Saturday, December 29, 2018

Woodstock - 2019

50th anniversary coming right up.  Also 50th wedding anniversary in June for Julieann and I.

Jesus H. F’ing Christ where did the time go?! I guess it went here...

For old time's sake (auld lang syne)
Love the one you’re with time.
Study your ass off time.
Work your ass off time.
Howdy Doody time.
Experiment time.
Time well spent.
Exciting time.
Scary time.
Party time.
Hard time.
Easy time.

The time of our lives. (It better have been because it was our only time.)

It was our time.  
Now it is someone else’s time.  
Hopefully they will do a better job
Of preserving what exists. 
So they can pass something on for next time.

Gotta’ go.  Time’s up. 


"The Truth: It’s not hard to see at all…
Except for those who refuse to look."
Tom Campbell - 6/25/2018

Sunday, December 9, 2018

"Bertha" - A Eulogy

It was late 2003 and she was brand-new, right off the assembly line.  She was 2004 Volkswagen Touareg and she was the first-year model of her kind.

She was loaded with extra plush heated leather seating, a big V-8, moonroof and virtually anything else you could think of as accessories at the time.  She was also big and heavy, even for an SUV.

It was late in the model year so there were some decent discounts to be had.  He saw her sitting in front of the dealership and she looked good so he invited his family to join him for a closer look and test drive.  Approval was unanimous so the they did the deal and took her home.  He quickly named her "Bertha" after the WWII bomb because she looked...well...she looked big.
The original "Big Bertha"

Fifteen years later she has accumulated over 130 thousand miles and enough infirmities that it is time for her to be put down.  Ironically, she still looks good though and her mighty engine still runs strong.

There are some folks claiming to be wise who suggest that when considering whether to buy or lease a new vehicle you should include your best guess as to how long you think you will keep it.  "If buying," they say, "drive it until the wheels fall off."  That is how it is/was with Bertha although we sure didn't start out with that intent.
"Bertha" - December 9, 2018
Still looks good on the outside
but inside...she's toast.

Some (other) folks also advise against buying a vehicle in its first model year as there will likely be bugs that have to be worked out.  That was sort of the case with Bertha as she did leave us stranded and using tow services a couple of times.  She also had this very annoying problem of chattering windshield wipers that ended up being replaced many times over the years.  Plus, a few nonessential parts fell off but we just left them off.  All in all though, she held up well.

Bertha became our go-to family ride...hauling the Campbell family to their many soccer games, school and work.  Since I was a pitiful road warrior and gone much of the time, Bertha evolved from "company car" to Julieann's wheels and that was that through most of her life.

Being a full-size SUV, Bertha was also a tall entry so when the World's Greatest Goldie, Molly grew old she would put her front paws up in back and patiently wait for one of us to heist her butt the rest of the way in.

So that's it...she has been donated to National Public Radio.  Thanks for the fine, long ride Bertha.

Sunday, October 28, 2018

On Writing...penmanship that is.

As a kid, and a leftie I had miserable penmanship.  Just couldn't figure out how to hold the pencil without smearing lead... or pen without smearing ink.  The nuns at Saint Peter's Elementary in Huron, Ohio didn't know how to help me and my grades reflected it.  Well, maybe my attitude was reflected in my grades too.

Then one day early in Huron High School, I noticed a girl printing everything and saw how easy it was to read.  Okay, okay maybe I was looking over her shoulder while cheating on a test I don't recall.

So I started printing.  Everything.  I did it for several years and for some unknown reason it put some discipline in my unruly south paw.  Then I tried writing something again and noticed... it wasn't bad!  In fact, some of it looked pretty good.  I carried on from that point taking some pride in legibility.  Cheap thrills I know.

My kids, both lefties, do it too.  Tyler a combination of both and Samantha just about everything...printing that is.

Then.  Computers.  And keyboards.  And the end of a lot of writing.  And my practiced hand went on a leave of absence.  I made a note about it in 2015...I mean a hand written/printed note.  Just came across it in one of my (antique now) notebooks and am posting it here for posterity.  And for the hell of it.

