February 17, 2011

  • Maximum Sea-Curity

    note: This is an old post. I have decided to update it, add recent events in the lives of some, and to write about a couple more...

     

    CRIMINAL ON BOARD

    Morgan City, Louisiana was the first town in America to require all job applicants to be fingerprinted, and their prints run through the FBI's registry. This was back in the '70's, before I sought work in the oil patch. When I first heard this, I was convinced it was the work of fascist totalitarian control freaks. Maybe so, but the reason for such measures was the number of people on the run from the law who came to Louisiana to get jobs. For example, Jack Henry Abbott, the murderer who wrote "Belly of the Beast" about his life in state orphanages and then prison, famously championed by Norman Mailer, was caught in Morgan City after killing a restaurant manager in New York City shortly after gaining parole.  "Belly" was a powerful book, but how anyone who read it could feel that Abbott was fit to walk the streets is beyond me. He was a victim of state neglect, and it is a shame. However, he was past rehabilitating. But I digress.

    Yes, the marine industry has been a haven for brigands, cutthroats, and crazies, probably since the dawn of time. And guess what? It still is. One reason, I believe, is due in part to the nature of the job; weeks-long hitches in small cramped quarters are easily tolerated by ex-convicts, who are delighted to be paid, and get better food, and not be hassled by guards and clanging steel doors. Lots of deckhands have prison "tats"(tatoos, for you citizens), such as swastikas and assorted curse words, that are not viewed kindly by prospective employers at the Shoe Barn, or IHOP. The other pool we draw our deckands from is ex-soldiers. I prefer the cons; I have only had one ex-military man worth a tinker's dam. And he committed suicide! They are lazy, undisciplined, and argumentative, the exact opposite of what I would have expected before experiencing this phenomenon first-hand. One has to stand up to some frightening fellows every now and then, or you will not be respected, and respect is Everything to these guys. But I have never had any problem with stealing, or worried about getting a knife in the back. We never lock our bunkroom doors. A crew develops a tight bond, and anyone who violates that trust gets black-balled, or worse.

    The other reason I like these guys is their stories. Some of what follows may be a bit dark, but boring it ain't. Allow me to introduce you to:

    Tom. He was the only deckhand who was a friend before we worked together. He had just got out of Atlanta Federal, when I brought him to work with me on the first boat on which I was the captain, the m/v Elizabeth Bourg. He had served 4 years of a 12-year stretch for conspiracy to distribute cocaine, but he had wangled a job in the prison law library, and actually got his sentence reduced to time served, plus probation, on a technicality that his lawyer was ignorant of. Dumb, Tom wasn't. He was a character straight out of an Elmore Leonard novel. Strong as an ox, he picked me up from a loaded barge onto an empty with one hand one night. Tom once fought 5 cops at one time, and the judge laughed when he read the cost of the uniforms that were torn up in the fight, and the dental bills. Still got jail time, however. He could charm cops, anybody really, especially the ladies, when running or fighting wasn't an option. We had an engine room fire one day in the Houston Ship Channel, and Tom grabbed a fire extinguisher, climbed out on an exhaust pipe over the flames, and with one hand put the fire out. It was one of the bravest things I have ever seen, and it saved our bacon. However, he was still  a con in his head, and intimidated the other deckhands. I interceded on a skinny guy's behalf finally, and we had a slap-fight that nearly came to blows. I admit, when I saw how close he was to exploding, my insides turned to jelly. Tom only stops hitting when he gets tired. I still fired him on the spot, and although we hugged and made up before the company driver came to take him to the bus station, he remained fired. And that rat bastard I defended turned on me years later, and got me fired off a boat. Of course, EJ wasn't a criminal, and had no code. We worked together in 1985, and Tom has served two prison sentences since then. We are still friends. Better than being his enemy, trust me.

    Update: I haven't seen Tom in over eight years, except for a picture in the arrest record on the local paper's website, for a minor misdemeanor of some sort. He is 50 now, and off probation. I guess he has settled down some.


    Willie LaPointe was another character. He had done time in Angola for raping his ex-Mother-in law, of all things. He said she set him up, but who in their right mind would get into such a situation? When Kermen, our personnel guy, interviewed Willie, he asked him if he could cook. "Yeah", Willie said, "But only in real big pots". Willie was a beast; he had no moral compass whatsoever, and was even stronger than Tom. One poor deckhand, a real nice young fellow named Terrell, was a victim of  Willie's warped sense of humor. Willie would pinch his rear every time he passed, and tell Terrell how he was going to make him his "maytag fag"(isn't prison jargon colorful?).  He told Terrell how he would be Willie's wife on the boat, and do his laundry and assorted other wifely things, or get the hell beat out of him. I would not have put it past Willie, but one night while we were pushed into the bank, waiting on the Industrial Locks, the captain heard a splash. It was Terrell, throwing overboard a plastic bag loaded with his gear, slipping into the water after it, and swimming to shore.
    One night, on a different boat, a propeller shaft broke, and fell off into the water, leaving a 10-inch hole shooting water into the engine room. Everyone was scrambling to get into the flatboat, as the pumps could in no way keep up with the inflow of water. Willie grabbed a coffee can and a bunch of rags, forced the coffee can into the hole, held it there against the force of the water, which had the pressure a firehose might have, and jammed rags around the can, slowing the flow to a trickle that the pumps could keep up with until a blocking flange could be screwed in place. No sane man would have tried that, but there you are. He saved the boat, and became a legend on the waterway.
    But Willie was another one who could not adjust to life on the outside, where violence was not the answer to everything. He beat up a captain one night, and when Kirk offered no resistance, it was open season on the poor bastard. Weeks later, Willie chased a bleeding and bruised Kirk onto our boat, which was pushing a tow with theirs at the time. Crying that Willie wanted to kill him, my crew said they would protect him. But when Willie followed Kirk over and started thrashing him, no one lifted a finger. Thankfully, I was at home that week. Finally, my deckhands jumped Willie and kept him at bay until the boat reached port, and our driver picked up a now calm and mildly repentant Willie. Peanut, the driver then and my captain now, kept his .38 in his lap for the entire drive back to New Orleans. Willie, I hear, is back in Angola, this time for life. I hope he and his wife are happy together.


