Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Christmas Fun

Well, guess we can stick a fork in another Christmas - it's done - and for my part it was quite fun. 

Although I am a confirmed non-believer and tend to be a strict constructionist on matters of the separation of church and state, I confess I am less than consistent in this regard when it comes to the Christmas holiday. 

I just LOVE the holiday and baby Jesus is welcome in my home every Christmas.  But then again so are Santa, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, the Grinch, Frosty the Snowman, and any wandering wise men or vagrant elves who happen to be in the neighborhood.  Indeed, I rationalize my lack of indignation over putatively religious symbols in the public square over the holidays precisely because I make no distinction between the creche story and its inhabitants and their more recent secular cousins.  It's all one glorious fable to be taken lightly and enjoyed - with hopefully more than a whiff of cheer and good will toward one's fellow man.

As is customary, I was invited to Alison's Christmas Eve supper - boef bourguignon a la Julia Childs.  Very yummy.  A delightful evening.

The hostess and her father-in-law

Alison suggested that when Eric and I come for supper - she needs to double the recipe.  Eric and I did not disappoint.

The family Christmas supper was particularly fun insofar as I now have my own home suitable for entertaining and I flew solo on turkey with all the trimmings.  Dinner for ten.  YIKES!  The vittles proved satisfactory - at least nobody went home hungry - and everyone seemed to enjoy the experience.

Mom's former neighbor, Lori, now lives at the Pionners' Home.  She was sprung for Christmas supper.

On a couple of occasions I thought I might have to tie mom to the chair.  She clearly felt she belonged in the kitchen.

Auntie attended along with her visitors from Anchorage - grandson Brock and his two sons.  Auntie particularly enjoyed the company of my boarder, Enrique, and his hound, Nikki.

  Auntie flirted shamelessly with Enrique all evening.  YOU GO GIRL!

After I cleaned-up all the debris Enrique and I opened our gifts from out mutual friend, Joan.  Enrique was clearly light-headed - bordering on the delirious - after spending time with my family and there was considerable confusion over one of Joan's gifts.

 What was initially identified as a pair of doggie long-johns...

...was subsequently recognized as a hat for Enrique

So there you have it...

Today is ghostly quiet at the ol' homestead.  Enrique and Nikki have upped-stakes for the Lower 48.  They will return in March when he will be appearing in another Perseverance Theatre production.  I like having company!

Saturday, December 24, 2011

A Bum's Christmas

 Ho!  Ho!  Ho!  Merry Christmas everyone.  I have been on a blog holiday for over a month - but I'm now fit and rested and ready for a whole new year.  It is my INTENTION to post regularly for the foreseeable future - reserving the right, of course, to change my mind at any time.


But first things first and in keeping with tradition, I offer once again my own personal favorite yuletide tale.


So without further ado....

A Bum's Christmas

By H.L. MENCKEN



Printed in The Wall Street Journal Editorial page - December 24, 1998 H.L. Mencken (1880-1956), the legendary Baltimore newspaperman, wrote the following story, originally entitled "Stare Decisis," for the New Yorker. It was published as a book in 1948. To mark the book's 50th anniversary, we present Journal readers with a slightly abbreviated version of Mencken's classic tale. © Copyright, Alfred A. Knopf Inc.

Despite all the snorting against them in works of divinity, it has always been my experience that infidels--or freethinkers, as they usually prefer to call themselves--are a generally estimable class of men, with strong overtones of the benevolent and even of the sentimental. This was certainly true, for example, of Leopold Bortsch, Totsaufer [customers' man] for the Scharnhorst Brewery, in Baltimore, forty-five years ago. . . . He was a sincere friend to the orphans, the aged, all blind and one-legged men, ruined girls, opium fiends, Chinamen, oyster dredgers, ex-convicts, the more respectable sort of colored people, and all the other oppressed and unfortunate classes of the time, and he slipped them, first and last, many a substantial piece of money.

Nor was he the only Baltimore infidel of those days who thus shamed the churchly. Indeed, the name of one of his buddies, Fred Ammermeyer, jumps into my memory at once. Fred and Leopold, I gathered, had serious dogmatic differences, for there are as many variations in doctrine between infidels as between Christians, but the essential benignity of both men kept them on amicable terms, and they often cooperated in good works. The only noticeable difference between them was that Fred usually tried to sneak a little propaganda into his operations--a dodge that the more scrupulous Leopold was careful to avoid. . . . [H]e sent each and every one of the clergy of the town a copy of Paine's "Age of Reason" three or four times a year--always disguised as a special delivery or registered letter marked "Urgent". . . .

But in the masterpiece of Fred Ammermeyer's benevolent career there was no such attempt at direct missionarying; indeed, his main idea when he conceived it was to hold up to scorn and contumely, by the force of mere contrast, the crude missionarying of his theological opponents. This idea seized him one evening when he dropped into the Central Police Station to pass the time of day with an old friend, a police lieutenant who was then the only known freethinker on the Baltimore force. Christmas was approaching and the lieutenant was in an unhappy and rebellious frame of mind--not because he objected to its orgies as such, or because he sought to deny Christians its beautiful consolations, but simply and solely because he always had the job of keeping order at the annual free dinner by the massed missions of the town to the derelicts of the waterfront, and that duty compelled him to listen politely to a long string of pious exhortations, many of them from persons he knew to be whited sepulchres.

"Why in hell," he observed impatiently, "do all them goddam hypocrites keep the poor bums waiting for two, three hours while they get off their goddam whimwham? Here is a hall full of men who ain't had nothing to speak of to eat for maybe three, four days, and yet they have to set there smelling the turkey and the coffee while ten, fifteen Sunday-school superintendents and W.C.T.U. [Women's Christian Temperance Union] sisters sing hymns to them and holler against booze. I tell you, Mr. Ammermeyer, it ain't human. More than once I have saw a whole row of them poor bums pass out in faints, and had to send them away in the wagon. And then, when the chow is circulated at last, and they begin fighting for the turkey bones, they ain't hardly got the stuff down before the superintendents and the sisters begin calling on them to stand up and confess whatever skullduggery they have done in the past, whether they really done it or not, with us cops standing all around. And every man Jack of them knows that if they don't lay it on plenty thick there won't be no encore of the giblets and stuffing, and two times out of three there ain't no encore anyhow, for them psalm singers are the stingiest outfit outside hell and never give a starving bum enough solid feed to last him until Christmas Monday. And not a damned drop to drink! Nothing but coffee--and without no milk! I tell you, Mr. Ammermeyer, it makes a man's blood boil."

