Hoquiam: New Views, Anecdotes, and a Bumblebee Interlude

On a harsh light day at the beginning of July, I ventured out for a photowalk on the northeast side of Hoquiam, Wash., my hometown.

My destination was the soccer pitch and baseball field behind Immanuel Baptist Church, where I would meet up with the Hoquiam River and a footpath that leads into an abandoned and wooded section of the city, on a nook of land formed by a bend in the river.

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ABOVE: At left, Immanuel Baptist Church. In the background, left to right, Karr Hill and College Hill.
Up the cleft between the two hills runs Grand Avenue, leading to two areas on College Hill that readers of my blog will be familiar with: Elton Bennett Park, on the hillside, and Sunset Memorial Park on the top.

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But first an anecdotal aside

I've lived here in Hoquiam for nine years now, which is the longest I've stayed in one spot my entire adult life.

You can't, apparently, live in a place that long without piling up a few stories. Two come to mind in connection with the church, and I'll share them here because they both flesh out Hoquiam in a way that my photos don't.

Thanksgiving and Murder
The Immanuel Baptist Church annually holds a Thanksgiving dinner at the church. It's a completely free, cornucopian smorgasbord open to the community, and well attended. The one year I went there were easily 100 people gathered around folding tables in the auditorium, a group made up of both families of the church and unattached community members without a more traditional Thanksgiving to attend.

This was in 2018. I went with my best friend at the time, days after his mother was stabbed to death by his brother. He was (obviously) still in shock and scrambling to find something that would distract him and get him out of the family home where the murder occurred.

The community meal fit the bill, as well as anything could at a time like that. We were able to be with people and at the same time go mostly unnoticed in the crowd and its hubbub. The large spread on offer was something he could appreciate, even at the time, as a professed foodie. I think for a few moments he was able to forget about what had just happened.

My Homeless Girl
Over the past year, the church and its grounds have taken on a new significance: it's where my sometime girlfriend and I used to go to hang out, usually in the middle of the night.

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Katt and @cliffagreen

Katt is homeless, schizophrenic, and addicted to meth. She loves to go to the church at night and sit under the entrance overhang (which you can see in the first photo above). The acoustics under there amplify the music from her phone, and she can sit and watch the sky for aliens and try to decipher what the flickering and flashing lights in the hills are signaling.

Being schizophrenic and on meth can lead to some unsettling behavior. Like, for example, performing a wardrobe change in the middle of the church parking lot while they are holding youth group.

That's why we don't hang out there anymore. The church was always uncomfortable with her being there: she talks loudly about bizarre things, mostly only when others are with her but sometimes to herself, and sometimes she looks like a real bag lady. But after the wardrobe change, the church started going out of its way to tell her she couldn't be there, threatening to have her arrested for trespassing and even getting the police to cruise through in the middle of the night to ask her to leave.

I suppose I understand where the church is coming from, them not wanting kids to be exposed to strange, drug-influenced behavior. But, Katt feels safe on the property, she never does any damage to it, and she is exactly the kind of person that Jesus hung out with and ministered to. Kicking her off the property just doesn't seem very Christlike.

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The perfect time for a bumblebee interlude

Before I made my way down to the river, I stopped by the landscaping near the church entrance to photograph these flowers blooming on a bush.

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A bumblebee zoomed in ... just as I was zoomed in!

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Finally, to the woods!

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The footpath leading to the woods was as baked as the grass in the ballfields, and well trodden.

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Like a noob, I didn't actually photograph the path in the woods. Suffice to say it is no wider there than it is leading into the woods, and in places partially closed off with blackberry bushes and other underbrush.

You can get a sense of what it's like from this shot alone.

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Lovely, dark and deep, as the poet says.

The vegetation has overtaken the remains of old Hoquiam.

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Deeper in, there are more bits of concrete foundation and a broad paved area that might have been a parking lot, with small trees growing up through it. I asked my retired friend Ed what used to be in there, and the best answer he could give is some kind of rendering plant (presumably for fish). It's apparently been abandoned for awhile: Ed said it was even when he was a kid, and "kind of scary to go back there."