    Dane was my deckhand when Katrina hit New Orleans. He is a good hand, but at the time he had a bad substance-abuse problem. One time he was so messed up that he took 30 minutes, strike me dead if I'm lying, to tie his handkerchief on his head, pirate-style. He was drooling all the while. It was crew-change day, and Peanut and I had to hustle him out of the galley before the driver saw the condition he was in. Why didn't we just fire him? Because the Devil you know is better than the Devil you don't. Anyway, the boat was in Baton Rouge after the storm, and Dane had to work over, as our other deckhands had evacuated to Texas with their families when Katrina came through. When he did get off, he had two big paychecks to blow. Jeff, the driver, asked him where he wanted to be let off, thinking he would say somewhere in New Orleans. "Where's the bad side of Baton Rouge?", Dane asked. "Take me there". Jeff did, and Dane was MIA for a year and a half. He's back now, but with warrants and attachments just waiting to be served on his buccaneer butt.

    Update: Dane came back after a stay in Florida, something about a car full of stolen pharmaceuticals. he had not changed, however, and was living with a woman who did as many pills as he. Dane knew that there were warrants out for him, as he had walked away from a work camp a few years back. It was just a matter of time before he was stopped by the police after being spotted in a drug-soaked section of Kenner, Louisiana, on foot, the only white boy for blocks. I talked to him a few months ago, and he was on work-release again, but he sounded a bit smarter. I sure hope so.


    Then there was Sonny, who is a hard worker, but he likes to work alone, as he gets time-and-a-half when he does. So he runs off everybody he can, in order to make the big money.   I was fine with him working the deck solo,as he is very conscientious and attentive to his duties. Sonny was the last deckhand I remember seeing wash the boat in the rain, common in my day, today not so much. He was gone for a couple of years, serving time for stealing dirt-bikes, or some off-road vehicle. He claims that he was passed out in the truck when his buddies did it, and only woke up when the cops chased them down. A good story, but it didn't sway the judge. One guy refused to be intimidated by Sonny, and Sonny invited him out onto the barge to have it out. Nevins, I forget his first name, obliged and punched Sonny's ticket in short order. No overtime that week. 

    Update:  This is good. and the story includes another character on the deck.

    Our boat and Sonny's were tied up in the trees north of Mobile, waiting out a hurricane. I was off that week, thank the stars.

    In anticipation of a two-day hiatus, both captains had stocked up on beer and Crown, my captain's favorite whiskey. That is how many boat stories start, by the way. So the drinking starts, and my deckhand, Earl, got stupid almost immediately. He had recently learned that the deckhands were not getting raises, and he had been stewing on that news for a few days. The two captains were drinking and talking on our boat, when Earl burst in, demanding that Picou, my captain, talk to the office and get him a raise. Picou said that he had, but Karl was unmollified. Tired of his loud mouth and demands, the captains picked up their glasses and the bottle, and went to Robbie's boat to get their drink on. Though told not to, Earl followed a few minutes later. They moved back onto our boat. When Earl followed, Picou told him to go. Earl refused, made a stupid statement, and Picou leapt over the table and hit Earl hard enough to knock him out.

    When Earl got up, he changed the focus of his venting from wheelhouse personnel to the deck crew, bitching about the lack of a raise. Sonny took it to heart, and raised the ante.

    About a half hour later, Hicks, the wheel man on Robbie's boat, heard some banging in the engine room. He got up(Hicks was not much of a drinker, and had avoided the revelery). He caught Sonny in the engine room, drunker than Cooter Brown, sabotaging the generator. Hicks wrestled the maul from Sonny, who then tried to pull the electrical wires off the generator. After a tussle, Sonny went upstairs and told Robbie, his brother-in-law, incidentally, that he quit, and demanded to be taken to Mobile right then. If not, he was gonna tell the office about the drinking. So Robbie had the other deckhand fire up the engines, and they headed down to Mobile, planning to drop him off at the fuel dock. From there, he could call his family, and get a ride home to Louisiana.

    Well, Sonny got a little impatient, and an hour before arriving at the fuel dock, the idiot jumped over the side with his luggage, and waded to shore. Robbie was plenty mad, but maybe he should have tried a little harder to convince Sonny that he had just dragged his sorry soaked butt onto 12-Mile Island. Robbie turned around and headed back upriver, and calls Sonny's Mother, telling her what her son had done. Remember that here is a hurricane in the Gulf. Sonny passes out shortly thereafter, as he does not call home for 10 hours.

