In those days there was lots to eat, but they destroyed it. They used to get game easily, but Coyote and Wolf made it hard to get food. Wolf went hunting. He was going to hunt groundhogs. He went and stood under a rock cliff. He said, "Rocks, come after me,’ and all groundhogs came down to him. Then he killed what he thought would be enough for a meal and went home. Coyote was his brother. He was home, and he asked him, “How do you kill so many like that? Then Wolf told him how he did it. Coyote thought he would try. He did what his brother had told him and got many groundhogs. Then he ate them, and afterwards he stood there and said the same thing again. Then all rocks rolled down after him. That's how Coyote spoiled easy hunting.
—Daisy Brown, told in her Northern Paiute language, Summer 1930, Fort Bidwell, Surprise Valley, CA. Interpreter: Nora Henderson. [1] [2]Rock Art Oregon
Considering contemporary landscapes and our visible surroundings with an eye to the invisible: rock art, signs, murals, markings, expressions, and random impressions.
02 February 2026
Groundhog Day: In rock rim country
20 January 2026
Flowering Earth
"The extreme temperatures of 2023, 2024 and 2025 will be seen as cooler than average in just a few years. Continued fossil-fuel emissions are rapidly resetting what the world considers normal."
—Samantha Burgess, European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service
‘New Climate Reports Show ‘Unprecedented Run of Global Heat’
https://insideclimatenews.org/news/13012026/multiple-reports-show-2025-extreme-global-heat/
02 January 2026
The Stone Verdict
Nothing magnificent, nothing unknown.
A gazing out from far away, alone.
Just old truth dawning: there is no next-time-round.
Unroofed scope. Knowledge-freshening wind.
—Seamus Heaney
Air spanned, passage waited, the balance rode,
Nothing prevailed, whatever was in store
Witnessed itself already taking place
In a time marked by assent and by hiatus.
—Seamus Heaney
NOTE
—Petroglyphs, stone, lichen, stains, rock varnish — discrete galaxies in constant change. Eastern backslope of Abert Rim, Lake County, Oregon. 2025
Seamus Heaney selections:
—top: from the poem Lightning in Seeing Things (1991)
—above: from Settings, XIV, in Seeing Things
—below: from The Stone Verdict in The Haw Lantern (1987)
Irish poet Seamus Heaney (1939-2013) was awarded the Nobel in Literature in 1995.
CODA
from The Stone Verdict
Let it be like the judgement of Hermes,
God of the stone heap, where the stones were verdicts
Cast solidly at his feet, piling up around him
Until he stood waist-deep in the cairn
Of his own absolution: maybe a gate-pillar
Or a tumbled wallstead where hogweed earths the silence
Somebody will break at last to say, 'Here
His spirit lingers,' and will have said too much.
14 December 2025
Rock Varnish
The extraordinary patience of things!
—Robinson Jeffers
In particular I will mention Rock Varnish.
Carving, hammering, abrading — the making of petroglyphs — interacts with layers of being and becoming by cutting through. To reveal. From within and through a thin “patina” layer the rock-art design motif emerges.
This rock varnish, compounded by dust or clay adhering to stone, accumulates and concentrates manganese and iron. The characteristic rich blacks, browns, reds of exposed basalt. Cyanobacteria find a home here as do a variety of micro-fungi. Tiny lichen often complicate this living surface. A microcosm of Gaia.
Time stands still having no place else to go, rather here, deposited, metallic sheen glistening in the slow eye of duration.
The English words rock and varnish yearn to grasp this living changing realm. Yet the petroglyph as action, as image, transforms our understanding of formation. The inspirited expanse of the matrix. Earth matter. A marked language decipherable with guess and luck in the context of changing light and weathers. Allowing for a certain grace of presence.
CODA
As for us:
We must uncenter our minds from ourselves;
We must unhumanize our views a little, and become confident
As the rock and ocean that we were made from.
—Robinson Jeffers, Carmel Point
Photos: Douglas Beauchamp, Oregon's Northern Great Basin; High Lakes region
26 November 2025
Snowfall High Lakes Country
simplifying what we saw.
The atmosphere began to hibernate
into the realm of hypothesis.
—Luljeta Lleshanaku
A Last Look Back
Things change behind my back.
The starting snow I was just watching
has escaped into the past.
Well, not the past, but the part of the world
that surrounds the moment at hand.
That's why, whenever I see
animal tracks in a light snow like this,
I think of footnotes.
So strange, to inhabit a space
and then leave it vacant, standing open.
Each change in me is a stone step
beneath the blur of snow.
In spring the sharp edges cut through.
When I look back, I see my former selves,
numerous as the trees.
—Chase Twichell
NOTES
—Luljeta Lleshanaku. trans from Albanian by Shpresa Qatipi from the poem Over the Icy Magma of Your Gray Curiosity, in her collection Fresco (2002)
—Chase Twichell, A Last Look Back from her collection The Snow Watcher (1998)


























