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but that's not why we went to the Olympic peninsula this weekend. we went because my dad is a beach-combing nut. and we didn't make it to Forks. we camped just north of Queets in a little nook of rainforest called Kalaloch. don't they have just cool names for places in this part of the world?
we spent hours and hours walking along beaches. endless beaches covered with what all the little informative plaques call the bones of the rainforest: massive bleached tree trunks piled and twisted and tangled into a death trap of soggy, slippery wood. I almost died three times.
Friday, when we'd finished setting up camp and eating a very late dinner, we walked down to the edge of the continent and watched the waves come out of the darkness with that low and endless growl of theirs. in the shadows, it was deeply frightening. that rushing and pounding of so much water--so much water that it could twirl the whole rainforest into splinters without so much as a thought. the sound of it more than the dampness of it was chilling. and all the large black shapes in the distance, looking so much like bears or whales or monsters... even though I knew they were just dead trees, I found myself watching them as we approached, waiting nervously for them to move. but they never did.
the next day we spent six hours hiking south along the coast, stopping to throw pebbles into the surf or to dig old rope out of the driftwood and rocks. we found a lot of rope.
we all came home with just the slightest trace of sunburn. having been, in February, to a place where it rains more than three hundred days out of the year, that's kind of funny.
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