    When he tells his Mom to come pick him up, she tells him she ain't got a boat, nor a plane. He asks what she means.

    "I mean you are on an island, you dumb drunked fool!" she informs him.

    Sonny has to swallow some pride, and call Robbie. Robbie agress to pick him up finish the delivery job. About then it started rining really hard, and it was one water-logged, bedraggled, hung-over Sonny that was unceremoniously dumped at the fuel dock. He was fired, natch. Forever. I heard he did another stretch in the joint. I know, I am as shocked as you are.


    Bundy was my favorite deckhand of all time. He weighed 350 lbs, most of it muscle, and due to an unspecified blood disorder, was completely hairless.  All over. He was called Bundy because he resembled King Kong Bundee, a famous wrestler of the time. Again, this was the 80's.  He was a sleepwalker, and would show up in the galley in the middle of the night in his white underwear, looking for all the world like a giant New Year's baby. he would make two sandwiches, stuff one in his mouth, and take the other one back to his bunk. The next day, he would remember none of it. Bundy was a white supremacist, but he liked black women, and he absolutely loved Jimi Hendrix.  We agreed after a sit-down to disagree on the race issue. I became his friend for life when I recorded  Hendrix' "A Band of Gypsies" onto a cassette for him. He was not a rabid racist, just thought blacks were inferior, and in fact had a lot of black friends. Black people love outrageous white people and Bundy was outrageous indeed. Always smiling, always ready to josh and joke. And no one could tighten a ratchet like Bundy. When he was done building tow, even a thousand foot of loaded barges did not bend no matter how hard we steered on them. Other deckhands hated to break the barges apart that he put together. Usually, they needed a sledge hammer to knock the ratchets loose. He was finally let go for health reasons, and the last anyone saw of him, he was a barker on Bourbon Street, urging passersby into the strip joints in the French Quarter.

    Update: Bundy was visiting a friend, another bouncer, in the club where he was on duty. When a patron got a little rowdy, Bundy's friend went overboard, and they thought that the guy was dying. Bundy helped dump the body in a dumpster. Fortunately, the guy survived, but he was seriously brain-damaged. Bundy and two others were charged with an assortment of crimes; it looked pretty bad for my big bald friend, not that he didn't deserve punishment. However, the fellow who did the beating was looking at life anyway, as this was his third strike, and he 'confessed' that he had dumped the man in dumpster all by himself, and all charges were dropped against Bundy. He faces a huge civil suit, however. As my friend Ron says, you aren't going to get any blood out of a turnip.


    Earl

    I had just fallen asleep when Dudley burst into my cabin.

    "Earl fell in the bathroom, he's bleeding from his head, and I can't get him to respond!"

    I jumped out of bed as went on. I was dressed and headed downstairs as Dudley admitted that Earl was drunk off of a bottle that Dudley had snuck on board for him. I filed that away for later.

    Earl was blue, laying on his left side, a trickle of blood ran from a gash in his forehead. I opened one eyelid, at my command Dudley took a flashlight and shone it in his unresponsive eye.

    "You know CPR?", I asked Dudley.

    "Sort of." he replied.

    Earl had drunk a whole fifth in about 20 minutes. His breath stank accordingly. "You get to do mouth-to-mouth," I told his supplier, and we went to work.

    For two minutes we worked on him; I would stop every few pushes and listen for a heartbeat, and could not detect one. Dudley, bless his heart, never stopped breathing air into Earl's inert, ever more bluing body. I stopped listening, and just pushed on Earl's chest harder and harder, yelling at his sorry ass to freaking LIVE!. Then he coughed, luckily Dudley was taking a breath, or the sputum that followed would have gone...fuhgeddabouttit.

    We shouted at Earl, slapped his face a couple of times. Finally he opened his unfocused eyes. I just knew he was brain-damaged, but then he looked up at me.

    "Hey, Greg...", he said weakly. Then "Ow!" as Dudley dabbed a rag soaked in hydrogen peroxide on his head injury, which was actually minor; all the drama was alcohol-induced. We got him on his unsteady feet and walked him to the galley table, where he promptly laid his head down on the table.. Dudley poured some more peroxide on the cut. Earl's head shot up.

    "You aren't going to sleep", I said as we gave him some coffee. I was mad, but he was still too drunk to take in what had almost happened. Besides, I was pretty damn exhausted from the effort expended and the adrenaline rush, now fading. "You might have a concussion." Dudley took over the patient's care, doing a very good bandage job. He must have been  assigned to the prison infirmary.

    The captain had snuck home for the night. If I called the office, that might come out. When not binge-drinking, Earl was like a part of my  own mind out there on the tow; always having just done what I was about to tell him needed doing. So I prepared to threaten him with firing, then giving the 'one more chance, don't even watch a beer commercial, or I will fire you' spiel.

    When he came down stairs the next morning, he looked rough, but alive.

    "How are you, Earl?" I asked in a voice edged with sarcasm.

    "My chest hurts." I knew that I had done the CPR right when he said that. You have to break the cartilage in the ribcage, or you aren't pumping blood through the heart. And he god-damned deserved to hurt.

    The Captain fired Earl a few months later, for an incident that rates its own post.

