Looking west down the Las Huertas Creek drainage, across the Rio Grande to Santa Ana Pueblo and the Rio Puerco beyond. The Rio Puerco itself would run roughly north-south in this view. The East Fork of the Jemez River enters the Rio Grande from the west side, slightly downstream from the entrance of Las Huertas Creek on the east. West of the river, this is the north end of the Mount Taylor volcanic field and the south end of the Pajarito Plateau.

Note: Robert Julyan in his Places Names of New Mexico says of the Rio Puerco: “The Spanish name parallels the Jemez Indian name for the stream, which means ‘dry mud with creek’ … ”

When you live alone with a dog, in my case an alert blue heeler, they learn all the what’s-next signals, from teeth-brushing and sock-tugging, to garbage-can rustling and cookie-jar rattling, to text messaging from a walk friend and inhaler-puffing by the alleged walk supervisor. Dinnertime delay prompts a visit and a stare. After five years of constant surveillance, I have no secret moves.

View south to the smoke-shrouded Sandia Mountains, just a couple of miles from me on Lower Las Huertas Creek in northeast Placitas, New Mexico, with 107 wildfires in 15 western states burning over 2 million acres, August 8, 2021, noon.
Air quality reading, Placitas, 11 a.m., August 8, 2021. The ozone and smoke count got as high as 174 later Sunday, well into the red.
Fire map, August 8, 2021, morning. National Interagency Fire Center@NIFC_Fire·#NationalFireNews Fire activity in 15 states. Currently, 107 large fires or complexes have burned 2,272,800 acres. Near critical conditions w/ wind gusts up to 45 mph reported over north central MT, & up to 30 mph in E OR. Nearly 24,000 personnel & 30 T1 and T2 IMTs #FireYear2021
Smoke coverage forecast for August 8, 2021.
Smoke plume (shades of gray) descending south into New Mexico, morning, August 8, 2021.

Twenty-four-hours ago, with the Sandias at upper left and blue sky all around and the real Cowboy in the shade. We were out when we were because we had been warned the smoke was coming. High temp later on in the mid-90s, UV index 10.

Stay tuned for this report tomorrow, Monday, August 9, 2021.

And check out this book, published last year.
Morning, Monday, August 9, 2021, looking a few miles west to Santa Ana Mesa, across the Rio Grande.
Sunset, Sunday, August 8, 2021.

New York Times, Monday, August 9, 2021: Nations have delayed curbing their fossil-fuel emissions for so long that they can no longer stop global warming from intensifying over the next 30 years, though there is still a short window to prevent the most harrowing future, a major new United Nations scientific report has concluded. Photo: The Dixie Fire, which destroyed one town and forced thousands to flee their homes in Northern California, became the second largest wildfire in state history on Sunday.Credit…David Swanson/Reuters

Here is another smoke-tinged sunset, seen from Placitas, New Mexico, on Sunday, July 11, 2021. Massive plumes of wildfire smoke across western states are common these days — one of the consequences of climate change, I am convinced. This smoke in New Mexico tonight apparently is from fires in northern California, Oregon, Idaho and Nevada. My little Canon Powershot couldn’t quite capture the intensity — or the eeriness — of the colors tonight. I thought it was an ugly view.

Here is a fire and smoke map from Sunday:

PBS tonight moved an earlier story (click here) on warming, drought, drying and climate change. It quotes John Fleck of the University of New Mexico.

“The word drought just doesn’t do it anymore,” Fleck said. “Drought implies a dry spell that ends with a wet spell. And climate change is fundamentally changing things… The landscape is drying out, the headwaters are drying out. It’s just a different world now with less water and warmer temperatures.”

Another quote from the story: “It’s one of the longest droughts that we’ve had in 100 years. The longest and the most severe,” said Brian Richter, president of Sustainable Waters. “It would have been bad even without climate change, but climate warming is accentuating it, it’s making it worse.”

New Mexico environment writer Laura Paskus has been telling us all this for some time, most recently in her book “At the Precipice. New Mexico’s changing climate.”

And here’s a recent story from Susan Montoya Bryan of The Associated Press: https://apnews.com/article/business-environment-and-nature-new-mexico-83bc326a75e427c4a4548a40da8cc489

Sunset

I am 99 percent convinced now that there is not a novel in me, or at least that I am not capable of producing one.

