In a Circle they met sold today for $65 plus tax. I had planned on selling it for $97 since I did valued the frame higher than the print. But, the fellow said I told him $49, which I meant if it was in a black frame, so we compromised. Frame cost me nothing anyhow, since it was copped from sister.
Anyway, printed another to take down. Nice just to sell anything and make up for the rental and club dues.
Yet to see commission check though from Mike. Must mention it tonight.
In a circle they met seems to be about the only thing I can sell lately. Oh well, at least something is selling.
Took another poem down from John Clare facebook page and re-posted it at Poetry of Image blog. Miffs me to no end to post stuff only to have it ignored. I think it is all in the friend mix. Most are probably out working and aren't always checking Facebook like I am. Not all as addicted.
Tonight is the Spring Reception at the college. I do not hold out much hope of winning. I do think the ladies hands sewing in black and white will win overall or first in photography.
Friday, February 28, 2014
Thursday, February 27, 2014
The Azalea Gala
It did not look as if the sunset was going to appear. Most of the late afternoon was gray overcast. I was inside and as I looked out the back door, noticed a redder sky opposite the sun. I thought that unusual. I went out back with the Canon S100 and took several shots, nothing of note. Turning, I was amazed. Over the pool and house a brilliant red appeared seemingly from the gray suddenly. I took a few shots and rushed inside, telling Melanie on my way to the front yard to look at the spectacular sunset. I went out to the azalea's by the road and tried to get a good shot balancing the flash with the sky. Usually, I over-expose the flowers. I got two correct before the brilliant sky faded. It came quickly and was over as fast.
The photograph was then placed on Facebook without little if any work. The comments were slow to come. Johnny Bullard was most kind, saying I need to make note cards and enlarge it. And yet, as nice a shot as it turned out, it has so far come no where near the shot of 170th Avenue lane. It depends greatly on who shares and sees. Friends of friends see and it grows. I cannot emphasize this enough to my friends.
The photograph was then placed on Facebook without little if any work. The comments were slow to come. Johnny Bullard was most kind, saying I need to make note cards and enlarge it. And yet, as nice a shot as it turned out, it has so far come no where near the shot of 170th Avenue lane. It depends greatly on who shares and sees. Friends of friends see and it grows. I cannot emphasize this enough to my friends.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
of wind and rain
And so Melanie types out her resume, while Frank, the Vietnam vet pool man puts a new mother board in the salt generator. Needs 40 pounds of salt, yellow stuff and chlorine. Always in need of something, that pool. Do not buy a home with a pool. You will grow old and tired of its demands.
It is eternally interesting to me the things that reverberate. The photograph of 170th Avenue was not particularly a grand shot. It was not even the main reason I told Gerald suddenly to stop! It was the fruit upon the Japanese plum beside the old oak that did. I offered to pick some, but they said it was on private property. I said, looks to me no one even lives there. And so, in the getting back in, I took this and two other lane shots. And that is the way it went. The three occupants in a particular hurry to get somewhere, with me, not. But, as I posted already, I resigned myself to the speed and tried to snap as we flew past places I once walked upon slowly.
And we never made it to the cemetery, detouring instead left at the intersection of the trees to go up toward Blue Grotto. I told Melanie that next time we come, it probably will be just me coming. No one else could stand my slow driving.
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
First Impression
I always find it a bit disconcerting when first presenting work to the volunteers for entry and processing. It is usually a good indicator of how the work will do, as invariably, they cannot contain their opinion as to what they think of the work. An awkward silence and you know you are sunk. A oh my and wow and still you feel you are sunk. It is a tough gauntlet to pass through. I prefer to have everything completed when I arrive so all I have to do is pass it to them and run. I prefer not to know the prints I have selected are again the wrong choice.
Usually the works we choose in some way, on some level spoke to us. We did not select them out of others speaking. Thus, when others speak of our personal choice, it is as if they are speaking of us personally. I know this is taking a print to too personal a level, but that is the way it is.
Well, we shall know come this Friday night when the two judges decide if it spoke to them.
Usually the works we choose in some way, on some level spoke to us. We did not select them out of others speaking. Thus, when others speak of our personal choice, it is as if they are speaking of us personally. I know this is taking a print to too personal a level, but that is the way it is.
