Rip Snorter's Blog

Orion high

Morning blogsters:

Orion's an hour or two above the western horizon, clear sky.  If you're outside before dawn you ought to be able to get a good look at him.

That bright, middle star of his belt isn't a star.  It's a globular cluster.  A whole snowstorm of stars, all bunched up so's they look like one.  Fairly impressive through a telescope.  Although maybe my memory's serving me wrong.  Maybe that one's a nebula.  It's been 25 years since I looked at it through a telescope.

In the early times of telescopism the instruments weren't clear enough to distinguish between a globular cluster and a nebula unless the nebula was a particularly good one, such as the Horseshoe or the Crab.  A guy named Messiere, or something similar located as many as he could find and catalogued them.  Now all are M 294 or whatever, numbered by his initial.

Anyway, if you're outdoors you might amuse yourself by taking a look.

Jack

Entry #472

Civility and civilization

Hi blogsters:

Taking a breather here and got to thinking about something that happened a few years ago that's worth relating.

During the post-Y2K financial challenges I substitute taught in the public schools for a while. 

Those situations often leave the sub in front of a bunch of kids without any obvious means of spending the time.  The regular teach didn't know he was going to get into a car wreck or have a terrible hangover, so there's no agenda.

One week I found myself in front of several days of classes of high school seniors.  Rather than let them use it for a study hall, I decided to get them talking about what they believe in.  Try to get them into a mode of defining it and possibly thinking in ways they hadn't done so before.

One of the days was spent talking about civilization.  What it is.  What are the characteristics of a civilization, as opposed to merely a complex society.

From the beginning, every classroom full of kids believed a society couldn't call itself a civilization if it condoned slavery within it.  They continued believing that (after some discussion) even after I pointed out the fact the US allowed slavery until a century and a half ago. 

It was a strange sensation, watching those kids absorb, then adopt the realization that by their own definitions the US couldn't possibly have been a civilization until the end of the Civil War.  But they were universally adamant in that regard after thinking about it.  Even after I pointed out further that slavery existed almost all over the world in one form or another until fairly recently in history....REALLY recently.

But once they'd decided there couldn't be civilization without civility defined as a respect for the freedom of the individual, they hung tight on it.  Those kids decided human beings weren't civilized anywhere until 'way after a lot of civilizations (by other definitions) had risen and fallen.

Smarter kids, those, than I figured on them being.  And perfectly willing to stick by their guns on something they believed in.

Another thing they were adamant about as a prerequisite for civilization was a respect by the government and the citizenry, for human life.  A wisdom and determination that whims wouldn't rule when it came to robbing individuals of their freedom.  That criminal statutes wouldn't be jailing people, or killing people this week for behavior that would be legal a year from now.  (We talked about prohibition and the aftermath.  There were booze runners who were jailed during prohibition who weren't released from prison until 20 years after the repeal of the Amendment).

That town we were in had three prisons.  Two for men and one for women.  Prisons were the main source of employment.  Those kids knew a lot about prisons.  They probably knew more than most adults in the US about what happens in penal institutions because they heard about it from family members who were employed in them.

Because of that, probably, they believed unanimously that prison is a serious matter that we aren't handling in a way that reflects a respect for human life, for law, for individual freedom, for humanity.  They believed without much argument that we shouldn't be imprisoning people for victimless crimes. 

The bulk of the prisoners in the women prison are there for drug possession and prostitution.  Those youngsters believed in their hearts there ought to be a better means of dealing with such matters in a civilized society.

It took them longer, but these kids absolutely believed, following a lot of debate, that due process is the foundation of civilization.  They believed wars without due process were criminal, that they were the antithesis of civilization because they failed to respect human life enough to follow their own prescriptions and procedures.  They believed killing, mayhem are serious matters worthy of reflection, debate, and a profound respect for doing things thoughtfully and exactly according to law.  They believed failure to do so is a symptom of a society withdrawing from the condition we call 'civilization'.

Thanks to that experience, I believe there's a lot of hope for this country, once those kids get control of the political processes.  They had a lot more potential wisdom than most adults I've encountered in past years.

Jack

 

Entry #471

An invitation to use your noggins

Morning blogsters:

Those of you who are sending me PMs asking for my advice and opinions about various lotteries and what's going to hit would be doing yourselves a big favor if you pause a moment.  Lean back in your chairs and ponder.

You are basing those PMs on a false assumption, which is that I'm a good predictor.  I'm not.  If you examine my history of prediction, the best day I've got on the record, or series of days, you'll find stark testimony in the numbers that I'm a lousy predictor.