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Dakota Summer


1970 - Phoenix, AZ
It was a sixties summer...1967
Peace, war, love, hate
It was all in the air

But that Dakota night I was
Driven by peace and love
To that hilltop nightclub
And your table
To ask you to “...dance with me”
And we have never stopped

First we were friends
And then your heart so big
It found love for me

Then war and hate called 
And I had to go
To serve the cause
Right or wrong

But the distance made our love
Phoenix, Arizona - With sheepdog,
"Mopsy's Aerial Motions"
Grow stronger
And I carried your beauty
In my heart

Then the many years of work and school
Together 
All the while your beauty
All the while your forgiveness
All the while your tenderness
All the while your love

Along the way you gave me a son and daughter
Both captured your beauty 
And your heart

Son Tyler and Daughter Samantha Campbell
We mellowed to togetherness
A bond formed 
From your hard work
From your patience

Now we are in
The September of our years
And I have never loved you more
I will never love you less

I want to dance with you again 
As we did that Dakota night
Many years ago
And I will

I want to hold you again 
As I did that Dakota night
And I will

Your beauty is all around me
Every day, every minute of my life 

I Love you
My inspiration
My hero  
My heart  

Friday, October 5, 2018

God's Round II - Sacrilege? I Think Not

What if God decided on starting over with her/his experiment called "Earth?"  Given the size of the universe, maybe He/She already has and we just can't see it.  What ideas could we share on a new, improved version? (Thank you to those who have contributed.  Your tips for God are marked with your initials. The others are mine...from my mind...if you don't mind.)
  1. Don't sacrifice your only begotten for us.  We're not worth it.  Besides, we need Him to stick with us a little longer.
    God's Do-Over. Thinking things over...
  2. Don't let a bunch of scribes write the Bible.  There is too much left to interpretation.  Besides, we'd rather hear it first hand. I mean, do we really need the book of Job?  We can't even interpret the Constitution. It's only 4 pages and we have had to amend it 27 times for God's sake (sorry).
  3. We like peace so please, make us all the same color.  You pick. We'll see if we can do better if we are literally all begin on the same page.
  4. "Let's skip a couple of emotions please...fear and hatred.  Thank you.  Or is that cheating on the test?  Also, banana splits in every refrigerator." - DCWC
  5. There are certain inventors...guns and nuclear weapons for example, who should remain unborn.
  6. "A couple more hours in the day (without making us age faster) would be nice." - SMC
  7. Let's dump that chastity vow for priests and nuns okay?  It's just too much pressure for the human brain to deal with.
  8. No kid's diseases. You must be 21 to get sick.  If diseases must happen, we'll be better prepared to deal with them then. 
  9. Help us all be born with an innate understanding that rampant population growth is harmful to the Earth and causes us to fight among one another.
  10. "Let all children have proper homes, nourishment, education, emotional and medical support." - SMC
  11. "Benjamin Button the process. Reward a life lived well with play and innocence." - BH
  12. Give our intuition a better engine okay?  At least let us be born knowing how to change our own diapers and tie our own shoes...
  13. Do not include Saturday mail delivery.  It is a very expensive service. It is 90% junk mail and the remainder is bills.  Those puppies can wait until Monday.
  14. Pennies?  Who needs'em?!  And the 545 + 1?  We need a major overhaul there.
  15. "I want Matriarchy to be the prevailing social order." - AG  "Smash the patriarchy." SMC - "Just put women in charge and let's try that for a couple thousand years okay?" - TC
  16. Clear up the man/woman controversy that surrounds you okay?  I mean if you Google "God" images you just get zillions of photos of a badass looking man.  Conversely, if you Google Woman God...you mainly get a bunch of images of Ariana Grande and we know she's not God...or is she?
  17. Hey!  How about taking a "selfie" for us?!  That would sure clear up a lot of speculation about what you look like.
  18. "More wine" - DB..."Hear! Hear!" - JO & TC
  19. "Equality" - JMC & SW  "... and students taught to understand and respect our differences rather than bullying" - SW
  20. "Scratch house flies, mosquitoes, gnats and no see'ums off the creation list." - JO  "...I'd add ticks, chiggers, probably brown recluses too." - SW  "No fruit flies in my old vine zin." - JO
  21. "Term limits." - BeeGee
  22. One last thing (maybe). I respectfully request that my family and I be born again, literally. Also, please have all our dogs with us, all the way.  And please make me more tolerant of bad drivers this time around.  God knows, I mean You know, I'm not perfect so why in God's name, I mean Your name, should I expect others to be that way. 
All right...this could end up a work in progress.  I kinda like to come back and edit/update things.  You have input? Great!  Have your people get in touch with my people.



