Locomotoring

Spending our time untethering the mind, getting the fidgets out, exploring the in-between ideas, and learning kintsugi.

Posts Tagged ‘modoc

Modoc land

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These pivot irrigation systems are a common sight in Modoc – from Tulelake to Alturas – and they reminded me of Theo Jansen’s Strandbeest.

Snow capped mountains, lakes, waterfalls and rivers mark this land and volcanic eruptions have shaped these markers. What now exists is a mixture of what came naturally, and how the settlers shaped the land. Large agricultural fields stand where Tulelake once did – the 1906 Klamath Basin Project drained much of the lake to create farms and cattle grazing lands. What is left of Tulelake now is struggling to become a wildlife refuge. In drought years like 2021, Tulelake becomes a giant mud puddle, leaving the current stewards of the lake, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, scrambling to fight botulism (link). Alturas town, the far east side of Modoc land prides itself as a land where cattle is raised.

Where the forest prevails, I imagine that it looks much the same as what it did a thousand years ago. In the spring, the snow capped mountains are visible in the distance, the blue sky is full of white fluffy clouds, the streams and creeks criss-cross the land, small and large lakes and swamps offer view of nesting birds, the fresh green leaves of trees are interspersed by black volcanic rocks. On a trail, the sound of a waterfall or river is never too far. The light on the forest floor looks green due to all the new leaves in the understory of tall pines.

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Written by locomotoring

May 18, 2025 at 3:28 am