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Monday, May 31, 2004

Duck Walk

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“Look outside!” Matt yelled.

Matt and Chris had finished mowing our lawn, and had not quite finished arguing about a party they were or were not going to, and about dinner they would or would not have with us, when Matt hollered at us from the porch. Susan looked though the kitchen window while Diane and I hurried outside and looked up. Hot air balloons? Hawks? Ultra lights? Raining parts of a commercial airliner? I didn’t see a thing.

“What, where, Matt?” I yelled back.

“On the ground.”

And then we looked down. Padding towards us from the backyard near Mary Dill’s house were fourteen baby ducks.

I immediately assumed they came, parentless, from the wetlands behind Bob and Joy’s house. After a quick call to Karen, Chris’s mom who works for Audubon, I called Joy to tell her we would be herding the flock back to their home, and hopefully to mom and dad duck.

Take the: photo tour

And the short movie:
Mp4 ( 3mb – won’t play in older browsers so you may want to download it first).

Drop by in a day or so because this story is not quite finished.

posted by michael at 11:05 am  

Sunday, May 30, 2004

Changing Course

This is short, but one of my favorite stories. It would have little impact if it were told by a Mr. Peepers kind of guy.

Noland’s size and deep voice gives weight to his stories. And when he talks he looks me dead in the eyes. He has often complained about “Mr. America,”the not quite husband of his wife’s cousin who wears “cheaters”(sunglasses) indoors. “I was on the road for years. If I can see the eyes, I can size a guy up in a few minutes.”

” After the war, I hauled beef for Sullivan’s in Boston. Eight cows each cut into four parts, each piece weighing about two hundred fifty pounds. I’d drive them to Essem’s where they make ëem into hot dogs and hamburgers. Since Essem’s was union and I wasn’t, I’d unload them without help. Those bastards wouldn’t lift a finger.”

Noland extended his right arm and then bent it, like on the Arm and Hammer box. “You put the leg right here in the crook and swing the beef up onto your shoulder.”

“One day I’m on route 114 driving back from Salem. I pass the new stadium being built in Lawrence. There was this crane with the name Shaugnessey’s written right across the boom. I looked up and thought, I lift more weight in a day than that goddamn things does in a week. I turned around, drove back to Sullivan’s, and gave my notice.”

posted by michael at 8:25 am  

Saturday, May 29, 2004

Tidbits

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Breaking camp, last day.
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Flo in her apartment listening to Peter Rodd describe how Emma was thrown from her mount during today’s horse show.
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More photos from that fateful moving day. Out of the old and into the new – Concord Park


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Susan has been working hours and hours cleaning Flo’s old apartment preparing it to be sold. Next Sunday Matthew and friends will spend the day rolling on fresh coats of paint. Here, she has transformed the old refrigerator into a new one.

posted by Michael at 4:47 pm  

Friday, May 28, 2004

Life's Lessons

Maybe he’s looking into the not too distant future, but today Noland talked about his friend Frank who died while Noland was visiting him in the hospital. We were sitting at his dining room table watching “The Price Is Right,” and a guy in uniform had just won “The Showcase” worth about twenty-five thousand dollars.

“Frank had emphysema and his breathing sounded like someone was squeezing his vocal cords. Loud and high pitched. The doc walked into his room with a needle this size.”

Noland held his forefingers about eight inches apart.

“And that was the end of him. My grandmother was the same.”

I somehow missed how he tied Frank to his grandmother, with “the same.” I may have been watching “The Price is Right” winner who was hugging his new car and saluting the audience. After Noland’s mother died when he was a baby he was raised by his grandmother and a very cruel father.

“She suffered like Frank. One day she asked me for apple juice and ice cream. I went out to the nurse’s desk, repeated her request and came back with ice cream and juice. I gave her ten or twelve small spoonfuls of ice cream and enough apple juice to wet her lips. She smiled, closed her eyes and that was that.”

“That was that? Jesus, Nol, give me a warning. I didn’t know she was going to end up dead. From ice cream to, “That was that”?

“That’s life, I could take it.”

“I know that’s life and I know you could take it, but all of your stories end like that. The boom drops. Don’t you have any boring stories?”

He doesn’t. They all finish with someone dead, beat-up, or fired. They’re short and they hit hard.

This one too, which I’ve been holding back because it’s Noland’s other side. Peter had already guessed there was more to Noland than met the blog’s eye.

