Evening-primrose "snow" on a flat above the Arkansas River, Colorado

Pallid evening-primrose “snow” on a flat along the Arkansas River, Bighorn Sheep Canyon, Colorado

Thursday morning, I set out for Northwest Arkansas, 800 miles across the Southern Great Plains from Salida, a two-day drive, to visit my  Arkansas in-laws. I planned to drive nine hours the first day to Woodward, just east of the Oklahoma Panhandle, more than halfway.

That gave me a shorter drive the second day, so I would arrive at my sister-in-law’s house in Springdale a little more relaxed.

Peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Range above Texas Creek, Colorado

Sangre de Cristo Range above Colorado’s Wet Mountain Valley

I meant to leave at ten that morning, but I wasn’t on the road until eleven. So when I saw the white evening-primroses blooming on the flats in Bighorn Sheep Canyon just downriver from home, I didn’t stop. Even though there were so many the high-desert looked dotted with snow.

Until I came around a curve and spotted thousands across the river. I had to shoot a photo. I parked, dashed across the highway and clambered atop a guardrail post for a better view. I snapped a couple of photos, and then stepped down. Only I fell. Backwards. Onto the pavement.

I lay there, saying, “Oh sh___!” for a moment. Then I hauled myself up. My left leg didn’t work, so I stood on my right, holding the guardrail for balance. After a few seconds, my left leg responded and I limped across the highway to my car.

Missouri evening-primrose blooming in the highway margins right outside my motel in Woodward, Oklahoma.

Missouri evening-primrose blooming in the highway margins right outside my motel in Woodward, Oklahoma.

I debated about turning around and driving the 40 minutes home to the closest hospital. My knee was wrenched, my hip aching, and my ankle was weighing in with pain signals too. But they all still worked. Pretty much.

Further, Molly and I planned the Arkansas trip weeks ago. She and her partner Mark were flying in to meet me. (M&M live in San Francisco.)

So I drove on until I found a deserted side road where I could stop and slather arnica ointment on the offended hip, knee, and ankle. The stop also offered the view of the snowy peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Range in the second photo above.

Then I drove on. And on, and on, and on until I reached my motel in Woodward at nine that night. It was 88 degrees out. I applied more arnica ointment, plus ice. And fell into bed thinking I had been stupid and lucky and that I should slow the frenetic pace of my life.

Indian paintbrush, coreopsis, and yarrow blooming along the highway east of Tulsa.

Indian paintbrush, coreopsis, and yarrow blooming along the highway east of Tulsa.

I woke the next morning very stiff and very sore, but the hip, knee and ankle worked, and weren’t too swollen. I applied the arnica and ice again, and then hit the road. (Not literally this time.)

As I exited the driveway of my motel, located on an ugly industrial strip, I spotted clumps of glorious yellow Missouri evening-primroses blooming along the highway margins. I stopped to photograph them, limping considerably. But I didn’t fall.

Molly Cabe and her partner, Mark Allen

Molly Cabe and her partner, Mark Allen

And then I drove on. The roadside wildflowers all across Oklahoma were lovely, which cheered me considerably.

I reached my sister-in-law Letitia’s house late that afternoon, and limped inside to warm greetings from Molly and Mark and Tish, all of whom were sympathetic and impressed by my story. (Impressed, that is, by my stupidity.)

Still, it was a great weekend of visiting with Molly and Mark, Miss Alice, Tish, and her daughter Carolyn, spouse Doug, and their son Oliver, who at four is quite excited about becoming a big brother this fall. (I am very lucky in all my family.)

My niece, Carolyn Myrick and her grandmother, Miss Alice Cabe (Richard's mom).

My niece, Carolyn Myrick and her grandmother, Miss Alice Cabe (Richard’s mom).

We ate well, had time to catch up on each others’ lives, look over family photos, plant Miss Alice’s windowboxes, and visit the spectacular Crystal Bridges Museum of America Art, an outing organized by Tish.

(If you’re anywhere near northwest Arkansas, it’s worth a visit to Crystal Bridges just to see the woods-and-wildflowers setting and the gorgeously curved building tucked into that landscape. The art collection is superb too.)