    _________________________________________________________________________

    There were others, like the fellow with the knife scar across his face who got in my face one day because I made him build a coupling that he thought was unnecessary. That was fun. And the Charlie Manson look-alike who would stare at the back of my head until I could feel it, and turn around to see him leering at me in the darkness. We called the office and got him replaced before he evinced any other Manson proclivities. We did not let him know that he was fired until his relief pulled up in the company truck. Whew!  I may have to do another post on this subject, as I am recalling more and more crazies as I write this. Most of the rest were run-of-the mill drunks, burglars, and crack-heads. But good workers, and most, to a point, became my friends. Kermen and I used to laugh and say "You don't need a criminal record to work for Gulf Towing, but it helps".

February 13, 2011

  • PELICANS, PLUS A BIRD OF A DIFFERENT FEATHER

    I braved the the incredible cold(45° Farenheit) to take these pictures, but it was worth every shiver. Hey, I'm from Florida!

     

    This a consecutive series of shots I took as this fellow landed behind our boat
    Img_7404

    Img_7400

    Img_7399

    Img_7401

    This is a different pelican
    Img_7397

    pelican close-up

     

    I snuck up on this Louisiana Heron (4-4 1/2' tall), who had come rest on our barge
    Img_7365

     

    He saw me before I could get a picture of him at rest, but these came out rather nice..
    Img_7366

    Img_7367
    He is honking his little feathered ass off, absolutely pissed that I had the nerve to approach him.

    Img_7368

February 11, 2011

  • Pint-Size Diva

     

        The Grown-Up In the Mirror


    I heard our daughter from out in the hall
    laughing and chatting to no one at all
    I peeked in our bedroom, only to see
    in front of Mom's mirrors, the woman to be

    She was deep in her Mother's make-up kit
    Too much mascara? Well, maybe a bit
    Absorbed in the mirror, she hadn't seen me
    watching, and loving, his grown-up wannabe.

    Scolding a member of her reflective retinue,
    hand on her hip like she'd seen Mommy do
    Then she deepened her voice, and to my regret,
    pretended to smoke one of my cigarettes. 

    A baby-blond tress fled the scarf she wore,
    soon to be followed by  two or four more
    While pretending shyness with make-pretend guys,
    then trying on  a  brassier demeanor for size

    She danced like Brittany, and sang like Miley
    pouted like an actress that she watched on TV
    she posed for the cameras, and kissed the air
    gave the crowd her profile, then saw me there.

    "Daddy!" She yelled, running straight into my hug
    What are you up to? "Nothing", she said with a shrug
    "You go wash your face, it's about time to eat."
    To the bathroom she ran, Mom's shoes on her feet

    From dressing-room diva to not eating her peas,
    is a switch  she can make with an innocent ease
    In her pretty world, dreams come without fears
    She's already my star, at ten weeks and five years.

February 10, 2011

  • HE WAS A GOOD PELICAN.......

    An awful thing happened on our way west from Mobile two days ago. Awful to me, anyway.

    We were south of Biloxi, it was 5 in the afternoon. All morning, there had been pelicans on the barges, along with a swarm of seagulls. I got a few pictures, none of which were worth keeping, and went to bed. So the deckhand takes the running lights out to the head of the tow.

    He radios back to me, There's a pelican out here on the head of the tow! I think his wing is broken."

    I reply, "Do you think he can be saved?" The tow was 800 feet long, and the covers blocked my view.

    "Maybe", Ronnie replied.

    So I fired up the laptop, thinking there might be some animal rescue organization nearby, that maybe the Coast Guard might be willing to bring the critter to shore,,...Hell, I didn't know, maybe we would wait til we got to New Orleans. Ronnie, in the meantime, had picked up the pelican, which opened his mouth as if to bite, but he never did. Then Ronnie put him back down, and went to set up the last running light. In the wheelhouse, Windows™ was starting when Ronnie yelled.

    "Greg! This sonuvabitch is committing suicide! He jumped off the barge!

    "Where is he?"

    "He went under the rake of the barge. Oh man, he's gone!"

    All I could was take the engines out of gear, and hope that he washed out from under the barges before he met up with our 78" props under the boat. It takes a good quarter-mile to stop 8 loaded barges. Then Ronnie's voice came up on the radio again.....

    "He's between the barges. He's pinned there. He ain't movin' Cap."

    We are in New Orleans now, waiting to go into the river. I haven't gone out to see if the pelican's carcass is still there, between two loads of steel plate, I haven't had the heart.

February 7, 2011

  • Control Towers, Children's Hour, and Pelican Power

    IMG_6777
    That white tower was the Governor Nicholls river traffic control center.
    Now it is run from a room in downtown New Orleans, or maybe Hyderabad.

    IMG_4654
    American grain being loaded onto ships bound for overseas markets. At least we have Something they want.

    Memona and Mck
    Mck(pron, Misk) and Memona, our neighbor's daughters. Both will become models, I predict.

     

    And now, onto the Pelican pics. They were congregating in a marsh near where we were waiting on barges in North Mobile. Our boat was apparently moored abutting their flyway, as they came flying by in twos, threes, and mores from either direction.Control Towers   

    229

    231

    232

    240
    It's wabbit seasson! Wabbit season!

    pelicans and trains

    pelican and train

    233

    IMG_6775
    Pigeons are the other consumers of American grain that are barged downriver.

February 4, 2011

  • Photo Dump

    the cat ate those zebras 
    Miles, our cater familias. My dearest wife Joiwinds took this picture.

    sailboat Industrial canal,site of  Katrina breach+
    A sailboat, with the Ninth Ward visible over the new levee

    ninth ward, over levee break site
    The area is coming back to life.

    unloading ship in mobile
    This ship is being unloaded at the new container dock in Mobile. This used to be referred to as the Banana Dock,
     and it was used for that purpose form the early 1900's until the '70's.

