Saturday, September 27, 2014

An Autumn Bike Ride (or) 'Ol Poopy Butt


‘Ol Poopy Butt

 

This is a true story, although you might not think so. I had trouble believing it myself until it was confirmed by the son-in-law of the speaker. The teller of this tale was ‘ol poopy butt herself, a proper and refined lady about my age who told the story during dinner. After I got home, I wrote down all that I remembered and I have tried to faithfully record her story verbatim. Since ‘ol poopy butt may be known to some readers, I’ll use a writer’s prerogative and simply refer to her as Linda M in order to protect her from unremitting ridicule by our mutual friends. Here is Linda M in her own words as I remember them.

 

“It was a beautiful fall afternoon some years ago when my family gathered at Mackinaw Island for a last taste of summer. Our family group of six adults included my two grown daughters and their husbands for this one-day getaway on Mackinaw Island. I had dressed carefully for the trip, even wearing a new pair of stylish, light blue Capri pants. We had taken the ferry in late morning, planning to spend the afternoon exploring the island before returning to the mainland in the evening. As we walked off the ferryboat, the first thing we saw on our right was a huge bicycle rental place. We planned our trip on the spur of the moment: we would rent bicycles and spend the afternoon touring the island, then enjoy a relaxing dinner along the shoreline in a pleasant restaurant before catching the ferry for our return to the mainland. A perfect day for a fall afternoon, we thought, blissfully unaware of what lay ahead.”

“My daughter Tammy was always the adventurous one. She decided that her rental bike just had to be a bicycle built for two. No one else seemed to share her enthusiasm, so I agreed to join her as co-pilot while the other four adults chose solo bikes for our trip around the island. Since Tammy is younger, bigger and stronger, I agreed to ride behind her. Our tandem bike was a boy’s style bike with the high cross bar connecting the two saddles. I stood on a curb and mounted the rear saddle while Tammy steadied the front end. Once aboard, I held the bike for her while she mounted the front saddle and then we were off!”

“It took but a moment for our group to find our way on Mackinaw’s coastal highway. Leaving town behind us, we began the long counter-clockwise route around the island. It promised to be an exhilarating ride with the cool breeze from the lake cooling my sun-warmed face as we formed a phalanx of bicycles and pedaled along the flat coastal road. After a while, I noticed that our tandem bike seemed to swerving back and forth across the road so I asked Tammy about it.

“ ‘ Oh, didn’t you notice the horse poop? I am swerving around the piles,’ “ she yelled to the wind that caught her voice and sent it back to me. I began looking down along the road. She was right! There was horse poop everywhere. I thought the island people cleaned it up. Apparently, there are so many horses they can’t keep up. I noticed that you could tell the older piles from the fresh ones since the older ones consisted of little poo apples that were congealing in the sun to form one large pie – something you certainly didn’t want to hit with the bike or step in.”

“The trouble began after we had ridden several miles on the coastal highway and decided the eight mile-long road around the island was too slow and too boring. Tammy was one of the ringleaders who decided it would be more adventurous to turn left at the next road and cut across the island toward town where we could visit the shops and tourist attractions. I was enjoying the ride, so it didn’t matter to me which way we went. I pedaled silently behind Tammy.

[Mackinaw Island is essentially a large rocky hill sitting in the watery straits of Mackinac. Over millennia, the waves and the wind have gradually worn down the hill at the shoreline to provide a flat perimeter around the island where the coastal highway is located. Turning inland, however, one encounters the hill that rises to a peak in the approximate center and then descends to the fort and the village on the southern shore. It was this rise in the land that allowed the British to capture the American fort during the War of 1812 when the British landed unobserved then climbed the hill overlooking the fort. The American commander wisely surrendered.

Automobiles were banned on the island in 1898 when local residents complained that the new-fangled contraptions were scaring their horses. The ban has remained in effect since then. The result is a picturesque society of exclusive horse transportation and an excess of horse excrement on every public road until the hardworking road workers sweep it up. Most folks don’t mind the horse offal, but most folks don’t ride tandem bikes either.]

 

“We didn’t realize the road across the island would be quite so steep, especially for those on a bicycle built for two. Within minutes of our turn, we were slowing down and Tammy struggled to keep our bike balanced. As the bike slowed, we began to wobble and I began to get scared of falling. When it appeared we were stopping, I leaned to my left and hopped off the bike … almost. I had forgotten about climbing on the curb. When I hopped off my left foot hit the pavement but my right foot got hung up on the too-high crossbar. Since the bike hadn’t stopped moving there was nothing to be done but hop forward on one leg while the unaware Tammy continued to valiantly pedal forward. By the time I had made three or four hops forward, my yelling finally got Tammy’s attention. She stopped pedaling one moment too soon. We had just passed a horse pile, the congealed type, and my left foot landed square in the center. It was slippery, too slippery. My left foot slipped forward while my rear went down. In the pile.”

