hola amigos

Greetings from the therapeutic heat and humidity of far-from-work sunny Mexico.

A proper pictorial update when we’re back.

Now, though, Keaton says she’s ready to “float” again.

You’ll find us poolside, sans watches and cellphones.

good to be home

A happy Friday to you, friends and enemies alike. I wrote some stuff again today, and you’re about to read it, I think. Enjoy.

My time in Chicago was short. Not that I wanted it to be at all, let along long… but I had hoped we’d have landed earlier, as we were planning on making the most of the overnight delay and taking the train downtown for some pizza or something. We got in too late, though, and ended up eating a horrible and overpriced dinner at the hotel bar. After which neither of us had the will or determination to stay up and chat, so we retired to our respective rooms (cramped little odd-shaped holes off the main floor that must be reserved for airline comps).

In the end, I made it home and am glad to be back here in the 75° Californian weather with my two favorite girls. Keaton gave me a hero’s welcome, and even colored me a picture as a homecoming gift. Sharaun appreciated the authentic South Carolina grits I brought her, and I was more than happy to change into a fresh pair of boxers. Good to be home.

Now then, let’s close the week “In Pictures” with snaps from my Thursday. You’ll have to live without Friday shots, as my night-before blogging schedule makes that impossible. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed it and I’ll be sure to do it again sometime sooner than four years from now. For now though, here are some highlights from today (yesterday, as you’re reading):

Well, almost time for me to sign off. I’ll take this chance to remind you that it’ll likely be a bit slow around here next week while we’re all on a family vacation in Mexico. But, however strange it may seem, I am taking the laptop with me – so I could end up posting once or twice if I feel up to it (it’s hard for me not to, being perfectly honest).

Oh, and, just quickly before I go – I wanted to note that I broke 200,000 pieces of blocked comment spam sometime in the past couple days. Incredible.

Goodnight.

kinda like a wolverine

Happy Thursday folks. I’m writing from a cramped table in an airport terminal (crowded with two laptops, two cellphones charging, and two beers). You’ll find out why as you read on.

Since I won’t be home in sunny California until sometime around midnight tonight, I figured I should go ahead and write when I can. So, here I am, a lull in the second day of this two-day all-day meeting, writing a bit. I have time, actually… at lunch United sent me a text message saying the flight leaving here was delayed by more than an hour, which puts me right up against the connection in Chicago. Looks like I’ll most certainly miss that, and a couple calls to the airline and the company travel agent bore no fruit. So, I’m stuck hopping the flight to Chi-town and hoping for the best on the connection. Since I’m relatively sure I’ll end up missing the connection, I’ve been looking at what there is to do in Chicago. I’m traveling with my boss, so I would at least have an companion to bum around downtown with. We have enough time to get downtown, have some dinner and maybe walk around a bit.

Wait… wait a minute folks… this just in… the BlackBerry buzzed in my pocket. The text message tells me that our flight has been delayed again and missing the connection is now a certainty (I think I know why). Bummer. Now it’s so late it’s not even worth making the flight to spend an evening in Chicago… so it sounds like another evening in South Carolina. Yippee…

Today we had some free time that we used to grab a southern-style lunch and do some walking around downtown Columbia. I had sweet tea, shrimp and grits, and collard greens with pepper sauce to eat. Was delicious, and when I was done I spoke like Foghorn Leghorn for a full half hour. Afterward we walked into the only grits-mill that’s still active in South Carolina (apparently there were forty-one of them at a time). Finally, we drove over to the capital building and walked around the grounds a bit. And, last night on the way to dinner, one of the locals drove me around USC campus a bit. So, at least I got some culture out of the trip. And, being that this paragraph is the perfect lead-in for the Wednesday edition of “In Pictures.” Enjoy:

Transition: I’m going to change styles drastically, one of the negatives of not writing all in one sitting.

On a plane with a full bladder and the seatbelt light won’t go off. Thumb-typing on the BlackBerry, I’m pretty fast now. Finally I break down and just go, I don’t care if my singular rebellion is a catalyst for all-out anarchy or not – I have to pee. Decided to listen to the Wrens album from some years back, don’t know why, other than that it almost always sounds perfect to me. The clouds below is look like a frothy ocean, they often do. They look all pillowy and soft, like we could bounce to a safe landing were we to plummet through them. Guess clouds are a little misleading, kinda like a wolverine (for some reason they look non-threatening to me).

I wonder how many other humans are in the air right now… thousands? Yeah, maybe tens of.

