Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Beginnings






Christmas came a week early for Cindy and I this year. There was a joy at having all "the chicks back in the nest". This from Cindy who pronounces the words with a sigh in remembrance of days past. I think of Sarah's words in describing some minor outing by Adeline without both parents in attendance "We Are Raising Her For The World."

Easy words when your child is two and the world and it's clutching hands are far in the future. Far more difficult words when your children have kicked their way out of the nest, and with wild eyes and a shriek of joy, thrown themselves into open space.

In response Cindy and I have decided to do the same thing. With wild eyes and a shriek of panic we have thrown ourselves out of the nest and are back on the road. Admittedly the shriek of panic was more about me almost crushing the mailbox than anything else.

This morning we are sipping coffee and writing in our snug travel trailer 60 miles North of Disney World. Again we have stumbled on a quiet spot in the middle of Florida's wall to wall development. Lake Griffin State Park, 4 miles from 'The Villages'. Here we intend to stay for the next ten days, taking long walks and thinking deep thoughts.

After Lake Griffin we are without destination. We have vague plans of returning to Mexico for a month and still more murky plans of buying a winter home in Florida. We are in the midst of an unscripted play, a comic romantic adventure, with Cindy in the lead and I the principle supporting actor. She supplies the plot and I bumble along at her side. Occasionally I forget my lines but she is swift to prompt me.


Thursday, April 22, 2010

EXPERIMENTAL HOPS FARM SOUTH

The Vice President of research and development is pleased to announce that the experimental hops farm (southern division) is up and running.
Thanks to a new rear tine Troy Built tiller and two large buckets of seasoned cow manure the first planting has taken place. Thankfully a worker was found who recently crossed the boarder from Mexico and was willing to work for food.All for now...will report tomorrow when the first shoots pop up. Am thinking about installing a computer camera in the yard and streaming images on line.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Travels

I'm aware that I should not post this on the web for fear my shares of Disney may take a dive, but there are other places to visit in the South besides Disney world. Ouch...that hurt...

Well we arrived back in Orlando from Mexico and found our car parked right where we left it. We then spent the night with Kelly (Mike and Colton were freezing in Mich) and took Kelly out for her birthday dinner. She found us this really neat Oyster bar and they gave her a free pitcher of beer. She shared it with me and not Cindy (somebody had to drive home.)


We then went to St. Augustine for three nights and took the free "First Responders Paranormal Investigators" tour. Our tour was led by the "Lead Investigator" (at least that's what his t-shirt said.) This is Cindy taking in every word. She kept trying to say things like "amazing" and "great experience" and "glad you brought me out here tonight Bo" but the only thing that came out of her mouth was "bullshit". I think it was the spirits!



This is me when I first realized my innate talent for communing with Ghosts. It was at the place where the Voodoo Queen was burned to death by an angry mob. I felt her icy breath on my cheek and heard her whisper 'bo youu da man' Thats when I knew I would have to bring my talents back to Chippewa Lake. I plan on buying an 'elf' meter (19.95 on Amazon.com) and leading tours of the famous haunted locations near Chippewa Lake. There may be some drinking involved (spirits invite spirits) so we'll need designated drivers. Details and invitations will be sent telekenetically and for those without "the gift" I'll just call you up.



This is St. Augustine by day. They got this old fort.



So now we're in Savannah. This is us in one of the 24 squares. They sure got a lot of flowers here.

My bout with the absess tooth is on the mend. Dr. Garlic phoned in some anti bodys for me and I'm felling a lot better although my face still looks like a chipmonk. I think it was the Voodoo Queen being pissed at Cindy. She probably threw a curse missed Cindy and hit me. Love you all and miss you.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Happy Easter

