…part one of a two-part epic...
In the northeast corner of the Chico
Quad, Dad had inked a red X. “Some
day, we’re gonna find that place, son,” he said pointing to a mark next to the
words West Branch. (Many of the maps in his collection, I
was to discover, had red marks, including one on South Yola Bolly Peak where he
now rests.)
It was 1969 and dad has his first brand new car new: a
Toyota FJ-40. In it, we set out to
find West Branch. It was to be a
fairly simple exploration, the site not far off route 32 east of Chico. Past Forest Ranch, there’d be a left
turn onto a dirt road of some sort and surely, we’d come right upon it. What “it” was, we weren’t certain. I’d heard through an elderly gentleman
at church named John that there once had been a lumber mill but that not much
was left. I figured we might find
an old teepee incinerator or maybe some scraps of metal.
There being several dirt roads left
of the highway east of Forest Ranch the puzzle turned out have a few more
pieces that originally thought. Throwing
the shiny FJ into low range, Dad would creep up a steep incline to the edge of
a bluff, look at the map, shake his head and creep back down, backwards. Once, I got out and walked along side
hoping he’d not wreck the car I was thinking I would one day inherit.
Finally, we arrived at a spot that looked like it could be
at least near our target. We
parked in what once might have been a clearing. The encroaching woods of alder oak and little pines were
thick. I found traces of what
looked like a graded route now overgrown.
We bushwhacked a ways suffering boughs slaps from low branches and
slippery footing on the slick, needly duff. At a point, Dad looked at the map and shook his head. Backtracking, we found a dip that
traced the side of the ridge. We
marched through brush until we were convinced we were moving away from the red
mark on the map. For the better
part of an hour we circled and connoitered, north and east, along the bluff’s
edge overlooking the canyon, then deep into the forest, then almost back to the
highway, hoping to find a square nail or a rotting piece of lumber buried in
the duff – some evidence of human industry or habitation.
At length, returning to the Toyota, Dad smoothed the map out
over the vehicle’s hood, making sure I watched as he traced various contour
lines. “Looks like we should be
close,” he said, “but, hell, we could be miles off…”
He shrugged. Folding
the quadrangle and as he turned to open the vehicles door, the toe of his boot
lifted a rock from the duff. The
chunk broke away easily, rolling over and exposing the aggregate of which it
was composed.
A laugh escaped.
“What?” I asked.
He kicked through the matting of needles and leaves
uncovering a low stem wall of aging concrete stuck through with an occasional
iron stub.
He’d parked the Toyota inside the foundation of the old West
Branch Mill.
In December 2013,
while archiving Dad’s slides, I discovered the picture that kindled this
memory. I’m thinking there may be
more memories to come…
© 2013
Church of the Open Road Press
Pretty cool story, Mr. Brilliant. Isn't it amazing how quickly nature restores sites like this to "natural?" Keep 'em coming.
ReplyDelete