Well, we shall know come this Friday night when the two judges decide if it spoke to them.
Curves Converge
Taken from the dock overlooking Kings Bay at Crystal River. The lady was waiting for the next boat to load so she and boyfriend, husband, lover or whoever could load their 150hp watercraft. The curves from both naturally caught my eye, the exact intended purpose of the designer of such powerful craft, women and boat.
Today I take the three prints to the College for the show this Friday, to hopefully win something. Sam Reed, the volunteer in charge of hanging wants me on hand for awhile to take photographs of the volunteers. Said I would. Then, from one until five will be at the gallery volunteering.
The blow out from Olustee really cooled my interest in volunteering, with seven of my works messed up.
Maybe today will re-kindle some interest. Dale Tompkins put me on a Camera Club page I assume is part of his church. They plan to meet periodically and go on outings and such. I assume I will be the senior member of said group. Oh well, young ideas always good to be around. Lord knows we get the extreme opposite at the Art League.
BTW, the third print decided upon was Catscape, the distorted picture of Zoe our cat upside down.
And...my how we are growing...up to 15 followers. At this rate I will have to start watching what I say. No more, mamma took a bath today and I am about to shoot the next door neighbor's.....
Today I take the three prints to the College for the show this Friday, to hopefully win something. Sam Reed, the volunteer in charge of hanging wants me on hand for awhile to take photographs of the volunteers. Said I would. Then, from one until five will be at the gallery volunteering.
The blow out from Olustee really cooled my interest in volunteering, with seven of my works messed up.
Maybe today will re-kindle some interest. Dale Tompkins put me on a Camera Club page I assume is part of his church. They plan to meet periodically and go on outings and such. I assume I will be the senior member of said group. Oh well, young ideas always good to be around. Lord knows we get the extreme opposite at the Art League.
BTW, the third print decided upon was Catscape, the distorted picture of Zoe our cat upside down.
And...my how we are growing...up to 15 followers. At this rate I will have to start watching what I say. No more, mamma took a bath today and I am about to shoot the next door neighbor's.....
Monday, February 24, 2014
Take it quickly
We had just finished eating an early supper at Charlies seafood in Crystal River. I was still full from the large pork and fries lunch at Frogs in Williston. Everyone else had eaten small Frogs BBQ. At Charlies I had the catfish, Gerald and Melanie the Maui Maui and Billie Earl the fried mullet. We walked out to the dock and as I approached, I had the little Canon S100 camera out and ready in P mode with a minus one exposure compensation. I had seen this lady sitting by her boat and knew immediately it would make a good composition between the two palms. The lady never saw me take the only shot I was able to get before she noticed us walking up and changed position totally, getting up to load the boat from Kings Bay.
Point is, had I not been scanning ahead, composing as I walked along mentally, approached quietly and quickly, camera out and ready, I would have missed the shot. It is satisfying when things fall into place ever so often quickly.
Point is, had I not been scanning ahead, composing as I walked along mentally, approached quietly and quickly, camera out and ready, I would have missed the shot. It is satisfying when things fall into place ever so often quickly.
Do you think you can tell?
Tomorrow is the entry day, the day to take the art work to the Gateway College Performing Arts Center to enter in the Spring Art League Show. Last year I missed the deadline by an hour. The year before that I got an honorable mention. Each entrant is allowed up to three works. Two I had chosen simply out of laziness and the fact I have no other 11x14's on hand. Suwannee Burning and In a circle they met. The third? Do you think you can tell what judges will like? I cannot. Do I go black and white, shock value, conservative and pretty? Perhaps the third will be something I do not usually do, perhaps the shadow selfie.
Intrusion of Illusion. Whatever it is, I went to Office Max and again came away with 80.00 in ink and paper. If time frames were not of essence, I swear the sending out for printing has to be less expensive. And I say that I want to move up to at least 16x20 and larger, with fancy frames and mats? No so fast cognoscenti.
Sam just called and he wants me to be on hand tomorrow around noon to take photographs for the club. I will likewise be at the gallery from 1-5 tomorrow. And around 1:30, Melanie is having an executive conference call. She feels tomorrow they will tell the people of the layoff. And we will definitely be printing 8x10 and 5x7's.
