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Besides my career as a scientist, I enjoy writing poetry, horror stories, ghost stories, and home spun yarns of the mid-south region. My stories can be found at www.horrorlibrary.net
April 07

Weather Surprise

Lately, it seems that I'm playing fast and loose with severe weather. I'm not a huge risk taker, but besides my recent near-miss with a tornado in my beloved Bernheim Forest (see a previous blog) there have been a few high shear winds and tornado fly-bys at my office and at home.

Still, after today's Clark (Indiana) near miss, the sky had cleared and was bright and suny.

Left work and headed to pick up B. She wanted to go walking andreports were saying hail at midninght ... so plenty of time. Famous last words.

We changed, drove over the short distance to Iroquois Park and the weather was outstanding. Maybe 77 F, very comfortable for Kentuckiana. We walked down the two mile loop. The half-moon was clearly visible and white in the evening sky. It was ages before sunset.

Half-way down and tot he 1 mile marker, the clouds darkened and descended. A little lightning. Half way back on the return trip to the car the sky started to really rock and roll. Thunder pealed and echoed through the trees. Squirrels started to skitter, chipmunks ran into their burroughs, and birds hushed. In the distance, a flock of geese from the top of the park in their lake nearly screamed - I'd never heard such a ruckus. they must have been over a mile away.

Still, we thought we had just enough time to make it back tot he car and drive home. Then, the sky went green.

The tornado warning sirens blared.

Oh oh.

We began to walk quicker and about 100 yards from the car the hail started. Ouch. It was more hail than rain, but marble sized. That kind of hail stings when it pops you on the head and skin.

Then about 50 feet from the car, the sky just opened and poured. We practically dove into the car, and then we had a choice. Sit it out, or make a run for it. We decied to drive home.

B's phone rang. It was her pal from the office, J. She said they were in the basement and were worried about us. She'd heard there was a tornado touch down in Iroquois Park !! (We live only 4 blocks from the park and she thought we were at home.) Later we learned that apparently the tornado swooshed over the park and skirted just south of our house.

I drove with my glasses dripping, my clothes soaked, and windshield fogged. The wipers barely pushed the wall of water away. Then ... home ...and we plunged into the garage, intot he door, grabbed the portable radio, flashlights, and headed to the basement. We sat out the storm, prayed that the poor people in the path of the storm would be spared heartbreak and injury, and after a bit, the sirens ceased.

March 26

An eerie walk in a city park

My, it has been a long time between entries!  My attentions have been at my Weird Beast and HPLblog.  However, I experienced a strange sensation today.  I'll let you walk with me.
 
It started out to be a routine Sunday afternoon walk.  It was sunny and in the high 40's which made it convenient but cool walking weather.
 
The usual two mile walk started out on the closed road in Iroquois Park.  This Olmstead park was once a manicured and state of the art 1930's grove and hike meadow.  That all changed and by the 80's the park department threw in the towel and stopped upkeep.  This made it - probably by coincidence and happenstance - a nature preserve.
 
There is little of the hoodlum crowd left and so it is a very peaceful place to walk especially in winter and on cool days.
 
Today, we thought we would walk one of the horse trails that traces the outer city road and inner park road.  Had it been summer, the green would have suffocated us.  However, little has bloomed, so we walked the cider and dirt trail with only a few birds and squirrels to bisect our trek.
 
The acid rain of the city had worked its evil however.  There were hundreds of uprooted (shallow roots choked by acid-soluble alumina from the clay soil) trees now in varied stages of rot, termite infestation, and perfect woodpecker food.  Hairy vines had claimed more trees and had crushed the life out of them like something out of a Johnny Weismueller movie.
 
Several trees had toppled and become suspended in a brother or sister tree making sundials amidst the shadows.  Greenbrier tangled in clumps and netting making perfect rabbit warrens.  Elsewhere, thick triangles and semicircles of giant black fungii exploded from the knots and nicks of eldridge trees.
 
The meandering trail felt like something out of Dorothy's terrible trip through haunted woods, but it was exhilerating.  That is until the end.
 
There, a ghost dog appeared from nowhere.  B and I stopped.  It was a spotted dog with tags, so we waited for the owner - but no owner showed up.  The dog appeared stymied.  It did not move, bark, growl, or make any sound.  It refused to move from the path, did not come to us, nor did it shy from us.  It's eyes seemed dim - drug-like - and it pretended not to hear us at all as if it's mind was miles away on other thoughts.
 
The dog might have been part greyhound, but if not, the withered area at the kidneys made both of us shiver at the thinness of the dog.  After interminable minutes, we moved past the dog who continued to refuse to accept our existence and ignored us completely.
 
Somewhat shaken by the eerie and daemoniacal woods and the strange dog, we walked back the safer and better known paved road back to the car about a mile away.
 
It is good to know that one can walk secret trails and have brain-searing adventures onlyfifty yards from a well driven road.  I suppose the road less traveled is often the one least suspected.
February 19

My art purchase

I'm behind my time.  I picked up my clay sculpture last week, but just now have a chance to show you what I purchased.
 
Brace yourself for a different kind of art ...
 
 

Transcendenatlism & Loren Eisley

 

I met a new friend this week, though he has been dead nearly thirty years. His taciturn negativity is not my style, but his transcendentalism suits me. His name is – was – Loren Eisley (1907-1977).


His essay – and God was he an essayist – on The Star Dragon is profound. However, the poignant aspect of the essay is at the beginning. His father lists up the three year old just as Halley's comet passes overhead. He tells the tiny boy something he will never forget and will never be able to fulfill.


