Sunday, May 27, 2012

A very quick trip to the Former Life

Last weekend I went up to Michigan to a friend's "Pre-Blessing of the Bikes" party.  This is the first time in almost 18 months that I went over a hundred miles or so from home.  For someone who owns two touring bikes, this is shameful.
I had been thinking for some time about going to the neighborhood where I lived between the ages of 1 and 12.  Since this was sort of on the way and I would be in no real hurry, I decided this was the time.
I left early on Saturday morning as it was getting light.  I had enjoyed coffee as I was getting ready, so there was one unavoidable stop as I went headed north.  As is usual, I had the roads largely to myself in the morning and the air was crisp and cool.  A mid-May heat wave was predicted so the cool temperatures to start were nice.

I got to my old neighborhood after about five hours.  I was surprised how close this was to the interstate.  It was a little easier traffic flow to start by going to a park I remembered as a kid.  I easily found the park, but after parking, I didn't really remember it.  It is possible this is because it has changed or because we used a different entrance.  Considering it was a really nice Saturday early afternoon by this time, there was surprisingly few people there.  The park had a playground and large open grassy areas.  There was a large stream or small river running through it that I did remember.  Several wooden bridges cross the water.  I crossed some of the bridges as a walked around.  The wood smelled faintly of creosote, but it was not the intense heated smell I remember (and like).  Unfortunately, better sensibilities likely prevent the use in the quantities that it was previously used.  I remember playing in the shallows of the water as a kid; the water used to have huge flowing masses of algae in the water that were not there.  This could be due to the time of year or just differing water quality and treatment.  The 'burbs are not where I would want to live, but the park was pretty nice.  I could see how it could be an asset to a nice neighborhood feel.

From there I went down the road to the old neighborhood.  I did not see the Krystal Flash gas station where I used to buy fireworks and candy.  I've heard of people going home and seeing everything as tiny compared to what they remember.  I didn't experience that, but the scale of many things was adjusted.  The most striking example of this was my paper route street.  I recall this being a laboriously long street with houses separated by large lawns set off the road.  In reality, it was a typically suburban neighborhood with small yards and houses packed together.  I could still locate my friend Nathan's house.  It had (and still does according to Google Earth) a kidney-shaped in-ground pool behind it.  It was not the near castle that I recall, just a normal house far closer to the neighbors than I remember.
The one thing which was definitely as long as I recall was the walk from my house to the bus stop. This is far longer than modern sensibilities allow.  There was a large group of kids that massed at the Catholic High School.  To get there, I had to walk through the neighborhood and through "the field" between the church and the high school down a worn dirt path.  The path is gone as is the field, replaced by athletic fields the high school has built.  There was a sense of apathetic loss at the lack of the field.  The field was a broad, open, sandy, unbuilt area.  It was used by kids from all over as a play area.  We built sand forts, launched model rockets, had fights and got into all sorts of mischief there - there was a lot of mischief.  Of the many places I could have died as a kid, the field ranks up there.  Neighbor kids we knew all gathered there at times.  Unknown kids from other nearby neighborhoods also went there.  Unknown kids were feared until mutual acquaintances allowed the fear to be turned into new friends, even if that was short lived.
A row of heavy trees now separates the church from the athletic fields.  I guess I'm a little hopeful that there could still be a foot and bike path, but I doubt it.

I rode my motorcycle to the church parking lot where my dad was the minister.  The church looked about like I remember it.  It had an addition built on it in the front shortly before we moved and this addition looks like it was remodeled into offices and a larger entryway.  There appears to be a new addition at the back; this second addition is ugly, consisting of mostly glass contrasting with the conservative brick of the rest of the building.  A driveway connecting upper and lower parking lots had a gate which was open.  This is a change as I remember that it was almost always locked with a very heavy chain to prevent people from using the parking lot as a street connector.  "Bad" high school kids would crash the chain and break it a few times a year.  The parking lot often had empty forty-ounce beer bottles lying about as a possible connection.  Those bad kids were only surpassed by the evilness of the green car with the black top.
Two things about the church did shrink.  There was a stone wall allowing a walkway and basement windows from the upper part of the church.  This wall used to be a huge impenetrable stone wall that only the mightiest could scale.  This rock wall was all of about ten feet tall.

There was also a white outcropping that I think only served as decoration.  It was blank when I lived there, surrounded by large evergreen bushes.  It had the name of the church on it now in script that looked far too modern to be appropriate.  This outcropping was only about eight feet tall.
I wasn't sure if I wanted to see inside of the church or not.  One of the most obvious external changes in addition to the glass addition on the back was a myriad of HVAC equipment.  On the hot summer days, the church used to have enormous fans to blow the hot soupy air around the sanctuary.  I guess God now loves the coolness of air conditioning.  No one was around and the church was locked.  This may have been a good thing.