     

    The next few shots were going to a separate blog. The gloomy skies had sapped the color out of the landscape, and I was going to do a series called 'Points of Color', In Search of Color', some such bullcrap.

    mobli chalmette, spot of color
    Mobil Refinery, Chalmette, La.
     

    chalmette ferry landing
     ferry boats, Algiers-chalmette ferry landing
    Chalmette Ferry Landing, and the ferry boats
     
    pilot boat
    The pilot boats carry ship pilots back and forth from the vessels as they transit the River

    Yeah, pretty boring. Here are some better shots.....
    Ron S, international problem 'solver'
    My good friend, Ron, is standing on the pier at Mexico Beach,
    wishing that he had a fishing pole.

    foggy morning at CBG LaPlace
     Foggy mornings are beautiful, and a good excuse to stay tied up.[note: this is NOT our tow]

    escher wannabuilding
    Remember the perspective-twisting artist, MC Escher? If he were an architect...

     

February 1, 2011

  • POEM FOR A PEOPLE ON THE CUSP OF FREEDOM

    Hushed dissent behind closed doors
    takes root and grows
    in cafes and bazaars, shops and back yards
    freedom whispers no more

    Into the streets flows the soul of a nation
    finding its voice, rising as one,
    tired of breathing the stink of corruption,
    captive to one man's vision.

    The fever burns bright, the falcon takes flight,
    flares paint the crowd in stark black and white
    No smoke full of tears, no massed military might
    will turn them away this night.

    Bakeries abandoned, there's no bread to eat
    No coffee to drink, no afternoon tea 
    Looted shop shutters succumb, defeated
    by the twin pangs of hunger and greed.

    From the window we watch the crowd below
    Yesterday they smashed in our door.
    Our young men stand guard down on the first floor
    We lost water and power twelve hours ago.

    Freedom's flavor depends much on who's tasting
    Taken for granted, freedom is blandest
    the flavor grows sweeter, the harder the chasing
    For freedom's fighters, the flavor is grandest.

January 25, 2011

  • THE PELICAN SERIES

     

    Good morning, people!!
    sunrise east of new orleans

    Military Sealift Ships
    These are Military Sealift Ships, each has enough supplies and ammo to re-inforce a division
    The only time they have ever been gone from the harbor was during the run-up to the Iraq War.
    They are such a landmark that  New Orleans Vessel Traffic uses the ships as a check-in point.

    lil red tugboat
    A pretty little tug, I forgot its name

    huey p long widening project
    The ever-ongoing widening of Huey P. Long Bridge. The steel outside the yellow scaffolding
    is all new construction.

    pelican and friend4
    I cannot believe that I actually forgot that I had taken these shots.

    pelican and friend3

     

    pelican and friend2

    pelican and friend

    pelican, and friend cropped

    Well, that's all for now, folks, have  a good day.....
    southbound Kenner Bend Anchorage

    dutiful duck
    And rest easy, a vigilant watch is being maintained...

January 20, 2011

  • A POST, FULL OF PELICANS

    Yesterday morning, we were in Theodore, building tow at the cement plant there.

    building tow in Theodore

    ....But I had the strangest feeling, a feeling that we weren't alone, I sensed that we were being watched...
    Img_6322
     
    Yes, we were being studiously ignored.....

    Img_6326
    The pelicans were trying a little too hard to be nonchalant, their efforts at normalcy a little forced.

    Img_6339
    Just fishing, or was this a recon flight, probing our defenses?

    Img_6337
     Is more than floating on his mind?

    Img_6365
    A few special ops types made feints, testing our readiness. The deckhand hurled day-old bread at them,
     a tactic that always disrupts their ranks.

    Img_6360
    Their leaders mulled over the options open to them.....

    pelican in Theodore
    The decision was his to make....

    unsavory types
     The tension mounted.....

    Img_6357
    ....and mounted

    council of elders
    .....emotions were running at a fever pitch

     

     

    ...And then I woke up. It had all been a dream...

    mv Sea Eagle
    ...and we were outbound in Mobile Bay. We had left Theodore without incident.....

    dauphin island bridge
     As we passed under Dauphin Island Bridge, I took a walk on the barges, chuckling at the silliness
    of my dream, the dread I had felt. Pelicans aren't evil, and they aren't keeping tabs on us....

    fleeing pelican
     Or ,  are they.......?

January 19, 2011

  • EIGHT PICS FROM AN EIGHT-PACK

    Harvey Canal at sunrise
    A left-over pic from our last drydock stay

     

     CG Cutter Bonita
    Coast Guard Cutter Bonita

     

    marsh east of New Orleans
    Marshland east of New Orleans

    pelican on barge
    This pelican took a breather on our tow

    pelican on barge2
    His best side.

    Sunset east of New Orleans
    Sunrise.....

    sunset over chalmette 2
    ......and a sunset, taken from almost the same spot. Different days, however.