Fred's duly boiled, and to immediate effect. By noon the next day he had rented the largest hall on the waterfront and sent word to the newspapers that arrangements for a Christmas party for bums to end all Christmas parties for bums were under way. His plan for it was extremely simple. The first obligation of hospitality, he announced somewhat prissily, was to find out precisely what one's guests wanted, and the second was to give it to them with a free and even reckless hand. As for what his proposed guests wanted, he had no shade of doubt, for he was a man of worldly experience and he had also, of course, the advice of his friend the lieutenant, a recognized expert in the psychology of the abandoned.

First and foremost, they wanted as much malt liquor as they would buy themselves if they had the means to buy it. Second, they wanted a dinner that went on in rhythmic waves, all day and all night, until the hungriest and hollowest bum was reduced to breathing with not more than one cylinder of one lung. Third, they wanted not a mere sufficiency but a riotous superfluity of the best five-cent cigars on sale on the Baltimore wharves. Fourth, they wanted continuous entertainment, both theatrical and musical, of a sort in consonance with their natural tastes and their station in life. Fifth and last, they wanted complete freedom from evangelical harassment of whatever sort, before, during, and after the secular ceremonies.

On this last point, Fred laid special stress, and every city editor in Baltimore had to hear him expound it in person. I was one of those city editors, and I well recall his great earnestness, amounting almost to moral indignation. It was an unendurable outrage, he argued, to invite a poor man to a free meal and then make him wait for it while he was battered with criticism of his ways, however well intended. And it was an even greater outrage to call upon him to stand up in public and confess to all the false steps of what may have been a long and much troubled life. Fred was determined, he said, to give a party that would be devoid of all the blemishes of the similar parties staged by the Salvation Army, the mission helpers, and other such nefarious outfits. If it cost him his last cent, he would give the bums of Baltimore massive and unforgettable proof that philanthropy was by no means a monopoly of gospel sharks--that its highest development, in truth, was to be found among freethinkers.

It might have cost him his last cent if he had gone it alone, for he was by no means a man of wealth, but his announcement had hardly got out before he was swamped with offers of help. Leopold Bortsch pledged twenty-five barrels of Scharnhorst beer and every other Totsaufer in Baltimore rushed up to match him. The Baltimore agents of the Pennsylvania two-fer factories fought for the privilege of contributing the cigars. The poultry dealers of Lexington, Fells Point, and Cross Street markets threw in barrel after barrel of dressed turkeys, some of them in very fair condition. The members of the boss bakers' association, not a few of them freethinkers themselves, promised all the bread, none more than two days old, that all the bums of the Chesapeake littoral could eat, and the public-relations counsel of the Celery Trust, the Cranberry Trust, the Sauerkraut Trust, and a dozen other such cartels and combinations leaped at the chance to serve.

If Fred had to fork up cash for any part of the chow, it must have been for the pepper and salt alone. . . . But the rent of the hall had to be paid, and not only paid but paid in advance, for the owner thereof was a Methodist deacon, and there were many other expenses of considerable size--for example, for the entertainment, the music, the waiters and bartenders, and the mistletoe and immortelles which decorated the ball. Fred, if he had desired, might have got the free services of whole herds of amateur musicians and elocutionists, but he swept them aside disdainfully, for he was determined to give his guests a strictly professional show. . . . He got, of course, some contributions in cash from rich freethinkers, but when the smoke cleared away at last and he totted up his books, he found that the party had set him back more than a hundred and seventy-five dollars.

Admission to it was by invitation only, and the guests were selected with a critical and bilious eye by the police lieutenant. No bum who had ever been known to do any honest work--even such light work as sweeping out a saloon--was on the list. By Fred's express and oft-repeated command it was made up wholly of men completely lost to human decency, in whose favor nothing whatsoever could be said. The doors opened at 11 a.m. of Christmas Day, and the first canto of the dinner began instantly. There were none of the usual preliminaries--no opening prayer, no singing of a hymn, no remarks by Fred himself, not even a fanfare by the band. The bums simply shuffled and shoved their way to the tables and simultaneously the waiters and sommeliers poured in with the chow and the malt. For half an hour no sound was heard save the rattle of crockery, the chomp-chomp of mastication, and the grateful grunts and "Oh, boy!"s of the assembled underprivileged.

Then the cigars were passed round (not one but half a dozen to every man), the band cut loose with the tonic chord of G major, and the burlesque company plunged into Act I, Sc. 1 of "Krausmeyer's Alley." There were in those days, as old-timers will recall, no less than five standard versions of this classic, ranging in refinement all the way from one so tony that it might have been put on at the Union Theological Seminary down to one so rowdy that it was fit only for audiences of policemen, bums, newspaper reporters, and medical students. This last was called the Cincinnati version, because Cincinnati was then the only great American city whose mores tolerated it. Fred gave instructions that it was to be played à outrance and con fuoco, with no salvo of slapsticks, however brutal, omitted, and no double-entendre, however daring. Let the boys have it, he instructed the chief comedian, Larry Snodgrass, straight in the eye and direct from the wood. They were poor men and full of sorrow, and he wanted to give them, on at least one red-letter day, a horse-doctor's dose of the kind of humor they really liked.

In that remote era the girls of the company could add but little to the exhilarating grossness of the performance, for the strip tease was not yet invented and even the shimmy was still only nascent, but they did the best they could with the muscle dancing launched by Little Egypt at the Chicago World's Fair, and that best was not to be sneezed at, for they were all in hearty sympathy with Fred's agenda, and furthermore, they cherished the usual hope of stage folk that Charles Frohman or Abe Erlanger might be in the audience. Fred had demanded that they all appear in red tights, but there were not enough red tights in hand to outfit more than half of them, so Larry Snodgrass conceived the bold idea of sending on the rest with bare legs. It was a revolutionary indelicacy, and for a startled moment or two the police lieutenant wondered whether he was not bound by his Hippocratic oath to raid the show, but when be saw the whole audience leap up and break into cheers, his dubieties vanished, and five minutes later he was roaring himself when Larry and the other comedians began paddling the girls' cabooses with slapsticks.

I have seen many a magnificent performance of "Krausmeyer's Alley" in my time, including a Byzantine version called "Krausmeyer's Dispensary," staged by the students at the Johns Hopkins Medical School, but never have I seen a better one. Larry and his colleagues simply gave their all. Wherever, on ordinary occasions, there would have been a laugh, they evoked a roar, and where there would have been roars they produced something akin to asphyxia and apoplexy. Even the members of the musicians' union were forced more than once to lay down their fiddles and cornets and bust into laughter. In fact, they enjoyed the show so vastly that when the comedians retired for breath and the girls came out to sing "Sweet Rosie O'Grady" or "I've Been Workin' on the Railroad," the accompaniment was full of all the outlaw glissandi and sforzandi that we now associate with jazz.

