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Friday, September 29, 2006 The day's last light: ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 6:37 PM [+] |
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Wednesday, September 27, 2006 [continued from entry of September 24] Back at the house, Georgie discovered a container of RealLemon juice (as opposed to actual real lemon juice), noticed a recipe for lemonade on the label, began concocting a batch. G. investigated mounting a wall cupboard, quickly came to his senses, we retired to the patio instead to hang out in the spectacular September weather. Minutes later, Georgiana materialized with glasses of faux lemonade -- G., being an excellent father, actually drank some. I took a cautious sip of the glass presented to me. Tasted better than I expected, and I left it at that. (I hate lemonade. There it is -- I'm a grinch.) Sunshine. Conversation. Georgie made art with a small tub of Floam. Birds chirped. Squirrels swanned about. The minutes slipped by until I got a glance at a clock, realized I needed to get ready to hit the road. Flew upstairs, pulled on clothes suitable for attendance at a wedding (blue shirt, nice dark pants, necktie borrowed from G., pointy boots), dragged my back stuff downstairs, tossed it all into the car. A short time later found me on the Palisades Parkway heading north, crossing the Bear Mountain Bridge (the river a band of water far below, green mountains rearing up to either side of it), following a shady two-lane toward Poughkeepsie, having plenty of time to spare, taking the drive in leisurely fashion. At Cold Spring, cut across to Rt. 9, which passed under I-84 a few miles up, transforming from a pleasant road into a hellish six-lane lined with malls, gas stations, etc., traffic heavy, halting, miserable. What had been a fast, easy drive became near-endless lines of cars waiting at red light after red light. Until the site of the wedding appeared on the left and I pulled in, mumbling thanks to whomever might be listening. Locust Grove -- a beautiful spot I would never have expected to find hidden away on Route 9. Found my way to the visitors center, went inside. The main hall was being set up for a wedding dinner, nary a guest or wedding-type person in sight. Turned out I'd gotten there way early, which gave me time to return to the car, find a shady, secluded parking space, and put in some quality almost-snoozing time. When I finally roused myself later, the place was jumping. Inside, the hall lay ready. Outside, a band played jazz, people in dress-up duds milled about, beginning to lay into the just-opened bar, hoovering finger food from folks circulating with trays. I located my brother and sister-in-law, then my niece and her beau, exchanged hellos, made brief conversation, then got out my camera. The relations had never seen me with a serious implement of photographic destruction before and expressed suitable appreciation. I was told, however, to check with the event's official photographer to make sure the presence of another picture-taker wouldn't bother her. When I found my nephew (he who was to be married) he said he had yet to see the official photog. and gave me his blessing re: pic.-snapping. I went and did some. ![]() Something I noticed during the ensuing hours: I found myself on the receiving end of interested scrutiny by more than one woman in the 30's-40's age bracket. (Happened earlier, too, in front of G.'s house as we stood talking.) Was it the big camera? The pointy boots? My sparkling personality and undeniable manliness? Or simply my adorable booty? Whatever the cause, it was fun. The official photographer materialized as the bride and groom appeared for the ceremony, the main event got underway. A short, lovely ceremony illuminated by late-afternoon sunlight, the bride and groom clinched for a fairly lengthy smooch, then everyone began drifting back to the visitors center, members of the two families waylaid for photo sessions en route. ![]() My brother-- the original handyman -- had built the arbor for the ceremony, several males from our side of the event were pressed into service to take it down and pack it into vehicles. The sun had set by then, I found myself donating blood to the legions of mosquitoes that called Locust Grove home. Finally, near dark, we were allowed to go inside and join the party. I found myself at a table with my brother and sister-in-law, my niece and her guy and two guys I hadn't seen in 30 years, cousins of my sister-in-law who were raised in the town my brother and sister-in-law have lived in since going to the local college (where they met and got hitched). In fact, I saw a bunch of folks at this event I knew far too many years ago -- faces I enjoyed seeing, every blessed one of them. In each face, I could see the young person I'd known, still alive, now an active part of the adult attending this event. A strange feeling, that, but seriously enjoyable. I like people. I like hearing about the course that old friends' lives have taken, I like being able to spend some time with them after a long time away. Call me simple, but there it is. Dinner. Chat. The wedding toast. The bride and groom out on the floor doing the first dance. The one and only marriage ceremony I've taken part in -- feeling like several lifetimes ago now -- took place in the living room of my ex-in-laws' home. A small, intimate affair -- brief, without all the pomp, without the rituals. It was a sweet, congenial passage, and just right for us at that time. Something about watching my only nephew going through the big, stylized version, almost the polar opposite of the version I experienced, got me watching it with a strange sense of -- not detachment exactly, because plenty of emotions coursed through my system. An odd, vivid sense of it all being a bit foreign. Maybe in part because I don't really know a whole lot about my nephew these days -- about any of my brothers' clan. (My brother