South Pasadena Real Estate Keller Williams Top Rated.

South Pasadena Real Estate Keller Williams Top Rated.

“Keys on the Counter” by Chris Bray

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO: Chris Bray | The 'Tell Me How This Ends' | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes

The sign on the gate doesn’t say what you’ll find behind it, but it also doesn’t say to stay out. It isn’t locked anymore.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

If you go through, a half-mile of driving will take you to another gate, open to people but closed by a cattle guard.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

That hazy gray-blue strip behind the hills on the right is the Pacific Ocean. The sign on the left says to watch for kids and dogs, but you won’t find either. You won’t find anyone. There’s a garden, with a greenhouse, neatly laid out but now untended.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes
PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

A few tomato plants inside the greenhouse are flowering, but there’s no one to water them. They’ll die as flowers. Past the garden are the houses. The doors aren’t locked.

South Pasadena Real Estate
PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

The bedroom windows look out onto the ranch buildings down the hill.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

But you won’t find cattle.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

And you won’t find ranch hands, though you’ll see signs that they worked here.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

Cattle ranching at Point Reyes began in the 1830s, or maybe a little earlier, and then began again under new land title in the 1850s, in the American era. People who ran the ranches on this oceanfront land about an hour north of San Francisco talked about the distant past when their great-grandparents were the stewards of the place. When you talk to the current generation, they tell you about their childhood here, thirty or forty years ago. The last ranchers are clearing out, now, and most are already gone, following a lawsuit by environmental groups that argued against grazing on public land. The people who walked away from this ranch left the keys on the counter for the National Park Service, but no one has stopped by to pick them up.

PHOTO: Chris Bray | The South Pasadenan | Keys on the Counter - Point Reyes
PHOTO Chris Bray | Tell Me How This Ends | Keys on the Counter Point Reyes

And now they’re gone.

Have been traveling. More soon.


"Tell Me How This Ends" Chris Bray on substack | Elite class ritual performance, cultural and political decline, military culture, and the dismal state of American journalism. chrisbray.substack.com
Tell Me How This Ends
Chris Bray on substack | Elite class ritual performance cultural and political decline military culture and the dismal state of American journalism
chrisbraysubstackcom