David Heiller
Α couple images will stay with me for a while from last
Saturday. The first clicked at about 4:30 p.m. We were walking across Duane’s
field, the five of us, when the sun dropped below its skirt of clouds. The soft
light of late afternoon instantly spread a golden glow
on everything, the grass, the plowed field, the faces of the four people
walking over them. It didn’t hurt that those humans were walking with a
purpose. There was a glint of adventure in their eyes.
Alex and Laura, Malika and David, and I hiked cross-country to Freeburg to hear Bob and Gail perform at Little Miami. It was a fine little adventure. |
It wasn’t a huge adventure, mind you. We were hiking from
our house to Freeburg, a whopping four miles at best. Little Miami awaited us
there, good food, good music, perhaps
a cheering crowd. Well, two out of three at least. But it put a spring in our
step.
The sun left us about the time we hit the state land and
its plantations of pine trees. We pawed through them and descended through the
woods above Elsheimer Valley. I don’t know if that’s its official name, but every adventure needs an
Elsheimer Valley or two. The walk through those woods was darn near
magnificent, in the subtle ways that our woods have around here. I
half expected to be going through logging slash. Sometimes it seems like you can’t step on state
land without running into the after effects of logging. Not that I have anything
against that. But it’s still hard to beat a mature hardwood forest and its big
oak trees.
Outcroppings of limestone rocks dotted our trip down the
big hill. We bounced from one to another, probing with a stick here, testing a boulder there. Rattlesnake
country, I thought more than once.
Then it was the floor of the valley, big open spaces,
leaves flattened by snow but the snow now gone. Perfect hiking.
Not for
everyone though. Malika, my daughter, started complaining about blisters on her
heels. “Do you have two pairs of socks on?” I asked. That’s always been my
remedy for blisters, something I learned when I was about her age. She answered
in the negative, and not to worry either, Dad.
We followed a dry creek bed south to the end of the woods,
then through a prickly border of wild plums to farm fields. I had received
permission to cross the
property, which made our climb over the fences just fine. It’s not a good feeling to climb over
a fence without permission. I
peeled two oranges. We drank
water. Time to celebrate.
We came to Elsheimer’s Road and walked along it. It was good that we hit the
road when we did, because the sun had set and it was getting hard to see. A
couple dogs barked as we approached the farm of Mark and Pat Lange. One came up
to the road and gave us a friendly greeting.
Malika’s blisters were getting worse. We stopped by an
overturned boat and sat down. I took off one of my pairs of socks and gave them
to her. “It’s kind of late now, isn’t
it?” she asked.
“It’s never too late,” I insisted. “They could get a lot worse” She didn’t seem
entirely convinced of that, probably because I wasn’t either. But she put them
on.
We crossed the bridge over Crooked Creek and found the
snowmobile trail. Its sign was barely
visible in the gloaming. Still we left the road and went west on the
beaten-down path, although it hasn’t received much of a beating this wimpy
winter.
Then the other image of the night popped out. “Here comes
the moon;” Alex said. He always notices little things like bald eagles and full
moons. Sure enough, it rose right above a rounded bluff, like a Roman candle in
slow motion. We stopped for a few minutes. “You can see it move,” Alex added.
Right again. It was a reassuring sight, and a beautiful one.
We kept walking, and the trail kept getting brighter. Soon
we could see our shadows. A full moon in January is no small thing.
That lasted for about 10 minutes, then the clouds smothered the moon. The darkness slowed
us a bit. We weren’t quite sure where the trail was, or where Freeburg was, or
the Bruening homes that marked
our way. A little worry crept over us, just enough for an adventure of this
magnitude. But it didn’t matter, and we all knew it. We just had to keep
walking and we’d find our way. It’s hard to get lost in the Crooked Creek
Valley. You go one way, you come to the river. You go the other, you come to
Freeburg.
We finally climbed over one last fence and at 6:10 p.m. we
stood on County Road 249. “How much further is it?” Cindy
asked. She was worried about her daughter and not herself.
“About a mile,” I replied. That last mile went quickly,
and 20 minutes later, we came over the rise
to the friendly lights of Little Miami.
The others went into the restaurant first, while I changed
shoes at the car that we had left there earlier. Then I walked into the bar
with a feeling unlike any I’ve had there before. I was cold and tired, yet
proud in a small way of what we had just done. It made the food and fellowship
and music seem even better than normal. A good little adventure will do that.
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