A flash of broken Mirrors

Wednesday afternoon I was in city centre doing a quick walkabout to stretch my legs.  As I sauntered past the white collar littered promenade at lunchtime, a crowd of suits sped past me.  One of them pushed me and my camera gear up against a brick building facade.

Normally, I would have brushed him off as an eejit and went on my way.  But, I had something eating at my gut, so this little incident sent me slightly over the edge.  I have nothing against people in suits.  I have a lot of suits.  I enjoy looking professional, but being that I’m a country boy, I am much more comfortable in denims and a t-shirt.

“What is your problem?” 

He turned around, looked at me, whispered something to a cohort, laughed, and continued on his way.

Just the mere mannerisms and holier than though attitude infuriated me further, so I bit my bottom lip and lectured, “Between me and my family, we pay over a ****** ******* dollars to this state alone every year, so as long as I’m following the laws and mores  of our wee society, I’ll walk where, when, and how I want…I’d be more careful of who I knock over, if I were you”.

“Oh Yeah?”  He enquired whilst cockily crossing his arms and snickering with his twenty something pals.

“Yeah”, I boldly stated.

“Who’s your father then, tough guy?”

““*** Davis.”

“The *** Davis?”

“The one and only”, I answered whilst sighing.

“You’re kidding me, right?”  He jokingly asked whilst destroying a piece of gum.

“No.”

“*** Davis has no son…he has three girls.  I know him.  My firm, *********, does work for him”, he laughingly hollered as a crowd gathered.

“He has six children, whether you know it or not”, I muttered while turning to walk away.

“If I were you, I’d be more careful about lying to make yourself feel big", the chump yelled whilst pushing his comrades forward.

The English lady from the coffee house that I was standing in front of patted me on the back and told me not to mind him.  I had a café noir fuelled walk and went home.

 

Later that night, I was sitting here at my desk fuming about what the bloke said.  As hard as it was to swallow, it was almost the truth.  I had not talked to him in months.  We had a wee bit of a falling out over a wee money issue.  I had called his phone on numerous occasions and left messages trying to rectify the situation, but to no avail.

I went to the kitchen cupboards to fetch some Earl Grey and there peering out of the dark recess was a brand new bottle of a precious beverage from Ireland.  I grabbed one of my grandfathers favourite glasses and the green bottle.  Humour flowed from a TV show I rarely miss loosely based on the FDNY as well as the bottle. 

A crack of thunder rattled the windows, as I searched the darkness for the incoming light show.  The rain had lightly been pelting against the office window all night.  While trying to grab a ciggy and a light, I stumbled a bit not realising how much I had consumed.

I stood at the back door and gazed out into the blackness of the garden.  While smoking that one ciggy, a thought popped into my bevvied head.  So, I grabbed my keys and phone and headed out the door. 

I ran from one wet street to another until I approached the main thoroughfare.  Soaked from head to toe, I stopped and gawped at the quarter moon peering through a gap in the heavy mist.  I gazed at the moon, while standing on that sidewalk, enquiring as to why things are the way they are.  Then, a suburban whizzed by covering me in road muck.

Reflecting Footpath

So, I decided to run to the 24hr bistro, encountering heavy raindrop laden puddles, like broken mirrors illuminated by lightning strikes along my path.  When I got to the bistro, one of the waitresses that I know offered me a towel to dry off and brought me a cup of coffee.  She asked if I was alright, and of course, I said I was fine.  She knew better because I never show up in the middle of the night.  She told me to call Red, an off and on again petite amie.

12:30AM  Ring…ring…ring…ring

“Hello”, she whispered.

“Hey”, I hollered in a half inebriated manner.

“What time is it?”  She pleaded as the ruffling of covers and feathers could be heard over the phone.

“It’s 12:30.  I’m at the bistro.  I need you to pick me up so we can talk.”

“Are you kiddin’ me?”  She enquired with a bit of disdain in her tone.

“No.”

“Are you drunk?”

“Only slightly”, I uttered whilst trying not to laugh.

Click

I reasoned that she was mad at me for waking her up, so I finished my coffee.  The kind waitress offered to call me a cab, but I benignantly refused.  I took my time walking home.  The thunderous storm had passed and a murkiness thick enough to cut through with one’s body had settled in its place. 

It was around 1:30 in the morning, when I turned onto my street.  I sneakingly walked past the other houses, hoping not to wake my ever alert grandmother that lives two houses down. 

By the time I approached my front yard, the audaciousness and silliness had wavered.  I discovered a glint of something on my front stoop.  Scared, I drew closer.  A figure came into view through the vapours.  I got closer and realised it was…

It was her.  She walked up to me shivering, her countenance filled with rage and worry.

Slap

“Don’t you ever scare me like that again”, she whispered in my ear.