I think can smell my own feet; maybe it means I need new sneakers. Not a stinky smell, something more like sweet; maybe only I smell it. It makes me aware that I only brought enough clean underwear for a three day trip, didn’t expect the extra night in Chicago. I hate reusing underwear.

The clouds broke. I see a big river down there, a factory alongside it, smoke coming from its smokestacks, and some mountains and roads. Wonder where we are? I hate that I’m so bad at geography. Makes me feel ignorant. Like I’m contributing to the stereotype of the dumb American who thinks he doesn’t care about what he can’t see.

From another hotel room, this time in Chicago – goodnight.

that’s all i’ve really got

Hi Tuesday folks, or Wednesday folks, as the case may be.

It’s just after 9pm here and I’m already back at the hotel room for the night. The iPod has its heart set on jazz for some reason, and it’s doing OK at setting a mood. Maybe not the most exciting mood, but certainly one that makes me want to sip whiskey and smoke. Too bad I’m doing neither. In fact, I’ve had this bugger of an itch in my throat all day long, and my sinuses were giving me trouble too. I’m hoping it’s just a reaction to the thick dusting of yellow pine pollen that clings to everything around here, and not some illness which might take root and decide to blossom south of the border next week while we’re on vacation.

Hey, while I’ve still got that “just started the post” momentum, I’m going to go ahead and jump to today’s installment of “In Pictures.” Not a whole heck of a lot to document today, just a long meeting and a fairly uneventful group meal afterward, but I managed to take a fair amount of snapshots anyway. I did take a quick tour of some of the highpoints of USC campus – but totally forgot to take pictures. Sometime after I got home I switched the little phone camera into “superfine” mode, so some images might look better than others. Here we are then, my Tuesday in brief:

Hope you enjoyed ’em.

The meeting today was long. I couldn’t get to sleep at a decent hour last night, and I seem to react to a three-hour time-change more than tend to do going oversees on a long haul, so I was actively trying not to nod off after lunch. Eventually I just got up and stood by the wall, which is a tactic I use when those afternoon doldrums take the wind from my sails. It works well – it’s much harder to fall asleep on your feet. The meeting itself was good, lots of good networking and handshaking and strategy-exchanging… all that wanna-be high-power business-school crap.

I miss Sharaun, and Keaton.  Keaton most of all.  Every time I hear her little voice in the background when I call Sharaun I just wish I could be there to scoop her up and kiss her.  I’m really looking forward to next week when I have them all to myself in Mexico.  Can’t wait to get home and leave again, in fact.

Now then, that’s all I’ve really got. Goodnight.

safe, sound, south

Safe and sound in South Carolina (bonus points for alliteration).

A happy Monday evening to you, folks. My day began early and looks to be ending late – at least when you take timezones into account. Going on eleven here in the SC, and I rolled my butt out of bed at 5am this morning back in sunny California. A couple of flights later and I touched down in the land of Cracker Barrel, Waffle House, and “smoking or non-smoking?” (Funny how you forget the little things.) Got to the hotel around seven and headed right out in search of some sustenance. Hit a local seafood joint the hotel-guy chatted up and wasn’t too disappointed; had scallops and vegetables – I love scallops. Also enjoyed some fermented grains, as travel often demands.

Right now some Pink Floyd is playing. But, not just any Pink Floyd, mind you, no. This is a live performance of their classic Dark Side of the Moon LP for BBC radio in 1972. It’s one of the most widely lauded Floyd bootlegs of the time period because the sound quality is simply amazing, and the live interpretation of the album is inspired, presenting a welcome change to fans who’ve memorized every single note of the storied long-player. It’s making a great hotel room soundtrack for the short time I’ll be awake prior to crashing. Anyway, if you simply have to hear it now, just turn to your friend and mine, Google, and hit this link for tons of win.

Before I get much more into this whole thing (not sure how much more I have in me, actually), I wanted to go ahead and do today’s “In Pictures” bit. If you’ll remember, I’ve chosen to document this week not only with my typical words, but also with images. I know it’s sort of anti-climactic to see only a couple pictures from each day, but really… today was sort of boring to begin with – some eight hours of traveling doesn’t really provide a wide and varied backdrop for composition. Deal.

Here, then, is my Monday… in pictures:

Now that that’s over – what I really wanted to write about tonight.

So, on the plane today I somehow got stuck with a middle-seat (stupid United booking tool isn’t supposed to do that to VIPs like me). Anyway, I had my iPod on for the entire flight, so I wasn’t really interacting with the seatmates to my left and right, nor was I paying much attention to Alvin and the Chipmunks. In fact, between playing Ms. Pac Man and solitaire on the iPod, about the only thing I was doing was looking around the plane, watching people.