Saturday, September 29, 2018

Hold'em Poker in D'moin Aye Owe Eh


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Remember your first poker tournament?  Or any sort of tournament?  I do.  I wrote about it. 

July 17, 2007
Des Moines:  DeeMoeen. D'moin.

Iowa:  EyeOA.  Eyeohwah. AyeOweEh.

West Des Moines to be more precise.  I was there on the job…or more precisely three consecutive jobs that would last almost three months. I would make an occasional weekend trip home to Sacramento to show my driver’s license at our door and beg admittance. After a couple of days though, the three beautiful ladies there (wife Julieann, daughter Samantha and Goldy Molly) would tire of my manly habits and wave goodbye sadly(happily) as I headed for the next plane.

West Des Moines is a shining example of modern suburbia. It is a fairly large sized community full of good people that doesn’t seem to have a single building more than twenty years old. It has a huge modern mall and, under construction, one of those live, work, play integrated communities that looks like it is designed for folks to walk everywhere. All in all, a very nice place filled with terrific, hard working folks. It is a great snapshot of America as it seems it should be.

That is not what this story is about though. It’s not about my usual road warrior story either…what I had for dinner (although I know Bob Bunker would prefer I go there).

It’s about gambling. That’s right. It’s the “C’mon dice! Daddy needs a new pair of shoes!” kind of gambling. For the past year or so, when home and in hotel rooms I have been cranking up the tube in the evening and dialing in whatever Texas hold’em poker game happened to be on. Then, while that was playing I would fire up my Mac laptop computer, kick in the Internet router connection and play the same game on line for a couple of hours or so. I was learning the ins and outs and through thousands of games with free, play money.  If you have ever checked this out, you know I am one of hundreds of thousands (millions) of folks who are doing the same damn thing.

I had also played a few live cash games of limit hold’em during my Harley travels in Nevada, not really doing well along the way but figuring I was learning something while having fun. Duh. It doesn’t take much to make me happy sometimes.

Then…I found out there was a casino in the Des Moines area that had poker tables. I would hit them once in a while when laying over on weekends that I had to work.  These guys and ladies were all ages, 21 to 81, male, female, all races, everybody fits. My typical plan was to hit a table with a $100 buy-in and a $3-6 or $4-8 dollar limit game. I made the tables a half dozen times or so and the local good old boys didn’t get too far into my knickers I am proud to say. I may have been down a couple of hundred bucks total.  Cheap lessons and cheap thrills…I was a happy camper.

A week ago I headed to Prairie Meadows north of Des Moines on a Thursday night for some reason.  We had shut down the project at a fairly normal hour and I was anxious to do something.  When I walked into the poker room it was pretty full and I discovered they were just a couple of minutes from beginning a $115 buy-in no-limit Texas hold-em tournament. I figured what the hell; that is just a little more than I would plan to lose in one night so I might as well buy in and learn something. Each player started with 2,500 in chips and we were off! There were 90 entries so the last person would win something over $3,000.

When I sat down I was pretty pumped but I felt pretty good too so I just started playing as I ordinarily would…fairly patient, waiting for cards, rarely bluffing, relying on all my earlier practice to know when I had a good hand and when I didn’t.

I wish I could remember what cards I had the first time I ever went all in. Damn that was cool, saying “all in” and shoving my pile of chips toward the center of the table. I would do it three or four times over the course of the evening and sometime in the third hour I was looking down at roughly 30,000 in chips. I had successfully ridden through the periods of slow hands and the periods of good hands. I was having such a good time I even called Julieann during one of the breaks to tell her I was still in it. More cheap thrills right?!

