The Weekly Watch

A Sense of Place

It was the mid seventies when I moved from Alabama to the northern corner of North Carolina near Boone, the highest county seat east of the Mississippi. It was Smiley that triggered the memory. He lives in the high country. I know a song that has the line “the warm winds of memory drifted past him”. In the case of my experience in Mabel NC, it was the cool winds of memory that came to mind when Smiley reminded me of those days... and flooded me with the pleasure of my learning experiences there. Place has a strong effect on us and I hope this essay reminds us all to choose our place(s) carefully.

snowy scene.jpg

Boone is a tourist town. They come for skiing in the winter and to escape the heat in the summer. There's a historical outdoor play there “Horn in the West”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5Krp3Wjzd4 (6 min)
http://www.blueridgeheritage.com/attractions-destinations/horn-in-the-west

And a favorite tourist restaurant with southern fare...
http://www.danlbooneinn.com/

But my experience in NC was more about community....

My plan was to set up a home and get a job. I was about twenty and hoped to get my teaching degree at Appalachian State. I had a $1000 in pocket from summer work and struck out. I found a nice house to rent in Mabel, a little town in a valley between Boone and Mountain City, Tennessee. Mabel was (maybe still is?) just a country store and a few churches. Up and down the valley, folks farmed Burley tobacco.

I stopped in the country store and met Vic and Hon, the owners. He was a retired Marine and Hon his Vietnamese wife. It was an old timey store with a potbellied stove and old timers hanging around ready to offer advice. They told me about a little house for rent. The owner was working in the Detroit car industry. His brother, John, lived nearby. I found out later he was retired CIA. He cut the rental deal with me.

forest_0.jpg

The house was full of wormy chestnut woodwork. The American chestnut, once the dominant tree of the forest, is essentially extinct. On the ridge tops large trees still lie, resistant to rot, silent reminders of the forest of 100 years ago. https://www.ourstate.com/american-chestnut/

chestnut stump.jpg

The water in the house was gravity fed from a spring half way up the mountain behind the house. Ray, a farmer I met down the valley didn't bother to put shut off valves on his piped spring, he just let his spring run in his sink 24/7. He didn't have a refrigerator, but used a spring house. The spring ran through a concrete trough than widened and narrowed to provide shallow or deep placement of items in the cool spring water allowing him to cool a butter dish or a big pitcher of milk. There was electricity and a refrigerator in my rental house.

spring house.jpg

The heat was from a fuel oil (something between diesel and kerosene) furnace that resembled a wood heater. In Alabama natural gas or propane was the fuel of choice, and this was a new experience for me. It was all a new experience in this remote little valley.

Finding work was the first order of business. Initially I landed a timber site improvement job. It involved killing hardwoods in pine plantations. Using a hatchet you knocked off a chunk of bark and then sprayed a herbicide into the notch. After two weeks, a local carpenter recruited me. Both jobs were weather dependent and winter was around the corner. I drove the 10 or so miles into Boone and started asking about work. A couple of days later, I got a call from the Hardware Store with a job offer. I jumped at the chance, and I landed on of my favorite jobs I've ever had.

as it was.jpg

Farmers Hardware was right in the center of Boone. It was a big three story affair with a mezzanine. Out back a separate building held a ski shop and under it, tractor and chainsaw sales and repair. The bottom floor of the main store was paints and glass. In the old days they had a shooting range for customers to try out guns before purchasing them, but that was long gone ... only some bullet holes in one of the chestnut columns supporting the building still told the story.

The main floor was tools, dishes, screws, guns, knives, stove pipe, kerosene lamps, horseshoes and harness, and much more. It was the kind of store where you needed a clerk to help you find what you were looking for. Things were stocked in drawers with multiple bins. Women worked the front where the dishes and housewares were located and the guys were in the back with the hardware bits and bobs.

farmers hardware_1.jpg

The mezzanine was electronics...Sony TVs and the newly released beta max recorders. Cecil, the owner, had his office there and he handled most of those sales. He had a window that looked down over the main floor. Third floor held picnic tables and patio furnishings, wood stoves, fireplace equipment, and similar seasonal items. There was a old freight elevator to take items and customers up there.

It was a thriving business throughout the year with winter ski clientele and summer snowbirds returning from Florida. Cecil treated his employees right. He had profit sharing. He paid a substantial bonus at the end of the year, not to mention giving everyone a wheel of cheese and a big ham for Christmas. That sure creates loyalty and makes you want the store to do well.

