More art

Celebration

Celebration

There is a note to each of these. 

Celebration was done from a photograph I took of friends from my graduate school days, Frank and Carol.  Frank was my lab buddy.  He did his Ph.D. dissertation on possum testicles.  He used to collect them, embed them in resin, and make earrings out of them for ladies he admired.  He was celebrating passing his oral examination when this was taken.

Insomnia
Insomnia

Insomnia was constructed from 2 images made in a class on computer graphics.  The figure was drawn with a computer mouse on a mouse pad from a model.  That was a lot of fun.  The sheep was from a photo I took at my friend Penny’s farm and manipulated with an ancient paint program.  I never really understood what I was doing in that class.  I put the two images together on a piece of plywood and made a reductive woodcut. 

Dear Family
Dear Family

Dear Family was done after the death of my step-mother who was killed in an automobile accident.  The car she and my father were driving to take her to a dentist appointment at 1 o’clock in the afternoon was hit by a drunk driver.  She was killed instantly.  My father was in the hospital and then recovering at my house for 3 months.  This is the poem:

Dear Family,
When you read these words
Wrap me in a sheet
Bury me in the woods
If the authorities permit.
Plant me so that I may grow
Not like a rose or hibiscus
But like a Jack-in-the-pulpit,
Or Lady Slipper, or some other
Singular inflourescence of the shade.
I leave you my things in accordance
With Florida Law.  If I have made a mistake
Forgive me.  You will find my tears,
Recycled, in the upper reaches of my soul.
You may all use them.
Feed the cat in the morning and in the evening. 
Sheep
Sheep

Sheep was done from more sheep photos taken at Penny’s farm in southern Virginia.  I think I have about a thousand pictures of sheep.

Rabbit
Rabbit
Fox
Fox

Rabbit and Fox were drawn from images on a tapestry at the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Untitled
Untitled

The pony, man, and dog were from a photo I took at a fair, I think in Burton-on-the-Water when my grandchildren were small. 

Balboa park
Balboa park

Balboa Park is, obviously, partly from my imagination, and partly from a photo I took in Balboa Park of a musician.

The tropics
The tropics

The tropics is to illustrate another poem:

Dream
The tropics dark with monkeys
Dusty winds rattling
Through palmfronds.  Glowing peacocks lurking
In the gloom — staccato rushing
Of pigs and chickens
In a strange twilight
Without rain or sun.
Posted in Uncategorized | 14 Comments

Cat prints

Untitled

Untitled

A Good Book
A Good Book
untitled
untitled
Elemental habitats: fire
Elemental habitats: fire
Elemental habitats: air
Elemental habitats: air
Elemental habitats: water
Elemental habitats: water

These are a few of my prints from past years.  If you hover the cursor over the image it shows the method used to create it.  The theme of this lot is cats.  I have often used cats: they are favorite subject matter. 

I am not good at talking or writing about art, and that has been a handicap in navigating the art world.  I can say that I see a blurred line between things imagined and things “known”.   I like images that are odd, funny, and beautiful.  If they can be all those things at once, I have acheived a step toward my goal.  If the images I make have additional meaning it should be visual and not verbal.

In this group there is one etching and the rest are either made with a wood or linoleum block.  For wood I usually use plywood.  I like the grain. 

The reductive method works this way.  The edition number is set at the beginning.  A solid color is printed.  I usually use black as a first color.  The image is cut on the block, and a second color is printed on each piece, perhaps green.  The result is a black line drawing on a green field.  Then I cut out of the block whatever part of the print I want to be green, and print a third color.  This way the color image is built up.  Some people who work this way plan it all out in advance, using a color chart.  I do it more like a painting.  If I don’t like a color I have printed I don’t use much of it, if I like it I use more.  So these are evolving works.  They are great fun to do, but an immense amount of work.  It might take a month to finish an edition.

I can’t remember how I did the colored etching, but I think I wiped the plate first in black and then added color.  I believe it was all printed at one pass through the press.  I only made a few prints of that one. 

In future posts I will show some more of these prints, and perhaps a few paintings.  I just learned to work my slide duplicator, and it broke.  So for the moment I am waiting to get a new one.

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Driving through Yukon, remembering Lola

Yukon

Yukon

When Jerry and I go to and fro to our house in Alaska we drive through Yukon Territory.  When we do I always think of Lola Estee.  Yukon is a wild and beautiful place, but not as wild as it was almost 40 years ago when I knew Lola.  I knew Lola in Florida, and I thought of Yukon as a wilderness of frozen waste.

I knew Lola for 2 reasons.  We worked at the same place and our teen age boys went to school together.  She had a connection to Yukon.

I taught Biology at Florida Southern College in Lakeland, Florida.  Lola was the sole lab technician for a scientist named Boris Sokolof, who had a lab in the basement of the science area there.  His objective was a modest one.  He would find a cure for cancer. I don’t think he was paid by the College.  He had some sort of minimal grant money, and was allowed to use college space which would otherwise be empty.  His activities gave the College the cache of doing serious research.

Florida Southern was, at that time, a deeply conservative school run by the fundamentalist faction of the Methodist Church.  Faculty meetings were for “information and inspiration” and faculty members were not allowed to speak without prior approval of the subject matter by the administration.  There was a great deal of praying. The president of the college was a Methodist minister.  The dean was a lawyer whose practice had been in real estate.  He insisted on being called Doctor.  I do not know what his academic qualifications were, if any.  He was a big beefy fellow with a granite jaw and a huge diamond ring.
 
The buildings of the college were designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.  Units were connected by long outdoor walkways with low overhead roofs.  Frank Lloyd Wright was short.  Tall people took their chances at Florida Southern,  where they tended to walk with a perpetual stoop.  Under the crisscross of walkways and buildings was a network of tunnels containing the pipes and wires of the physical plant.  Boris’ lab connected to these tunnels, and opened to the outdoors on a hillside.  Lola’s and my sons found it convenient to visit her, and retire to the tunnels where they kept their stash.

Boris, who was in his 70’s, was a white Russian, a remnant of the nobility.  He had the title of Prince, but princes, I am told, were a dine a dozen in pre-revolutionary Russia. He regularly wrote letters to the Tampa Tribune accusing Richard Nixon of being a communist sympathizer.  He was a tall man, with a stoop, either because of his advanced age or the low walkway roofs.  He had a shock of brown hair, which I assumed was dyed, but Lola assured me was the result of the vitamin B12 shots she administered to him weekly.  He believed the shots would keep him alive indefinitely,but sometimes his faith in the vitamin would waver and he would have panic attacks.  Then Lola would stay with him all night.

