Archive for August, 2007

Gonzo is gonzo.

Gonzo has left the building. And it’s about time. I am one of the many who think our elected representatives on both sides of the fence have turned into spineless single-cell organisms when it comes to how they have handled the criminal activity taking place in the White House. Across the board, ours is a lazy country where people complain from their easy chair and rally around a mouse pad and their 17-inch LCD monitors. If every disgruntled American would stand up, gather and voice their outrage in person and out in the streets things would change. This would have happened sooner.

That said, I will still celebrate the resignation of the most inept Attorney General. Now, let’s repeal the wire-tapping. Let’s hold the Telecom companies accountable. Let’s try impeaching someone. I feel like impeaching Cheney, how ’bout you? I want someone from the Bush Administration to spend more time in jail than Nicole Richie.

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I left San Francisco on Friday so that I would be home to see Barack Obama speak at the Miami-Dade Auditorium on Saturday. Right in the heart of Little Havana and on the tails of speculation that once again, perhaps Fidel has died. The only downside to the day was the DNC threatening to take away our delegates if we vote on our newly scheduled primary. So much for ending the disenfranchisement of a swing state.

I haven’t committed to any candidate as of yet. I am one of the many hold-outs hoping that Gore enters the race and opens a can of ozone friendly whup-ass. Richardson is the most qualified candidate but he has no presence anywhere. And when I see Hillary as much as I want to think GIRL POWER, I can’t help but see the DLC, a vote for the war, I see Carville who is married to Cheney’s go to gal, I see the people that took down Howard Dean, I see failed Health Care Reform and the abysmal Defense of Marriage Act and the Wet Foot/Dry Foot as long as it’s not a Haitian Foot Act.

Sure Hillary’s a woman and she’s powerful but for some amnesiatic reason she’s being treated as if she is the first woman to run for president. And she isn’t. That would be Victoria Woodhull back in 1872 on the Equal Rights Party ticket. Then there was Belva Lockwood in 1884 and again in 1888. Sen. Margaret Chase Smith had her name placed in nomination in 1964 – at the Republican National Convention. Rep. Shirley Chisolm (D) ran in 1972. Ferarro as Mondale’s VP in the 80’s. Liz Dole ran as a Republican in 2000. And Carol Moseley Braun just ran as a Dem back in 2004. So why all the hullaballoo about Hillary? It’s got to be more than the whole buy one Clinton , get one free. Cause if it is, I will need more than that. And I like Bill.

Although Kucinich is loveable, many of my friends are supporting Edwards. He fights for little guy. Two Americas. Has a health care plan and apparently takes the time to actually explain how he will pay for it. But he isn’t getting press time other than when he’s horribly attacked for having a wife who fights like no one’s business. I like Edwards and I like his wife. I really like his wife. She has more balls than most of our Senators.

Then there’s Barack. Backed by Oprah. He sees the color purple. Has always opposed the war. I wanted to give him a chance to win me over as he has with so many of my friends out of state. They simply love him. And I wanted to see for myself what the draw was. And I guess I did.

This guy sounds real. Genuine. Honest. And after45 minutes he promised only one real thing. That if he was elected, he’d wake up every day and work to make our lives better. He joked about the press and other nominees calling him naive, claiming he was too hopeful. But I think it works to his benefit. Like he said… Rumsfeld and Cheney have the longest resumes in Washington and if that is what experience gets you, well……

I say give me the guy who says I’m not perfect but I sure as hell will try.

When we walked out of the rally I said to my friend Wendy, an Edwards supporter, that if I have to choose someone (that isn’t Al) then I will choose the candidate who inspires me to come up with the most ideas for bumper stickers, banners, t-shirts and buttons. I have two pages of Barack headlines. I guess I like the idea of being audacious.

We’ll see.  I’d like to say we have time, but at the rate we are going the primaries will be over before Wal-Mart starts advertising for Christmas.

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Alaskan Adventures: The Conclusion.

So I am on sitting on my bed back at home. It’s 4:30pm and it feels like 4:30pm. Sorta. I think. A lesson I learned many moons ago from my cousin in Australia – always try to land at night when you do long flights across time zones. Go to sleep that night and when you wake up, you acclimate easier than if you did a red-eye or if you landed mid-afternoon. But two nights home and I am going to sleep at 2am, and waking at 11am. Today I feel like I need more coffee so I think jet-lag has caught up with me. Oh well, it was worth it.

As my last Alaskan entry this is a long one. So sit back, have a read and enjoy. It’s not going anywhere so if you need to do laundry (like I do), then g’head.

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My last weekend in Alaska was tremendous. We spent it in Nate’s ‘lodge’ in the woods south of Denali. Nate York created and runs a Humanitarian Aid/ Development Organization with his wife Marlo. It’s called Solace International. The two of them are do-gooders in the greatest, most complimentary sense. They help the poor and needy. The sick and struggling. The persecuted and endangered. They built schools for girls in Afghanistan until the Taliban regained power. They now build schools for orphaned children infected with HIV/AIDS in Malawi – as well as other countries. And recently-returned-from-Malawi-Marlo is recovering from malaria. Cerebral malaria. YIKES. Listening to them speak about their work makes you want to donate money or your time. It makes you want to write to a Congressman or Senator to ask for help. But this is a bit normal around Jason’s friends. Most of them are do-gooders. Even the lawyers. And I think he knows every lawyer under 40 in Anchorage.