Doc Watson, who was from Deep Gap a few miles down the road, was a regular customer. When you were helping him he would say,”let me see it.” Which meant take it out of the plastic wrappings so he could feel it to see if it was what he wanted. He wired his own house. He must have used a sound generator to tell the wires apart. People who knew him as a child said you would never know he was blind. He would play with other children running around the playground as if he was sighted.

One of my favorite albums of Doc and his son Merle from 1970 (1.25 hours)

Music is common in the area, and it became more a part of my life as well. One day a fellow came in the store, said he was looking for a bandger screw. Well, we had all kinds of screws...round head, flat head, wood, self tapping metal, and so on...but no bandger screws. I asked him what they were for...and he looked at me like I was an idiot and made like he was strumming and said you know, for a bandger (banjo). Ended up he needed a small screw for a mechanical tuning peg.

Here's some background about the Appalachians and the European settlers (and their music) (30 min)

It wasn't just locals, lots of tourists came to the store. One day I was filling in downstairs in the paint department. It was winter, and a woman came in from out at the ski shop. She was wearing a loose knit sweater, and it being cold her headlights were on high beam with her nipples sticking out of the sweater. Dale was working the floor with me, an older local fellow. He was dumb struck and could not even speak. I was a young hippie accustomed to nudity and got the paint brush she was seeking without a blush. Seems there was always something entertaining at the store.

The little town of Mabel was also constantly entertaining. Tobacco farming is one of the last crops that allows for small farms. I arrived in the late summer, and helped my neighbor (D.E. And Ruby) with their harvest. There a good bit of hand work. You cut the tobacco plant. Use a metal cone over a stout stick and stack the cut plants on it. The sticks get hung in the barn to dry. After drying the tobacco leaves are pulled off and graded into “hands” ready for sale.

burley.jpg

The tobacco allotments are small enough that many folks still work them with horses and mules. Down the road I met Earl, a retired salesman. He was the resident horse expert and often judged shows and went to auctions. He had a old white mule that was smart as could be. He would buy a untrained horse and harness it up with his mule. That mule would train the horse to work biting or kicking it till it would work like a dream. Then Earl would buy another matched horse and swap sides, letting the old mule train the second horse. Then he would harness the two horses together and work them... finally selling them as a match pair. People came from all over to buy his well trained horses (and he would make a pretty profit as a result).

Denver and Ruby lived across the road. Denver's Dad once owned the little store in town. He remembered going with his Dad in a wagon to Mountain City once a month to get supplies for the store. It was a day there and a day back home. Ruby always seemed the one who did the work around their farm. She could tote two square bales at a time by holding them at shoulder level. They had hippie chickens, that's what they called them anyway. Their feathers grew over their eyes. Ruby would catch them and trim their head feathers so they could see better. One day I went over the visit. Denver was reclined in a outdoor lounge chair, and Ruby was on the roof caulking around the chimney. Denver keep hollering instructions...a little more over to your left.

Every Friday night there was a auction in Mountain City, Tennessee about ten miles away. We got in the habit of going with some of our neighbors. I still have several items in my house from those auctions...a mirror on my medicine cabinet, an old chestnut washstand, a few tools, and old wheat cradle that hangs in my barn. Like the Trade Day in my current life, the auction was as much a social event as a shopping opportunity.

snow.jpg

I had to learn to drive on snow. The hardware store opened at 7 AM and I was often the first person out of the valley. It started snowing in December that year, and I didn't see the ground again till late March. Some mornings the only way to see where the road was were the tops of the fence posts on either side of the road. You had to drive down the valley and turn left to get to the main road which was plowed. When I first arrived they gave me advice on how to drive that sounded bizarre but ended up being the strategy. First thing buy snow tires with studs (little metal spikes). When you need to turn, start early and go into a controlled slide, when you're lined up with the road use your gas to propel you in the right direction. After a week or two it was natural and pretty easy.

We met some folks over in Spruce Pine. They took us cross country skiing on the Blueridge parkway. He was a wood turner and I also had my first experience with a lathe there. It was easy to meet people in the store. Some of them I encountered years later. Paul comes to mind. He was a musician and I was invited to a session at his house. He had built a plastic greenhouse type structure over a little creek outside his door. The little stream buffered the temperature and he had early spring blooms there as winter was letting go its grip. Years later we re-met in Rome Georgia at a little festival we were both playing.

