A Bit of Dog Medicine

Samhain                                                        Thanksgiving Moon

Up and out for the dogs this morning.  On the way over I was feeling a bit down, a little tired, didn’t workout last night, generally blahhness.  When I got to the kennel, Eric, the guy that runs the place, told me, “If you could breed these guys and produce all dogs like Vega you’d have a definite new breed.”  He’s right.  Vega’s a sweety, intelligent, just willful enough to be interesting and a dog of true leisure.

Feeling a bit better after that.  Always nice to have an outsider reinforce your own feelings.  Then the dogs came out with handlers.  Jumping, straining at the leashes, wanting to get at me, say hi, lick my face, bump me.  Right then whatever blahs remained drifted away.

On the way back with all four dogs trying to sit in the front seat, I realized what I was missing.  Companionship.  And someone who needed me.  The house is no longer empty.  And neither am I.

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Samhain                                                              Thanksgiving Moon

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Back Home Again

Samhain                                                             Thanksgiving Moon

Back in Minnesota where the house, still sans dogs and Kate, is even quieter.  A snow came during the time I was gone, barely 48 hours.  Not much, but enough to give the yard a coating of white and the driveway one of packed snow.

Thanksgiving at Jon and Jen’s, a family first, went well.  Turkey eaten.  Sweet potatoes and cheese and stuffing and quiche and artichoke and bread pudding with pecan pie and ice cream.  Still, not ramming it in, eating with restraint.

 

(1960 Chrysler Valiant)

When Kate went to pick-up the rental, they were all out of economy so she got upgraded to a Chrysler 200.  I can’t remember the last time I drove a piece of authentic Detroit iron.  A retro experience.  The cushiony ride, the clock in the dash that looked like a small clock for a desk, an interior designed to soothe.  Mostly though, it felt like a gunboat.  Like I should be engaging in some form of diplomacy.  Weird.

Kate worked hard on Thanksgiving and she likes it.  She came back to the hotel and said, “I work hard.”  As if maybe I hadn’t noticed.  She’s out there until Monday.  I pick up the dogs tomorrow and the house’s noise level will pick up again.  I’m looking forward to it.

Getting Ready

Samhain                                                          Thanksgiving Moon

This is a two grandma thanksgiving.  Barb, Jen’s mother, and Kate, Jon’s mother motor around the renovated kitchen chopping, boiling, baking, smashing.  Other family members clean house.  Sponges, windex, vacuums, furniture moved in and out.  Smells of turkey and butter and squash and potatoes invade the house, bringing with them the ghosts of Thanksgiving’s past.

Gabe and Ruth help in various ways.  Gabe by taking a bath and sitting around in his bear costume.  Ruth brings down the little table and the little chairs. “This is where the kids will eat,” she says, throwing a tablecloth on made by another Grandma, Zelma, Jon’s dad’s mom.

Purpose and family.  Food and sunshine.  Tables with many places.  Renovated houses.  Traveling.  Listening to stories.

Romanian in-laws.  How Jon made the table, using tools at a custom woodworking shop.  The laying of the sod.  Gertie’s ACL surgery.  Sollies weight loss.  Again.  The sound of football.  Kids laughing.

Happy Holidays.  Happy Holiseason.

Denver

Samhain                                                              Thanksgiving Moon

Slightly out of breath.  The mile high city will do that to you.  Already had the grandkids running, “Grandpa!” and grabbing on, getting lifted up.  The world has little better to offer.  Perhaps the unconditional love of a dog is equivalent.

Jon and Jen have a backyard with grass, pathways of gray crushed rock, a tree house, a brand new Jon made dining room table, an impressive piece of carpentry, two new bathrooms, tiled and plumbed by Jon, a new master bedroom with big closets and a totally renovated kitchen.  And tomorrow they’ll serve Thanksgiving dinner.  16 people.

When I got up at 5:30 am, I wondered who had made the damned reservation.  (Me, back in August, when 8:22 am didn’t seem too bad.)  I was, however, pleased when I got to the airport on the busiest travel day of the year and waltzed right through security.  The plane left on time and arrived on time.

A short trip, this one, but an important one.  For family.