As we approached four hours, the blinds were something like 1,000-3,000 and we were suddenly at the final table! Ten of us and that meant every one of us would finish in the money. With the high blinds it wasn’t long before three guys were gone. I was dealt an Ace-nine unsuited…what they call a “weak Ace”. I called the 3,000 big blind and most of the table folded until this guy across from me raised another 3,000 or so. I figured it was time for another so I said, “All in.” and felt a little adrenalin fueling things. I probably had 20,000 at the time. The other guy called and we flipped the cards.  He had an Ace-eight unsuited against me. I was thinking I had a pretty good chance, maybe 60-40 to win but an eight hit on the flop and nothing helped on the turn or river so I was out in seventh place. $280 bucks in my pocket and I was pumped. I was thinking if my hand had held up I might have finished in the top 3-5. Wow!

The next Sunday they had a $50 buy-in and I was out mid-way in a field of just over a hundred. Not too good and not too bad. I am not done though. I want to try a few more!  So here’s the deal; saying “All in” and shoving a pile of chips toward the center of a poker table is one damn fine experience. I highly recommend it. I will be watching for chances to try this some more.

Your Friendly Road Warrior Correspondent,
 

Monday, September 17, 2018

Imagine Tom!

Just imagine...
I am my grandfather, William Elias Gladue
Me (standing) and my brother Charlie
I was born in 1885,
not 1925 like my daughter Martha, our Chippewa Princess
1945 like my grandson Thomas,
or in 1949 like his bride Julieann,
or 1980 like my great grandson Tyler,
or 1988 like my great grand daughter Samantha.

I am a Metis (mixed blood) Indian..."Chippewa" or "Ojibwa" and French.

According to the 1930 census my father was Metis.
My Mother was Chippewa.
My French ancestors worked for the Hudson's Bay fur company.
Many traveled south and married Chippewa.

I once lived on the White Earth reservation
In northwestern Minnesota.
I have a brother, Charlie.
My Bride Alice Dubois-Gladue
There may be others but I do not remember.

I will spend much of my life living on the Turtle Mountain reservation in northern North Dakota.
There I will meet and marry another Metis, Alice.

We will have eleven children.
We will homestead in Froid, Montana
In the 1920's and 30's.
The Great Depression will drive us from the homestead.
We will settle in Seattle.

My children will grow, marry and find employment.
Many will work at the Boeing company.
Many will succumb to or suffer from alcohol addiction.
One of many ailments introduced to us by immigrants.

I will pass in the mid-1950's.
Our Family (My Mother, Martha top center)
Seattle, circa 1940
My wife Alice will follow some 10 years later.
Most of my children's children will scatter.
Most will lose contact with their cousins and their heritage.

This will mark the evolution of many original Americans.

It is not what I would have preferred.

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Shrapnel Today - Vietnam Yesterday

Well I did it.
And it basically blew up.

I was working diligently at my computer in my man cave. I reached (had a spasm?) for something and knocked over a heavy, empty water glass.

B-52 flies over Vietnam during
Operation Linebacker - October 1966
When it hit the tile floor it sort of exploded. A piece of shrapnel hit my ankle and left a cut. It was small and I didn't even notice it until sometime later.

But when I did, it reminded me of me of my time in Vietnam, back in the day...
Way, way back in the day...

We had landed at Ton Son Nhut airbase outside Saigon. I was stationed at Utapao Air Base Thailand and headed for Kadena, Okinawa. At the Air Force base there, I was to go through  physiological (altitude) chamber training so I could fly on a B-52 bombing mission.  We needed this training so we could survive high-altitude oxygen issues that might occur.

I was working in Intelligence at the time, building strike chart maps and radar predictions for bomb runs. We were supposed to take a B-52 flight as a form of orientation or motivation or something.  I was never quite clear on that but it seemed like an adventure so I was pumped up.  You know when you are 23 you are immortal so "what the hell" right?!

