I. The Other Loyalist. P says take Instas. We met a couple from NY—Long Island. They moved here 1977. They live in El Segundo. I pronounced Camarillo wrong. I didn't know where my brother lived. We drank wine and looked out at what was left of the rest of the country. Our view was of … Continue reading California in March
Category: Travelogue
Midlanding, Sept. 5-18, 2014
I. Road Hand, 9/5. Frontenac WFC ticker, Dow up 29. Friday air yellow, please reduce travel. Too late for that. 87º at 9:34. No AC, US-61N to Hannibal. Fifty miles to Cuivre River. White Memorial Wildlife Area. 64 miles at 10:06. 88º at 10:36—windy. No one on this road. I'm doing 60 mph, comfy. Missed … Continue reading Midlanding, Sept. 5-18, 2014
Meramec State Park, August 22-24
I wrote nothing the whole time at Meramec. We camped, we floated, we sweated. Friday I camped with one of my five cousins, Lyle. He picked me up in his Sierra. I gave him a quick tour of the house. His brother had been here, a few years ago at holiday time. We crawled along Hanley and I regretted having suggested we go that way. Big Bend, Jack—quit forgetting about Big Bend.
Just getting my camp gear loaded into the truck I was sweating. He was sweating at work and never stopped. He must've hauled ass to get to my place when he did—left the mill at 3:50, down 70 to Soulard, fight the good fight along 64/170 to College City—I expected him at 5:30 but he got here at ten after. I was only a third of the way through a manhattan solidarity said I shouldn't have. But solidarity lost its good fight.
Continue with this travelogue...
Sam A. Baker State Park, August 8-10
I. Getting There.Leaving 9:25a, cloudy...we're listening to the radio...the market is mixed, I did a bit of work this morning, B is driving..."I Touch Myself," I have an inexplicable memory of getting off a plane when I hear this song, of disembarking at the moment when you say "bye now" to the stewardess...and I remember … Continue reading Sam A. Baker State Park, August 8-10
St. Francois State Park, July 18-20, 2014
I. Friday at Site 88. ...In which Pat sets up his erstwhile tent, an igloo type, smaller than his new one, saying it [the erstwhile tent] is a little musty because he hasn't used it since Wisconsin...And in which Jack buys a couple of bundles of wood from a guy on a golf cart... One of … Continue reading St. Francois State Park, July 18-20, 2014
Klondike Park, Late June 2014
I. Friday Night, Late Enough, Lying in Tent. That roar, that humming noise is not some dope's generator—it's the hulking skulking Labadie power plant. Its white noise comes and goes, I don't mind. That light from a few campsites down, that's the fire of two guys, not real country music but listening to country. I … Continue reading Klondike Park, Late June 2014
Current River Float Trip, May/June 2014
I. Preface. I'm listening to house music in the southeast corner of a hundred-year-old home in University City, MO. B comes in, to investigate. We're investigating each other, all the time. Who you text-a-sizing with, B? What are you looking up now, B? I started by watering the lawn this morning—really what I watered were … Continue reading Current River Float Trip, May/June 2014
Meramec State Park, May 2014
I. Friday Afternoon. We're here! We've been here for about 90 minutes. The tent is up; I'm well into a 12 oz. La Fin; the Cardinals are trying to come back and tie the Cubs. It's 6-5 in the top of the eighth. B is reading her crossword puzzle mystery by Parnell Hall. On the … Continue reading Meramec State Park, May 2014
New Orleans
(for J. Smith)
I. Prologue.
These thoughts I have. I'm just gonna write them down. Why is she...?
"What are you doing?"
She moves away, sighs. I'm scrawling.
"Are you... What are your code names for J[] and T[]?"
"Pretty sure J is Brett."
"T is...Fairchild?"
"I think I referred to both in Jamaica '09, so they would be whatever they were in there."
The humidifier gargles. This is the most I've written in this putative dream journal since I don't know when. I'm up there. B asks me if I'm writing in the dark.
Continue with NOLA...Eagles in Winfield, MO: Lock and Dam #25
1
We left here at two minutes to nine—nine being when we were to be at the Vaughans' house. I had rushed to get my backpack filled with the right things. As I sat it in the backseat, I remarked to myself, "This bag is heavy."
At the Vaughans' place, Anne-Marie was ready to greet us as we made to knock. We piled into her Scion, for what reason I never inquired. I was kind of disappointed because I really like riding in Pat's Vibe. Pat still drove. I rode shotgun and felt I had nothing to say. Pat made the left from I-170 North to I-70 West (a turn he once made in error, begging Billy's chagrin at the White Birch disc golf course, but I digress). I thought: he's done it again—why are we getting on Interstate 70 West when Grafton and the eagles are east of here? But I didn't say anything, except for a small prayer that I said only to myself (and God).
Through the airport area on Interstate 70 is a nasty speed trap—Berkeley, Edmundson, St. Ann: the various airport municipalities, some more obscure than others. Pat wasn't exactly laying off it but I didn't see any cops. Eventually they were there (two of St. Ann's finest), but one had gotten out to share some hot intel with the other and Pat saw the guy's fluorescent highlighter vest and eased up.
That disaster averted, I got back to worrying about where in the hell we were going. I thought, "Is he going to take Lindbergh to 367?" That's not the way I would have gone, and we would lose a little time, but it would get the job done—I guess. Nope. Then we flew by the ramp to get onto I-270 and I was completely confused. I resorted to consoling my worry by thinking, "Okay. There's some other place, along the Missouri River that's really good for seeing eagles, that Pat knows about because he's got the whole St. Charles County-sort-of country street smarts thing going on." Except that B and I had recently mentioned to Pat and Anne-Marie that we (me and B) had driven up along the Great River Road to Grafton on Christmas (with my sister Emily and her boyfriend, Rob) and we had seen a boatload of eagles along the way. If Pat knew about a sweet spot for eagle watching that was somehow better, he didn't mention it then.
I started to worry that his plan was to take a series of ferries to get us to Grafton, something we had done once when we all went to Grafton for my birthday one September. On that occasion we first took the Golden Eagle ferry across the Mississippi to Golden Eagle, IL before then taking the Brussels ferry across the Mississippi yet again to Grafton. This possibility concerned me because I was pretty sure that neither of those two ferries was running today. I'd checked. The winter has been quite cold and best I could tell from the websites for those ferries—and from Twitter—the ferries were shut down because of ice build-up on the river. The Winfield ferry, which I'd never been on and didn't even realize existed, had apparently started running in the last day or so, but Winfield was a bit further north. If we headed up that way, it might be our only option but even then: if the Brussels ferry wasn't running it wasn't clear to me how we'd get to Grafton. Either way, it was looking like we were going to be spending more time in the car than I had imagined and I was starting to fret just a bit...
The eagles are just ahead...