So Nate’s lodge… Like I said, it’s in the middle of the woods near Denali and 11 of us, plus four dogs gathered for the weekend. With Nate, Marlo and their dog Chloe, there was Scott (Executive Director of a sustainable energy business nonprofit), Polly (runs Alaska Youth For Environmental Action), their dog Charlie, Tamara (Prosecutor), Rob (Real Estate and the sommelier for the weekend) and their puking puppy Zev (wolf in Hebrew) Emily (Environmental Planner), Mara (Judicial law clerk and soon to be prosecutor, Justin the Fisherman (freelance attorney), Jason (lawyer for ACLU), Josie and myself. To get to Nate’s place, requires a half hour seaplane flight from Willow – flown by a disgruntled pilot who I believe will never be bitten by a mosquito (or sexy woman for that matter) because he smells like a dead of summer NYC cab with no air and no functioning windows.

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Before boarding we had to place everything on a giant scale – including ourselves, to make sure we didn’t exceed the capacity of the little sea plane. There were two full size dogs (neither wanted to be on the plane) and five passengers, a smelly pilot, backpacks and lots of food and beverages. LOTS. In fact, we were overweight so sacrifices were made and left behind for the second group of lodgers to bring with them. In the end wine was chosen over water. Chips and salsa over apple pies.

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Despite the desperate need for a shower or cologne or even a green, pine-scented air freshener dangling from the steering column, the flight out was lovely. Blue skies for miles and we could see Denali though from my camera it looks like low clouds (chalk it up to dirty windows and crappy 3.2 megapixel camera).

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The lodge continues the theme of my trip – perfect locations for a horror film. Though he has a neighbor with a big slobbery dog, the cabin is basically isolated. No roads. No electricity. No running water. The lake we land on in our sea plane has pike and beavers. Plus lots of reeds. Perfect hiding place for zombie like serial killers. It’s framed by marsh which was continually trampled on by the dogs. We unpacked our bags from the sea plane and proceed to haul our gear up a not so steep incline to the lodge.

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We passed a single room cabin on our right with a loft space – this is where Jason, Justin, Mara and myself stayed. It had an outhouse but it was not working so it was either anywhere in the woods, or the other outhouse behind the tool shed which housed spikey sharp objects, mechanical equipment to ride on and drag fallen trees.. and quite possibly – maniacal chainsaw massacre killers and victims. I am not sure about the latter but it looked ideal.

The lodge has a surround deck – though 2/3 is either under renovation or is off limits because as Nate warned, “if you walk on it, you’ll fall and die.” The lodge interior is comprised of a large kitchen/dining/living area and is flanked by two bedrooms. The main room has a wood burning stove and the floor, redone with pergo and linoleum, and is covered by a giant red Afghan rug. The bedrooms have similar rugs that cover plywood floors. Each room has a queen size bed. The cabin has bunk beds, a sitting room area with sofa and arm chairs, a sink a broken wood burning stove (no heat here) and then an upstairs loft with two queen size blow up mattresses. So it was roughing it but not rough roughing it. Quasi rough. Sorta rough. I mean there was no electricity, no running water and no flushing toilet or showers… but we weren’t sleeping in sleeping bags on dirt floors or on mattresses made of straw. This wasn’t 14th century Scotland. It was merely rustic. Yeah. Rustic.

On our first day there I’d helped Nate and his friend Jay (he was leaving that day) pull apart one side of the deck, which had wood rot. It was the first time I got to really use a pry bar. Pretty cool. And pretty tiring. For the rest of the afternoon, I pretty much hung out in the cabin and on the deck. Nate had a middle-eastern water pipe called a hookah (sometimes known as shisha and in Turkey it’s a nargela) from Quatar and we lit it up and smoked grape tobacco. You can get lightheaded from water pipes and it took awhile to get the grape flavor going but it brought back nice memories of traveling through the mid-east years ago. The mosquitoes arrived before the second plane carrying Justin, Mara, Rob, Tamara, their puppy Zev, and the rest of the food and supplies. Alas, two apple pies I bought were left behind.

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Scott prepared dinner. Roasted potatoes and smoked goose with a mushroom port wine sauce. He carved the geese while wearing a Petzl head lamp since we had no electricity. I never had goose before. It tasted pretty much like ham. Divine saltiness. That night we played charades and then the cards came out. Texas Hold ‘em and I think something called HORSE and I have no foggy clue what else because I don’t know poker and I wasn’t playing poker.

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What I do know is that at the end of the night, Jason was the big winner though it was with Mara’s money – he took over her hand when she tired of playing. That night I went to sleep and after settling into bed, all nice and snug, I knew I had to get up to go to the bathroom. That though, was not going to happen until morning. Suffice to say, I did not go into kidney failure. Whew.

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Day two, Justin and I went out on the canoe to fish. There wasn’t much biting going on, but he did reel in a small pike and I got to fillet my first fish. Pike are very very bony – the bones are thinner than fishing wire and just as translucent. All we needed was whitefish and we could have made gefilte fish.