Spring replaced winter and the area has some great hiking opportunities. The tobacco farmers set up plastic covered nurseries to start their plants. The more prosperous farmers would use tractor driven planters. The smaller operators planted their crop by hand. Ray just used a stick to poke a hole, placing the seedling in it, and covering it covering it by hand...much like I now plant in my garden.

planting.jpg

I guess that's the point I'm trying to make in this essay. Where we spend our time, shapes how we spend our time, and so directs us on our path. I loved my year in Mabel and Boone. It help mold me in many ways. You may be wondering why I left. One of my profs at Auburn offered me a scholarship ...an offer I decided to take - going to school full time. I went on to get my BS and MS in Agronomy and Soils. I had an $800 debt when I finished my BS and no debt when I completed my masters. I went on to UGA for a PhD, but left the publish or perish corporate research world to teach in public schools with a MEd in science circling all the way back to my goal when I first struck out to make a new life in NC.

Has there been a place in your life that shaped you? I would love to hear your story.

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mimi's picture

and ask one more: no, I have not had a place that really shaped my life, aside may be the garden my mother created way back in the late fifties and early sixties and the way she stuck it out and ended up always creating new outdoor living spaces, all self-taught. My mom didn't read many books, but she read and studied a lot of journals and books of how to create gardens.

I passed places that shaped me, but always only in passing by. I was a migrant somehow, not by choice, gut also not by need. So, in a way I am still searching for that place that will shape my feeling of having arrived and building a home (it's a little late being 70 years old now, but old girls sometime still hvae dreams... Wink ).

Now my question, as there is a lot in your life story that in one way or another reminds me of my son.

When you left with planning to set up a home and get a job, would you think the same could still happen today? You said that you were about twenty and hoped to get a teaching degree at Appalachian State and that you had a $1000 in your pocket from summer work.

Much of your luck depended on getting this job at the hardware store. A permanent job.
It wouldn't happen these days anymore, is my guess. And a scholarship to be able to go fulltime to school? No student debt at the end? Getting a roof over your head with a rental place you could pay on your own? From what I see and hear, that doesn't happen anymore these day and many have given up to achieve those goals in a way you were able to.

Choose your place well, you say?

Having seen tropical jungle areas with soils not fertile (in Cameroon), deserts dry and windy with sand storms and temperatures up to 40 centigrades (my son in Iraq), winter times in Montana and in Seoul, South Korea, and areas in Maryland, where I was the longest of times in my life, and warm and dry mediterranian climate in Rome Italy,(sometimes getting dusted by sand from the sandstorms originating in Iraq or Northern Africa), I have not learned that much.

Just watching the Hurricanes around the world, I would say, all I conclude is to best build on a rock that is a bit elevated and try to get your irrigation needs for your garden plants, vegetables and your lifestock in the backyard, from a spring or little river powered by solar and little wind generators. And I guess I would build the first floor with bricks and the upper floors out of bamboo in warm, humid climate zones. And I would start out early .... So, I have not much to show for here ...

A good lifestory. And many thanks for sharing all of it with us. Kind of heart-warming. Hugs to you for it. Take care.

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Lookout's picture

@mimi

to dig in the Earth. I still find such solace in it. Do you still have access to your Mom's garden? The time which we talked about last week is now. The place is here (be here now). Next week I'll touch on the how...how we approach our path.

Till then my friend. Take care and be well.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

I'm not sure if a place shaped me. I'll have to reflect on that. People shaped me, that's certain. Then again, my sister and I grew up among the same people, but are different. So, maybe how you come into this world matters.

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Lookout's picture

@HenryAWallace

all so different. It is both the cast of the genetic dice and the environment. I bet you and your sister hung out with different folks. Thanks for reading and glad it made you think about the places in your life. All the best!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout

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janis b's picture

@HenryAWallace

what you came with. And possibly even what matters more is for that to be recognised and appreciated.

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mhagle's picture

And you are such a great storyteller too.

Like mimi commented . . . I don't know if a kid could do that today. Finding a good full time job and affordable housing?

At the moment I am confronted with a heartbreaking situation. We already have a friend of our daughter's living with us. This is the third year. They have been friends since 3rd grade and throughout the years we have occasionally had to rescue her. Mostly things like she would be sick at school and no one could come and get her. For a period of time she and her younger siblings mostly lived alone. Anyway, no surprise when our daughter announced to us that her friend had to come and live with us. She's been great. An A student in her second year of college now.

She has a friend (not a friend of our daughter's though) who is pretty much homeless. Started having babies young. Has two and both have been taken from her. No job. No education. Bunches of family around who don't give a shit about her. Guess she has found a place to stay for the moment. We had our "unofficial foster daughter's" mom and 3 of her siblings living with us for about 5 weeks last winter. Homeless at that point too, but now have a place and a job. Very hard on my kids to have all of those extra strangers around though, so this time I just couldn't do it.

Told my neighbor about the situation and she said that girls at church (baptist) were getting pregnant left and right. She said it must be in the water. I said, "no . . . it is because they do not teach sex ed and birth control at our local school district."