drifted away over the last fifteen or so years, especially during the last two or three, and with him the rest of his family.) And in part because the ceremony does feel a little foreign. All that ritualized stuff. (Not that there's anything wrong with that.) And all around me at the table, all those faces from years past. It felt good to be there, sharing the event with them. Strange, but all right. A long drive lay ahead, and at 9:30, shortly after the ceremonial first dance had morphed into r&b tunes, the dance floor heaving with guests in motion, I started pulling myself together, saying so-longs. Found my nephew to give him a hug, he insisted we sit down and talk for five minutes. We sat, we talked, him clearly a little high on the event, me a little tired, ready to hit the road, but enjoying him. And then I was out the door to the parking lot, my brother along to see me off. A few minutes later I was out on Route 9, then following traffic east through Poughkeepsie to the Taconic Parkway. Dark, no street lights, little traffic. Just me, heading north along miles of winding blacktop and the occasional small town. By the time I'd crossed into Vermont, passing through Bennington and on toward Rutland, few cars were about, most towns and villages were dark. In Rutland, I stopped at an all-night convenience store/gas station. Filled up the car, parked at the store's far end, got out and walked about, getting some air. Wandered off out of view, along one side of the store -- when I came back into view, the single on-duty employee had come out of the store for a smoke, said a startled hello. Seemed suspicious of my having been off around the corner of the store like that, moved directly in front of my car and leaned against something, watching me rummaging around in the rear of my Subaru for a bottle of water until another car pulled in and she had to return to the register inside. Later, driving along Along Rt. 100, the narrow, winding two-lane crowded by woods, a fox burst out of the brush on one side, shooting across the asphalt in front of my vehicle, disappearing into the trees on the other side. Still later, when I'd finally made it to I-89, what would normally be a high-speed part of the journey, I found a road enveloped in fog, visibility close to zero, making it feel like one more two-lane. Pulled into the garage here at 2:30, nearly five hours after leaving my brother in the parking lot at Locust Grove. Left everything in the car, went upstairs, pulled off clothes, went directly to bed. Woke up four hours later as daylight gathered outside, found myself back in Vermont. Back in Vermont. For now. España, te echo de menos. rws 7:47 PM [+] |
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Monday, September 25, 2006 Past peak -- Montpelier, Vermont ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 9:55 PM [+] |
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Sunday, September 24, 2006 [continued from previous entry] A nice dinner. The girls seemed to decide they liked having me there, once their food had been shoveled down, they came and went from the table, leaving me, G. and M. to talk about whatever we wanted to talk about (me hoovering down rice & beans the entire time). Which wound up centering on my first cross-country trip, immediately post-college, me making the trip when I wound up passing three weeks with G. and his parents in their house on a lake in southern California. Evenings were spent in L.A. tossing down Mexican chow and vat-sized glasses of margaritas, days were spent hanging about house/lake or running around L.A. being tourists. At night I slept in the guest cabin, in a room lined with packed bookshelves, staying up to all hours reading books that caught my attention (the only one I remember: a volume of letters from Groucho Marx to his daughter -- hard to put down, packed with laugh lines). G.'s father -- now deceased -- was, essentially, Disney records. Turns out the company's going to honor him in a ceremony sometime soon, G. will be flying out to attend. When I stop and think about it, it's amazing how many parents of friends took me in and put up with me in earlier years. Sometimes for a night or two, sometimes for weeks – displays of kindness and generosity that went leagues beyond the call of duty. Rain continued to fall. G. had to go to a meeting at an out-of-business theater he and a group of people were attempting to resuscitate, I grabbed my laptop and followed, figuring I'd find a café with wi-fi to sit and do some electronic scribbling. Wound up at a Starbucks where it turned out they charged big money for wireless access. I didn't feel like handing over a pile of shekels for an hour of online time, so I sat and simply wrote as wave after wave of local teenagers poured into the place and back out into the night, the air smelling of rain and coffee. G.'s meeting took place a couple of blocks away in the theater, a short stumble down the main drag. We'd arranged to meet out in front -- when the time came, I packed up my laptop, made the short trip, found no sign of G. at the rendezvous point. A tug at the theater's doors showed one of them to be open, I went inside to see what was what. What I found: the meeting still in process, G. and a bunch of other folks up on the stage talking away, deep into a lot of theater world hot air. I pulled out something to read, waited a while. When it became apparent they might go on well into the night, I took off, made the hike back to the house where M. and the girls seemed surprised to see someone other than the fourth member of the family walk in the front door. Then not so surprised to hear that the meeting seemed nowhere near wrapping up for the night, G. being a master shmoozer who can go on for hours in a meeting-type sitch. He eventually returned, household life wound down for the evening, I retired to my room, turned on the TV for a while, turned it off, switched to a book, eventually turned off the light and passed