Month: May 2022

  • Apple Valley Ranchos

    22 photographs (8 x 10 inches) and 1 brochure with a map. This is an album of promotional photographs and a brochure of a “Western-style” townsite and housing development in Apple Valley, San Bernardino County, California. Views of the small town of Apple Valley in the desert; interiors and exteriors of ranch houses; people in western clothing riding horses, dancing, and working with livestock.

    NotesTitle devised by cataloger. Photographs are stamped with date “1949” and “Apple Valley Photo Center / Ralph H. Cowles / Box D500 LVSR / Victorville, Ca.” Photographs were in a tooled-leather album cover with title “Apple Valley Ranchos” made by “Deere. Van Nuys, Calif.” The leather cover had mold, and has been treated and sealed. Photographs were removed from deteriorated plastic sleeves and kept in original order. The community of Apple Valley was developed by Newton T. Bass and Bernard (Bud) J. Westlund (not pictured).
    SubjectsHousing development.
    San Bernardino County (Calif.)
    Recreation.
    Architecture, domestic.
    Form/GenrePhotographs. (aat)
    Physical CollectionErnest Marquez Collection

    Digital Collection
    Photographs, Huntington Digital Library
  • Trees with Warbonnets

    Saltating sands
    Fluvial braids
    Eolian curves

    Beauty, of course.
    Lightly veiled; delicate and delicate
    intricate and complex

    set in a silver mantle
    beneath blue upon blue
    blue within blue
    deep and forgetful
    changing ever so gradually

    extended wings
    cupping the sky
    lift
    lifted
    and aloft
    in flight . . .

    feathers like fingers
    fanning in flight
    a single feather loosens and falls
    twisting, circling, swirling,
    and falling in the anonymous wind.

    soaring above the mountain cirque
    not a cloud can be seen
    and always below

    hot-headed leopard lizard
    trees with warbonnets

    snakes eat rats
    then chase their tails
    coyotes eat rabbits
    then chase their tails
    the desert lizards
    eat bugs and each other
    and wildflowers

    Saltating sands
    Fluvial curves
    Eolian twists

    —~ W. Feller