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Edges Like Sea Glass

By Leah LaRocco

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Bruno Mars & Judy Collins: A Case Of Musical Era Whiplash

August 22, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

On Saturday I had the rare opportunity to go watch Bruno Mars and his band do a sound check.  It was pretty awesome, I’m not gonna lie.  They have “sound check parties” where they sing any song that isn’t a Bruno Mars song, so they took requests from the group.  James Brown, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beyonce (won’t tell you who that was), they even nailed Bohemian Rhapsody.  The band is incredible.  The musicianship of these guys is ridiculous on so many levels.  They wrote most of the songs on the album together, they play a show using no tracks.  Bruno played several of the instruments on the album.  They met years ago along the way and are a tight, cohesive band that would make any pop star green with envy.  They answered a question from each person in our group and by the end of the sound check we were all completely smitten like a bunch of drugged puppies.  We talked to one of the band members who co-wrote Treasure with Bruno.  He told us the day they wrote the song he had sprained his ankle and was in tons of pain and had to run to the store to get a cane when Bruno called and said he wanted to write.  Lesson learned: don’t pass up any opportunities that come your way.  We were so impressed with not just the professionalism and musical caliber, but the kindness of everyone in the camp.

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Rob and I went to the show that night which was fabulous.  The entertainment factor was off the charts.  There was video, pyro, lights, and lots of dancing.  There were enough sweat-soaked, bulging muscles to make any woman pass out cold, and those guys made love to everything on that stage by the end of the night.  All of that was great, but it was the singing that blew me away.

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At one point in the night Rob asked me if I thought anyone would come to a show like this if it was just Bruno and the band onstage without all the technology and crazy lights.  I can safely say I believe they would.  I left that show and thought to myself, “Thank God I live in Nashville and can experience music like this.”

Which brings me to tonight.  I left the house at 7:30 and walked to the Franklin Theatre where a true icon of the 60s was playing.  Judy Collins: no fancy lights, no pyro, no video.  Just her, a 12 string guitar, and a piano.

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I was the youngest person in the place by at least 20 years, easy.  This willowy woman walked onto the stage with long silvery hair flowing behind her, stood at the mic, opened her mouth, and enchanted every person in the room.  She sang Both Sides Now, Joni Mitchell’s song that she sang over the phone to Judy before anyone knew her name.  She told stories, they poured out of her.  I don’t ever think I’ve been to a show where the artist talked so much, but this woman has so many stories inside of her, she can’t contain them all.  She talked about New York in the 60s, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, all these songwriters she used to hang with.  Her best line of the night was, “If you remember the 60s, you weren’t there.”  She talked about getting drunk with friends (a lot) and hearing Dylan writing songs in the middle of the night after a party.  She told stories, she sang snippets of songs, giving us just a taste of an old folk song, or just a sound byte of something her father sang to her when she was a girl…half the time she sang with nothing behind her, letting her voice carry the story.

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During the second half of the show she sang folk songs on the piano that made your heart cry, she stood up and sang Send In The Clowns and I nearly wept from the beauty of it.  Then she closed with Amazing Grace, no instruments, just that beautiful, melty voice, singing a hymn in the Bible belt, letting old ladies harmonize off key with her.  My heart was inspired.  I walked home through the humid summer evening so thick I practically swam through it, and once again, “Thank God I live here so I can experience music like this.”

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I struggle sometimes with living here because so often I feel like a fish out of water, this place doesn’t always feel like home, but the blessings I have here, the dreams that have come true for me in unexpected ways,  remind me that this is where I’m supposed to be.  I miss the water most.  I miss standing and looking out at the waves and feeling small, overwhelmed by the utter beauty of it.  I felt that same feeling when I was in the Rocky Mountains last month.  And every time I go to a concert, that feeling comes over me in the same way.  I’m a beauty junkie.  Music, scenery, flowers, lovely things touch my soul.  I think God gives me these moments because he knows I can only survive so long without them.  So even though my heart is where the ocean is, my heart is also where music is, and music is here.

Filed Under: Thoughts On Life Tagged With: Franklin, music

Rocky Mountain National Park Wildflowers

August 12, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

Since July is peak wildflower season in the Rocky Mountains, we constantly found ourselves saying how pretty all the flowers were, immediately followed by, “I wonder what it’s called.”  So I took pictures of what I could and found this awesome wildflower website with names and images of the flowers in the region.  I learned from reading the RMNP website that many of the plants in the tundra are decades old.  It said that a four inch pincushion plant might be 50 years old and a tiny flower could have a root system reaching over three feet underground.  No wonder there were tons of signs telling us to stay off the tundra!

