Sharing my love of Big Sur

By Artist and Big Sur resident Erin Gafill

"In the end we will conserve only what we love; we will love only what we understand; and we will understand only what we are taught." (Baba Dioum, 1968.)

We walk up the ridge hearing birds sing, feeling the sun’s warmth on our skin, smelling the scent of wild sage growing rampant on the trails. A thousand feet below, the blue Pacific spreads out like a carpet of sapphires. Deep purple irises are blooming now.  They peak out from beneath the dense brush edging the trail.  We have packed a picnic and find a clearing in the sun where we can eat it, savoring every bite as we rest our weary muscles.  We are hungry, thirsty, tired, and incredibly happy to be sitting here surrounded by the indescribable beauty of Big Sur.

Erin Gafill Picture.jpeg

Before we left the house, I had been feeling a little sad and overwhelmed. It has been a long winter. Last week, walking through the orchard below the house, it seemed the three old apple trees had died. Now, just a week later, their branches sprout new leaves and pink blossoms. The annual miracle. 

On the trail now, spring flowers bloom and sitting on this mountaintop above the sea I feel at peace. May flowers have lured us out today, but there is never a bad time to hike the coast.

We never tire of scanning the sea for the annual migration of whales, the frolicking of dolphins, and the soaring majesty of the California condors. Too long without it, I begin to feel like a plant without water, too. Here, Nature is fierce and nourishing at the same time. This spring, the coast’s rugged beauty is adorned with red Indian paintbrush, orange sticky monkey flower, wild radish and patches of lavender lupine and sprawling California poppy.

It is in first falling in love with a place that we are inspired to protect it. We protect it by first paying attention to it, tending it, and allowing it to teach us. We protect it through sharing it in ways that inspire love in others—writing about it, photographing it, painting it, composing music inspired by its sounds and rhythms—and we preserve it by respecting the boundaries of trail and wild spaces. 

As we make our way down again, Tom asks me to photograph the wild flowers we are seeing along the way so that later my sister-in-law Meredith can identify them for us. Some, like the red Indian paintbrush, are like old friends. Others require a little research. I did not know that poison oak flowered, or that blackberries grow rampant along some of our beach trails.

When we go into Nature, we seek not to change, but to be changed. We invite its beauty, harmony and diversity of life to ground us, to bring us back into balance. The experience inspires in us a desire to not just feel, but also to understand, and in understanding, to protect.

As an artist and writer, I rarely travel without a pen and paper, though lately “Notes” on my iPhone has taken the place of my journal. Taking time to make notes, I feel more deeply the vastness of the turquoise sky and cobalt sea.  Pen in hand, my senses quicken. Instead of just enjoying the birdsong as background music, I find myself wondering which birds I am hearing. 

In pausing to contemplate, my curiosity is aroused, and also the pure primal joy that rises up at being alive, feeling that sense of one-ness with all. I am struck again that understanding a place means paying attention to it, and that it is in slowing down that we can best observe it, ask questions about it, study it.  

As we finish our hike, we take care to leave nothing behind, and take nothing with us but the memories of this day. But we do not leave empty handed. We have gathered deeply from the well of beauty and wisdom and leave full-hearted. 

It is my hope that in sharing my love of Big Sur through image and word, I am part of the ongoing education of others who may not have yet learned ecology stewardship, or the profound joys to be had experiencing Nature first hand.



WAYS TO LOVE BIG SUR

Weston Call Fund for Big Sur was created in 2018 to provide residents, businesses and visitors an opportunity to pool their giving. It is governed by an advisory board which provides oversight, raises funds, defines grantmaking priorities and recommends grants to benefit Big Sur. It is a special purpose fund of the Community Foundation for Monterey County, which offers administrative and investment support. It is the holding fund for LOVE Big Sur.

What is LOVE Big Sur? In Memory of Weston Call

By The Call Family

Welcome to a Locally Organized Visitor Experience for Big Sur, or LOVE Big Sur! This thoughtful acronym was created by Weston Call, a proud resident of Big Sur. Eager to impart a sense of conscious tourism onto incoming visitors, Weston thought up the concept from his long sought-after dream home on a ridge line overlooking Big Sur’s Valley and the Pacific Ocean below.