This morning I headed out on the long drive home. The weather maps showed a gap between fronts (including the one that spawned the tornado that devastated Moore, near Oklahoma City).

Magenta locoweed and yellow evening-primrose along the highway in the Oklahoma Panhandle

Magenta locoweed and yellow evening-primrose along the highway in the Oklahoma Panhandle

After I passed through Tulsa, the rain abated and the wind dropped. The driving was pretty smooth and the roadsides were abloom with wildflowers. I was tired but eager to get home. I have things to do.

I drove almost nine hours to Guymon on the Oklahoma Panhandle. As I unloaded my car at the motel, I congratulated myself on  weathering the grueling drive pretty well despite my fall at the beginning. And promptly smacked myself in the face opening the car door. By the time I got upstairs to my room just moments later and went to get ice, there was a lump below my eye socket the size of a jumbo green olive.

Good thing I have that arnica ointment. And the ice machine is just across the hall.

Okay. I get the message. Tomorrow, while I carefully drive the rest of the way home, I will make concrete plans to slow the pace of my life.

First, though, I’m going to bed. As I do, I will send Light and love out to the people of Moore, Oklahoma. What a terrible, terrible tragedy. Bless us all.

Walls built on the ground as a unit--very efficient.

Walls built on the ground as a unit–an efficient way to frame and build walls. But it does require muscle to raise them.

I have walls. Not all of them, but enough that the house is beginning to take shape “above ground.”

Here’s what Steve of SKT Construction and his crew did today:

First, Steve and Mike finished building the front and back walls right on the slab, complete with door and window openings and house wrap. The photo at right is shot from the back of the house, and that’s the back wall with its sill plate facing you. (The front wall is in the background. And beyond it, across the creek and the parking lot, is the ugly blank wall of Safeway. Not the best view, but as you’ll see, it’s not my whole view. By any means.)

On three....

On three….

When they finished those two walls, the largest as single units, Steve called for reinforcements to begin raising them.

Here’s the front wall of the house going up.

Put a little more muscle into it…

 

 

Raising 500 or 600 pounds of wall is less-fraught when the air is calm.

Raising 500 or 600 pounds of wall is less-fraught when the air is calm.

A little more muscle…

Keep stretching…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And it’s up! (The wind wasn’t blowing, which was a very good thing.)

Hang onto that wall!

Hang onto that wall!

Then it needs to be settled on the bolts, which go through holes in the sills. If the holes are measured correctly.

Sometimes the wall needs persuading.

Gentle persuasion, framer style....

Gentle persuasion, framer style….

With a length of 2X4.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then comes bracing. Which has to be done very quickly, just in case .

Braced, with hands and the first cross-piece

Braced, with hands and the first cross-piece

Walls like this make great sails. Not something anyone wants to see.

 

 

 

 

 

Once the front wall was up, the guys moved to the back wall. I took pictures and stayed out of the way. In a little more than half an hour, they had both the big walls up. The other guys headed on to other jobs, leaving Steve and Mike to start work on the smaller wall sections.

My view over Safeway with Methodist Mountain in the background on the left, and Poncha Mountain on the right.

My southerly view-to-be

And me to shoot a few photos out what will be my living room windows.

(The round-backed mountain on the left is Methodist Mountain, the lower one on the right is Poncha Mountain. They’re part of the Sangre de Cristo Range, which smacks into the main stem of the Rockies out of view. I’ll see that mountain-range-junction out my west-facing living room windows.)

By the end of the day, Steve and Mike had another wall up at one end of the clerestory windows between the front and back of the house.

It's starting to look like a house now.

It’s starting to look like a house.

That’s my tiny house, sitting high above Ditch Creek on the wrong side of the former railroad tracks. It’ll have a deck off the front of the house (the left side in this photo), and the side toward the street (on the right), will be terraced with boulders and colorful native plants down to the sidewalk. (There will be fill around the blue stem walls below the house walls.)

Thanks guys, for framing, sheathing and raising the walls. I can’t wait to see the rest of the place grow….