Later in the afternoon, Polly, Marlo, Emily and I took the dogs on a walk to a lake/pond/ice cold body of clear, pike-free water for a swim. We walked through brush that hadn’t been cleared yelling out THERE BEAR. HERE BEAR. BEAR BEAR. SOMETHING BEAR. Basically making noise to ward off bear. Then we finally came to a clearing of marsh and a lake. (But it wasn’t the lake we wanted. Ours was the next lake.)

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Now when it comes to travel, I’m into activities. I like the action. Scrambling, climbing, jumping, and many other gerunds. I don’t retain the nature show explanation of what I am seeing because I am too busy ‘doing’ I guess. And when it comes to the outdoors, If it’s green and grows outside there is a 99% chance I am allergic to it. I only want to know if it will sting, itch, burn, or poison me. But Emily….Emily was like a kid in a candy store jumpy up and down on marshy ground (which soaks through your sneakers by the way) oooh oooh ooooh pointing out stuff that can make tea. And Polly was pointing out wolf or coyote skat – that’s wild animal crap with grass in it. And Marlo, as you can see from the photo below, pretty much looked like a nature girl hippy back in her element.

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When we got to the lake, they all went for a very short swim. There was no way I was jumping or sliding into water that cold and I sure as hell wasn’t going to walk barefoot on the gooey, mucky ground. Outside of the tzzzz tzzzzzz tzzzz from little flying kamikazee mosquitoes which come out in droves when you are standing still near a body of water, it was incredibly peaceful.

We got back and it turns out while we were gone the guys played .22 golf – which is shooting targets on trees with a .22 caliber gun. I think they also used a rifle. I kinda wish I stayed to play. I like target shooting more than nature walks. And if there is a chance I might run into a bear I think I’d rather have a gun in my hand than a swimming towel.

That night we dined on rib eye, veggies and grilled pike, which Justin caught. One of the pike he caught had a rodent in its belly. I don’t think we ate that one. At least I hope we didn’t. Sometimes the circle of life is undeniably gross. But the pike was amazing. The evening was spent playing charades, a guessing game called Boticelli and of course there was wine. I like red wine as much as I like port which is to say, I don’t like either and think they taste like cough medicine. I guess all of Jason’s friends have an affinity for cough medicine. Of course some of them start drinking Tecate beer at 10:30am – what else is there to do in the middle of nowhere?

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Day three in the wilderness. I made breakfast burritos for everyone and then got lazy. Tamara, Rob and Emily had to head back to Anchorage so they were around until late afternoon. The guys sat outside on the deck drinking wine and playing poker, the girls went for a walk back to the lake to swim. I stayed in the cabin reading a book called “Eat. Pray. Love.” Emily and Polly had both brought the book with them. Emily was halfway through hers and said I had to read it because I lived in Italy and the author lived in Italy. There were similarities, but my life in Venice was very different than hers in Rome. She gained a lot of weight from eating there. She really really studied Italian. She didn’t meet and stay in Italy cause she was dating a ridiculously gorgeous man who did nude body modeling for ‘art’. But hey, we both lived in Italy. The book is a good read. (Gilbert’s writing style is similar to mine in that it’s conversational and witty. Well, I hope mine is witty. I’m told it’s witty. I didn’t just wake up one morning and proclaim myself a wit. It was dubbed by others. Ahh, I digress. As I do with this great photo of Zev and a stick.

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I finished reading the part of the book about Italy and gave the book back to Emily as she was leaving. Polly, Mara and I joined the boys outside for a game of Texas Hold Em. I’ve never played poker before but it seems sorta like playing Bullshit, just not as fun. At least for me. I think the gambling affinity corresponds to the drinking affinity (which likely corresponds to the football affinity) and since I don’t have that, I guess I don’t have the gambling one. Casinos and gambling just don’t give me an adrenaline rush. As soon as I fold I have lost interest in the game. And there are better ways to throw my money away. But that’s me. And apparently not Jason. Or Nate. Or Scott. And certainly not Justin.

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It eventually got dark and buggy so that meant it was time to once again eat. Actually eating never really stopped during the weekend. Except to sleep. Dinner that night was simple. Scott made pasta with pesto and pine nuts and salad. More wine. More Boticelli. And then philosophical ‘Would You?’ questions like how much for you to row row out to the beaver lodge and stay overnight? How much for you to walk over to the next cabin (far away) without a flashlight or weapon, touch the door, take a photo of the place and then head back? Justin was ready to do most anything for $20 bucks. I wouldn’t do anything that meant walking in the dark alone much less walking in the dark, alone when there are bear out.

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Day four was clean up day and don’t forget to sign the guest book. I made blueberry pancakes for breakfast and then we proceeded to get rid of perishable food from the root cellar. We’d all be leaving today but Nate was going to return so we had to take stock of what food was left and what had to be tossed. We sweeped, cleaned and then Nate turned on the generator for a whopping ten minutes to vacuum. Justin decided to row out to the beaver lodge, for free, and go fishing one last time. And as my previous post showed, he caught a 34-inch pike as the seaplane was landing. His bags didn’t make it on the flight because we were weighed down (smaller lake means less runway means less things can go on board) but we did bring the fish. And that night, after we drove back to Anchorage, after a long steam shower and several loads of laundry…. Justin and Jason had friends over and we grilled the fish – preparing it several different ways. All yummy. A great last night in Alaska.