The house I lived in looked about the same.  The color was wrong and the large tree next to my dad's study had been replaced by a smaller one - at least I think it was.  The "huge" front yard was replaced by an average suburban front yard.  The side area where the garden used to be was much smaller than I remember and with the large trees shading that area, I don't think a garden would be possible now.  I could not see if there was still a crabapple tree in the back yard.
Many of the other houses on the dead end street look like I recall.  I can't help but wonder if there are still any of my treasures buried around the area.  Neighborhood friend's houses were still recognizable.  John H's house, next to Paul B's house and Jerry A's; his beagle and pen long since gone.
One surprising thing on reflection is that I saw no/none/zip kids playing in the area.  This would have been unthinkable when I lived there on a hot summerish day.  I can only surmise this is due to the aging of the neighborhood, or children really DO stuff outdoors a lot less.  Probably, it is both.
I'd like to say I had a nostalgic feeling as I restarted the bike after taking a few pictures, but I didn't.  It was time to head to my friend's house anyway.



I got to the pre-Blessing party early and helped set up.  The party was a bit low on attendance but was a success.  I was able to see several people I hadn't seen in a couple years.  By the time the live band was winding down, there were more band members present than guests.  They continued until the end with gusto.  The singer was kind of creepy - walking around as he sang among an audience only he could see.

I was glad I took the time to get out of Dodge for a day.  Catching up with friends after a couple years is an important thing to do.  My bikes deserve to have their tires stretched.
As for the old neighborhood, we'll see what it looks like in another twenty years.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

2012 Pig Hunt Drive Home Day

Got up very early to a wet morning as a light rain had fallen overnight.  Showered and packed up the rest of my stuff while drinking a quick cup of coffee.  I was out the door by 5:00.
Traffic was predictably light until I got near Columbia when the State Capital rush hour required much more attention.  Once headed north, traffic again lightened up.  After crossing into North Carolina a while later, signs warned that a rock slide on Interstate 40 west had the road closed.  I scrambled to look at the GPS and map to remind myself of the route taken in 2009 when I-40 was also closed from a rock slide.  I proceeded through Asheville to US25 through the mountains.  This route is pretty, but with lots of long stretches where passing was prevented.  There were only a few slow cars and within a reasonable time, I was back on I-40 in Tennessee.  Traffic between Knoxville and Lexington was very heavy with trucks and there seemed to be a disconcerting level of aggressive truck drivers as well.  Perhaps they were trying to make up lost time from the long route around the I-40 closure.  The three-lane interstate after Lexington made the traffic seem more tolerable.
I was home in about 11 hours total drive time which allowed me to unpack and do laundry.  The dogs were very happy to see me.  I deboned the hog and ground up about half of the meat and had it in the freezer by early afternoon.
Time to sleep, and go to work tomorrow.  I need my next adventure already...

2012 Hog Hunt Day 4

After the mayhem with the truck/tree incident on day three, day four started a little slower.  Nobody was hunting in the morning so I was alone when I got up around 5:30.  After waking and taking a shower, I surfed the net for a while and quietly watched TV.  As it started to get light out, I decided to walk down to the Pee Dee river which is about a mile away.  It was another cool clear morning and the sunrise over the river was very pretty. There was the occasional fish jumping in the river as well.  After the sun came up, I walked back to camp where life had started to stir.  The rest of the morning progressed slowly with a good breakfast of scrapple, biscuits, gravy and eggs.  The day warmed quickly and a second walk with Nathan and Rachel to the river ended the morning.  There was a boat attempting to net fish in the river this time.
Rick got his truck back and it didn't look that bad.  Most of the dent was banged out and the lack of a fog light in the lower facia now matched the other side.  We convoyed back to Georgetown for the evening hunt. In the procession was the Plantation Suburban, Rick's truck and Nathan's truck which held the coolers since this was to be the last evening.  We all piled in to Rick's truck and fed the south end stands before going to the more northern stands for the evening.  I had the choice of being close on the ground at one stand (the wind didn't allow for the normal stand at that location) or the Feed Lot.  I chose the Feed Lot and sat there all evening.  There were several deer around me from about 15 minutes after I got on the stand until near dark.  They kept looking off to the left and acted nervous about something in that direction, but nothing else ever showed.  As it got dark, the deer left to the right.  I heard something continue to walk around me after dark, but I suspect it was still the deer.  I also had a racoon walk underneath me (when I first saw it in the dark, I almost thought it could have been the bobcat I was after).
After dark, Rick came and got me.  Judd had shot another hog and we went to look for it.  Unlike his hit the first night, this one had a good blood trail.  We trailed it a long way until it looked like it was going to go past where Nathan had been sitting.  Nathan had seen a hog running by after Judd shot and suggested it wasn't acting right, but moved quickly through the area.  Almost assuredly, this was the hog Judd had shot.  At some point, we stopped looking as the hog did not appear to be hit bad enough to stop despite the blood trail. Judd was understandably upset.
This ended the hog hunting for 2012.  I wish I had seen and/or shot at more animals, but I was happy with the one I got.  Since I spent time thinking about what I had shot over the years, I'm including the count below for posterity:
2007: 0 hogs
2008:  245 pound sow
2009:  235 pound boar, 85 pounds sow
2010:  100 pound boar, 245 pound boar and 150 pound boar
2011:  140 pound boar
2012:  120 pound boar

