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Saturday, April 20, 2019

The Smell Of Jasmine



Dale Matson

The seasonal smell of Jasmine on my daily walk in Fresno today reminded me of my arrival here from Wisconsin to interview as the School Psychology program director at Fresno Pacific University (Then Fresno Pacific College). It will be twenty-seven years on Wednesday. That morning 27 years ago, I began my day with a morning run. The motel security guard cautioned me about the frigid 50-degree morning. I had to laugh to myself about his weather caution.
I was wearing shorts and a tee shirt and decided to run around the Fresno Airport. I could smell Spring everywhere. I dodged the lawn irrigation in the industrial park and guessed the grass must be real. At the time I had never seen Bermuda Grass. The smell of Jasmine in bloom anchored forever that experience in my mind.
 The previous morning in WI, I had run two miles on a snowy road wearing a face mask, long pants, gloves and a jacket. April is still Winter in Wisconsin but well into Spring here in Fresno.
Twenty-seven years ago, I was still a Midwesterner at heart. I was born and raised in southeastern Michigan. I was there for 24 years minus a two-year stint in the Army. I spent the next 24 years in Wisconsin, moving there when I got married. The plan was for my wife and sons to move to Fresno after my older son finished his last year in High School.
I had completed my doctorate and opportunities were scarce for middle aged white males. I found this tenure track job in Fresno and decided to interview for the job. I got the position and drove out in my car with my wife late summer. It was hot when we arrived mid-August. It was 115 degrees hot!
She said, “This is too hot. I could never live here.” And it came to pass. We divorced the following December.
         It was a difficult beginning for me with a new job in a new location living by myself in a one bedroom apartment. Working kept my mind off my loneliness but the weekends were long. I would often park by the Fresno Airport and watch the planes take off. Should I be on one headed back Wisconsin when the year was up?
         One of my colleagues lent me his camera and I began to head to the national parks on the weekends. Yosemite and SeKi Parks are only about an hour away. I was simply captivated by the mountains. There were also popular trails to hike and run. After a time, I began to look forward to the weekends with new adventures awaiting me in the mountains.
         I also met and began running with a group every weekday morning. They were my first “church”, although I did join a church in Clovis where I also me my wife of 23 years.
I said to one of my running friends, Dave, one morning, “I should have born here.” He replied, “You don’t have to be born here but it’s important that you get here as soon as possible.” Every year the smell of Jasmine reminds me of Dave’s wise statement.   


Monday, April 15, 2019

The Ponds By Wellbarn Road Near Marshall Station



Dale Matson

Note: I have an article on the hike to the Temperance Flat area of the San Joaquin River with additional particulars.



In a typical year the area I photographed with the ponds and bluffs near the San Joaquin River would be about to turn brown and the ponds dry up. The tadpoles would be frogs and would have moved on already.
Today I thought I would get some comparison photos. I used my SonyA7R3 with the S/Z 55mm 1.8 and my Leica Q 28mm 1.7. My eyes are not the best but both look OK with less than optimal light. Some photos were cropped but no additional operations were performed.


Sony A7R3














Leica Q














You Park And Walk To The River From Here