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My last day in Anchorage was spent buying souvenirs and packing and repacking my bags. I visited the ACLU of Alaska and the office bears a striking resemblance to and office building of Russia. Circa 1972. I’ve never seen such a depressing office. Cold fluorescent lighting. Nasty orange carpet. Wood paneling that belongs in a basement or playroom.

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How are they to protect our civil liberties when the office itself is so oppressive? I am thinking of writing to ABC Extreme Makeover Home Edition to see if they can help. Nothing ostentatious. But perhaps less communist bloc and more hopeful.

My trip to Alaska ended on an altercation of asinine proportions. Although I packed and repacked, I unwittingly left my toothpaste in an exterior pocket of my backpack and it was confiscated by airport security. There was nothing left in the tube but the tube itself was more than 3oz and I guess the FAA thinks I might flouridate the crew to death. The 3oz. rule does nothing to keep anyone safe and everyone knows it. I think it is merely a marketing ploy between Ziploc, the travel-size item industry and the airlines. The woman working security was nasty and hung up on semantics with this whole ‘Are you forfeiting the toothpaste.’ And I said. Well you just said I couldn’t take it and you took it……. So ummmm…. take it.’ And I try to walk through the security gate and this other woman barricades me and pushes me back asking the first woman if there is a problem. The first woman says, ‘Mam, if you want the toothpaste (she literally throws is back at me) then go over there and check it with your bags.” And I look at her exasperated and say “Listen, you said I can’t take it. So take it. I can buy new toothpaste. Do whatever you have to do with it. It’s really not a big deal, OK? ” And I try to walk through and the other woman won’t let me. Both agents start this verbal exchange over my wording (which is ironic since I am a writer and semantics stickler) and they are insisting my toothpaste was not taken from me and are demanding I announce aloud that I have freely and willingly relinquished my toothpaste – which I did several times over but they were consumed with power at this point. Finally, I am let through and am thinking good thing I didn’t bring the ice packs. I can just imagine the solid v. liquid debate with these two check-out register cashier stand-ins. But when my flight finally boards.. I tell you….I was overcome with a great sense of relief… I felt so much safer knowing I don’t have toothpaste with me.

The two flights were relatively uneventful. Relatively. You know how some people have reported sleepwalking, or getting in their car and driving to work, or eating all the food in their fridge with no recall at all when they have taken Ambien? Well I just might be one of those people. The airline host said I could put my fish on ice after she finished serving beverages. (THANK YOU AMERICAN AIRLINES ONCE AGAIN). Since it was a red-eye I took an Ambien and figured I’d wake up when she passed by, get the fix out of the bag in the overhead compartment, give it to her, and then go back to sleep. And I did. But I have no recall of this. At all. Nothing. I woke up and walked over to the other air host saying I need to put my fish on ice and when he looked over to the other host she pointed to the ice cart. He opened it up and there was my fish. I literally gasped and jumped back. There was no way they could have done this on their own… they wouldn’t know which bag was mine. Which means I did it. And I have no memory of it. Which means I am one of those people that needs to hide my keys if I take Ambien. I was taking it at the cabin. Good thing I didn’t go off wandering then or fall down the loft ladder. I dunno… perhaps even in an un/semi-conscious state I still maintain reasoning and logic. Or fear of bears.

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And that concludes my great Alaskan Adventure. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did. Thanks again Jason for showing me such a good time. I had an incredible time and am so glad to finally get to visit. Sneezing as I am, I need to do some laundry now – the last thing I did in Alaska was play with Josie. Go figure, ten minutes unpacked and all the dog hair on my clothes caught up with me. Welcome home Jo.

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Who am I? Where am I? …… I’m… I’m… Gunga Din.

Right now I am writing this from the Hotel Rex in Union Square. In a Willy Wonka ‘must go forwards to get back’ I left Anchorage last night at 11pm, flew a red-eye to Dallas, got off the plane, bought a chocolate croissant and immediately boarded a flight to San Francisco which landed at 10:20am. In all, I have been on a plane for 10 hours. And I have been traveling with vacuum-packed, frozen yet thawing, smoked salmon and hallibut. Yes, I took them as carry on. They were frozen for days, began to thaw and on both flights the airline attendants put the fish in the beverage cart on ice. Thank you American Airlines for being so accommodating. That’s American Airlines, who understands I have a choice of airlines I can fly and I chose them, American Airlines. I am hoping product placement and endorsement will score me a ticket or upgrade with American Airlines which is part of the One World Alliance. I feel safe and confident flying with an Alliance. It is all about who you know and who you hang with and I hang with an alliance. Of the world.

I am in SF for a few days for meetings and then home to Miami in time to see Barack Obama on Saturday.

There is much to tell (and much not) about my last days in Alaska. These last days are not to be confused with the last days of Pompeii although there was apparently a volcano warning in Anchorage before I left. I have many photos, many funny anecdotes, as many memories as bottles of wine consumed and relatively few mosquito bites.

