From the shameless self-promotion department, I’m happy to announce that I won a Solas Award for Best Travel Writing.
I won the Gold in the category of Travel Memoir for my story, “From Mill Valley With Love.”
And here’s the story below.
I look up to the ridges woven with fire roads cut into the sage and stands of trees, quiet dirt roads running above the length of my town. As a kid, I know that I could hike all the way to Mount Tam’s summit and some of the bigger boys did.
Dear Horse-Crazy Girl with the Stringy Hair,
At the foot of grassy Horse Hill, you and your sister stand patiently at a barbed wire fence, waiting as the pastured horses lumber slowly downhill to your outstretched palms piled with blades of grass. Their velvety muzzles deftly wipe your palms clean.
Some of the older neighbor girls have their horses and ponies to gallop alongside the railroad tracks. You beg your parents for your own horse and the answer is always no. But your little sister’s begging paid off; your parents agree to buy a two-hundred-dollar pony if she pays half.
The mare’s name is Kia, a dun-colored buckskin with a black mane and tail and large chocolate eyes. You ride her bareback along the tracks at a walk, too frightened to gallop like the big girls. And you never ride on the days the lumber train rolls by because Kia spooks. She walks along peacefully, her head bobbing, ears pointing forward, the air heavy with the scent of sage.
But she spooks anyway and bolts full speed down the tracks and you grab her mane and fight to stay astride her slippery bare back as her hooves pound the gravel. Terrified, you saw at her mouth with the reins but her head is too high and she won’t settle down. You slide right off her back when she cuts to the right to run up a steep path under the eucalyptus trees. You try to keep ahold of the reins but they speed through your fingers as she gallops away.
Sore and humiliated, you climb the path, slipping on eucalyptus acorns, and trudge to the pasture gate where Kia stands expectantly, the reins hanging to the ground. You slip off her bridle and never ride her again.
You are braver than you think.
Brave? These days, I don’t feel brave. Sitting still with my emotions on this bench is about as courageous, or as foolhardy, as it gets.
Dear Teenager In Bell-Bottomed Jeans Carrying a Doeskin Purse,
It’s Friday night and you and your girlfriends are driving down Blithedale Avenue, blasting The Who. You join the public school kids in the bus depot parking lot to pile into vans, VWs and borrowed station wagons and head over to Frank’s Valley, between Muir Beach and Muir Woods. In a grassy meadow studded with oaks, kids drink beer, smoke pot and make out under the moonlight.
You never forget Frank’s Valley.
One May evening, you and a boy ascend the system of stairs and hiking paths built by early city fathers to a viewing platform above the village. As an indigo twilight fades, a full moon rises and washes the five square miles of your hometown in silver. Dark forested ridges, which Kerouac described as a “roaring sea of trees,†line the valley, which ends at the mudflats and sloughs of Richardson Bay. You can see houseboats bob in the tide and the lights of Sausalito climbing towards Wolfback Ridge. Beyond, the lights of Highway 101 zigzag downhill from the Golden Gate Bridge.
You and the boy draw close together against the chill. You are in love for the first time. You will never forget that boy.
Ah, yes, boys. Now I understand why the Seventies had been so alarming to my dad.
Across the Golden Gate Bridge, free sex and hippies made international headlines and drug dealers plied the streets of Sausalito, and, hell, even the Mill Valley bus depot. I’m sure he didn’t sleep much in those days.
Dear 17-Year Old Adventurer,
You climb to the top of Kite Hill after high school graduation as the traffic hums below. You take in the sky, the bay waters, the afternoon fog creeping over the green hills and tell yourself that it’s time to leave. The wanderlust gene you had inherited from your father’s DNA has tripped. When he offers you two choices for your graduation gift – a used car or a trip to Mexico – you choose Mexico. He understands; he had circumnavigated the globe before his twenty-sixth birthday.
You are 17 and think it’s time to leave Mill Valley.
Youth can be foolish.
You come back but at 19 you leave again to live in Italy. When you move away for good with your new husband, your dad teases you, reminding you of an essay you wrote about how “I’ll never leave the shadow of Mount Tam.â€
Today, I realize what an unusual childhood Mill Valley offers its native children.
In my youthful ignorance, I never appreciated how much I had thrived in such magical beauty, the perfect setting for a creative child. This notion sunk in later after traveling the world and observing children in Mexican slums or amid India’s poverty. Amazed by my incredible luck, I had lost much by moving away.
So I write my own reply to these letters.
Dear Lovely, Verdant Valley of the Mill,
We are the daughters of Republican businessmen or the sons of Bohemian artists. Underneath the hushed redwood cathedral of Old Mill Park, you baptized us as we waded into Cascade Creek’s cold, clear waters, sinking our bare feet into the soft gravel bottom. We hopped from stone to stone, climbed the boulders lining the creek side and warmed ourselves in your random patches of sun.
We thought everybody grew up as we did, under protective redwoods and enchanted fogs as deer grazed silently behind our homes.
We thought everyone’s relatives came to visit just to see where you live. We never realized that people traveled to Muir Woods from the world over simply to see your redwoods.
Now as adults we find clarity, appreciating how much your mountain’s bountiful springs and benevolent watershed, your lofty redwoods and open spaces had shielded us from the real world.
And then I write another letter, a thank you note.
Dear Dad,
Please accept my endless gratitude for being such a dedicated father. Thank you for getting up early every morning to battle the traffic across the bridge so that your kids could grow up in Mill Valley. Thank you for meeting the challenge of raising kids during a time of cultural upheaval. And thank you for living in a materialistic society as a man of faith.
Thank you for Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church.
It’s still standing.
After reading my letters, I no longer see Mill Valley as a ghost net. Instead, my hometown transforms into something like Indra’s Net.
According to a Hindu myth, the god Indra cast a net over the entire universe, affixing a multi-faceted jewel at each juncture that reflects every other jewel until jewels within jewels mirror the interconnectedness of the universe. Crafted of the interconnections of time and place, this multi-dimensional web stretches into an infinite universe and love connects it all.
A girl is standing in the Bus Depot parking lot. A writer is standing next to her on the red-bricked plaza. And her father is standing next to her.
I Won a Gold Solas Award for Best Travel Writing
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LENORE GREINER TRAVEL WRITER/AUTHOR
I grew up across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco, CA with wanderlust in my DNA. My travel writing has won seven Solas Awards for Best Travel Writing. Delta Sky magazine, Traveler Tales To Go, Fodor’s guidebooks, Air New Zealand Pacific Way, World Hum & many anthologies have published my writings & photography
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