We saw many more that I didn’t take pictures of, but these were some of the most common ones we came across.  I truly believe that much of their beauty is derived from their environment, that they can grow in the most unlikely of circumstances and put on a show that only lasts a short time.  I looked up tons of pictures to try to identify these flowers and based the identification on the picture match and the environment we saw them in (alpine, subalpine, montane, dry, wet).  Some of the yellow ones were very hard to distinguish.  If you notice an error, please let me know in the comments!

One Sided Penstemon
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Fireweed
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Fireweed
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Narrow Leaved Paintbrush
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Yellow Pondlily, Waterlily
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Goldenrod
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Red: Narrow Leaved Paintbrush   Yellow: Goldenrod   Purple: Aspen Daisy
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Red: Narrow Leaved Paintbrush   Yellow: Goldenrod   Purple: Aspen Daisy
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Mountain Harebell
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Narrow Leaved Paintbrush
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Dusky Beardtongue
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Elephantella
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American Bistort
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Yarrow
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Yellow: Snow Buttercup
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Yellow Saxifrage
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Alpine Avens
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Tufted Phlox
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Moss Campion
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Alpine Sandwort
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Tansy Aster
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Mountain Blue Bells
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Western Yellow Paintbrush
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Alpine Avens
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King’s Crown
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Burgundy: King’s Crown    Blue: Mountain Blue Bells
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Alpine Avens or Snow Buttercups
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Elephantella
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Shrubby Cinquefoil
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Wild Geranium
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Thistle
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 Yellow Evening Primrose
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Nodding Onion
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Western Wallflower
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Blue Leaf Cinquefoil
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Large Yellow: Galardia   Background Yellow: Sulphur Flower
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Yellow: Shrubby Cinquefoil   White: Smooth White Aster
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Silvery Lupine
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July is the perfect time of year to visit the Rocky Mountain National Park.  The flowers cover the landscape, dot the fields and tundras with splashes of color.  The amazing thing about many of the flowers we saw is that many of them are not located in Tennessee, so this trip was a treasure.

 

Filed Under: Hiking, Travel Tagged With: Rocky Mountains, Travel, Wildflowers

Rocky Mountain National Park: Day 3 Of The Alpine Adventures, Trail Ridge Road At Dusk

July 25, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

Today there was a very high chance of rain in the afternoon, so Ashley and I headed to Boulder to the Celestial Seasonings Tea Factory and took our tea-loving selves on their free tour.  It was pretty great, but we were having major RMNP withdrawal so we quickly headed back to Estes Park in the rain.  The rain ended at around 5 pm so we headed back to the park with the thought of, “Oh, we’ll just go see the Sheep Lakes meadow in the evening.” So we got the meadow and were like, what the heck, let’s just keep going.

So we kept going and came to a fork in the road.  Should we do Trail Ridge Road again?  Is that crazy?  I mean, you only live once, so why not?!  So we turned right at the fork and headed upwards once again.  We got the first overlook and the whole landscape was shot through with light.  The shadows played on the precipices, the trees took on a whole new green, and the landscape changed before our eyes as the sun began to set.

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We headed up to the next overlook, Rainbow Curve.  Should we go higher?  I mean, why not go all the way to the tundra?  Do we have enough time?  Sure, why not?!  So we headed straight up the Tundra Communities Trail aka Rock Cut.  It took about 10 minutes to get there and there were hardly any other cars on the road.  We got to the lookout and there were a few other cars parked with people looking over the ledge where the pikas and marmots were sunning themselves yesterday.  We peak over the ledge and holy cow, the herd of bighorn sheep we’d seen yesterday were right there, about 20 feet away!!!

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This was awesome considering the fact that we were told they aren’t seen too often.  The wind was icy, cutting right through us as we stood there, in July, freezing our butts off to look at these amazing creatures.  They were like, yeah, whatever, this is where we live, chomp chomp.  I read on the RMNP website that the sheep’s horns weigh more than all the bones in its body combined.  Bighorn indeed!  The moment was so special, the fading light, rays of sun shooting through the clouds, shadows shifting, and sheep grazing.  The marmots and pika were still hanging out, making their little high pitched squeaks.

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We ran our frozen bodies to the car and headed back down the mountain toward the Forest Canyon overlook.  We saw a herd of elk grazing on the steep mountainside.  How these animals do not tumble off, I will never understand.  They are massive and they skip along these sheer faces of land like it’s a walk in the park…which it is, I guess.

The Forest Canyon looked amazing.  The sunlight was shining directly on the pines in the canyon so you could actually see them well.  In the day time the canyon looks very dark and the trees are less defined when you look down at them.  We couldn’t speak for the beauty we were seeing.  If we hadn’t come, we would have missed this.  The lack of people made us feel like we had the whole mountain range to ourselves with just the quiet sounds of the wind for company.

