Day after Tomorrow

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 10th, 2015 by skeeter

Day after Tomorrow

Someone asked me the other day
buttering me up, I spoze
if I would like to be remembered …

Without thinking much I said no.

Like maybe I’m a buddhist zen priest
or something.

No? this somebody asked. No?

Who no’s?!! The days roll off the calendar
making a noise like wind through the firs, which, when I think about it,
is a bad metaphor. The wind’s coming back.

We don’t even have kids, fer chrissake. The woods
beyond the garden sits cat silent. And waits. Long
after I’m gone, maybe the firs’ll remember.
Maybe the wind is just a memory. Or just the wind without the fir.

Hits: 68

audio — McMilk

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 9th, 2015 by skeeter

Hits: 36

McMilk

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 8th, 2015 by skeeter

 

 

Some of us farmers down here on the organic South End are alarmed at the news Coca-Cola is making milk. They claim they’re making it better. God is going to be heartbroken to hear this. Probably thought She’d pretty much perfected it after all these millennia. Course God neglected marketing, something the labs down at Coke sure didn’t.

I’ve been getting milk down the road from my friend the Goat Lady. Pure, unadulterated, no growth hormone, no antibiotic, free range goat milk, unpasteurized, really creamy stuff. What we South Enders call ‘natural’, Coca-Cola would characterize as raw, meaning it’s pre-manipulated. They’re planning to separate that into sugars, proteins, carbos and fats, all its component parts, then reconstitute it. I’d tell you the formula, but it’s a secret, no doubt the hangover of those first Coke recipes that used cocaine before the pharmacologists and food scientists realized sugar and caffeine would be cheaper and less criminally suspect.

Science, a powerful tool. And … if you can’t trust your food to a soft drink corporation, who can you trust? It’s not as if they’re a cigarette company, chopping tobacco into its component parts, making a slurry, then adding 200 ingredients known to the state of California as carcinogens before rolling the goop into a totally addictive product for the consumer. Not like that at all! Besides, we got the FDA regulating food, right? Right??

The future looks grim for us farmers is what I think. Reformulated broccoli candy bars, reprocessed pea popsicles, endive gum, bus bean twists. But … when the chemists are done, what an improvement on that stuff growing in dirt and you-know-what. They’ll take that out first step in the centrifuge.

It’s a brave new world and maybe we better put on a brave new face. Hey, if nothing else they’ll take the sting out of our nettle crops. Sales might go back up to pre-Recession and the good times might return. Plus we won’t have cows tromping around pooping in our fields now that they’ll be confined to laboratories. Thank you Coke! But … wasn’t your slogan a few years back ‘YOU CAN’T BEAT THE REAL THING’? So why try?

Hits: 1310

audio — the bluebird of happiness

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 7th, 2015 by skeeter

Hits: 43

The Bluebird of Happiness

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 6th, 2015 by skeeter

 

When I first arrived on the South End, my biggest concern was finding a job. I’ve always maintained, and still do, that the only thing worse than work is looking for work. The best days of my life are those where I quit or gave notice or just walked off. The worst were the days following when it dawned on me I would now have to go searching for another dead end minimum wage position.

I had driven school buses back in rural Wisconsin and in Seattle and Gomorrah. I’d even driven metros so it seemed like I’d be able to get a job with the local school bus company, which proved true and before long I was chauffeuring children into town and back twice a day. My boss was happy to hire an experienced driver … until I let my hair grow and then a beard and he finally realized I wasn’t the cleancut young man he thought he’d hired. At which point he wanted me gone. Twice a week I was summoned into his office next to our break room to answer charges of driving recklessly, driving drunk,  driving on drugs, driving onto the shoulder, driving toward oncoming traffic, slamming the brakes, kicking kids off the bus miles from home, outrageous accusations that I refused to take seriously, but he wanted me to know were serious offenses if true. I would roll my eyes and he’d fire another accusation purportedly made by the parents of my kids. I suspected they were made by him, but really, what difference did it make? I knew my days were numbered as a professional driver.

We had a bus driver on a Stanwood route who had a reputation as a real ballbuster of a disciplinarian, at least according to him most days in the coffee room after the routes. When he came down with pneumonia, I subbed in for him. Holy Bluebird, the kids on that bus never heard they were spozed to use the seats to sit on. I never saw anything like it. Took me a whole minute or two to pull over and have a short chat with the little attention deficit folks, something to the effect that I might be taking them home for a free vacation day, maybe see if their parents wanted to babysit instead of go to work. After that, we didn’t have much trouble.

On the last day of my short career with the company the supervisor came up to let me know rumor had it there might be a water fight on the bus and I should be watchful. I said I sure would, boss. You better believe he wasn’t going to be my boss much longer.

