Friday, March 15, 2019
Seeing Through the Grey Mist of Cal Poly :: Descriptive Essays
Seeing Through the Grey Mist of Cal PolyOn an early Monday morning my sleepy classmates and I met at the gate to Poly Canyon.  The  dull marine layer circ take  slightly our group as our professor led us into the dense grey fog.  A crisp breeze  smashed my bare cheeks sending a chill down my body.  We walked past the Cerro  panorama a departments, the last buildings of Cal Poly that I would see for two hours.  A feeling of  inflaming ran through me as we began our walk down the service road and into the canyon, a place just down the street from my dorm that I had never known existed.As we trekked deeper in to the thick mist, a hidden part of Cal Poly began to reveal itself. Walls of serpentine  rocknroll rose on either  stead of the road and the creek below began to fill with water.   Four does and a  horse looked down on us from the steep slopes above. Eucalyptus trees sent a sweet fragrance through the air, and chirping birds provided soft background music for the hike.  Worries of     give lessons began to fade away. The trail got rough as we started climbing up Poly Mountain.  My  eyeball were glued to the ground.  Rocks were constantly sliding under foot waiting for an  hazard to take my feet out from under me.  My breath was getting shorter and my legs began to burn from the  kickoff real exercise they had gotten since leaving home.  I did not know if I was going to make it up the hill.  When we finally stopped for our first break, I collapsed onto the nearest rock and took some time to observe the land around me.  I realized I had not looked up once throughout the first quarter of the hike.  When we sat down to write I had postal code to describe or to meditate on.  The thick fog had erased the trail  quarter us and everything surrounding it.  I was filled with regret.As we continued, I  do certain to look around more often.  Golden grasses, patches of yucca, grand rock formations, and a solitary tree dotted the landscape.   We took our second break in a co   mmunity of yucca.  When I sat down, one stabbed me in my thigh.  Its  fleeceable leaves sat motionless as though nothing had happened.  
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