The show continued at high tempo until 2 p.m., when Fred shut it down to give his guests a chance to eat the second canto of their dinner. It was a duplicate of the first in every detail, with second and third helpings of turkey, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, and celery for everyone who called for them, and a pitcher of beer in front of each guest. The boys ground away at it for an hour, and then lit fresh cigars and leaned back comfortably for the second part of the show. It was still basically "Krausmeyer's Alley," but it was a "Krausmeyer's Alley" adorned and bedizened with reminiscences of every other burlesque-show curtain raiser and afterpiece in the repertory. It went on and on for four solid hours, with Larry and his pals bending themselves to their utmost exertions, and the girls shaking their legs in almost frantic abandon. At the end of an hour the members of the musicians' union demanded a cut-in on the beer and got it, and immediately afterward the sommeliers began passing pitchers to the performers on the stage. Meanwhile, the pitchers on the tables of the guests were kept replenished, cigars were passed round at short intervals, and the waiters came in with pretzels, potato chips, celery, radishes, and chipped beef to stay the stomachs of those accustomed to the free-lunch way of life.

At 7 p.m. precisely, Fred gave the signal for a hiatus in the entertainment, and the waiters rushed in with the third canto of the dinner. The supply of roast turkey, though it had been enormous, was beginning to show signs of wear by this time, but Fred had in reserve twenty hams and forty pork shoulders, the contribution of George Wienefeldter, president of the Weinefeldter Bros. & Schmidt Sanitary Packing Co., Inc. Also, he had a mine of reserve sauerkraut hidden down under the stage, and soon it was in free and copious circulation and the guests were taking heroic hacks at it. This time they finished in three-quarters of an hour, but Fred filled the time until 8 p.m. by ordering a seventh inning stretch and by having the police lieutenant go to the stage and assure all hands that any bona-fide participant found on the streets, at the conclusion of the exercises, with his transmission jammed would not be clubbed and jugged, as was the Baltimore custom at the time, but returned to the hall to sleep it off on the floor. This announcement made a favorable impression, and the brethren settled down for the resumption of the show in a very pleasant mood. Larry and his associates were pretty well fagged out by now, for the sort of acting demanded by the burlesque profession is very fatiguing, but you'd never have guessed it by watching them work.

At ten the show stopped again, and there began what Fred described as a Bierabend, that is, a beer evening. Extra pitchers were put on every table, more cigars were banded about, and the waiters spread a substantial lunch of rye bread, rat-trap cheese, ham, bologna, potato salad, liver pudding, and Blutwurst. Fred announced from the stage that the performers needed a rest and would not be called upon again until twelve o'clock, when a midnight show would begin, but that in the interval any guest or guests with a tendency to song might step up and show his or their stuff. No less than a dozen volunteers at once went forward but Fred had the happy thought of beginning with a quartet, and so all save the first four were asked to wait. The four laid their heads together, the band played the vamp of "Sweet Adeline," and they were off. It was not such singing as one hears from the Harvard Glee Club or the Bach Choir at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, but it was at least as good as the barbershop stuff that hillbillies now emit over the radio. The other guests applauded politely, and the quartet, operating briskly under malt and hop power, proceeded to "Don't You Hear Dem Bells?" and "Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party." Then the four singers had a nose-to-nose palaver and the first tenor proceeded somewhat shakily to a conference with Otto Strauss, the leader of the orchestra.

From where I sat, at the back of the hall, beside Fred, I could see Otto shake his head, but the tenor persisted in whatever he was saying, and after a moment Otto shrugged resignedly and the members of the quartet again took their stances. Fred leaned forward eagerly, curious to hear what their next selection would be. He found out at once. It was "Are You Ready for the Judgment Day?," the prime favorite of the period in all the sailors' bethels, helping-up missions, Salvation Army bum traps, and other such joints along the waterfront. Fred's horror and amazement and sense of insult were so vast that he was completely speechless, and all I heard out of him while the singing went on was a series of sepulchral groans. The man was plainly suffering cruelly, but what could I do? What, indeed, could anyone do? For the quartet had barely got half way through the first stanza of the composition before the whole audience joined in. And it joined in with even heartier enthusiasm when the boys on the stage proceeded to "Showers of Blessings," the No. 2, favorite of all seasoned mission stiffs, and then to "Throw Out the Lifeline," and then to "Where Shall We Spend Eternity?," and then to "Wash Me, and I Shall Be Whiter Than Snow."

Half way along in this orgy of hymnody, the police lieutenant took Fred by the arm and led him out into the cold, stinging, corpse-reviving air of a Baltimore winter night. The bums, at this stage, were beating time on the tables with their beer glasses and tears were trickling down their noses. Otto and his band knew none of the hymns, so their accompaniment became sketchier and sketchier, and presently they shut down altogether. By this time the members of the quartet began to be winded, and soon there was a halt. In the ensuing silence there arose a quavering, boozy, sclerotic voice from the floor. "Friends," it began, "I just want to tell you what these good people have done for me--how their prayers have saved a sinner who seemed past all redemption. Friends, I had a good mother, and I was brought up under the influence of the Word. But in my young manhood my sainted mother was called to heaven, my poor father took to rum and opium, and I was led by the devil into the hands of wicked men--yes, and wicked women, too. Oh, what a shameful story I have to tell! It would shock you to hear it, even if I told you only half of it. I let myself be. . ."

I waited for no more, but slunk into the night. Fred and the police lieutenant had both vanished, and I didn't see Fred again for a week. But the next day I encountered the lieutenant on the street, and he hailed me sadly. "Well," be said, "what could you expect from them bums? It was the force of habit, that's what it was. They have been eating mission handouts so long they can't help it. Whenever they smell coffee, they begin to confess. Think of all that good food wasted! And all that beer! And all them cigars!"

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Winter Ho!

Yikes!  Another week gone...and I find myself a year older.  No indication that I'm one bit wiser however...

I've been busy as can be and enjoying myself at the same time.  Can't beat that...  We have now completed the transition from fall to winter as illustrated below.

Nikki and I cruise the trails at Dredge Lake

  
And the next day at the glacier

Not everyone has their own backyard zipline

Look out for the tree!
Yikes!  A foot of snow.

Enrique, Nikki and a friend went snowshoeing

Life is good.  Although there is another winter storm warning for tonight!

Friday, November 4, 2011

Fall Day - Winter Morning

What a difference a day makes...

The last two days were truly classic fall (or as close as we get in these here parts) - clear, cool, and very welcome after the rain and wind earlier in the week.  Tuesday was the stereotypical October Juneau day - complete with a number of power outages.