What you are looking for isn't here at LP.  The fact I'm as sorry at predicting as I am, and that I look as though I'm awfully good based on the prediction statistics only means one thing:  The people predicting on LP are at least as unsuccessful at it as I am.

My statistics will show I've made a lot of predictions and that I'm somewhat ahead in the game, overall.  That's not something worth your awe.  It's something you need to just stop and consider.  One of the best prediction records on LP at this morning is not much ahead of breaking even.

LP has lots of predictors giving you a drumbeat of what numbers you ought to go out and spend your money on, every day.  But no matter how loud they are in their chest beating, their claiming they take it to the bank, the fact is you have no evidence they're making money with their own predictions.  They don't show it on the LP records.

What are you doing trusting something like that?  What are you doing asking a guy who ain't getting rich even with imaginary money, me, about anything?

I don't know anything.  Obviously nobody else does, either.

Give some thought to studying the numbers on your own.  Maybe you can figure it out.

But recognize that the folks here are no different than you are.  We aren't genius material.  We're just trying our best to figure this thing out, same as you ought to be.

We obviously haven't succeeded yet, and you'd be crazy to spend money on any predictions I make, or that anyone else here makes.  If the people you are trusting for advice are losing, where do you come off trusting what they say?

Jack

Entry #470

Libertarian - a true story

I gotta chuckle.

During the mid-1980s I served a while as the North/Central Texas Libertarian Party Chairman.  That chapter consisted of three people.  I earned the honor of being elected chairman by being the only one of the three either of the others could find any area of mutual agreement with.

One drove down from Granbury, the other from Dallas.  We met in a cafe in Leander one evening to discuss our party strategy.  How we were going to overwhelm all those Democrats and Republicans in Texas.

The party broke up on rocky shores when the manager of the restaurant asked us to leave because my two constituents got too loud shouting at one another over nuances of doctrine.

Likely the Libertarian Party of Texas has a lot more members now, provided they keep a lot of distance between themselves and only talk over phones, where they can hang up on one another.

Jack

Entry #469

Day of the Lost Souls (re-posted for shalini)

Day of the Lost Souls

Copyright©2003 Jack Purcell

 

Sky mariners in some other reality probably navigate as old mariners here sounded the nighttime and foggy channel bottoms sampling with buckets to fix their positions by mud color, or sand, or shells. They’d examine the debris in buckets and ponder; arid southwest: almost turquoise. Inland California: grey-blue. Coastal: yellow hazy blue. But that was forty years ago. Maybe the atmosphere has grayed during these decades, the way my own mustache, eyebrows and hair has shifted to bare metal silver.

1964, blue on blue, I tunneled through tints and shades of airy void from the New Mexico desert to arrive in San Francisco several hours ahead of my outbound rendezvous. The old DC3 clubbed the air dizzy and crawled over the unconscious body getting me to the coast. Those blunt wings hammered the molecules of blue air into solid ice to hold man and machine aloft and skim across the bumpy surface.

But we were young in that country. The November 9, 1964, San Francisco Airport Terminal teemed with Peace Corps Volunteers. We milled around the gate awaiting our flight to Hawaii.

Ten more days and I'd be a full 21, a legal man. Full of mature, critical appraisal I skulked the waiting area; studied the rosy cheeks and sunny attitudes; the strapping young adults I knew I'd spend the next piece of my life among. Though some were older than me they were mostly kids.

I watched those youngsters straight-on for a while until they noticed. Then I shifted and gazed covertly at the reflections from the plate glass window/wall of our capsule. Those windows were all that separated us from the din of steel-gray planes and scorching ash-gray runways. Silent planes vanished into the heat waves and hazy yellow blue skies.

I pretended to read my book and scrutinized my soon-to-be-companions out of the corners of my eyes; strained to hear the dribble of their conversations which each seemed to say, "I'm a neat person. I'm worthy of this." Some, I could surmise, tacitly agreed to allow certain others to be as neat as them.

We were elite, the acceptance letter assured us. Only one of every forty applicants, the letter whispered, were accepted for the intensive preparation to save the poor in hungry backward lands. We were all riding on the bobsled thrill of those flattering words. The resulting fast pulse beat of waiting in the terminal became a political caucus. Probably most of us figured those others were likely to be special, but secretly believed the Peace Corps made a mistake in letting our particular selves in.

The candidates talked films; of Viradiana, of Antonioni, of Fellini and of a Swede who made foreign films in those days. Of Existentialism. Talked about the beatnik poets. All so serious. What's your major? Where did you get your degree? I pondered the words, scowling to myself.