We are nearing the end of our Merida trip, wondering how we will get the kalua and other assorted stuff home without breakage and without buying another suitcase. We have had a great time here and, except for my ankle, have had no difficulties. We have been to the village three times and yesterday went to the Gulf of Mexico with the Lozada family for surf, fried fish, shrimp, and sun. Priscila's husband took us on a boat trip along a man made canal through "white mangrove" to a crystal clear cenote. Since there are no surface rivers on the peninsula, this was quite a surprise for us, and a lot of fun. Since we are yet to find a protestant church in Merida, we have been hanging out at the main cathedral off and on this weekend and it has been very busy with lots of processions among the various parish churches located throughout the city and with masses everyday. We went to a candle light mass last night in which I think the bishop presided. We were veryy tired fromour day at the beach that we gave up our seat to one of the many families that were packed into the hot, not-airconditoned cathedral. We will check it out again today.
We hope everyone is well and has a great Easter. We miss our family and friends. See you soon.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

The Perils of Penelope/Cindy

Well, it is a beautiful Saturday night in Merida and we are strolling in the main plaza... Bo is strolling. Bo is strolling, and I am hobbling. For those of you not on Facebook, I had a misstep in the Hyatt Hotel on very badly constructed steps and twisted my ankle. I was not able to get to the conference yesterday, but have attended wondersul session on the Maya and Mayan women. We have met a lot of wonderful people in and around Merida and our hotel-anthropologists, writers, journalists, and retirees, some come here yearly, some came and never left. We are going to teh village Monday, so I am hoping to be able to maneuver the village streets without too much pain. We will report back when we return. Cheers and love. Cindy

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Merida Yucatan Notes From the Field

I´s wednesday, I think, and I am again in an internet cafe on the main plaza sipping coffiee and composeing my thoughts. I don´t know how to use the spell check yet and Cindy isn´t here so forgive my poor spelling.

Yesterday we went to Progresso and strolled the beach. We were going to have a fish dinner but I asked our waiter for ´botannas´{free snacks that come with beer} six plates arrived. Some of the best food we´ve eaten while here. Our table was a wooden bench under a palm umbrella directly on the white sandy beach. I half expected to be in one of those tropical beer commercials for corona. Six bucks.

On the bus ride back I had a half hour conversation with three teenagers. Kids all over the world are the same.

Cindy was pissed because the bus driver had over charged her. It was the first time she handled the finances. Usually I pay the bus drivers and restraunt bills. The bus driver made off with 50 cents american and I got to smurk for the rest of the day. Priceless. I of course gave our bus driver the tratidional ´gracias´on our departure. He avoided eye contact with Cindy.

We are staying in a wonderful hotel in the center of Merida populated by several elderly ex pats who come down for the winter. Walking distance to almost everything and with a friendly staff who do not mind teaching spanish. The small pool and court yard are perfect. I snag a couple beers at the tienda across the street and we sit out in the moon light at night.

Today the antropoligists arrived at the Hyatt uptown. A five star hotel if I ever saw one. We took the bus up this morning so Cindy could register. {I made her pay to restore her confidence} and as I write she is attending lectures. This morning we met another professor of antro who is staying at our hotel. The first thing she said to Cindy was that her book on the Maya is assigned reading for all of her classes. I told Cindy not to get too excited because the students probably buy used copies.

Walked back from the Hyatt on Calle 60, stopping for a coke and a couple panucho´s at Parke Santa Anna.

Next week we´re going to the Village via taxi {12 pesos/one dollar} and if we survive the ride we´ll spend the night with Pablo and Dasiey and drink fresh squezed orange, water mellon or qual querie. Sarah, Nathan and David. Everybody in the village and I mean everybody asks about you. Pablo and Dasiy have a room for you and yours. Heather, Khristen start working on your spanish. Joel two words...Cervesa y bano...

Cindy is with the anthro´s for the day and much of the night so I´m going to wander around town.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Beach House in Progresso

The Village was everything we remembered. Half a day and we were both exhausted. Taxi ride to and from was like Mr. Toads wild ride without the safety warning. Arrived back home dripping sweat and collapsed into the pool. Two beers and several taco´s later we revived.

Today we´re in Progresso at the beach....hot....hot....hot....