We were on the ground for maybe an hour dropping off and taking on passengers.  I was in harm's way there (okay, okay I wasn't really) but got out safely.

"Shrapnel," a random thing that was the norm in the days of the Vietnam war and tragically remains so today in places like Afghanistan and Syria.  It's not really funny as I originally intended this post. It is strange though...to be wandering all over the world without a whole lot of thought to that sort of thing then get zapped while sitting in your office chair.

Note: I did get one month's combat pay for that flight...$45 thanks to you, the taxpayers of America.

Friday, August 31, 2018

Guppy Swallows Whale Awash With TRICARE Bucks

...and it is one hell of a big whale Vern at almost $60 billion annually. Yes, the guppy was busy. Here's how it went down:

In the late 70's, concerns about the rising cost of health care cause the nations doc's to offer "Voluntary Cost Containment" out of fear Congress will come up with something worse. It doesn't work. Public and congressional attention is then drawn toward prepaid health plans AKA managed care organizations such as Kaiser Permanente. Managed care is based on the old adage that there is strength in numbers; that bargaining power to control costs becomes stronger when large numbers of consumers, the "population at risk," represent the chips in play. 
  1. One of nation's first Health Maintenance Organizations is formed shortly after the HMO Act of 1973 is passed. Dr. Jim Schubert, Sacramento Orthopedist, controversial in championing HMO's, is a founder of the Sacramento Medical Care Foundation, later forming the health plan; "Foundation Health lan." Foundation will be the first licensed health plan in California.
  2. 1984 - Foundation is so successful it goes public on as "Americare Health Care Corporation."
  3. 1986 - Merrill Lynch leads a leveraged buy out "Foundation Health Plan" reemerges.
  4. Early to mid 80's - Foundation, attempting to replicate Sacramento area formula for success, acquires struggling local health plans in Seattle and Portland.
  5. Mid 80's - Captain Bob Bunker, USAF, MSC, is helping launch the Air Force Medical Service' first Office of Innovation.  He decides to approach (via cold calls) managed care organizations to gauge interest in a form of managed care to supplement direct military health care. He catches the attention of Foundation executives who he and others later brief on an upcoming Department of Defense Office of Health Affairs initiative called the CHAMPUS Reform Initiative. "CRI" when launched is to be a demonstration project that, if successful will be adopted nationally and overseas. The Title would later be changed to Tricare. 
  6. Mid-80's - CRI pre-contract process begins.  Interest of nation's HMO's declines rapidly as significant financial risk becomes apparent.
  7. Foundation and DOD staff begin considering "risk-sharing corridor" where both share in potential profit and losses from contract operations.
  8. 1987 - Foundation begins experiencing financial difficulties as their ability to manage health plans in Washington, Oregon and New Jersey fails. To raise needed cash, Foundation considers selling their large health care claims building (a former Safeway) for approximately $1 million. However doing so will drop their Tangible Net Equity below the $5 million the State requires to maintain health plan licensure.
  9. Late 1988: Foundation, the sole bidder, is awarded the nation's first CRI contract and begins implementation activities. At that time, it is the largest health plan ever awarded.(No other health plans would bid because of ambiguities in the associated financial risk.) 
    • Schubert is the champion of the initiative and is continued as Chairman and Chief Medical Officer of the company.  
    • Commemorative copy -
      original contract award
      Subsequent Foundation hiring includes MSCs and officers from several service branches; first is recently retired AF Major Tom Campbell, an MSC who had been hired by Foundation earlier at the recommendation of Captain Bunker.  
    • Campbell assumes role as COO for Northern California operations serving nearly 400,000 beneficiaries. Campbell then recruits Paul Murrell, MSC Lt. Colonel and Chuck Upton, MSC Colonel who would assume Foundation corporate roles. For Northern California operations, Campbell also hires recent MSC retirees including Navy Commander Bob Legg, Army Lt. Colonel Mike Sexton, Army Colonel Jim Schlaak and Army Colonel Ed Bland as directors. Air Force Colonel and former pilot Ernie Givani also signs on as a director.    
    • The health plan also begins exploring the sale of their two out-of-state HMO's.
  1. 1988-'89: 
    • CRI begins. All operations are largely successful with the exception of claims processing. Foundation had contracted with an external party for a claims system known as "Eagle."  It didn't work. Schubert, in attempting to defend the system causes significant government concerns and is asked to resign.  
    • Foundation's CRI contract operations are favorably reviewed by external contractor, the Rand Corporation.
    • The continuing influx of government contract cash saves Foundation.
  2. 1989:  Foundation, unwilling or unable to manage its remote plans, sells Oregon and Washington HMOs to Dr. Malik Hassan, founder of a small successful Pueblo Colorado HMO; Qual-Med.
    CRI /TRICARE enrollee #2
    (Dr. Schubert was #1)
    Yes, they were still figuring out
    how to properly laminate things.
  3. 1989-1990 - RAND Corporation evaluates CRI - operations receive excellent ratings overall with exception of struggling claims system.
  4. 1993: Qual-Med merges with Health Net to form Health Systems International.
  5. 1997: Health Systems International merges with Foundation Health to form Health Net. The 'Guppy' that Foundation sold its struggling HMOs to a few years earlier swallows the 'Whale.'  Health Net CEO is Dr. Malik Hassan who originally formed the 7,000 member 'Guppy' HMO in Pueblo.
  6. 2016: Centene merges with Health Net.
  7. 2017: Centene signals intent to establish regional Headquarters in Sacramento...in full circle to where this story began. 
So there you have it.  At least you have my version of it. The old "Foundation Health" morphs to "Centene", largely on the backbone of TRICARE.

