London calling

Jack London State Historic Park in Glen Ellen, Calif., marks the centennial of the prolific writer’s death with tours and talks on the 130-acre farm where he wrote and wrangled.

GLEN ELLEN, Calif. -- Rain fell. Nothing major, certainly not on the level of an Old Testament gully washer. Just a steady, spitting splatter of linked hydrogen and hydroxyl ions that turned the ground squishy and made you want to nominate the inventor of Gor-Tex for a Nobel Prize.

This weather, however, apparently was inclement enough to call off a full Saturday of activities -- photography classes, tours of ruins, a poetry reading -- at Jack London State Historic Park, washing out a small portion of the yearlong celebration marking the centennial of the writer's death and interment under a large volcanic boulder at his spread in rural Sonoma County.

Perfectly understandable, really. Still, doesn't it make you wonder what Jack London would've thought about letting a little rain spoil your experience?

I mean, c'mon, this was a famously roguish writer whose wanderlust and thirst for adventure sent him to far-flung locales on the high seas and frozen tundra, champing a cigar, chugging Glenlivit and scribbling down impressions for the reading public. You think London would've let a little dampness stop him? Think he cared if his trouser cuffs got wet and his shiny boots sullied? Ha, you don't know Jack!

I said as much -- albeit maybe not so embroidered with mock passion -- to Tjiska Van Wyk, executive director of the park, in a

subsequent telephone conversation. She merely chuckled, kind of dryly. But she seemed to take the ribbing in the good-natured spirit in which it was intended.

Weather permitting, the park is going all out in 2016 to celebrate all things London. Each month, docents and a passel of nature and historical experts will lead tours and give talks and oversee hands-on activities, not only highlighting London's productive career (more than 50 books between 1900 and 1916 alone) but featuring his waning years as a writer-slash-gentleman farmer on the 130 acres he purchased as a restorative home base after his peripatetic Call of the Wild exploits.

(Brief digression: London would've spat out his stogy and challenged me to engage in fisticuffs if I had called him a "gentleman farmer" to his face. "I have no countryside home," he wrote to friend Geddes Smith in 1916, "I am a farmer. It is because I am a farmer that I live in the country.")

Van Wyk said the events will allow visitors to "delve into London's legacy" in many ways: nature hikes, wildflower gazing, plein air watercolor painting, alfresco piano concerts, book-group discussions, not to mention the annual summer "Broadway Under the Stars" musical theater series.

The motivation is almost completely altruistic -- teaching new generations of readers about London's colorful life and belletristic output. But it doesn't hurt that the nonprofit organization that runs the park -- teaming with the state, following that whole messy State Park funding crisis of a few years back -- figures to get a boost in attendance and revenue.

"What we've been saying is that we want to 'Bring Jack Back,'" Van Wyk said. "By that, I mean, in the past he always used to be on the required reading list for all school kids. Now he's on the 'suggested' list. We want to keep him prominent. We want to lift his profile not just (as an author), but we find that people don't know about what he was trying to do here [in Glen Ellen] with sustainable land practices. There's a lot more to [London] than you'd think."

Even on a rainy day, without the benefit of guides, you can get a good idea of what London's life was like during the decade or so he spent in the Sonoma Valley, away from the trappings of fame dogging him in his native Oakland.

The historic park is bisected by two parking lots just past the entrance kiosk. Park in the upper lot, and you can explore the remnants of the work of "Farmer Jack" at what he called "Beauty Ranch." Park in the lower lot, and you can experience "Literary Jack" -- his gravesite, the remains of the grand Wolf House that burned to the ground during construction and his widow's "House of Happy Walls" that now is a museum full of Londonalia.

The upper park is geared mostly for those wanting to explore the outdoors. Check out what's left of the grain silos, smoke house, stallion barns, manure pits, the winery and distillery and the elaborate "Pig Palace," a circular feed house attached to 17 pens featuring a roofed sleeping area and fenced outdoor "runs" for London's porcine boarders. An informational sign says that Sonoma County farmers had great sport in making fun of London's lavish pig sty, but supporters are quick to note that he was ahead of his time in advocating "free-range" livestock raising.