Boris’ plan for finding a cure for cancer was to extract a wonder drug from a Florida plant.  Lola collected the plants.  One of Boris’ favorite plants to test was the Spanish Bayonette, and when it was blooming with its huge sprays of waxy white flowers Lola would spend days in the palmetto fields climbing on a step ladder to gather blossoms.  She would come home covered with cuts and scratches from the knife-like bayonette leaves. 

Lola boiled up a lot of peculiar potions in her lab.  Then she administered them to mice.  I think the experimental protocols were pretty slap-dash, but Lola was as nice to the mice as one could be under the circumstances.  The mice were obtained from the Jackson Laboratories in Bar Harbor, Maine.  She showed me the mouse catalog from Jackson.  There were all sorts of mice with all sorts of genetic peculiarities and disease susceptibilities.  The main mice that Boris used were guaranteed to get cancer.  There were many others, though.  There were hairless mice, mice which would spend their lives spinning in circles, obese mice, and so on.  These mice were patented, and it was illegal to breed them.  Nevertheless, for her amusement, Lola would order pairs of varieties that struck her fancy and raise baby mice.

Lola was in her late 30’s.  She had short, bleached hair which always looked slept on.  She wore a white uniform to work which was permanently stained and blue bedroom slippers instead of shoes.  She said the cement floors were hard on her feet and the slippers were comfortable.  Lola had false teeth.  In her 20’s she had trouble with her teeth, so she went to a dentist and told him to pull them all out.  She had to go to 4 dentists before she found one willing to do it.
 
Before becoming a lab technician she had made her living in various ways, but, not to put too fine a point on it, she was mostly a bar fly.  She had been married 7 times.  Husband number 7, the one I knew, was also number 5.  She married him twice.  He was in his 60’s and had lung cancer.  He needed someone to look after him, and she needed his social security when he died.  He was always called “the old man,” and he sat all day in a chair watching TV.  He and Lola fought all the time.  Lola sometimes pummeled him, often punching quite hard.  They had a child, a girl named Lola Rae.

The governor of Florida, Claude  Kirk, was invited to give a commencement address at the College.  Lola had know Claude (a man well known for living life to its fullest) in her bar fly days.  As the dignitaries were assembling in their academic regalia outside the main hall, the governor and the president of the college leading, Lola sauntered by in her stained uniform and blue bedroom slippers.

“Hi, Claude,” she called out.

He turned quickly.  “Oh, hi, Lola,” he said, “What are you doing here?”

Before she could reply he was surrounded protectively by men in black robes and hustled into the auditorium.  Boris was later admonished to keep Lola out of the public eye.

Lola and I were friends.  She was intelligent, and I found her total disregard for a conventional life refreshing in the midst of Southern piety and conformity.  She claimed that she was the adopted child of multi-millionaire Californians and that she had been a child prodigy pianist.  I had a piano, although noone in my family played.  When Lola came to visit she would sit down at the piano and run her hands over the keys, playing what seemed to be stream of consciousness non-music.  She claimed that she had given a recital in the Hollywood Bowl as a child, but had forgotten all the music she knew then. 

Her story was that her adoptive parents had disowned her and cut her off without a cent.  I have forgotten the reason she gave for this, perhaps her marriage.

This brings us closer to Yukon.  Her first husband, the father of her 2 boys was a handsom devil.  He was also a counterfeiter.  Apparantly he was good at it, and they managed well for a time on his profits.  But he got caught. He escaped to — you know where — Yukon.  Lola said every now and then the FBI would come to her house and ask her questions about his where-abouts, but she always claimed to know nothing.  In fact, they kept in touch.  Every summer she sent her boys to visit their father in Yukon.  She said it would toughen them up and teach them to be self sufficient.

I think the boys liked their time with their father.  I used to imagine what Yukon would be like in contrast to soft, steamy Florida, teaming with life.  I thought Yukon must be a harsh, cold, empty place of terrible hardship and extremes.  Now when I drive through its immense landscape, I see its grandure and elegance.  I think of those boys with their outlaw father. I wonder where they are now.

I left Florida Southern to continue my graduate work.  I lost track of Lola.  I heard that she was getting a Ph.D. at Duke.  Her son told my son that she had stayed with the old man until he died, and in the end she was the only person who could get him to eat.  She sat with him in the hospital, slapped him awake, and yelled at him, “Eat your lunch, you old son-of-a-bitch, or I’ll knock you upside the head!”  Then he would smile, open his eyes and meekly swallow the food she fed him.

Posted in Memoir, Uncategorized | 10 Comments

A few miniatures I did in Alaska.

Grizzly bears

Grizzly bears

Bekah and her poodle
Bekah and her poodle
Bea's cat
Bea’s cat
CaribouCaribou
Rabbit

Rabbit

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

These are some of the small paintings I did in Alaska to give away as Mah Jongg prizes.  The average size is about 5×6 inches.  The one of Bekah and her poodle is a bit larger.   I did that one especially for her.  She plays Mah Jongg with us, middle aged to elderly ladies, and she is very good.  She often wins, and she cares about winning.  Her poodle is her love.  I am sorry I have forgotten it’s name.  It is a female.  When I gave Bekah the picture at my last Mah Jongg before we left for the island, she took it to the window seat where we were playing and just looked at it for about 15 minutes.  It makes her look older than she is (she is only about 12) but perhaps she will grow into it.  I saw that it pleased her and I was touched.  I did some others, but I forgot to take pictures of them.

I am just learning how to post these without messing upn my whole blog.  As time passes I will practice and try to put up more of my more serious (?) work.

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A day in town

I don’t know the exact reason why we have reduced our town trips to average one a week.  It’s partly because the ferry fare has gone up so much – it costs about $8 for the 2 of us and the car.  It’s partly because we get tired in town and then have to take a nap when we get home.  When we wake up it’s time for a glass of wine, then dinner.  Nothing accomplished for the day.  Partly it’s my policy.  Since I live on an island, I should treat it like an island, not just an inconvenient appendage of the mainland.

 

Tuesday was this week’s trip to town.  I had a doctor’s appointment, and we had a couple of prescriptions to pick up.  Besides that I had some projects to shop for.  Projects almost always involve shopping.  And spending money.

