September 18, 2022

I called emergency services when I was staying in Corryton, TN this summer. 

It was three in the morning and I woke suddenly with a strong smell filling my nostrils. At first I thought it was interesting, but quickly became worried as the smell intensified. What was it? I lay there on the left side of my Aunt Linda’s king-size bed, which for all impractical purposes was cot-width because I’d chained myself to the length of my computer’s short power cord.

I let my mind drift above her 12 unit, 55-and-older condo community to imagine what lays beyond the acres of cow pasture and wide-spaced farm houses. I was pretty sure there were no chemical plants nearby. But how far away were the people in Bhopal, India when chemicals from a nearby plant escaped in the middle of the night and killed thousands?

The smell seemed to be getting exponentially stronger. I rose, turned on lights and set about sniffing. I sniffed in the living room. I sniffed in the kitchen. I sniffed in the front bedroom and bathroom. I opened the back door, went outside and sniffed around the small back patio and over next to the air conditioner unit. After so much sniffing, the smell had so inundated my olfactory that I could no longer smell anything. I knew the smell was there, but it was as if I’d taken a physical blow to the nose. 

Should I call the police, the fire department, wake the neighbors? I was only sure of one thing— I had to get out of there. Maybe it was fertilizer I postulated. But why now? Surely no one was spreading it in the middle of the night. 

I dressed and went out to the car my aunt Linda loaned me. I drove up the hill to the corner of the country road above the little valley where the condos sit. At the stop sign I pushed the button to lower the window.  Was the smell less here? I couldn’t say. I needed more distance. 

At the next corner I paused again. Left or right? To the left, a half mile away, is the hub of Corryton—a library, a post office, a fire station, a tire store and where Aunt Linda and Stewart live. To the right…well I’ve been that way but I couldn’t remember anything but country. Left it was. I drove slowly with my window down. The roads were barren. Night insects sang in my ears. The parking lot of the fire station was brightly lit. I pulled in making a wide arc to park facing the road. There were lights on inside but if anyone was in there they were asleep somewhere in a back room and I wasn’t going to knock on the door. I googled the fire station on my new phone.

Rural/Metro Station 33 was what it was called and it said open 24 hours! Before I pushed the call button I sat there trying to think how I would describe the smell. I knew the person on the other end would ask. Chemical didn’t seem quite right. Aren’t all smells chemical? It’s a poor word for someone who doesn’t like describing, but likes having described. 

The smell was still there in my nostrils although I had the suspicion that it might not be in the air surrounding me. I closed my eyes and focused on the sample of droplets that lined my cranium like condensation in a dark cave. Then it hit me—it was like fresh mown grass times one-hundred. The times one-hundred part was important to get across. This wasn’t just passing a newly mown field, it was like having the super saturated smell of one-hundred acres of newly mown hay compressed into a Binaca blast spray container and then having that injected into each nostril.

When the emergency dispatcher answered my call I suddenly became aware that it might sound like I was pulling a prank.

“I know it sounds crazy but that’s the only way I can describe it,” I said after emphasizing the one-hundred times

“Well, would you like me to send someone out?” the woman asked.

“I hate to wake anyone up about this,” I said. 

“We don’t really go on that. I just need to know,” she said. 

“Well, I guess so. I’m really concerned that it might be some sort of chemical leak.” 

After I ended the call, the phone soon rang again and I had to explain the situation all over. This new dispatcher told me that they were having to send people from Union County because there wasn’t anyone available nearby. 

I drove back to the top of the road above the little valley where the condo units sit and parked at the stop sign, facing the road, to catch whoever came before we went down. Fields surrounded me. Porch lights of a farmhouse nearby kept going on and off like there was a short in the wire or perhaps there was an animal activating an automatic sensor. After about 15 minutes, I laid my chair back and closed my eyes. Before drifting off I had the opportunity to reflect on what kind of fool am I? 

In about 40 minutes I heard the sounds of a big fire truck accelerating out of the curves up the road. A fireman in a black Suburban preceded the fire engine. We spoke between open windows. 

“It’s the third unit down there on the right. I’ll follow y’all down,” I said.