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I believe this photo gives a great summary or tease of the weekend. This is Justin fishing. (When he wasn’t fishing he was playing poker and drinking wine.) We spent the weekend at a lodge south of Denali. It is owned by Nate, a friend of Jason’s. 11 adults. Three dogs. One puking puppy. No electricity. No running water. And fortunately, no bear. (That we could see.) Justin was fascinated with a beaver lodge about 20 feet from land. He canoed out, stood on the lodge, and decided to get one last cast in. Just as our seaplane was landing, he had a bite and reeled in a pike. A 34-inch pike. The pilot had to wait while we gutted the fish and threw it in a garbage back for the flight home. We grilled it that night and it was fabulous. Justin checked this website that gives the weight of pike based on their size… yes, such a website exists, I know crazy, huh? 10.8 pounds. A pike caught off a beaver lodge, just as the plane was landing. And did I mention it was goose fed? But that will have to wait until another entry.

I do believe I need to take another nap. My laptop says it is 5:49pm. My phone says it is 2:49pm. It’s 1:49pm in Anchorage yet my body, has no clue where it is or what time it is. I am meeting my friend Greg for dinner tonight. It will either be at 9pm, 6pm or 5pm – depending on which clock I finally decide to go by.

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In the south it’s a pick-up. In Alaska…

… it’s a pick-up. And a plane. And an SUV. And a boat, too. What, no totem pole?

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Jason wanted to show me his favorite front yard in all of Alaska and took me past it last night (night used loosely and only to convey PM and not positioning of sun). It happens to be in his neighborhood and on the way to a softball game he was playing in. Is there anything more to say?

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Jason is a good softball player. He slid into first base to tag someone out. Had a skinned knee to prove it. Notice the blue sky. Yeah, that’s me. (Note to self about temperature: less sweltering, more mild with a dash of warm.) Jason warns me about the arrogance of the Greek gods. (Double note to self: be humble.)We are leaving now for a weekend at a friend’s cabin. We will drive two hours to Willow, then take a sea plane and then get to the cabin. No running water. No electrical outlets. Back on Monday night. : )

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Call me Zeus.

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I traded in frequent flyer miles to get to Alaska. It was double the normal rate for miles… mine at 50K and not just 25K which allows me to fly anytime, anywhere, and apparently it allows me to control the weather.

 

It is a very powerful ability, this weather controlling. To make the sun appear on command and rain when I need it to.

 

The weather was crappy before I got here and the sun came out as soon as I arrived in Alaska. It’s been warm. Sunny. Blue skies. I am impressed with my skills. I can even make the sun appear by sitting near a window. I am that good.

 

My cousin had told me that while I was here he was going to need to do some work. And at a same time a client had contacted me asking if I could freelance for a day and a half. Their deadline was right when Jason needed to work so I thought, why not? But I didn’t want to be working and thinking ‘I could be kayaking right now.’ Or ‘I could be hiking’. So yesterday, I made it rain. And I did the same today.

 

Yesterday consisted of working from a cafe that offered free wifi. The food was bad but I got work done. And then things took off and got exciting. Jason took me to get the emissions tested on his Jeep. And then we went to a tuxedo shop so he could get fitted for his friends wedding next month. We also stopped in the Anchorage Sausage and Seafood to get pricing on fish. Even though it’s caught and packed here, it’s still pricey. I wanted to bring fish back home but I am stopping in San Francisco for a few days before I head back to Miami. The young woman at Anchorage Sausage and Seafood said it wouldn’t be a problem. I just need to stop in the day before I leave, pick up the fish, freeze it and pack it in my suitcase with some frozen gel packs. Frozen fish in my packed luggage? I asked won’t everything smell like fish and she said no it’s all vacuum packed and it will be frozen so it won’t smell. We price shop at another establishment and at this point I am unable to remember what costs what.

We leave and I begin to strategize a way to transport the fish. I say to Jason, “What if I freeze the fish, and ice packs and pack that in my carry on?” Jason warns that I might not be able to bring ice packs on board. I ask why not and he says because you can’t bring liquids on at that size. Now throughout the trip, trying to be all lawyerly, I have often cited precedence in a the ruling of Finver v. State which used the “Nu-uh” defense. It is widely respected in esteemed legal circles. Jason generally counters with precedence in the Jason B. v. State “Yuh-huh” defense (which is very similar to an insanity defense but so much harder to prove in a court of law. You need a really good shrink to distinguish the subtle nuances.) So in my head I am thinking Jody F. v. State and I say, “OK, gel packs I understand, but ice? Ice is not a liquid. It’s a solid. By it’s very definition it’s water in a solid phase. It has the potential to become liquid at a given time given the right temperature, but it’s a solid.” ( I think to myself Mr. Shelhammer, my 10th grade chemistry teacher, was a schmuck but he’d be proud. My command of general science makes me feel rather superior at this moment.) Jason allows me to finish my argument and I think is a bit impressed with my oratory skills but responds with, ” Even so, do you really think that the person working airport security knows the difference between solid and liquid, and do you really want to take that risk when you are trying go catch a red-eye and you have 2 pounds of frozen smoked fish sticking out of your backpack?”

 

Touché, Pussy Cat. Touché.