Intrusion of Illusion. Whatever it is, I went to Office Max and again came away with 80.00 in ink and paper. If time frames were not of essence, I swear the sending out for printing has to be less expensive. And I say that I want to move up to at least 16x20 and larger, with fancy frames and mats? No so fast cognoscenti.
Sam just called and he wants me to be on hand tomorrow around noon to take photographs for the club. I will likewise be at the gallery from 1-5 tomorrow. And around 1:30, Melanie is having an executive conference call. She feels tomorrow they will tell the people of the layoff. And we will definitely be printing 8x10 and 5x7's.
Who Shot Jackson?
by john clare stokes
When our evening sinks and we stand in the great assize,
to give an account of our earthly words and deeds,
stand not too proud, smug in the blood covering,
for the Great Judge has His own ways of revealing,
and when He asks. "Why shot ye Jackson?",
do not glibly say, "Why would you ask such a question?"
"Everyone knows it was the 18th Carolina volley,
upon the Plank Road on the night of May 2, 1863."
And the Master will continue his long, SMH stare,
"IT WAS YOU! YOU WERE THERE!"
Do not at this point, try and win the argument with God,
He simply wants to hear you say, "I was the one."
He knows you shot Jackson on February 22nd, on a Saturday,
He knows you never understood His speaking in mystery,
He knows you thought all your deeds were past history,
He knows you hadn't a clue that Jackson was a mutt,
He knows you hadn't a clue it was his master,
who took your bullet.
When our evening sinks and we stand in the great assize,
to give an account of our earthly words and deeds,
stand not too proud, smug in the blood covering,
for the Great Judge has His own ways of revealing,
and when He asks. "Why shot ye Jackson?",
do not glibly say, "Why would you ask such a question?"
"Everyone knows it was the 18th Carolina volley,
upon the Plank Road on the night of May 2, 1863."
And the Master will continue his long, SMH stare,
"IT WAS YOU! YOU WERE THERE!"
Do not at this point, try and win the argument with God,
He simply wants to hear you say, "I was the one."
He knows you shot Jackson on February 22nd, on a Saturday,
He knows you never understood His speaking in mystery,
He knows you thought all your deeds were past history,
He knows you hadn't a clue that Jackson was a mutt,
He knows you hadn't a clue it was his master,
who took your bullet.
It is finished
And so the ministry of Russell Taylor plays out in Lake City, forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the word in Lake City. The final sermon text was Acts 16:6-10. The Spirit suffering them not, Come over into Macedonia, to help us. Assuredly gathering that the Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto them.
We shall not re-tell the story of the journey from the panhandle back to the panhandle. Those who lived the journey know it all too well.
The Christ's Fellowship that Russell leaves met following the service in order to share that John Cleveland, the once Youth Pastor with Russell, after two weeks prayer, was led to remain in place with his youth group in Brooksville. Ken, Tony, Gary and Scott were appointed as a pastor search committee.
In my mindless messing with the camera last evening, the sermon was erased. Mercifully so, for Russell called upon me to offer the closing prayer. In my stumbling, bumbling tears and broken voice, I embarrassingly threw out some gibberish. But, those there know the journey all to well and understood I trust the difficulty in getting those words to flow.
The small fellowship is on the boat to regions unknown. The man who troubled the city is on his ship to Navarre. It remains to be seen if we land another babbler who will come and set forth strange gods, preaching unto Lake City Jesus and the resurrection.
We shall not re-tell the story of the journey from the panhandle back to the panhandle. Those who lived the journey know it all too well.
The Christ's Fellowship that Russell leaves met following the service in order to share that John Cleveland, the once Youth Pastor with Russell, after two weeks prayer, was led to remain in place with his youth group in Brooksville. Ken, Tony, Gary and Scott were appointed as a pastor search committee.
In my mindless messing with the camera last evening, the sermon was erased. Mercifully so, for Russell called upon me to offer the closing prayer. In my stumbling, bumbling tears and broken voice, I embarrassingly threw out some gibberish. But, those there know the journey all to well and understood I trust the difficulty in getting those words to flow.