At some point during the flight I noticed that of the three seats in front of me, only the guy on the aisle had reclined. This created a little “gap” through which I could see most everything he did. I only mention this because, shortly after recognizing my voyeuristic opportunity, the guy actually began doing something worth watching. Pulling out his handheld PDA, he fired up what looked to be an e-book application, and several lines of large-print easy-to-read (even at my distance) text filled the screen of the device. At first I took notice simply because reading e-books on a PDA is something you don’t see to often, although it’s a use-model the marketing folks at Amazon would likely have us believe is widespread.

Of course, taking my nosiness to the next logical level, I began to read what the guy was reading. It really was quite easy, the text was large and the guy wasn’t making any effort to conceal it (even from the guy seated to his immediate right in alongside him in his row). Pretty soon, certain special words began jumping off the screen and into my eyes: handcuffs, balls, slave, master, chains. Oh… oh…. what the… Yeah, that’s right. Turns out, after following along with the guy as he thumb-scrolled through more than a few paragraphs, I found out he was reading some very hardcore sado-masochistic gay porn. Right there in the airplane, in front of the me, the stewardesses, and God himself – this guy was casually enjoying some totally raunchy gay porn.

Now completely interested, I simultaneously tried to get a better look at the man sitting in front of me enjoying his S&M gay porn on sold-out packed-to-the-gills airplane while also not neglecting to follow along with his chosen time-passing narrative. He was an extremely well-groomed guy, haircut couldn’t have been more than a couple days old because I could still see telltale tanlines under the fresh cut. Asian or Pacific Islander or some mix of both (that matters how, I’m not sure), wearing glasses and dressed all biz-casual in dockers and a button-down long-sleeve shirt.

And, when I say he made no secret of his reading, I’m serious: He even continued reading when the stewardess took and delivered his drink order, PDA screen held in front of him where anyone with eyes close enough could read it. Outwardly, he was a totally regular fellow, the kind of guy you’d sit across the table from in a customer meeting, the kind of guy you’d ask to make sure he had his report to you by noon Friday, pretty unremarkable. Had he not been reading gay torture porn, I’d have been unsurprised to see him browsing an e-book edition of the NY Times or Grisham or playing e-sudoku. But nah… not for my guy, only the hardest-core freaky-freaky for him.

As for the story, I was actually able to pick up quite a bit of the plot: A man has been captured and made a sexual slave to several other men. He is kept chained up and is renamed “Nancy” by his captors (I’m being entirely serious right now, this is exactly what the story said). He is a heterosexual male, but his new masters make him do homosexual acts as part of his enslavement (which, in an entirely shocking twist, he eventually learns to enjoy). In addition to “attaching” him to various medieval-themed torture devices (chains, collars, weights, etc.), the “masters” give “Nancy” daily hormone injection shots so that he’ll grow breasts. The writing was really rudimentary, all action, to-the-point and brief to a fault. For your benefit, I won’t go into any more detail here, but rest assured it was about as exploitative and explicit as it could be (maybe that’s the only flavor this literature comes in, who knows).

I was just in awe of homeboy – straight-up reading it right out in the open…

And guys, I wanted sooo bad to snap a picture of the guy reading his gay S&M smut for today’s “In Pictures,” but the BlackBerry doesn’t provide a way to snap pictures without an accompanying faux-shutter “click” sound that’s fairly audible to those in close proximity. I doubt the S&M guy would’ve heard or suspected, but it was bound to look odd to the guys sitting right and left of me. So, I chickened out – but I swear every word of the story is true. Funny what people dig, you know? You just never can tell…

(And… Kerry, if they don’t block me today, I consider it a blank check for the future).

Goodnight from the dirty south friends, I’ll have a bowl of grits ‘n’ cheese for you tomorrow AM.

someone called me a writer

Happy Monday morning friends.

As you read this, I’m winging my way to South Carlolina via DC. A couple days there doing some sort of work-type stuff and I’m back home. Two days at work and then I hit the skies again, this time with family in-tow, for a weeklong vacation in Mexico. That said, that’ll likely be a pretty sparse week for blogging, so let’s enjoy this while we can.

Anyway, today (Sunday, as I write) was a good day. The girls all got together to do some winetasting, so I invited the abandoned guys over for a BBQ and some beer. I cooked up a ton of ribs, and we all ate to excess. Even the weather cooperated, for the most part.  And now, fresh from the shower where I tried, with some small success, to wash the stink of oak smoke off of my skin and out of my hair – I’m ready to start a blog.