Learning more about this homeless girl . . . very crappy home life. Mom would leave 4 little kids at home alone without food to go and hang out with her boyfriend. This mom always had a steady job I guess and was not homeless.

I had a terrific childhood, so these types of situations are hard to imagine. It was an Iowa farm life with plenty of hard work, but lots of love and fun. And most local families were like that.

I don't know how much of it is regional - probably quite a bit - or generational. But I am becoming aware a chunk of society that is being marginalized. This homeless kid went to school with my kid. I remember I gave her a ride home once. At that point she was pretty and outgoing. I suppose "they" have always been here and I didn't see them. Our good friends here are educated and not locals, transplants as well.

Seems like there needs to be a place or organization to help kids get back on track. Does that exist?

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Lookout's picture

@mhagle

but I didn't really have a good childhood...lots of conflict, a evil step dad...but adversity built strength and strong mindedness for me. I left home early and paved my own way. I always thought kids should have a public home option. If they faced abuse they could go to a group home. Parents might act differently if their kids could walk out to a different life...and kids who were ignored or mistreated would have an option. Dream on I guess. Public options are not prevalent.

So good of you to help your daughter's friend. I'm sure it shaped her life in a positive way. As Henry W. said above...people shape our lives. We do what we can do.

Wishing you and yours the best....

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mhagle's picture

@Lookout @Lookout

It would be a balancing act too . . . don't want to take kids away from parents who are loving but just having a tough time. Maybe the difference would be that the kid chooses?

And the foster home situation here strikes me as a bit creepy. People become foster parents as a source of extra income. **Shudder**

If there was a good loving safe place for kids to escape to . . . that would be wonderful.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

ggersh's picture

thru the day, I grew up loving baseball, memorizing
BA's, ERA's which led me trading(shoot me) cuz numbers.

https://twitter.com/RealKentMurphy/status/1040656126428291073

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

Lookout's picture

@ggersh

BB stats are kinda like them really. My Grandmother (Nana) was a puzzler...everything from jigsaws to crosswords. She started me out early with them. Also word puzzles. you know the type - Sally lives in a red house. Tom lives in a green house. What color house does Mary live in.

Later in life it sure served me well because all those college entrance test and so on had those same kind of puzzles, and I blew them away...explaining my scholarships.

Exercising our minds is good no matter the routine...stats or puzzles. All the best!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

ggersh's picture

@Lookout my memories both great ones are of
one grandma being a compulsive cleaner while
the other was a thinker looking out the living
room window all day watching life pass by. It
was all good my siblings became the cleaners
and I'm enjoying life passing by.

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

A delightful read for a Sunday morning.

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Lookout's picture

@TB mare

...and thanks to smiley for reminding me of this story.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

magiamma's picture

at the time was an off-the-radar small art community full of artists, back to the earthers and good music. I learned a lot and it pushed me to go back to school and study art.

Thank you. Good read!

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook

Lookout's picture

@magiamma

Artists and back to the landers. Hope that schooling was enriching. Thanks for reading and commenting!

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earthling1's picture

You paint a good picture with your words.
Like Mimi, I grew up in a migrant lifestyle, moving from place to place. Meeting new people, forming new relationships at each move.
Born in West by God Virginia, I was migrated to Southern California (Compton) as a 5 y.o., a then orbited around L.A. from one suburb to another until moving on to Portland, Oregon, a short stint in Ringgold, Georgia, Sugar Hill, outside of Atlanta, then back to Washington state.
All of these places had an effect on me, but no one place provided anything as profound as your N.C. experience.
I have known, and still remain in contact with, people who have never left the county they were born in. Yet they lead vibrant, happy lives.
Thank you for a facinating glimpse of your personal journey to becoming you.

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Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.

janis b's picture

@earthling1

"I have known, and still remain in contact with, people who have never left the county they were born in. Yet they lead vibrant, happy lives."

It brings to mind a book by Jon Kabat-Zinn, - Wherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life

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@janis b
I think I play this too much...

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janis b's picture

@QMS

[video:https://youtu.be/SmqKTBa47sM]

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Lookout's picture

@earthling1

...and many of my friends...folks I play music with weekly, have been together since grade school. Travel and seeing other cultures is mind opening though, and just staying in one place can stunt your development. Like most things in life there's good and bad in most. The trick is focusing on the good I think.

here's hoping you find good in your place today!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Enjoyed the read. Thank you.

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Lookout's picture

@OPOL

I was so grateful for all your pieces in LD's BNR. I looked forward to them every AM during the primary.