“My son, Danny, was about sixteen when he asked me if he could have a motorcycle. He was with his buddy, Jim. I said, ‘I’ve taken care of you all these years and I want you alive. You have an accident on a motorcycle and the party is over.’ He turned around and left. A few minutes go by and I was about to walk back in the house, and I see Danny’s other friend John laughing. I asked John what was funny and he pointed down the street. There was Danny on the back of his Jim’s motorcycle. I got in my Olds and chased them down. Cut them off. I got out of my car, opened the back door, picked Danny off the bike and threw him into the back seat.”

Noland uses his hands when he talks, and his motions, like his words, are short and economical. He moved his hands as if he were throwing a bale of hay.

“I said to Jim, ‘If I ever see him on the back of your bike again, I’ll do the same to you.’ I drove Danny home and pushed him through the front door. I put the hassock up on the divan, took the pictures off the walls and cleared the rest of the room. I said, ‘You’re going to learn who runs this house.’ I punched him again and again. I knocked him down and then I picked him up and threw him against the wall. His head hit the wall and he slumped to the floor. I thought, I hope he doesn’t get up. He didn’t. Years later he told me he remembered that day. He said, ‘Dad, I couldn’t get up.’ I told him It was a good thing.”

*********************

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Susan treated us to dinner last night at Daniela’s Cantina, and in spite of the cold weather, we drove to Erickson’s for dessert. Shinydome will appreciate this most – she had wintergreen chip in a cone. Yes, ice cream with foreign bodies.
View larger image

posted by michael at 6:34 am  

Friday, May 28, 2004

Life’s Lessons

Maybe he’s looking into the not too distant future, but today Noland talked about his friend Frank who died while Noland was visiting him in the hospital. We were sitting at his dining room table watching “The Price Is Right,” and a guy in uniform had just won “The Showcase” worth about twenty-five thousand dollars.

“Frank had emphysema and his breathing sounded like someone was squeezing his vocal cords. Loud and high pitched. The doc walked into his room with a needle this size.”

Noland held his forefingers about eight inches apart.

“And that was the end of him. My grandmother was the same.”

I somehow missed how he tied Frank to his grandmother, with “the same.” I may have been watching “The Price is Right” winner who was hugging his new car and saluting the audience. After Noland’s mother died when he was a baby he was raised by his grandmother and a very cruel father.

“She suffered like Frank. One day she asked me for apple juice and ice cream. I went out to the nurse’s desk, repeated her request and came back with ice cream and juice. I gave her ten or twelve small spoonfuls of ice cream and enough apple juice to wet her lips. She smiled, closed her eyes and that was that.”

“That was that? Jesus, Nol, give me a warning. I didn’t know she was going to end up dead. From ice cream to, “That was that”?

“That’s life, I could take it.”

“I know that’s life and I know you could take it, but all of your stories end like that. The boom drops. Don’t you have any boring stories?”

He doesn’t. They all finish with someone dead, beat-up, or fired. They’re short and they hit hard.

This one too, which I’ve been holding back because it’s Noland’s other side. Peter had already guessed there was more to Noland than met the blog’s eye.

“My son, Danny, was about sixteen when he asked me if he could have a motorcycle. He was with his buddy, Jim. I said, ‘I’ve taken care of you all these years and I want you alive. You have an accident on a motorcycle and the party is over.’ He turned around and left. A few minutes go by and I was about to walk back in the house, and I see Danny’s other friend John laughing. I asked John what was funny and he pointed down the street. There was Danny on the back of his Jim’s motorcycle. I got in my Olds and chased them down. Cut them off. I got out of my car, opened the back door, picked Danny off the bike and threw him into the back seat.”

Noland uses his hands when he talks, and his motions, like his words, are short and economical. He moved his hands as if he were throwing a bale of hay.

“I said to Jim, ‘If I ever see him on the back of your bike again, I’ll do the same to you.’ I drove Danny home and pushed him through the front door. I put the hassock up on the divan, took the pictures off the walls and cleared the rest of the room. I said, ‘You’re going to learn who runs this house.’ I punched him again and again. I knocked him down and then I picked him up and threw him against the wall. His head hit the wall and he slumped to the floor. I thought, I hope he doesn’t get up. He didn’t. Years later he told me he remembered that day. He said, ‘Dad, I couldn’t get up.’ I told him It was a good thing.”

