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June 28, 2011

Whitewater Rafting. How Green Is My Valley, Mind, State (NJ)(an environmental topic). Modern Absurdities. Welcome to Asbury Park(NJ). June 28, 2011

Filed under: November 2009 — Tags: , , , — earthood @ 2:00 pm

Firstly WWI began and ended on this day.

For the second year in a row, answering the call to expand consciousness and earthly experiences, I went whitewater rafting Sunday with a group of Rutgers alumni, an ex-Marine and my son, although I wonder who put in that ‘call;’ after all, I’ve been mostly an avowed land-lubber and weekend non-adventurist, save for some doubles tennis or precarious, rocky jetty sitting. Why do I go down the rapids of a river swelled with copious run-offs from a week’s heavy thunderstorms? Well, it’s really recent life’s call to grow; the same call to environmental awareness, living to 150 years, finding past and future life, vortexes in Sedona, Arizona, meditation on Fifth Avenue, live music at Asbury Park’s Stone Pony, or absorbing contemporary Rutgers campus life.

Absurdities

on a cerebral mountain top in Sedona, Arizona

The setting for the expedition on Sunday was the Lehigh River, nestled in dense woods off of Route 80’s exit 273, in northeast Pennsylvania. No, it wasn’t the Colorado River or even the Moose River in upstate New York, known for its intense category 5 spring time rapids, but it was problematical enough for me to go out and buy a helmet with a distinct Germanic look, so I was told, when modeling it for my rafting comrades, just before a life vest fitting. Clouds made for cool temperatures and chilly water. Last year it was hot and sunny; immersion was refreshing. People rented wet suits, an ominous prophecy of discomfort. Minutes later: the quick flowing river, jumping into the raft, securing chin strap of helmet and a four hour journey.

Absurdities

our gang rafting on Sunday(yours truly in grey helmet)

We were seven undaunted spirits, urging each other to paddle forward, steer quickly right, no left, to avoid large unfriendly life-ending rocks, and to bail out the raft, rapidly filling. Confession: fears were quickly dispelled as a raft with six girls (aged around eight something) and an adult passed which reminded me of Kansas’s Dorothy Gale with Toto waving hello to a couple of bikers in the middle of a tornado dream.

Absurdities

Dorothy & Toto just before the tornado hit.

If they can do it; enough said. It was good to be alive, catching your breath after an enemy raft passed close enough to heave buckets of cold water at us. Retaliation is sweet and energizing.  When the river slowed, I absorbed nature. Symphonies of silence, rushing water and falls, fallen decaying trees from lightning, abandoned railroad trestles, islands in the stream, plant life growing between boulder cracks, two ducks hanging nearby; mother nature’s artistry filling every ocular vista. Last week’s blog was filled with notions of living in a remote cabin in Montana, in the middle of nature, fending, surviving and mostly escaping; Sunday I experimented with required ruggedness and I liked it a lot.

On May 22, 1970, I celebrated the first Earth Day and ever since, have marched more towards awareness of the planet’s frailty and our culpability. Vince Lombardi once said, (why didn’t I pay more attention to his greatness and leadership techniques of ascension when he was here?), “Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.”  I say, “The environment isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.” Suppose if you put the two together; we’ll figure it out; winning, Earth, species, survival; everything is the environment which is going to catch us one day long after my Montana cabin blows away in the wind and the white dove finally ceases flying and New York City is under water.