{Parenthetical aside to be read in a stage whisper} Jason, for the record, insists he knows the difference between liquid and solid. He claims he thought I meant gel packs and says that when people say ice packs or ice bricks that he thinks gel packs. I have diagnosed him with a medical problem common in males his age: Nolistenitis. Sadly, nolistenitis only worsens over time, especially under the duress of marriage. I consider buying him BellTone hearing aids but then I picture our Uncle Stanley. He just turns them off when he doesn’t want to listen. Severe nolistenitis.

 

The case of the frozen fish has yet to be resolved. Stay tuned. Tuesday concluded with Jason’s friend Mara coming over for NY style pizza and we watched crap tv. No wonder Scott Baio is 45 and still single. He’s an ass.

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So today Jason went into the office and I worked from home. The weather was dismal and I put the heat on – not realizing my own strength – (note to self, make temperature warmer) Jason was complaining that the weather sucked but I said, “Hey, that was all me. I need to concentrate and you need to work.”

 

He brought home soup for lunch and left to go back to work. His roommate Justin is working from home and just checked his credit score after seven years and is all smiles. And so am I. I finished my work. The rain has stopped. The sun is coming out. Damn, I’m good. I mean really, really good.

Blue skies

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Homer (d’oh), Homer (the Odyssey)

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There are two things to keep in mind when you do a road trip in Alaska. One: the summer sun doesn’t set until past 11pm. And two: distance is measured more in hours than in miles. You quickly adapt your driving patterns understanding that the sun will be out longer and the location you are headed to will be much farther. In fact, you won’t blink twice about driving five hours for an overnight trip. It’s just a way of living here.

So on Sunday Jason and I decided to head to Homer, Alaska: the Hallbut capital of the world. But before we hit the road, Justin convinced us to join him for some fishing. My fishing license expired at 2:30pm on Sunday so I had the chance to get in some time at the creek before we hit the great wide open.

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The fish weren’t biting. But the bees were. Jason lucked out in the family gene pool – he isn’t allergic to bees – which is a good thing cause he got stung a few times when he searched out a fishing hole that was, as we discovered, right near a hive. I’d like to say I stood by his side, but truth be told as soon as I saw him swatting at what were obviously not mosquitoes I dropped my bag and bolted away. I don’t like things that flutter or fly. I don’t like things with wings – sometimes this even includes planes. And I sure as hell don’t like things that bite or sting or come with the risk of instant swelling and death. So when it came down to possible death or fleeing, I fled like a (insert your own politically incorrect analogy here.)

My cousin is in one respect like a Knight of the Round Table searching for the Holy Grail. He wants to visit every Fred Meyer super market there is in Alaska. Not exactly a noble quest, but not exactly easy to achieve especially when you won’t look up the cities that Fred Meyer can be found in. Basically, if we pass one, we go in. I have been here for less than a week and I have been to three different Fred Meyer stores. Jason really knows how to show a guest a good time.

The drive to Homer was beautiful and again since the sun doesn’t set until 11:15pm or so, you can leave later for your destination and arrive later without having to drive in the dark. Five hours in a vehicle allows for the opportunity for varied discourse. Aside from the typical, pop-culture trivia exchange, and political attacks on the present Administration, there is ample opportunity to discover the less popular songs stored on your iPod. Like SchoolHouse Rocks and Hindi dance music – and how can you drive five hours without cranking up the 80’s tunes?

As far as conversation, which I alluded to some in a preview email, it was one liners all the way. Jason has this tendency to repeat things I say but does it in such a way that he thinks he came up with it. He subconsciously hears what I say, and then takes it as his own. (He has admitted he was a terrible student in law school when it came to intellectual property.) So, after several instances of me responding with “I just said that,” to his comments, he proceeded to tell me the story about this guy he knew who lived in our destination city, Homer. Apparently, this guy is known for inventing his own words and using them constantly without any care as to whether anyone understands their meaning. Take ‘hygrade’ – not to be confused with hybrid or hijack…. hygrade means means to take someone else’s property and transform it into your own. So Jason says the guy was crazy tall like 6′7″ and weighed 140 pounds. I said, “Who is he Manute Bol?” Jason said “No, he’s white.” So I said “OK, Manute Rice?” Now, DO NOT be surprised if Jason attempts to tell this story and claim that he came up with Manute Rice. He is a notorious Intellectual Property hygrader.

So Homer: We arrived at 9:45pm and drove the stretch of the spit which looks a bit like a mix between a desperate mining colony and the Jersey Shore. The spit is about 4 miles long lined with beach box bungalow sizes tourist trap stores selling knives, taffy, fudge and as Jason says,” A wide selection of nic-nacks with Alaska etched, burned, or otherwise emblazoned in a variety of fonts from Alaska native-esque to Post Modern.” You can get anything with ‘Alaska’ embroidered on it. Including thong underwear. (Jason has just told me that you can purchase fur thongs in Anchorage – just what our cousin Robin wanted…. a fur thong.)