The small fellowship is on the boat to regions unknown. The man who troubled the city is on his ship to Navarre. It remains to be seen if we land another babbler who will come and set forth strange gods, preaching unto Lake City Jesus and the resurrection.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Behold the Crunch
Tomorrow will be Russell and Christina's last Sunday at Christ Fellowship. They will soon be moving to the panhandle, to Navarre, to start a new church plant. Our prayers and heartfelt sorrow go with them, in the leaving of Jackson behind. I know that when we moved from our previous locations, we wanted to exhume our pets and bring them along as well. I told Christina on Facebook tonight that while I have attended many human funerals over the years, never have I cried so hard as over the graves of our beloved pets.
In a way, the death of Jackson, like the death of Stonewall Jackson, was a final blow that ultimately ended the war for the South. This is a metaphor for the final blow that Russell and Christina have endured while in Lake City. They have stood, like Jackson, as a Stonewall. We salute Russell and Christina and their family who will move to greener and friendlier pastures we pray. They need a respite from the battle. Grant it Lord.
Friday, February 21, 2014
Happy Sky
Oh Happy Sky, I awoke today
And Happy Flame and Hop
had gone away
Flame told me it would stop
All the dancing
And prancing around
the rusting swing
But we did not want it to end
Can you drift across the sea
Bring a happy word
to a certain little image of me
Tell him Happy Sky
That Flame
Hop
Wonder Pony
Bug
Rocky
JT
Zoe
Big Kitty
Even Carlotta
Is doing some really
big missing?
Thank you
Happy Sky
Sincerely,
Pappa
And Happy Flame and Hop
had gone away
Flame told me it would stop
All the dancing
And prancing around
the rusting swing
But we did not want it to end
Can you drift across the sea
Bring a happy word
to a certain little image of me
Tell him Happy Sky
That Flame
Hop
Wonder Pony
Bug
Rocky
JT
Zoe
Big Kitty
Even Carlotta
Is doing some really
big missing?
Thank you
Happy Sky
Sincerely,
Pappa
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Happy Flame and Hop
Once with happy flame
we would swing
and how he would sing
he had no last name
said, he didn't like things
with ends.
he had a friend named hop
and he could dance
he just wouldn't stop
and when happy flame
got the chance
he would ride ole hop
around the swing.
we would swing
and how he would sing
he had no last name
said, he didn't like things
with ends.
he had a friend named hop
and he could dance
he just wouldn't stop
and when happy flame
got the chance
he would ride ole hop
around the swing.
Warning Points
After an afternoon of hard labor and a shower to cleanse myself of the hard labor, I told Melanie, working away in the old converted bedroom of Jordon, later Meme, that I was heading to Alligator Lake for a bit. It was 3:30 and the park would close at 5:30. Arriving, the White Pelicans were near the point to my right off the trail about a quarter mile walk, so I briskly set out. By the time I arrived, they had already moved away from the point, probably because of the menacing Alligator sunning himself, enjoying the return of weather to his reptilian liking. With the long lens attached, I quietly made the change to a wider angle and moved in just a bit, not too much. I was able to get about six shots before he bolted. It was the first shot that I found the best composed. How often does that occur? On this second part of the infernal assessment test I took this evening, they said, do not spend much time on one question, go with the first thought. Well, on tests such as I was taking, I am not sure that would be too wise. But out in the field, it often is the keeper.
Final Acts
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Bombus upon Azalea
Spent the latter afternoon with the bumblebees and azaleas in the front yard. Used the tripod and flash on the cord. It was easier I found to pre-focus the lens and hold the flash off camera, watching for bombus. They dart about so quickly, keeping ones eye upon the viewfinder, you would never catch them coming. This way, I could see them coming and try to time it. One in twenty would be almost right. This was one. The really good one the bumblebee was at the very edge of the upper left frame on his way out. If I had captured him a millisecond sooner, he would have been at the edge of the petal, a nice profile.
I was resting after raking leaves all day in the front yard and restacking the split rails, raising them. I also did a myriad of smaller tasks in the near eighty degree day. I still have thirteen large leaf piles waiting to be drug to the back yard on the old trampoline bed.