Venture farther west, slightly more than half a mile, and you'll come upon London Lake, a 5-acre man-made body of water, with a stone dam, at the base of a six-mile trek up a winding fire road leading to the 2,463-foot summit of Sonoma Mountain. The first part of the trail is lush and shaded, canopied by Douglas fir, redwood, manzanita and oak. Near the summit lies grassy slopes with the payoff being a gorgeous view down upon what the native Miwok people called "The Valley of the Moon." (London titled one of his novels, about a proletariat Oaklander going back to the land, The Valley of the Moon.)

You don't have to imagine London tramping through this hilly expanse carved with trails because he wrote fictionalized accounts of it.

This from Chapter 36 of his highly autobiographical, alcohol-soaked 1913 novel, John Barleycorn:

"I ride out of my beautiful ranch. Between my legs is a beautiful horse. The air is wine. The grapes on a score of rolling hills are red with autumn flame. Across Sonoma Mountain wisps of sea fog are stealing. The afternoon sun smoulders in the drowsy sky. I have everything to make me glad I am alive."

It was not all vigorous horseback riding and diligent agrarian chores for London on this side of the property. No, just west of the manure pit lies the cottage where London composed scores of novels from 1911 to 1916 before dying on the front porch that November under circumstances (suicide? overdose? tropical diseases?) still debated by scholars but listed as "gastrointestinal uremic poisoning" in official park literature. What's not debatable is that London found artistic inspiration at the cottage. He wrote looking out on a massive, gnarled oak tree and, according to some reports, occasionally would sit under the tree with pencil and notepaper poised.

The nearly 400-year-old tree endures, despite being given a death sentence by arborists several years ago as the result of two polysyllabic, unpronounceable pathogenic fungi, only to have the diagnosis reversed by a second set of experts. The tree still serves as a nexus at the park and is the site for some of the centennial celebrations. It certainly is a must-see for visitors because, according to what experts have told park officials, the tree may have only another 10 years left before it becomes a threat to fall and crush the cottage or park visitors.

"It's such a signature part of Beauty Ranch," Van Wyk said. "It's had a stay of execution. On Arbor Day weekend [April 30], we harvest[ed] 25 acorns and 17 seedlings. We're planting one [seedling] off Sonoma Plaza and more in open space. That part of Jack will live on."

The lower side of the park, by contrast, is geared more for The Great Indoorsman.

Sure, you have to walk 0.3 of a mile to reach London's grave (one man's opinion: not much to see, really; it's a moss-covered boulder) and another 0.3 of a mile to get to the charred remains of the Wolf House.

The house is worth seeing, even if it now is mostly a skeletal volcanic-rock frame of one man's dream. Architect Albert Farr spent years building the four-story, 15,000-square-foot, 26-room house that cost $80,000 to construct. In 1913, a month before London and second wife Charmian were to move in, the house was gutted by flames, combusted spontaneously, forensic fire experts believed, from the discarded linseed oil rags of workers. London vowed to rebuild; he died at 40 before workers could even start.

The more interesting part of the lower park, to bookish types, is the museum housed in the House of Happy Walls, which is the fieldstone home with a Spanish tile roof that his widow built after London's death. Charmian London lovingly preserved all of Jack's possessions -- souvenirs from the Yukon and other journalistic adventures, even his roll-top desk and the Dictaphone he used to plot out his works.

Many of his papers and correspondences are on display. You can read, pre-Call of the Wild and White Fang fame, examples of the rejection letters London received from San Francisco newspapers. (Example from the Chronicle's M.H. deYoung: "Owing to a pressure of other matter upon the columns of the Chronicle, I am unable to use the manuscript ... ")

You also can ogle, but not thumb through, first editions of the books that made him American publishing's first "millionaire author," and also read about London's championing, but ultimately rejecting, a socialist political agenda. (Excerpt of his resignation letter from the Socialist Party in 1916: "Dear Comrades: I am resigning from the Socialist Party because of its lack of fire and fight, and its loss of emphasis on the class struggle.")

London's literary fame and political affiliations brought a curious mixture of visitors to his Glen Ellen spread. He drew so many guests, in fact, that he wrote and mimeographed a primer for those arriving. Here's how he describes life at Beauty Ranch:

"Our life here is something as follows: We rise early, and work in the forenoon. Therefore, we do not see our guests until afternoons and evenings. ... You will find this a good place to work, if you have work to do. Or, if you prefer to play, there are horses, saddles and rigs. In the summer, we have a swimming pool."

Funny, no mention of potential rain necessitating a cancellation of those events.

Travel on 07/24/2016

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