Banjo Duel
Bobby squeals like a pig
Titles expected between 2015 and 2020
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/sep/03/new-jd-salinger-fiction-documentary
Hi readers.
When J.D. Salinger went stealth in the 1960s I didn’t think he could hold out. I snickered to myself and said he was in there writing books and one day he’d lose his determination and drop them on me like depth charges. I figured I could hold out longer than he could.
Eventually I began to think I had him figured wrong maybe. That he’d either burned all his stuff and wasn’t writing more, or that he was a Class A horses ass and just wasn’t going to let any of it go public until after he died. Then he died and for a while I was sure that now, now, now, here they’d come!
They didn’t, and when I turned 70 one of the things I had to reconcile myself to was that J.D. Salinger wasn’t gonna have anymore books during my lifetime. Decided he was indeed a Class A horses ass.
But yesterday Jeanne sent me the link above. Oh, yeah. Thanks a lot, J.D. Salinger. 2015. Hell, I went out to the RV, took some mega vitamins checked my blood pressure, then checked over the cats trying to figure out what we all need to do in order to survive until 2015.
I’m thinking it’s going to be a cliff-hanger, but we’ve got a middling good shot at lasting until the first one. I’m okay, the cats seem okay. I’ll gear up the cat-vitamins just to help us along, make sure they eat less hard food and more canned food, and we’ll take a run at it. Might even squeeze it all the way to the last one in 2020.
But if J.D. Salinger happens to only be pretending to be dead I’d love to say a few choice words to him.
Old Jules
Posted in 1960's, 2013, Adventure, Book Reviews, Books
Tagged Human Behavior, J.D. Salinger, miscellaneous, musings, personal, senior citizens, survival
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read.
I slipped over to Yahoo News when I got online this morning, wanted to find out whether the world went up in smoke during the night. Turns out all the news is piddly stuff mostly, nosy things allowing the non-celebrities spot checks into what life’s like for the sainted big named and big-breasted.
But something caught my eye about some 10 year old kid who found a mummy in the attic of the house his grandparents owned. Brought to mind what a great judge of character I pride myself being.
Early 2000s a friend of mine died near Belen, NM. He and I loved the same books about history, etc, and he used to joke he’d leave me that several walls of books we both cherished, when he died. And I’d tell him I would kill him if he left me those books to have to drag around and find someone else to leave them to.
His house was a museum of artifacts he’d found. We’d even done some artifact searching together. I think some of those mini-balls on one of the lead pictures on this blog were found when we were somewhere together.
So when I saw in the Albuquerque paper that he’d died I was careful not to contact anyone concerning the fact we knew one another. Not because I was afraid he’d left me those books, either.
Turned out he’d been robbing graves down in the neighborhood of where those mini-balls were found. Maybe graves elsewhere, old ones.
Back room of that house was jam-packed with human remains a century-or-more old. Bastard never showed them to me, all the time we were sitting around drinking coffee and talking about history.
Which I suppose is okay, because I put a high value on his friendship, enjoyed knowing him a lot. And sometimes even then I’d forget how old I was and have to decide spur-of-the-moment whether to open a can of whupass on someone.
In his case if I’d known what he had in that back room we might have had to pick our weapons out of his museum and go at it. I had a lot of mixed feelings swirling around inside me when the news came out and he had his brief day in the sun.
I’d have never suspected it of him. So he’s the exception proving the rule. I’ve got everyone else figured out.
Old Jules
Posted in 2000's, Adventure, America, History, Libraries, New Mexico, NM
Tagged History, Human Behavior, lifestyle, miscellaneous, musings, other, personal
An open letter to President Wossname, the guy in the White House
Backward South American countries gave right-wing death squads a bad name during the last half of the 20th Century. Naturally nobody wanted to be identified with anything backward Mexicans in Chile or Argentina did, so for a while the United States People In Power tried to find lower profile alternatives to accomplish the same goals.
But the truth is that throwing the baby out with the bathwater just narrows the options more than is required.