Melanie and I still nervously await word on her employment and if a layoff is coming, which all feel will. I took a nearly two hour pre-test tonight as a step in trying to get back into retail management. I was so rusty on math, ratios and problem solving questions, I have little prospect of going very far, especially if I make it to an interview and they see my age(59). The twenty-year old managers will say to themselves, can a relic relate? No, but I have people skills dammit!
I was resting after raking leaves all day in the front yard and restacking the split rails, raising them. I also did a myriad of smaller tasks in the near eighty degree day. I still have thirteen large leaf piles waiting to be drug to the back yard on the old trampoline bed.
Melanie and I still nervously await word on her employment and if a layoff is coming, which all feel will. I took a nearly two hour pre-test tonight as a step in trying to get back into retail management. I was so rusty on math, ratios and problem solving questions, I have little prospect of going very far, especially if I make it to an interview and they see my age(59). The twenty-year old managers will say to themselves, can a relic relate? No, but I have people skills dammit!
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Portraits of Olustee
| General Jesse and aid |
| John Segale |
| United Vices |
| black eye |
| Kezia Dubi |
| Kezia Dubli and husband |
| friend of Straggler |
| friend of Straggler Straggler has missed the last two Olustee's. He is famed for his camping under stars, no tent, shoes with holes, all askew and rough. |
| Kimberly Johnson |
| mothers lament |
| Mary Stanser |
| grandmother turns away for Federal encroachment |
| John Segale |
| John Chovis |
| Scott Baumgarner |
| Chaplin Joey Young |
| Chad White |
| John Chovis |
| Friend of Straggler |
| John Chovis |
| John Segale |
| John Segale |
| Tierney Dubi and Zac her son, as boys were often dressed in the period as girls. |
Separation of Shadow Selfie
I sent this selfie into the art website hyperallergic today. I doubt seriously they post it, nevertheless.
I wrote the following:
The struggle always ensues in the attempt to compose a selfie as shadow always competes with image. Shadow with latent shyness draws from the light, image gravitates toward the light. I engage the services of compliant hand to pull shadow kicking into the light.
BA Art Florida Southern
I reside in Lake City as a photographer.
This quiet Monday Melanie works away, possibly her last week, probably since her company she works for has lost 90% of a contract. She has filled out some applications, one 24 pages long! I have been outside all afternoon raking the leaves in the backyard and piling them against Paul's side. The two Rhode Island Red Hens follow me about scratching for insects.
I am in a continual state of heaviness over Nathaniel and the one year since seeing him coming up. My anger toward Landon and Amber has remained as strong, not easing, if anything, growing with time.
I see them over there in ignorant bliss with one another, no telling what poor Nathaniel is having to cope with.
We cannot be there for him. Is greatly saddens me. He got such nurturing from us. Even Jordon commented how Landon just wasn't engaged as a father, if anything, treating Nathaniel as a rival, bullying him at times, making him cry by aggravating him. No grandpa to rescue him. I trust Landon in all this father time he has created is putting it to good use, and not just being absorbed in himself and Amber, as they were while here.
Harsh. But true. Anger tempers and bitters the words.
I wrote the following:
The struggle always ensues in the attempt to compose a selfie as shadow always competes with image. Shadow with latent shyness draws from the light, image gravitates toward the light. I engage the services of compliant hand to pull shadow kicking into the light.
BA Art Florida Southern
I reside in Lake City as a photographer.
This quiet Monday Melanie works away, possibly her last week, probably since her company she works for has lost 90% of a contract. She has filled out some applications, one 24 pages long! I have been outside all afternoon raking the leaves in the backyard and piling them against Paul's side. The two Rhode Island Red Hens follow me about scratching for insects.
I am in a continual state of heaviness over Nathaniel and the one year since seeing him coming up. My anger toward Landon and Amber has remained as strong, not easing, if anything, growing with time.
I see them over there in ignorant bliss with one another, no telling what poor Nathaniel is having to cope with.
We cannot be there for him. Is greatly saddens me. He got such nurturing from us. Even Jordon commented how Landon just wasn't engaged as a father, if anything, treating Nathaniel as a rival, bullying him at times, making him cry by aggravating him. No grandpa to rescue him. I trust Landon in all this father time he has created is putting it to good use, and not just being absorbed in himself and Amber, as they were while here.