I had never been prouder than at that moment.  It was not my intention to worry her or anyone else, but it was nice to know that she cares.

For Her:

Freckles is a savage word.

How about dapples of lust,

Honey sisters,

Blunders of the Sun,

Love in lace,

Damsel’s shivers,

Silent baubles,

Caramel kisses,

Blotch of arcs,

Or a serene flock?

Echinacea Purpurea (Eastern Purple Coneflower)

To Pops:  Happy Fathers Day, dude!  You’ll always be my pops, and I hope to make you proud one day.  A little bit of time is all I’m asking for.

P.S.:  Drinking and smoking are not things that I condone or would suggest that anyone start.  I don’t have an addictive personality, so I can get away with the occasional drink or gasper.

P.P.S.:  Most of us have father issues in one form or another.  Our fathers are our fathers no matter what.  Tis best to love them, because we never know when we or them may not wake up one morning. 

Honour thy Father and thy Mother.

Thanks Gramps

As the sound of splintering white oak limbs reverberated across the large ravine, I thought of my grandfather.  If it were not for him, I wouldn’t have known what to use to shelter myself from the horrendous rainstorm that blew out of nowhere deep in the wilderness trails of Caesar’s Head State Park.  I would not have known how to get safe drinking water, when my water reserves ran out.  And, I certainly would not know how to track, kill, and clean deer or bears, if such an extreme were necessary.

Saturday morning I decided to go hiking by me self.  It is irritating when someone offers to join me, yet he or she only has a two or three hour window in which to hike.  That is utterly useless.  When I go hiking, I hike for at least four hours.  I go on wild walkabouts simply for the journey.  The constantly changing elevation and terrain is better than any tread climber.  The scenery isn’t bad either. 

On a usual trip, I see snakes (this time too), wild boars, bears, wildflowers, and of course, huge squirrels.  It is indeed a treat to hike through the mountainous terrain that is my home. 

Grandfather and I spent every summer of my youth camping, fishing, and hiking.  He taught me everything I know about how to survive in the wild.  He spent ages teaching me which wild berries are edible along with how to clean animals.  I didn’t always enjoy it, but sitting here today, I am very grateful that he passed it on to me. 

His parents died in a car wreck, when he was seven.  His mothers family on the Cherokee reservation took him in and raised him ‘til he was thirteen.  The elders of the tribe treated him as one of their own, even though his father was ‘white’.  He was taught all of the traditions that were still being passed down through the generations at that time.  Sadly, most of these teachings are fading away with the memory of the trail of tears

Gramps was on his on from his teens until he met my grandmother at a dance in 1949.  They were head over heels for each other from that point forward and married in ‘50.  Both had jet black hair yet managed to have three blonde haired, blue-eyed children. 

Everyone called him Abe, because he was a spitting image of Abraham Lincoln.  I don’t know if he fashioned his beard like Lincoln’s on purpose, but he definitely got a kick out of the remarks.  At 6’5”, he had the stature of a giant and the posture of a titan.  Throughout his life, he had five heart attacks.  I never heard the man whine or whimper once in the seventeen years that I knew him. 

When I was a wee lad, he would take me bowling.  This happened quite frequently, since I was sick a lot and unable to go to school.  On one occasion, a drunk started mocking me because of the way I talked.  He made the mistake of calling me retarded.  Gramps hit him so hard and fast that the man slid halfway down the alley.

He taught me a lot about life, but the most important one of all was to keep going down that wacky, and sometimes wicked, trail we call life no matter how arduous it may become.  So, I kept going down that lengthy trail soaked from head to toe and already exhausted.  Five miles later, a few blisters and bruises, and wrecked knees I emerged victoriously.  Fifteen miles through some of the toughest mountainous terrain the Southern United States can provide. 

Survivor Tip:  If you are in need of water and it happens to be raining (lucky you/me), simply ring out your clothes.  I got enough water out of my t-shirt and a few leaves to almost fill up the water bottle.  I could have used water from the rivers and streams that surround the trails, but I would have had to set up camp, start a fire, and boil the water.  Because of pollution and disease, the water in the rivers and streams is not safe to drink unless boiled.  You’re not supposed to drink from rivers right after it rains anyway due to the animal faeces that washes off the banks. 

How ‘bout some pictures? 

wildflowers (by JeffersonDavis) Riverbed Crossing (by JeffersonDavis) Woodland Trail (by JeffersonDavis) thicket (by JeffersonDavis) Raven Descent (by JeffersonDavis) Craggy Falls (by JeffersonDavis) jittery Lensman (by JeffersonDavis) Foamy Pool (by JeffersonDavis)

Return to Green 2009

Many apologies for the lack of post this week.  My family had a bit of a crisis.  Everyone still has their fingers and toes so no worries.  Saturday will be a grand and somewhat green start to a brilliant weekend.