Absurdities

Vince Lombardi. Early on coached at St. Ceclia High in Englewood, NJ

A few years ago I got involved in the New Jersey Environmental Federation and started going to their annual conferences at Rutgers-Newark Law School. In late 1968 (memory lane time), a few of my fellow Rutgers Pharmacy school (also nearby in Newark) comrades discovered the joys of studying in the silence of the law library. I think I shall never see a quieter place to study than amidst volumes of justice and law students chasing paper. Medical school, nursing, engineering libraries all were noisier. Been there, done them all.) A few weeks before Super Bowl III, the comrades were studying; using legal mind-elevating chemicals and having a good noisy time when suddenly, a man looking like George Washington, with long white wig, told us, the British were coming and that we had to evacuate permanently. We were kicked out. When I learned the NJ Environmental Conference was held at the Law School, it became the ‘Return of the Invisible Man’ for me. The past years of conferences introduced me to many new comrades in the environmental theatre of operations. So many devoted, dedicated and inspiring people I’ve met. Among that ‘Readers Digest’ List are two stand-outs, Jeff and David, one representing Sierra Club, the other, the lobbyist for NJ Environmental Federation. The movement needs cohesiveness and unity. So I learned yesterday, the two long time friends, on and off the playing field, are not talking; each endorsed a different candidate for Governor. David’s endorsement of Governor Christie went bust.

Absurdities

Governor Christie. Rolling back environmental progress?

Christie is rolling back clean energy goals and loosening regulations in my New Jersey. That Montana cabin is looking good; so good I’ve taken to collecting returnable bottles on roadsides and emptied a huge pantry cookie jar to keep all the found coin savings; a ‘Montana or Bust’ venture deal. Jeff endorsed Chris Daggett, an environmentalist who had no chance to win. Last month Christie pulled New Jersey out of a regional program to curb air pollution that causes climate change. Bill Bendix said in ‘The Life of Riley’ (a 50’s television sitcom), “What a revolting development.” Jeff and David probably won’t make up soon and the air that I breathe, water I drink here in New Jersey will be wedged into further pollution by policies of Christie. (perhaps any Governor. “It’s not personal Sonny, it’s strictly business.” It’s funny how that favorite movie quote slips into so many intelligent, relevant, contemporary conversations)

Absurdities

THE Tower of Babel. (babble?)

A few years ago, I was thinking about the global environmental movement or lack  thereof and conjured up a term to describe what I saw from high(up) on a red spiritual mountain in Sedona, Arizona; a tower of babble (biblical Babel?) (to talk foolishly, irrationally). In Babel, everybody spoke a different language; today’s metaphor for different agendas and values. Why would China care about car exhaust(greenhouse gas) emissions when their citizens are finally able to buy cars? Remember the smog during the Beijing Olympics? Let the west (America) come up with ideas and sacrifices first (we’ve been using cars longer) And so forth and so on. Babble (Babel) (I wonder if this qualifies as a homophone). I’ve got a lazy eye on the Kyoto protocol (climate change). Rich and poor countries still disagree on the future of the second commitment period of the Kyoto

Protocol; the only international treaty binding nearly 40 industrialized countries to cut greenhouse gas emissions. The discrepancy between the two groups grew even wider during the previous round of climate change talks.  I think Tower of Babble.  Point being; right here in New Jersey, grass roots, green grass still all around, we’ve still got babble dissecting the environmental movement.

Absurdities

A smallmouth American bass fish. (a boy fish I think)

Moving on, I’m going to fire away on things which ‘move’ me. Lou Dobbs, radio and TV host recently said, “I am saying drill, I am saying mine, exploit and produce. We have so many rich deposits of fossil fuels…it is mindless and self-destructive not to pursue that goal.” I wonder about clean energy economy and environmental due diligence. Climate change will turn the Baltic Sea into an increasingly freshwater sea and devastate its marine life. Smallmouth male bass fish, which inhabit our freshwater lakes, have been found to have female germ cells (oocytes) in the testes of 82% to 100%.  The boy fish’s endocrine systems are being ‘disrupted’ by chemical pollution of our water.