*********************

cantina_sm.jpg
Susan treated us to dinner last night at Daniela’s Cantina, and in spite of the cold weather, we drove to Erickson’s for dessert. Shinydome will appreciate this most – she had wintergreen chip in a cone. Yes, ice cream with foreign bodies.
View larger image

posted by michael at 6:34 am  

Thursday, May 27, 2004

Starry Starry Night

The cabin porch was saved from destruction by a combination of luck and a skinny, but resilient limb that caught the crushing force of a falling tree . Adam and I spent two hours surgically removing it, section by section, and then finally swinging what was left, still clinging to its upright half, away from the roof. From that tree we crafted a bench on which to sit in front of the fire,  and enough firewood to reload the porch area for Ed’s next winter trip. Or our own next Grok Hill visit, whichever comes first.


Yesterday at the lumberyard.I walked in, picked up gate latches and hinges, and then shuffled to the desk to order the stock I needed to build a custom door in the back of an attached garage in Carlisle.

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I was helped by Betty, who is small, probably in her forties, and has zero distinguishing features other than her voice. She sounds like Betty Boop — high-pitched and childlike. Betty stopped me somewhere between my ordering plywood and primed pine to complain about this wet weather breeding mosquitoes. I told her I had been camping in New Hampshire, and indeed they were ferocious. To which she said, “Tell me something. I talked to my ophthalmologist, and he said it was the light and not my eyes. Can you really see more stars if you get away from city?”

I thought to myself, you can see more stars if you leave The Home, but I said, “Of course. The further from the city, the more stars. Try Montana.”

I left, walked to the yard, loaded my truck, and on the way out I stopped to talk to Watson (known as Georgia – why, I don’t know). Georgia is a gentle-hearted guy with nothing but distinguishing features – from the creases in his face deep enough to plant potatoes, to ears like airplane landing flaps. Georgia retired years ago, but couldn’t tolerate doing nothing, and he’s now back making sure the lumber on your truck matches what’s on your slip.

“Georgia, I won’t mention any names, but someone inside asked me if you can see more stars the further you get from the city. Can you imagine that?”

Georgia reached up and pulled the bill of his Red Sox hat away from his face, thought for a moment, and replied, “You know, at my house in Littleton, there are so many trees I can’t hardly see any. But if you go to the Walmart in Hudson, New Hampshire, the sky is covered with them.”

posted by Adam at 6:23 am  

Wednesday, May 26, 2004

Grok Hill Journal – Last Entry

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Page Two
Photo Gallery

posted by Adam at 6:54 am  

Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Breakfast

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Matt and Hil frying the bacon.
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Items that need to be claimed:
Take a Hike for Humanity T-shirt
One pair of boxer shorts with footballs
An American Eagle T-shirt with paint stains
Faded yellow and blue swimming trunks
Net bag with insect repellent
Yellow flashlight
One pair of white socks

Full gallery of photos tomorrow.

posted by Michael at 7:30 am  

Monday, May 24, 2004

Brew Pub

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Dinner Sunday afternoon on our way home.
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Iíll add content later (and maybe Adam will too) when I have time to post more than a solitary photo. However, in short, if we reflect back to collective concerns about this trip, and read the comments on Fireworks; I have to say the voice of reason was right on. And why wouldnít he be? Heís the closest in age to Matt and his friends. Here are his two comments: ìLet them go have fun. They’ll be fine without chaperones. This should probably be the least of your worries about your childrenî and ìYou old folks are too far removed from the issue. They’ll be fineî

They were more than fine. Every parent should have the pleasure of taking this group somewhere like into the woods, or to a vacation house in New Hampshire, or on a weekend trip to Bermuda, or to the south of France, or wherever they want to go.

posted by Michael at 2:56 pm  

Sunday, May 23, 2004

Camp Gilsum

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Cort and Chris
Kathy, Cel, Cort and Chris

See, there is this tradition invented many years by my brother Peter. It requires boiling water, wash cloths, Dr. Bronners Pure Castile Soap and very willing participants.

More pics to come.

posted by Michael at 9:37 pm  

Saturday, May 22, 2004

Chris Grosjean

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Baseballl fans on a sunny Friday afternoon.
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Chris Grosjean in motion.
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posted by Michael at 8:59 am  

Friday, May 21, 2004

New Digs

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Flo’s new front door.
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Inside her apartment.
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Celebrating Susan’s arrival – ice cream at Erickson’s.
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posted by Michael at 6:26 am  
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