Sometime Friday Keaton started showing signs of having a cold again: runny nose and coughing. By Saturday evening she was running a low fever and she was congested and having issues breathing. In fact, by later Saturday night her breathing had morphed into full-on wheezing, and was pretty shallow and fast. Sharaun called the doctor, and she said that, since we’ve been through something similar before, Keaton likely has an asthma-like reaction to some illnesses (I guess chestcolds or something). The last time she was breathing like this they actually gave her a breathing treatment at the pediatrician’s office. Anyway, she asked that we bring her in the next morning for another treatment, and so that they could give us a machine (called a nebulizer) of our own to continue the treatments at home.

For those not familiar, a nebulizer is basically a machine that vaporizes medicine in liquid form so that the user can inhale it directly. It’s used often to deliver the steroids that asthma sufferers use to get relief. In my youth, a good friend of Sharaun’s used nebulizer often for her asthma – and my buddies and I used to goof on her (in front of her, so it’s OK… right?) for it. I think it was the name that was hilarious to us, so futuristic sounding or something. We’d give her the Vulcan salute, and crack jokes about being on the bridge of starship or battling Klingons. Yeah, and now karma has turned it all around on me yet again. Anyway, the treatments really seem to help Keaton, and the doctor said it’s only temporary just to ensure we knock this cold out for good. Read ahead and you can even see a picture of babygirl “nebulizing.”

Changing subject… I upgraded to WordPress 2.5 over the weekend and everything seems to have come through OK for me (I’ve read of some folks having issues). So far, I like the new and improved backend overall, and I’ve reserved a special place in my will for the new image upload/link/align tool – which makes adding images to my posts so much easier. And, with the gallery capability being so integrated now, I don’t need to use the NexGen plugin anymore. Actually, I’m going to go ahead and try to do some 2.5 gallery beta-testing this week, by reviving an old sounds familiar weeklong gimmick from the past. I’m sure you are just dying to know which gimmick…. so…

Back in November of ought-four, I did a cool weeklong “thing” for the blog where I took pictures of what I did each day and posted them along with the entry. Ever since doing it I’ve told myself I needed to redo it, but I never have. So, in the spirit of doing all kindsa new kindsa stuff up in this camp, I’m gonna try it again this week. At our sawmill, we call this week “workweek fourteen,” which we abbreviate, all nerd-tastic, as WW14. So, this week will evermore be dubbed: In Pictures – WW14’08, or IPWW14’08 for… ummm… short. Anyway, one of the rules is imposed this time is that I’ll take only crappy images with my cellphone camera, partly since I’ll be traveling and won’t leave Sharaun without our “good” one, and partly also because I just always have it with me. No time like the present… so let start with Sunday in pictures:

Actually, as something of a postscript here, you may have noticed that those images are still in the old-gallery style (with the fancy popup browser). That’s because, try as I might, I couldn’t get WordPress’s built-in gallery to work how I wanted it to. I’ll keep working on it to try get it right, but for now, and so I can still do this week “In Pictures,” I’m sticking with what works. OK, that’s enough talk about WordPress. And, I think I’ve built up the daily-dose of pictures such that it’ll be hotly awaited each day (right?). And, wrapping up…

Before I go – I read this article with interest the other day, as it reminded me of something I’d written before here on the ol’ blog. I called it “Run 83,” but essentially it’s the same concept: Modern science pushes the limits of experimentation just a little too far and accidentally destroys everything. (A little self-promotion there, I suppose.)

In closing, the other day, someone called me a “writer.”

This someone is the kind of someone who knows me, knows I write here on this internet-website-online, and (I think) reads sounds familiar somewhat often. But, still. To hear someone call me a “writer,” a word used to describe an artist (good one, or not), was humbling.

That’s all. Goodnight.

YDF #2: Hoboing


Happy Friday folks. So much to write about, so little time. Let’s go.

It’s funny, but this week’s winner of the You Decide Friday contest actually fits well as a follow-on to last week’s initial one.

And, by reading that, you’ll likely guess that I decided, in the end, to go with the superdelegate vote instead of the popular one (read: I discounted the “fake” votes and instead went with only what I could tell were heartfelt expressions of my readers’ desires – communicated to me through mouselclick, of course). I also edited the results graph to reflect this, although I left the total number of votes there to somehow acknowledge the disparity (sorry Mr. or Mrs. “pants off” guy or gal).