Absurdities I love how science calls this ‘intersex fish;’ the same abuse of terminology as when Regan MacNeil in ‘The Exocist’ was possessed and the medical community called it ‘Tourettes,’ and juiced her up with ‘Halolperidol’ a powerful tranquilizer, the same way we get juiced up by the media. Think about the last fifty years of ingested hormones and other drug delicacies being flushed into the nearby Atlantic Ocean. An environmental group needed called ‘The Unflushables?” And speaking of oceans, the oceans are at high risk of entering a phase of extinction of marine species unprecedented in human history. A deadly trio of factors – warming, acidification and lack of oxygen – is creating the conditions associated with every previous major extinction of species in Earth’s history. Marine scientists from institutions around the world recently met at Oxford University. New science indicates that pollutants such as flame retardants, fluorinated compounds and pharmaceuticals as well as synthetic musks found in detergents and personal care products have been located recently in the Canadian Arctic seas. Some are known to be endocrine disrupters (remember the small mouth bass fish) or can damage immune systems. “Enough, Calvin”

From environment to absurdities, one of my favorite blog ramblings: I get over a hundred health related emails (from a myriad of sources) a week informing me without charge (money) of latest developments and healthful tips. But I also get emails from Johns Hopkins, sometimes ten pages long; either promoting management strategies on Atrial Fibrillation for $39.95 or hawking ‘The Johns Hopkins Memory Bulletin’ subscription which is just $149 for four quarterly issues. I keep forgetting to cancel my emails from them; at this life stage I’m so into altruism and sincerity. Johns Hopkins kind of reminds me of network television breaking into programming to say a terrible virus is spreading all over the state, causing horrific symptoms, but there is something critical and timely that can be done to prevent it, so watch the news at 11PM, eleven hours away.

Absurdities

alan simpson. shame on him for denigrating senior citizens

Did Alan Simpson, Senator from Wyoming, call senior citizens the Greediest Generation as he compared “Social Security” to a Milk Cow with 310 million teats back in 2010? I, and millions of other Americans, have been paying into Medicare from my Day One, and now folks like Wisconsin’s Paul Ryan propose to change the rules of the game. Why? Because ‘someone’ mismanaged other parts of the economy to such an extent that they need to steal money from Medicare to pay the bills.

And speaking of bills: What does the U.S. military spend annually to stay cool on bases in the war zones like Iraq and Afghanistan? $20.2 billion, former Iraq war logistics chief Brigadier Gen. (Ret.) Steven Anderson said. A gallon of gas to power an air conditioner in Afghanistan must be shipped to Karachi, Pakistan, then spend 18 days travelling for 800 miles over land in fuel convoys, dangerous transportation.

Last week, I blogged about the old Brooklyn Dodgers and Jackie Robinson. It’s absurdly coincidental but embattled Dodgers owner Frank McCourt took the dramatic step of filing his franchise(LA Dodgers) for bankruptcy Monday, setting up a showdown with Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig.

Google is actually the common name for a number with a million zeros. And is a bit of a war going on between Google and Facebook which has 600 million members now? Facebook took in $4 billion in revenue last year and the company’s private valuation is as high as $100 billion but it has two assets, data and members. Data is nothing unless you can make it something. Google has decided instead of paying for the right to access Facebook’s social data, they will just take it, because it’s there on the ‘free’ internet. And what about long term Facebook outlook? If history has taught us anything (right from ‘The Godfather’) it’s that people don’t stay with social networks forever. How over is MySpace? So over that even the guys who founded it can’t be bothered to update their own profiles. Hey, Mark Zuckerberg recently wore a suit and tie in Paris at the G8 summit where he gave a speech to world political and business leaders. He gets around, just like the ‘Beach Boys’ song ‘I Get Around.’ We can only imagine what data doors are opened just as I now wave at a vaporous apparition of ‘J. Edgar Hoover,’ sitting at my kitchen table.

Absurdities

j. edgar. hoover. everybody was afraid of him. can you imagine him with google and facebook

Soon, I’ll steal away to the Jersey shore at Belmar and take in some college basketball, summer league style at St. Rose High School, preceded by  jalopeno pizza across the street at Federico’s. Swirling around my consciousness, is this recurring love affair with the city of Asbury Park, New Jersey. Two weeks ago: I had an amazing dinner there, spur of the moment, downtown Asbury, half-gallon of freshly made Sangria, trolley cars and salt air, lots of people under thirty, music coming from back alleys and store fronts, a crowded boardwalk, filled sidewalk cafes, bills posted about upcoming jazz and rock. A few blocks away, ‘The Stone Pony’ where Springsteen and ‘ Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ’ kicked off.