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The water was icy cold and relatively wave-less, the beach comprised of large grey, flat stones that people normally spend tons of money to have line the water feature in their backyard and the designated tent sites ($8 to set up your own tent) had bathrooms facilities, however they were locked. So we drove out of town to another campsite. It looked like the set of a horror movie. Too wooded. Too isolated. Too quiet. Too mosquito-ey. With outhouses that provided shelter to spiders. And hook-armed, serial killers. The view was sensational, but you could only see if from your car as you were driving out. Back to the spit we drove and we passed the $8 tent campsites, the $15 rv site, and at the very end, found the private campsite. For $25 you can set up your tent on flat grass next to the rocky beach, a campfire is waiting for you in front of your plot, the toilets were not locked and they flushed, and the water was hot. Camp was set up by 11:15pm.

A Small Drinking Town with a Fishing Problem. That’s the tag line for the Salty Dog Saloon. A former lighthouse, the saloon has been a watering hole for many decades and is supposedly a ‘must see’ in Homer. Jason wanted to see if this woman he knew, a lawyer who works as a captain of a boat during the summer, was there. She wasn’t. It was full of Marlboro cigarette smoking, mullet donning fisherman wearing rubber boots, women who belonged in a White Snake video and a smattering of tourists. We headed out pretty fast and decided to get some sleep.

The next day we had breakfast at a place called the Duncan House and I tried Reindeer Sausage. Tasted just like regular sausage and I don’t need to have it again. At 11:30am we made our way to the Danny J.: a boat that takes passengers out of Hallibut Cove. The Cove is a small community of eccentrics, artists and macrobiotic recluses. The ride is an hour and a half. Mera, our captain, is a public defender eight months out of the year and looks like a runway model. Her father is a judge for the Alaskan Supreme Court. She pointed out the various breeds of birds that live in a rookery we passed along the way. There was the gray bird with beak and wings, the whitish grey bird with beak and wings…. and puffins. Most birds abandon their young shortly after they are born. Puffins have one chick a year and raise the kids until they are ready for college. Give me a break here…the rookery falls under the category of “Things that flutter and fly” so I tuned out. And without binoculars it just looked like a breeding ground for avian flu and other diseases.

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Hallibut Cove has a restaurant called the Saltry and the food is fantastic. We had steamers drenched in garlic, and a seafood platter that had ceviche, chili shrimp, pickled salmon, sushi rolls and salmon pate (cream cheese and salmon). Finished it up with a berry crisp and then we headed to the lookout point over this natural made arch. Glorious views, and one of the oldest residents was buried at the top. At the top of the lookout was also a rather large ditch and it turned out to be the future resting place of Clem Tillion.

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Residents for more than 50 years, Clem was a fisherman and is married to Diana, an artist who paints primarily in Octopus ink (this is how the color sepia was discovered.) Diana doesn’t understand why Octopus ink hasn’t taken on in the art world. It’s either because it is really expensive or the process for doing it yourself is a bit involved. She explained to Jason that octopus ink is not so easy to extract. After you find an octopus nest ( a rock crevice in shallow water) you pour some bleach into the hole (she didn’t tell us this… Mera did on the ride home) and the octopus swims out the other side to escape the poison. After safely wrangling the sucker out of the water you extract the ink with a hypodermic needle, then release the octopus back to his newly disinfected watering hole. Diana seemed a lovely lady and chatted my cousin up. The elk she paints hark more to an antler wearing Goliath (the claymation dog brought to you by the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day Saints) but she was lovely.

Back to Clem. Clem gets bored frequently and likes to play with heavy machinery, so he carves out paths on the island, digs holes, and started to dig his own grave. Clem insists that we will die September 2012. I wonder if there is a connection between the end of the Mayan calendar (December 21, 2012) and Clem’s prophecy. A family from southern Louisiana spotted an eagle (Let the Eagles Soar… Sing John Ashcroft, Sing!) and a whale. I saw a spurt of water 10 miles off in the distance. It could have been a whale. I will take their word for it. (Moose: check. Whale: supposedly check. Bear: TBA) In all you spend 2 hours on the cove before getting back on the boat and the roundtrip ticket is 40 dollars. Mera is a great captain and the ride back to Homer was relaxing. There were more whale sightings (or water spoutings) and we saw a otter who looked like he was waving hello. I think he escaped from SeaWorld.

That night we had dinner plans with Good Karma Inn owner, Mike LeMay. A Vietnam vet and practicing Budhist, Mike and his friends Debbie and Hope were arrested for distributing military recruiting opt out information at the local high school. The Inn is a Scandinavian Log Cabin.

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It is stunning – with huge Blonde logs, enormous windows, wood carvings, a full-size bear skin rug and a breathtaking view of the Homer glaciers. Mike grilled locally grown beef burgers and we strategized ways to deal with the military presence at the schools. I took a photo with Mike and Debbie who held up t-shirts they had printed up after they were arrested. It says free the Homer Three.

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For me, it was a fantastic way to finish up our visit to Homer. After much conversation, we had to part ways and face the drive back to Anchorage. Three and a half hours into driving Jason looked over to me and said, “Hmmm, it’s 11pm, the sun is down and it’s dark. Looks like winter is coming.”