At a convenient stop that’s now the Visitor Center I pulled my 40 foot long yellow Bluebird over, turned off the motor, set the brakes and turned to my charges. Okay, I said, give it your best shot. We went at it for ten minutes, water pistols and cannons, even a couple of half gallon jugs I brought for the finale. When we’d finished, I opened the front door and water poured out of that bus like a mini-Niagara, cascading down the steps onto the ground. My supervisor asked me when I got back to the barn if there’d been any trouble. No, I said, no trouble at all…. Thanks for the heads-up. That, happily, was the end of my bus driving career. Course, the next week I was scrounging for the next miserable job. Without, needless to say, a good reference.

Hits: 451

Today’s Bumper Sticker Seen at the Co-op

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 5th, 2015 by skeeter

I’M ALREADY AGAINST THE NEXT WAR!

Hits: 66

audio — neither a borrower or a lender be

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 5th, 2015 by skeeter

Hits: 63

Neither a Lender or a Borrower Be

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 4th, 2015 by skeeter

 

Me and my buddy Clyde were sitting up at my deck on a nice summer afternoon this year enjoying a cold one and listening to the pesky howl of a lawnmower in the distance down below. Except for the lawnmower it was an idyllic scene. Warm breeze off the Sound, mountains beyond, good conversation, cold beer — about all a South Ender requires of Paradise …
… before Nirvana was shattered by an ungodly scream of metal on metal, a horrific clatter and screech and finally silence. Clyde and I shook our heads. “That doesn’t sound good,” he said. “No, sounds like a John Deere death knoll. Glad it’s not our mower.”

We popped another cold one and counted our blessings. The neighbors could afford a new John Deere. Sure, a bit of an inconvenience, but hey, keep the economy humming, if nothing else. You can’t expect a mower to last forever, right?

About this time we hear footsteps on the stairs and from around the corner here comes Junkie Jeff, my heroin addict deadbeat con-artist no-account who rents the house next door and before we can say ‘whazzup?’ he’s apologizing, didn’t mean to hurt anything, he’ll make it good … and I finally say “STOP! You mean that godawful noise we just heard was MY mower???”

Jeff had borrowed it from my unlocked shed, filled it with my gas without asking and proceeded to run it into a pipe half buried in his lawn where it died a horrible death, spinning blade vs. steel opponent. RIP. “I’ll buy you a new one, really, I’ll replace it, Skeeter.”

From a calm center I replied firmly, “Naw, Jeff, I’ll buy a new one myself. And here’s the deal: you never touch it, you never ask to use it, you never step on my property again, not ever, never. And … I would greatly appreciate you start as of now.” Head hung hangdog low, Junkie Jeff retreated back to his syringe-filled sorry ass miserable excuse for a life with the unmowed lawn and the drawn curtains and his sad dreams of the next fix. “Man,” Clyde said in amazement, “you really let him off the hook.”

“Not really,” I admitted. “This morning I stripped the bolt that holds the blade. The blade is shot. The mower was shot too. I was going to buy a new one this week anyway. Jeff just saved me taking that one to the dump. And … now he’ll never darken my doorway again. He wouldn’t have bought me a mower in a hundred years, trust me. He’s a junkie. A liar. And he’s dead broke. This way, it’s a win-win. Say adios to my buddy Jeff.” Clyde smiled, we returned to our beers and celebrated. The South End — morally uncomplicated.

Hits: 169

audio — good fences, bad neighbors

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 3rd, 2015 by skeeter

Hits: 42

Good fences, bad neighbors

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 2nd, 2015 by skeeter

 

Tea Party Ted, my neighbor here on the Don’t-Tread-On-Me South End is doing some major Martha Stewarting on his high bluff property. He’d had a little problem with water draining into his house so to solve it he trenched along the side, dropped in what we call a French Drain (what Francophobes prefer to call a ditch with perforated pipe) and shunted the water away from his hacienda.

Like a lot of us down here, Ted’s not much for permits. Course, Ted’s not much for anything except Ted. The Law of the Jungle works pretty well for the Teds of the world, you just need to own more guns than the rest of us and be twice as mean. I was down at his place the day he was laying pipe. The pipe ran off into the shrubbery, made a sneaky left turn and headed toward the bluff where I assumed he’d hooked up a ‘tight line’, a solid pipe that would reach to the beach below so the run-off wouldn’t erode the bluff.

“To hell with that,” Ted replied to my inquiry. “Same water, same bluff.” I wandered over for a look-see. “What’re you?” he growled, obviously irritated. “The *%##@! EPA?” Ted had put his run-off over toward the edge of his property, but above his neighbor down the hill whose house sat precipitously close to an unstable bluff. The last thing they needed was more water working on the erosion beneath them.

There was a time — about when I first got here — when there were so few of us it didn’t much matter what we did, it didn’t affect any neighbors. I miss those days, I really do, but with boys like Ted still playing outlaw down the road, I’ve come to appreciate a few rules. Saves me strapping on the gunbelt, if nothing else.

Hits: 111