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

2012 Hog Hunt Day 3

Got up to yet another cold clear early morning.  Went out to the same stand I was on the "Day 1" evening.  A few turkeys came in, but nothing else.  Not even the group of small pigs that were there the earlier night came in.  Rick came and got me and we (Nathan and Judd were out that morning as well) went back to the lodge.
We went to breakfast in Johnsonville.  Judd, Nathan and Rachel went for supplies while I fed stands with Rick and Will.  We fed all the Hemingway stands with no more hog sightings, even small ones.
Everyone met back up at the lodge and after a short break, we headed down to Georgetown.  Rick fed a few stands and I was put on the OK Corral.  The stand was a tall ladder stand the leaned forward slightly.  It was a little tougher to stay comfortable, but the temperature was near perfect.  I didn't see anything until around 5:30 when an antlerless deer came bounding through the woods behind me.  It went almost directly underneath my stand and out onto the corn pile.  This deer was followed by several more.  There were a total of at least 10 deer and almost all of them had antlers.  One was an OK 8 point and another was a very wide but spindly 6 point.  It will probably be a pretty decent deer next year.  The deer were all skittish and I was hoping hogs would push them out.  The larger deer roamed in and out of the immediate area, but there were deer on the pile until well past shooting light.  I could still hear animals on the pile after dark, but I strongly suspect they were still the deer.
After it was dark for about 45 minutes, a Suburban pulls up under the stand.  I didn't recognize it and Rick was a bit sick so I didn't hear him say my name.  After a few seconds, I figured whoever this was knew where I was so I got out of the stand.  It was Rick.  Apparently, he was feeding other stands and had hit a tree with his truck.  Back at the skinning shed, the damage didn't look too bad, but apparently the radiator had been damaged badly enough that all the coolant was gone.
Nathan had shot a smallish (50 pound) hog.  After he was finished with it, we transferred all our stuff into the Suburban and headed into Georgetown for subs.
Went back to the lodge for the end of another day.  Still a great day, but with less hogs.

2012 Pig Hunt Day 2

Got up to another early cold morning.  Went out to sit on the "L" field to first wait for hogs, then call for predators.  Sat in the stand until about 7:30 with no hog sightings.  Started calling for about a half an hour with the mouse distress call to hopefully coax a bobcat out.
Around 8:00 three deer came out.  I switched the call to the rabbit distress call.  The deer took three steps towards me, stopped and ran back into the woods.  I wished I had tried the deer call on the caller to see what the reaction would have been.  I was picked up around 9:30 with no other interesting animals coming into the field.
We fed stands around Hemingway for a while and headed back to the lodge.  After a short break, we headed down to Georgetown.  After feeding several stands, I was seated on the "Green Strip" stand.  It was a very nice late afternoon.  Sun was out and temperatures were in the 60s.  There was a bald eagle flying around which was really neat to see on such a clear day.  Not much was happening, but the stand was a big double ladder stand with camo covering so it was very easy to stay comfortable.  Around 5:30 a pig came out from behind the corn pile.  It ran to the corn pile and started rooting at the corn.  I watched it through the scope for a few minutes.  After not seeing anything else, I waited for it to turn broad side and head-shot it.  It flopped around for a few minutes and dropped to the ground.  It seems like all hogs look very small once they are on the ground and this one looked like the size of a cocker spaniel.  I saw two other hogs way past the pile over the next half hour.  First, a smaller hog came out, then a much larger pig was seen in the same area.  I thought about trying to shoot the bigger one, but it was a very long shot and the angle wasn't real good with the rise of the ground.  Also, I has just shot one and it is best not to be greedy.  After dark, Rick came to get me.  He had already gotten Judd who had shot a large sow and with the same shot killed a very small pig.
We went to get Rachel who had also shot a pig.  We trailed the shot pig, which had a decent blood trail to the edge of the rice swamp.  Nathan went quite a ways into the swamp, while being "coached" by Rick about the alligators, but he never was able to find the pig. We packed up the truck and headed to the skinning shed.  My pig was about 120 pound boar - a good eating size pig.  Judd's was approximately 150 pounds and the small pig was a couple pounds.  After skinning and cleaning the hogs (Judd's wasn't skinned because it was going to the processor), we headed back to Hemingway.
And two more days to hunt still.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