 

First, I wanted plants for various pots that had been made orphans in last winter’s extremes of cold.  Last week I had looked at Home Depot and found little to please me.  This week I thought I would go to Lowes’s.   Lowe’s was a disappointment too; not much to tempt and all very expensive.  I did see a red delphinium, which interested me. 

 

In a big pot by the front door I have an enormous (it extends above the roof gutters) electric blue-purple delphinium.  It has to be tied up, but it astonishes visitors with its size and color.  Red seemed almost unnatural in a delphinium.  I thought about buying the red one, but it cost $15 and delphiniums are an investment in time.  I bought some thyme and oregano and basil.

 

Next we went to Jo Ann Fabrics. That is, I went to Jo Ann Fabrics.  Jerry sat in the truck.  At Lowe’s he can shop for lawn mower batteries and stuff like that.  But craft stores hold no enticements for him. 

 

I was shopping for trinkets to stuff into a purse I bought at the Saturday Market here on the island last week.  It is to be a birthday present for my 6 year old granddaughter.  The purse is purple felt with yellow and red zigzags embroidered on it.  To stuff it I bought packets of beads, feathers, bells, and stickers.  I got some little packs of colored paper and some colored plastic string and some squares of felt sprinkled with glitter and a crocheted doily.  I loved doilies when I was a kid.

 

Next stop was Kmart for more plants.  Jerry looked for a hat there.  He can’t go out without a hat, since he is bald-headed and fair skinned.  He wants a baseball type hat with a soft visor, and he can never find one.  They all have stiffening.  No luck at Kmart.  I bought some snapdragons and hollyhocks. 

 

My next project stop was the Mexican grocery.  I have a new Mexican cook book, called Simply Mexican  by Lourdes Castro,  and I had a list of things I needed for making chicken tamales with tomatillo sauce.  The Mexican grocery is a challenge, because there is only a tiny bit of English spoken there (I have no Spanish) and I needed direction.  

 

The young men in the store were all good humored and helpful, and eventually I emerged with bags of masa harina, tomatillos, jalapenos, cilantro, corn husks and various spices.  I will certainly go back for other exotic Mexican stuff, like banana leaves – there’s a tempting recipe for anchiote chicken roasted in banana leaves. 

 

Jerry waited patiently in the car with the poodles.  He was okay listening to an NPR news program, and his tall Scandinavian build would not have been comfortable in the cramped little store where short people spoke Spanish.

 

Next stop was Costco, to pick up prescriptions.  I had hoped that there would be enough sample tables set up to avoid having to buy lunch, but all that was on offer was almond butter and ranch dressing; not really an adequate lunch.

 

To kill time before my doctor appointment we went to Barnes and Noble.  Jerry had his usual double fudge chocolate cupcake and coffee, and I had my usual non-fat latte, supplemented with a pretzel stuffed with spinach and feta.  (Sounds good, but was actually tasteless.)  We read the New York Times and I did the easy Tuesday crossword.

 

By the time we got home it was time for a glass of wine while I made a simple dinner – lamb chops on the grill, baked potato, and salad.  All in all, it was a pretty nice day, for a day in town.

 

 

     

Posted in Day to day | Tagged | 13 Comments

My father was a spy

This account is based on 3 main sources:  First, my own recollection, with the internet to check dates (I hope I have them all correct); second, a book by Alistair Cook, A Generation on Trial, and finally the transcripts of some taped interviews my daughter did with my father about 20 years ago.

 

My father’s name was Henry Julian Wadleigh, but he was always called Julian, except sometimes, in his family, he was called by his nickname, Ribby, because he was quite skinny.  He was born on Feb 2, 1904. He was American, but his parents lived in Europe (various countries – Germany, France, Switzerland and Italy) and he was educated in England. 

 

He went to Marlborough, a “public” school, and then to Oxford, where he read classics.  My grandmother insisted he do classics, because that is what she believed an English gentleman should do.  She was a consummate snob.  He had wanted to study entomology, and as a youth, for his own amusement, he wrote a paper entitled, “Insect and Man.”

 

At Oxford he was considered brilliant, and he expected to become a fellow of Christ Church College.  However, he had a long bout of jaundice at the time of his exams, and as a result he took second class honors.  At least, that was the excuse for the second.  At Oxford he leaned left politically, and was known by other students as “that Bolshie American.” 

 

He was a good looking man, though somewhat nerdy and earnest, completely innocent in all worldly matters.  He had a habit of guffawing loudly at things nobody else thought were funny, and not getting the point of most jokes.  But he was gentle and good natured, always more comfortable dealing with abstract ideas than with anything concrete or the personal.

 

Because of the second at Oxford, he gave up the idea of a fellowship and enrolled at the London School of Economics, where he met my mother, a New Zealander.  Together they came to the United States.  He had a fellowship at the University of Chicago.  My mother also got a fellowship there.  Both of them later had fellowships at the Brookings Institution.

 

I was born in 1932 in Washington, DC.  I think my father was unemployed at the time, but soon he got a job as an economist at the Department of Agriculture.  When I was 3 my mother left to be with another man, a Canadian economist they had met at the University of Chicago.  About that time my father transferred to the State Department.

 

At the end of his tenure in the Department of Agriculture he got mixed up with radical left wing politics.  He joined the Socialist Party and got to know a woman named Eleanor Nelson.  She turned out to be a communist, and when he wanted to do something active against the growing fascist movement in Europe she put him in touch with the communists in Washington. 

 

At that time we lived in an apartment at a place called Cathedral Mansions, which was across the street form the Washington Zoo.  Almost every evening in summer, when he came home from work, he would take me for a walk in the zoo.  We walked mostly at the upper end where they kept the elephants.  I often rode piggy-back on his shoulders.  I had an anxious fear that they would close the gates of the zoo before we got out, and we would be stuck there all night – an eternity to a 3 year old.

 

Eleanor Nelson introduced my father to a man who would never reveal his real name.  He called himself Harold Wilson.  Harold Wilson explained to him that if he wanted to work for the communists he would need to submit some of his writing.  My father gave them some samples of reports he had done about foreign trade barriers to American farm products.  Apparently this satisfied the murky characters in charge of espionage, and he was recruited to take documents from his work, to be copied. 

 

At first he would give the documents overnight to Harold.  Later another man was introduced whose name was Carl.  This man turned out to be Whittaker Chambers, and he became my father’s usual contact.  My father began this activity in 1935.  That was when I was 3 and we were walking in the evenings in the zoo. 