This monitoring well probably explains why the path is kept open.

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It looks like a good year for blackberries; there were blossoms all over.

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Incidentally, in the three weeks since I took these photos, the blossoms around town have already turned into green berries.

After a distance of four or five city blocks, the river bends west back toward downtown. I broke through the underbrush to the upper bank just after the bend and popped a squat on this log...

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...which afforded a somewhat novel view of Riverside Bridge.

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It was a lovely day for boating.

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A New Perspective

After the boat cleared the river, a flock of geese swam upriver and into the shadow of the bank on the far side. I switched from my 18-55mm zoom lens to my 75-300mm to photograph them.

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An outlier kept an eye on me while I did.

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The 75-300mm lens is new to me. I've only had it a couple months, and I'm still learning how to use it. When it is extended to 300mm, the weight is all on the front end, which makes it difficult to hold still. And at that magnification, every bit of motion is also magnified, so I'm finding it a challenge to take clear photos. Of the 25 photos I took of the geese, only a few turned out with them in any kind of focus.

I experimented with using my camera's pop out, tiltable LCD display, instead of the viewfinder, while sitting on the end of the log and propping the camera on my knees. It made for some interesting framing, like in that last photo above.

After pausing in the shadow, the flock continued upriver, past the bend and out of sight.

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The watcher was the last to go. In this final shot it looks like it is checking the shadow to make sure no one was left behind.

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There's lots to learn with the new perspective 75-300mm creates. Starting at 75mm forces one to 'stand' farther into the scene in landscape photography, and it also makes objects at a distance figure more prominently in the composition.

The new possibilities are exciting though. I could not have captured the view below of the riverbank behind the Timberland Bank offices (the brown building) at 55mm. The riverbank there is one block from my apartment, and it's my favorite spot to sit and have coffee. It's pretty cool to be able to have (and share) a look at it from this angle.

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I also played around with the bokeh capabilities of the new lens.

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Back in the woods, I found I could focus on elements of the forest farther off the path, like these berries dappling the leaves with their shadow.

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A Vista to the Wild

I've photographed this area behind the church and in the woods on a few occasions over the past five years, and I've never before found a satisfactory angle for a photo of the river from the bank behind the church.

With the new lens at 135mm, I was able to 'get out in the river' for this final shot, which shows the second-to-last bend of the main stem Hoquiam River, less than a mile before it forks into tributaries at the northern city limits.

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I'm not sure I've even noticed that tree hanging over the water before.

I'm satisfied. And eager for more.



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11 comments
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The schizo lady certainly poses an odd dilemma for the church. I, too, can see why they would prefer it if she wouldn't change her clothes in the middle of a youth group activity, and resort to banning her from the premises. I can't think of an alternative solution at the moment, however.

I like the photos of the bumble bee and the flower, which looks like a rose to me.

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I can't think of an alternative solution at the moment, however.

From Matthew 25:35, 40 (italics mine): For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in: ... Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.

They could feed, clothe, and provide housing for her.

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They could ... but that also would require specialized training to work with her unique needs ... or at least some way to partner with organizations that do. We deal with this at my church to a certain extent ... having to balance the needs of people we are already serving with people who need more advanced care. Most churchgoers are average people with no ability to cope with the aftermath of meth addiction and the presence of serious mental health challenges ... but at my church, we do try to find partnerships to meet the needs we can't.

REMEMBER: Christ is God. There is no possible mental or physical challenge He cannot heal. Average not-God Christians: not so much, and that should be understood ... but average Christians can be challenged to do better. The case of the one you love is a TOUGH ONE for any organization that serves children to handle; what would have been needed was a trained, compassionate specialist to stand in the gap for her at that moment. Immanuel Baptist Church needs to partner up ... but maybe they don't know that, yet. El Bethel Missionary Baptist Church had to learn ... maybe Immanuel can, too.