I could see these mostly weren't my kind of folks. I'd scraped and cheated to get a high school diploma several years earlier, did three years in the US Army. Hitch-hiked across the country several times, been in jail more than once. Sweated under a blazing sky in dozens of hellish jobs that didn't carry any prestige in these circles of toy-people. Now we were going off to India to teach the natives how to raise chickens. Bouncing off through rainbow skies bearing the weight of the white man's burden to teach a culture older than our God how to raise poultry. But we were young in that country,

I felt uncomfortable in my snazzy dark suit with narrow lapels. My only suit. It was the leading edge of fashion when I bought it for $20 a couple of years earlier in Boston. The pencil thin blue tie with gold flecks felt awful on my neck, and worse as I became conscious of the width of ties the others were wearing.

As the morning wore into early afternoon more of the India X Peace Corps trainees filtered into the waiting area from incoming flights, draining the rest of the country of heroes. I hung around alone and tried to guess which of the waiting passengers were trainees, and which were just transients.

I gazed at the women who were obvious volunteers, wondering whether any Peace Corps taboos would stand between me and female companionship during the next few months. I idly checked out the prospects. Most didn't bear up under a lot of scrutiny. Rules of training could make for a long dry spell, and the fraternity boys were already busy staking out their campsites among the curly haired Goldiloxes of the crew.

Eventually, I noticed a lean, freckle-faced red-headed Irish looking chap hanging around watching, same as I was. He wasn't mingling with the other selectees much, and he appeared gangling and awkward. I smiled to myself, musing, probably feeling superior. Just as I felt somehow superior to all these fresh-scrubbed college folks off to slum among the huddled masses. Labor, I learned, was his name. Rex Labor. At that moment I watched, listened to, and studied a future friend for life for the first time.

A lady schoolmarm, strangely vacant blue-eyed, lanky, ruddy faced and scarlet haired, from Virginia caught my focus. I heard her tell someone she was an English teacher. Lillie Rogers. Lillie Belle Rogers, I learned later. No raving beauty, but a touch of class, presence, bearing. Straight and tall. I sensed an underlying tinge of bitterness in her manner.

Sometime later it came to mind, a female counterpart to Labor. I didn't sense that Lillie Belle would be the lady of this group I'd come to know best. I'd have rejected that notion, then. Lillie Belle Rogers. A long, sensuous neck ahead of Nancy Philson and Priscilla Thomas in a dead heat. Women I wouldn't have picked for myself that day in the San Francisco airport. But in a few weeks, the training gave everyone a chance to show their mettle. Or their fluff. For those three and a few others, it was bare stainless-steel.

The flight to Oahu was long.....I was seated next to a tough blonde named Georgia Grover.....nice humor, vaguely pretty, and I began laying what I hoped was groundwork for later. Foundations for things to come but never came.

When we arrived on the islands I was already feeling a rising alienation from the group. I didn't like a lot of folks in those days, and I could tell I wasn't going to like most of these. The chaos leaving the main terminal created visible stress among the Chosen. We had half a mile or so to walk to the Hawaiian Airlines Terminal and the next jump to the big island. No transportation from one terminal to the other for the bags. An early test.

Husky young college gents struggled with their own bags and staggered in macho competition to help the attractive ladies. Mr. and Mrs. Eebie, the elderly retired couple of the group shuffled along behind with the jaded males and less attractive females. The girly girls and ex-twirlers chattered across the tarmac admiring the white man and his burden. Georgia Grover shrugged away the offers of help and shouldered her own bags. Most likely, Lillie Rogers, Priscilla Thomas, and Nancy Philson never had the offer.

Time passed quickly during the next weeks. Four hours a day devoted to language lessons. We built chicken house made from lava rock passed down hand to hand; chopped sugarcane in the fields for the thatched roof. Downed palm trees and built a walking bridge. The remainder of our days were spent in formal exercise, poultry disease classes, and getting inoculations against the diseases of the distant east. I came to know the other trainees, and them, me. I found a few worthy of respect.

Somehow we found time to frolic in blue green waters under the blue white waterfall of Rainbow Falls. We climbed the nearby cliffs and gazed into the discharge spray below the falls. And late one afternoon I found myself with Lillie whispering from a cradle of limbs in a huge banyan tree near the falls; lips brushing ear and neck to be heard above the cascading clamor of falling water. Forms and futures swirled in clouds studied through a break in the green umbrella.

Competition was a strong component of the training. A thin-line between competition and popularity. We were advised on arrival that most of us wouldn’t make the final grade. We’d be expected to excel but we’d be subject to constant scrutiny and weeding by the staff and in the end we’d also be rated by our peers. They wanted ‘team-players’. Roughly half of us wouldn’t make it.