2012 Pig Hunt Day 1

Got up to an early cold morning and got ready.  Nathan Judd and I headed out with Rick.  Nathan and Judd were hunting hogs, I was after a bobcat.
We dropped Nathan and Judd off and then went to a brushy field on a tall tripod stand.  I called using the electronic caller for about 2 hours, more on than off.  The caller is enough to make you batty for that long.  No predators showed during the time.  It was, however, a beautiful morning.  Very sunny and rapidly warming.  Rick picked me up and showed me where there were bobcats tracks in the road.  Maybe.
Judd hadn't gotten anything and Nathan had seen one smallish hog on the stand but it was moving too fast to get lined up on it.  We fed the stands around Hemingway.  All had been hit hard.  The stand I was on during the previous evening had several very small hogs on it.
Went back to the lodge and then down to Georgetown.  Ate breakfast at a really good breakfast bar and fed the plantation stands.
Headed back to the lodge for a while and then went out to hunt hogs for the evening around Hemigway.  I was on the same stand Nathan was on in the morning.  As I was getting into the stand, several (around 10) small hogs were running around the corn pile.  They were there for around an hour and approximately 16 turkeys came in for about 10 minutes.  They left and a short time later the little hogs came back.  Weather was nice; cooling and extremely still.  About half an hour before dark, the little hogs returned and stayed there until it was too dark to shoot.
Nobody else had seen anything.  We went back to the lodge and ate spaghetti for dinner.
Nice day, but wish someone would have been able to connect with a pig.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

2012 Hog Hunt Drive Day

Got up at about 3:30 and was out the door by 4:00.  My "antique" Magellan Meridian GPS wasn't working.  I ran back inside and changed the batteries and was out the door for the second time.  Temperature was near freezing and damp as I left.  Headed south and got through Cincinnati.  I had packed the night before (Friday) instead of Thursday because I worked too late Thursday to get everything done at work before vacation.  I always seem to forget something on any trip and an hour south into Kentucky I realized I forgot a camera.  I have a decent camera on the phone; I also decided I could stop somewhere if I saw some place.
Continued south through Kentucky.  Saw a gorgeous sun rise at the Tennessee Kentucky border.  Tried (unsuccessfully) to get a picture on it.  There have been many sunrises I've seen while on the way to South Carolina, and I have never gotten a good picture.  Since I'm in driving mode, I won't let myself stop.
Headed through Tennessee and into the mountains.  Light traffic most of the time except around the cities.  Weather was almost perfect especially compared to some previous years when snow and rain were the norm.
All through Tennessee the GPS started to act up.  I was listening to the book A Short History of Nearly Everything and I envisioned aliens messing with the GPS system.  More likely, the aging GPS is on its last legs.  It got annoying after a while; after a few attempts it seemed happier after resetting the SDcard.
Stopped at a Walmart in Tuberville, SC to look at cameras.  Decided I didn't want to pay nearly $200 for a camera that I wasn't sure I would like.  I'll have the phone.  Rick, Nathan and Rachel will also have cameras and the magic of email.
Got to Waccamaw around 3:30pm.  It was perfect weather - upper 60s and not a cloud in the sky.  Talked to Rick for a little bit and he asked if I wanted to go out hunting.  Since it was early enough - I decided I should.
Rick dropped me off on an L-shape food plot.  Saw nothing until around 5:30 when five deer came out.  The first one was very small, almost hog like.  As it got dark, 3 more deer came out but no hogs.
Another guy in camp, Judd, shot at a black boar.  We trailed it for a while, but it was not recovered.

Spent a bit of time chatting.  In camp are Nathan, Rachel (Virginia) and Judd (Florida).
It was an easy drive down and a bonus day on the stand.
Good enough start...