With LOVE Big Sur as a vehicle, Weston’s passion and vision for the Big Sur community included education for visitors and tourists while transporting them around his beloved home. Weston would do his best, for instance, to provide important historical context for visitors, giving them insight into a landscape once inhabited by the Esselen tribe, a Native American people indigenous to the Santa Lucia Mountains. Weston was also inspired by how the Esselen migrated seasonally from the coast to the inland forests, consuming foods from the ocean and the land alike depending on weather and seasonal climate. Weston made it his duty to spread this kind of historically inspired narrative for Big Sur to visitors so that visiting also always included learning. To Weston, Big Sur was the “grandest meeting of land and sea” and he was proud to play a role welcoming tourists in a way that was helpful for everyone--a locally organized visitor experience.

June 8, 2018 fix.jpg

Today, local families, businesses, hotels, bakeries, art galleries and restaurants support the local economy and the visitors’ experience to this still very wild land. Every year, millions come from around the globe to visit the scenic and iconic landscape, hike the trails, observe the chilly ocean water and relax near the Big Sur River. Weston’s hope, and the desire of many Big Sur locals, is to continue to encourage a desire for conscientious tourism and a more thoughtful, loving, sustainable treatment of the wild lands. A Locally Organized Visitor Experience, or LOVE Big Sur, hopes to continue to support this messaging in Weston’s honor.

The truth about Big Sur is that it’s extremely vulnerable to all kinds of natural and unnatural disasters like fires and floods and structural damage from storms to name a few. These kinds of disasters can completely upend life for locals who call Big Sur home, and also create all kinds of problems for the global visitation that support the local economy. In honor of Weston Call, who passed away from natural causes in 2018, and in honor of his heroic and creative LOVE Big Sur efforts, a fund was established in his name to support non-profits that are so vital for the community of Big Sur. Today, The Weston Call Fund for Big Sur also aims to provide relief from the often inevitable disasters the community experiences. Through this fund, and with LOVE Big Sur as a channel through which the fund can be given a very special Weston Call voice, Weston’s love for Big Sur and the community can live on, and his good nature can keep on giving.


Weston Call Fund For Big Sur is LOVE Big Sur

The Weston Call Fund for Big Sur was created in 2018 to provide residents, businesses and visitors an opportunity to pool their giving. It is governed by an advisory board which provides oversight, raises funds, defines grantmaking priorities and recommends grants to benefit Big Sur. It is a special purpose fund of the Community Foundation for Monterey County, which offers administrative and investment support. It is the holding fund for LOVE Big Sur.

Mission

To provide sustainable, impactful and supplemental funding to nonprofit organizations benefiting the residents of Big Sur and build resources for disaster relief.

Our Priorities: Health, Safety, Education, Arts, Culture and Community Stewardship

  • Create additional funding for health, fire and safety needs through Big Sur nonprofits

  • Support educational, cultural and historical programs

  • Aid sustainable tourism and destination stewardship efforts

  • Create and enhance community partnerships

  • Support nonprofits providing services in Big Sur

  • Respond to disaster through the Big Sur Disaster Relief Fund, a component fund of the Weston Call Fund for Big Sur

Advisory Board: Brian Call, Chair; Galen Call; Sharen Carey; David Fink; Kirk Gafill; Matt Glazer; Butch Kronlund; Guillermo Meza; Frank Pinney

Ways to LOVE Big Sur

  • Support the Weston Call Fund for Big Sur

  • Learn about Weston’s life and initiatives around maintaining a healthy balance between locals and tourists in Big Sur, how you can be involved and local resources visit www.lovebigsur.com.

  • Take the Big Sur Pledge to protect and nurture Big Sur

  • Follow LOVE Big Sur on Instagram at @lovebigsur

Join Us!

Whether you and your family have lived or worked in Big Sur for months or decades, or you are a visitor that has enjoyed its beauty, you can give in a way that is meaningful today and will also have an impact for future generations.

Make a Gift: Donate

  • Send a check made payable to “Community Foundation for Monterey County” with “Weston Call Fund for Big Sur” in the memo line

  • Mail to: 2354 Garden Road, Monterey, CA 93940

  • To make a gift of stock or other assets, contact Christine Dawson, CFMC Vice President of Philanthropic Services at 831.375.9712 x126.

Donations to the Weston Call Fund for Big Sur of the Community Foundation for Monterey County (CFMC) are tax deductible. The CFMC is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, Tax ID #94-1615897.