"No Kings" rally: There was a wonderful, glorious, friendly crowd in Medford yesterday.
Pictures and a report tomorrow.
But what is a person to do if he wants to avoid the crush of other people -- even a friendly crush? He drives out of the city into the higher elevations that surround our valley. He finds a quiet place to enjoy nature in transition from green to yellow leaves, and from brown rock to white snow.
Tam Moore has been doing photojournalism for seven decades.
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Photo from the late 1960s |
Guest Post by Tam Moore
While tens of thousands of people hit the streets of America protesting what’s unfolding in this second Trump administration, my wife and I headed for the Cascade Mountains Saturday.
It’s time to look at the aspen trees as they shed their chlorophyll, carotenoid-laced leaves turning to yellow and orange. Here in Southern Oregon, the show unfolds along state highway 140 from its Cascade summit near Lake of the Woods east to the flats bordering Upper Klamath Lake.
Mount McLoughlin, a steep extinct volcano located about 10 miles north of the lake, keeps watch over the changing forest. Its peak is 9,493 feet above sea level, heaped with rock from the last eruption about 30,000 years ago. Conifers cloak the mountain below its jumble of volcanic rock. When terrain levels, and abundant water exists beneath the surface, families of aspen creep up to joust with the taller pines and fir trees.
Fresh snow dapples the higher peaks. Bright October sun warms the clumps of golden aspen. No one is talking about “hate America rallies,” or how the United States birthed itself, rejecting an autocratic king. It’s a good Saturday to be out in the high country.
The big display of fall color in Southern Oregon takes place less in high-elevation nature than it does in cities, where home landscapers and city arborists planted trees with the intention of getting a splash of bright fall color. In town, at the elevation of 1200 to 1600 feet, we have another week or two to wait for the bright reds and oranges.
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