He basically says, if you live a careful life and live a very long time, you will be able to see the come again. Though I will be long gone, we will live this moment again, together, in your old age. Memory and myth. This is the transcendental angst of which Eisley wrote – pondered – and how man in his microcosm of Nature will exist. Or will he? Perhaps like his life, cut short to early to see the cosmic event, are we pigeon-holed by evolution to a dead end, unable to change? Will we devour the landscape until a new parasite evolves to devour us and make us extinct.


Eisley's essay leaves us with a sobering thought. The poor, limp creature from which we descended, dwelt this earth of several hundreds of thousands of years despite predators. Who is the weaker and more advanced? The ancestor we bushwhacked and usurped? Or we, who are possibly at an evolutionary precipice and ready for apocalypse?

February 08

I did it.

I purchased that frog-troll-potter-thing.
 
It was sooo easy.  One phone call, and it was mine.
 
I asked if the artist would tell me the story behind it, and otday I got only a fleeting comment.  "I wanted to show the primal potter."  Hmm.  I guess it will be up to Chris Perridas to make the story for the artist.  I am a writer, after all.  I did say that?  Yes!  I am a writer and proud of my art.
 
Stay tuned.  I pick up the thing Saturday.
 
The artist is Page Candler .... click ... and behold a clay-fairy wonderland.
 
 
February 04

A Winter Magic Day

Today I set out to have a transcendental experience. I needed magic.

 

After some personal time, B- and I looked out the window. The overnight rain turned to snow and the trees were taking on a powdery look. We both knew we had to go to the forest.


Driving into the magic of Bernheim in winter was exhilarating. We made a bee-line to a special area where the injured or otherwise “challenged” deer are kept safe. We began to walk into the stand of trees and beheld sugar frosting on the brown hickory leaves, the tree bark, and limbs.


We walked through the billowing snow that nit into our cheeks and chilled our noses. No hint of global warming today, and the birds were alive and foraging for precious food to keep those high body temperatures elevated.


Through the variegated forest we trekked and over several wooden bridges. Beneath each bridge was a veritable torrent of creek water from the downpour the night before.


As we rounded the trail we navigated past the fence of the deer pen. They were lonely and almost dog-like the came running when they saw us. I plucked some greenery out of their reach and they devoured it greedily. The one-eyed buck rubbed antler stubs (they shed antlers) against the fence with a tenderness and devotion bred by hundreds of school children encouraging this behavior.


In the wet and snow covered mud, I picked through the trail fill. Often, because I know fossils (I am a scientist) I see bits of Devonian coral, brachiopods, and fossilized wood. Today I found two small fragments of petrified wood and a bit of coral. Left there, they would disintegrate. I rescued them for my overflowing collection.


Then we went to an open area to look for our “friend” - a special red-headed woodpecker that we watched recently build a nest. Today, it was not to be seen, but hundreds of robins were every where we walked. Then, we spied a downy woodpecker – after first hearing its thin rap on a tree. We stood in the below freezing wind and took in the simple pleasure of watching one of Nature's fellow creatures.


I encouraged B- to go with me to the art gallery. I was so pleased she did, because there was magic there. The front of the gallery was filled with Russian art. The docent told us they had already left. There were fish, mannequins, and other typical Russian iconography. However, in the back area was where my heart raced.


Among the Bernheim fired pottery was one piece that spoke to me as a weird tale writer. Entitled “The Potter”, it was a glazed pottery image of a troll-frog with several horns akin to some triceratops. Its gnarled fingers crafted a clay pot.


Afterwards, we talked to the docent at length and soaked in Bernheim lore.


The time that a huge flock of sand cranes flew over and people ran to see. They were like a “tornado” in the sky.


Then there was the anticipation of the arrival of the annual migration of cedar waxwings who would eat what the robins left behind.


The overlooking of the deciduous holly grove when the leaves drop and seeing only a mist of reds and yellows from the remaining berries.


Too soon, the day faded and we had to leave. But I have in my mind to call next week and get that Lovecraftian imp. If I do it will be my first real “art” piece. Sure, I've bought prints, but this is a one of kind creation that leapt from someone's artistic imagination – a piece of soul.


Stay tuned – will I follow through?


In the meantime, I walked with Thoreau today.

January 14

Treasure Hunt

I admit it.  I've always been geeky.  One of my favorite things is to prowl used bookstores.  Today, did that armed with a 15% off coupon to boot.
 
Up and down the aisles, I fondled words.
 
I groped, garbbed, and caressed new and ancient books alike.
 
B- didn;t mind, because she was right there with me.  The lust in her eyes when she spied several out of print antiques, ahhh, what a gal.
 
We came away with 20 volumes - some just beacuse the cover art was worth the price of $1, some for other reasons.  I was stunned to see a volume of Bardbury's life I'd given to a (now MIA) friend as a loan.  Originally $35, it was a teal for $14.  An out of print book of Scottish ghost legends for my already burgeoning collection.
 
All in all, 15% discount applied, I walked out under $65.00.  Wow.  There must have been over $200.00 in cover prices.
 
The trip was so heady, B- and I had to qualm our racing hearts.  Like thieves that just heisted the Queen's jewels, we went to our Riviera - the lake within Bernehim Forest. 
 
The ducks, geese and swans had each chosen a section of the vast lake.  Some stood on ice, others hiddled on the shore.  We took in the exhilarating chill air and thanked Heaven for Nature and Books.
 
 
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