Henry Ford, the US mining industry, the US lumber industry, and during the Vietnam War, the US government all used right-wing death squads for the greater good of all. The industries would have had a lot more difficulties busting the unions if it hadn’t been for right-wing death squads. The US government couldn’t have killed off all the Black Panthers without them. The Vietnam War protests would have gone on and on ad infinitum if the Ohio National Guard’s right-wing death squad hadn’t opened up on those students at Ohio State and showed them what-for.
Bill Clinton and Janet Reno ran up a trial balloon at Waco, then again at Ruby Ridge in an attempt to restore the usefulness of right-wing death squads, clean up the image. But for reasons not fully understood, the practice was then dropped.
Hopefully this guy in there now will examine the benefits the US has reaped in the past through the use of right-wing death squads and see it’s time to bring it back for the greater good of all.
Right wing death squads aren’t a solution to every problem, as Bill and Hillary Clinton and Janet Reno demonstrated. But that only means they didn’t use the right tool for the right job.
Right-wing death squads worked admirably for Henry Ford and the mining and lumber industries. They worked great in South America, despite the bad press. And history proves they can work well again in the United States if properly applied.
Yours truly,
Old Jules
Posted in Adventure
Tagged Argentina, Bill Clinton, Black Panthers, Chile, death squads, Events, Henry Ford, History, Human Behavior, humor, Janet Reno, Kent State, Mexicans, miscellaneous, musings, other, politics, random, society, South America, thoughts, United States, Vietnam War
He’s not sending out right-wing death squads to places like Waco and Ruby Ridge to get them screaming and burning.
Well, okay. At least he’s not doing it inside the boundaries of the United States yet.
Old Jules
Posted in Adventure
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
The last post about creeping cowardice was going to have some of this as a part of it, but became too lengthy so I saved it with the thought I’ve got a while to live yet and might still work it in somewhere.
I believe one of the ways a person might attain valid perspectives about himself and his life events is through hindsight. Might be the only way. If a person can look back and seriously say to himself, “I should have done it,” probably he should have done it.
I can’t say that about those two mine shafts because I know even now I’d have done them if I could, and I recognize for whatever reason, I couldn’t. No ‘should have done it’ hidden in there.
But around 2002, 2003, there’s a should have done it I still occasionally experience a flash of regret about. Just until my insistence about not to regret anything in my life kicks in to trump it.
There’s an airstrip, or was an airstrip parallel to the old highway running between Belen, Los Lunas, and Isleta Pueblo I used to always swing into when I was in the area. A number of old airplanes to walk around and look at, wonder about, kick the tires of. The airstrip was gradually becoming inactive.
But at one end there was an old Cessna 140 tied down. I’d always go over and walk around, check it out. Sometimes sit inside it. Watch the tires gradually lose their air and grass get taller around it.
I asked the guys running a motorcycle shop that used to be an airplane related business about it. The 140 belonged to a man who lived in the neighborhood adjacent to the air park. He’d been experiencing advancing dementia … quit flying the plane a couple of years back. One of them heard he was in a nursing home, and that his wife had died. The house and plane were in an ambiguous ownership state as a result of complicated family matters.
When I heard that I began to realize that old plane needed to be taken around the patch a few times before it rotted to the ground. Or before it found its way into Trade-A-Plane and got sold to someone in Alabama to fly off or be hauled off.
I did a lot of planning about that plane. The battery was going to be dead, and maybe the fuel would have gone bad, but probably not. Avgas tends to last a long time in a tied down airplane. But there’s probably water condensed inside the tank if it wasn’t left full. Water under the gas that would be drained off before the engine started.
I borrowed an air bottle and brought the tire pressure up on one of the trips, checked the oil, got inside and tested the controls. Everything hunky dory. Just needed to draw the water off the fuel tanks. Fuel guages showed one full, one 3/4 tank. The 3/4 tank would be the one most likely to have water in the fuel tank.
I never made a conscious decision not to take that old bird around the patch, do a few touch and goes. My bud in Belen, Deano, died and other matters kept me from going into that area without a special trip. I suppose it just slipped my mind.
Which didn’t keep it from creeping back into my consciousness for years afterward, including now. I can tell you today, I should have done it. The way I know I should have is that I can’t think of a single reason why I shouldn’t have.
I’d be remembering that as my last pilot in command this lifetime, if I’d done it. And instead of a sense of loss when it sneaks into my head, I’d be remembering those touch and goes in a Cessna 140.