out, the sound of the crowd at a nearby Friday night football game coming and going, like the faint sounds of waves on a beach. Woke up with first light, could feel I wouldn't be returning to sleep, gave up, got out my laptop. G. appeared not long after, sleeping in apparently not something that happens often in that household. His footsteps came up the stairs, went into the other third-floor room, where the home's computer lives. I follwed him in there, we got blabbing, time passed. G. had to take one of the girls to a violin lesson, they dressed, ate, disappeared. M. and the other girl were going to drive out to a birthday party out on Long Island. I waited till they'd gone (thank-you's and good-bye's flying in the minutes leading up to their departure) and the bathroom was finally free. Showered, etc. G. returned, we went out to breakfast, making the trip on foot, Georgiana talking nonstop, providing a hyper-detailed rundown of a story she loved. We found the breakfast joint, claimed a table, a big, beautiful black woman took our orders. Georgiana requested a big plate of blueberry pancakes with whipped cream. It arrived, she ate a few paltry bites, left the rest. G. and I ordered 'Mexican omelets,' mine seemed to get better with each bite, until I found myself eating it faster and faster, getting happier by the minute. (In general, if someone cooks for me, I'm predisposed to bliss -- if the chow is at all decent, I experience a kind of joy that is positively indecent.) Post-breakfast glut: a wander along the street, me dragging G. and Georgiana briefly into a café where I inhaled an espresso so quickly G. appeared alarmed. A stop into the town library, a great little place (with a room full of computers free to use, and wi-fi access for those with a laptop, also free of charge) -- the kind of institution I'd be all over were I a town resident. A stop into a wildly garish shop dealing almost entirely in Halloween and Christmas stuff -- G. practically had to drag Georgiana into it, then practically had to drag her out of it when his interest quickly waned. A stop into a thrift shop where every single article of clothing was on sale for 25 cents (me picking up a necktie emblazoned with teeny soccer players, to be given to a friend -- a gift I suspect the recipient will both love and hate). [continued in entry of September 27] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Autumn rainbow, northern Vermont: ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 7:46 PM [+] |
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Monday, September 11, 2006 Frost hit some parts of this area last night, something that the local weather types had been warning of. A warning that got me to move all potted outdoor plants into the garage and throw covers over tomato plants, etc. Just in case. The wee hours brought thick fog, which moderated the cold a bit -- when I peeked out the dining room window this morning around eight, the temperature hovered in the mid- to upper 30's, then began moving nicely upward as fog dissipated, the sun lifting into blue September sky. I pulled covers off plants, did an accelerated version of the morning shower/shave thing, then headed into Montpelier for caffeine, gym, errands. And during my hours in town, a day originally predicted (by those same weather types) to be chilly turned into a showcase of warm, lovely Septemberness. With a sensation of summer that's mostly been absent since mid-August. ![]() Warnings of colder temperatures and more widespread frost have been issuing from radios all day, and people around here began preparing, resigned. Late afternoon found me out picking tomatoes, accumulating two bowls' worth, all of the fruit with any real color, leaving the green buggers on the vine. As it is, I'm already practically afloat in fresh tomatoes. I may be ready for a vacation by the time I finish plowing through them all. When I pulled myself out of from under the covers this morning, the temperature in the house was a nippy 63 degrees, cool enough to get me zipping through the wake-up routine with dispatch before fleeing into town. We'll see how it feels tomorrow a.m. I'm hoping the sadists in the local weather biz are lying through their crooked teeth (not that I can point fingers when it comes to crooked teeth) about more intense overnight cold. It's mid-September. More and more trees are turning, the annual show of color slowly gains steam. Pumpkins have appeared at the local farm stand. The afternoon sun slips down behind the trees earlier and earlier, the hours of darkness slowly increase. The cold season looms, and in a part of the planet where the cold season occupies far too much of the year, that looming sometimes seems like a repeated nudging, nature's quiet, insistent reminder of the major change in lifestyle that lays ahead. In anticipation of that, yesterday morning found me flopping about up in the house crawlspace again, continuing the It's looking increasingly likely that I'll be returning to Madrid in November. There are preparations to be made, and a step at a time they've begun happening. Two months from now, I should be there, getting reacquainted with a part of the world that felt like home until last autumn. As I write this, the local world has slipped from dusk to darkness. Time to pull together something resembling an evening meal. Later. rws 7:42 PM [+] |
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Saturday, September 09, 2006 This morning (far too early): ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 8:01 AM [+] |
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Thursday, September 07, 2006 Backroad barber shop -- Marshfield, Vermont ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 2:11 PM [+] |
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Saturday, September 02, 2006 Cryptic sign of the day, seen in Montpelier this morning: ![]() Who is Hugh? And why is he on sale? España, te echo de menos. rws 5:32 PM [+] |