     

     

    poland street wharf, upper end
    Poland Sreet Wharf, in lower New Orleans. It has been neglected, and is probably beyond repair

     middle bay lighthouse
    Middle Bay Lighthouse, in Mobile Bay. I hear it's for rent

     

January 13, 2011

  • Another Day at Work....

    sunrise  at my house
    My neighborhood never looks so good as when I have to leave for work...

    gift shop at marianna caverns
    The gift shop at Marianna Caverns is made of the local limestone. Ignore
    this photo, it has nothing to do with the rest...

    trunk at marianna caverns
    ....neither does this one

    birds feeding  in our wake
    We must have been stirring up some shrimp with our wake, to cause this mass feeding frenzy

    hitchhiker
    We had a hitchhiker for a short time

    pelican behind boat   
    Look! He's waving at me!

    pelican behind boat 2
    The Pelican, my spirit animal. Originally, my vision ordained the hamster as my spirit animal,
    but I won my appeal.

     

    Norwegian Spirit
    Those passengers don't know what they are missing. Only we get to see the mermaid.

     

    sunset jordan road
     New Orleans, as seen from its easternmost point. 'Night, all.  

January 11, 2011

  • HOW I SPENT MY WEEK OFF

     

    Walkway, Meaher State Park, Alabama 2
     walkway at Meaher State Park, Mobile Alabama

    pelicans fishing

    NASA facility at Michoud
    The NASA facility at Michoud, in eastern New Orleans

    from my roof
                       I took this picture while standing on my roof Friday morning.

     

         On Saturday, Ron and I literally rambled around North Florida.
                We first ended up at the Marianna Caverns St Park
    pond at Marianna Caverns

    A pond at Marianna Caverns State Park. And no, we did not go in the caves. Maybe next time.

    ccc statue in Marianna Caverns State Park
     I wonder if they had a DADT policy in the Civilian Conservation Corps? 

     

    RobertFBurgess
    After driving to the Caverns, we took a side trip to meet a good friend of Ron's, non-fiction adventure-writer, Robert Burgess. this is a picture from his Wikipedia entry. Yes, I know someone with a wikipedia entry. Bob looks more like  Ernest Hemingway, whom he knew, now than he did in this picture. He was kind enough to let us call on him with no advance warning, and showed us a few of his artifacts, such as a stone fishook, found in a river in Ohio. These days, his typewriter might also count as an artifact.

January 1, 2011

  • THE LAST REVIEW OF THE LAST HALF OF LAST YEAR

    My fan base (Ron) asked me when my year-end review was coming out. I had not planned on doing it this year, being busy with personal growth issues, assessing my financial state and my place in society, and burning ants with a magnifying glass. (I'm not being childish, did you know that ants bite us because they hate our freedom?)

    for a look at the 1st half of the year, go here

     

    July

    The combined efforts of government and private industry have thus far failed to stem the flow of black, vile, poison emitting from a hole leading to the foulest depths. But enough about rep. Michelle Bachmann's latest utterings for now; let's see how the professionals and experts are managing the spill from BP's hole in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Having tried the 'top kill'(Failed), the 'bottom kill'(Failed), and the 'junk shot'(you guessed it), the expertly professional oil-leak stopper guys have decided that the next effort will called the 'cheap shot'. When asked how it works, professional expert Silas 'Sy' Entist explained. " There was a heated discussion and 'buzz kill' and 'double shot' were both suggested as possible terms, and perhaps we will utilize those in the future should "cheap shot' not work." A reporter repeated the question as to the mechanics of 'cheap shot', and Entist admitted, "So far, all we have is the name. But it's a cool name, and we will devise a plan worthy of it."

    In other oil spill news, the First Family visited the Gulf Coast in an effort to boost tourism in the area, which has suffered from the reports of oil on the beaches. President Obama arranged a photo op of himself and daugter Sasha swimming in pristine water. Footage of Sasha making 'oil pies' on the beach was never aired.

    Things are starting to heat up in advance of the November elections and Sarah Palin made several comments that had pundits shaking their heads for days.

    President Obama, responding to complaints from the right that he wasn't pandering enough to their whiny demands, asks, "What do they expect me to do, keep Gauntanamo prison open and try the prisoners in courts where they cannot mount a competent defense? Two days later, Obama signs the "Keep the American Gulag Open And Hold Show Trials, Just Like a Friggin' Third World Dictatorship ' Act.  Speaker Nancy Pelosi hails the bill as an act of 'superb diplomatic caving', while minority leader John Boehner says it 'doesn't go far enough'.

     

    August

    Wikileaks, a group of idealistic tattle-tales, released yet another mega-batch of files. Their last release, a zillion memos, interoffice notifications, meeting minutes, and missiles drawn on cocktail napkins, indicated what few did not already know, that things are not going well in Afghanistan. The Justice Department has declared that they will put an end to the 'mentioning of the obvious'. Citing possible unrest, Attorney General Holder said, "What if somebody starts spreading the notion that corn-based ethanol won't help America, indeed, it will cause more problems than it fixes? Who wants that?" Holder said. "Or what if, theoretically speaking, wiki next releases texts of leading financiers admitting that the global financial system has less structural integrity than a sand castle in the Bay of Fundy? Or that an asteroid the size of Tokyo is on a collision course with the earth...China is running things now..." at this point, AG Holder was hustled off the stage, due to vague security threats, according to sources that will remain anonymous if I know what is good for me.

    Talkings heads were busy the very next Sunday, responding to Sarah Palin's outrageous comments about wikileaks. But others were pondering the significance of a petite young lady in Maryland, one who was never a witch. Was ex-gov. Palin's lock on outrageous statements in jeopardy? Tune in next month, the month some called....

