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The ladies of the Sunol Homeowners Association are still impatiently awaiting their cable tv, and insist that they be hooked up before Constantine gets kicked off of American Idol. Thank you for your attention.

Click below to see Sunol's tiny version of Yosemite...

Another look at the this exclusive local plant.

I post more pictures of poppies not because it is prudent, but because I prefer it. I will post poppies until people pop from the persistence of poppies.

The yellow flowers in the middle, I believe, are the endemic Mt. Diablo Sunflowers, which only grow within a fairly close proximity of Mt. Diablo (this is about 40 miles away). They were all over the park.

What is that you say? That it is not possible to post more pictures of poppies? Pshaw! Pshaw!

For readers offended by the persistence of poppies, I post this picture, which I consider to be the anti-poppy, as consolation:

By the way, if anyone knows what species that is, I'm curious. Couldn't find him in the books. Found on the park road at Sunol Regional Wilderness Park, near the visitor's center.

After meeting the fine ladies of the Sunol Homeowners' Association (see previous post), I hiked through the Canyon View Trail at the Sunol Regional Wilderness park. This gorgeous park is in full bloom this year, as Northern California has had plenty of rain. The grasses are green, the variety of flowers can't be counted, and the endless green hills are disturbed only be the occasional artistically placed oak. This week we'll take a long, slow walk through a small portion of this huge complex of parks in the East Bay hills. The poppies were everywhere.

And the occasional dead tree--due to natural causes, or the Oak Death disease that many are worrying about here I don't know--contrasted against the bursting green hills.

Say it with me now, "The hills are alive! The hills are aliiiiiiiive!" Ok, don't. But check back in over the next few days to see a low elevation version of a Swiss landscape. And a teeny tiny version of Yosemite.

The ladies of th Sunol, California, homeowners' association would like to express their concern over the lack of cable television access in the Sunol Regional Wilderness park. The ladies would very much like to catch up on past episodes of CSI and Desperate Housewives. They also have some shopping to do on HSN. The ladies hereby warn the public that if they do not get what they want, they may spend even more time sleeping that would be considered prudent. Thank you for your attention.

Welcome to Northern Word, the online home of writer Susan McNerney. Northern Word features lots of photography, words on the business and process of writing, original bits of fiction and nonfiction, travelogues and travel writing, and anything else that Susan feels like posting. Browse the categories on the left (or the topic cloud below) to see previous episodes, and don't miss the two big travelogues: A Week in Rome and A Great Southwest Road Trip. Susan is originally from the redwood regions of Northern California, but now lives and writes in chilly Minnesota.

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All images on Northern Word are under copyright (see Creative Commons license linked below). Want to use one of these pics? Feel free to drop me an email at mackerelstreet ((at )) gmail (( dot ) com.

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This page is an archive of recent entries in the Sunol category.

Redwood Empire is the previous category.

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