Absurdities

Asbury Park. old view from Ocean Grove

link to magical Jersey shore.   Also check out the ‘Jersey Shore Icon Contest.’

http://www.visitthejerseyshore.com/

and for last minute special deals on Jersey shore rentals:

http://shorevacations.wordpress.com/

Absurdities

THE Stone Pony. Southside Johnny there on Saturday

Absurdities

The city was born in 1874 and in the 1920’s the Paramount Theatre and Convention Hall were built. In 1943 the Yankees held spring training in Asbury Park and in the 1950’s my parents took me on weekends for salt-water taffy, custard, boardwalk, Merry-go-round and to see ‘Tillie,’ the face of Palace Amusements, long gone. The city is coming back big time, rich in music history. Tony Bennett sang about leaving his heart in San Francisco and if I had a voice, I’d be singing about my heart at the Jersey Shore, Belmar’s jetty and Asbury Park’s rejuvenation, redolent salt air, gentrification, and haunting forces that keep pulling me. These last few weeks, I’ve had this internal battle going on. Remote Montana cabins call me. The Jersey Shore yells just as loud. If I can appropriately file environmental attacks on my beleaguered state of New Jersey and mind(cerebral), I’ll settle into notions of going west(Montana) to visit every now and then. Perhaps while roaming antique shops of the Jersey shore towns, I can find a Conestoga wagon and hitch-it up to an old Desoto, Edsel(wish I had just one  now) or Nash-Rambler and head out west for only a few weeks, because in the final analysis, there is no place like home.

(ps. look below for a note on the asteroid which missed earth yesterday by 7500 miles)

LINKS:

New Jersey Environmental Federation:

http://www.njwea.org/

Absurdities

CONTACT INFO:

website:  http://vichywater.net

Facebook: Cal Schwartz

twitter: Earthood

Vichy Water book trailer (65 seconds long):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qj2ko9gcC_M

Oh regarding my novel, Vichy Water:

The twittersphere is abuzz over a school bus-sized asteroid that came within 7,500 miles of Earth yesterday (Monday), zooming even below some satellites. Noted science, technology, and news outlets on Twitter sensationalized the event with tweets about the asteroid being a “near miss” and “close shave” that “buzzed earth.”  NASA says the asteroid–which scientists named 2011 MD–is so small by celestial standards that it would have burned up once it entered Earth’s atmosphere.

June 21, 2011

Father’s Day (thoughts from a New Jersey jetty in 1955). Celebrating the ‘geographic’ Jersey Shore. Why I Think About a Cabin in Montana (political escapism or cerebral asylum?) Atlanta Radio Vitriol. Another movie review: ‘Section 60.’ Clarence Clemons Remembered. June 21, 2001

Filed under: November 2009 — Tags: , , , , — earthood @ 10:58 am
Clarence Clemons

President Eisenhower. a point of reference

 Set sail in a heavy humid aromatic wind; for me, it provokes memories of childhood, father-son relationship notions and a Yankee-Baltimore Orioles baseball game on a Saturday in July when Eisenhower was President. I always pick on Eisenhower, it seems. He had a mistress you know and so did FDR.  Senator Vitter solicited a prostitute. In a magazine interview way back, Jimmy Carter said that “he lusted.” I liked when President Carter told us in the 1970’s to go solar and get off oil. Now it’s windy; smoky dust gets in my eyes; I wonder if published ‘lust’ is different than sending picture tweets on the internet.

Clarence Clemons

Christmas snowstorm(blizzard?); thoughts piled eye high

   All of a sudden, its Christmas week and we had that terrible snowstorm (some media folk insist it was a blizzard) and I keep shoveling streams of pure consciousness into huge piles, as tall as eye level. Everywhere, there are huge drifts, piles of snow and double societal standards. Hot dog! (Exclamation of sarcastic excitement): are we entering a new world of revelations and redefining of politician’s private lives? I took a double take last week when my Governor Christie was interviewed locally on television and during the call-in segment; a woman asked why he sent his kids to parochial schools. He replied, “It’s none of your business.”  I liked that response because he’s ‘politically’ right.