One afternoon in a distance run I found myself beside the redhead, Rex. We outdistanced the whole crowd on a ten mile run, came in long before the others. Found we weren't appreciated for our efforts. Evidently the run was intended to be something of a fellowship, team thing. Labor and I didn’t hear the message. The whole affair on the big island was a distance run, and Rex and I were neck and neck for last place.

That night, Rex and I went into Hilo and had a few beers, exchanged a few dreams, disappointments, and observations about the place and the people. We were young in that country.

Mid-selection was coming in that beautiful land, and before it arrived, I was fairly certain I would be one of the deselectees. I was also fairly certain Labor would be. Neither of us fit in. We were different, even from the others I thought would be deselected. By that time we'd been through the Minnesota Multi-phased Personality Test. The rumor was you couldn't even lie consistently on that one, except they could sniff you out, flush you like quail in the cool dawn. I knew I was doomed.

The morning before selection time the staff added the final horror. Humiliation and forced betrayal. The peer ratings. We’d been warned and knew they were coming but they still came hard.

Question: Here is a list of your fellow trainees. Top to bottom, list the people you consider most equipped for the task of Peace Corpsman, down to least favorable. Top to bottom, which do you like the most. Down to whom you like the least. And so on. Sell your young souls, trainees; young Americans. We won't accept the papers back until you've listed them all, every white space above a black line filled with a name of someone you’ve spent the last two months learning to admire or scorn.

I was angry as I watched 80 eyes probe the room checking names against faces. I worked out my own strategy, locked eyes, whenever I could. I reversed the list they wanted. Picked the weakest and least liked for my Ajax and Penelope. Threw the leaders to the dogs. With my own name at the pinnacle, of course. But I knew the exercise was futile.

Even so, I was crushed when my name came out on the list of get-outs. I didn't notice how the others reacted, and I don't remember much about the time between the boot and the airplane. I do know that somewhere in there, I decided I wasn't going back to the mainland. Somewhere during that time Rex made a similar decision.

The rain was falling sideways when we got off the plane in Honolulu. Big Joe Weiss, Korean War marine was with us on the plane to Oahu. He listened to our dreams and talked quietly of staying in the islands with us. He was as crushed as I was about being given the shove. But in the terminal building, he couldn't look at either of us as he told us he was going on to the mainland. I could see that big Joe was limping inside, hurting. Maybe worse than I was, with all my bravado.

Rex and I had a notion about catching a sailing boat, heading for Australia or New Zealand. We had a couple of hundred bucks each, guts, energy, and no promises to keep. We'd signed on for a two year stint in Injia, and Injia belched us back. We were a bolus flying out the mouth of someone who's just had the Heimlich performed unexpectedly during an aborted dying incident.

We spent a few precious bucks on a taxicab.....told the driver we wanted the cheapest hotel he knew of. It was the Huna Hotel, he took us to. Twelve bucks a night. But we were young in that country.

The rain continued through the night, and we emerged from the room still full of energy and bravado....we were taking big steps, making deep tracks in our future lives.....we thought we were about to make big tracks on the land, as well.

We picked up a newspaper looking for boarding houses......Rex found one belonging to a Japanese lady named Matsushige....he wrote down the address as I looked over his shoulder....wrote on the classified page of the newspaper.....2323 East Manoa Road.

We took a city bus, carrying our bags, our belongings from the dead Peace Corps experience, and got off at the confluence of East Manoa and Manoa Road. The driver pointed a direction for us. But at 2323, our knock was answered by a man who appeared to be dressed in a pair of WWII Japanese uniform trousers. He curtly explained that he didn't know what the hell we wanted, didn't want to know. Didn't appreciate our disturbing his home, his morning.

We walked to Manoa and looked....nothing made any sense.

So, we found a pay phone and Rex called the number from earlier.....wrote 2319 on the newspaper. Hung up the phone, turned puzzled from the booth. "Twenty-twee twenty twee?" I still burst out in laughter every time I think of that incident four decades later. I can still see him turning puzzled from the booth muttering, "Twenty-twee twenty-twee?"

We settled in at Matsushige's that day, a second floor room with two bunks, 4 feet or so apart, parallel, a desk between the two at the head. Shared the john with some other roomers....settled in young, full of bravado, full of dreams.

Next day we went looking for work. Rex took a newspaper and headed down to check out the openings on Waikiki.....I headed for the bars on Hotel Street looking for a job or a hooker to prime me for my job search. Tomorrow I'd go down to Waikiki to find my busboy job at the Hilton Hawaiian Village. Today I had more pressing matters.

In a while, I came to a booth with a pretty gypsy lady; flirted a bit, talked around the issue. Was certain she was a hooker. Finally, she demanded, "You want a gypsy good-time?"

