Here I sit
on a Sunday morning whilst the girls are at church, having just watered the
garden and eaten a few ripe tomatoes off the vine. In two weeks, I'll be
sitting on a bus bound for the Badlands, leading a tour of the Northern Rockies
but looking toward the west.
Been thinking
about Los Altos a lot lately and the old bay area days. I've said it
before but I am so grateful that my parents decided to move down that way in
the mid-50s. Had I grown up in San Francisco, I'd be an entirely
different person now, though who knows if better or worse. Would growing
up in an urban environment have made me more competitive? In the predator/prey relationship of young
boys, would I have been the prey? Or
would I have been a hustler?
Just got
lucky, I guess. I look back an amazing 50 years now, and I remember the
summer of 1963 hanging out with friends, walking the railroad tracks just
outside of town.....the old Vasona line…feeling like a mid-century modern Tom
Sawyer. There was the intimacy of the small town, the proximity of open space,
the golden humming hillsides.
I had my first girlfriend too....a sophomore named Marilyn who lived in a big, sprawling house up in the Los Altos Hills. Her family owned five cars, swimming pool. She was way out of my league and I think she knew that. We were a hot item for a few months, but she broke up with me that summer. I was devastated, of course, as only a lonely teenager can be. But I had my friends, and a warm summer of apricot wind, and that intangible feeling of the world opening up to me.
I had my first girlfriend too....a sophomore named Marilyn who lived in a big, sprawling house up in the Los Altos Hills. Her family owned five cars, swimming pool. She was way out of my league and I think she knew that. We were a hot item for a few months, but she broke up with me that summer. I was devastated, of course, as only a lonely teenager can be. But I had my friends, and a warm summer of apricot wind, and that intangible feeling of the world opening up to me.
It was a sad
day when the railroad tracks were torn out to make way for the Foothill
Expressway, when the last fruit orchard was removed to make way for
subdivisions, when Hal’s Record Den moved from Main Street to the new
super-mall on the El Camino Real. It
didn’t all happen overnight but the changes came soon enough.
But 1963 was
a year unto itself. As my late friend
Jim said about it
“the last great expression, for us, of innocence and childhood." Most of that changed too in the fall when JFK was assassinated, and our world went south.
“the last great expression, for us, of innocence and childhood." Most of that changed too in the fall when JFK was assassinated, and our world went south.
I remember the LP record listening booths at Hal’s Record Den
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