I’ll be at Return to Green distilling a days worth of events into fifty to a hundred memorable photos.  We are supposed to be blessed with a blue sky, bibulous smiles, and a green river.

This wee festival is my hometowns early celebration of Saint Patrick’s Day.

I’ll update the post with a proper description and pictures Saturday evening.

UPDATE:  I made a bit of a mess of things with the dates.  The festival is tomorrow, Sunday, the 8th day of the third month of 2009.  Ooopppssss.   :)

return_to_green_goofy_mutt (by JeffersonDavis)

Wintry Cerulean Moonbeams

We were warned on Friday that we would get up to a foot of snow Sunday evening.  I laughed at the very thought of it.  Tis not very common for us, the southern US, to get snow in March.  However, I remember it snowing as late as Easter, when I was a lad.  In fact, I remember being snowed in, in the middle of March on my birthday.  Hint!  That year, we had a blizzard of epic proportions.  I vividly remember wading waist deep through it and disappearing into a sea of white fluff. 

truck (by JeffersonDavis)

The continuous pelting of raindrops over the past week turned my yard into a mud hole.  About 5:00PM yesterday, sleet began mixing in amongst the droplets of frigid rain.  Only minutes later, everything around me was covered in a light dusting of snow.  It started out as tiny bits of snow and ice mixed together and progressed into cascade of powdery flakes. 

Icy Needles (by JeffersonDavis)

There’s nothing I like better than a good blizzard.  It purifies the air and kills off all of the nasty critters that I can’t stand anyway.  I got out and played in the snow, capturing moments in time along the way.  I ended up at my Uncle’s house.  He was going on about not being able to watch the telly because of snow buildup on the roof.  Pardon the pun, Uncle.  :)

Heavy Limbs (by JeffersonDavis)

So, we wrapped up and headed out to knock the snowfall off the Dish.  The moment we got the signal back, the power went out.  I speedily called the utility company and was told that the power would promptly return at 5:00PM Monday.  This made me irate, so I told the kind lady that I had two grandmother’s that could not be without power due to the freezing temperatures.  She dutifully told me that my grandmothers and about a half million more would have to find somewhere to stay overnight. 

Winter's Breath (by JeffersonDavis)

I hastened the delivery of heaters to me nannas and then tried to figure out what to do about moi.  After all, I needed to stay warm as well.  My Uncle offered me a couch in his heated and powered RV, so I took him up on it. 

March (by JeffersonDavis)

We woke up at four this morning to find the power on.  Those poor fellas that get paid $75 an hour must have worked all night long.  Some neighbourhoods are still without power.  I’m very thankful to be sitting in this cozy house rambling about nothing.

About 4:30AM, I treaded across the snow laden range that separates our houses.  I’ve walked through that area at all times of the night and day and never had a worry except for the crack heads two streets over.  This morning it was eerie. 

The ever wise moon casted sombre cerulean moonbeams across the landscape leaving crisp lines in the icy abyss.  I, in my own abysmal cerebrations, glanced up to discover the moons half smirk and laughed.  Quietly, I walked across the plain leaving a stamp of myself behind.  As I approached the house, the snow ceased thus did I.  Perhaps it was nature itself trying to tell me to stop and look.  I heard frozen limbs creak as clumps of snow fell from the heavens. 

A wee squirrel leapt from a low limb onto the plush snow, twitched his head and tail in a synchronous motion back and forth.  He struggled across the snowy woodland behind my residence, and made his way to one of the evergreen trees and began hastily digging for treasure.  I knelt there for a few minutes and watched the gnawer dig with his little paws.  I finally gave up and went inside. 

Frost Morning (by JeffersonDavis)

A few minutes ago I went outside and he had dug a bunch of holes in the snowpack.  One extremely important principal we can learn from nature, is to never ever give up.  If you can’t find your treasure in one location, try somewhere else until you find it.  Squirrels are brilliant little critters, aren’t they?  :)

Flirtatious Dufuss

The past week overflowed with merriment.  It all started on the previous Monday.  I can’t explain it but life is grand.  I’m finally over the bloody (literally) cold.  The future is looking bright for once in a long while. 

I’ve spent blisteringly cold evenings walking hand in hand with a lady that I can’t go into detail about at the moment.  I don’t want to ruin it!  I’m keeping my mouth shut.  I’ve learned a lot about myself through this newfound friendship.  Honesty and humility are good characteristics according to some women. 

It all started with me being a blubbery nervous dufuss.

“Would kind so be to refill get me, please?”

She laughed and asked my name. 

“Davis, Jefferson, S****.”

We both laughed and continued with me organising my thoughts properly.

Also, it snowed this morning for about an hour.  I was out in it helping a guy install a satellite system. 

That’s all for today.  I am working on a dreamy post for tomorrow.

Pretty Place Cross (by JeffersonDavis)