 

After my mother left I was taken to my aunt Clare’s because my father couldn’t take care of me and work.  I stayed with my aunt for a year.  My father moved to the State Department where he worked in the trade agreements division.  He came to my aunt’s to visit me several times during that year.  My mother came back in 1936 (the Canadian economist dumped her).  My father continued his espionage activities.  I went to kindergarten.

 

Early in 1938 my father went to Turkey for nine months to negotiate some trade agreements, about tobacco, among other things.  Before he left, at the end of 1937, there was some backing off of his contacts – they had begun to be nervous, not only about getting caught, but also about power struggles in the USSR over the defection of Trotsky.   Some spy in Switzerland had been murdered, presumably by Stalin’s secret agents.  My father told Harold and Chambers that he would be away anyhow in Turkey.

 

I spent the summer of 1938 in Italy at my grandmother’s villa which perched high on a hill overlooking the Riviera at a town called Alassio.  It was a beautiful summer of swimming and sunshine.  I listened to the grown-ups talk about the coming war, and worry about the fascists.  Of course, I didn’t understand, but I felt their fear, and I was afraid.  From the balcony of my bedroom I watched them after dinner as they had coffee and liqueurs on the terrace below.  They dressed for dinner, the ladies in long chiffon skirts that fluttered in the breeze, and the men in worn tuxedos.

 

My parents came back from Turkey, and I was brought back by my aunt from Italy.  We took the night train from Italy to, I think, Marseilles where boarded the Normandy, an elegant ocean liner that later burned in New York harbor (we traveled third class).  At the border crossings in Austria and France soldiers with guns came on the train to check papers.  I was very frightened of them. 

 

At home I started first grade.  My mother was working for the Treasury Department as an economist and my father was still at the State Department.  He was no longer in contact with the communists, but one day Chambers called him at his office (a very unusual thing to do) and said he wanted to meet him in Lafayette Park.

 

“Lafayette Park!” my father said, “That’s right in front of the White House.”  They met, however, and Chambers told my father that he had quit the Communist Party and advised my father to do the same.  Chambers believed that he and my father were suspected of being Trotskyites and were in danger of being killed.  My father hoped that Chambers was being paranoid.

 

Since my father had had no contact with the communists for more than a year, and he was becoming disillusioned their tactics, he decided that the best thing to do was just stay quiet.  Then in August of 1939 Stalin made a non-aggression pact with Hitler, and Stalin and Hitler divided up Poland between them.  My father was disgusted by this and vowed to have nothing more to do with the communists.

 

He was worried, however, that on the one hand Chambers would go to the FBI and tell them everything, and on the other hand that there might be some retaliation against him by the communists.  He believed that, in fact, Chambers did go to the FBI, but he went without proof.  My father believed that the lack of proof kept the FBI from acting – after all, Chambers might have been a crack-pot.  But he felt that his own career in the State Department failed to prosper because of lurking rumors of his communist sympathies.

 

The war came.  Life everywhere changed forever.  My mother and father were divorced when I was 8, and I remember Pearl Harbor.  My mother remarried, another economist named Carroll Daugherty.  I lived with them in New York for a couple of years.  There were practice air raid alerts and we had special black-out shades on the windows.  My stepfather was called to Washington to head the division of wage stabilization during the war. I went back to my aunt’s house to live permanently.

 

My father remarried and his choice was less than ideal.  My stepmother was a selfish, bad-tempered woman.  When troubles came to my father she made them worse.    

 

My father went to Italy for the State Department after the allies invaded, in order to asses the food situation for the war stricken population.  He shared an apartment with his brother, Richard Wadleigh (Dickie) in Rome.  Dickie was an intelligence officer in the army because he spoke fluent French, Italian and German.  He had led the first armored division into Rome because he knew the roads.

 

The war ended and the post war era began.  I was in high school at a girl’s prep school in Andover where my aunt and uncle lived.  In 1948 Richard Nixon, an ambitious young congressman who was a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee met Whitaker Chambers, a former editor of Time Magazine who was making headlines by accusing Alger Hiss, a State Department official of being a communist spy.

 

I think Nixon was an opportunist without any particular ideology.  But he saw anti-communism as a way to gain public attention quickly.  He summoned Hiss to testify, and Hiss denied the charge.  The charges and countercharges dragged on.  Hiss sued Chambers.  Chambers initially made his accusations without any documentation, but in November Chambers led a group from HUAC to his farm in Maryland and produced a lot of microfilmed documents from the interior of a pumpkin.

 

I was always interested in politics, so I had been following all this.  Even as a small child in Washington I listened to my parents discussing politics and absorbed some of it.  My father said that when I was about 5 a neighbor told him, with a sly grin, “I know quite a lot about your political views.”  He asked her how she knew and she replied, “From hearing your daughter expressing them.”

 

One evening in the winter of 1948 I came home from school and the news was on the radio in the kitchen where my aunt was preparing dinner.  My 6 year old cousin Deborah was there also.  As I entered the room I heard my father’s voice on the radio saying, “I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that it might tend to incriminate me.”  As Nixon was asking his next question Deborah began making some sort of loud noise and I screamed at her to be quiet.  My aunt said, “Don’t talk to her that way, she’s just a child and doesn’t understand.”

 

I was sorry I had yelled at Deborah, and overcome with distress about what was happening in the news.  I think my aunt had known about it for a while, because my father had already been testifying before a grand jury in New York.  Nobody had told me.

 

The Boston Globe the next day had a headline something like “NIXON QUESTIONS AS AID SQUIRMS” My father’s name, Julian Wadleigh, was all over the front page.  My school, Abbot Academy, pulled all the newspapers from stands around the school so that the other girls wouldn’t see them.  Wadleigh is not a common name.

 

I immediately assumed that all the accusations against my father were false.  I thought he could do no wrong.  My aunt gently tried to tell me that I would be disappointed, but I was positive I was right. 

 

A couple of weeks later he came.  In the big front hall of the Andover house as he arrived and took off his scarf and gloves and I said to him, urgently, “You didn’t do it, Daddy, did you?”

 

Looking down at the hall table he said in a voice tinged with irritation, “Of course I did it.”

 

I guess that’s when I grew up.

 

That spring, in 1949 I graduated from high school.  I spent the summer in Vermont with my mother and half sister.  My stepfather was arbitrating a labor dispute in the steel industry on a board appointed by Harry Truman.  The Hiss trial was proceeding and my father was a key witness for the prosecution.  At the time he had been testifying before HUAC he was also telling all he knew at the grand jury in New York.  Both my stepfather’s and father’s names were often in the newspapers.  I went square dancing almost every night with my handsome new boyfriend. 

