Categories
Pescadero

The Other Side of the Street

This is the coast south of Half Moon Bay, which is to say this is the part of California that people who live here do not talk about at dinner parties. The road runs through artichoke fields. The fog comes in the morning and does not always leave. Twenty minutes south of anything youโ€™d call a town, there is a place called Pescadero, and if you have never stopped there you should stop.

Everyone goes to Duarteโ€™s. This is correct. The soup is what they say it is.

But there is a gas station across the street, and this is where I want to take you.

The building is burnt orange. There are strings of lights along the front that were probably Christmas lights once. Inside, past the motor oil, there is a counter, and behind the counter someone is making carnitas that certain people โ€” the kind who pay attention to such things โ€” will tell you are the best in the Bay Area. The place is called Mercado & Taqueria De Amigos. It is cash only. There is a white sauce at the salsa bar that I have not been able to identify or replicate or stop thinking about.

There is a man who comes in at lunch โ€” work boots, a particular kind of flannel โ€” who does not look at the menu. The woman at the counter is already writing when he speaks. He sits outside. Eight minutes, start to finish.

California is full of places that exist entirely for the people who live in them. We drive past most of them. We are always on the way to the lighthouse, the next town, the thing someone told us not to miss. The gas station in Pescadero is not on the way to anything.

I keep going back.


Hereโ€™s a revised and extended version:

The Other Side of the Street

This is the coast south of Half Moon Bay, which is to say this is the part of California that people who live here do not talk about at dinner parties. The road runs through artichoke fields. The fog comes in the morning and does not always leave. It hangs in the cypress trees and in the low places between the hills, and some days it is still there at three in the afternoon, the light going gray and cold, the ocean invisible a quarter mile west.

Twenty minutes south of anything youโ€™d call a town, there is a place called Pescadero. Population 643. A post office. A feed store. A bar that has been a bar since before your grandfather was born.

Everyone goes to Duarteโ€™s. This is correct. You should go to Duarteโ€™s.

But there is a gas station across the street, and this is where I want to take you first.

The building is burnt orange. There are strings of lights along the front โ€” Christmas lights, probably, once, now just lights, strung there so long theyโ€™ve become part of the architecture, the same way certain things in certain places stop being decorations and start being load-bearing. Inside, past the motor oil and the WD-40, there is a counter. Behind it, someone is making carnitas. The place is called Mercado & Taqueria De Amigos. Cash only. At the salsa bar there is a white sauce that I have spent three years failing to identify and cannot stop thinking about.

There is a man who comes in at lunch. Work boots with the kind of dried mud that doesnโ€™t come off, a flannel shirt the color of something faded, a straw hat with a cord that keeps it on in the coastal wind. He does not look at the menu because there is no version of this transaction in which he needs the menu. The woman behind the counter is already writing before he finishes speaking. He carries his food out back, where there are picnic tables under whatever sky the fog has left behind. His truck is parked along the side โ€” an old Ford, the kind that has stopped being a vehicle and become a tool. Eight minutes inside. He stays longer out back.

If you walk up around the corner โ€” it is a short walk, less than you think โ€” there is an auto shop. The walls have been painted so many times in so many colors that the paint itself has become the material, layers of blue and cream and rust bleeding into each other like a tide chart, the wood beneath showing through in long vertical streaks. The doors are not garage doors. They are paneled, ornate, the kind of doors that belonged to something else in another century, pressed into service here and painted over until they forgot what they were. Above them, a small Ford dealer badge, neat and official, as if someone wanted to make sure you knew this was still a place of business.

Keep going. Cross the street. Further on, there is Saint Anthonyโ€™s โ€” a white Catholic church with a steeple that rises into whatever the sky is doing that day, a rose window above dark red doors, a hand-carved wooden sign out front that someone made carefully, with time. It has been here long enough that the people buried in the surrounding hills were baptized here, married here, carried out those red doors for the last time. The man with the cord on his hat has probably sat in those pews. His parents almost certainly did.

If you keep walking โ€” past the church, out along Pescadero Road where the land opens back up โ€” you will find Harley Farms. They make goat cheese there, small rounds of it, sometimes rolled in herbs or edible flowers, the kind of thing that sounds precious until you taste it and understand that it came out of this specific soil and this specific fog and couldnโ€™t have come from anywhere else.

California is full of places that exist entirely for the people who live in them. We drive past most of them. We are always on the way to the lighthouse, the next town, the thing someone told us not to miss.

The gas station in Pescadero is not on the way to anything. Neither is the church. Neither is the auto shop, or the farm at the end of the road with the goat cheese that tastes like the fog smells.

I keep going back. Iโ€™m still not sure I have earned it.

Categories
Living Massachusetts Nature

The Quiet Neighbor

There is a specific kind of silence that exists only in the shadow of fame. In Lincoln, Massachusetts, just a stone’s throw from where we used to live, lies Farrar Pond. It stretches out, bordered by trails and trees that turn to flame in the autumn, holding its water with a calm dignity.

It is beautiful, certainly. But it is not the pond.

Just over the hill sits Walden. That is where the pilgrims go. They go to see the replica of the cabin; they go to find Henry David Thoreauโ€™s ghost; they go to stand in the spot where American transcendentalism found its footing. Walden is a celebrity. It carries the weight of history, of literature, and of the thousands of footsteps seeking an epiphany.

But we walked to Farrar.

There is a distinct grace in the “next pond over.” Farrar Pond doesn’t have a manifesto written about it. No one quotes its water levels in philosophy classes. Because it lacks the burden of expectation, it offers something Walden often struggles to provide amidst the tourists: actual solitude.

Living close by, you realize that nature does not distribute beauty based on historical significance. The herons stalking the shallows of Farrar do not care that they are fishing in the “lesser” water. The maples reflect just as clearly on its surface as they do on its famous neighbor’s.

“Nature does not distribute beauty based on historical significance.”

We often spend our lives chasing the Waldensโ€”the recognized achievements, the famous locations, the validated experiences. We want to be where the plaque is. But life is mostly lived in the Farrar Ponds of the world: the quiet, unmarked places just down the road. The places that belong to us, not because they are famous, but because we were there to witness them.

Walden belongs to the world. Farrar belonged to the quiet afternoons. And sometimes, the anonymity of a place is exactly what makes it sacred.