The fire truck following the suburban turned in front of me, engine whirring with all the strain of a machine hauling hundreds of gallons of water, ladders and equipment.  I followed and parked behind the fire engine with its rolling red lights and heavy idling engine. I imagined neighbors peaking from behind curtains.

I won’t belabor this story any longer except to say the two men who showed up were very nice. They identified the smell as a skunk that they theorized had sprayed next to the central air unit. How embarrassing! I’ve smelled skunks a thousand times in my life. I can only guess that this one being so close impacted my olfactory in a way that took it out of commission. 

R.C., the neighbor across the little condo loop, made me feel better the next day telling me that a skunk a few weeks back smelled just like burning wood. He also said he hadn’t heard the fire engine, nor had the neighbor who shares a common wall. I saw her at Hammer’s Five and Dime in the town of Hall a week later. Her coworker came around the corner to join in listening to the tale of a fool who called the fire department about a skunk.  ————————–

Unrelated cute puppy photo. Sasha’s first bath.

September 4, 2022

If I’d known two months ago that I would still be in patio-renovation-mode I wouldn’t have made an optometrist appointment in San Francisco for nine Saturday morning on this labor day weekend. I had to get up at my regular work-rising-time (about 6:15) to catch BART and make it there on time. Ah well. Might as well continue the grind. I got there at 8:45. 

Haight Street Eyecare hasn’t been on Haight Street for about 20 years now. But that’s where they were when I first went to get a screw replaced on my glasses in 1991. I’d first discovered my eye doctor sitting on Haight Street trying to sell a breaker bar that was one of the few tools left after the rest were all stolen from my VW van which I had driven to SF on the path to hippie enlightenment. The breaker bar sat between me and my companion Shigeru with a sign that said $10. Shigeru was a Japanese tourist who had helped me rebuild the engine on the ’69 pop top camper I’d bought from Tiny, a farmer in Ithaca, NY who liked to put beat juice on his cheeks to give him a rosy appearance.

Doctor Chan was maybe a few years older than me then (strangely enough he still is) and I remember thinking how he’d already made something of himself while I was busy being a bohemian. That thought just shows how I’ve never really gotten over my indoctrination in—to use an old hippie phrase—the establishment.

Some beautiful young woman roughly my age, who I would never dare to ask on a date, put a new screw in my glasses for free. That bought my loyalty for these last thirty years. I’ve spent many thousands of dollars with them since then. 

Dr. Chan is very thorough and I appreciate his looking at my eyeballs with all their blown out veins on his big computer screen. I’ve seen pictures of his children appear in his office and watched them grow through these greatly spaced stills. The oldest is now in college. It’s like watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade every year.

I had time Saturday morning to go find a cup of Joe. I’d forgotten how deliciously empty San Francisco feels on an early weekend morning. The office at the bottom of Fillmore near the Kabuki movie theater didn’t open until 9 so I went uphill until I found a cafe. They were playing some Violent Femmes and somehow it worked well with the floral wallpaper in their bathroom. It took me back to my youth so I was happy to add a dollar tip on the $3.50 cup of coffee. I sat and sipped it for ten minutes and then carefully coasted back downhill with my to-go cup. I spent $350 on a new pair of prescription sunglasses (that’s after insurance) and another $160 bucks on some contacts. Nothing like purchasing prescription sunglasses to make one feel vain and self-indulgent. 

How much are the contacts I asked the young woman helping me. “$75 for a box of ninety days.”

“Oh, good,” I said elated at the reasonableness. “I’ll take a box.” 

“Okay, that’s for one eye. Do you want a box for the other eye?”

—————

My beard got caught in my windbreaker as I was zipping it up a few mornings ago while riding my bike with no hands. I often do that sort of thing when I’m starting out. Sort of the same thing I do when driving. I almost never put my seat belt on until I’ve started moving in a forward direction. Then I take my hands off the wheel and buckle up. Sort of stupid. I’m much more likely to get into an accident at the worst possible moment, but it has something to do with my desire to save time and the influence of reading the book Cheaper by the Dozen when I was a teenager and the father always doing two things at once for the sake of efficiency like shaving and reading the paper—basically to save time, as if any of it can be saved. Which it can’t. It just flows out through the hour glass and when it’s gone it’s gone and it doesn’t matter if you were safely zipping up your jacket before you got on your bike or zipping it up while riding. It’s all a crapshoot. Over the years I may have saved a full hour zipping up my jacket this way, but I might be killed by a catastrophic head injury and loose all that time and an additional fifteen or twenty years. 