 

All this happened a long time ago.  I have seldom spoken to anyone about it over these years, except for the family and very close friends.  Why write about it now?

 

Because it happened.  It was a piece of history, albeit a footnote, and to the best of my ability I have told it truly, as my father ultimately did.  I think telling the truth is important.  Life is not all happy, our elders are not all inspirations.  Life’s fabric is flawed; the flaws make beautiful.

 

Do I judge my father?  The honest answer is yes.  He did not do what he did for any sort of personal gain.  He was taking action, he thought, to help stop the fascists from enslaving the people of the world.  He thought he was joining in a great revolutionary movement.  But he was wrong to do what he did.  He betrayed a trust, he broke the law, and it was a really dumb thing to do.  To carelessly toss aside the ordinary rules that govern us all was to arrogantly put himself above the rest of human kind.  He thought himself superior in intelligence and judgment.

 

There are degrees of error.  Ultimately he saw that it was wrong.  He stopped doing it, and when confronted, he told the truth.  He paid dearly.  It ruined his life from the time it began until he was a very old man.

 

Alger Hiss continued to betray his country long after it was clear to everyone that Stalin was evil and the USSR was our enemy.  Alger Hiss went to his grave an unrepentant liar.

 

Alistair Cook, in A Generation on Trial, wrote:

 

“If Hiss had said he had done all this, that he had passed papers proudly to confound the Nazis, to quicken the day of deliverance of enslaved populations, he could have been a greater Wadleigh”

    

 

 

 

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The drive from Alaska

We just drove from Manley Hot Springs to Lummi Island.  We left on Wednesday May 27, after Jerry spent the morning getting every drop of water out of the pipes, just in case we don’t get back before next winter when the temperatures will be minus 40 Fahrenheit.  We had had no mail delivery for a week, because of the holiday and bad weather.  The mail plane is a private carrier and sometimes misses deliveries.  By noon it hadn’t come, and it was raining, so we left without the mail.

 

In Fairbanks we shopped briefly for trip provisions, then on to Delta Junction for the night.  We had a good supper of left-over chicken and salad in the motel room, and everything was fine except that Jerry couldn’t find the wine opener.  I gave up quickly and ate my chicken sans wine, but he was bothered because he couldn’t remember where he had put the opener.  He kept leaving his chicken to search for it, so by the time he finally found it, in a place we had both looked three times, dinner was over and we didn’t want wine anyhow.

 

The next day we drove to Haines Junction, Yukon.  It rained most of the way, and, sadly, the weather obscured the spectacular scenery around Kluane Lake.  Instead of continuing down the Alcan Highway we often take the Cassiar Highway south to the Yellowhead Highway.  If you want to see one of the grandest bits of scenery of the north, drive this road.  The mountains, lakes, rivers, and views are stunning.  The southern two thirds of the road has an excellent surface and is comfortable to drive.  The northern third is wilder, and is a work in progress.  There are many bumps and places that make me clutch the sides of the cab. 

 

The third night we stayed in Dease Lake, British Columbia.  Dease Lake is a mining center and a center of the native population, First Nation as it is called in Canada. It is one of 2 stopping places on the Cassiar Highway that open all year.

 

When we got there it was still raining and cold.  We had dinner at Mama Z’s, the only eatery in town.  I count on at least one high point per trip.  Mama Z’s was it this time.  The place was empty when we entered.  We were greeted by a lovely woman (of a certain age.)  Her hair was fluffy blond and she wore a blue-jean mini skirt, a tee shirt and a cross around her neck. She spoke with an Italian accent.  I chatted with her from time to time throughout our dinner.  I asked her if she had recently acquired the business, since we had been there before and it seemed different.  It was usually closed when we stopped.

 

She told me that she previously had a couple managing it, but that they were drunk all the time and often failed to open.  She fired them, and now she was running the place by herself, with only the cook in the kitchen to share the work.  As the restaurant began to collect more customers, some clearly locals, some transients like us, she zipped around, cheerfully greeting everyone with Mediterranean warmth.  She must have covered a couple of miles back and forth to the kitchen while we were there.

 

Our food was simple, but well cooked.  The vegetables especially were done to just the right tenderness and crispness and not the least bit greasy.  That’s a pretty good restaurant test. 

 

Mama Z, Zora, chatted with me intermittently as she dashed past with plates of food.  She told me she moved from Fraser Lake, farther south in British Columbia to Dease Lake 3 years ago, with the help of her two fine sons, both in their 20’s.  Her husband had left her for a younger woman, and she didn’t have a penny when she arrived, only her car and what was in it.  During those three years she worked her way to ownership of the restaurant, and she said she is determined to make it succeed.  I think she will.  There is a website, www.mamazscafe.com, (but it does need some work.)  She says she is writing a book, when she has time.  “Read my book!” she says.  So I will, when it comes out.

 

If you have a chance to drive the Cassiar, stop at Mama Z’s and get to know Zora.  She’s a remarkable woman.

 

When we woke up in the morning in Dease Lake, as usual, I put on my shoes and crept out in my nightgown with the dogs for their morning pee.  It was snowing.  Hard.  It was May 31.  We drove south through a winter landscape.  The snow was sticking to the road and the trees.  That lasted for a couple of hours, then it turned to rain, then the sun came out.  By the time we stopped for the night the temperature was 80.  We had gone from winter to summer in 8 hours.

 

The third night we stopped in Burns Lake on the Yellowhead.  I was tired, so we stopped early at a motel we have stayed at before.  It is the kind I favor,  clean, but very down market, with a kitchen.  The couple who own it are nice, and “pet friendly.”  He smiled kindly and refused me a kitchen. 

 

He said, “I’m only renting a couple of rooms tonight.  We’ve sold this place and are moving to another motel in Clinton.  We have to leave tomorrow morning, and I have to clean the rooms myself.  No kitchens.”

 

“Oh, please,” said I, “I won’t make a mess.”

 

He hesitated for a moment and said, “I could do that for you.”  So I got to cook dinner and clean out the cooler, and I’m sure I left the kitchen as clean as I found it.             

 

When Jerry and I travel we both look at the scenery.  We watch for wildlife.  On the way back from Alaska we saw a herd of elk, a lot of moose and a fox.  I pay attention to the kinds of trees, and I notice flowers and colors. I study the light.  Jerry tells me about the geological features of the land – the braided rivers, the glacial valleys, new and old mountains. 