So, the topic that landed at the top of the heap after ignoring all jiggering was: “When we used to go ‘hoboing.’” Indeed, there was a time when my friends and I used to go “hoboing.” I realize, however, that, before I jump into the good bits, some terminology needs to be explained.

Back in the town where I came of age, sowed my teenage oats, watched my first dirty movie, learned to drive and got my first car, back in that town – the city garbage collection service was, at some point, converted over from round aluminum cans lifted by hand to the modern process: a truck with a robot-arm that allows a single man “crew” to get trash into the truck without ever leaving his comfy seat or the familiar strains of Lynyrd Skynyrd. (My word, is that last bit even a legitimate sentence?)

When this happened, everyone was issued large rolling garbage containers, much like what most larger urban areas have today but with one notable difference: For whatever reason, we called these wheeled garbage cans “hobos.” I know, it sounds odd – and maybe even a bit derogatory to actual boxcar-hopping bindle-carrying folk, but it’s true. To back that up, I actually went to my old hometown’s webpage and searched on “hobo.” Low and behold, it seems like it’s not just Southern-fried patois, it’s actually some kind of brand name or acronym for the garbage can or something. From the city’s Frequently Asked Questions:

What if my HOBO (wheeled garbage container) needs repair?

Call the Public Works Department and they will pick it up, make the repairs, and return it to you. Unless the HOBO has been abused, there is no charge for this service.

Sidenote: I got a kick out of the statement: “Unless the HOBO has been abused.” Makes me think of a doctor going over the transient you turned in, trying to determine if his bumps, bruises and scrapes are a result of hobo-abuse or just a general side-effect of his nomadic, somewhat not-sleepin’-on-featherbeds lifestyle choice. Ahhh, but I digress…

So we had these trash containers, which were wheeled on the back, had two aluminum “stands” at the front-bottom on which they rested, and were also outfitted with an aluminum handlebar-type thing to make transporting them to and from the curb easier on the homeowner. You could tip ‘em onto their wheels and roll them to the curb with ease this way. At the time, we also had me, the somewhat reckless group of friends I used to run with, and the newly-minted Florida driver’s license I’d obtained through the hot days of freshman year spent circling tiny cars with no air conditioning around the driver’s-ed track. These things, coupled with the boredom of a few newly-mobile teenage punks and the fact that my parents had essentially permanently loaned me the red Nissan Sentra four-door (oh man how I loved, and alternately abused, that vehicle) one day spontaneously combined to create the summer’s hottest new nighttime activity: hoboing.

I forget exactly how it started, but I know I was driving. I was really the only one, aside from Joey, who didn’t have a car yet if I remember right, who could drive at the time. We used to drive around the town, sometimes rolling through house-lined streets in local neighborhoods for no reason other than to look for trouble. While out cruising like this one evening, one garbage-pickup eve evening, to be specific, someone got the bright idea to pull up slowly alongside one of the many “hobos” lining either side of the street. “Push it over!,” we urged to the rear passenger, likely having to shout over Experience or The Chronic turned up to eleven. At which point the passenger would roll down the window (the Sentra, although near perfectly equipped for a boy of sixteen and his misfit friends, still did not have the power-package) and shove over the garbage can with a might push, spilling the contents onto the street as I wheeled us away from the scene of the crime, giddy with laughter. Now, as fun as that may sound, and despite the unending joy you think a bunch of motley teens might be able to derive from doing it over and over again – it is not “hoboing.” No… hoboing is that to the next level, I’m afraid.

Pushing over garbage cans is pretty mean, pretty destructive… I mean, the homeowner, lest they see the mess early the next morning prior to garbage pickup, will surely be skipped by the garbage man and his robot-arm truck, an must now also suffer the double-indignity of not only having to pick up his family’s refuse, which has by then likely blown around and is littering the street, but being forced to hold that garbage for whole week longer than expected. This means, by next week, when, the poor wheels on the hobo will be creaking in protest under a load which makes it impossible to close the lid properly – the homeowner will be even more furious when we come by and do it again, y’know, because the fullest hobos obviously make the best targets.

Yes, hobo-pushing was indeed mean and rude and terrible… but it wasn’t hobo-ing. So, what was hobo-ing, you ask? Let’s see….