I’m currently on a mission to not have a mission, which means I will likely be zipping up my jacket and putting my seatbelt on before I start moving. I’d like to watch the water flow by rather than be in the stream, if that makes any sense. I’m tired of fighting the current. 

I saw a video a few years ago of a man floating quickly by some tourists who happened to be filming the millions of gallons of water going over Niagara Falls. I believe this footage was verified as the last seconds of a known suicide. The guy wasn’t fighting the pull of the water at all. It would have been futile anyway. He wouldn’t have even been able to stay in one place even if he was Mark Spitz. He had a sad, reflective look on his face. With 20 or 30 seconds before he hit the falls he had time for a full newsreel of his life.  Anyway, this is sort of a non sequitur but it came up when I thought about not fighting the current. To be clear, in this case, I would rather be on shore not fighting it than in the water. 

I have another non sequitur and really, I assure you, I’m not working on a stand-up routine. Why does the rather elegant woman’s prerecorded BART voice say “Arriving out” and “Now boarding out.” It doesn’t even make sense. How can you board out? Don’t you board in? And, why is there a long pause before the stop is named like the computer has to do the calculation at that moment to decide where the train is. “Now boarding out…………Concord”.

———-

The following pictures will explain why I haven’t yet written about my trip to Tennessee this summer or about the cabin I’m still pondering building in the woods. The pictures show the process I’m calling my “back patio renovation”.

The project started before I went to Tennessee in July and picked back up when I returned over a month ago. I’ve basically been going at it non-stop—full days on the weekends. On weekdays, after work, I take a nap, work on the patio for a few hours, eat and watch a little tv, then fall asleep. I’m very lucky to have friends who are helping me on a work trade basis, especially since they are master carpenters and I’ve been perfecting cutting a straight line these past few years. 

This is what the patio looked like before we began the project. What got me started thinking about the whole thing was the forward leaning of the posts. Then I noticed that one of the rafters was buckling around a knot. Then I was told that the span between front and back of the porch was really more than you want for these 2×6 rafters. After all that, I couldn’t sit out there without thinking about it all coming down on my head.
Day one of the project with Aaron and Steve. With these two experts on hand two rafters at both ends were double sistered with 16 foot 2×6 boards and supported with four new posts
Aaron always brings a wide array of helpful tools with his expertise.
Two new posts and the sistered rafters at each end after day one.
Aaron added these X braces to further support the roof from excessive forward-back movement.
The deteriorated ends of all the rafters were cut off and the front beam was sistered to widen and strengthen it. Blocking between the rafter ends was replaced by 4×6 pressure treated wood that they now butt against, secured by metal corner ties.
New plywood (painted white) replaced the old which had rot at one end. Alternately the rot could have been cut out and replaced with strips of plywood but that would have required more blocking underneath.

Left to do: apply tar paper and rolled asphalt roofing, install new electrical for lights and plugs, tie the patio roof into the main house by going through to the attic and linking the structure with the joists there. Oh, and I want to paint the whole underside structure to make it look spiffy.

Each step of this project has come with dozens of small tasks to prepare for the next part. What I think will take a day takes a week. I’ve shifted from being bothered by all these details to embracing them for what will mean having a job done well-done that will last and be safe.

Below, Jillian’s new puppy, Sasha Moon Piperaceae, aka Shasha Moonbeam Pepper, has also been taking up some of my time though contractually I’m obliged to do nothing but enjoy the fruits of her sweetness. Yes, we have it in writing, but who can resist this face!

p.s.–Jillian told me I used the word sistered in here a bunch of times and that people might not know what it means. I guess it shows my excitement. It’s a new word for me too. To sister a rafter, a beam, or joist (joists refer to floors, rafters to roofs) means to add another one next to it running parallel. It strengthens the board. A 2×4 becomes a 4×4, a 2×6 a 4×6, etc. Incidentally, those measurements aren’t accurate in lumber. 2x4s once were two inches by four inches but now they are 1.5 x 3.5.