"Yeah! A gypsy good-time!"

She took me into an attached room with nothing but a cot, sat me down. "$10"....she took my money and assured she'd be back in a moment. I sat there and knew when she brought in a snaggle-toothed crone that I'd just lost a sawbuck for another of my lessons in life.

"Here it is! A gypsy goodtime!" She and the crone danced back and forth in front of me, all of us laughing. My life has been rich in gypsy good-times. I've been a man wealthy in gypsy good-times, but that one was best. A gypsy-good time when the coconuts fell beside us and mangos piled high under the trees blocking the sidewalks where Rex and I grumbled in our cots picking off sunburned skin to throw to the giant roaches. We were young in that country.

We stayed in touch with a few of the trainees still on the big island. Lillie and I wrote and sometimes talked by phone. We made plans to meet in Oahu after final selection whether she went on to India or not. Nancy Philson and Priscilla Thomas came through a few days ahead, voluntarily dropped from the group. An evening of drunken revelry on hotel street and they were off to the future.

I met Lillie at the airport with the other triumphant survivors. Chianti, baby gouda cheese, and a rented jeep, and we made long and easy love on the beaches in sight of Chinamans Hat, Hanuama Bay, the Blowhole, toward the end, pounding surf spraying the moonlight. Her red hair tickled my face as we idled the jeep down the inland spine of Oahu, back to Honolulu.

Next night, the gin mills of Honolulu and Hotel Street. Lillie'd never seen a stripper....I took her to a place I'd been a few nights previously with Nancy and Priscilla. The best I'd ever seen, her veils of blue velvet, blue chiffon.

They boarded the plane, and India X was off to save the world from hunger, from savage restraints, from a historic dearth of fowl in their diets. Off to Gujarat.

In a while, I flew back to the big island and went into the jungle off the Kohala range, thinking to become a hermit, thinking to die there. While I was gone Rex met a Japanese Hawaiian girl named Janice and flew back to the mainland with her.

In six weeks I came out of the jungle, in a maelstrom of roiling grey blue clouds. I'd met myself for the first time. I finally had seen myself; also seen God in that quiet forest. I knew I had more to do.

Years later while he was in the Marine Corps Rex's kids came to be among my favorite children....Janice, an object of my deep respect. From a distance I watched those kids and admired Rex and Janice as parents and friends. Their marriage gasped to an end before the 20th century finished wiggling.

Today Rex's in Seattle, trying to find what he should do with his life. Searching for the greatest gypsy good-time of them all. And I wait for the moment I'll return to the woods as I did so many years ago beneath a savage sky in some country of youth and springtime. Give me, Powers of the Universe, the springtime but spare me the youth.

Copyright©2003 Jack Purcell

jackpurcellbooks.us

Entry #468

The more they stay the same

Morning blogsters:

One of the things I was doing elsewhere for a few days involved going through newspaper microfilm looking for some info for a friend.  I spent several days poring over small-town newspaper screens from 1900 to 1931.

Strange times.  I kept getting side-tracked into story sequences that had nothing at all to do with what I was searching for.

I'd never thought about the Mexico borderland being a magnet for rum runners during prohibition, but friends and neighbors, there was a war going on down there during the 1920s and 30s.  Guys with cars and trucks full of the devil rum coming across the border down at Hatchita and Antelope Wells, getting in running gunfights with the law, getting themselves killed and killing the chasers.

These were sometimes bigtime crooks, other times just local guys who were doing some bootlegging on the side.  Meanwhile, the newspaper was full of opinion by the citizenry, some thinking the guys all needed killing, others really wishing this prohibition thing would spang go away.  Arguing about the same kinds of ideas about freedom and government intrusion into private decisions you and I might make about the War on Drugs.

Weird feeling reading those kinds of words and thoughts from seventy-five years ago with only a few nouns altered, but people dying and going to prison in a country at war with itself about freedom of choosing which mistakes a man wants to make, which ones he's willing to have the government make for him.

What hill he's willing to die for.

Then there was all the stuff about the 1918 flu epidemic, who all died this week how many died where....

We have better cars and roads these days, better medicos, a lot more cops and prisons full of prisoners, but not much else has changed.  We Americans know a lot about freedom for a people willing to make criminals of people doing just about anything we think a person would be better off not doing.

Such as sipping a beer or martini.  And killing the delivery man and bartender.

Jack

 

 

 

 

 

Entry #467

The winter of our discontent

Made glorious summer by this son of York.

Hi blogsters:

I hope all's well with you.

