Autumn

Lake Winnebago, Wisconsin

Out of the American Southwest, we aimed for the northern woods to witness autumn. Fall in Arizona is much like springtime in Arizona and not too distant from the conditions of winter. To differentiate seasons in the desert, one only needs to consider the temperature. If it’s above 90, you are moving in or out of Summer; everything else is simply the rest of the year. Through our travels and reading, we have come to be aware of the leaf peeper phenomenon. Leaf peeping is the act of venturing into the natural landscape to participate in the act of witnessing foliage change color. It is true we have some deciduous trees changing color in the mountainous areas of Arizona, but those leaves turn yellow, gold, and finally brown. Vibrant reds, vivid oranges, and fluorescent yellows must be seen where an abundance of maples grows. And so it was that we followed our inner geekiness on a pilgrimage to the forests of Wisconsin and Michigan with the hope we might catch prime leaf-peeping season before high winds and a freeze stripped the trees bare.

Fond du Lac, Wisconsin

And so, with the break of dawn and the crazy idea that we should make it to Michigan today, which is about 450 miles away according to the route up U.S. Highway 45 that we’re eyeballing, we’ll have to keep gawking at the sights to a minimum as if that were possible.

Lake Winnebago, Wisconsin

Lake Winnebago and the surrounding tributaries were our first stumbling blocks out of the gate. What the photos can’t share is the lovely sound of flocks of geese overhead, heading to warmer climes down south.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Somewhere along the way, we passed through Oshkosh, Wisconsin. This is not Oshkosh.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

If this doesn’t sing fall to you, nothing will.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

I can assure you that they weren’t speeding, but they might have been gobbling.

New London, Wisconsin

This is no longer the City Hall for New London, Wisconsin, on Route 45; I just can’t believe a new building could be cooler than this.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

After a couple of teases yesterday, it’s looking ever more promising that the colors we’d hoped for are on big display and that we will not have to worry about finding disappointment.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

And then there was this: wtf? Who thinks these are in good taste? From my perspective, they are racist figures, and while I’m well aware that racism is alive and well across the breadth of the United States, I still prefer not to see this; then again, when we are in the South, I just know we’re going to see the rebel flag down that way. Funny how, after World War II, the German government made swastikas and images of Hitler illegal, but we can’t do something like that right here…oh yeah, freedom of speech and all that.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

If I were only in Phoenix for a week, the cinderblocks and beige everything would be experienced as an overwhelming scream of conformity, but as I live there month to month, year to year when I can get far away from that sterility, my eyes and senses demand I soak in as many old homes, barns, streams, wooden churches, and unfenced yards as I can.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

The desert bakes this scene out of your imagination. The very idea that water just flows in random places and not because it was dammed further upstream or that it’s been raining, but it’s just here boggles the mind.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

It seems that a trip for us must now have at least some dirt road; maybe this is one of the key signs of looming perfection.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Many more of these detours, and we won’t be getting to our next destination until it’s good and dark, not that that would be a first.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Getting back on the road…

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

…only to find another moment of distraction.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Of course, I had to stop to photograph this old Ford truck sinking into the earth and being eaten by the weeds. Gives meaning to Found On Road Dead.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Should you have some kind of PTSD from the leaves of fall because you’ve grown up somewhere you had to clean them away or suffer from some other kind of trauma related to an abundance of leaves, you might want to skip the next days of blogging.

Somewhere on Highway 45 in Wisconsin

Nature’s fireworks explode right in front of us.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Here we are, entering the Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction because we needed a nice break out of the car, and walking around a lake sounded like a therapeutic jaunt that would stretch these legs.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Wow, curling bark! This is the most beautiful curling bark I think I’ve ever seen.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

But John, didn’t you say you had to temper these jaunts else you’d arrive late in that place you are supposed to get to this evening? Yeah, but there’s some nature out here begging us to explore.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Those famous words are coming back…as above, so below.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Mmmm, is that a yummy squirrel snack we spy you noshing on?

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Hey, hey, you humans, you got snacks?

Caroline Wise on the Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

This is a human squirrel scurrying through nature, hunting for visual treats. The orange hands are indicative of the female of the species.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Like dirt roads that must be taken, a visit to the forest would be incomplete without mushrooms.

Fallison Lake Nature Trail near Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

A tree felled by a beaver is certainly not something we see very often. I could stare at those impressions left by the beaver’s teeth for a long time and try to imagine its vigilance in bringing it down one scrape at a time. That’s some serious power put to work in order to harvest dam parts.

Quinn Motel in Ironwood, Michigan

It’s almost 14 hours after we left Fond du Lac this morning that we pull up to the kind of motel we want to afford. We’re in Ironwood, Michigan, just across the border from Wisconsin, and Quinn’s is offering us an overnight stay for only $30! We couldn’t resist and couldn’t care less about the condition of the room as long as we had a dry place to sleep.

Midwest Vacation

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Lake Michigan in northern Illinois

Flew into Chicago today, rented a car, and drove north as fast as we could. The first stop and the official beginning of vacation was right here on Lake Michigan.

Snake in Northern Illinois by Lake Michigan

Dude, we’re from out west where snakes have rattles, letting us know to stay away; your posing is not getting the results you desire. Smile for the camera. [The way I remember it, we actually did hear a rattle, but that must have been all in my head because after researching local snake photos, I came to the conclusion that this little fellow was a fox snake and nonvenomous – Caroline]

Caroline Wise standing in Lake Michigan in northern Illinois

After our lakeside stop that allowed Caroline to dip her feet in the waters of Lake Michigan, we continued north.