Harsh. But true. Anger tempers and bitters the words.
Swine Flew
A letter to a prodigal son:
Dear Son,
It is coming upon the one year of your leaving us and cutting off all communication from home. We do not know how you did in basic training in Texas, how things went in tech school at Biloxi or at Mobile at Kessler AFB. We do not know how the move went to Japan to Misawa Air Base, where we assume you are now. We have no idea how Nathaniel our grandson feels about losing so suddenly his beloved pappa, or his grandma and great grandma or Uncle Jordon or cousins, Pearce and Carson he has never seen.
It had to affect him for a time, for when he woke up that March day, the first thing he asked for was pappa, going all over the trailer and yard looking for me.
You have affected a cruel and unusual punishment upon your family and friends who loved you. The false offense you based this upon, that we were interfering with your marriage, is a lame and baseless excuse.
You are simply being lazy and belligerent in your separation from us. Yes, we hold ourselves to blame, but we came to you, and you know it, with humble, open arms asking forgiveness and restoration. And for whatever reason, you have chosen to keep that channel closed, not allowing us the opportunity to even express our willingness to confess our sins. In that, the burden for the sin now rests upon your head.
I wish so badly that I could get a letter or a word to you, and it would affect the change in you that would open again the communication between us. I know that in your younger years, I was not the prime example of a father. I was working way too much at a stressful job, allowing your mother to stay home and raise you.
I know early on we spent many happy days in the woods and waters together, and I do feel we were close. When Nathaniel came along, I poured myself into him, perhaps too much, in an effort to make up for any short comings I may have failed in you. And when on that day I last saw him, and I knew it would be the last time, well, from that day until now, my heart has grown weaker and weaker with sentiment and sorrow.
We simply exist here in your imposed exile and I trust this is pleasing to you. I trust that you are seeking God through all this, as you were so ardently before you left for basic training. That same fervor that wanted to be a missionary.
But fervor I find, has a way of floundering upon low hurdles and I fear that you have allowed hurdles to impede you. You have chosen a path beyond the track, a cross country if you will.
I too attempted that journey, without compass or pack, thinking I was sufficient in self. But as I did, and you will eventually find, you are hopelessly lost and too far from home, with a longing to return fading as well. The longer you wait, you will never make it home. Like little Nathaniel, the memory will be gone.
Home too will be gone if you happen find it. Return while there is time. While the lights remain on. The fire sticks you made are waiting for you to spark the flame again in the old syrup kettle.
Dear Son,
It is coming upon the one year of your leaving us and cutting off all communication from home. We do not know how you did in basic training in Texas, how things went in tech school at Biloxi or at Mobile at Kessler AFB. We do not know how the move went to Japan to Misawa Air Base, where we assume you are now. We have no idea how Nathaniel our grandson feels about losing so suddenly his beloved pappa, or his grandma and great grandma or Uncle Jordon or cousins, Pearce and Carson he has never seen.
It had to affect him for a time, for when he woke up that March day, the first thing he asked for was pappa, going all over the trailer and yard looking for me.
You have affected a cruel and unusual punishment upon your family and friends who loved you. The false offense you based this upon, that we were interfering with your marriage, is a lame and baseless excuse.
You are simply being lazy and belligerent in your separation from us. Yes, we hold ourselves to blame, but we came to you, and you know it, with humble, open arms asking forgiveness and restoration. And for whatever reason, you have chosen to keep that channel closed, not allowing us the opportunity to even express our willingness to confess our sins. In that, the burden for the sin now rests upon your head.
I wish so badly that I could get a letter or a word to you, and it would affect the change in you that would open again the communication between us. I know that in your younger years, I was not the prime example of a father. I was working way too much at a stressful job, allowing your mother to stay home and raise you.
I know early on we spent many happy days in the woods and waters together, and I do feel we were close. When Nathaniel came along, I poured myself into him, perhaps too much, in an effort to make up for any short comings I may have failed in you. And when on that day I last saw him, and I knew it would be the last time, well, from that day until now, my heart has grown weaker and weaker with sentiment and sorrow.
