QUICKSILVER

A Fall Ride in the Redwoods - November 2001
The trails near Woodside are a mix of redwoods
and manzanita, a deep quiet where
the hooves of your horse give a hollow
beat from the ground as you travel over
the single track trails cut from the side
of the hills. I'm riding with
someone who grew up here 45 years ago and
hasn't been on these trails for 25
years.
Now there are yuppie joggers and hikers,
new trails with solitary hikers and
large groups - with accents from
the UK to the Far East - from our East
to the heartland to native California.
Memories are brought out - she says that's
where my Dads horse went over the
edge and had to be hauled out by rope from
another horse. That's were my horse
dumped me at age 7 and my father came from
home to find me. Here's were we found
the cold watermelons in the stream and
"borrowed" one. I used to ride out
here all the time on my first horse.
You compare the distances to what we
do today as endurance riders but you still
think it was a lot...
You start out on a long uphill that gets
the horses warmed up - several miles
of nice open road that just keeps going
on and up. The air smells fresh and
cool - the sun is coming through the tall
trees and spreading light that you might
see in an old cathedral. Moss is
growing on all sides of the trees showing
that it's not going to help you find North
if you get lost. The trees give off
a smell you never find in our cities.
You're really not out for endurance conditioning
but it happens anyway. You
do all the things you would normally do
- nice long steady trots, walk the
downhills, try to get them to drink early
in the ride with no success, take
a break where you might have had a vet
check, certainly trot all the uphills
and don't let them sneak into a canter.
You say hello to everyone - slow to a walk
- when you meet those less fortunate
hikers who don't get to be on these spirited
Arabians. Everyone says "what
beautiful horses" - you agree and are glad
to be out there on one of the last
days in the fall. In one little girls
eyes - you see her hearts desire showing
through for one of these Arabians.
You pass old burnt out redwoods with new
ones rising out of their black charred
stumps. The new rises out of the old and
the forest renews itself. You wonder
what memories the old redwoods have of
the mountains and all the life that
has passed through here.
Yet just a few miles away bisecting Interstate
280 - you passed a straight -
miles long - building where the Stanford
Linear Accelerator peers into the depths of
the atomic world. It looks at the
future and the redwoods look to the past.
They both have meaning for us today on
our horses.
The trails turn to "kneeknockers" with nice
turns that you lean into as your
horse takes them like a four footed grey
sports car. He seems to like them even better
than you do. He's sure-footed and
never gets your knees as you drift through some
of the turns and switchbacks. You
feel like you could do this forever...
You also remain convinced that Arabians
can see parts of the spectrum we cannot.
They see shapes and things that we will
never be able to see but they protect us
even if we can't see them...
We ride along roads with big houses and
small houses hidden in the woods. Most
have their American flag out at the gate.
Again Sept. 11 is with us wherever
we go - and always will be.
Looking at the hills toward the ocean -
we see a dark blue fog rolling in with the
coming storm. It smells like rain
to come - but different than that of
the thunderstorms of my heartland youth
- more like the sea.
Given the coming rain - we're happy we got
in this ride in the last of the fall.
Seeing the redwoods again and thinking
back on the memories of many years ago
on these trails - she says - perhaps
you can go back - if you're on a horse.
Mike