Caroline Wise and John Wise entering Wisconsin

Happy faces of happy people entering the state of Wisconsin. Due to this now being a last-minute trip without the typical travel planning, I only just had today’s itinerary figured out in a spreadsheet, and even that was hardly a schedule as much as it was a note for a single destination. Due to my stay in Santa Barbara in September (to help with a family emergency) and the uncertainties surrounding dates there, I hadn’t been able to return to the itinerary, so this will be a relatively spontaneous adventure following the road that takes us forward, but first, we must head for Milwaukee and take a sharp right turn west.

Caroline Wise at Jimmy's Grotto in Waukesha, Wisconsin

Jimmy’s Grotto in Waukesha was on my radar for their famous Ponza Rotta deep-fried pizza. I’d caught wind of this place on some radio show on NPR, I believe, but wherever it was, I heard about the brilliance of deep-frying a pizza; we were here right now for our first encounter. But was it worth it? No question!

Wisconsin

The rest of the day was spent driving through Wisconsin farmland on our way to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

Wisconsin

This is just the reason we wanted to be here in this corner of America in late September or early October…we’re joining the herd of leaf peepers.

Wisconsin

Oh yeah.

Wisconsin

Having arrived mid-day in Chicago, we were not going to get far, nor did we want to, as then we’d miss the countryside, so we only went as far as Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and called it a night.

Blue Dragon

Blue dragonfly in Santa Barbara, California

Indulging myself with the new lens I was on the prowl looking to take photos that previously were out of reach. Funny thing is that when you don’t have the tool to do the job right it seems opportunities arise constantly, reducing you to wistfully fantasize that someday you’ll be properly equipped. When that day arrives and you find yourself confident to go forward and tackle those objects which had previously been outside of your reach, they cannot be found. And that is how I found myself with my new lens: I was ready to shoot but little showed itself to my discerning eye. Where was that grizzly now? Ok, a wetland in Santa Barbara probably wasn’t the best location for tracking bears, but how about a dazzling bird, or a fluttering butterfly? Then in an instant there it was, a beautiful giant blue dragonfly zipping by.

Update: Somewhere just a few days after this with Uncle Woody at home and a rehabilitation therapist visiting on a regular basis, I’m assured that things will be okay and that I can return to Arizona. I’ll have just enough time to get ready for our fall trip to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan for you guessed it, fall colors and some leaf-peeping.

Briefly

Caroline Wise in Santa Barbara, California

Here she was and just as quickly gone again.

Heron in Santa Barbara, California

Sunday morning and another five-hour visit to the sea.

Heron in Santa Barbara, California

Caroline and I tried to spend as much of our time together as we could find. It is by now going on a month since coming to Santa Barbara and the end is not yet in sight.

Great white heron at the Goleta Slough near Santa Barbara, California

Next week, on the 4th, we are supposed to take a vacation up in Michigan, but, as of this moment, that is one big uncertainty. As evening rolled around, Caroline and I made our way back down south to Burbank for her to catch a flight back to Arizona – sigh.

Fly in

Egret in Santa Barbara, California

Last night, Caroline flew in and landed in Burbank, California, where I picked her up and whisked her away up to Santa Barbara.

Caroline Wise in Santa Barbara, California

It’s been nearly two weeks since last I saw her although it feels like months.

Pelican in Santa Barbara, California

This morning, we arose early to catch a sunrise at the beach; we had to imagine the sunrise behind the foggy daylight.

Grey Plover in Santa Barbara, California

The next five hours were spent walking in the sand, sitting in the fog, watching the birds, and listening to the surf.

Kayakers in the fog in Santa Barbara, California

Being together, that’s all that mattered.

Birds and the Broken Hip Repair

Pelican in Santa Barbara, California

Guess who’s flying in tonight? Nope, not another pelican, it’s my wife Caroline!

Pelican in Santa Barbara, California

Yep, it’s worth raising your wings and celebrating.

Heron in Santa Barbara, California

Meanwhile, this is me just waiting around as the evening can’t arrive soon enough.

Curlew in Santa Barbara, California

This sure beats Phoenix for things to photograph but I wonder if I’d get bored here after taking 100,000 images of the coast?

Black Skimmers in Santa Barbara, California

By now you might recognize their profile, more of those black skimmers coming in low.

Santa Barbara, California

Tranquility out in the bay.

Pelican in Santa Barbara, California

Every direction I look, things are beautiful.

Black Skimmers in Santa Barbara, California

I’m guessing they got their fill out on those calm waters.

Xray of my great uncle's hip now held together with a titanium pin after a fall which broke his 84-year-old hip

It’s been fifteen days since Uncle Woody broke his hip and today was his appointment with the surgeon who performed the repair. The doctor showed us the x-rays of my uncle’s new titanium rod permanently attached to the thighbone and screwed into the broken head also known as the ball, that is held in the hips socket joint. He told us the hip was healing slowly and that my uncle would continue to be restricted to 50% weight bearing to ensure the bone securely heals around the screw, since if that screw were to break through the ball my uncle would feel the sort of pain that would make the break seem minor. So it was now obvious that I would be staying on in Santa Barbara for an indeterminate amount of time before my uncle would regain his mobility and once again live at home independently. Hopefully, I’m just being pessimistic. Time to drive down to Burbank to pick up Caroline.