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Yes, absolutely, thank you for contributing your experience. I think that connecting Katt with trained professionals would be a loving, compassionate thing to do, and perfectly in the spirit of what Jesus was teaching in the verse I quoted.

Interacting with the homeless is somewhat new to Immanuel Baptist (and all of us in Hoquiam). Our neighboring city of Aberdeen broke up a tent city of about 100 people a couple years ago, and everyone scattered throughout Aberdeen and Hoquiam. All public organizations (library, restaurants, etc.) are being presented with the challenge of dealing with people who literally have nowhere to go and who have basic human needs that the organizations are really not set up to serve.

Aside from my relationship with Katt, I deal with it at the gas station where I work at night. We aren't supposed to allow loitering; it's my job to move people along or call the cops if they don't. That's the policy, but what is the human thing to do, when it's cold outside and warm in the store, and the only shelter is miles away in Aberdeen and they've already closed their doors for the night? How can I deny a cold person a cup of coffee if they have no money, when there are boxes and boxes of coffee sitting on our shelves? Or what about when they are hungry and shoplift food? Should I call the cops on them?

I have made people go back into the cold, I have denied them coffee, and I have called the cops (though so far not for food shoplifting). To an extent my criticism of the church is projected self-criticism.

I certainly can't deny the complexity of issues that Katt presents for the church. I just think that we do have a responsibility to each other, and I want to challenge us (the church and myself and anyone) to look for the compassionate and loving path.

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The challenge of competing responsibilities is a tough one ... we work in a system that simply does not care about people over property and profits. You would be descended upon by dozens of needy people and swiftly lose your job and your ability to care for your family if you gave in even once... so, your stewardship, in this system, requires a hard stance. The people of Immanuel Baptist Church are, in a way, in the same position: as a 501c3, organized churches are creatures of the state, and therefore belong to the system.

I know in other countries, people are using Hive to solve these problems: what is lacking in Hoquiem and Aberdeen is an organization set up to help other institutions work with this issue. There may be people in Immanuel and many other churches there who want to help, but within the present structures, there is not a way ... but there probably is space to do something new. What that would be, I don't know ... our churches here support the local shelters, some have provided designated space, and it simply does not get that cold at night here such that life hangs in the balance except for a few days a year.

The Lord Jesus also said, "Ask, and it shall be given unto you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and the door shall be opened unto you." You, sir, care about Katt and the 100 who need help. Perhaps you are the leader you are looking for. With Hive only at 36 cents, there is not so much we can do for 100 people NOW ... but in building toward and into the bull run, if Hive were to meet its former all-time high, we could do a lot more. Maybe share this article around a bit more, online and off, and see who cares about the issue. I am going to put it in Things Ms. Dee Likes, my newsletter, this week to get it more exposure.

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Hive does offer many exciting opportunities; in a way, it already is a space for something new. The technical infrastructure to administer and distribute a city-based UBI is already available on this platform, for example. It would take a relatively tiny amount of money to create a Hoquiam token. And, we have many examples on this platform of tokens that distribute Hive earnings, so a self-funding, city-specific program for the homeless (or to be truly universal, anyone in Hoquiam) would certainly be possible.

I'm a bit like Jonah when it comes to leadership, though.

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Well, sir, you know what happened with Jonah... all that running, just to have to go do the job, because he was called ... of course, your name is Cliff A. Green, but you know Hive has a goodly number of whales already around in its seas, so ...

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I hope katt gets better and stronger, she needs to be in a sane and healthy mind to stay happy. This is some nice photos of your adventure! I haven't actually moved away from my spot in my entire life and I wish to hehe someday!

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Katt is an incredibly strong woman, I think. A soul cannot agree to come into this life to have the alternative experience she's living without being strong. ... Moving away from one's place of origin turns every day into an adventure! I highly recommend it, if only for a few years. ... Thanks for taking time with my story and photos. :)

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