We simply exist here in your imposed exile and I trust this is pleasing to you. I trust that you are seeking God through all this, as you were so ardently before you left for basic training. That same fervor that wanted to be a missionary.
But fervor I find, has a way of floundering upon low hurdles and I fear that you have allowed hurdles to impede you. You have chosen a path beyond the track, a cross country if you will.
I too attempted that journey, without compass or pack, thinking I was sufficient in self. But as I did, and you will eventually find, you are hopelessly lost and too far from home, with a longing to return fading as well. The longer you wait, you will never make it home. Like little Nathaniel, the memory will be gone.
Home too will be gone if you happen find it. Return while there is time. While the lights remain on. The fire sticks you made are waiting for you to spark the flame again in the old syrup kettle.
Mossy Aroma
Imagining how it was riding to Gainesville and back every day, working in a busy doctors office, the stress that led to the crash of 2009. Imagining how I could ride a century with Roger or a marathon with Hambone in under three hours, today unable to run a mile without stopping to catch the breath.
Of taking foreign jaunts to Mediterranean islands, lying upon sea shores in bliss, while back home wondering how the lights were going to remain burning. And the coffee was consumed, with sugar and whole milk.
Who shall go to the store and buy the good cream? The hazelnut? Will it be I, or her, or we, as we both have time enough to sit and sip coffee soon?
So yesterday, in a fit of cabin fever, mom sleeping til noon and Melanie lazing, watching the birds hunt for the dwindling seeds, I said, let us go to Huddle House and eat. It was a good plan. By one we were in our corner seat ordering the MVP for 5.99, two bacons, one sausage, grits and toast, waffle, scrambled, bisquits or meme, and so it went down. The pregnant waitress sitting to take our order.
Talked a spell with Mr Sherrod in the booth over of traveling down the Suwannee, of what levels the water is best, and we determined it to be around 53 to 55 feet somehow.
From the HH we were stopped by a slow train on Marion at Railroad and speculated further upon empty lots and how churches would be nice here, amidst the rubble across the street, beside the old Wicks Lumber store, now a derelict club closed. And so the cross rails raised and I said, let us see if the soup kitchen is still open. And it was. So we rode past the cemetery beside the tracks where the boy and his dog rests.
On down past the tobacco barns, past the now non christian Christian Service Center, speculating as to how it all ends when government assistance begins. Turning into Forest Lawn to Gwendolyn and Bascombs well kept graves by Laura Ruth their loving daughter. Down to the two markers of Helena's one and two day old sons, to Mossy Jesus standing guard beside them, hidden behind the lichen in plain sight. O'er to Mrs Hunters, lamenting the lack of lily's upon her site, mamma always picking some for her. I said I will steal some if I see some and was upbraided. O'er to Kimberly Leach in the far corner, murdered at thirteen by Theodore Bundy, his last kill. Out and down toward the kindergarten center where the red caboose now rests in Ft White, o'er to the homes of the VA Chaplin and Steve Stafford and his unkempt blueberries, pointing out here a camellia and there a tulip tree. Down to the station across from Roundtree Toyota for fifty dollars worth of gas. O'er to G&K to see if there were more camellia's, finding few. Onto the neighborhood of Alamo and Judy and other home care patients in the past. Down 47 and way out to find Mrs Margarets house, never finding it, missing the turn, ending up on Christ Central Road and back on another Witt Road to 47 again and heading down to Mason City for more Camellia's, finding one white we think we will like and purchasing it for sixteen dollars in the three gallon size. Back down Gabe road past Arky Rogers wood stick fences, behind Hopeful and to the intersection of Country Club and two fifty two. Seeing Mr Markham in his yard beside the gourd pile. Melanie getting out and asking him if they were for sale. He was going to give them to her but she offered to buy them for a dollar a gourd, so we bought ten. And so we made a new friend, the lonely man on the corner who grows the huge garden, who lost his wife, who has a bad back, but not bad upon the tractor, only bad when hoeing. And so it was agreed I would hoe for a gourd. We shall see. Nearing home, mama wanted to see again the fake oversized animals at the estate of the B&B family, the competition in the county to the S&S family. Content to see the ten foot rooster beside apes, we made it home, where her happiness drained when it was learned they were coming for her later on.
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