I just returned home to discover I'm still a man rich in cats.  Contented cats, as cats tend to be when anything they're used to changes a bit.  Such as someone they're used to having around fairly consistently leaves for a spell.  Makes them happy.  Adds variety to their lives.  Contentment.  Which they communicate by finding interesting places to upchuck, etc.

While I was gone I made the horrifying discovery that there used to be a lot of violence in the world.

Which, of course, is no longer the case.

Later,

Jack

Entry #465

Mystical numbers versus 'luck' or statistics

Morning blogsters:

I'm sitting here waiting for sunup to crank up the jalopy and head off on a minor sabbatical for a few days.  But waiting gets me musing, so I think I'll muse on screen.

When I came to LP almost a year ago I watched the threads a while, but I was here for a specific reason... the same reason anyone comes to LP.  I wanted to find out how to win the lottery.

I posted a thread, https://www.lotterypost.com/thread/109482?q=Rip+Snorter explaining what circumstances led me to it.

I also submerged myself in every aspect of number behavior I could concieve of.  I refused to disbelieve anything unless I saw for myself it wouldn't work.

I think I'm coming right along toward getting it figured out.  The predictions pages seem to be holding fast, still getting enough hits on the predictions to keep me imaginary money ahead.

It's taken me a year of submersion in the numbers and trying crazy things to discover for a certainty that it can be done, knowing fairly well what numbers are going to hit on a given day.  I believe you can do it, anyone can do it, and that most of you can do it a lot more easily than I did, because hopefully you are smarter than me.

The first step is in believing those numbers aren't random and that you are the person to figure out how they work.  The second step is not believing almost anything anyone else pronounces about how numbers work.  Including me.

If you keep an eye on the prediction statistics and see Rip Snorter begin to fade, it was all a fluke and everything I'm saying now is BS.  But if there continue to be more imaginary dollar successes than failures it ought to serve as proof to you that some dumb old country boy in New Mexico figured out a way to understand enough about number behavior to beat the odds a bit.

If you want to try it you can follow my thought processes and the testing I've done, the things I've tried right through this blog..... they're all back there, crazy and unlikely, but maybe they'll help.

Or, if you see me going belly up on the prediction statistics, go back up to the mathmatics forum and lottery systems forum and hope for the best.

But my guess is if you want to figure out how numbers work you are going to need a Premium Membership.  LP is good, but not good enough unless you have the tools Todd provides to allow you to use LP as a launchpad.

Best to you, blogsters.  Good luck.

Jack

Entry #464

Feels a bit weathery

 

Evening blogsters:

Cold night in the NM mountains.  These adobes are nice and cool in the summer, but the price is that when those mud bricks get cold all the way through they tend to stay that way.  Managed to get the living room up to 62 degrees just now, so I suppose I'll turn off the heat again.

I'm sitting here in several layers of longjohns and sweatsuits with the fur cap with flap ears on, so at 62 it's nigh unto being too warm except for my fingers, which are stiff.

Had plans to get out of here before daybreak in the morning and get some miles behind me figuring on arriving there by noon, but I'm thinking now I'll let the road people put down some dirt and have the sun hit the pavement down the mountian before I get moving.

I'm not sure what the online situation's going to be so I might be out of pocket for a few days.  If you don't hear from me don't get thinking it's permanent.

That looks like me but it isn't the real item.

Jack

 

Entry #463

Footprints

Morning blogsters:

Comes an end to the long weekend.  Had a bit of snow here last night, so I suppose we can conclude summer's at an end, as well.

I was thinking this morning about how we tend to move across the countryside of years and geography not paying a lot of attention to what we're doing, not looking at the tracks we're leaving.  From Saint Louis, MO, to old Fort Union, New Mexico there's still a track made by men who were looking out ahead of them, never thinking about it.  You can see that track from the moon... the Old Santa Fe Trail. 

On the ground it's hard to recognize.  Just a series of gullies and washes.  But get up a few hundred feet above and it's plain where all those wagons followed that trail, moved over when the ruts got too deep and moved over again when they got too deep there.

The trail they left with those ruts carried water, which carried soil and on every incline and decline it eroded further until it's an arroyo sometimes 30-40 feet deep abraded across the prairie a hundred yards wide or more.

Those guys cracking whips on the backs of mules and oxen never thought twice about it.  They had their attention locked on the horizon.  Their goals weren't much.  Getting somewhere.  Selling something.  Having a woman in Santa Fe, maybe getting good and snockered, and heading home.  Trying to survive weather, hostiles, day to day.  But you can still see the mark they made in their passing.  The dreadful damage to the surface they never dreamed they were accomplishing without ever intending about it, never thinking about it at all.

We living creatures tend to leave a lot of tracks where we go. 

