Roasted Portobellos?!!!! Duh, why did I never try that? I just got some HUGE ones at the market the other day…If it cools off enough out here I’ll give roasting a try, but it’s been strictly grilling only this week. I can’t stand turning the stove on when its this hot outside!

  15. Libraries are the best are’nt they. I’ve become quite dependant on their printers and copymachine as I don’t have have ( can also be read as I don’t want) them at home.
    So am happy that you’ve got the internet stuff worked out it’s always such a joy to find your newest post.
    And I think likewise with you. This is a truly beautiful world we live in, there can be beauty found in everything and everywhere even the places where hope has almost deserted.

    • Ah!
      A fellow library user!
      You know, I am dedicated to NOT amassing a mound of new belongings every six months and this summer and have been doing what I can to not buy lots of stuff. When we arrived in the Methow for the season, I nabbed a library card. I haven’t used a library consistently since we lived in Alaska and I fell in love with the system all over again. The library here is wonderful. And I have a share in it, I mean, as a taxpayer, I am part owner of the library here! I like to think of it that way…and put it to good use, since I am helping to pay for it.

      Yes.
      Beauty everywhere.
      X

  16. You always capture such stunning beauty!

  17. Dear Jillian,
    I want to recommend a book to you – if you haven’t come across it already. It’s an artist’s meditation on color, basically, but so much more. It’s called The Anthropology of Turquoise, by Ellen Meloy. I think you might like it.

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