Lake Tahoe’s Balancing Rock
Fannette Island is located in the middle of Emerald Bay, peaking through the crystal-blue, crisp Tahoe water. The
island has been around since long before Scandinavians built the famous and architecturally amazing Vikingsholm castle and the smaller Tea House. The scarcely wooded granite rock interrupting the serene and seemingly endless lake rises 150 feet above the surrounding smooth water. The island’s obstinacy is charming and personifying, as it resisted the urge to be calmed and overridden by the glacial ice passing by all those years ago. However, the Tea House has not shown the same obstinacy, and has allowed itself to be vandalized in recent years, leaving only a stone shell of what was once the afternoon-snack quarters of royalty.
Like the Shaolin monks, the excitement the Balancing Rock and the surrounding area lie not within just pure, peaceful intentions-at least not for me. I enjoy the unbelievable sight because I know defying the natural laws of existence can only last for so long. I get innocently captivated with the idea that the monk’s fingers could falter-that the slim stone foundation could crumble. And in time, it surely will.
The slender base of the formation is slowly wearing. The fantastic weight and pull of the Earth’s inner force and endless weather for ages longer than all of man’s history could tell rakes their knives and scars on even the greatest and most permanent earth and on the hardest stone. The world has gone on without regard for the Balancing Rock. The cracks are beginning to show the caducity of the natural unnatural formation, and time will eventually win, as it always does, sending tons of granite crashing to the gravity-conforming ground below.