Quiet

Samhain                                                           Thanksgiving Moon

The house is quiet.  Kate is gone.  The dogs are at the kennel.  Just me.  I hear the dogs anyhow.  They went looking for Kate this morning.  Absence.  A part of life and death.

Spent the day working on Missing.  Finally put the covers on the bee colonies, too.

We’re pretty much closed up for winter here.  Food put by.  Bulbs planted for next year, including   garlic.  Composted manure added into the soil of beds that saw heavy use this last growing season.  Some leaves yet to add as mulch.  Trees to prune and cut, but that’s winter work anyhow.  Ready for snow.

Gonna get up at 5:30 am tomorrow.  That’s early for me.

A Year Ago

Samhain                                                                    Thanksgiving Moon

one of my favorite days on our cruise…

Follow The Green Sidewalk

Posted on November 19, 2011 by Charles

Spring Moon of the Southern Cross

Montevideo, Uruguay On the banks of the Rio de la Plata, overlooking the Atlantic to the East

Travel brings the unexpected. A primary purpose, of course, but after tours with guides, I had become a bit dulled to the canned formula of the best this and the most that and the very special music. Not saying it was all boring, far from it, but too predictable.

Not today. In Montevideo, a city of which I had no expectations, Kate and I had a wonderful day. After being pressed sideways into the dock, we ended up within walking distance of the old part of Montevideo. At about 10:30 I suggested to Kate that we walk into town, something we could do in only a handful of ports. She agreed.

Our way took us first past two warehouses, both as I described earlier, three stories high with iron doors spaced about 50 feet apart on each story, brick with chipped and rusted concrete outlining the doors and interior bays. The iron doors, once gray now have rust blooms, some just a few, others with the gray vanishingly small.

When we got past these, a painted walkway led us through a port welcome area with guides hawking city tours and a free shuttle to a leather factory. Beyond them a memorial to the sinking of the Graf Spee shared a park-like space with painted anchors and their chains, or sheckles, as we learned from our Captain. Policia Turistica sported chartreuse fluorescent vests and stared off, wherever people stare who face an entire day of standing in roughly the same spot.

Across an intersection a sign said, “Tourists Follow Green Sidewalk.” Guess what that made me want to do? Kate said, “We’re following the green sidewalk.” Oh, ok.

A large boulevard with some cobblestone lanes opened in front of us. The buildings were somewhat dilapidated, like the warehouses, concrete and brick that had seen better days. Or, maybe not. There was a shabby chic to it that appealed to me.

A wandering fellow tourist told us about a market hidden by buildings ahead. We walked over that way. Sure enough there was a large open air market with many different things for sale, many of them tourist oriented, but just as many artisans selling their products.

Off the market area, pedestrian only somewhat like Florida Street in Buenos Aires, a large building held more shops and a number of restaurants each of which featured huge fires and metal grills filled with roasting meat: chicken, sausage, beef tenderloin, pork, lamb. Each restaurant had an awning with its name around four sides of an island that contained the fire, the roasting meat, a bar and an area for washing dishes. Tables and chairs flanked the islands in the open area created by the building, fans turning, cooling the diners.

When we firsts went through, tables were set and glasses sparkled. The smells of roasting meat had only begun to fill the room.

We looked in several shops, but continued up another, older pedestrian way with a slight incline. This had a few tourists shops, too, but began to sport a carneteria here, a fruit and vegetable market with their wares colorfully displayed in wooden crates on the sidewalk there, a bar named “Los Beatles” and a petfood store.

The buildings have a colonial look, similar to the older part of Panama City that we saw well over a month ago, balconies, molded cornices, plaster decorations. A few of the buildings had pastel colors, recently added.

Like the warehouses and the building across from the green tourist sidewalk these buildings had a shabby but not run down look to them, more like a neighborhood in which people really lived. As the mid-day heat had begun to settle on us, Kate started talking about air conditioning. About 45 minutes before that, I told her I’d give my 12:30 tour a pass to meander around Montevideo with her.

We walked back down the hill toward the large building with the restaurants.

Inside we walked past several folks hawking their restaurants, “Sir, a refreshing drink?” “Some lunch, mister?” and found a table underneath a fan at the Cafe Veronica.