On the North San Gabrial River in Texas, North of Austin on US Highway 183, there's probably still a vertical wall with the tracks of some prehistoric critter on the bottom vanishing into it.  You can see the trail of tracks, see where that thing paused to look at something, leaned back in one of his prints to make a double of it.  Paused and walked on.

Got his picture taken without ever knowing it.  Umpteeumph million years later along comes a river, washes down to that layer of rock, uncovers that moment for a while until a flood comes down the river rolling boulders with it to destroy that moment.

Makes me think maybe we humans ought to look just a bit more closely at the ground behind where we're walking, literally and figuratively.  Every moment of this life we're getting our pictures taken.  Might be worth considering whether we'd admire ourselves in those photographs stored in the land, the minds and spirits where we're leaving our tracks.

Jack

 

 

 

Entry #462

More phone stuff

Hi blogsters:

This thing is amazing.  Comes with two books of instructions about 50 pages each, probably half of those pages written upside down in Spanish.  I'm not great with Spanish when it's right side up, but upside down is way beyond me.

But that ain't enough.  There are lots of pages of warranty type stuff with parts of it emphasised in boldface, which is troublesome.  No way I'm going to read those parts.

Additionally, some of the extra loose stuff mentioned that if you have reception troubles to move to a window or extend the antenna.  I wasn't having trouble with reception, but figured I might.  I looked all over that phone and couldn't see any sign of an antenna to extend, but there were little bumps and cracks here and there.  Picked and pried at them with the point of a pocket knife enough to make lights come on and get static sounds (reception went all to hell), but still no antenna.

Finally, upside down in Spanish I found on upside down page 15 the remark that my particular model has an internal antenna.  Much relieved to hear it.  I don't think this thing is up to too many sessions with the point of a Swiss Army Knife.

My tour d'force is high-tech fixing things with a Swiss Army Knife.

Jack

Entry #461

Magic communications

Evening blogsters:

About a year ago my cell phone fell out of my overalls pocket into the irrigation ditch when I reached down to worry a valve.  Sank spang to the bottom, but came out seemingly okay after I dried it out.

But it's never been the same... grew progressively worse until it was useless for the past couple of months.  I waited, figuring it might come back, or that I might decide I just didn't need a cell phone.  But I'm a pansy-arsed modern man these days and I finally just decided to give in to progress.  Got myself a new one.

Gives me something of a start, the stuff on that new phone.  Rattles me to the core that we've become so futuristic Dick Tracyesque.

This thing will take pictures!  It will surrepticiously take videos or requardings of the cop who's leaning over your car window acting the way cops shouldn't.  It will do all manner of things I don't know how to do with it yet and maybe won't be able to justify learning.

Gives me the fantods thinking about trying to figure that thing out.

Reminds me of when I was a kid and we got our first phone.  They were teaching me about it, how you put this end to your ear and that end to your mouth and listen for an operator to say, "Number please."  Then how you say, "3621" if you need to call Jeanne Ann and Hollis because someone had an accident and you need to get help.  Or when you call KENM radio station to give the answer to the College Dairy Quiz and win movie tickets for the family.

And how you stay the hell off of it in all other circumstances.

I was a precocious kid and had a tendency to get us all to the movies pretty often, but my problem was that when that operator came on I usually blew up.  My mind went blank, I'm ashamed to say, when I heard that beeeeeeutiful female operator voice.

Fortunately, the operators got on my side after a while, with the College Dairy Quiz.  At 6pm when I lifted that phone they'd just say, "I'm ringing them dear." without me having to say anything.

This one won't do that, but it's still okay without any operators.

Jack

 

Entry #460

Deja vu all over again

Morning blogsters:

Like most of the people I've gotten to know over the past quarter-century, I spent those years generally knowing the location of the Lost Adams Diggings. 

I spent my winter nights researching, picking apart the accounts, studying topo maps and air photos through magnifiers, pondering and speculating.  I'd spend a lot of time in archives and libraries reading microfilm of correspondence between Army officers of the 1850s and 60s and newspaper accounts from the late 1800s searching for hints.  Then I'd be planning access and egress to whatever place I knew it was, come snow melt. 

Chomping at the bit to get out there and check it out.  Sometimes not willing to wait, burning up with cabin fever I'd snowshoe in, knowing I couldn't tell anything about it under all that snow, but just unable to contain myself and wait.

For me it was a lot of different places over the years.  Good canyons, mountains, mesas I was glad I went into (with a couple of exceptions), but never the Adams.  Which was okay, because I'd no sooner checked one out and found it lacking before another jumped off the map at me and pronounced itself the Adams with the same certainty as the last one.

Those were good years.