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We stopped at an overlook above Horseshoe Meadow to watch the sun rays behind the peaks, then headed back down.  On our way we passed a Ptarmigan (Tar-Mih-Gan) on the side of the road, so we quickly turned around so we could take pics.  When we pulled up beside the bird, there were three adorably fat little chicks following behind her.  This was a stroke of luck because we’d met a guy yesterday on the Tundra Communities Trail who was tracking the radio signals of Ptarmigan collars.  That bird would have been so far off the radar if not for running into him.

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Lastly, we stopped at the meadow we’d originally come to see one last time.  All the colors were so vivid as we watched the last light fade behind the mountains.  Even the wildflowers looked brighter.  I told Ashley I want to remember this scene for the rest of my life.  My soul has been fed.

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Filed Under: Hiking, Travel Tagged With: Rocky Mountains, Travel

Rocky Mountain National Park: Day 2 Of The Alpine Adventures, Mind Blown Even More

July 24, 2013 by Leah Leave a Comment

Yesterday, Ashley and I took the Trail Ridge Road up the Rocky Mountains, and if we were astounded hiking the lake trails, it barely scratched the surface of what we felt yesterday being surrounded by the majesty of these mountains.  I’ve never seen anything like this.  We were on a bus trip through a Alps several years ago, and that was massively impressive, but my goodness, the Rockies are just as awe-inspiring.

We spent a lot of time in the tundra, which was surprisingly teeming with life.  I’ve always thought of the tundra as a barren desert-like expanse of land covered in rock and snow, which most of the year it is, but what we saw was a vast green landscape overrun haphazardly with wildflowers.  Here is some of what we saw.

At the first overlook we were able to see the Alluvial Fan where we’d hiked yesterday.  The higher perspective showed where the flood happened, something we weren’t able to see on the ground.

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A pika!!!!  The cutest creature ever!  Kind of a cross between a bunny and a hamster and so utterly adorable.  They run over the rocks collecting greens for winter “haystacks.”  Can you spot the pika in this pic?

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As we headed up to the tundra the views were so dynamic.  I’m going to do a separate blog with the wildflowers we saw.

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Another marmot!!!  These little guys actually are relatives of the groundhog and seem to hang out more at the higher altitudes so they were running across the trails.  This guy was tanning and posing for pictures.

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Nothing makes a rodent look more majestic than an awesome backdrop.

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We took a hike up the Tundra Communities Trail and saw birds, flowers, and incredible panoramic views of the Trail Ridge Road.  We could even see the Alpine Visitors Center from here.  The trail is dotted with plaques that reminded us how fragile the ecosystem is here.  We read one plaque that said it takes a tree up to one hundred years in this climate to add an inch to its diameter.  100 years!  The thing that was troubling to me was the callous attitude some people seemed to have toward the nature in this area, letting their kids run into the tundra grasses or on the dangerous snow piles, smoking and tossing cigarettes, throwing candy at the animals.  It blew my mind.  You imbeciles!  You’re in a protected area that has been sheltered so these creatures and this environment isn’t trampled.  I don’t care if there are millions of acres and it seems like a giant trash bin, everything we do affects it in some way.

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We headed up to the Alpine Visitors Center and on the way we saw some bighorn sheep and some elk.

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At the visitors center I took the Alpine Ridge Trail which nearly made me have a heart attack.  The view at the top was stunning in every way.  360 degrees of mountains!

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We continued on Trail Ridge Road to the Continental Divide where half the water drains into the Atlantic and the other half drains into the Pacific.

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As we headed back, evening started to fall and the creatures emerged.  We passed 6 elk in a field, just hanging out, letting people take pictures, chewing on some grass…no big deal.

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We passed the bighorn sheep again and this time we stopped the car and trekked the road to go see them.  A ranger was talking about the sheep saying they only come out two or three times per month and that at this point the males were sparring, trying to hook up with some hot female sheep from up the mountain.  I couldn’t help but be in awe while watching them.  They are the quintessential picture of life surviving in adversity.  Everything in this environment is a miracle, the plants that grow, the little marmots and pikas scurrying, the birds, the bugs flying around, and these sheep and elk who traverse these rocky hills…all of them speak to a way of life that struggles to survive under harsh circumstances, making them all the more beautiful.

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As we headed down the mountain, the light shifted and the shadows changed.  We said little to each other as we tried to take in everything we saw.  I must return here someday.

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Filed Under: Hiking, Travel Tagged With: hiking, RMNP, Rocky Mountains, Travel

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