August in the Sierra. to climb my hilltop today. I would rather sit here, and see where a yellow cliff gleams in a circle of dark pines toward the south; and watch a river-like torrent that foams passionately down the cliff, and breaks into spray on black rocks below. Let the valleyworld make its pilgrimage here, and when we have nothing better to do, we will take a pinebranch for an umbrella, and visit the lands of the tule islands, the cities of dead levels and streets mathematical. One arrives in the Sierras by slow gradations. You cannot easily understand the greatness of the mountain battlements you ascend. Along some artery-like road, hewn out years ago by the argonauts in their goldquest, you climb unaware into the land of peace and silence. The Coast Range often has its peaks cleft nearly to the valley level, and its ridges follow no law of arrangement, but project towards all points of the conmpass. But the axis of the Sierra is unbroken; from the high plateau still higher peaks rise, and ravines descend to profound depths; but the traveler who once gains the " divide" between two rivers can follow it up to the snow-peaks, and find that the season keeps at almost a standstill for him, if he times his journey with judicious care.. How good a plan, just for a change, to have three months of June, and come back to the valley to discover that it was September there! The children one passes on the roadside are carrying armfuls of wild lilies. You can find them growing in tall clusters in openings in the forest - clusters sometimes so tall that if you are on horseback the topmost buds will be nearly at your waist. A child is always an object of interest in the mountains; parents make companions of them to the greatest extent imaginable, and the petting they have from old miners who live lonely lives in their cabins is quite marvelous. Thus they come at last to have a demure dignity all their own, and learn to rule their kingdom with a rod of iron-at least, the girls do; for the boys are too soon dethroned, and learn that the world yields only to wit, strength, and wisdom. Not many years ago the old mining counties were considered worn-out, and fit to emigrate from; but one of the most encouraging of recent developments in the direction of fruit culture and grape-growing is in these same old mining regions. The settler finds good timber, free fire-wood, pure water, a glorious climate, soil which will grow the grains and fruits of the temperate, and often of the semi-tropical zones. Some men of energy have created for themselves fertile gardens on the hillsides, and there is room for thousands of others. According to the reports of the immigration societies, a steady stream of travel to the mining counties appears to have begun, and it is not hard to predict a great change there within a few more years. Shasta is receiving much new blood; the broad plains east of the Sacramento, at Redding, are dotted with cabins, and the red-land foothills west of Anderson are nearly all occupied. Placer and Butte Counties have become favorite spots for home-seekers, and Nevada County is also attracting attention. Tuolumne, Calaveras, Mariposa, and the southern Sierra region, are also coming into public notice. This very hillside where I sit would make an excellent place for an apple orchard, and the fruit would keep much later than that grown farther down the ridge, ten miles from here; and several thousand feet lower, peaches and grapes thrive. A slice of land a mile wide, and extending across this county, would be like a strip of territory from the Gulf to the Lakes, put into a condenser and reduced to thirty miles exactly. At one end there might be a date palm tree planted for a gatepost, and at the other end an edelweiss from the Alps, for a warning that only lichens and snow-plants could grow beyond. Paul Mferedith. 1885.] 173
August in the Sierras [pp. 170-173]
Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 6, Issue 32
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- Force - E. R. Sill - pp. 113-114
- La Santa Indita - Louise Palmer Heaven - pp. 114-117
- Early Horticulture in California - Charles Howard Shinn - pp. 117-128
- In the Summer House - Harriet D. Palmer - pp. 129-138
- Battles of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge - J. W. A. Wright - pp. 138-152
- The Hermit of Sawmill Mountain - Sol. Sheridan - pp. 152-162
- The Bent of International Intercourse - J. D. Phelan - pp. 162-169
- For a Preface - Francis E. Sheldon - pp. 169
- August in the Sierras - Paul Meredith - pp. 170-173
- The Metric System - John Le Conte - pp. 174-185
- O, Eager Heart - Marcia D. Crane - pp. 185
- A Hilo Plantation - E. C. S. - pp. 186-191
- Roses in California - I. C. Winton - pp. 191-197
- Reminiscences of General Grant: Grant and the Pacific Coast - A. M. Loryea - pp. 197-198
- Reminiscences of General Grant: Grant and the War - Warren Olney - pp. 199-202
- The Picture of Bacchus and Ariadne - Laura M. Marquand - pp. 202
- The Building of a State: VII. Early Days of the Protestant Episcopal Church in California - Edgar J. Lion - pp. 203-206
- Accomplished Gentlemen - pp. 206-209
- The Russians at Home and Abroad - S. B. W. - pp. 209-215
- Reports of the Bureau of Education, Part II - pp. 215-218
- Etc. - pp. 219-221
- Book Reviews - pp. 221-224
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"August in the Sierras [pp. 170-173]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.2-06.032. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.