Clarence Clemons

Governor Christie: "It's none of your business."

   I just rubbed a strange striped stone from the Bay of Fundy last summer. A tour guide said some stones, near a big red cave, have magical powers. If I had the resources, I’d graciously send a stone to each member of the House of Representatives. Ah, but it’s Father’s Day so I need to get back to that baseball game.

Clarence Clemons

pix of me standing near my jetty in Hurricane Earl last year.

  When I was ten years old, my parents rented a bungalow in Belmar at the real Jersey shore for the month of August. There weren’t a lot of kids my age, so I found ways to amuse myself; notably in a pinball amusement place. When no one was looking, as if I was a local street urchin, but I was, I crawled underneath the machines, and foraged for dropped nickels and dimes. Hey, it was a living. When I finished accumulating daily wealth, I walked to the beach, checked-in with my mother and baby sisters, then I disappeared to my ‘Walden Pond,’ the jetty at the Shark River inlet, where I’d sit for hours, dreaming, staring down ships heading to Kilimanjaro and places Blackbeard would frequent. Sometimes you can’t explain why things buried deep inside your brain just randomly fire away. Lamentation: why I wasn’t ‘afflicted’ with “superior autobiographical memory;” imagine having total recall of every day of your life. CBS/Sixty Minutes did a report on this condition which has only recently come to light.  A handful of people, including actress Marilu Henner have this memory condition. And it’s probably true, if you ‘suffer’ from this, you might never lose an argument. Here’s the program video link:

 video link to CBS/60 minutes/ superior autobiographical memory

But what I do remember from the jetty during that summer of my contentedness was how I kept wondering about being someone’s father and how important it was and whose father would I be?  Gosh, I was only ten, so why did fatherhood dreams pre-empt the Brooklyn Dodgers on their way to the pennant and a chance to get the hated Yankees in a World Series? Funny, I remember loving the Dodgers and not the Yankees; it was a racial thing and I was ten.

Clarence Clemons

Jackie Robinson: why I loved the Dodgers

 The Dodgers and my hero, Jackie Robinson were the first to break baseball’s color barrier, not the Yankees. Jetty sitting one day; there were white caps and my mother told me the ocean is readying for a big storm; I resolved before that storm, that I’d bring my child to this magical jetty which helps you look past the horizon and tell my son/daughter (I was never gender specific) how much I dreamed of bringing them here. My father was never with me. I was always alone. Oh, a couple of times he’d throw a baseball to me in the driveway until that wonderful July day in the Bronx. My father got tickets to the Yankees versus Orioles. We were so early that we watched a choose-up game in a field near the stadium and pre-baked in hot unyielding sun; once inside Yankee Stadium, he passed out from sun stoke and I saw the game from a nurse’s office. That was the last time my father spent a day with me for the rest of his life. My father, who never even saw me play organized basketball, still taught me about fatherhood. When my son was ten years old, we went to my jetty and I told him the story. The following year we went to a football game at Rutgers Stadium and the year after that, my son and I were season ticket holders. I thought about my father yesterday. One day I’ll ask my son what his plans are for our Belmar jetty.

 It’s a good time to plug this amazing place of sand, jetties, Atlantic Ocean, summer sounds, winter solitude and French fries with vinegar sold at boardwalk vendors. The Jersey Shore is a best kept secret (sort of). Years ago, people from eastern Pennsylvania used to invade the shore, carrying lunches in shoe-boxes; hence they were called “shoe-bees.”

