![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHcICmbipxCSx2DHPFyi5W3k97xkA4bb3N9kOUaSxvvK730Gl6K7ELcOnwwDxs96p8ZS_VzW7oeUFuvDEjrG9fwOCXN7OTInzGhwxj5rhvg_aGVk1SIB5ohI9s3fc7DqyrERuAWYkGEAO5/s400/creeksized.jpg)
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e-lane bridge crosses a one-lane LaBarque Creek up the road just a bit, and I sat on the railing and looked at the dreamlike water, usually crystal-clear but chocolate-gelato-colored because an inch of rain fell the day before, and watched it sparkle in a setting of ultra-rain-soaked greenery, and I sighed because I am so in love with it and it is all I have ever wanted, and because it looked almost like a Japanese painting. I wanted to capture that and show you. Here's also a photo of the little bridge's warning. I sometimes crawl down the bank and when it's passable go hunchback beneath the bridge seeking fossils and crayfish, which survive only in very healthy streams. And I did once scoop up a glassy little crayfish hoping to show it to a friend. With its little toothpick arms it defended itself, pinching the palm of my hand (ow!), making me drop it back into the water.
You can't imagine how as a kid of about eight or nine I pined to sit by streams, to study their creatures, to watch the light on them, to listen to them. Instead I visited a vacant lot and after rains watched a rill that ran into a culvert, and listened to its trickling, and hoped that someday I could have what I have now.
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