This morning, however, was a horse of a different color - the color being white.  About 3 inches of fresh snow in my driveway. 

I received a call from auntie about a quarter to eight.  She was at Les Schwab along with about half of Juneau waiting to get her snow tires put on her aging Buick.  Amazed she got there without a mishap.  The roads were VERY slippery.  I immediately went out to collect her to take her home.  If she's lucky, her car will be done tomorrow.  But I wouldn't count on it and if its remains icy I would just as soon that Les keeps it for a bit.  I had a bit of a slip 'n slide experience getting up her hill this morning even with the Jeep.

After taking auntie home I then shoveled mom's driveway followed by my driveway.  Hmmmmm.  It is possible that a snow blower is in my future.  We'll see.

In other news Amanda has, at least temporarily, relocated to her friend's place downtown.  She is always welcome here, of course; but I do not blame her for making the move.  Her apartment should be ready in the next week or so...

Sunny day at Eaglecrest.  The snow creeps down the mountains.

A beautiful day

 Adam is a serious snowboarder - was an instructor at Mt. Hood

 The next morning...  What the hell happened to fall?

Have a great weekend everyone!

Sunday, October 30, 2011

October Weather

Well, October started out September-like but has made up for it the past week.  A very big wind and rain storm mid-week.  Amanda and I sat in the living room and watched the huge triple pane windows do the wugga wugga dance...no danger...but still kinda eerie.  Bet we had some hurricane force gusts.  More of the same (not quite as windy though) yesterday and the classic "rain - heavy at times - and high winds" predicted for tomorrow night.  Followed by mixed rain and snow later in the week...followed by partly cloudy and low temperatures in the upper 20's. 

On Thursday we got a little break and I took Nikki out to the dike trail.

 Nikki LOVES the dike trail.  Runs like a jack rabbit on the wetlands.

The snow creeps down Eaglecrest Valley.  Still great views from the dike trail...

...until you look towards the airport.  Gotta love the prison rec yard look...

All my roommates are now present and accounted for...  Adam got in last evening.  He missed his plane in Seattle so got to spend his birthday hanging-out at Sea-Tac.  He is still snoozing...

...as are Enrique and Amanda who indulged in the Juneau downtown Halloween club scene last night.  I expect it will be a quiet day for the boarders.

Yesterday Amanda got a hot tip on a very reasonably priced apartment downtown on Gastineau Avenue.  She went to inspect and immediately said she would take it.  Great location and cute - though small, of course.  She is delighted.  The joint is being painted and otherwise made ready; but she hopes to move in within a couple of weeks.  We need to go furniture shopping.

Later gang!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Where Does the Time Go?

Yikes!  I haven't posted for over a week.  I'll be damned.  The time just flies.

I've had house guests for just over a week.  Enrique is busy learning his lines for "A Christmas Carol."  He has rehearsals every day accept Monday and has also started working at El Sombrero during the day.  A busy lad. 

His companion, Nikki the Dog, is also busy.  Last evening she was busy for about two hours as I repeatedly flung her chew toy down the hallway.  Yesterday we went for a walk on the beach at Auke Bay Recreation Area.  I am rapidly coming to the conclusion that having a house guest with a dog is probably better than actually having a dog myself - I can take the hound for a walk when I want to - but am under no obligation to go out in the horizontal rain.  Heh Heh. 

Another big day today as daughter Amanda arrives from Portland.  It will be WONDERFUL to have her here - and she says she feels the same.  (Hold that thought, 'Manda.)  I know she has applied for a number of positions with the school district and other agencies.  No joy yet; but I am confident she will be gainfully employed very quickly.

And on Saturday my buddy, Adam, arrives for a visit.  An outsider might conclude I am running a youth hostel; but the way I look at it is that the yin of youth at home is a very welcome balance to the yang of my typical day spent among the elders.  Balance is good.

In other news, there were a couple of interesting columns in the Washington Post today.  The first, by Katrina vanden Heuvel, titled  The Republicans' war on science and reason  describes what many of us have recognized for a good long while - that facts and reason are no longer relevant in the minds of the lead dogs of the Republican right. 

Coincidentally (or not), Eugene Robinson's column on the latest global warming study is interesting insofar as the lead researcher on the project was formally regarded by "skeptics" as one of them.

Well, time to head to the elders for coffee.  Then a workout.  Then pick-up Amanda.  Yippee!

Monday, October 17, 2011

Bah Humbug

Well, my first house guests have arrived.  They flew from New York to Juneau in about eleven hours.  Nikki was damn glad to get out of her kennel.  They both seem to approve of their new digs.

Enrique has gone out for drinks with a couple of friends - he's been here often enough that he has pals both in the theater and otherwise.  Nikki is glued to Enrique's pillow on his bed; although she did come out to observe me putting my bolognese sauce into containers.  I suspect she'll be fine in a day or so - doggy jet lag.

I am a serious Christmas person - I've already been assessing the property for Xmas light purposes.  Christmas will be particularly fun this year insofar as Enrique will be appearing in Perseverance Theater's production of "A Christmas Carroll"  I am housing Bob Cratchit.

I wonder if I will be expected to cook a Christmas goose?

And for those of you who do not recall Nikki - here's a pic from this spring.

  One of my new roomies - Nikki the Dog

I'm delighted to have company...

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Settling In

Well, the first two loaves of zucchini bread just came out of the oven - so it's official - I live here.  Still feels new and not quite normal - routines have been disrupted and need to be reconfigured.  But I will manage.  The fact is that I'm as happy as can be - I love this place.

It was another busy week painting, unpacking, and acquiring more stuff.  My new bed arrived on Tuesday.  It is very big and very comfy.  I have the TV set-up and bought a couple of nice lamps.  The master suite is now reasonably well appointed although I have not yet hung any artwork anywhere.  I think I want some new material...

Tomorrow I need to rake and clear the dog yard.  My first house guests arrive on Monday.  I also need to drain and refill the hot tub and figure out how it works.  We're definitely headed into hot tub season.  The snow level appears to be down to about 2000 feet this afternoon. 

And here's another bird pic - an American Coot that Alison and I saw out by Dredge Lake a week or so ago.  A rare bird for Juneau. 

An American Coot
 
I'll try to be more diligent about posting now that the hurl-burly of moving is more-or-less behind me.

Cheers!

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Busy Beyond Belief

Jesus H. Christ on a bicycle - I'm tired - feel like I'm back at work.

On the other hand, unlike regular work (at least of the kind to which I was previously accustomed) this brand of labor brings immediate satisfaction.  I am almost completely unpacked and I am now typing from my very recently painted office.  Indeed, the entire master suite is now a beautiful green - Dutch Boy Spearmint Green to be exact. 