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Alaskan Adventures: Episode One

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It’s my third day in Alaska visiting my cousin Jason. I landed at 8:30pm (which is 12:30 am EST) on Thursday night but the sun doesn’t set until 11:30PM so you very quickly lose any concept of time here. Day one was beautiful: and it began with an email from one of my best friends announcing that she got an engaged: Congratulations Amy and Trey!!!!! OK back to our regularly scheduled programming: It was an incredibly warm, blue-sky day and we took Josie, the mooching wonder dog, and hiked Flat Top Mountain in Anchorage. Green hills, purple flowers, dark blueberries – where was the Lucky Charms Leprechaun I wondered. That night his roommate Justin grilled salmon (that he caught) and many of their friends came over for dinner. So for a first day, pretty great.

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The second day was quite a ride. I’ll begin by saying I started Harry Potter on the flight from Dallas to Anchorage. My nose was buried in the book and Jason and Justin, having both read it, understood completely. The morning of day two was gloomy and I was finishing the novel, went to sit on the floor by the sliding glass door willing the sun to appear. And within moments it did. (Jason thinks I have the Shining.) We were going to hike some other mountain but Justin invited us to come hang out, fish and picnic by a creek and hopefully catch some salmon.

Justin drove with Meghan, a doctor doing her residency here, and I left with Jason. After spending more than an hour in a Fred Meyer (super center grocery store like place), getting fishing licenses and some food, we set out to meet their friends Alex, Sarah, their son Ian Shennanigan (a contest was held to choose his middle name), Sarah’s sister visiting from San Diego, and Lea an immigration attorney.

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After about two hours Meghan and I went for a walk searching for a ladies room at this particular park. We didn’t find one. But we did find an enormous Moose just wandering around. At first I thought he was a horse. He was huge and could have easily stepped over the fence that provided pedestrians with a false sense of security and is most likely there as a visual prop to line the path to the what turned out to be a closed visitor center.

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After snapping off a few photos, with Meghan whispering don’t get too close he looks like he could take the fence, we went back to our picnic site and the fisherman of the group, Justin, decided it was time to move on to the prime fishing spot to catch silvers and pink salmon.

The first place we drove to had no fish, but Justin found a huge hook in the water. We drove to another location, Lea attempting to fix her brand new pole which became tangled in wire immediately after her first cast. We had cut the wire and it was still a jumbled mess as we arrived at our next location. As we hiked down to the waters edge, through mud, around giant leafy itchy stinging plants, Lea stopped short and looking down, we could see the recently cut line and hook was now planted in the back of her calf. She had hooked herself.

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Typically, if something like this were to happen on one of my trips, I would be the injured party. I have a SchlepRock tendency to get maimed, injured, dislocated, or neurologically damaged in stellar fashion. And I felt especially bad, because about ten minutes earlier I had a vision of the hook getting caught in her leg. I think it was less a Psychic Hotline moment and more a “Hmm, that hook is just dangling and isn’t latched onto anything. That is going to hurt.”

Fortunately, we had a doctor with us. Unfortunately, she had a broken hand and the hook was planted pretty deep and although the barb was small, it was sufficient. Justin and Dr. Meghan went back to her house to get provisions. Lea tried to remove the hook herself – but the barb made it too difficult and painful. Jason, uncorked a bottle of wine, and began to sedate the patient.

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Dr. Meghan returned with gauze, Band-Aids, cuticle scissors and Vicodin. Shortly after administering the second form of sedation, and icing the area to numb it, surgery began.

It felt at times like being on a wilderness show – like ‘Man vs. Wild’, or in pioneer days when surgery was performed with little or no anesthesia. After basically cutting her skin away with cuticle scissors, and Lea feeling everything, the hook was safely removed.

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Not to make the entire day a loss I jokingly said to a rather dejected and fishless Justin, “Well, you might as well fish.” He tried to repair Lea’s tangled rod but it was shot so he used Jason’s instead. One cast in, and the line yanked. He caught a fish. On one cast. In a basically empty creek.

Although I have fished as a kid, I have no memory or knowledge of what happens to a fish after it is caught and reeled in. I generally passed the rod off to my dad and next thing I new the fish was dead and in a bucket or thrown back into the water. But I was on a wilderness show today and even though I spent the next few moments with my fingers in my ears, facing the other way and saying ‘La La La La La La La’ very loud, I did catch instances where I saw my cousin, the mild mannered ACLU attorney, bludgeon the fish with an empty bottle of wine. And when I say bludgeon, I mean blood drenched-wine-bottle -whack-the-bajesus-out-of-this-fish with a maniacal expression that read more Friday the 13th’s Jason Voorhees than my Supreme Court “Bong Hits for Jesus” arguing cousin.

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It was a full on day. A moose, a hooking, a fish. We even watched a salmon swim upstream to lay its eggs and followed a beaver as he swam around and built a damn. The day concluded with Jason and I grilling the fish (which turned out to be the kind you can’t catch and keep – ummmm….oooops?) and then going to see the Simpsons Movie – I had no idea about the Alaska scenes and it seemed fortuitous to see if here.

All in all, a great second day in Alaska. Sunday morning involved Jason speaking at the Unitarian Universalist Church about his free speech case which went before the Supreme Court. He was great. I am finishing up this blog entry as I eat a bagel with Lachs (they don’t spell it Lox and I don’t know why but it is local Salmon and it is fantastic). We are going to go fishing for about an hour and then drive to Homer. We might be back tomorrow. Who knows?

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10:18am

when i have something to share you will find it here.

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