 

He used to own an electric company in Manley, and he notices telephone poles and power lines.  When we were in New Zealand he asked me to take pictures of power poles because they were concrete.  He notices machinery, trucks, and most especially airports and airplanes.  Road building interests him.

 

We enjoy the trip, but as I get older I find it increasingly difficult.  I was bone tired when we got home.  It was not easy on the dogs.  Once, just after we got married, we did part of the trip on the ferry.  That was fun, but expensive.  Maybe next time we will try it again; after all, you can’t take it with you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Alaska, Day to day | Tagged , | 17 Comments

Manley Hot Springs, past and present

Yesterday, Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, we spent most of the afternoon at a celebration of the 50 th year since the establishment of the Manley school, now called the Gladys Dart Manley Hot Springs School.  Gladys herself organized the event, helped by her sons and some community minded residents here.  The original school, a one room cabin near the hot springs, had been lovingly and skillfully restored by Bunny, our neighbor down the street.  It is painted dazzling white with brilliant red trim.  The cabin is on the land owned by Gladys and her husband Chuck.  She started it in 1958. 

 

That year, coincidentally, is when Jerry first came to Manley to work for Harold Strandberg, who was prospecting for gold in Tofty (just down the road.)  Jerry went back to Fairbanks where he finished his education and homesteaded.  He returned to Manley from time to time until he bought the electric company here in 1975 and came here to live for the next 10 years.

 

The weather for the celebration was beautiful.  It was sunshine and 70 degrees.  There were about 50 chairs set up outside next to the school and a lavish pot luck lunch spread under a canopy.  My contribution was chili.  

 

Many Manley residents came, and Gladys had gathered a lot of former pupils, especially from the first two or three classes in the school.  Those people were in their 50’s and 60’s and many had children and grandchildren with them.  Jerry’s son, Patrick, went to the school, but after it had moved to another location in a double wide.  The ceremony began with a salute to the flag, an inaudible prayer said by a sweet-looking elderly native woman, and singing of the Alaska Flag Song.

 

Then, as everyone (even the children) stood silently, names of people who had died during the memory of those present were read.  I could see that many in the crowd had tears in their eyes.  I saw that Jerry was moved.  He had known almost all of those people, some of them well.  I recognized the names of many Jerry had told me stories about, some funny, some sad, some sensational.  Memories of the past bring emotion with them, and all these people were remembering together.  There is unity in that; people are drawn closer.

 

When the list concluded it was suggested that anyone call out a name to add to the list.  There was a little pause, and then many other names were spoken.  I whispered to Jerry, asking him whether he wanted to say the name of his late wife.  He said, in a clear voice, “Susy Hook.”

 

Then there were a lot of testimonials to Gladys, but after a while someone grabbed the microphone and said, “It’s getting late, we’re getting hungry, and the food’s getting cold.”  Gladys spoke, a few more funny stories were told, and everyone headed for the food.

 

I saw a lot of friends from the town, and met some new people.  An interesting woman who had taught Patrick in preschool invited Jerry and me to her place on a lake near Denali National Park.  I want to go, but it is reachable only by airplane.  I have her email address.

 

I learned for the first time the complete history of our house.  It is not a happy one.  The family who built the original one room house was murdered at the river landing by a crazy man (Jerry thinks his name was Michael Silka) who lurked around in a boat on the Tanana and shot everyone he saw.  They were a young couple with a 4 year old son.  She was pregnant.  Jerry knew them.  He said they were quiet and kept to themselves, but were nice people.  All killed.  It took the troopers some time to get out here, and when they finally came, in a helicopter, the crazy man shot at the helicopter and killed one of the troopers.  The murderer killed 7 people here and a trooper.

 

The next family here in our house was that of the school teacher.  He built a big addition which is now the living room and bedrooms.  Jerry and I have changed this part.  After the school teacher left an old man lived here who had difficulty with stairs. The steps to the deck were replaced with a plywood ramp covered with chicken wire to keep it from being slippery.  Jerry has built fine new steps to replace the ramp.

 

We bought the house from a man who fancied himself a trapper.  He was not particularly popular in the town because it was said that he interfered with other people’s traps.  He left odd chicken wire and coffee-can home-made traps all around the house (and a lot in the native woods behind the house.) Jerry is gradually getting rid of them.  I guess they must have been supposed to trap squirrels.  He left us a huge bleached white moose bone which I keep on the window sill.

 

At the celebration a friend said to me, “You asked me about cliques in town when you first came.  Here’s your clique.”  I asked him to explain.  “Well, the people here are one clique,” he said, “Then, you notice the people who are not here.  They’re the ones who think this isn’t important.  That’s the other clique.”

 

Manley is a good place, but Jerry says it’s a dying place, full of old and dying people.  There are empty houses.  Next year there may not be enough kids to open the school.  I think my friend is right.  The celebration was important.  Things like that keep communities together.  Towns fail when they lose their schools.  There is a lot of enthusiasm these days for people to go off into the bush and pretend to be survivalists, but the idea of nurturing a small town is a much less popular concept.  The appropriation of $12 million for a new airport may save the town.  For a while at least          

 

Manley is a place I never would have thought of living.  I am here to make Jerry happy, because I love him.  Its major charm for me it that there is nothing for me to do here but paint and write and read, so I don’t fritter time away gardening or on the net, or going to town because I forgot to get cumin for a recipe or chatting with friends.  I even talk less on the phone because the phone here is by satellite and makes an odd delay so you keep talking over the other person.  There is beauty here, but that beauty partly inheres in the vast sameness of birch and spruce forested hills as far as the eye can see.

 

I have met some interesting characters in Manley.  I have written about some of them.  The people I wrote about in the withdrawn post came here 5 years ago.  Some people have been here most of their lives.  Some of my commenters would have you believe that the inhabitants of interior Alaska have uniform characteristics of fiercely guarded privacy and pioneer independence. 

 

On the contrary, I find more diversity and eccentricity here than in most places.  Politics range from very liberal to wild man conservative.  There are dead beats and dreamers, people who manage to get along without ever working and people who think they will someday get rich finding gold.  There are retired academics. There’s a proselytizing evangelical Christian who spends half a year in India converting Hindus and worshiping the memory of Mother Theresa.  There are rich men.  There are local business men (my Jerry used to be one of those).  There are retired school teachers.  Some people are religious, some are atheists.  There are dog mushers and fishermen and trappers and hunters.  There are people who live on government grants and subsidies.  There are knitters and quilters and pilots.  People.  Mostly they live in peace, sometimes they quarrel.  In a pinch they help each other out.