I had not painted a room in over ten years.  Used to be pretty good at it; still am.  It just takes longer and is more painful.  I am not as limber as I once was and the various painting poses are now a tad awkward.  And painting - like most everything else - takes longer than it once did.  But I just got back from supper and today's paint is now dry and it does look fabulous - if I do say so myself.  There are a few spots that need a touch-up and the room will probably probably require four hours or so to put it back together - but I am quite pleased.

The urgency of the painting is a function of the arrival of my new King Size Temperpedic adjustable bed on Tuesday.  It will be a "sleigh" bed and the headboard weighs about 200 lbs.  I assume the footboard hits the scales at about half that; but in any event I want everything prepared for its arrival.  The bed may not move for a few years...

In other news, Amanda will arrive on October 25th.  She's applying for lots of jobs and I have no doubt she will be gainfully employed shortly upon her arrival.  I am REALLY looking forward to having her as a house mate.  I wonder how she will feel about her purple bedroom?  It is possible that more painting is in my future... 

I have also booked a guest for a couple of months who will be acting in a production at Perseverance Theater later this fall.  Enrique previously stayed with my friend, Joan, and I am delighted to continue the tradition.  Enrique will be accompanied by his best pal, Nikki, a little herder dog who accompanied me, Joan, and her hound, Maddy, on a number of walks this past year.  Nikki will be giving my new abode a test drive as far as doggy compatibility in concerned.  Enrique is very diligent about his dog walking; but it is possible Uncle Elmo may be able to do some dog walking too...  Hah!

Finally, a couple of pics of a Magpie that Alison and I stumbled across on the Fish Creek Trail early last week.  He/she was a very cooperative subject.

Oddly enough - Magpies are more common in Juneau in the fall and winter

A very handsome and cooperative specimen

And oh, yeah, I am now the owner of a new iPhone.  So...for those of you who lamented my inability to be a text buddy - that issue is now resolved. 

So there you have it!  Carry on kids....

Saturday, October 1, 2011

NOW I'm Retired

I'm more-or-less moved in to my new digs.  I'm trying to be very judicious in my unpacking; knowing full well that where I put things will likely be where they remain for the duration.  This is particularly important for the kitchen - where things tend to reside forever - despite daily reminders that they would be more efficiently located elsewhere.  Time will tell whether or not I have been successful.

I LOVE my new home.  I have spent the past couple of hours sitting in every chair (and moving chairs) in the living room and each and every perspective has been pleasing.  And I had a decent sunset tonight.  And now the stars are shining.  The Big Dipper and the arc to Arcturus are featured tonight from my deck to the west.  Vega, Deneb, and Altair are overhead.  Cassiopeia is to the east.  I may need to acquire a telescope.

The house is somewhat peculiar - a hexagonal structure.  It is, I suspect, very inefficient in terms of the use of space - nooks and crannies everywhere.  But I, too, am notoriously inefficient and peculiar - so I suspect it is a good match.  So there you have it.

For the first time since I retired I feel like I know what I am doing.

Salud!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

7644 Glacier Highway Is Now Off-the-Air

Everything I can move in the jeep is now moved - except for my electronics which are going next. Hard to believe it's been almost nine years in this place.  Gonna miss the Dilleys...

With luck, I will be signing-on from Blackerby Street by tomorrow.  Depends on GCI and my consultant, Mr. Rickey.  My land line will also be off-line until we're squared away at the new digs.  I've got my cell however.

So...without further ado, I sign-off from my nice little apartment on Glacier Highway.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Anatomy of a Move: Part 2

Whew!  This is hard work.  I've been moving my stuff jeep load by jeep load to the garage of the new digs.  I'm still a little ahead of schedule; but that is because I've been keeping my nose to the proverbial grindstone.

Yesterday was kitchen day which took longer than I thought.  Did the stove cleaning thing and packed up all the regular dishes as well as all the dry goods.  I do believe there were several items in the back of several cupboards that were last seen when they were placed there at the time of my LAST move - almost nine years ago.  It's possible that these items have exceeded their expiration date.

Yesterday at 3 PM I moseyed over to the title and escrow outfit for the formal closing.  Must have signed my name fifty times.  Most of the paperwork was completely unintelligible and many documents appeared to be the result of the recent mortgage/financial meltdown - things like attesting that what I said was my income is REALLY my income.  A day late and a dollar short...

Still, the deal is done and after filing today the bank and I will be the proud co-owners of 4121 Blackerby Street.  Yippee!

On Saturday my electronic devices consultant, Mr. Rickey, joined me on a shopping spree at Costco where a 42" Panasonic plasma TV, home theater sound system, 32" Sony LCD TV and various peripherals were acquired.

Today will be more moving and cleaning as well as a more mundane shopping excursion to acquire garbage cans, a mailbox and other less glamorous household appurtenances.  And at 4:30 PM my exile to the garage will end as I obtain the keys to my new crib.

My furniture will not be moved until Thursday morning...it is possible I may be able to get a little painting done at the new place tomorrow.  And Dougie will join me either this evening or tomorrow evening to hook-up new electronics.

It is also possible I will be without access to the internet for a couple of days as the move nears its climax.

TallyHo!

Friday, September 23, 2011

Anatomy of a Move: Part 1

The day has come...I must actually start packing stuff.  Where to start?.....   I know... the computer room closet. This is where all the Xmas stuff resides.  After ten years maybe the time to buy a bin for all the Xmas wrappings. 

DONE.  CLOSET CLEANED-OUT.

Then the entertainment center that has not held a TV for about 7 years; but has become the closet for photography stuff.  This is dangerous territory...lots of old photos in old jackets...slides...grade school report cards...one never knows what one will encounter. But I persevere; without a single tear.

DONE.  ENTERTAINMENT CENTER PURGED

The old desk - from my folks years ago - think Grandma Newman had another one just like it.  It will be a focal point of the new house when you first walk in the front door.  Today it was full of "stuff" - no more.

DONE.  DESK CLEARED.

Tomorrow  I need to pick-up the pace.

Or not.

Life is good.

   

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Homeward Bound

Well, time to mosey back up the road to Seattle.  I'll arrive home tonight on AS 79.

Too short a trip - although I DID manage to squeeze tons of fun into six days.  Yesterday I drove out to the coast.  It was a beautiful day.  I'll post a couple of pics when I get home.

Monday was the girls' day.  I took Leah and Amanda to lunch at Veritable Quandary on First Avenue.  I had a smoked chicken and mushroom crepe that was out-of-this-world. 

