Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Andres.



My recent trip to Guatemala with Amira -- my first journey there
since 1979 -- enabled me to track down some old friends...
who were young friends back then.

These shots show our amigo Andres at 11 in 1977 and 45 in 2011.  He
 and his little brother Manuel lived next door to Linda and me in the center
 of the tiny village of Santa Catarina Palopo.

The two of them were constantly hanging about at the coolest casa on la
calle principal (aka, main street), and who could blame them?  That's where
we lived!  Amazingly, Andres now works in the kitchen of the restaurant
 of the hotel where stayed, the very same hotel on which construction
was just beginning during our first visit there (1977).

Andres, who still lives in the same house, now has five children ranging
in age from 2-16, and I met them all, and his parents, wife, and various
cousins.   Sadly, little Manuel, one of our favorites, became an
alcoholic (Guatemalan men are notoriously terrible drinkers), and he
 died several years ago in his early 30s. 


Sunday, August 21, 2011

This is the day to remember this man...



Gr-grandpa Patrick J. O'Brien, killed in a mining accident on August 21, 1890.
He was 56-years-old.  RIP, P.J.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Thursday, August 18, 2011

May Your Big Day be Wrinkle-Free, Stevie!


Ann Arbor, Michigan, July 2011

Birthday Boy Steve and his mates (l to r, Mickey, Adam, Christian -- out
 of frame, Mike) are  mesmerized by DS merchandise-meister Joe
 (AKA, Joseph, Guiseppe, Joey, Hey You!, et.al.), as he lectures them
 on proper clothes-folding  techniques, a valuable skill he learned
 in his retail days.

  Visibly impressed by Joe's ability to handle everything from
 wife-beaters to boxers with the easy facility of a laundromat mogul,
 the boys then promptly left the room, and in a sudden rush to
 get back on the road, haphazardly and hastily crammed all their
 belongings into their backpacks. They then stuffed their backpacks
 into any nook or cranny they could find in the van, vowing to begin
 folding their clothes just like Joe at the next stop.  Not.

HB, Steve!


Monday, August 15, 2011

A fitting Tribute to a Fine Specimen of Doghood...

The Mighty Casey
December 24, 1995 - August 12, 2011

The greatest dog in the world was laid to rest on Friday, peacefully fading into canine afterlife. No doubt Casey's new universe will include an endless supply of every imaginable consumable treat, all within easy reach: no counter tops to scale or reprimands for having an insatiable appetite for almost anything--but especially human food.

Casey joined the family five years before the turn of the century and endured into its second decade. In dog years she was old--very old; in the human equivalent, she was ancient (about 108). Her "cousin" Hillary, also a Vizsla who came into the world at about the same time, lived a great long life--and died two years ago.

Our Casey was a true homebody, never straying far from the patio and always preferring the company of people. Vizslas crave attention and affection and behave more like classic "lap" dogs. Even when she was full-grown, Casey wouldn't hesitate to pile on to you or put her face in your face or her paw on your leg--gently intruding on whatever you were doing for a dose of human touch. She made a lot of friends that way, including complete strangers, who often greeted her with a "hi sweetie" or "what a sweetheart" refrain. Indeed, she was beloved.

Though Casey was no watchdog, she did let the others in the local animal kingdom know on whose homestead they were treading. She eventually made peace with deer, probably because they visited so frequently. Bear were another story: her voice went up two octaves at the very sight, hair tense and up on the back, alive in sheer hysteria. At the other extreme, there were skunks, and Casey's curiosity was appropriately acknowledged: she was twice christened, and when she re-entered the house, she couldn't hide her humiliation. While it took weeks for the stench to fade, it only took her a day or two to get her mojo back.

But it was Casey's preoccupation with food that was the thing of legend. In her prime, she was a master thief: creative, crafty, and most of all, persistent. Among her trophies: an entire gingerbread house, loaves of bread, a tin of coca powder, tomatoes from the garden, a pan of brownies, a whole chicken leg (bone and all, stolen at a picnic out of the hand of a guest). Her tastes sometimes strayed from food and included sun glasses, retainers, tar paper, mulch, bar soap, Q tips, paper napkins, candles. Those occasions didn't always end well, but before long, she would be back in the game.

Mark Twain once said, "It's a good thing a dog has fleas, they keep its mind off of being a dog." Maybe there's an analogy here for Casey. She wasn't bored being a dog, she had a mission. Maybe it was her relentless pursuit of the next item of food that kept her youthful and alive for so long; maybe her insatiable appetite actually added years to her existence. Not because of the additional nourishment, but because she was "in the hunt." Maybe that's Casey's legacy for the rest of us: Whatever the pursuit, there is something to always being hungry
MJM, 8/14/2011



Saturday, August 13, 2011

R.I.P. Casey.

Got news yesterday of this great dog's passing. In honor of a life well fed, er, led, we offer up this vintage post of classic Casey...

Busted!
CASEY.gif
Newton, NJ, August 2007 - Our exclusive Hidden HackFester Cam caught crafty Casey up to her old tricks -- in this case, sweeping stray Zingerman's bread crusts off the kitchen counter into her mouth. The above photos reveal her time-tested method: Spotting, balancing, reaching, grabbing, gobbling.  As her loyal and long-suffering masters have learned over the years, nothing edible -- from tomatoes to birthday cake to snotty Kleenex (and worse) -- is safe with this insatiably hungry hound in the house.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Before...

Brothers Rodrigo, Jose Maria, Carlitos - Santa Catarina Palopo, circa 1977

Amira and I depart for Guatemala and the above-named village
on Thursday, August 4.  This is the same little community where
 Linda and I spent most of the summers of 1977 and 1978; and
where Mike, Chuck, and I showed up on Christmas Day, 1977 -- 
after an epic bus journey through Mexico -- playing
 Santa Claus and his helpers.

Due to the long Civil War that worsened in Guatemala in
 the late 70s, we were unable to return, and by the time
 the conflict was finally settled (1996), we
 had other countries and other concerns on our minds.

 In any case, it will be unreal seeing all the good people (many of them
kids) that we got to know (and in some cases, have kept in touch with all
these years); and observing all the changes that have come about in this
utterly tranquil place, where fishing, farming, and weaving were the
 villagers' main occupations.  

Stay tuned for the AFTER photo....

Monday, August 1, 2011

It was 30 year ago today...

Photo credit:  Janusch Family Archives, copyright 1981

A rousing, rollicking mariachi band serenades those fortunate enough
 to be in attendance at the Marion-Dominguez wedding reception,
 August 1, 1981.  Note Richard Gump in background, staring
 starry-eyed into the horizon, wishing that he, too, had been born
 Mexican, so that he, too, could have become a mariachi man and
 have performed at weddings and wakes and birthdays and
 anniveraries like this lucky quintet.  

It was just moments after this photo was shot that he snapped
suddenly out of his reverie, ran over and grabbed Mary Ella,
 and dragged her to the driveway-dance  floor.  There,
 the two of them put on a wild disco-dancing display to the oddly
  compatable Mexican music concert behind them, the likes of
which nobody who witnessed it would ever see again....