 Some of the most expensive real estate any where is on Stone Harbor, near Atlantic City and HBO has the successful series, ‘The Boardwalk Empire” as is MTV’s ‘Jersey Shore.’ That’s a lot of pop culture, for the obvious reason; the shore is happening, evolving and magical (and probably hard to adequately describe if you haven’t been or happen to live in one of the Dakotas). Spur of the moment Saturday night, with friends, we went to Asbury Park (where Bruce Springsteen first met Clarence Clemons), walked downtown, crowded with casual folks, found a perfect Portuguese restaurant and dined for three hours outside, under cirrus clouds and a pink setting sun; two pitchers of Sangria enhanced as did a red trolley car that passed by. After dinner, we walked around absorbing the Haight-Ashbury-like youthful energy of the place. You could hear/feel echoes of Bruce, but there’s actually plenty live music to be had all the time in Asbury Park. Here’s a link/doorway/rabbit hole/key to shore magic:

http://www.visitthejerseyshore.com/ 

Clarence Clemons

Asbury Park Convention Hall

 Also check out the ‘Jersey Shore Icon Contest.’   

Clarence Clemons And speaking of Clarence Clemons, why is it in life; that you never pay enough attention to gifted humans, or find ways to get to that first row and just keep regularly taking in amazing precious talent? Clemons met Springsteen on the Jersey Shore in 1971 and played on two songs on Springsteen’s debut album; ‘Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.’ Clemons joined the inaugural E Street Band in late 1972 and played with them until his death. He played on 21 Springsteen albums and was featured prominently on many of his biggest hits, including “Blinded By the Light,” “Thunder Road,” “Jungleland,” “Badlands” and “I’m Goin’ Down.” On stage, Springsteen regularly introduced Clemons as “The Biggest Man You’ve Ever Seen.” Clemons was around 6-foot-5 and 270 pounds. And I’ve added “not having seen Clarence perform enough live,” to my ever growing list of “should’ve done” things. I hate that list and I loved Clarence Clemons.

Clarence Clemons

Clarence Clemons

 Youtube. Clarence Clemons “Jungleland” solo 

So what’s the deal with my moving to a cabin in Montana? It’s because of everything swirling around my head, Ma (listening now to Dylan’s song “It’s Alright, Ma, (I’m Only Bleeding).” “Son, you take too much to heart. Go hop on your Harley, find Captain America.” I wish my mother would’ve said that back then. I might’ve headed out west, discovered America and more of myself. Cousin Stuart offered me a ride on the back of a Harley last summer in Dallas. I looked to the hot sun and asked Ma, “Is it alright?”

 “An’ though the rules of the road have been lodged
It’s only people’s games that you got to dodge
And it’s alright, Ma, I can make it”    Bob Dylan

 Here we go; the roller coaster ride at Olympic Park in Irvington, New Jersey. I rode that ride once when I was twelve years old and never again. Could it be, I’m still dizzy? Guess what I’ve known all along; The Supreme Court ruled unanimously today that a huge class-action lawsuit against Wal-Mart Stores alleging sex discrimination cannot proceed. The lawsuit could have involved up to 1.6 million current and former Wal-Mart employees and billions of dollars in damages. The plaintiffs (women) can still pursue their suit on their own, but not as a class action, the court ruled, meaning much less money would be at stake. See Ma, big money usually always wins.

Clarence Clemons

My dream log cabin in Montana: vegetable garden around the back

 Back to the cabin idea; I’d live alone, grow my own cucumbers, no electrical outlets, no outside world, no US Mail, no political campaigns, media feeding frenzies and other dire straits machinations.

 There seems to be ten states now where it’s particularly bad to be a woman because of a lot of new legislation (hint). And if I did cabin living (with only batteries), there might not be National Public Radio, under the de-fund gun. In Minnesota, the Education Finance Committee is readying a funding bill that will eliminate the goal of desegregated schools. And a few states have rejected high speed rail service and I love train travel as you all know. I like net (internet) neutrality; that’s under fire. Did some House representative from Arkansas introduce legislation cutting funding for the President’s teleprompter? Are there real wars going on against unions, collective bargaining, middle class; all of which touch me? I’m so ‘middle,’ I want to live in a cabin.  In Texas, Debbie Riddle  (R-TX) introduced a bill that would jail people who hire undocumented workers but would exempt anyone who hires “the help” for their homes, thereby effectively legalizing slavery for illegal immigrants. And what’s the deal with Neal Boortz, an Atlanta vitriolic radio talk show host advocating vigilantes and shooting ‘street thugs.’ Cox broadcasting likes the publicity; good for ratings? And how come there isn’t more of an outcry from the media and politicians or are they still burned out on hot dogs? “Hey Ma, do you see why I’m dizzy?”