For supper we went to St. Jack's, a newly opened French bistro. The charcuterie plate was very good although I was a mite disappointed with the entree.  We then motored over to El Gaucho at the Benson Hotel for dessert - Bananas Foster with all of the at-table hoopla. 

The subtext of dessert was that it gave me an opportunity to meet Nick, a server at the establishment and a person of interest in daughter Leah's life.  He seems like a great guy - although it is possible that he was a mite flummoxed by our presence.  Not the best circumstances for introductions.  Nevertheless, it was a very satisfactory day all around.

I had contemplated motoring out to Leah's winery yesterday; but she said she was going to be swamped preparing 1300 or so wine orders for shipment to wine club members.  And Amanda indicated that sleeping-in and reorienting herself to PDX was going to be the order of the day.  So...not as much time with the gals as I had hoped; but still a very nice visit.

Tomorrow will be the beginning of a very strenuous period of time.  Got to do some banking and other running around.  And on Friday I will start packing my apartment for the move to the new house.  Can't say I'm real excited about the moving part; but I AM excited about the new digs.

Cheers!

Monday, September 19, 2011

The Ewoks - A Gentle, Peaceful People

A most amazing camping trip.  Adam and I attended "Fire 13," a dance party in the wilds of Washington near a little town called Glenwood about thirty miles north of Hood River.  The party was on about 80 acres of wooded land with a large grassy clearing where tents were pitched and three sound stages set-up.  Around a thousand folks attended - some in Star Wars inspired costumes in keeping with the theme "An Ewok Village."  Many of those NOT in costume appeared plenty exotic too.

Although it is likely that I was the oldest guest on the premises, I did not feel out of place and had a great time.  We pitched our tent between two of the stages.  The party did not take long to get started - and once the sun set there was a way cool laser and light show to keep everyone inspired.  It is possible that various chemical substances also contributed to the inspiration...

In any event the party went-on all night.  Indeed, it was still continuing albeit at a somewhat reduced tempo when we upped-stakes yesterday morning.  I did attempt to catch a few hours shut-eye during the wee hours; but our strategic location between two massive sound systems was not particularly conducive to sleep. 

I was very impressed with the friendly, well-behaved and generally laid-back atmosphere.  My first Rave.  Hah!

Although NOT an officially recognized Star Wars character, Adam was well received in his Panda costume

A beautiful Sunday morning...the dance continues even as they began to break-down the stages...

So there you have it!

Well, this morning I hope to head-over to Jane's for a little photo shoot.  Daughter Morgan left for college this weekend and mom and dad are feeling a need to sell her car.  Daughter apparently refused to take pics for posting on Craig's List herself - a matter of principle in her mind, I'm sure.  

Leah has the day off so I hope to hook-up with her for lunch and Amanda is due into PDX today so supper with my daughters is in the cards.  

The weather is improving this morning...supposed to be a very nice week.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Portland Fun

Ah, back in my favorite city.  Terry and I had a swift and uneventful drive from Seattle to Portland on Thursday after a good Thai lunch in Ballard with her mom.  T. and I motored over to Jane's place, had a glass of wine and then off to supper at a nice local Greek restaurant in Sellwood.  Delightful.

Yesterday I spent the day with my friend, Adam, getting organized for a quick camping trip (maybe).  We plan to go up by Mt. Adams where there is an outdoor concert gig he really wants to attend.  However this morning it is raining and kinda looks like it's going to be more serious than what the forecast predicted.  So we'll see...

Last night was reunion night at Accanto - a very nice Italian restaurant on Belmont.  I had dined there previously with the girls.  A picture is worth the proverbial thousand words...so without further ado...

 Terry and Tim

 Jim is contemplating relocation to Dallas.  This announcement received mixed reviews

Jane and Julia

Alison and Dougie

I spoke to Leah yesterday and we'll do supper tomorrow.  Bet she's not happy with the rain either.  Grapes need heat and sun this time of year.  Amanda is supposed to arrive on Monday so there will be more dining.  And I would like to get down to the vineyard on Tuesday if the weather cooperates.

Well, gonna do an anti-rain dance.  Later gang!

Thursday, September 15, 2011

City Fun

A very productive and fun day yesterday.  After morning coffee, chit-chat with Marian, and a half-way decent workout I took the bus downtown for some power shopping.  Clocked-in at Macy's about 2 PM and clocked-out about 4:30 PM. 

I am an extraordinarily efficient shopper when I know what I am looking for...and yesterday I was on a mission.  First order of business, wardrobe refurbishment.  I hijacked an attractive young salesperson to be my sherpa and set-sail for Dockers Land.  Found four pair and put the alterations department to work.  Then a couple of shirts, two sweaters and a new outdoor vest.  Bingo!  Wardrobe complete.

I then legged-it upstairs to the bed and bath department to find furnishings for my new king size bed.  This actually took longer than the wardrobe hunt; but in the end I was well satisfied and at a price that was quite pleasing.  I got 20% off everything yesterday by virtue of a week-long sale and the bedding was already on sale.  Bottom line - a $500 Ralph Lauren comforter with accessories for $178.  Nice.

Having done all the damage I could afford at Macy's and being a mite fatigued, I repaired to the bar at the Mayflower Hotel for a martini before meeting my pals for supper.  I love the bar at the Mayflower.  Huge windows that look-out on 4th avenue.  Great people watching venue. 

Then off to an Italian joint in Pacific Plaza for supper with Mr. Milnes, Mr. Long, and Mr. & Ms. Ahrensfeld.  We were seated at 5:30 PM and didn't rise 'til after 9:30 PM.  Serious conversation and big time fun. Took the bus back to Ballard and was in the sack at exactly 10:48 PM.

A very pleasing day...

This morning I had another nice visit with Marian and am now at Tully's waiting for her and Terry to join me for lunch at a little Thai restaurant on Market Street.  Then T. and I will head down to PDX.    We should get down to Jane's place between 5:30 and 6:00 PM. 

I have been somewhat disappointed by the weather - it's been cloudy and cool since I arrived - but no rain.  Looks like the weather in Portland will be a little better; but the recent hot spell is over.  No matter...

TallyHo!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Attention Shoppers!

Well, here I am once again in the bowels of beloved Ballard.  Sitting at my favourite Tully's Coffee staring at the "for lease" sign across the street that once housed Lombardi's Restaurant.  I was rather fond of Lombardi's - decent food at a reasonable price and a very congenial bar.  Tough times...

Last evening Terry and I supped at The Dahlia Lounge downtown.  Best duck I've had - maybe ever.  Great atmosphere.  Outstanding company.  Tom Douglas, the owner and chef of the joint (and several other well regarded establishments in Seattle) was walking the floor.  A real live celebrity chef of sorts.

