Archive for 2011

Strands of Post-Irene Road in Catskills

August 29, 2011

Our evacuation from Zone A of New York City to the Catskill Mountains continues today!

As followers of this blog know, we felt a bit bad, in leaving NYC last weekend, that we were missing out of all of the excitement of Irene.  Sure, staying for the drama of the big storm might be kind of interesting, but it wasn’t worth the risk.  (Besides, we were forced evacuees.)

So, we’d come up to the mountains we thought, where we’d be high above the coastal storm system.

Above is a video of our road, post-Irene.

Below is a video of another part of our road.

And another.

It is quite beautiful here, which is lucky, since we will be spending quite a bit more time than expected.

Wishing to Say “Goodnight Irene”, Instead Goodbye-Hello – The Evacuee’s Plaint

August 28, 2011

Above is the place where a driveway used to be.  This driveway belonged to an upstate house to which we fled when evacuated from Zone A of NYC before Hurricane Irene.

Which brings me to:

The Evacuee’s Plaint

From the frying pan into the fire,
the saltine into the soup,
the thick to the thin, the baby in the bathwater to the baby thrown-out
with the bath water–make that roiling water–
from puddled embankment to muddy rapids,
dim to dark,
maybe to absolutely,
the flooding to the washed-out.

It’s still raining here
where we’ve come
to be high
and dry.  All feet
are cold
and damp,
but with
five toes wriggling.
Make that ten.

Irene – Out-of-the-loop Style Rain

August 27, 2011

20110827-082051.jpg

I am a couple of hundred miles (at least) from the epicenter of Hurricane irene, and, thanks to evacuation, unlikely to be ever closer than a hundred miles from that center.

All day the sky has felt like a petulant child in the back seat of a car. At the risk of disclosing my age, I am thinking of a 1950’s or 60’s car i.e. not air-conditioned–so the sky (in my mind) was a sticky child, forehead moist with sweat, slightly motion sick, asking endlessly when the traffic would move and if we were there yet, a child whose face darkened and contorted steadily with a kind of holding-his/her breath irritation.

It has started (at last) to rain here.

The sky is no longer dark except with night–the clouds now lie like stoles along the shoulders of the landscape; the air, though damp, breathes easily.

The rain is gentle for now, slowly getting stronger, but not lashing, not pelting, quite content, it seems, to be out of the loop.

Hope you are out of it too.

Evacuated. Tired. Waiting.

August 27, 2011

20110827-053037.jpg

Feeling a little guilty to have fled my apartment in downtown NYC in advance of Hurricane Irene. This guilt is somewhat assuaged by the fact that the “excitement” would have consisted mainly of sitting in the dark listening to the wind howl (If you live in Battery Park City, you will know that the wind howls there even in ordinary storms–the place is a wind tunnel.)

My guilt is also assuaged by the mandatory evacuation, which, despite the inconvenience,certainly eased the decision-making. When presented with the option not of sitting out the storm in your apartment, but HIDING out there, the dithering ceases abruptly.

The air felt hot, ominous, as we left the City late last night on a full commuter train, and even upstate (where we’ve sought refuge) has a brooding quality, clouds heavy, landscape lit from beneath. Everything at ground level seems to be waiting, a little petulantly, a little fearfully, overly hot; there is a slightly feverish quality even in the grass, and my personal energy has dropped lower than the barometer.

Maybe a good time for a lie-down, like the ground itself. Good luck all!

Hurricane/Evacuation

August 26, 2011


Not to seem trivial (hah!), but just as I get back to the City, just as I get theater tickets, just as I determine that I’ll stick out the hurricane and run and do a bunch of shopping, I find myself in a mandatory evacuation zone.

A time to feel lucky to have somewhere to go.

Have a safe weekend all.

More Yankee Grit And More Tea

August 25, 2011

My favorite baseball team, the New York Yankees, once again gave a lesson in perseverance today, coming from a score of 1-7 (behind) in the 4th inning against Oakland to a final victory of 22-9, with a record breaking 3 grand slams.  This, on a day in which the game was delayed for approximately 90 minutes because of rain.

