San Francisquito Creek,
(so called by forty six year old Gaspar de Portola when his
miserable party of soldiers first
came upon it in November, 1769), rises in a bank
of grayish white clouds that hangs like a giant unbroken wave of
surf, its base pierced by pointed
firs and stately redwood groves that cover the mountainous spine
of the San Francisco Peninsula
between the valley of Santa Clara and the Pacific Ocean. In the
climatic atlas these modest mountains is a
little piece of Oregon, with its 40 inches of rainfall, source
of the waters that flow across the floor of the valley:
For mountains and high places act like a thick sponge overhanging the earth and make the water drip through and run together in small quantities in many places. Aristotle, Meteorologica I, xiii, 10
Two years had passed now since the last big storm, February of
eighty six, when a ten inch gush that
raised the San Francisquito creek nine feet, three thousand five hundred
cubic feet per
second. This was still four
feet short of the flood of December 22, 1955, when a record flow
of five thousand five hundred cubic feet per second
had gushed over the tree fringed banks into the lowlands near the
bay. I remembered the details of
storm of 1986; it had occurred in the midst of a drought and it
had rained hard for ten days on the
northern part of the state. The town of Guerneville up on the
Russian River had been a disaster.
Even then the gays (as we later came to know them), led by a rich and
fancy bridge player and an Air Force officer who declared that he was
queer and got himself on the cover of TIME, were making Guerneveille
into another Fire
Island or Provincetown; people were wondering whether God had
sent the flood to wash away this
wickedness, Yahweh making the skies burst and the fountains of
the deep open so that the waters crested and the gentrified
houses
were plastered with mud and debris
and torn off their foundations and the silverware and china
tumbled into the brown cataract. A levee blew on the Yuba
River in that same flood of February, 1986, washing out half the
county. You wondered what the farmers up there had done to deserve it.
Already that spring the California temperature, both winter and
summer, had warmed
about one degree centigrade since
the turn of the century. Now such a small change, two degrees
farenheit, hardly seems like much,
though it is undeniable in a balmy climate where the monthly rise
in temperature in the spring is of
the same magnitude, that is, two degrees fareinheit a month,
that the effect of such a change is to cut off the coldest month
of the year,
that being December (which month in the calendar year of 1987
had produced four and a half inches, or thirty
percent, of the year's rainfall.) Compared to today the cooler
weather of the
late nineteenth century had added a December and subtracted a
July, producing a
decade of floods in Northern California, showers and fruit
orchards and vineyards in Los
Angeles. California, if not the world, was evidently getting a
little warmer and a little drier.
But it was not the warming and drying, as I have explained it here, but rather those erratic character in weather (which in fact had obscured the overall trend) that seemed even more significant to me in the 20 years that I had lived in California. It seemed that there was a kind of bad tempered bitchiness that had grown into the California weather over the past few years.
We talk of the weather, we talk of the markets. A few months
before the
stock market had lost a third of its
value in a day and now it
was wiggling drunkenly again, brazenly upward. Conversely real
estate along the creek had risen twenty four percent in a year.
Money pured from stocks to real estate, back again.
Frantic lawyer buyers streamed out
of San Francisco to write offers on the hoods of their wives
Volvos. Meanwhile drought singed
the midwest, the worst since the dust bowl.
I made graphs. There was talk of an increase in earthquakes, more each decade; with the exception of the sixties, the number of damaging earthquakes in the state had increased ominously; of vague changes in the air itself. Throughout the filmy bubble of the biosphere global oxygen concentrations of carbon dioxide had now approached the unprecedented 350 ppm.
People had begun to suspect computer trading and Mexico smog and the radon that was causing 13000 deaths a year from lung cancer. Unsteadiness was on the land; in Texas John Connelly auctioned off his household goods to pay his bills; a million africans would die of AIDS in the next decade and a new book by a Yale historian said that that the United States was plunging into decline, which was perhaps not unexpected considererng the crack epidemic that was sweeping the cities. In the nation's capitol the president's wife consulted astrologers. By June it was evident that the year was going to be the hottest year on record, and perhaps the worst drought in fifty years.
If it weren't the jet stream slithering south it was the threat of global warming. New revelations were coming monthly now, of the past and of the future, some said the dinosaurs had been quick fried, others quick frozen, but it was agreed by all that a giant asteroid had knocked Gaia senseless and now a scientist named Michael Rampino was aying that it all had to do with one-celled ocean plants, calcareous nannoplankton.
It was with these thoughts I walked along the creek, thinking of the
crack
of time we had between peaceful oblivion and peaceful oblivion. I was
about to turn
a corner, seeking to know why the dog had begun to run.
The next few moments would change my life forever.
Copyright 1996 Kirribili Press. Return to Ignatius Donnelly and the End of the World | Index | Chronicle of the Late Holocene