Showing posts with label San Fernando Valley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Fernando Valley. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Earthquake and Writing

Right after I woke up on Monday morning we had an earthquake in L.A.  It wasn't the worst I've ever felt.  That was the Northridge quake in 1994.  But it still shook me up, literally and figuratively.

Once I got up and dressed, things were pretty much back to normal, if you don't count all the news reports and Facebook and other accounts of what happened.  And things around my house aren't exactly normal anyway since the city is currently repaving our narrow street--long overdue, but still hard to deal with.  Both of our cars fit in the garage, but a lot of neighbors had to find parking spaces on other streets. And I still have to figure out whether I can get out of the garage and use the street if I have someplace to go.

I of course had to use the earthquake in some writing. I also blog on Killer Characters, on the 18th of the month--yesterday--so I made sure that the protagonist of my Pet Rescue Mysteries, Lauren Vancouver, blogged about how the earthquake affected the wonderful pet shelter she runs, HotRescues, in L.A.'s San Fernando Valley.  Of course everything there worked out fine.

I did leave the house for a little while and was glad I could get back and pull my car into the garage on my return.  Then I sat down at the computer and began acting as if this was a regular day--answering emails, writing blogs, and, of course, writing.  Because it was, in fact, a regular day--even if it started off a bit too exciting!

How about you--have you been jolted awake recently by quakes or weather or anything else?

Saturday, February 21, 2009

A Change of Scenes

I left the victim in book four of the crochet mysteries dead on the beach and let my son talk me into going for a walk in the mountains behind us. It still amazes me how we can drive a short distance through some twisty streets of houses, park just before the street ends, and walk into a wilderness. More specifically it’s the Santa Monica Mountain conservancy.

It was a perfect time for a walk. The afternoon had started to fade and the temperature had dropped into the low 60's. The sky was clear except for some clouds that looked like wisps of hair and the recent rains had left everything green and sweet smelling.

The path from where the streets ends led us up to the dirt road portion of Mullholland. We took the opposite turn we usually do and after a short burst of bushes and open area, we passed a large concreted rectangle we think is a helicopter pad or at least we saw a helicopter land there once. It’s surrounded by wild growth and giant hunks of sand colored rock. As we continued, the road turned and there was tall growth on either side with an occasional path going off and disappearing.

When we reached the creepy water tank behind the barbed wire fence we turned off onto an asphalt road that goes a short way and then abruptly ends just before a steep cliff. From there we took a narrow path that led up and around until we reached a summit that offered a fabulous view. The helicopter pad seemed about the size of a postage stamp. Beyond, the San Fernando Valley looked like a sparkling carpet as lights came on. There was still of dusting of snow on some of the taller mountains that ring the Valley. The Santa Monicas aren’t as tall and thanks to the ocean air that finds it way through them, are much greener. As we looked back into the Santa Monicas, we could see mysterious houses tucked into secret valleys that seemed to have no outlet.

The sun was beginning to slide behind the mountains to the west when we started back. By the time we got to dirt Mullholland, the sun was gone and the sky becoming night. Coyotes starting to think about dinner yipped in the distance. We passed pockets of fragrant, cold, damp air that had wound its way in from the ocean. It was completely dark when we reached the street and the car.

Then it was home and back to work on who fed my victim on the beach the deadly s’more.