The Day

Elevated thoughts: Lessons from a hillside

- Steve Fagin

A granite outcrop not far from our house rises steeply above the forest floor, providing expansive views of the surroundin­g countrysid­e.

It is a wonderful perch to scramble atop, gaze off at the distance and contemplat­e one's place in the cosmos. We've taken to calling it Bald Mountain after a favorite small peak in Western Maine.

At first glance this vestige of the glacier that covered half of North America more than 15,000 years ago — the same Wisconsin Ice Sheet that carved out Long Island Sound, the Connecticu­t coastline and other more prominent features — appears impervious to geologic and meteorolog­ical forces. But a closer inspection reveals how nature is slowly but surely bringing Bald Mountain down.

The other day I absent-mindedly tugged at a slender birch sapling that had taken root in a narrow crevice, and a rock slab the size of a car windshield broke free, slid down a sheer face and smashed below into a dozen pieces.

The ground nearby was littered with countless other shards, suggesting the hill at one time had been considerab­ly broader, taller and probably balder.

Over the millennia as forests gradually spread over bare rock, tree roots have exerted relentless, immense pressure in search of nutrients and water. Each season decomposin­g leaves have created more soil, and combined with the ravages of cold weather, the inexorable pulverizin­g has continued. An old-time stonemason once told me one way to split a rock is to drill holes in winter, fill them with water and let expanding ice do the trick.

Here in the East, where a moister, more temperate climate supports robust arboreal growth, the Appalachia­n Mountains have been steadily wearing down. When first formed about 480 million years ago they were nearly triple in height, as tall as the Rockies and the Alps.

Over in Asia, meanwhile, steadily upthrustin­g tectonics slowly add elevation to the world's tallest peaks.

We humans, whose life spans barely register as the blink of an eye, would characteri­ze these as slow-motion processes, but by chrono-stratigrap­hic measures the dismantlin­g of Bald Mountain

has been taking place at warp speed. Even I, in a few short decades of casual observatio­n, can detect degrees of deteriorat­ion.

The flat summit is marked by a golf cart-sized boulder called a glacial erratic, derived from the Latin word errare (to wander).

I like to tell friends that I spent weeks dragging this multi-ton rock up Bald Mountain, but in truth the monolith had been deposited there when the enormous glacier retreated. It rests a few yards from the edge of a steep drop-off and will tumble down when the hillside eventually collapses.

No matter. There always will be hills to ascend, and people will continue to climb them. Humans likely first sought out elevated places to hunt for prey; later they learned the military advantage of gaining the high ground; eventually they realized that rising to the top of even the smallest mound literally and figurative­ly is an uplifting experience.

The best explanatio­n for scaling to the top, of course, was given nearly 100 years ago by British mountainee­r George Mallory.

Asked why he wanted to climb Everest, he simply replied, “Because it's there.”

As for me, I'm pretty sure Bald Mountain and the surroundin­g hills will be around for a while. Even though the hill is wearing down, climbing it continues to raise the spirits.

Lindsey Stirling — 8 p.m., Foxwoods’ Grand Theater; with Alexander and Jean; $30-$70; 1-800-200-2882.

Lady Gaga — 7:30 p.m., Mohegan Sun Arena; $50-$400; 1-800-745-3000.

Jonah Smith — 8 p.m., Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center, 300 Main St., Old Saybrook; $27; 1-877-503-1286.

PnB Rock — 9 p.m., Garde Arts Center, 325 State St., New London; with Moe Steele, Franc Gramz and Jus Cuz; $30-$110; (860) 444-7373.

Chorus of Westerly — 6 p.m., George Kent Performanc­e Hall, 119 High St., Westerly; first concert of the 2017-18 Symphonic Series, featuring choral selections by composers from Great Britain; $23-$65; (401) 596-8663.

Svenska: Music Found in Old Drawers —5 p.m., La Grua Center, 32 Water St., Stonington; Music Matters concert featuring Andrea Larson and lydia ievins on fiddle and nyckelharp­a; $10; (860) 535-2300.

Ken Peplowski Quartet — 8:30 p.m., Side Door Jazz Club, 85 Lyme St., Old Lyme; $35; (860) 434-2600.

Jamie Kennedy — 8 and 10:30 p.m., Comix at Mohegan Sun; $15-$35.

“Midsummer/Jersey” — 7:30 p.m., Old Saybrook High School, 1111 Boston Post Road; drama club production of “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” set in the Jersey Shore; $5 seniors and students, $7 general admission; (860) 395-3175.

“The Game’s Afoot” — 8 p.m., Ivoryton

Playhouse, 103 Main St., Ivoryton; thriller comedy set at Gillette Castle; $50 adults, $45 seniors, $22 students, $17 children; (860) 767-7318. “Women in Jeopardy!” — 8 p.m., United Congregati­onal Church, 87 Broadway, Norwich; comedy/murder mystery presented by the Chelsea Players; $12; (860) 887-7289.

“Jesus Christ Superstar” — 8 p.m., Granite Theatre, 1 Granite St., Westerly; $25, $22 seniors, $15 children; (401) 596-2341.

“Rags” — 3 and 8 p.m., Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main St., East Haddam; musical about the country’s immigrant past; $28$80; (860) 873-8668.

Craft & Vendor Fair — 9 a.m., Fitch High School, 101 Groton Long Point Road Groton; annual Falcons Music Boosters fundraiser; free; fitchcraft­fair@gmail.com

Women’s Club Bazaar — 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Saint Agnes Church, 22 Haigh Ave., Niantic; with baskets, restaurant gift certificat­es, bake sale and more; (860) 6907104.

Holiday Bazaar — 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Union Baptist Church, 119 High St., Mystic; silent auction, gift baskets, homemade baked goods and a soup and sandwich luncheon; (860) 536-9659.

Jack Frost Bazaar — 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Niantic Community Church, 170 Pennsylvan­ia Ave.; 72nd annual bazaar with children’s activities and a visit with Mrs. Claus; (860) 739-6208.

— 10 a.m., Mashantuck­et Pequot Museum and Research Center, 110 Pequot Trail, Mashantuck­et; open to all veterans, active-duty military and their families, and the public; free with museum admission; (860) 396-6910.

— 10 a.m., Waterford Community Center, 24 Rope Ferry Road; sponsored by Waterford Regional Lions Club; free; (860) 443-4402.

— 1-4 p.m., Hempsted Houses, 11 Hempstead St., New London; hearth cooking demonstrat­ion, cider pressing and historic games on the lawn; free; (860) 443-7949,

— 3 p.m., Waterford Public Library, 49 Rope Ferry Road; free; (860) 444-5805.

— 4-7 p.m., Foxwoods’ Premier Ballroom, 350 Trolley Line Blvd., Mashantuck­et; 21+ only; $35, $55 for VIP access at 3 p.m.; 1-800-200-2882.

— 5-7 p.m., Lyme Public Hall, 249 Hamburg Road; annual chowder dinner with sides and desserts; $15 adults, $10 children under age 12; (860) 434-1929.

— 7-9 p.m., Christ Episcopal Church, 78 Washington St., Norwich; admission is $5 or 2-4 canned food items for the food pantry.

— 7:30 p.m., Donald L. Oat Theater, 62 Broadway; screening of “Maudie”; $7 suggested donation.

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