I’ve started enough of them to know that I quickly lose interest and, even if I could carry one through, know I probably would be embarrassed by the result.

This has been disturbing to someone who had a writer for a father, loved to read from childhood on and assumed throughout much of his prolonged adolescence that he would be a writer when he grew up. Well, I’m near 72 now and starting to feel grown up.

More and more, I am not worried. I don’t think it’s only my laziness and lack of discipline holding me back. I respect friends who do write novels but confess that the same conditions that prevent me from writing one seem to stop me from reading theirs. I think I am too conditioned by newswriting and news reading. I have gotten impatient. I still try to read Patrick O’Brian’s 19th Century sea novels but I have four glossaries to use with them and make it through only a few pages a sitting.

Maybe it’s just fiction I am stalled on. I still admire short stories and occasionally read them but even there truncation and allusion start to rub me the wrong way. My reading hours are almost completely taken up by essays, journalism and history, where I can find directness and sometimes good prose. Poetry seems to have been a once upon a time thing for me, though I sometimes still repeat to myself Theodore Roethke verses and study the plain-spoken elegance of Richard Hugo. I was rereading Larry McMurtry nonfiction — Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen — just before he died because I enjoy the rambling trails of his insight, erudition and honesty. I am rereading some John McPhee now because he is a non-fiction master.

The truth might be that I have nothing to say, which of course is the clearest of all literary warning shots. Certain things in my life I am sure of, like the need to quit drinking 36 years ago or seeking conscientious objector status during the Vietnam-era draft. A lot of the rest, I am still figuring out. Sure there are some exceptions but having so far survived two cancers and still getting older, I’m not willing to cast judgment on anyone but myself. I am sometimes moved to write non-fiction tributes about the outstanding qualities of others but remain daunted by the task of trying to frame someone else’s thought in fiction. I feel I don’t have the time and am pretty sure I’m not that clever. Speaking as a run-of-the-mill flawed human, I wonder if mediocrity is such a low aspiration. I know I’m not all good. I just hope I’m not all bad.

I have realized the truth of my 40-year-long newspaper career is that I was more of a craftsman than a journalism ace. I was always curious about daily events, was particularly interested in government and politics and was always eager to be the one sharing the news. But I was not the sort of reporter who sunk his or her teeth into a story and shook it until the truth fell out. Writing was the most important challenge for me, though I learned that in the newspaper business it is rightfully secondary to reporting. I liked being part of of getting the paper out and the reliability of the production chain, despite the many tensions every day.

I have been buying books to study paintings, lately more curious about how painters do things than novelists. The fiction writing that has caught my attention in the fast-paced 21st Century has mostly been television screenplays. I’m intrigued by the work of the Cohen brothers but notice my patience for movies also is waning. I’m impressed by the writing of MASH, Seinfeld, Longmire and some British detective shows, most recently “Pie in the Sky.” I’m about to move on to LA and “Bosch.”

I pay more attention to characters than plot. I am often oblivious to the mystery in many mysteries. In Westerns, I tend to focus on the locations and horses, although I remember all the white hat-black hat morality lessons of the classics. I like actors near my own age. I have digital subscriptions to a dozen or so newspapers and magazines but mostly scan Twitter to pick and choose my news and the stories I read at length.

I’m not sure why I write on this blog but I keep saddling up and riding out many mornings, especially if I’ve had a decent sleep. It can keep me as happy as watching the sky and walking with my dog, Cowboy.

Now that I think of it, my greatest newspaper writing ambition always was to sit down and type an entire story without pause. Tight. Bright. Short. Clean. Fast. The best compliment I’ve ever gotten on my blog — at least I hope it was a compliment — was, “I like your blog because it’s short.” And I like to blog fast and move on. I wonder if it one of the side effects of cancer. Maybe, as in my newspaper career, it’s just a short attention span.

I am about to go over my word limit here but since I have backed into my point anyway, I will add that I woke this morning thinking that the writing I strive for is like light. I see it best in paintings and Ansel Adams photographs these days. Fleeting but bright, day or night.

I am always leaping up for my iPhone camera in my house without curtains in the northern New Mexico hills. The snapshots for me open doors to stories. I like trying to make blogging a moment of light.

Sunrise