Friday, March 19, 2010

Merida

I met this really sweet dog just before we boarded our plane for Mexico. He poked his nose into my crotch and sat in front of me. I now know that exporting more than 10,000 from the US is against the law. Lucky for me my money belt had only about 500 bucks. I guess some creatures can smell money.

We´ve been in Merida for a little over two days and already we´ve found the perfect house. One bedroom in the Santeago area of Merida. Right now we´re sipping coffiee in the plaza of Merida renting our internett connection and enjoying temp´s in the 80´s. Tommorow we´re off to the village.

By posted comments we need to know how many family and friends would visit us. {And what special services, accomidations, drinks, etc. you would need.}

Monday, March 15, 2010




Bo has written a serious posting on our travels, and I promised I would too. We have been on the road for 2 ½ months now, and getting ready to fly to Merida. We have been thinking about taking this journey for several years and planned for it for at least a year, and now we are half way through our four month trip. It doesn’t seem possible that we have been living in a 22 foot trailer for all this time without a major argument, and we have met many interesting people and seen lots of fascinating things. We miss our children and granddaughter very much, as well as our other family and friends. My mother has learned how to skype and it has been a blessing to be able to see and talk to her once a week.

Bo has been reading Walden, and I have been reading many books on my ‘retirement reading list,” many of these on my new Kindle (thank you Anthropology Department!). In real book form, I have been reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert Pirsig, a book I somehow missed in the 70’s. It is a slow journey as I read it mainly in Laundromats and places I don’t want to take my e-reader, and it is also slow because it is very philosophical and worth a midlife review. In the book, the narrator is traveling with his son on a cross country motorcycle trip and reviewing his own struggle with mental illness, referring to his alter-ego in the third person. He describes Phaedrus’ fall into mental illness as a crisis in faith in what he calls classical thinking, what we call the scientific method, and the struggle between scientific knowledge and romantic thinking or subjectivity. This, of course is a major tension in the discipline of anthropology.

Bo is retired, but I am still a faculty member, thinking about teaching four sections of anthropology in the fall—book orders are due next week- sorry Russ, not happening. But a major section of the book concerns education and Phaedrus’ dilemma in trying to define “Quality” as a teacher of rhetoric. How to define it and how to measure it. If we are teaching students about quality writing (or thinking or research), how do we define it? To be scientific, it must be quantifiable. What are the criteria for quality? How does a teacher know it in a student’s work and how does a student know how to duplicate it for a good grade? Is there an essential “quality” or is it what the teacher “sees?” Something like “I know it when I see it.” If it is quantifiable and has criteria, who determines these criteria? And if students follow all the criteria, does that mean that their product is quality? And does the rigor of defining quality smother creativity? So I have been pondering these questions (anew, not for the first time) in thinking about teaching and how to give our students a “quality education” and what that means. Since Phaedrus ended up in a mental institution undergoing electroshock treatment because his inner struggle destroyed him, it’s probably best not to become too obsessed about things for which there are no easy answers. The book is embedded with the question also, of what is insanity and who defines it, giving the book a quality of “One Flew Over the Cukoo’s Nest” in which we are left with the question of which of the alter-egos was actually sane and what price Phaedrus paid for his questioning of the status quo.

Well, enough philosophizing, we are off to Mexico in a few days and we will be able to return to the village of Yaxkukul, hoping that we can hold a conversation in Spanish. I look forward to visiting our friends in the village again, and in attending the SfAAs for the first time. We will not have regular internet access, but will try to blog when we find an internet café. Cheers for now. Cindy

Friday, March 12, 2010

Thoughts on Retirement

My friends and family have wondered what effect retirement has had on me.

Roman history records the story of a general who was called from the mist of plowing his field to lead the army in war. When the war was over and the enemy vanquished the general returned to his plow, which lay exactly were he left it, and resumed plowing.

What happened to the oxen is unrecorded.

If the field is a metaphor for the soul, then I too have returned to my field. Some, especially my good friends would suggest that my field is rife with 'Bull Shit'. Of course it is! But I remind you that cow manure is a wonderful fertilizer.