Clarence Clemons

Rep Peter King. was his hearings really necessary?

  ‘Islamophobia’ became institutionalized in the U.S. House of Representatives when Rep. Peter King (R.NY) had his McCarthy-esque “investigation of radical Islam” back in March. I’m so tired of Joe McCarthy.  Pell Grants, that help middle class kids go to college, have been cut by 25%. Back in my cabin, I wouldn’t have to worry about the planet adding a billion people every 12 years.

Clarence Clemons

Flooded Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant

 Hey Ma, more swirling stuff; Back on June 7th, there was a fire at the Fort Calhoun Nebraska nuclear plant.  The official story is that the fire was in an electrical switchgear room at the plant.  The facility lost power to a pump that cools the spent fuel pool for approximately 90 minutes.  According to the Omaha Public Power District, the fire was quickly extinguished and no radioactive material was released. Right now, the nuclear facility at Fort Calhoun is essentially an island. It is surrounded by rising flood waters from the Missouri River.  I love the ocean especially by my jetty in Belmar. But is Fukushima, which we hear nothing about anymore, killing our oceans and will it be the worst disaster known to us human kind? How much of Japan will be inhabitable?  My friend in Seattle, a psychic, keeps telling me about cracks in the earth’s surface (and earthquakes); one 500 foot crack developed in Michigan recently.

Clarence Clemons

Arizona fires.

The fire in Arizona consumed 500,000 acres and saddened me; I’ve climbed red mountains there a dozen times. I left my heart out west; that’s why I want cabin life in Montana; big blue sky away from the maddening crowd. “Hey Ma, why do I let all this stuff swirl me around?” Maybe if Captain America would ask me, under a starry western sky, to join him around a joint camp fire, but I’d have to tell him it doesn’t work on me and to put it back in his handlebars. Too much rationality and sensibility fight cerebral recreation.

 I just came in from outside. I love shoving 10:30 PM summer air into my lungs; I was back in Newark, sitting on a stoop, smoking a ‘punk’ which was nothing more than a lit stick that scared Jersey mosquitoes away.

Clarence Clemons

George Reeves. TV Superman

 The stoop gang looked up at the stars and wondered about the television ‘Superman’ George Reeves, dying the way he did. I hear the ‘Book of Mormon’ is now sold out for five years and I could’ve gone to previews. Pandora now has comedians. Earlier this afternoon, I flicked on the television and watched an HBO documentary ‘Section 60;’ the story of a section at Arlington National Cemetery where America’s most recent war dead from Iraq and Afghanistan lie in a quiet patch of ground. Families, friends and military comrades visit the gravesites. Such powerful visual stuff.   Link to Documentary web site:

‘Section 60’ Documentary Link 

Sure Ma, this was a serious blog. I think its time for Youtube and ‘Abbott and Costello’ “Who’s on First” routine.

 Abbott and Costello ‘Who’s on First’ Routine 

Often I’ve pondered writing like this, but thirty years ago, expressing what’s out the window, down the block, but I don’t think I could’ve back then without internet infusions and confusions. I’m a product of changing digital times, Belmar jetties, Google, Facebook, anti-oxidants, the Constitution, and Montana cabin dreams. If I were a songwriter, I would’ve written the lyrics for the aforementioned notions by this morning followed by two aspirin. Have a nice first day of summer. Quick thought; I wouldn’t have to move the clocks back or forward in my Montana cabin.

 CONTACT INFORMATION

 website:  http://vichywater.net

Facebook: Cal Schwartz

Twitter: Earthood

 Book Trailer(hey its only 65 seconds, Ma):

Vichy Water book trailer

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