T. and I were famished after an afternoon of shopping at Northgate.  I purchased some bedding.  Still need more however - as well as a wardrobe makeover. While packing for this trip I was forced to note that I have exactly two pair of casual pants that do not sport holes in the backside or very ragged legs.  Doesn't much matter in Juneau...but I cannot wear worn-out togs here in America. 

This afternoon I'll head downtown for more shopping.  After a very nice clerk at Macy's failed to find either shoes or pants that would fit me I was given a consolation prize of a 20% off most everything coupon for a sale that starts today.  I plan to take advantage of said coupon at the downtown store. 

Tonight I will dine with some old high school pals, Kurt Ahrensfeld, Tim Milnes, and Brent Long.  Looking forward to the company.  Tomorrow T. and I will take Mumsy Harrigan to lunch and then hit the road to PDX and move dining and visiting.

Yippee!

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Like Watching Paint Dry

Beginning to get organized for my trip.  Spent almost SEVEN hours today with my laptop- I had not turned it on since I got back from Hawaii in February.  First order of business:  charge the battery.  Then go online and spend hour after hour after hour after hour doing the various program updates.  Fifty five for Windows - took over an hour.  A couple of dozen for the antivirus program.  Then Mozilla, Adobe, Apple and some others I've already forgotten. When I travel these days I'm like a pack mule. Suitcase, camera bag, laptop - at least I won't have my golf clubs this trip.

Yesterday was pretty damn nice - mid-sixties and mostly sunny.  Alison and I hiked the dike trail where we saw an American Kestrel - a fairly uncommon bird for hereabouts.  And lots of short-billed dowitchers.

 An American Kestrel

 Not great pics - but no mistaking the identity

Lots of Short Billed Dowitchers

This morning I hauled Alison and Dougie to the airport for dawn patrol.  They flew to Seattle today and will arrive in Redmond, Oregon for the Juneau Fall Classic tomorrow.  Fore!

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Seventy Years Ago Today

Just got back from coffee at mom's and am waiting for a call from my realtor.  I should be getting a call any minute with the results of the appraisal. 

Coffee included a stroll down memory lane today (it often does).  Mom announced that it was seventy years ago today when she arrived in Juneau on the Alaska Steamship Company vessel the SS Aleutian.  It was a cloudy and misty day with light rain and she thought it was heavenly.  Mind you, she was recently delivered from southeastern Arizona in the pre-air conditioning era.  In fact, for her family it was also the pre-electricity and pre-plumbing era.  Mom still doesn't mind the rain...

With that said here's my favorite picture of mom from this era - probably a year or two later actually.  She believes it was taken before, during, or after a night on the town.  I reckon she was sixteen or seventeen at the time.  Probably when she was working in the pantry at the Baranof.  Hard to believe...

Evelyn Lindstrom (Klump) center.  Looks like they were having a fun night...

In other news, I have made reservations for a quick trip to the Great Northwest.  I will depart Juneau next Tuesday the 13th returning on the 21st.  Will visit friends in Seattle and do some shopping and then down to PDX for more visiting.  Amanda should be arriving in Portland on or about the 17th so hope to spend some quality time with my daughters.  And a big get-together with a number of old high school friends on the 16th.

Well...the phone just rang.  Good news and bad news on the appraisal.  The bad news is that I will be paying exactly what I offered (I thought the appraisal might come-in a mite lower).  The good news is that it appears I'm getting a pretty good deal.  I'm happy.  The seller is happy.  It looks very likely I will be moving-in on the first of October.  

The sun is shining.  I'm going to call Alison and see if she wants to go for a walk...

Later gang!

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Welcome to September

A half-way decent day yesterday.  Alison and I walked the trails near Dredge Lake.  Lots of warblers and chickadees and a half-dozen or so American Widgeons on Chrystal Lake.

Townsend's Warbler

After our walk we motored over to the Mendenhall Glacier to check-out the bear scene.  Lots of tourists.  One bear.  And a rangerette in the  person of my old friend Annie McLean.  She has really enjoyed working the visitors' center this season.  She said they have a dozen regular yogi types working the salmon stream including cubs and a number of two year olds.   Everyone on good behaviour thus far...

Matriarch of the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center yogi troupe.

So much for the dry weather, however.  It is raining this morning.  Beginning to look distinctly fall-like.  September 1st.  Yikes!  Where did the summer go?

In other news, I continue to wait for news on the appraisal of my (hopefully) new home. 

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Knock, Knock

Who's there?

Hairy Woodpecker.

Alison and I walked the dike trail yesterday

This guy was VERY cooperative

He just went about his business

We also spent some quality time with our ol' pals the Lesser Yellowlegs.  First time I've seen many waders this year...



 
In other news, the cruise ship season continues.  Every week one hears of a special cruise for this or that particular interest group.  This week Juneau was blessed by members of the Conservative Political Action Conference.  Our very own Governor Parnell addressed the group yesterday.  The group included former U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, president of Americans for Tax Reform, Grover Norquist, and the President of the National Rifle Association.  I reckon it was hard liquor and handgun night on the M/S Westerdam.

I THINK I heard on KTOO that this august body was going to hold some sort of seminar at the Nugget Mall yesterday afternoon.   I thought about attending; but fell asleep in the recliner instead.  Oh well...
On a more positive note, I hope to hear from the appraiser in the next couple of days.  With luck this house deal should be nailed-down before the week is out.  I will then contemplate a quick trip to the Northwest.

Yippee!

Thursday, August 25, 2011

'Shrooms

Finally!  A day without rain.  I took advantage of the hiatus to mow mom's and auntie's yards.  Mom's looks pretty good.  Auntie's not so good.  And oddly enough it is because mom's turf is still very thin while auntie's is much thicker.  No matter how many times you run a manual mower over auntie's grass there are still ungainly cow licks.  

We've had a shitpile of rain this month.  Everything is soggy.  I will be curious to see how this August ranks in the all time high rain sweepstakes. 

On the other hand, it's prime pickins for mushroom lovers.  I saw Mr. V. Sundberg at the A&P grocery last week and he peddled a line of bullshit of harvesting 20 gallons of the edible fungi.  I dismissed this out-of-hand as mere Norwegian bravado.  However today I saw Ms. Flemming who confirmed that her spouse, Mr. Fisher, was in fact engaged in this serious 'shroom harvest and that Mr. Sundberg was not peddling the proverbial baloney.  I tend to believe Laura.  But on the other other hand, nobody has offered me any proof - if you catch my drift...