As I compose these thoughts I sit with God behind our trailer in the mist of a Northern Florida Swamp. The air is alive with the sound of life. I've been reading On Walden Pond again and as I nod off at night in our small trailer, I fancy Cindy and I are living our own version of Walden. "One chair for comfort, two for companionship and three for society." We brought four chairs and indoor plumbing so I suspect I shouldn't take the analogy too far.

In sum I have returned to plow my field. To get my field ready for harvest. To mix the manure into the soil. To clear away the rocks that continually push through to the surface. To enjoy the sounds of life. I am content.


Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Travels in Texas

Because we've decided nobody cares about us anymore (Ie. they never phone, they never write, they never skype, they never facebook) We've decided to just post the photos. If you can tell the significance you may win a prize. Maybe....a really really big prize...Maybe a really cool big prize...


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6. 7. 8.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

BO AND CINDY'S MARDI GRAS ADVENTURE

Most of our friends and family, not to mention total strangers, wondered why we would go to Mardi Gras. The music, architecture, history, art and culture were the main attraction for Cindy. The title of her xmas present is Cindy, Val and Susan have tea. The unveiling will be this summer at the farm.

I was attracted to other things.
We were told at a bar in Florida that because we were from Michigan we had to register with law enforcement before entering Mardi Gras so I did. They asked me if I was still on my medication and I said I was although how they knew about my cholesteral I don't know.
We had to be careful where we walked because on every street there were people on the balconies that threw stuff at you. Some of the folks yelled at Cindy and some yelled at me.

There were lots of parades where people in funny outfits also threw things at you.
There were lots of folks with signs. This group wanted everyone to remain in town and be happy.
I think this was a father and son team. The son has a beer with a sign that says "Ladies Jesus wants you to show your t..s". Some lady who looked like the wife/mother told them both to 'go to hell' and stomped off to have lunch.
The new orleans version of a rubber tree
Lovely ladies
Young Flamingos
Old Flamingos
I was suprised to learn that 'cajun' is another term for'red neck'.
It was so wild in Mardi Gras I actually saw man kissing his wife.
Footnote: Other photos may be forthcoming--after reviewed by the censors.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Dolphins, Woodpeckers, Manatees and Other Wild Things


Since our last report we've made the most astounding discovery. There's a lot more to Florida than Fort Wilderness Camp ground at Disney.

We took a boat ride on the intercoastal waterway with Rob and Val. Someone had to be the lookout and watch for Dolphins which are known to ram and sink boats.

Captain Rob assembled the crew for a group hug when we set off.
Here are a flock of hostile Dolphins off our Port (maybe Starboard/never could get the lingo). Thanks to my sharp eyes Captain Rob was able to avoid them.

After an exhausting boat ride avoiding Dolphins we picked up Rob's mother Pam and she took us (by boat) to the American Legion Hall (in this case the hall is on the bay) where they had a live band playing Jimmy Buffit music and selling beer for 2 dollars a pitcher.


Then we were off to the McGormans (talk about wild life) where Mike beat me twice at golf. The second 18 holes I only lost by one stroke. I of course had a hole in one. I got so excited I almost dropped my wee (wii) remote.

Then we were off to Manatee Springs. A really really big spring (1.5 million gallons a day) where Manatees hang out. Maybe that explains the name.

Woodpeckers can really be annoying. This one was making a racket next to our trailer. No wonder they're on the endanger species list. I was tempted to chuck a rock at it myself.


At Manitee Springs we learned that Manitees are to be found in the wild. Until then I thought they only lived in Disney World. Unlike the one's in Disney the wild ones just sort of lay around in the mud all day. The grey spots behind Cindy are a herd of the critters.


On our way to Panama Beach we stopped in Apalachicola for oysters. (The town and surrounding area provides 80% of the raw oysters American's eat everyday.) We had no idea until we stopped for gas.

This is Cindy studying her new bird book in back of our camp site. Yup, we're camped on a beach. Life is indeed a beach!


Next week we're heading to Mardi Gras and I'll have more wild animal reports. Missing all our friends and family. Love Bo and Cindy