| I woke up to a beautiful day and
a knot in my stomach. Today was the day that I was going to interview Jane
and Jo Wheelwright, probably the most well-known people on the Hollister
Ranch. Jane moved to this ranch nearly ninety years ago, and grew up here
in a house now called the Hollister House. Jo grew up on the East Coast
and moved to the ranch after marrying Jane.
Before my dad and I left our house, my mom picked a huge bouquet of flowers
for Jane and Jo. As we drove up the winding dirt road, I worried. A million
anxious thoughts crossed my mind. What if they don't like the flowers?
What if they don't want to be interviewed? We reached their driveway at
last, and the knot in my stomach grew even bigger. We parked our car and
walked down a ramp to their kitchen door.
My dad knocked very loudly a bout five times, and finally, Jane answered
the door. She is a small lady, no taller than I, and was wearing a bathrobe.
She let us in and led us to the living room. Jo stood when he heard us
coming. He is an enormously tall man -- about six feet five inches.
Jo and Jane seem to be complete opposites at first sight. Jane is rather
small and reserved while Jo is quite tall and gregarious. But after talking
to them awhile I realized that that they share one common interest: a
love for this area.
We sat down and I gave them the flowers. Jo , who is blind, told me that
he could sense that the flowers were beautiful. Then we began the interview.
Jane Hollister was born in San Clemente in 1905. When she was three years
old, she and her family moved to the ranch, which is located on the California
coast near Point Conception. Her family began construction of the Hollister
House in 1908; during its construction, they lived in what is now called
the "green house". The Hollister House was finally finished
in 1910.
Jane didn't begin school until she was eight years old because there
was no school nearby, and there were no paved roads back then. The only
transportation was the train, and it took seven hours to get to Santa
Barbara. Eventually, Jane went to a boarding school called the Santa Barbara
Girls' School.
Jane's favorite childhood memory was when her pony arrived. Her family
went down to San Augustine, where the train stopped. When Jane saw the
pony coming down on the cattle chute she was very excited.
"It was a beautiful Indian pony," she recalls, "much bigger
than a Shetland. It came, and there I had it, my own pony!"
Jane's brothers, Clint (her twin) and Jack, met Jo Wheelwright at Harvard
and invited him to the Hollister Ranch. During his visit, Jo saw Jane
on horseback and says he didn't know where Jane began and the horse ended.
He thought, "Look! Some goddess is running around on earth."
Then his heart skipped a beat and before he knew it, he was in love.
Out of all the places in the world, Jo and Jane chose to live at the
ranch because it was, and still is, beautiful. Jo calls Jane and himself
"nature freaks", and they love living out in the wilderness,
as isolated as it is.
"We are very happy here with the view and the animals," Jo
says, ending our interview.
I thanked them, and they thanked me. We gathered our things and left.
My father and I drove back down the road, closing an hour in my life and
opening a chapter of memories.

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