 

As for privacy, my guess is that if anything of even minimal interest happens in this town, the news travels at warp speed.  There are feuding factions here, as in most small towns, and even those people who don’t take sides spend a fair bit of time discussing the maneuvers and thrusts of the combatants.  Gossip is the town recreation.

 

Native groups own most of the land around here, and they have a lot of effect on the community, not only because of the land they own, but also because in Alaska natives have access to government funds and programs that the non-organized people in the town don’t have.

 

Recently rifts developed between groups of natives who live here.  The faction which came out on top, because of superiority of numbers, has recently decreed that nobody, including the natives of the opposing group, may not set foot on Indian land.  This has resulted in grumbling and resentment in the community.  Basically it would mean that nobody could walk in the woods.  There’s no way to enforce this, so it is generally ignored.  Jerry and I walk every night in the woods behind our house.  But there are a lot of signs posted around the town warning everyone to stay off Indian land.  The signs are irritating, and especially distress those who are trying to encourage tourism here.

 

I hope the town prospers.  I hope the school stays open.  I hope the Roadhouse, which is a real treasure, keeps going.  The present owner wants to retire and since he also owns the store it is uncertain what will happen when he is gone.  My own future here is uncertain.   I am quite old and the trip from the lower 48 is strenuous.  I don’t think that at my age I could adjust to the winters, so year round living isn’t a possibility.  And, believe it or not, being a survivalist is expensive.  Jerry and I are thinking of moving on, trying something new.  We need to make the most of the years we have together.

 

Posted in Alaska, Day to day | Tagged | 9 Comments

The history of things

One day Jerry pointed to a shelf in the Manley house kitchen and asked, “Where did all these dishes come from?”

 

The question surprised me, because for the most part, Jerry regards household items as objects to use but not to notice.  He notices cars, trucks and small airplanes.

 

I explained the dishes.

 

Some baking dishes with storage lids belonged to Susy, his late wife.  A set of white plates with stylized floral design in aqua had been my mother’s everyday china.  The wooden salad bowl set I bought last year, on an impulse, at Sam’s Club in Fairbanks.  The cream and sugar set was one I have had for years, from when my kids were small.  The wine glasses, the ones etched with Christmas trees, were left in the house by the former owners, and the others I bought in Fairbanks to add to them. 

 

“What about the cups?” he asked. 

 

“That’s a funny thing,” I said.  “Some of them were here, left with the wine glasses.  The rest I brought from the island, and discovered that they match.  All plain white cups, the same shape.”

 

The table here in the kitchen Jerry made last year.  Its top is a simple piece of oak plywood which he finished with shiny urethane.  On it, in my line of vision, is a napkin dispenser that came from Jerry’s house in Friday Harbor (where he lived when I met him.)  It is one of those metal stand-up ones you might find in a diner.  It dispenses little wisps of useless paper napkin.  Jerry loves it.  I think it reminds him of his youth. 

 

He has it because Susy collected stuff dating from about 1900 to about 1950.  Everything in the Friday Harbor house was collected and coordinated to be like a museum of the early 20 th century.  Susy’s collecting was systematic, but she changed categories during the course of her life with Jerry, so that interior pictures of their houses showed widely different styles.  She always loved green.  One of her collecting categories on eBay was “green stuff.” 

 

The napkin dispenser was the only collected thing Jerry wanted to keep.  The rest he sold at the consignment shop of a friend.  Susy was a savvy collector and it yielded a lot of money.

 

Besides the napkin dispenser Jerry brought to our island house his physics books (from his days as an academic), a huge collection of tools (from his days as a builder), and more nuts, bolts, screws, hinges, knobs, and other hardware than could be used in a couple of lifetimes.  A building had to be erected to house all that.

 

I have 2 houses, both with out-buildings, one building lot; total acreage 7.

 

I thought about how all this stuff in our lives contain bits of the past.  The things in my house on the island are a kaleidoscope of my life.  There is absolutely no system to my accumulation. 

 

I have a lot of art on my walls.  In art school (I went to art school when I was 50) I resolved to support working artists and no longer put reproductions or posters on my walls. I have a mixture of pieces purchased from fellow art students, some pieces by me, some etchings done by my darling aunt, who was a much better artist than I, a watercolor my mother bought in China, and, of course, a couple of left over reproductions.

 

The furniture style in my house is random.  Some 19 th century side tables are from my grandmother.  A bookcase and a chair, both decorated with gargoyle heads, are from my uncle’s house where I lived as a child.  The sofa and chairs are from my mother, things she acquired early and late in her life in the United States (she came here in 1930 from New Zealand via England and died here 2006 at the age of 100). 

 

A copper table my father got in Turkey in 1938.  A brass table my mother got in Morocco in 1960.  A drop leaf desk I bought at a junk shop in Andover in 1964, and some other junk pieces I bought at an Atlanta flea market in 1984.  A teakwood sideboard I had made when I lived in Burma (1960), copied from a picture of a Danish modern piece.  And so on.  No theme, I just get attached to things and become accustomed to the fact that they don’t relate.

 

My only recent purchase is my dining room table.  It was made for me from alder wood by a craftsman on the island, Tom Lutz.  It is beautiful and opens up large enough to seat big portions of my family (not all, though; I have 5 children and 13 grandchildren).  I have promised it to my grandson when I die.  There are 10 solid mahogany dining chairs (made around 1900, they don’t match the table) from my uncle’s house.  I have been sitting in those chairs since I was 3 years old, and my feet still don’t reach the floor.  The chairs are really uncomfortable but they look nice.

 

There are ornaments, dishes, flatware, rugs.

 

Everything has a history.

 

I think of people who have lost everything, by war, flood, wind, tsunami or earthquake.  Losing things obliterates a big part of life.

 

In The Merchant of Venice, when Portia declares Shylock’s wealth and possessions forfeit but pardon’s his life, he says:

 

“Nay, take my life and all.

Pardon not that.  You take my house when you do take the prop

That doth sustain my house, you take my life

When you do take the means whereby I live”

 

An island acquaintance once told me that before she came to Lummi she had broken up with her partner, sold her house, and given away all her things except what she could pack in her car.  She said it was wonderfully liberating and she felt great.  I wondered.  She has settled now on the island, a couple of years later, and to me she looks happier.  She has bought a condo. 