But the 1998 search sort of ended all that.  I'd made promises to a lot of people who searched with me, who'd grown tired of Fox Mountain, that if we didn't turn it during that long series of climbs and unclimbs giving it everything we had, I'd concede Fox wasn't it and try some other places.

We tried a few, though Fox still lingered for me and I couldn't get excited about them. 

Meanwhile my friends were growing old and the fire was going out of their bellies to some extent.  The appeal of long climbs and treks with heavy packs, poking and digging around, sleeping on the ground in places where the best rocks under the bag still weren't soft enough to allow any sleep just dwindled for them.

Then along came Y2K.  My attention was diverted and my finances vanished.  From that point forward what searching I did came out of the certainties of strangers who knew where it was and wanted me along because of what I'd already done.  Wanted me there because I'd searched so long, written so much about it, and partly, I always suspected, to have me there to rub it in that they'd found it when I'd failed to do so.

I've always been picky about the people I go to the woods with.  If a man drops his trash, kills snakes, makes a lot of noise, doesn't take care of hygiene matters in a way I approve of, I don't go with him again.  If he does things to cause unnecessary risk to himself or others, or if he's afraid to take the necessary risks, if he shirks camp duties, I don't go with him again.

I ran into a lot of those kinds of people after Y2K, and I could never lock onto a location where I KNEW it was, as I always had before.

One night at my Y2K cabin, Mel came out and showed me a relatively flat nugget that must have weighed close to ten ounces he'd picked up in a canyon.  He was sure it was the Adams canyon, but someone else had told him about it in confidence, so he couldn't share the info.

I didn't get to examine the nugget closely, didn't get to look at it through a magnifier.  It was near dark and I just got to hold it for a couple of minutes in the dusk trying to figure out what it was about it that didn't feel right.

That canyon and that nugget became a source of contention between Mel and me for the next several years.  The nugget went into the hands of the guy who told him about the canyon, who claimed he sold it in Albuquerque for $500, which angered Mel and frustrated me.  Mel never went back to the canyon and the guy who took him there wasn't all that interested.  But Mel claimed until the day he died that he was convinced the canyon was the Adams. 

So it's been several years since I've burned with an idea about the Adams. 

But there's a canyon creeping back in to my mind.  I find myself sneaking around on myself studying maps and thinking about it.  It's not a new place for me.  I've done some searching within a couple of miles of there, but for some reason my mind was locked on target a bit off center from this one.  I just never went over the right ridges, never poked into it during the pair of decades I've been around the place.

But it has all the right stuff, or appears to.  At least until I can get in there and turn a few rocks over, pan a bit, it's where the Adams is.

Too bad Mel couldn't have lived to see it.

Jack

Entry #459

Give a person a fish

Hi blogsters:

I never see that phrase about fish without a flash of memory.

During the 1950s drought stock ponds were drying up all over the southwest.  There came a day a lot like this one, though it was probably warmer, when a kid named David Cagle and I were wandering around the ruins of cow country and came across a pond that was maybe five acres of surface and about three inches deep in water.  Every square foot of water had a fish flopping in it.  I've never seen anything like it.

A few hundred yards from the pond was an abandoned barn where we'd noticed an old galvanized washtub someone had probably used to water calves when there was still water, or feed them when there was still food.  We hoofed over to that barn and snagged the tub, waded into that fish and cow-mud calf deep throwing fish into the tub.

We glowed over that tubfull of fish all the way home, him on one handle, me on the other, thinking how deeeeeelighted our folks would be with the treasure we were bringing them.

Both of us smelled a joyous combination of cow-mud and fish when we got to David's house, went in through the kitchen door and watched his mama shriek even before she turned around and saw the fish.

"Get those fish out of this house!"

We got them out and she followed us into the yard to hose him down before she'd allow him inside.  Me, she ordered to take those fish with me and head down the road.

My own mom took a more circumspect view of things, mainly because she wasn't home when I got there.  I cleaned myself up and filled the kitchen sink with all the fish it would hold and started killing and gutting them.  The job was far enough along to make quitting a moot point when she got home.

I gutted a lot of fish over the next couple of days, though I did move the operation out into the back yard.

My mom's one of those kind of people who remember such things after she can't remember her own name.  I'm not sure I've ever returned to her company during the past 50 years without being reminded of it.

Give a person a fish and he might not appreciate it, but he won't starve until the fish is digested.

But give a person a fishing pole and he'll almost surely hook an ear or nostril before it's over.

I had a different, longer blog entry I've tried to post a couple of times today about other matters, but my comp froze up every time I hit the ENTER button, so you'll have to settle for this.

Jack

Entry #458