Someday, I'm going to have to read this journal. A couple of hours ago I began writing an entry about something that happened long ago, and I kept getting the nagging feeling that I had already made an entry about it. But there are over 2000 entries here, and I have no idea which one of them it might have been. Since there is no search feature, and I haven't the time to go on a hunt, I just kept writing. But now the sky is growing light and I am nowhere near finished with the piece, so I'm going to have to put it away for another time. I really ought to keep a paper record of what I write about, so I can find stuff in here.
I am thankful that this night has been considerably cooler than recent nights. There's even been a bit of wind to listen to. Today might turn out to be quite pleasant. Unfortunately, it is expected to heat up again by Friday. Some years we get Oregon's rainy spring, and some years we get Southern California's balmy spring. This year there seems to be a bit of Arizona drifting in.
Last night, I channel surfed by Jimmy Kimmel's show while David Duchovny was on, and saw some pictures from a slash/fanfic site devoted to The X Files with which Kimmel was embarrassing his guest. Of course, I had to visit the site itself. It has very romantic pictures of Mulder and Krycek making out which, even though I was never a fan of the series, I found quite amusing.
I am thankful that this night has been considerably cooler than recent nights. There's even been a bit of wind to listen to. Today might turn out to be quite pleasant. Unfortunately, it is expected to heat up again by Friday. Some years we get Oregon's rainy spring, and some years we get Southern California's balmy spring. This year there seems to be a bit of Arizona drifting in.
Last night, I channel surfed by Jimmy Kimmel's show while David Duchovny was on, and saw some pictures from a slash/fanfic site devoted to The X Files with which Kimmel was embarrassing his guest. Of course, I had to visit the site itself. It has very romantic pictures of Mulder and Krycek making out which, even though I was never a fan of the series, I found quite amusing.
no subject
Date: 2004-04-29 06:03 am (UTC)mulder/krycek slash is all over the web. they're a very popular pairing. they're both so handsome that it seems to be irresistable. photo manipulations generally make me laugh, though. :)
no subject
Date: 2004-04-30 04:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-04-29 08:30 am (UTC)I miss spring in Paradise...the cool nights wafting from the canyons, and I even miss the sudden heat. I miss the smell of the ponderosa pines, and the spectrum of greens in Butte Canyon before summer's heat blanches it. Florida is just so flat. [sigh]
no subject
Date: 2004-04-30 04:01 am (UTC)How long ago did you leave Paradise? I've been here since 1986, myself, and I've seen the town change quite a bit.
Life in a celestial village...
Date: 2004-04-30 10:17 am (UTC)So did you become enchanted with the beauty and move up there like I did? Only falling in love with a sailor had the power to tear me away.
Re: Life in a celestial village...
Date: 2004-04-30 09:24 pm (UTC)Oddly, I've never developed a very strong attachment to the place. I like the landscape very much, though not more than the landscapes of many other parts of the state, but the town itself has always struck me as odd and somehow displaced, and a bit sad. It's like a fragment of suburbia that got lost from its city, and didn't know how to get home.
There wasn't much change in the place for the first ten years or so after I arrived in 1986, but the last few years there has been a lot of activity. Within a half mile of my house, about forty or fifty new houses have been built, mostly in small tracts, and most of them fairly large and expensive. The biggest building booms in town have been on the edges, though, along the canyons where several hundred new houses have gone up, few of them smaller than 3000 square feet, most of them with three or four car garages. Some of them are quite lavish.
There is one neighborhood where some of the houses feature fully grown palm trees in their landscaped grounds. It's really quite surprising to see palm trees in the mountains, but I suspect that most of them will not survive the next snowy winter. It's been more than ten years since we had as much as a foot of snow on the ground at one time, but it's bound to happen again eventually.
I don't think that much of the growth is driven by retired people anymore. Chico has burgeoned from a sleepy college town into a bustling mini-metropolis, and many of the costly new houses in Paradise are occupied by well-to-do suburban commuters. It looks as though the orphaned town may have found a city to adopt it at last.
Re: Life in a celestial village...
Date: 2004-05-01 02:32 am (UTC)Re: Life in a celestial village...
Date: 2004-05-01 03:39 am (UTC)Chico now not only has two malls, east of the freeway, but a whole swarm of big box retailers, small office buildings by the score, and lots of new neighborhoods of town houses and apartments. I don't know how many branches of Starbucks are there, but it's a lot! Still, Bidwell park is much the same as it used to be, though busier, and the town has done a pretty good job of creating a network of bike paths connecting everything. It's probably easier to get around by bike than by car there. Traffic gets pretty bad at rush hour. I think the population of what they are calling the Chico Urban Area (which does not include Paradise, but does include the development which has begun creeping up the lower ridge) is nearing 90,000.
Re: Life in a celestial village...
Date: 2004-05-01 03:56 am (UTC)Thanks for sharing!
I always enjoy your posts...you write in a kind of prosetry...very evocative.