Old Jules
Posted in 2000's, Adventure, New Mexico, NM, Senior Citizens, Transportation
Tagged airplanes, aviation, Cessna 140, culture, History, Human Behavior, humor, Life, lifestyle, musings, New Mexico, personal, philosophy, senior citizens, society, sociology
Good morning readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
I’ve been noticing something in myself over the years that I suspect is fairly widespread, but doesn’t get discussed much. I have an idea it’s a sensitive subject with older men. I first noticed it in myself with an unexpected, irrational difficulty breathing and something akin to panic in situations I wouldn’t have been bothered by in the past.
I’ve done a little spelunking, gone into more abandoned mines than I could count and always got a thrill, a surge of enjoyment doing it. But late in the 1990s Mel and I were looking over a couple of mine shafts from the 1800s, one at the ruins of Golden, New Mexico and another near Magdalena. The first was the vertical shaft at Golden.
We carried all the right equipment up there, went prepared to go down the shaft 100 feet without any particular risk. Mel was troubled by claustrophobia he’d acquired going into some tunnels in Vietnam, so I was elected to go down that shaft to collect some samples.
But as I lowered myself down that shaft I hadn’t descended thirty feet before all I wanted was to get the hell out of there. I couldn’t breathe. The prospect of going deeper into that hole quickly became a non-option. I stayed on a ledge of rock trying to calm myself and get control enough to go deeper, but after a while it was obvious this was no longer a pleasure trip.
Mel taunted and heckled me about it the entire remainder of the jaunt, and I thought about it constantly, trying to understand what had happened. Completely unlike anything I’d ever experienced.
There’s another vertical shaft near Magdalena we’d both fallen in love with and I definitely was determined to go down it. I was sure I’d be able to if I worked and thought about what had happened at Golden enough. But a couple of months later the attempt resulted in an identical failure.
It was easy not to think about it during the years afterward, and I didn’t. But a while back I found I experienced something too similar to be much different when I was working on the Toyota RV, crawling around under it. Same thing, near panic, difficulty breathing, an irrational need just to get the hell out from under there.
I’ve talked about this with some other old guys lately and have been surprised by their admissions they’ve experienced exactly the same thing, mainly in tight spaces. When I described it they knew exactly what I was talking about, and they’d also never experienced anything akin to it when they were younger.
I don’t know what’s going on with all this, but seems to me if anyone has any guts anymore it ought to be old men. This doesn’t bode well at all.
Old Jules
Posted in Adventure
Tagged environment, Human Behavior, humor, Life, lifestyle, Nature, philosophy, psychology, senior citizens, survival
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read.
During the hardest, leanest times of my life, shortly after Y2K, I used to visit with the Korean guy who owned the trashed out motel across the parking lot from the Chinese joint my one-room apartment was situated behind. [I mentioned that motel before because one of the scenes from the movie 21 Grams was filmed there.]
Kim, the old Korean guy used to come over and we’d drink coffee and talk about Korean places we both knew. He’d stare around him and say, “Man, you are POOR!”
Me: I ain’t poor.
Kim: This is America! You don’t have to live this way.
I did odd jobs of handyman work for Kim to make a little cash sometimes, so I didn’t boot him out on his ass, calling me poor. And one day Kim offered me a proposition.
Kim told me there were wealthy families in Korea who had daughters they’d love to see become US citizens. Said they’d pay a man thousands of dollars for marrying one of them, staying married long enough to get her papers completed, then divorce.
He made it clear this would be strictly a business proposition. No kissee kissee fickycick in the deal. Cash and carry all the way.
Kim offered to put me in touch with some Korean families who were in the market for that kind of work. I thought about it long and hard, but one thing led to another and I never did it.
But I was telling Jeanne about it on the phone, just remembering, a while back and it came to me. I’m betting there’s a lot more of that nowadays than there was then, and that the price is sky high. I’d bet there are Japanese who’d pay out the wazoo to get a piece of their gene pool somewhere east of the Mississippi river these days. Not to mention rich Chinamen, Koreans, Malasians, hell, who knows. Maybe even Arabs.