At some point, the chants of “Push it over” from within the car were turned up a notch: “Grab the handle!,” someone said, “Grab it and hold on, we’re gonna drag that bitch!” Ahhh… and thus was born “hoboing.” The participant, sitting in the rear seat, would wait for me to precisely position the Sentra alongside the target hobo, and would then reach around and grab the metal handlebar. Once firmly held, I’d get the “OK” and would slowly move away from the curb, whereupon the passenger would make sure the hobo turned and tilted back onto its wheels. At that point, it was just a matter of running the Nissan up to 30mph (the ideal hoboing speed, as determined through countless repeated scientific experiments) and the crew giving the signal: “Let it go! Let it go!!” And, they would; let it go I mean, to spectacularly unpredictable results.

Thirty miles-per-hour is faaast people, I’m telling you. When the hobo was released, the metal legs on the front end would make contact with the street, resulting in an immediate and uber-cool jet-engine esque bloom of sparks shining bright on the darkened night street. Sometimes they’d get hung up immediately, flipping over quick and violently in the middle of the street as soon as they were let go, tumbling and bouncing to a stop tens of feet later in a literal explosion of garbage. Other times, and these were the times you hobo’d for, the times for which hoboing became legendary, they’d actually continue to roll along in a glorious cacophony of screeching metal and fiery sparks. Where they’d stop was anyone’s guess, as they could upturn at any moment or sometimes continue along until hitting some obstacle. Crashing a hobo into a mailbox became the ultimate prize, as the impact was stunning… garbage, sparks, occasionally a downed mailbox… Can you imagine waking up in the morning to find your mailbox has been knocked over and covered with garbage? Man… I would be piiissed.

Soon, techniques were developed (I recall fierce debates about how best to position the hobo for release to ensure it would continue to scrape along under the momentum imparted, and what sort of English you needed to put on it to best “steer” its course), scoring was kept, champions were crowned, and, as with everything in those days – antes were upped.

The progression went something like this: 1) Pushing over hobos. 2) Hoboing hobos. 3) Tandem, or team, double-hoboing. 4) Highspeed-hoboing (also known as main-road, four-lane, and highway-hoboing). And, thankfully, it ended there.

You can likely guess what double-hoboing is: Where, once one rear-seat passenger has secured his hobo for the pull, I slowly maneuvered the car to the line of hobos on the opposite side of the road so that the driver-side rear-seat passenger could also grab a hobo. The pull/release process was then repeated, only this time there were two hobos spewing garbage and fire into the streets. We tried and tried to make them collide, but could never get them to converge upon release. Tandem-hoboing was actually deemed too dangerous and eventually abandoned, as the width of the Sentra plus a dragged hobo on either side was often just barely able to thread the needle down the middle of the street when cars were parked curbside overnight. Several times I had to resort to slowing to unacceptable speeds to ensure my hoboers retained their limbs – and that just wouldn’t do. The few times we were successful at team-hoboing, however, were brilliant.

Highway-hoboing was the absolute culmination, the logical pinnacle, of the activity. The idea was simple: Liberate a hobo from the tight suburban streets and pull it along a more major thoroughfare, ramping the drag-speeds to the physical maximums sustainable by the hoboer. The risks were clear: Police were on those roads, and other cars too, and the whole thing would be much less hidden and out in the open. But, the danger made it all the more a goal. It only happened once, and I think we got to 45mph. At those speeds, the hobo became unstable (duh), wrenching itself from the hoboer’s hand and spilling a fantastic plume of garbage in a large fan along the main drag. It was spectacular.

Again, I put myself in the homeowner’s shoes… and like to imagine that he used that main road to get to and from work during the day. What must one think, waking up to find their garbage can altogether missing – gone. Then, how confounded would you be as, on your morning commute, your notice that it’s your street address on the side of the upturned hobo laying in the middle of the road amidst the twenty foot long spill of garbage you were only moments before head-shakingly tsk-tsking as you neared. Surely it would rock your world.

As fun as hoboing was, like all sports it was not without price to the human participants. “Hobo-pit” was a common ailment of participants, and several lunchtime Mondays at school were spent comparing the bruises in armpits caused by the popup locks (no power-package, remember?) one had to drape one’s arm over while dragging a heavy garbage cans down the road at 30mph (not an easy task, truly). Sore shoulders, hands, elbows and wrists were another common complaint. Being dedicated athletes, however, we never let these bothers interfere with our sport – and we continued to hobo for several months.

Eventually, we stopped hoboing, probably in favor of some other awful activity, but hoboing provided us bunch of stupid kids with evenings full of fun for at least a few months.

And that’s the story of hoboing, more or less (without much proofreading, so I expect I’ll have to amend it tomorrow when I finally re-read it). Hope you enjoyed it. Goodnight.