(All during this period, from the early 70's, there is background noise about a single-payer system. Although based on general population health and economic logic, each time it rises it is defeated by insurers...and money. In the past few years though, the idea, primarily tagged as "Medicare for all" has continued to gain ground among a few politicians and the general population. More on this HERE)

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Sedentarianism - The Fine Art of Poker

I have spent the better part of the past three weeks practicing the art of sedentarianism.  When the word first struck my feeble mind, the word "sedentarianism" that is, I thought I had made up a new one.  But then, I Googled it.  Damn.
Phil Ivey - Unblinking, unmoving
By God, I think I've got it!

Practicing the art is part of my master plan to excel at Texas Hold'em tournament poker by effectively demonstrating the astonishing capacity to sit for hours at a time while remaining expressionless and unmoving.  It is a fine art to be sure but someone must do it.

I will write no more on the subject.  I must return to...nothing.

Monday, August 27, 2018

The Good, The Bad, and The Beautiful

View from our room.
Hampton Inn, Green River, WY
Yeah, it mighta' been the last long road trip ever for Julieann and I...eleven days in all.  6+ days of driving. It was around 3,000 miles total, Sac-town to the Black Hills and back. Pretty fine adventure with tours through Yellowstone and the Tetons on the way and fastest return possible on the flip-flop.

We recently picked up a newer mid-size SUV that fits our current lifestyle pretty damn good and we (read "I") was anxious to test it's legs.  So we headed out with rear seats folded forward, bags and gear aplenty packed in back, small cooler for snacks and such, navigation instruments set and reservations made.

We would spent nights in some purely Western towns such as Jackpot, Jackson Hole and Cody. The route was familiar as I had made it a couple times before, accidentally on purpose collecting material for my book "Badass - The Harley Davidson Experience" and heading for the Mother of all Motorcycle Rallies - Sturgis.

So here's the rundown; the Good, the Bad and the Beautiful of our run:

The Good:
Another good: Breakfast
with the Presidents
at Rushmore
(It's not about the food.) 
  • Traveling with wife and pal of 50+ years was fun! We hollered at dumb drivers (including ourselves once each) and shared a few laughs every day.
  • Julieann's family - good folks from Rapid City I am proud to know. A never-ending curiosity to me why we are so far apart politically from most of them, why common ground seems so elusive.
  • The Black Hills - a Spring of steady rain has filled the creeks and lakes.  It is greener than we recall seeing it...ever.
  • Sturgis/Deadwood - Looking and feeling good there, always. (Especially during the Motorcycle rally.)
  • The hotels - Yes there are good ones out there folks and we found a few. A lot of people in this service industry trying to give folks a decent night's rest and are doing a good job of it.  Recommended: Hampton Inn in Green River, Wyoming and Gold Country Best Western in Winnemucca, Nevada.
  • The hay. Yes that's right; the hay.  Impressive seeing the crops of large round bales and rectangular big and small bales in the fields. Amber shapes lying in green fields. I wondered about the price in today's market and looked it up as some sort of economy barometer? Currently, the price of a bale of hay depends on grass or alfalfa - generally a large round bale of Alfalfa (weighs around a ton) a little over $161.  (Yeah, yeah I know...I have too much time on my hands.)
  • The Hippies - Yes folks they are still out there, roaming the country looking for Nirvana. The long hair, floor length skirts, sandals...the whole nine yards.  Except now the hair is gray, the bellies potted and the "look" seems pretty weird. (Funny, at times in the 70's I thought I wanted to be one, but these modern-day old folks have removed that desire. I do share that pot belly look though.)  
The Bad:
  • Between here and there you can't find decent food.  We looked.  We tried.  We failed. Road food is the pits folks. (Yes, we're spoiled.)
  • California forest fires. They blocked the sky and fouled the air all the way from Sacramento to the Tetons. (The year was 2018.)
  • Thoughtless drivers. Sitting in the hammer lane without passing, abrupt lane changes, following too close. (Where TF do these people come from?!)
  • Highway construction.  Sure we need it but that doesn't mean we like it.
  • The hours of driving.  Even when you have a ton of time it still seems to take too much.  Reckon they drag on more when you are older. (But they were very cool through the Tetons and Yellowstone.)
The Beautiful:
  • The Black Hills - so green and gorgeous with full lakes and streams. Like we have never seen them in 50 years of travel back and forth. (Okay, okay I kind of said this already but hey, some things bear repeating!)
  • The West - C'mon folks, America the Beautiful is alive and doing okay right?! (In spite of the fires, our new EPA and Department of Interior's efforts to F___ it all up.) 
  • My Wife and travel partner - she is always a step ahead of me in thoughtful actions and words. I see that capacity in my son and daughter too. (One of the most admirable traits a human can have eh?!)
  • Scott Jacobs art Gallery in Deadwood, South Dakota. (I have already paid homage to that master of photo realism here: http://tclifecycles.blogspot.com/2018/08/deadwood-sd-and-man-scott-jacobs.html)
Now many of you have asked (none actually) why that might be our last long road trip. Well, when you reach a certain age you seem to run out of gas a little quicker than the vehicle you are driving knowwhatimeanVern?

P.S.  For you Clint fans, I added "Beautiful" because there is no "Ugly" to this story.  (Wait.  There WAS that dinner at the Winnemucca Inn and Casino...)

Monday, August 20, 2018

Deadwood, SD and The Man, Scott Jacobs

It was the Black Hills famous 2018 Sturgis Rally,
Julieann and I had headed there to visit family
And tour some old familiar places

As part, I got to wander the main drag of Deadwood

Famous mining town
And site of the
Assassination of Wild Bill Hickok
By the villain "Crooked Nose" Jack McCall

There were a bunch of Harleys
Lining and cruising the drag
And all the shops were geared for
Serious tourist time
The best though
And one I had not seen before
Scott Jacobs and a fan.
Was the Scott Jacobs Art Gallery


I have been a fan of Scott's Harley
And related art for a long time
Scott is a great photo-realism artist
He has been the first official artist
For the Harley Davidson Motor Company
For many years

So I was happy to see his large establishment
Right there on Main Street
I got pretty busy
Admiring the works of Scott
And other artists he features
Including members of his family.

While there I thought I recognized him
I introduced myself
And thanked him for his work
He had a natural, friendly nature
And readily agreed to autograph
A book of his works on sale there
Thanks for the inscription!
He even asked if there were "others
I would like" to include
So I named off our gang
And he happily obliged


One of Scott's New Works