 

I heard a radio interview with Jill Bolte Taylor, who wrote My Stroke of Insight.  Her stroke caused complete loss of memory of her past life.  In some ways she found this exhilarating, though of course terribly hard, because, with all her memories of the past, she lost all the baggage that goes with those memories.  She started over, and now has a satisfying new life.  On the other hand, she knows of other stroke victims who don’t find the experience of memory loss agreeable at all.  It depends on what part of the brain is affected.

 

I have been reading A Three Dog Life by Abigail Thomas.  Her husband had a brain injury which didn’t kill him but destroyed not only his memory of the past, but also his ability to build new memories.  She says she can’t imagine what kind of hell this must feel like for him.  She likens it, in a small way, to how she felt when she lost her pocketbook, with all the stuff in it, “. . . . the little bits and pieces of detritus, proof I’d been living my life.”

 

Possessions, encrusted with memories, can carry both pleasures and discomforts.  Things clutter life as they enrich it and compose it.  I have been a rolling stone, but I have gathered more than my share of moss.  I was born in Washington, D. C, grew up Andover, MA.  I lived in Fleetwood, NY, Evanston, IL, Tampa, FL, Wellington, NZ, Rangoon, Burma, Wilhelmshaven, Germany, Atlanta, GA, Bellingham and Lummi Island, WA, and Manley Hot Springs, AK.  I have spent time in my grandmother’s house in Italy, my aunt’s house in Peterborough, NH, my mother’s house in La Jolla, CA and my daughter’s house in an English village. I have driven many times across the United States and Canada; visited every state and most provinces.  I have traveled in Europe from Greece to Scandinavia, including through countries behind the Iron Curtain.  I have traveled in the Far East and Australia.

 

Everywhere I went I acquired stuff.  I came home from every trip with a suitcase heavier than the one I took.  And I have things bequeathed to my by loved ones and things “stored” at my house by my children.  There is too much.  I am 77 years old.  I must divest.

 

What to do?  I have started to give some valuable things to children and grandchildren.  Though that helps, I worry that they won’t take care of these precious things.  I warn them to guard against loss, theft and breakage.  I tell them to keep them in the family; promise not to sell or give away.  I haven’t relinquished control.  I keep telling myself, “That stuff isn’t yours anymore, Old Woman.”

 

But I can’t erase the memory.               

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Blog and painting blues, Fluffy senses danger and other non-events

We’ve had some quiet, good days.  Jerry is building new steps for the deck.  I have painted 2 more miniatures for Mah Jongg prizes.  Mah Jongg will be at my house this week.  One painting is a caribou with mountains in the background; the other is a snowshoe hare, back-lit, surrounded by bushes.  They are good.

 

A few days ago I had some down time.  I got the blog blues.  These days when I post on my blog or read other’s blogs and comment I am always in a hurry because I am at the Washeteria (the only place here where I can get on the internet) and Jerry is waiting.  I don’t have time to read all the blogs I follow, and my comments are not well thought out. I saw that a couple of people I admire had dropped me from their blog rolls.

 

I had been struggling with a post I was working on about subsistence living, because I found the topic complex and difficult to analyze.  It’s a hot topic in Alaska.  After many rewrites I posted it, hoping to stir up controversy.    At first I had only a couple of comments.  I was certainly grateful for those, but I wished for some argument.

 

Besides having the blog blues, I painted 2 miniatures that turned out to be terrible.  I had done a lovely little portrait of Bea’s cat sitting in a patch of wild roses.  It is a fat white cat with faint orange stripes and blue eyes.  I gave Bea the painting and she was genuinely pleased.  The next paintings I did for myself, and I suppose I had become over confident and careless.  Because I had no definite audience, I allowed myself to gloss over defects I knew were there. These miniatures are not even good enough to mount.

 

The poodles were looking terrible.  Like dirty black mops.  Their hair had overgrown their eyes so they couldn’t see and had become too long around their butts so they were beginning to be stinky.  The weather was too warm, and there were mosquitoes.

 

My mood turned when I found an unexpected, favorable comment on the subsistence living post from a writer whom I particularly admire.  She said that it was a topic she had never thought about, and I realized that most people in the lower 48 are unaware of this issue which is so contentious here in Alaska. 

 

Then I set to work on new paintings for Mah Jongg prizes, and I found that when I paint for a deadline and a known audience I work to a different standard.  For a while I will only paint for give-aways until I figure out some other means of quality control.

 

I clipped the dogs, and they look really cute.  We went to a bon-fire at the river landing the night before the ice went out, and they rolled in the dust.  They were dust grey, but happy.  I drank a marguetita; there were lots of kids playing in the mud, and many happy, dusty dogs watching for dropped hot dogs.

 

Now that the snow is gone we walk every day up the hill in back of the house through the beautiful white paper-birch forest.  The dogs love this walk, and Fluffy roams freely, looking for squirrels.  Daisy has to be on a leash because she doesn’t come when called if she would rather not. 

 

Last night we took our walk after dinner.  We passed several trail markers, 2 fallen birches and a pile of moose poop. Suddenly Fluffy ran back to us, stopped and began to growl.  I was scared.  I couldn’t see anything, but dogs sense things people don’t.  A bear behind a bush?

 

I said to Jerry, “Let’s go back.”

 

He said, “Maybe it’s just a moose, let’s go a bit further.”

 

He had the gun strapped to his belt, and I trust him, so we advanced carefully, Fluffy close by and growling, Daisy excited and interested, me nervous, and Jerry calm and confident. 

 

Nothing happened, and we walked all the way to the track where mining equipment is occasionally moved through the woods.  We walked up the track for a short distance, noting a few old moose tracks, until we came to some large mud puddles where we turned back.  On the way home, in the same place where he had growled on the way up, Fluffy stopped again.  He seemed to see something that excited him in the woods on the right.  All I could see was a dead birch with some dark patches of loose bark, with a bush beside it.

 

As we walked back down the hill I remembered that Fluffy has some neurotic antipathies to various cleaning tools; a broom here, a mop there.  He jumps back and growls when he sees them.  Sometimes he attacks them. Perhaps he saw something in the woods with broom-like qualities.  I guess I can’t depend on him to warn of bears, or even moose.

 

So the days are calm.  We had a good dinner (caribou) at Pam and Joee’s.  The weather is cooler.  Tomorrow is Mah Jongg, and on Friday we will go back to Fairbanks since we are out of lettuce and tomatoes and getting dangerously low on wine.  There I can read all my blogs and catch up with my web friends.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Alaska, Day to day | 9 Comments