Oh.  And my elderly mom REALLY appreciated the dungeness crab (picked) that Mr. S. Rickey provided last week. 

In other news, my house quest continues.  Got the engineer's report today and the place has a clean bill of health.  The appraiser should have been there today...so by early next week we should be in FINAL negotiations.  I am getting more excited by the day...

Life is good.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

The House Revisited

The Masseys very graciously allowed me to come and see the house yesterday.  I took a few pics.  Here's the entire gallery.

I am more and more excited about this endeavor every day.  It will be very nice to have my own digs and this house has at least 80% of what I have been looking for...which is a VERY high percentage given the small Juneau market.

Tuesday is inspection day to be followed closely (I hope) by the appraisal.  The Masseys are hoping to be out by around the first of October.  Works for me.  If the appraisal occurs in a timely fashion and assuming that any final negotiation goes well, I am cautiously optimistic I will be able to spend ten days or so in Portland and Seattle next month.  I feel a need to see my Northwest gals and pals.

While down below I will also acquire some furniture...at a minimum I will need a new bed for the master suite.  I don't want to buy a lot of stuff until I have lived in the place for a bit and have a better sense of what will work...between what the Masseys are willing to leave me and what I have here at the apartment I can make-do for the moment.

The Masseys (and my hot tub)

 Living room -west

 Living room - east

Master bedroom

Max the Dog - he does not come with the house however

In other news, yesterday I attended the celebration in memory of Mark Notar.  It was held at the Moose Club and was VERY well attended.  Saw lots of old classmates and others long-time Juneau folks.  Very nice.  I took a few pics but the lighting was awful and I have yet to determine if any of them are blog-worthy. 

Later gang!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Stuff

Busy, busy, busy.  Advanced the ball a few yards on the house the past couple of days.  Signed loan documents, disclosures, etc.  Got documents from the realtor - the seller's disclosures, etc.  Have arranged for an engineer and a pest control guy to do inspections next Tuesday morning.

I ran some of the customary errands for the elders today.  When I went back to mom's around 1:30 PM I saw a big fat 'n happy land otter sneaking into the woodshed.  Got mom and we went into the bedroom at the back of the trailer to spy on him.  By that time he was standing by the raging stream at the back of the property.  Jumped in and started swimming upstream.  We legged-it over to the bedroom on the other side of the trailer.  And here he comes up the bank of the creek with a (barely) alive salmon.  He hauled it under the neighbors shed.  Bet it will be mighty aromatic in that shed in a few days...  Very fun to watch the otter however.

In other news, I've been doing a fair amount of reading.  A couple of days ago I finished The First World War - A Complete History by a Brit historian, Brian Gilbert.  It is worthy of a few comments.

It has been decades since I read a history of the War to End All Wars.  I consider myself quite knowledgeable about the Second World War but have never given the first major European conflict of the 20th century the attention I now believe it deserves.

Indeed I do not believe it is possible to have a good understanding of the second conflict, the Cold War, or current  European affairs without a working knowledge of WWI; and in particular how the war affected national and ethnic interests.

For example, the post-Cold War conflicts in the Balkans can be regarded, in part, as simply unfinished business from the Great War.  The Treaty of Versailles created Yugoslavia - a solution that at the time was generally regarded positively by it's constituent parts - the Slovenes, Croats, Serbs and other groups who desperately wanted separation from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Similarly, the genocidal mass executions and deportations of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks echoes down through the decades.  As does the unsatisfied national aspirations of the Kurds.

Both the Central Powers and the Entente played a ruthless game of promise and counter-promise with groups seeking their own nation-states.  The Poles probably played the game as well as the Great Powers and were duly rewarded (for twenty years at least).  The Zionists and the Arabs who had sweet-nothings whispered in their ears by the British - not so much.  And we all know how that has turned-out thus far...

And then there is the sheer magnitude of the slaughter.  More military casualties resulted from WWI than any other conflict.  Trench warfare was truly hideous.
The Central Powers, the losers in the war, lost 3,500,000 soldiers on the battlefield.  The Allied Powers, the victors, lost 5,100,000 men.  On average, this was more than 5,600 killed on each day of the war.  The fact that 20,000 British soldiers were killed on the first day of the Battle of the Somme is often recalled with horror.  On average, a similar number of soldiers were killed in every four-day period of the First World War.
While Gilbert's history is in most ways quite conventional, he does offer numerous personal stories that serve to make the story both poignant and horrific.  British and American soldiers, it seems, had a particular affinity for writing poetry while in the trenches.  The quality of the poetry varied greatly - but the themes were very consistent.
Among the troops sent forward on the following day [the second day of the Battle of the Somme] were detachments of the Foreign Legion.  In their ranks were several dozen Americans, including the Harvard graduate, and poet, Alan Seeger (Legionnaire No. 19522).  He was with a unit led by a Swiss baron, Captain de Tscharner, in an attack on the strongly fortified village of Belloy-en-Santerre.  During the attack they were caught in the enfilade fire of six German machine guns.  Lying mortally wounded in a shell-hole, Seeger was heard crying out for water, and for his mother.  In his poem 'Rendezvous' he had written earlier that year:

I have a rendezvous with Death
On some scarred slope or hill,
When Spring comes round again this year
And the first meadow-flowers appear.
God knows 'twere better to be deep
Pillowed in silk and scented down,
Where love throbs out in blissful sleep,
Pulse nigh to pulse, and breath to breath,
Where hushed awakenings are dear...
But I've a rendezvous with Death
At midnight in some flaming town,
When Spring trips north again this year,
And I to my pledged word am true,
I shall not fail that rendezvous.
Forty-two Canadians had been killed in the attack on September 16.  Among those killed on the Somme six days later was a nineteen-year-old British soldier, E.W. Tennant.  Having left school at the age of seventeen in order to enlist, he had been in the trenches since shortly after his eighteenth birthday.  His poem 'The Mad Soldier' opened with the lines:
I dropp'd here three weeks ago, yes - I know
And it's bitter cold at night, since the fight -
I could tell you if I chose - no one knows
Excep' me and four or five, what ain't alive.
I can see them all asleep, three men deep,
And they're nowhere near a fire - but on our wire
Has 'em fast as can be.  Can't you see
When the flare goes up?  Ssh!  boys; what's that noise?
Do you know what these rats eat?  Body-meat!

Well, I'm gonna ice the cookies I just baked.  Paula Dean's Loaded Oatmeal/Raisin Cookies with Brown Butter Icing.  Tomorrow morning I am going to make spicy potted shrimp.  Something sweet and something savory for a fundraiser for Loren Jones tomorrow night - my old department colleague is running for the Juneau Assembly.

Cheers!