I also appreciate your referral to Jason Fung. It really has had a profound effect on me. we never know the effects we have on others.

hope you're doing well. Wishing you the best!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

paralleling a river meandering east - west. The heady aroma of hashish in the air. Wavy Gravy and Abby Hoffman just addressed a collection of liberal minds in the quad. Dave Brubeck playing a quintet set. Jazz, reefer, social justice and hope were the coin of the realm. Think global, act local.

Anyone care to guess the time and place? A small slice of the life which led me here.

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janis b's picture

@QMS

but my first thought was the Charles River in Boston in the early, mid-70's.

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@janis b location further west, same latitude

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janis b's picture

@QMS

I know it's not 42 degrees south-west. That's where a niche vodka (I have not yet tried) is produced.

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@janis b Ann Arbor, maybe '72. Wink

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Lookout's picture

@QMS

Those were the days....
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0d8FTPv955I]

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Pluto's Republic's picture

You were so comfortable with people. That's a gift in itself.

Thanks for sharing that part of your life.

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Populations don’t like wars. They have to be lied into it.
That means we can be “truthed” into peace. — Julian Assange
Lookout's picture

@Pluto's Republic

comfortable with people. One of the best lessons I ever got was from a fellow teacher who said - you know that kid that drives you crazy? You just have to talk with them about stuff other than school. you know the saying "once you get to know them they're not so bad? well it's true".

and sure enough it is.

thanks for reading and commenting. I always appreciate your insights.

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janis b's picture

Sense of place has been my primary life-long motivation in seeking a sense of belonging and appreciation of life. Even though I have found a strong sense of belonging in relationship, place has been constant to my sense of wellbeing. Where I call home (NZ) has for 22 years continued to satisfy that need. It’s the longest I’ve lived in one place. When thinking about how to describe what it is that I find so satisfying, I think of its natural beauty, the freshness of its air, the sounds of its bird life and water, the naturally reserved and respectful nature of much of its population; and the place where in raising our daughter and sharing the most meaningful relationship of my life, I grew the most.

Thank you Lookout for initiating these reflections and sharing your experience. I am happy for you that your life has been so rewarding in its choices and that you feel so much appreciation.

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Lookout's picture

@janis b

Had a job offer to do forage research on the S island after my MS...really thought hard about it...but land is cheap in Alabama and figured I could start my homestead more easily here.

I've often wonder what my life would be had I opted for NZ. The choices we make determine our path. And although I have no regrets I often ponder what that path less traveled would have been like.

Take care on the other side of the world friend.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

janis b's picture

@Lookout

Forage research sounds interesting from the little I've read- collecting and interpreting public opinion and perception, from a human-centered approach. Oh well, your decision was NZ’s loss.

“The choices we make determine our path.” I believe more now than ever, that equal to the major choices we make in life, are the mundane ones we make every day. It’s good to live without regret.

I’m looking forward to your next Weekly Watch.

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earthling1's picture

@janis b
Loved every bit of it. Almost bought a cottage in the Bay of Islands.
Sorry I didn't.
Which island are you?

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Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.

janis b's picture

@earthling1

damn!

I live in West Auckland, in the Waitakere Ranges, 100 miles south of the Bay of Islands. I can understand why you would have been seduced by the area. How can you beat living on or near the Pacific, with its white sandy beaches, temperate climate, and alive with a wonderful culture.

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Mark from Queens's picture

I’m enjoying your stories.

Lately I’m out of town these Sundays for a gig. But I read when I can. Wonderful stuff.

Thanks, Lookout.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Lookout's picture

@Mark from Queens @Mark from Queens
I really love your writing style too. I'm erratic checking in this month cause I'm in Switzerland. More on that next week. Till then all the best to you and your family!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

smiley7's picture

amazed me when visiting as a child and most of my younger life i'd a dream of having a Shakespeare company in these mountains. Finally returned to settle at 48 with few regrets. A walk in the woods, the wilderness, fishing in a mountain stream or even a drive along the Blue Ridge Parkway gives me a sense of well-being.

Hope you can visit someday and we can ride over to Mabel.

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Lookout's picture

@smiley7

Always liked this Ian Tyson tune
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0anqjYUD0D0]

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

smiley7's picture

@Lookout

up in late oct and middle of nov with extra beds. Let me know and we'll work out a good time. Smile

Hey, why not mail a copy of your story to the Shoppes at Farmer's, sure the family would enjoy or i see they have facebook: https://www.facebook.com/The-Shoppes-at-Farmers-151220611571378/

I don't do facebook, but maybe you can find an email for them or put it on facebook if you are a user.

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