     

    September

    The leak is plugged! Not the wiki thing, the BP thing. Yes the well is capped, the oil has disappeared, and fish taste better than ever. We don't have reporters anymore, we have repeaters, hacks who read back press releases written by the scoundrels that  reporters of olden days would have pilloried in their columns.

    But the 'end' of the oil crisis gives us room for the discussion of the upcoming elections. A poll taken early in the month shows that Republicans might not only take control of one or both houses of Congress, they will have a plurality of state legislatures and governorships as well. As expected, Sarah Palin was quoted as saying something completely startling and controversial, then noticed that no one was listening to her. Christine O'Donnell was promising to 'end masturbating as we know it'. Sharron Angle, Harry (there IS a God!) Reid's opponent for re-election, was hinting that guns were the answer when elections weren't. 

    "Death panels!", Sarah sputters. "Taxes can kill! Russia is spying on my house!"

    But it was no use, the new faces brought their 'A' games -

    "People ask me, 'What are you going to do to develop jobs in your state?' Well, that's not my job as a U.S. senator."* –Sharron Angle

    "We went to a movie and then had a midnight picnic on a satanic altar."* Christine O'Donnell

    "We needed to have the press be our friend ... We wanted them to ask the questions we want to answer so that they report the news the way we want it to be reported."*--Sharron Angle

    "American scientific companies are cross-breeding humans and animals and coming up with mice with fully functioning human brains."* --Christine O'Donnell

    Sarah was stymied. never in her wildest imaginings did she envision other Republican women being even more controversial and outrageous than her. She calls her old friend Michelle Bachman for advice.

     "I don't know where they're going to get all this money because we're running out of rich people in this country."--Michelle Bachmann

    Defeated, Sarah slipped into a perky funk. Besides political punditry and queenmaking, she had nothing left now but her reality show(200k/week), speaking engagements(100k/speech), book deals(1.25 million bucks in advance for latest), TV appearances on Oprah, Larry King, etc. and the adulation of most of the masses, at least, the masses that want their President to be no smarter than their Pilates instructor.

    ex._Gov. Palin's spirits are buoyed by a poll in late September that indicates Obama is falling out of favor faster than her. Not only that, but sales of the Sarah Palin Talking Points Doll® were double that of the Barack Obama ch-ch-Chia Pet™.

     

    October

    Dismayed by his poll numbers, and rebuffed when he offered to campaign for fellow Democrats, Obama did what he usually does, and reached across the aisle to the Republicans with one hand, while slapping his liberal supporters with the other. It was useless, nothing he did seemed to make the Republicans like him. "I don't get it.." said the President to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel. "I gave up the public option in the health bill for them, I did away with drug-price bargaining. Hell Rahm, I saved the health-insurance industry. You know, I am beginning to think that it isn't my policies that the Republicans are upset about. I think, and this may sound crazy, but I think that they just want power, and would steamroll Mother Teresa, were she to get in their way."

    "@#$^ that old bat", Said Rahm

    "And my base? What up with them? I got a finance reform bill passed. 'no teeth, little power to regulate', they tell me. I get a credit-card reform bill passed. 'No teeth, doesn't go far enough', yadda, yadda. Close Guantanamo, put Bush on trial, end the wars, live up to my early promise, their demands never cease."

    "@#%& 'em in the #$&!" Rahm counseled. "They are a bunch of sniveling &*%$s anyway.

    "Well, at least I still have my friends and advisors, loyal to a fault, sticking by me in these tough days. Rahm, are you packing?"

    "%$#@& &^%$# right I am. I don't hang with  @#$#-&^%$%-ed loser types. I'm going back to $%#%ing Chicago, where politics is played the way I talk. Send me an e-mail when your &^%^ finally drop." Rahm said jovially.

    When allegations of infidelity on the part of her eldest child, husband, Ashton Kutcher surfaced, it was noted that wife Demi Moore seemed not to care; if anything, she defended him and leaned on him even more in public. Could the rumors be false? No way, man, they were printed in the Enquirer, (sadly) our most reliable and accurate source of news in America today. Well, it turns out that not even the scandal rags got the whole story. It seems that, yes, Ashton was sleeping around, with women picked out for him by Demi, who would often join in the fun. Because of this, The Society of Men Everywhere presented Demi Moore with their annual Wife of The Year Award. Demi left the awards banquet early, but not before slipping hotel room keys to one of the hostesses and two Filipino salad girls.

     

    If you don't mind, I'd like to skip

    November

    Thanks. Gee what a month that was! Americans once again voted into office the people who vote against the American people every chance they get. Good men and women were thrown out of office by a wave of incredible fury and stupidity. Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity(the Furies), Glenn Beck and Mike Savage(the stupids) were all admitted to hospitals for dislocated shoulders, caused by attempts to pat themselves on the back.

    And the 1st order of business? These new lawmakers, elected serve America's interests and promote America, to legislate and pass bills that help its people, have decided that, in the words of the incoming Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell,  "The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president*." It has to be a power grab; Obama has done more for the republican agenda than any actual Republican president up to and including Reagan.

    Here is Obama's modus operandi; Whatever issue is on the table, Obama first says "The Republicans are wrong on this issue because....". Then he says "It would be a bad thing for the country if the Republians get their way on this." Finally, he will cave on every Republican demand, and say someting like this at the signing; "This bill is not perfect, but is a baby step in the right direction....". Obama, crawling on your hands and knees before John Boehner does not constitute 'baby steps', OK?