“I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. I wasn’t hurt, but I found myself sitting in a pile of horse manure* with my right leg draped over the bike. I remember that the rear wheel was still turning and Tammy was standing in front still holding onto the handlebars with her end of the bike still partially upright.

*[Modesty prevents me from quoting Linda M directly at this point. The plain talking woman actually used other, more colorful language to describe the pile of excrement. I recall that it was a simple word of four letters, commonly used as a prefix to the word house.]

 

“Everyone else in our party of six heard my yelling and turned back to investigate. Presumably, my husband and family members deduced that I was unhurt. At least I hope so because all I saw was, at first, a few smiles and then uproarious laughter. Even Tammy joined in. I couldn’t cry and so I too, finally smiled. The worst part was when other bicyclists rode by and my family couldn’t desist in the laughter and simply pointed at me as the visitors rode by.”

“After the hilarity began to subside, Tammy managed to disengage herself from the bike and then helped me get my right leg from the downed bicycle. I gingerly got up, carefully leaning aside to avoid the pile. [Editor’s Note – see prior asterick].

Some portion of the pile got up with me, sticking to my backside and offering a noteworthy color shift to my light blue pants, almost like a bullseye [Editor’s Note – see prior asterick]. The hilarity began again, this time including me. We couldn’t quit laughing. Finally, our sides hurt from all the laughter, and one-by-one, we regained our sanity. It might have been Tammy, I’m not sure, but one of the family looked me and established a new and forever family nickname -
 
Let’s go, ‘ol poopy butt.’ “  

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Atttending a 50th High School Reunion


For some unfathomable reason, I attended wife Marjorie’s 50th high school reunion – the 1964 class of Pontiac Central High School. Even though friends warned me off the event saying I faced an evening among strangers intent on impressing their classmates, I decided to accompany her to the party. If all else failed, I reasoned, I could find solace at the bar. Attending the party involved a long drive, an overnight stay, and a buffet dinner in a dark, oversize banquet room. There were more than 100 oldsters of every size, color, and temperament squeezed into the room elbow to elbow. I didn’t expect much, but it turned out to be a hoot.

 

The party planners had arranged for a first-class DJ for the evening. He had asked graduates to choose favorite music with the result that the party grooved to the sounds of the Sixties via The Platters, Elvis, James Brown, and a host of other ‘60s rock stars. The dance floor was overrun much of the evening. It was a treat to see folks dropping their canes and walkers to bebop to the golden oldies. I was tempted to shake my behind to the grooves when I thought no one was watching, but then I realized that I didn’t know anyone, so what the hey. I joined the mass of bobbing bodies and occasionally found a groove I could keep time with. Nobody seemed to care about dance skills or a lack thereof, including me.

 

Behind the DJ was a screen with a continuous loop of old photographs and movie clips playing, each extolling the golden days when we were innocent and full of wide-eyed wonder. The pictures of muscle cars and historic buildings were interesting. I pretended to be thrilled when it came time for the school fight song and cheering the school teams. It turns out that their school, Pontiac Central, had many things to brag about including two Olympic gold medal winners: US Champion and gold medal winner in diving - Micki King (1972, Munich) and track star and gold medal winner Hayes Jones (1964, Tokyo). Both athletes overcame adversity on their way to record-breaking careers with Micki King becoming a Colonel in the Air Force.

 

The planners had also arranged for a professional photographer to circulate among the guests taking both candid and staged photos for any group of graduates who wanted. The photographer loaded  all the old photographs and the newly created pictures taken on the spot on memory sticks. And, here is the best part, each attendee got a free copy of the memory stick before the evening ended.

 

The party included a program where anyone who wanted had a chance to speak to the assembled group. Amazingly, several speakers turned out to be not graduates, but TEACHERS OF THE GRADUATES. Marjorie whispered to me that while she was in school she thought the teachers were all old, but now, they didn’t seem so old, after all. One of the speakers was my personal favorite, a guy named Joe Cool. Of course, he looked anything but. Surely, his name must have been worth a million bucks. Imagine going on a job interview, “Hi, I’m Joe Cool.” Marjorie’s class also had another person with the same name as a famous journalist – Ernie Pyle, the WW II correspondent.

 

Although I thought I knew no one, wife Marjorie knew most. After being prompted by the school photo’s that each wore around their necks, but she was able to recall most folks even though her class was more than 400 strong. It was a treat to learn the stories of various folks and how they had migrated from Pontiac to places around the world. I was surprised that several are still working and some are looking for work. Late in the evening, I recognized one fellow that I had worked with at General Motors and he and I had a chance to reminisce. We were given a booklet containing the graduating class statistics. They were a bit sobering; 78 of her classmates had passed and more than 100 were unable to be located for the party.

 

The evening ended after I pooped out early. Marjorie had a good time, I had a good time, and it was satisfying to see some folks who looked older than I look and couldn’t dance any better. So, if you are considering attending a school reunion, my advice is to go, maybe you’ll find an old friend or someone with a name like Joe Cool. Imagine that.