The waiter welcomed us to Montevideo and to Uruguay with a genuine and warm greeting. When Kate got up to take a quick picture of the fire, another waiter came up and encourage her to go inside the kitchen to take her picture. After some insisting, she did. We had a meal that exceeded our expectations and a dessert, pancakes con leche that would bring me back to Cafe Veronica in a hurry if it weren’t so damned far away.

This was the kind of day I’d been missing, a day of just poking around, meeting some folks, sticking our heads into various places, seeing the layout for ourselves, discovering rather than being led.

We had a great day together then came back and took a nap.

Just Me and the Dogs

Samhain                                                                      Thanksgiving Moon

Kate called from Denver.  A normal flight.  She’s had her nap and will head over to Jon and Jen’s.  I’ve worked on Missing.  Making progress, now more than 2/3’s through this first revision.  When I finish, I’m going to print it out and read it, pencil in hand.

Did a fitness test and my aerobic fitness is good for a man my age.  Which is fine.  Good is good enough.

Quiet here.  No thump, thump, thump from Kate’s sewing machine, which sits just above my desk, on the main floor of our house.

The dogs and I have a rhythm for times alone and we fall into it pretty easily.

Misc.

Samhain                                                             Thanksgiving Moon

Finished week 8 with the quiz on the Bacchae and Oedipus the King.

Staked our yard so the snowplows will remain in the street and not tread where our vulnerable sprinkler heads secrete themselves during the long non-irrigation season.  New bulb in the garage.  Ladder and extraneous buckets positioned for winter.  Still more to do. Fussy stuff.  Lay down compost, that sort of thing.

 

A Year Ago

Samhain                                                       Thanksgiving Moon

Backing Away From Buenos Aires

Posted on November 17, 2011 by Charles

Spring Moon of the Southern Cross

Outside our room and down at the deck just above the waterlines, refueling is again underway. The promenade deck in front of our room and for about a hundred feet toward the stern of the ship has red cloth barriers over it, preventing other passengers from getting close to the refueling. We, however, can just open our door and go see. Which we did. Then, being the good northern European adults we are we turned around and came back inside. After all.

Way back in Santa Marta, after paying for our lunch at a bayside restaurant, I turned to go next door and follow Kate into the souvenir shop. When I put my foot out, only open air was available. There was a step, in the same white tile as the floor, and I didn’t notice it.

At the time I was proud of my ability to react quickly, turning back and onto the upper floor where my other foot already resided.

However. In so doing I wrenched my back. That’s how I got the foot back on the same surface as my other one, whipping my back around while my planted foot remained steady.

Since that afternoon, our first port in South America and our first one of this trip, I’ve had a sore back. It’s gone up and down in inflammation, mostly background noise, but today I torqued it again. This time I can’t move easily, even with some significant pain meds Kate has along. That means that, though Buenos Aires is within walking distance, I can’t walk the distance. So. No wandering around here, which I had very much wanted to do. Mark O. gave me a neighborhood, San Telmo, and it sounds wonderful. Maybe next circumnavigation of South America.

As Evita said, don’t cry for me, Argentina.

Tomorrow we head out onto to the pampas by bus so I’ll see some of it on the way there. Also, we’re here overnight again tomorrow night, so perhaps I’ll have a shot then. Gauchos and boleros.

Even so, the travel malaise I spoke about in recent blogs has abated and I’m eager to get outside.

We watched cormorants or grebes today, flying between our ship and the Log-In Pantanal, a cargo ship being loaded just across the way. These birds are fish eaters, with the ability, like loons, to turn and suddenly disappear under the water. When one comes up with a silvery, squiggly catch, the race is on to get it eaten. The others flock to the successful bird, flail around, trying to knock the fish out and eat it themselves. In one scrum I watched the fish passed among five different birds until one of them got that long neck pointed skyward and let the fish slide in.

We are in shirt sleeve weather here, perhaps 80-82 and sunny, a change from the cloudy jacket weather of the Chilean fjords and Ushuaia.

Got good news today. We discovered that our checked bags going home have a 70 pound weight limit. That means we should be able to check bags without penalties and carry our fragile treasures on board.