I ponder this example of “sticktuitiveness” over my sixth or seventh cup of strong tea, hoping to get something done this damp evening, or to, at least, go to the gym.   Caffeine is useful, but doesn’t quite seem to substitute for a good eye, apt swing, strong follow-through, stamina….

Feeling sad and worried about Steve Jobs

August 24, 2011

20110824-113210.jpg

And wishing him well.

20110824-113326.jpg

Bear v. Handgun v. iPad 2?

August 23, 2011

20110823-113955.jpg

I missed the earthquake today because I am in upstate New York, a bit too far both from epicenter and traditional panic centers for awareness. Later this afternoon though I faced more typical local dangers as I walked–I hesitate to call my slow trudge a hike–up to a woodsy area increasingly known for bear sightings.

I don’t know if there are actually more bear here than there used to be; there do seem to be a lot more sightings.

Some people, in the light of these sightings, have advocated a policy of carrying a hand gun on a hike. This is not a policy I could ever imagine myself adopting: (i) I hate guns; (ii) I don’t own one; and (iii) the only moving target I would ever be capable of hitting is my foot.

No, I realize as I step into the woods, MY first line of defense is my iPad 2. The plan: if I run into a bear (worse yet, a mama with cubs) I’ll turn on the sound as loud as possible.

I am not in fact listening to music right now, I don’t typically have it on when I walk, but my iPad 2 (which I carry snugly in a vest pocket) has an annoying habit of switching on its iiPod music app whenever I cross my arms. (On this walk, I’ve already had to turn off “You’re the Top” twice.)

I recognize, of course, that there are potential snags in my bear-blasting plan. First, if a bear actually confronts me, the iPad 2 may not magically turn on (and certainly not at high volume) even if I forcefully cross my arms. I may have to pull the iPad 2 from its snug wedge in my vest pocket, open the cover, activate the iPod app, turn up the volume.

The plan may also be flawed (fatally) by the possibility that the bear will not find Cole Porter particularly intimidating. Especially since my recordings are not sung by Ethel Merman.

Hmm….

I carefully, and very very quietly, redirect my feet towards home.

(Would it work better in an earthquake?)

Sentimental heartwarming post (i.e. Canine)

August 22, 2011

20110822-104705.jpg

20110822-104721.jpg

20110822-104743.jpg

Blocked by Writer’s Block? Indecision Block?

August 21, 2011

20110821-072847.jpg

I am facing a real dilemma as a would-be writer these days. I am almost (truly this time) finished with a comic teen mystery novel called NOSE DIVE. It is a silly but fun book whose final proofs should be sent to me shortly. (Hurrah.)

So, now what? I started working last weekend on a novel that I had written bits and pieces of for last year’s Nanowrimo (National Novel Writing Month.) Approximately 50,000 bits and pieces. Though I ended up last November with a framework that seemed interesting, it was as fragile of the mere vision of a house of cards, meaning that it will require a lot of work from scratch.

In the meantime, I have three or four (maybe even five or six!) pretty close-to-finished old manuscripts. These are each novels, mainly for children or young people, that I thought at one point were done, but then began re-writing repeatedly, and finally, out of frustration with my own questionable decisions during revision, abandoned.

So now here I am, mainly just spinning wheels (the little ones in the cranium). Last weekend, the Nanowrimo novel seemed the most exciting if difficult choice. At my increasingly gloomy age, taking on a new and more serious book felt almost like being faced with a diving board–one of those things that if not attempted now, would be out of reach for the rest of my life.

But intervening weekdays filled with job, housework, and obsessive escapist reading, not to mention a large variety of internet distractions, and a very depressing world newscape–all seemed to snip last weekend’s thread.

Plus there are the ghosts of all those old, once-loved, novels. (My brain feels like it’s on a diving board with them too–that if I don’t address them now, I never will.)

The terrible thing is that the last time my body actually was on a diving board and I did make myself do a spring dive, it was actually sort of problematic. I mean, sure, there was the rush of fear and bravado during the prefatory springy steps, the jump, the upheaval of legs and torso, feet and head, the exhilarating plunge into the surprisingly cold hard water, but then I went so deep so fast, my ears beginning to hurt quite a bit, my stomach too, that I really wondered if it was such a great experience after all.

So, maybe, what I need to do first is look for another metaphor.