    So anyway, I'm glad I don't have to bring up November. Would it be too much to ask if we could skip.....

     

    December

    ...as well? Yeah, man up, I get it.

    December wasn't so bad, once you get used to the idea that over half of your neighbors and friends vote like a chicken at the fair plays the piano. 

    Obama had to re-invent how he worked with Congress; he listens to the Republicans, he jettisons measures from bills if they object, which Republicans tend to do with any provision that prevents the rich from hoarding their money, or having to give it up as taxes. He invites Republicanss to lunch at the White House, and is ignoring the people who got him elected.....I'm sorry, that was a typo. Obama did Not have to change anything.

    But he did try one more stretch of the olive branch; on the 31st. President Obama changed parties! He is now a Republican, and has promised to "support the republican agenda, as soon as they formulate one." In a statement released to what passes for a press corps, the Republican leadership excoriated Obama for 1) Not switching parties sooner, and 2) Not actively seeking his own impeachment. "When will this President curb his socialist tendencies and help us finish the job of privatizing Congress. When will the National Parks go on sale? When will the President (for now) get behind our Steady Climate bill, calling for, among other things, solar panels to be condemned as 'public eyesores' and banned. "

    Well, friends, that is it for the year, sorry it wasn't funnier. Or filled with happier news. Or written better. I am lowballing my expectations for 2011, and therefore wishing for you all a

    HAPPIER NEW YEAR!

     

     

    *an actual quote

December 28, 2010

  • The Wheel's A'Needin' Annealin'

    Everything is beautiful...
    pine branch

     

    In it's Own Way...
    pine trunk in Toreya

    george of the woods
    Having Gandalf along on a hike is never a bad thing

    Appalachicola River at Toreya St Park, by George
    No one, not even Gandalf, should ever hand-feed the Alligator Gars

    speeding pelican
    That just looks like fun.....

    sunset over France Road Wharf
     Sunsets, like puppies, rarely disappoint a photographer

    New Orleans, from the east

    front moving in
     The winds increased in the wake of this front 

    mv Chelsea westbound in the Sounds
     Our sister boat, a pushin' little mofo

    Img_5302 
    Becalmed

    Img_5763 
    This shot I took this morning at dawn

     

    Southern Shellfish building
     This one about an hour later.....

    As we waited for the shipyard to lift the boat out the water to repair the wheel...
    wheel damage 1

    clobbered by some unknown but large underwater structure that I ran over

    wheel damage and Chad
    The Chadster is used here for perspective, and to model this winter's ensemble noveau

      

December 25, 2010

  • The Jolly Old Fellow Traveler

    Brother let me warn you, stay out of that store
    After hours in line, you will finally find
    They sold the last one an hour before

    But the real reason, and friend, I kid you not
    St. Nick was a friend of Ho-ho-ho-Chi Minh
    And Christmas is a communist plot

    Santa Claus is a socialist,
    all dressed in Commie red
    He redistributes the people's wealth
    from his union-made commie sled
    The reindeer are from Sweden,
    and as liberal as can be
    Elves seldom retire, instead expire
    When the death panel so decrees 

    Santa hid listening devices inside every home
    How else would he know who's sleeping,
    And what you do when you're alone?

    So join the war on Santa, don't buy all that crap
    don't let your kids tell him family secrets
    when they're on the bearded creep's lap....because, ..

    Santa Claus is a socialist,
    all dressed in Commie red
    He redistributes the people's wealth
    from his union-made commie sled
    China bought the xmas franchise,
    it's the top story of the week
    Next year's Santas will be yellow-cheeked,
    and have slightly slanted eyes

    Come join the war on Santa...(fade out)


    Merry Christmas, Everyone Merry Cristmas, Every One!!

December 20, 2010

  • Curmudgeon's Christmas

    For the benefit of my newer friends, I am dragging this one, kicking and screaming, from the 2009 Yuletide  season...

    I Can't Wait Until Spring

    Gray skies are drizzling, the children are sniffling
    I'm tired from shopping, and in block-long lines living
    Noels and chorales I'm damn sick of hearing
    'They've been in rotation since sometime last spring.

    White lights nailed on rooftops fail to look very icicley
    Lit candy-cane trails are in more ways than one treacly
    There's an inflatable Santa, and a reindeer, I think
    It all makes me long for a holiday-free spring.

    No groups come a-caroling, to answered doorbell ring
    no fights with crusty snowball
    We spend all our savings on unneeded things
    for kids who complain, that's all?

    We gave up our big bed for loved aunt and uncle
    who thrill us with detail about each mole and carbuncle
    We get ten bathroom minutes at three each morning
    hope our company leaves ere the coming of spring.

    We brave malls so crowded to buy stuff loudly touted
    and leave with a rain check, for it's been sold-outed
    we're too late in buying our turkey and trimmings
    shoulda put in an order sometime last spring.

    No annual vacation, I can't afford one,
    I'm in hock to my 'nads
    I'm just too old now, can't take the cold now
    Was it more fun for Dad?

    The big day's at last here, I get dressed and ready
    I'm greeted with smiles and by shiny new TV
    Made in Asia, it's a Doozi, with a 60-inch screen
    My family has shown me just what Christmas means.