Hell, I’m thinking if times ever get really hard I’ll trim my mustache, polish my boots and go after some of that easy money if the price is right. The world’s full of pest holes I’ll bet rich wealthy people with Swiss bank accounts would love to get their daughters out of.
Wonder if old Kim’s still owner of that motel.
Old Jules
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
Tom, the retired USAF colonel who occupied the office next to me in the bomb shelter of the old National Guard HQ in Santa Fe, NM, should have known a lot about radioactivity. He spent the entire Cuban Missile Crisis camped under the wing of his B-47 bomber. Had all kinds of tales about the flight maneuvers a pilot had to perform to drop a hydrogen bomb and come away in one piece.
The New Mexico Emergency Planning and Management Bureau [EMPAC] was all housed in that bomb shelter. Most of the section chiefs were retired colonels, except my humble self, and Louis, head of Radiation Control. When nothing was going on there’d always be a few of us gathered in one office or another telling and listening to interesting experiences in our varied pasts.
So when Tom found his travel schedule was going to coincide with the one-day-per-year the Trinity Site where the first atomic bomb was detonated allowed visitors, we all envied him. He was gone a week travelling all over the State, and a few days after he returned several of us gathered in his office to hear all about it.
Naturally there’d been a nice dog and pony show at an old ranch house from the time a mile or so away, now converted to oversight center. Then, off to ground zero.
Tom described how it was all bare sand and soil, how they’d scraped away all the green glass that used to cover the spot. How visitors were warned not to pick up any of that green glass if they should find a piece.
So when his glance downward showed him a piece of that green glass peeking out of the sand near his foot, of course he had to tie his shoe. Slipped it into his pocket. Gave us all a sly smile when he pulled it out and held it in his palm.
Wow! A piece of green glass from the first nuclear detonation on earth! We all wanted to hold it. Passed it around, all except Louis. Our Rad Control section head. He stepped back a pace when his turn came to hold it.
“I’d like to put an instrument on that.” Louis had access to plenty of instruments, had more than a thousand of them spotted all over New Mexico. Part of the mission of his section was going around changing the batteries on those Geiger Counters regularly.
He was out the door and back while the rest of us waited in mild curiosity. The glass was back on Tom’s desk and Louis clicked the power switch. Didn’t actually have to get too near with the probe to peg the needle. Didn’t have to put on the headset to hear the buzz. We all heard it.
Louis had a straight shot at the doorway and he was first out. Followed closely by everyone but Tom. He just sat staring at that piece of green glass. Probably wondering what the hell to do with it.
I’ve always wanted to visit the Trinity Site, but I never got around to it. Even when I was living several years just up the road from it.
Old Jules
Posted in 1940's, 1990's, Adventure, America, Education, Emergency Preparedness, Gambling, Government, History, Human Behavior, Military, New Mexico, NM, Science
Tagged atomic bomb, civil defense, culture, Education, geiger counter, Human Behavior, humor, Manhattan Project, Nature, nuclear, nuclear weapon, psychology, radiation, radioactivity, science, society, sociology, technology, trinity site
Hi readers. I’m reblogging this because the original writing of it was a direct consequence of the events described in the previous post. J
I wrote this when I lived in Socorro, New Mexico, but I’d guess it’s as timely and germane today as it was then.
It’s sad, but they have to migrate: there’s no good water in the Rio Grande anymore. It’s all sewage passed downstream from Albuquerque and other towns.
This was almost home to them. Their ancestors arrived with the first cattle drives from Texas in the 1880s. But finally they’ve had enough. Lemming-like they’ve decided as one to return home, Lone Star Ticks to the Lone Star State, same as those invading Confederate Texas humans had to finally stagger and stumble home when things took a turn for the worst..
This far south they’ve just begun to gather; just started to come out from under the grassleaves, the treebark, stragglers still coming out of the brush. The main migration gathering is further north in the Isleta lands…
View original post 722 more words
Posted in 1990's, Adventure, America, Animals, Gambling, Government, Human Behavior, Nature, Police, Texas
Tagged culture, Education, environment, humor, immigration, Life, lifestyle, lone star ticks, Nature, New Mexico, rio grande, seed ticks, survival